четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Radio sportscaster in Parkersburg recovering from brain surgery

PARKERSBURG - A longtime radio sportscaster and voice of theParkersburg High School Big Reds is in a Morgantown hospital wherehe is recovering from surgery for a brain aneurysm.

Steve Daugherty was listed in critical condition Wednesdayafternoon at Ruby Memorial Hospital where he underwent brain surgeryon Tuesday, a spokesman said. He was flown by medical helicopter toMorgantown after going to the emergency room on Monday withcomplaints of a headache and that he couldn't hear, said MarkMcCullough, who until recently was an assistant football coach atParkersburg High and was president of the boosters.

"He's not doing too good," McCullough said Wednesday just …

Miami DE Bryan Pata Shot and Killed

University of Miami defensive end Bryan Pata was shot and killed Tuesday night, shortly after leaving the practice field, according to a university official with knowledge of the situation.

The official, speaking on condition of …

World Bank negotiates on loan to Serbia

The World Bank said Thursday it was closer to granting a US$388-million (euro308 million) loan to Serbia for the construction of a major highway.

The World Bank and Serbia have finished "a key step" in the negotiations on the financing of the so-called Corridor 10, the World Bank said in a statement from its Belgrade office.

It said that the credit would contribute to the financing of 84 kilometers (52 miles)of the highway leading to the Bulgarian border and 74 kilometers (46 miles) toward Macedonia.

"The two sections represent two of the main missing links on the highway network of the region," Martin Humphreys, World Bank's …

Leonard I. Horwitz

Leonard I. Horwitz, 80, a retired executive, died Tuesday inHumana Hospital Biscayne, Miami.

Mr. Horwitz, of Hallandale, Fla., formerly of the North Side,had been president of Leonard Electric Co., 7435 N. Western.

He founded the company in 1945 and retired in 1969 when heremarried and moved to California. He moved to Florida about …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Suicide attack on Somalia's gov't foiled

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — A police officer in Somalia says a suicide bomber who attempted to attack the presidential palace in Mogadishu has been shot dead.

Police officer Abdi Aden says the attacker jumped on the back of an African Union peacekeeping vehicle late Monday and managed to pass some security checkpoints at the palace.

Aden says that at …

At least 135 dead in Kenya in 3 days of violence over president's disputed re-election

Kenya's president threatened a tough crackdown Monday as rioters rampaged for a third day to protest what they called his sham re-election _ a bloody convulsion threatening what has been East Africa's most stable and prosperous democracy.

At least 135 Kenyans were reported killed in violence that flared from the shantytowns of Nairobi to resort towns on the sweltering coast. Opposition leaders set the stage for more turmoil by calling for a million people to rally against President Mwai Kibaki.

In the slums of Nairobi, rioters waved machetes and shouted "Kibaki must go!", while police beat protesters with clubs, fired off tear gas and shot live …

Trefeurig, Wales: A lovely place to visit

Here is a portrait of a farming community in Wales in which the people, animals and crops live together in pastoral harmony. It's the sort of place you might fall in love with if you stayed there in a bed and breakfast and had a picnic under a tree on a hilltop. If you had to live there, however, I suspect you might start scheming to move to the bright lights of Cardiff.

"Sleep Furiously" is a lovely film, but maddeningly complacent. Let me begin with the loveliness. It was filmed in and near Trefeurig, where its director, Gideon Koppel, was born, and where his mother still walks her dog. Here the year rotates through the seasons, calves and piglets are born, the choir sings in …

Emil Michael Klein and Kaspar Müller

LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND

Emil Michael Klein and Kaspar M�ller

CIRCUIT

Two artists, two rooms, five works each: Compare and contrast. At first glance, Emil Michael Klein's series seemed of a piece: a kind of allover (anti-)painting featuring decorous lattices of biomorphic shapes in a retro palette of Day-Glo orange, yellow, and red; color fields connected by an artery-like network of pale lineation. But his canvases ? which suggest an odd but joyous marriage of Sue Williams, Brice Marden, and Milton Glaser ? were not consistent among themselves. The Baselbased artist painted the two largest (Awenger and Komposition in Rot, Orange und Gelb [Composition in Red, Orange, …

Dalai Lama calls for religious tolerance in Nuremberg appearance

As the Dalai Lama continued his five-day tour of Germany on Sunday, Kurt Beck, leader of the country's Social Democratic Party criticized a federal cabinet member's decision to meet with the Tibetan spiritual leader.

Beck was quoted by the newspaper Welt Am Sonntag that government leaders in Berlin were given no warning that Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul had made plans to meet with the Dalai Lama on Monday in the capital.

After the meeting was scheduled, Beck said there was no way "to call if off."

On Friday, China filed a formal complaint about a meeting between the Dalai Lama and the development minister, arguing that …

Chicago air quality ranks as 'moderate' failure

The Chicago area falls in the "moderate" range in failing to meeta new, tougher federal ozone standard, the U.S. EnvironmentalProtection Agency said Thursday.

Health and environment groups hailed the tougher standard but saidmuch remains to be done to fight ozone -- which mixes with heat andsunlight to produce smog, the bane of people with asthma and otherlung ailments.

The new benchmark replaces one adopted in 1990. It is morestringent in being an eight-hour rather than one-hour standard, andin lowering the "non-attainment" level for ozone to 85 parts perbillion from 125 ppb.

Cook and the five collar counties' moderate rating means they arein the 92-106 ppb …

E&C now means "evolve and combine"

In recent years, major mergers and acquisitions have transformed many sectors of the chemical process industries (CPI), including petroleum refining, basic and specialty chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and foods. In contrast, the engineering and construction (E&C) industry has witnessed relatively less amalgamation - but the shake-ups, and shake-outs among E&Cs have been accelerating in recent months.

In July, the U.S. contracting scene saw two significant moves affecting top names in the E&C world. Both Raytheon Engineers & Constructors (RE&C) and Stone & Webster now find themselves under new management after running into serious losses on major power projects …

Philly lawyer's mural of justice draws objection

In the city where a young nation held some of its earliest Supreme Court sessions, attorney Paul Rosen can't imagine a better place for a mural about justice.

But his opponents say Rosen _ like justice _ must be blind if he thinks the planned site near one of this city's toniest neighborhoods is appropriate.

It would be a typical not-in-my-backyard controversy except that mural supporters say they hear a darker undercurrent in the resistance _ namely, that murals connote blight and aren't good enough for uptown ZIP codes like Rittenhouse Square, where luxury high-rises, upscale shopping and sidewalk bistros hug a historic park.

"How could …

Maker of Snickers and M&Ms is raising prices

The maker of Snickers bars and M&Ms candies said it is raising wholesale prices more than 12 percent to offset the higher costs of raw materials, packaging and energy, the second major candy company in the past week to announce such a move.

The statement issued by Mars follows a similar announcement by its larger candy rival, The Hershey Co., which cited the spiraling costs of everything from cocoa and peanuts to fuel and utilities.

The changes represent a 12.2 percent value increase to Mars' entire U.S. portfolio, and affect single bars as well as other package types, Mars spokeswoman Bertille Glass said Thursday.

The privately held Mars said the majority of the price increases will take effect Oct. 17, while it also will cut back on the volume in some of its package types. Mars also makes Dove, Milky Way, Skittles and Starburst brands.

"We have attempted to hold off on further price changes this year and only took this action after very careful consideration on the impact to our valued customers based on current market pressures," the company said.

A spokeswoman for Nestle USA Inc. did not return calls requesting information on its prices.

Last week, Hershey, which makes Hershey's Kisses and Reese's peanut butter cups, said it raised prices on its products by an average of 11 percent, a move that it said it expected would hurt sales volumes.

Log blames Ohio execution problems on drug use

A prison log blames a condemned Ohio inmate's past drug use for problems finding a usable vein during an execution attempt that was stopped Tuesday after an unprecedented two hours.

The log of Tuesday's scheduled execution of Romell Broom indicates that executioners made the observation at 3:11 p.m., more than an hour after first trying to find a vein.

"Medical team having problem maintaining an open vein due to past drug use," said the log reviewed by The Associated Press.

Broom said at one point he was a heavy heroin user, but then said at another time that he wasn't, prisons spokeswoman Julie Walburn said Wednesday.

Broom, 53, has been placed in a cell in the infirmary at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville where he is on close watch similar to the constant observation of death row inmates in the three days before an execution.

"It was the right place to keep him," Walburn said. "The less we can transport an offender, the better."

Death row inmates are housed in a Youngstown prison and executed in the death chamber at Lucasville. There's no precedent for housing an inmate whose execution didn't work.

Gov. Ted Strickland on Tuesday issued a one-week reprieve to Broom, who spent more than two hours awaiting execution as technicians searched for a vein strong enough to deliver the three-drug lethal injection. The issue arose three years after Ohio revised its lethal injection protocol due to problems with another inmate's IV.

No Ohio governor has issued a similar last-minute reprieve since the state resumed executions in 1999.

The night before his scheduled execution, Broom told his brother over the phone that he was ready to die.

"He is tired of being in prison and having people tell him what to do everyday," according to the prison log.

Richard Dieter, director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center, said he knows of only one inmate who was subjected to more than one execution.

A first attempt to execute Willie Francis in 1946 by electrocution in Louisiana did not work. He was returned to death row for nearly a year while the U.S. Supreme Court considered whether a second electrocution would be unconstitutional.

Dieter said he expects legal challenges will mean Broom will not face execution again in a week's time.

"I think this is going to be challenged, whether under our standards of decency subjecting someone to multiple executions is cruel and unusual ... whether this is in effect experimenting on human beings, whether or not they're sure what works in Ohio," he said.

Broom was sentenced to die for the rape and slaying of a 14-year-old Tryna Middleton after abducting her in Cleveland in September 1984 as she walked home from a Friday night football game with two friends.

Prisons director Terry Collins said the execution team eventually told him they didn't believe Broom's veins would hold if the execution reached the point when the lethal drugs would be administered.

Collins said he contacted the governor at about 4 p.m. to let him know about the difficulties and request a reprieve.

A medical evaluation Monday had determined that veins in Broom's right arm appeared accessible. Collins said that before Broom's next scheduled execution, the team would try to determine how to resolve the problem encountered Tuesday

About an hour into Tuesday's execution effort, a lawyer for Broom, Tim Sweeney, sent an e-mail and fax to Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer asking him to end the procedure. Sweeney said continuing the effort would deny Broom his constitutional rights against cruel and unusual punishment and violate Ohio law that requires lethal injection to be quick and painless.

The team had started working on Broom, in a holding cell 17 steps from the execution chamber, at about 2 p.m., four hours after his execution was originally scheduled. That initial delay was due to a final federal appeals request.

After about an hour, Broom tried to help. He turned onto his left side, slid rubber tubing up his left arm, began moving the arm up and down and flexed and closed his fingers. The execution team was able to access a vein, but it collapsed when technicians tried to insert saline fluid.

Broom turned onto his back and covered his face with both hands. His torso heaved up and down and his feet shook. He wiped his eyes and was handed a roll of toilet paper, which he used to wipe his brow.

The team tried to insert shunts through veins in Broom's legs, causing him to appear to grimace. A member of the execution team patted him on the back.

Broom, who did not have any witnesses present, requested that one of his attorneys, Adele Shank, come to the witness area. She asked to speak with Broom but was told that once the process started, it's protocol that attorneys can't have contact with their client.

"I want to know what Romell wants," Shank told a prison official, who told her that he was being cooperative.

"He's always cooperative," responded Shank. "I want to know what he wants me to do."

Collins said the difficulty in the process "absolutely, positively" does not shake his faith in the state's lethal injection procedure.

The problems prompted the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio to ask state officials to immediately halt executions.

"Ohio's execution system is fundamentally flawed. If the state is going to take a person's life, they must ensure that it is done as humanely as possible," ACLU Ohio counsel Carrie Davis said. "With three botched executions in as many years, it's clear that the state must stop and review the system entirely before another person is put to death."

Florida has also experienced problems with lethal injection.

The state halted executions after the death of Angel Diaz in December 2006 was delayed for 34 minutes because needles were accidentally pushed through his veins, causing the chemicals to go into his muscles instead. Florida resumed executions in 2008 under new procedures.

Problems accessing veins also delayed Ohio executions in 2006 and 2007.

In 2006, the execution of Joseph Clark was delayed for more than an hour after the team failed to properly attach an IV, an incident that led to changes in Ohio's execution process.

The state also had difficulty finding the veins of inmate Christopher Newton, whose May 2007 execution was delayed nearly two hours.

Since Clark, the state's execution rules have allowed team members to take as much time as they need to find the best vein for the IVs that carry the three lethal chemicals.

Ohio has executed 32 men since Wilford Berry in 1999, an execution slightly delayed also because of problems finding a vein.

___

Associated Press Writer Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus contributed to this report.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

ABA forms lending practices working group

A lending practices working group (LPWG) has been formed by the American Bankers Association (ABA) as part of its efforts to create innovative initiatives that will educate bankers and local communities on combating illegal loans. The LPWG will consist primarily of bankers and state association executives.

"A key to combating illegal lending is education, and our new Lending Practices Working Group will work diligently to find creative ways to educate the banking community and the communities they serve," said Donald G. Ogilvie, ABA executive vice president. "Consumers need to know that the safest place to get a loan is from a regulated financial institution or bank."

The LPWG will also monitor state and local legislation addressing illegal lending practices. Additionally, the group will act in an advisory capacity on consumer education initiatives and partnerships to help communities combat illegal loans.

Members of the new LPWG include William M. Dana, Jr., president of Central Bank, Kansas City; Robert Anderson, senior vice president and general counsel of First Union Corp., Charlotte, N.C.; Laricke Blanchard, vice president and counsel of Citigroup Inc., Washington; Thomas Lamb, senior vice president of PNC Financial Services Group, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Kathleen Murphy, executive director of the Maryland Bankers Association; and Richard Roberto, president of the European-- American Community Development Corp., New York City.

AP IMPACT: US nuke regulators weaken safety rules

LACEY TOWNSHIP, N.J. (AP) — Federal regulators have been working closely with the nuclear power industry to keep the nation's aging reactors operating within safety standards by repeatedly weakening those standards, or simply failing to enforce them, an investigation by The Associated Press has found.

Time after time, officials at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission have decided that original regulations were too strict, arguing that safety margins could be eased without peril, according to records and interviews.

The result? Rising fears that these accommodations by the NRC are significantly undermining safety — and inching the reactors closer to an accident that could harm the public and jeopardize the future of nuclear power in the United States.

Examples abound. When valves leaked, more leakage was allowed — up to 20 times the original limit. When rampant cracking caused radioactive leaks from steam generator tubing, an easier test of the tubes was devised, so plants could meet standards.

Failed cables. Busted seals. Broken nozzles, clogged screens, cracked concrete, dented containers, corroded metals and rusty underground pipes — all of these and thousands of other problems linked to aging were uncovered in the AP's yearlong investigation. And all of them could escalate dangers in the event of an accident.

Yet despite the many problems linked to aging, not a single official body in government or industry has studied the overall frequency and potential impact on safety of such breakdowns in recent years, even as the NRC has extended the licenses of dozens of reactors.

Industry and government officials defend their actions, and insist that no chances are being taken. But the AP investigation found that with billions of dollars and 19 percent of America's electricity supply at stake, a cozy relationship prevails between the industry and its regulator, the NRC.

Records show a recurring pattern: Reactor parts or systems fall out of compliance with the rules. Studies are conducted by the industry and government, and all agree that existing standards are "unnecessarily conservative."

Regulations are loosened, and the reactors are back in compliance.

"That's what they say for everything, whether that's the case or not," said Demetrios Basdekas, an engineer retired from the NRC. "Every time you turn around, they say 'We have all this built-in conservatism.'"

The ongoing crisis at the stricken, decades-old Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear facility in Japan has focused attention on the safety of plants elsewhere in the world; it prompted the NRC to look at U.S. reactors, and a report is due in July.

But the factor of aging goes far beyond the issues posed by the disaster at Fukushima.

Commercial nuclear reactors in the United States were designed and licensed for 40 years. When the first ones were being built in the 1960s and 1970s, it was expected that they would be replaced with improved models long before those licenses expired.

But that never happened. The 1979 accident at Three Mile Island, massive cost overruns, crushing debt and high interest rates ended new construction proposals for several decades.

Instead, 66 of the 104 operating units have been relicensed for 20 more years, mostly with scant public attention. Renewal applications are under review for 16 other reactors.

By the standards in place when they were built, these reactors are old and getting older. As of today, 82 reactors are more than 25 years old.

The AP found proof that aging reactors have been allowed to run less safely to prolong operations. As equipment has approached or violated safety limits, regulators and reactor operators have loosened or bent the rules.

Last year, the NRC weakened the safety margin for acceptable radiation damage to reactor vessels — for a second time. The standard is based on a measurement known as a reactor vessel's "reference temperature," which predicts when it will become dangerously brittle and vulnerable to failure. Over the years, many plants have violated or come close to violating the standard.

As a result, the minimum standard was relaxed first by raising the reference temperature 50 percent, and then 78 percent above the original — even though a broken vessel could spill its radioactive contents into the environment.

"We've seen the pattern," said nuclear safety scientist Dana Powers, who works for Sandia National Laboratories and also sits on an NRC advisory committee. "They're ... trying to get more and more out of these plants."

___

SHARPENING THE PENCIL

The AP collected and analyzed government and industry documents — including some never-before released. The examination looked at both types of reactor designs: pressurized water units that keep radioactivity confined to the reactor building and the less common boiling water types like those at Fukushima, which send radioactive water away from the reactor to drive electricity-generating turbines.

Tens of thousands of pages of government and industry studies were examined, along with test results, inspection reports and regulatory policy statements filed over four decades. Interviews were conducted with scores of managers, regulators, engineers, scientists, whistleblowers, activists, and residents living near the reactors, which are located at 65 sites, mostly in the East and Midwest.

AP reporting teams toured some of the oldest reactors — the unit here at Oyster Creek, near the Atlantic coast 50 miles east of Philadelphia, and two units at Indian Point, 25 miles north of New York City along the Hudson River.

Called "Oyster Creak" by some critics because of its aging problems, this boiling water reactor began running in 1969 and ranks as the country's oldest operating commercial nuclear power plant. Its license was extended in 2009 until 2029, though utility officials announced in December that they'll shut the reactor 10 years earlier rather than build state-ordered cooling towers. Applications to extend the lives of pressurized water units 2 and 3 at Indian Point, each more than 36 years old, are under review by the NRC.

Unprompted, several nuclear engineers and former regulators used nearly identical terminology to describe how industry and government research has frequently justified loosening safety standards to keep aging reactors within operating rules. They call the approach "sharpening the pencil" or "pencil engineering" — the fudging of calculations and assumptions to yield answers that enable plants with deteriorating conditions to remain in compliance.

"Many utilities are doing that sort of thing," said engineer Richard T. Lahey Jr., who used to design nuclear safety systems for General Electric Co., which makes boiling water reactors. "I think we need nuclear power, but we can't compromise on safety. I think the vulnerability is on these older plants."

Added Paul Blanch, an engineer who left the industry over safety issues but later returned to work on solving them: "It's a philosophical position that (federal regulators) take that's driven by the industry and by the economics: What do we need to do to let those plants continue to operate? They somehow sharpen their pencil to either modify their interpretation of the regulations, or they modify their assumptions in the risk assessment."

In public pronouncements, industry and government say aging is well under control. "I see an effort on the part of this agency to always make sure that we're doing the right things for safety. I'm not sure that I see a pattern of staff simply doing things because there's an interest to reduce requirements — that's certainly not the case," NRC chairman Gregory Jaczko said in an interview at agency headquarters in Rockville, Md.

Neil Wilmshurst, director of plant technology for the industry's Electric Power Research Institute, acknowledged that the industry and NRC often collaborate on research that supports rule changes. But he maintained that there's "no kind of misplaced alliance ... to get the right answer."

Yet agency staff, plant operators, and consultants paint a different picture in little-known reports, where evidence of industry-wide problems is striking:

—The AP reviewed 226 preliminary notifications — alerts on emerging safety problems — issued by the NRC since 2005. Wear and tear in the form of clogged lines, cracked parts, leaky seals, rust and other deterioration contributed to at least 26 alerts over the past six years. Other notifications lack detail, but aging also was a probable factor in 113 additional alerts. That would constitute up to 62 percent in all. For example, the 39-year-old Palisades reactor in Michigan shut Jan. 22 when an electrical cable failed, a fuse blew, and a valve stuck shut, expelling steam with low levels of radioactive tritium into the air outside. And a one-inch crack in a valve weld aborted a restart in February at the LaSalle site west of Chicago.

—One 2008 NRC report blamed 70 percent of potentially serious safety problems on "degraded conditions." Some involve human factors, but many stem from equipment wear, including cracked nozzles, loose paint, electrical problems, or offline cooling components.

—Confronted with worn parts that need maintenance, the industry has repeatedly requested — and regulators have often allowed — inspections and repairs to be delayed for months until scheduled refueling outages. Again and again, problems worsened before they were fixed. Postponed inspections inside a steam generator at Indian Point allowed tubing to burst, leading to a radioactive release in 2000. Two years later, cracking was allowed to grow so bad in nozzles on the reactor vessel at the Davis-Besse plant near Toledo, Ohio, that it came within two months of a possible breach, the NRC acknowledged in a report. A hole in the vessel could release radiation into the environment, yet inspections failed to catch the same problem on the replacement vessel head until more nozzles were found to be cracked last year.

___

TIME CRUMBLES THINGS

Nuclear plants are fundamentally no more immune to the incremental abuses of time than our cars or homes: Metals grow weak and rusty, concrete crumbles, paint peels, crud accumulates. Big components like 17-story-tall concrete containment buildings or 800-ton reactor vessels are all but impossible to replace. Smaller parts and systems can be swapped, but still pose risks as a result of weak maintenance and lax regulation or hard-to-predict failures. Even when things are fixed or replaced, the same parts or others nearby often fail later.

Even mundane deterioration at a reactor can carry harsh consequences.

For example, peeling paint and debris can be swept toward pumps that circulate cooling water in a reactor accident. A properly functioning containment building is needed to create air pressure that helps clear those pumps. The fact is, a containment building could fail in a severe accident. Yet the NRC has allowed operators to make safety calculations that assume containment buildings will hold.

In a 2009 letter, Mario V. Bonaca, then-chairman of the NRC's Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, warned that this approach represents "a decrease in the safety margin" and makes a fuel-melting accident more likely. At Fukushima, hydrogen explosions blew apart two of six containment buildings, allowing radiation to escape from overheated fuel in storage pools.

Many photos in NRC archives — some released in response to AP requests under the federal Freedom of Information Act — show rust accumulated in a thick crust or paint peeling in long sheets on untended equipment at nuclear plants. Other breakdowns can't be observed or predicted, even with sophisticated analytic methods — especially for buried, hidden or hard-to-reach parts.

Industry and government reports are packed with troubling evidence of unrelenting wear — and repeated regulatory compromises.

Four areas stand out:

BRITTLE VESSELS: For years, operators have rearranged fuel rods to limit gradual radiation damage to the steel vessels protecting the core and to keep them strong enough to meet safety standards.

It hasn't worked well enough.

Even with last year's weakening of the safety margins, engineers and metal scientists say some plants may be forced to close over these concerns before their licenses run out — unless, of course, new compromises with regulations are made. But the stakes are high: A vessel damaged by radiation becomes brittle and prone to cracking in certain accidents at pressurized water reactors, potentially releasing its radioactive contents into the environment.

LEAKY VALVES: Operators have repeatedly violated leakage standards for valves designed to bottle up radioactive steam in the event of earthquakes and other accidents at boiling water reactors.

Many plants have found they could not adhere to the general standard allowing each of these parts — known as main steam isolation valves — to leak at a rate of no more than 11.5 cubic feet per hour. In 1999, the NRC decided to permit individual plants to seek amendments of up to 200 cubic feet per hour for all four steam valves combined.

But plants keep violating even those higher limits. For example, in 2007, Hatch Unit 2, in Baxley, Ga., reported combined leakage of 574 cubic feet per hour.

CRACKED TUBING: The industry has long known of cracking in steel alloy tubing originally used in the steam generators of pressurized water reactors. Ruptures were rampant in these tubes containing radioactive coolant; in 1993 alone, there were seven. Even today, as many as 18 reactors are still running on old generators.

Problems can arise even in a newer metal alloy, according to a report of a 2008 industry-government workshop.

CORRODED PIPING: Nuclear operators have failed to stop an epidemic of leaks in pipes and other underground equipment in damp settings. The country's nuclear sites have suffered more than 400 accidental radioactive leaks during their history, the activist Union of Concerned Scientists reported in September.

Plant operators have been drilling monitoring wells and patching hidden or buried piping and other equipment for several years to control an escalating outbreak.

Here, too, they have failed. Between 2000 and 2009, the annual number of leaks from underground piping shot up fivefold, according to an internal industry document obtained and analyzed by the AP.

___

CONCERNS OF LONG STANDING

Even as they reassured the public, regulators have been worrying about aging reactors since at least the 1980s, when the first ones were entering only their second decade of operation. A 1984 report for the NRC blamed wear, corrosion, crud and fatigue for more than a third of 3,098 failures of parts or systems within the first 12 years of industry operations; the authors believed the number was actually much higher.

A decade later, in 1994, the NRC reported to Congress that the critical shrouds lining reactor cores were cracked at a minimum of 11 units, including five with extensive damage. The NRC ordered more aggressive maintenance, but an agency report last year said cracking of internal core components — spurred by radiation — remains "a major concern" in boiling water reactors.

A 1995 study by Oak Ridge National Laboratory covering a seven-year period found that aging contributed to 19 percent of scenarios that could have ended in severe accidents.

In 2001, the Union of Concerned Scientists, which does not oppose nuclear power, told Congress that aging problems had shut reactors eight times within 13 months.

And an NRC presentation for an international workshop that same year warned of escalating wear at reactor buildings meant to bottle up radiation during accidents. A total of 66 cases of damage were cited in the presentation, with corrosion reported at a quarter of all containment buildings. In at least two cases — at the two-reactor North Anna site 40 miles northwest of Richmond, Va., and the two-unit Brunswick facility near Wilmington, N.C. — steel containment liners designed to shield the public had rusted through.

And in 2009, a one-third-inch hole was discovered in a liner at Beaver Valley Unit 1 in Shippingport, Pa.

Long-standing, unresolved problems persist with electrical cables, too.

In a 1993 report labeled "official use only," an NRC staffer warned that electrical parts throughout plants were subject to dangerous age-related breakdowns unforeseen by the agency. Almost a fifth of cables failed in testing that simulated the effects of 40 years of wear. The report warned that as a result, reactor core damage could occur much more often than expected.

Fifteen years later, the problem appeared to have worsened. An NRC report warned in 2008 that rising numbers of electrical cables are failing with age, prompting temporary shutdowns and degrading safety. Agency staff tallied 269 known failures over the life of the industry.

Two industry-funded reports obtained by the AP said that managers and regulators have worried increasingly about the reliability of sometimes wet, hard-to-reach underground cables over the past five-to-10 years. One of the reports last year acknowledged many electrical-related aging failures at plants around the country.

"Multiple cable circuits may fail when called on to perform functions affecting safety," the report warned.

___

EATEN AWAY FROM WITHIN

Few aging problems have been more challenging than chemical corrosion from within.

In one of the industry's worst accidents, a corroded pipe burst at Virginia's Surry 2 reactor in 1986 and showered workers with scalding steam, killing four.

In summer 2001, the NRC was confronted with a new problem: Corrosive chemicals were cracking nozzles on reactors. But the NRC let operators delay inspections to coincide with scheduled outages. Inspection finally took place in February 2002 at the Davis-Besse unit in Ohio.

What workers found shocked the industry.

They discovered extensive cracking and a place where acidic boron had spurted from the reactor and eaten a gouge as big as a football. When the problem was found, just a fraction of an inch of inner lining remained. An NRC analysis determined that the vessel head could have burst within two months — what former NRC Commissioner Peter Bradford has called a "near rupture" which could have released large amounts of radiation into the environment.

In 2001-3 alone, at least 10 plants developed these cracks, according to an NRC analysis.

Industry defenders blame human failings at Davis-Besse. Owner FirstEnergy Corp. paid a $28 million fine, and courts convicted two plant employees of hiding the deterioration. NRC spokesman Scott Burnell declared that the agency "learned from the incident and improved resident inspector training and knowledge-sharing to ensure that such a situation is never repeated."

Yet on the same March day last year that Burnell's comments were released, Davis-Besse workers again found dried boron on the nozzles of a replacement vessel head, indicating more leaks. Inspecting further, they again found cracks in 24 of 69 nozzles.

"We were not expecting this issue," said plant spokesman Todd Schneider.

In August, the operator applied for a 20-year license extension. Under pressure from the NRC, the company has agreed to replace the replacement head in October.

As far back as the 1990s, the industry and NRC also were well aware that the steel-alloy tubing in many steam generators was subject to chemical corrosion. It could crack over time, releasing radioactive gases that can bypass the containment building. If too much spurts out, there may be too little water to cool down the reactor, prompting a core melt.

In 1993, NRC personnel reported seven outright ruptures inside the generators, several forced outages per year, and some complete replacements. Personnel at the Catawba plant near Charlotte, N.C., found more than 8,000 corroded tubes — more than half its total.

For plants with their original generators, "there is no end in sight to the steam generator tube degradation problems," a top agency manager declared. NRC staffers warned: "Crack depth is difficult to measure reliably and the crack growth rate is difficult to determine."

Yet no broad order was issued for shutdowns to inspect generators.

Instead, the staff began to talk to operators about how to deal with the standard that no cracks could go deeper than 40 percent through the tube wall.

In 1995, the NRC staff put out alternative criteria that let reactors keep running if they could reach positive results with remote checks known as "eddy-currents tests." The new test standard gave more breathing room to reactors.

According to a 2001 report by the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, the staff "acknowledged that there would be some possibility that cracks of objectionable depth might be overlooked and left in the steam generator for an additional operating cycle." The alternative, the report said, would be to repair or remove potentially many tubes from service.

NRC engineer Joe Hopenfeld, who had worked previously in the industry, challenged this approach at the time from within the agency. He warned that multiple ruptures in corroded tubing could release radiation. The NRC said radiation would be confined.

Hopenfeld now says this conclusion wasn't based on solid analysis but "wishful thinking" and research meant to reach a certain conclusion — another instance of "sharpening the pencil."

"It was a hard problem to solve, and they did not want to say it was a problem, because if they really said it was a problem, they would have to shut down a lot of reactors."

___

AGE IS NO ISSUE, SAYS INDUSTRY

With financial pressures mounting in the 1990s to extend the life of aging reactors, new NRC calculations using something called the "Master Curve" put questionable reactor vessels back into the safe zone.

A 1999 NRC review of the Master Curve, used to analyze metal toughness, noted that energy deregulation had put financial pressure on nuclear plants. It went on: "So utility executives are considering new operational scenarios, some of which were unheard of as little as five years ago: extending the licensed life of the plant beyond 40 years." As a result, it said, the industry and the NRC were considering "refinements" of embrittlement calculations "with an eye to reducing known over-conservatisms."

Asked about references to economic pressures, NRC spokesman Burnell said motivations are irrelevant if a technology works.

Former NRC commissioner Peter Lyons said, "There certainly is plenty of research ... to support a relaxation of the conservativisms that had been built in before. I don't see that as decreasing safety. I see that as an appropriate standard."

Though some parts are too big and too expensive to replace, industry defenders also point out that many others are routinely replaced over the years.

Tony Pietrangelo, chief nuclear officer of the industry's Nuclear Energy Institute, acknowledges that you'd expect to see a growing failure rate at some point — "if we didn't replace and do consistent maintenance."

In a sense, then, supporters of aging nukes say an old reactor is essentially a collection of new parts.

"When a plant gets to be 40 years old, about the only thing that's 40 years old is the ink on the license," said NRC chief spokesman Eliot Brenner. "Most, if not all of the major components, will have been changed out."

Oyster Creek spokesman David Benson said the reactor "is as safe today as when it was built."

Yet plant officials have been trying to arrest rust on its 100-foot-high, radiation-blocking steel drywell for decades. The problem was declared solved long ago, but a rust patch was found again in late 2008. Benson said the new rust was only the size of a dime, but acknowledged there was "some indication of water getting in."

In an effort to meet safety standards, aging reactors have been forced to come up with backfit on top of backfit.

As Ivan Selin, a retired NRC chairman, put it: "It's as if we were all driving Model T's today and trying to bring them up to current mileage standards."

For example, the state of New Jersey — not the NRC — had ordered Oyster Creek to build cooling towers to protect sea life in nearby Barnegat Bay. Owner Exelon Corp. said that would cost about $750 million and force it to close the reactor — 20-year license extension notwithstanding. Even with the announcement to close in 2019, Oyster Creek will have been in operation for 50 years.

Many of the safety changes have been justified by something called "risk-informed" analysis, which the industry has employed widely since the 1990s: Regulators set aside a strict check list applied to all systems and focus instead on features deemed to carry the highest risk.

But one flaw of risk-informed analysis is that it doesn't explicitly account for age. An older reactor is not viewed as inherently more unpredictable than a younger one. Ed Lyman, a physicist with the Union of Concerned Scientists, says risk-informed analysis has usually served "to weaken regulations, rather than strengthen them."

Even without the right research, the NRC has long reserved legal wiggle room to enforce procedures, rules and standards as it sees fit. A 2008 position paper by the industry group EPRI said the approach has brought "a more tractable enforcement process and a significant reduction in the number of cited violations."

But some safety experts call it "tombstone regulation," implying that problems fester until something goes very wrong. "Until there are tombstones, they don't regulate," said Blanch, the longtime industry engineer who became a whistleblower.

Barry Bendar, a database administrator who lives one mile from Oyster Creek, said representatives of Exelon were asked at a public meeting in 2009 if the plant had a specific life span.

"Their answer was, 'No, we can fix it, we can replace, we can patch,'" said Bendar. "To me, everything reaches an end of its life span."

___

The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

CBS Doubles Bandwidth for NCAA Streams

NEW YORK - While CBS Corp. is doubling the amount of bandwidth available for viewing NCAA tournament games this year, it will still restrict the number of viewers to keep the system running smoothly.

The video streams proved very popular last year. CBS is also beefing up the image quality for the video and making the online video player larger, which will take up some of the added bandwidth.

Joe Ferreira, the vice president of programming at CBS SportsLine, says the site is aiming to accommodate up to 300,000 viewers at any given time, up from around 175,000 simultaneous viewers last year.

Once that limit is reached, fans will be diverted to online "waiting rooms" until enough other users leave to allow new ones in.

CBS has been offering online viewing of the NCAA basketball games since 2003, but this is only the second year that they will be offered for free and supported with advertising. In previous years, fans had to pay for a subscription to view the games.

Steve Snyder, chief operating officer of CBS's digital media unit, said 2006 was a "year of learning" for selling advertising during the games. This year, CBS has a tighter grasp of how much ad time will be available and how to sell it, Snyder said.

Showing the NCAA games online is starting to turn into a real business for CBS. With as many as four different games being played simultaneously during the early rounds of the tournament, offering video streams over the Internet allows CBS another way to make money.

In order to keep their affiliated stations happy, however, CBS has to observe local "blackout" rules that prevent Internet users in a given area from watching a game online that is already appearing on their local CBS-affiliated station. That prevents users and advertising dollars from being leeched away.

There are a total of 56 such "out-of-market" games during the first three rounds of the tournament, but after accounting for the blackout rules most viewers would have a choice of about 37 games, CBS said.

CBS took in about $4 million in online advertising from the games last year, and Chief Executive Leslie Moonves told investors last month that the company expects to double those revenues and increase profits sixfold, but he didn't provide an exact profit figure.

The Hartford, a financial services company, has signed up to buy ads online for the first time this year, though the company declined to say how much it's spending.

"As consumers change their media consumption habits, we're constantly looking for ways to get our message in front of them," said Michael Johnson, vice president of advertising at The Hartford.

Only the first three rounds of play are being offered online, with many of the games concentrated during the afternoons of Thursday the 15th and Friday the 16th.

Ferreira calls those times a "sweet spot" for video streaming since many fans will still be at work, often with access to the high-speed Internet connections required to watch the video.

Borrowing a trick from computer games, CBS will offer a "Boss" button on the player that viewers can hit if they see their supervisor coming, which causes a fake spreadsheet to pop up and silences the audio feed.

The ruse could backfire, however, if bosses take the time to actually read the items listed on the spreadsheet, which purports to list, among other things, the millions of pounds of pizza, peanuts and other snack foods, including sushi, that were consumed while watching sporting events in 2006.

As for whether CBS will be encouraging slacking off at work, "employees and employers across the country are going to make individual decisions about what they do," Ferreira says. "We think it's a great perk."

In case some employers disagree, CBS does explain in a Q&A page on its Web site how companies can block online access to the video player.

---

On the Net:

http://www.ncaasports.com/mmod/faq

La. Governor Outraged Over Faulty Pumps

NEW ORLEANS - Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco lashed out at the Army Corps of Engineers on Wednesday for installing defective pumps at three major drainage canals just before the start of last summer's hurricane season.

"This could put a lot of our people in jeopardy," Blanco said. "It begs the question: Are we really safe?"

She and U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana called for a congressional investigation into how the Corps allowed it to happen.

"If they can't design, build and install a pump that works, then maybe they shouldn't be doing any of the work," Landrieu said.

Citing internal documents, The Associated Press reported Tuesday that the Corps installed the 34 pumps last year in a rush to fix the city's flood defenses, despite warnings from one of its experts that the machinery was defective and likely to fail in a storm.

At the same time, the Corps, the White House and state officials were telling residents that it was safe to come back to New Orleans, which was devastated in August 2005 when Hurricane Katrina breached the city's floodwalls.

On Wednesday, Donald Powell, the administration's Gulf Coast hurricane recovery czar, said that he was never shown the memo, and that assurances he made that New Orleans was as safe as or safer than it was before Katrina were based on information he got from the Corps.

"We were asking the Corps to do the job as fast as possible to get the condition of the levee back to make it as safe as possible," Powell said.

Because the 2006 hurricane season was mild, the new pumps were never put to the test.

The Corps and the politically connected manufacturer of the equipment, Moving Water Industries Corp. of Deerfield Beach, Fla., are still struggling to get the 34 pumps, designed and built under a $26.6 million contract, working properly.

The pumps have been plagued by excessive vibration, overheated engines, broken hoses and blown gaskets.

"You want to build confidence, but you have to tell it like it is," said Gwen Bierria, 65, who is rebuilding her home with her husband next to one of two canals that were breached during Katrina.

"It's like being pregnant; sooner or later it's going to show," she said. "And Katrina was a big-time show."

MWI is owned by J. David Eller and his sons. Eller was once a business partner of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush in a venture called Bush-El that marketed MWI pumps. And Eller has donated about $128,000 to politicians, the vast majority of it to the Republican Party, since 1996, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

"The decision to use these guys was not political; there was no connection there," said Frederick Young, a former Corps project manager who oversaw much of the work with the pumps.

When the decision was made to go to larger-diameter hydraulic pumps on the canals, MWI was the only "manufacturer that was agreeable to our timetable" of getting the pumps in place by June 1, Young said. Young said he had recommended using dozens of smaller pumps that had already been proven to work.

The Corps kept the memo detailing problems with the pumps within the ranks, Young said. Corps officials in New Orleans did not return telephone calls seeking comment.

William R. Scherer Jr., an attorney for MWI, said that the company's job had serious constraints and that the Corps changed its specifications, requiring an overhaul of the pumps.

"All I know is that the pumps that were installed met the capacity requirements; they perform as designed if called upon," he said. "We believe the people in New Orleans benefited by MWI being there, both by the portable and the temporary pumps."

The U.S. Justice Department sued MWI in 2002, accusing it of fraudulently helping Nigeria obtain $74 million in taxpayer-backed loans for overpriced and unnecessary water-pump equipment. The case has yet to be resolved.

As for whether the city was as safe as the Corps claimed, Powell said: "We got through a hurricane season without a hurricane, so we didn't have to answer that question."

But he said residents should not panic as the new hurricane season approaches. "The Corps is working as fast it can to get the systems back up. The levee system is better than it has ever been," he said.

The Corps said it decided to press ahead with installation of the pumps because some pumping capacity was better than none.

The 34 pumps were installed in the drainage canals that take water from this bowl-shaped, below-sea-level city and deposit it in Lake Pontchartrain. They represented a new ring of protection that was added to New Orleans' flood defenses after Katrina. The city also relies on miles of levees and hundreds of other pumps in various locations.

---

Associated Press writer Melinda Deslatte contributed to this story from Baton Rouge.

GOP aides: Powell to be State chief

AUSTIN, Texas President-elect Bush will name retired Gen. ColinPowell as his secretary of state today, making the popular Gulf Warleader his first Cabinet choice.

"I think America will be pleased," Bush said in a question-and-answer session Friday at his Texas ranch after he had lunch with Sen.John Breaux (D-La.).

Breaux had been rumored as a possible Bush Cabinet choice, perhapsenergy secretary, but after lunch, Bush said the Democrat did notwant to leave the Senate, which will be split 50-50 in January.

Bush was to follow up Powell's nomination Sunday by announcing hisWhite House staff, including Stanford University administratorCondoleezza Rice as national security adviser, GOP officials said.Rice served in his father's administration.

Bush will then leave for Washington for a three-day visit.

Details, Page 12

Moody's cuts GE's top credit rating

General Electric Co. lost its top credit rating from Moody's Investors Service because of higher risks at the conglomerate's struggling GE Capital lending unit.

The expected move follows a similar downgrade of GE this month by ratings agency Standard & Poor's.

Moody's lowered its ratings for GE and GE Capital two notches to "Aa2" from "Aaa." It said the outlook for both is stable. The downgrades mean GE will likely pay higher costs to borrow money.

GE Capital, which recently made up nearly half of GE's overall earnings, has been hammered by the financial crisis. GE said last week that the finance unit could end up just breaking even this year because of higher losses on loans for credit cards, overseas mortgages, big equipment and commercial property.

GE had forecast earlier that GE Capital earnings of around $5 billion.

Moody's said that GE's industrial businesses, which include energy equipment, machines for health care and jet engines, would still likely warrant the top credit rating on their own.

But the lower overall rating was warranted because of the volatility of GE Capital's earnings and questions over its funding, according to Moody's. As a stand-alone entity, GE Capital would have a much lower credit rating.

GE said in a statement that the downgrade, along with the S&P cut, would not have a significant impact on its operations or funding.

The company noted that both ratings agencies gave it a "stable" outlook, meaning a further downgrade is not likely in the short term.

"This action was not unexpected in the current environment, and while no one likes a downgrade, Moody's, like S&P, confirmed the fundamental soundness of GE Capital and the strength our industrial businesses," GE Chairman and CEO Jeff Immelt said in a statement.

Shares of GE rose 69 cents, or 7.2 percent, to $10.23 Monday.

Caption Only

NO TEXT

Color Photo: Tom Cruze, Sun-Times / STEALING THUNDER: ASTROS 2, CUBS 0North Siders' power out in storm-shortened game, Wood nears return61-62: Lightning cracks above Wrigley Field during a thunderstorm that delayed play in the top of the sixth inning and caused tornado-warning sirens to sound in the neighborhood. ;

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

CIVILIAN SKILLS SERVE WARRIOR-CITIZEN WELL IN IRAQ

ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Before deploying to Iraq, ISG Karen Henderson, a 20-year Army Reserve veteran and member of the 80th Division headquartered in Richmond, Va., expected to train Iraqi Soldiers in combat arms in the hopes of allowing U.S. Soldiers to come home quicker. Instead, she ended up working at the Minister of Defense level of the Iraqi government.

When Henderson arrived in Iraq in July 2005, she was assigned to administrative work instead of"combat arms training due to cultural sensitivities surrounding women in the country. However, 5 months later, the Army leadership was looking for Soldiers with communication network experience and learned that Henderson was an expert in this area due to her civilian job as a consultant with BearingPoint in Springfield, Va.

"For the remainder of my deployment, I served as the only enlisted adviser for the Iraqi Director General of Communications, who serves as part of the Ministry of Defense. As an advisor, I worked with the Iraqis and U.S. military to evaluate and supply the Iraqi Army with the needed communications to be a successful military force," Henderson said.

During her deployment, she was involved in approximately 30 convoy missions. During one mission in which Henderson was riding in the second Humvee of a five vehicle convoy, an Iraqi insurgent struck the lead Humvee with a minivan. Although Henderson and her team were not aware if the vehicle was loaded with explosives, they prepared as if it was. "You could tell by the severity of the attack and the actions of the insurgent, it was time to go into a defensive mode," Henderson said.

After the convoy commander accessed the damage and ordered a 360 degree perimeter set up for security in preparation for an insurgent attack, the minivan did not explode.

Using her combat lifesaver training skills she learned after being mobilized, Henderson tended to the wounds of a U.S. Soldier and the insurgent, who were injured. She prepared alt wounds for transport and the two were medivac'd out by helicopter.

For her actions as a combat lifesaver during the insurgent attack on her convoy, Henderson was awarded the Joint Service Achievement Medal. For her tour of duty and work at the Iraqi Ministry of Defense she was awarded the Bronze Star.

"I feel privileged to have served with the brave men and women of Iraq that I worked with. I am grateful," Henderson said.

[Sidebar]

ISG Karen Henderson hangs a wireless antenna on the defense phone network tower to connect the Iraqi 7th Division Headquaters to the Iraqi Defense Network.

[Author Affiliation]

By Paul Adams

Army Reserve Public Affairs

Pakistan poll campaign intensifies as Musharraf accused of wanting docile premier

Pakistan's election campaign intensified Monday with the three top political leaders traveling across the country to rally supporters and lash out at President Pervez Musharraf just two weeks before a hard-fought parliamentary poll.

The elections, demanded by Pakistan's Western allies, are seen as a crucial step in restoring democracy here after Musharraf's Nov. 3 declaration of emergency rule and his crackdown on the judiciary, political opponents and the independent media. Musharraf lifted the state of emergency after six weeks.

Former prime ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif, who both returned from exile for the campaign, scheduled rallies in their opponents' home districts Monday in an effort to poach voters from each other. Both candidates, who pledged to work together against Musharraf, were hoping to win enough seats to loosen the former army chief's grip on power.

Sadiq ul-Farooq, a leader of Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-N party, said Musharraf was pushing for a ruling party victory in the Jan. 8 election to preserve his authority.

"Musharraf would prefer a docile prime minister to legitimize all of the actions he had taken after imposing emergency rule," ul-Farooq said.

"Only people like Pervez Elahi can serve in this job, and President Musharraf is fully backing him," he told The Associated Press. Elahi, the candidate of the Pakistan Muslim League-Q, has emerged as a potential threat to win the premiership.

Sharif, who has been banned from running for office himself, was to address voters on behalf of his party's candidates Monday at a rally in southern Sindh province, Bhutto's home region. Bhutto traveled Monday to Sharif's eastern Punjab province for a large rally. Elahi was campaigning in the city of Jehlum, near his home district.

Both Sharif and Bhutto have accused Musharraf of rigging the vote in favor of the ruling party.

On Sunday, Bhutto accused Musharraf's government of failing to crush Islamic militants, days after a suicide bombing killed 56 people during prayers in a mosque in the northwest.

Hours after Bhutto spoke, a suicide bomb attack on a military convoy killed five civilians and four soldiers in Pakistan's troubled northwest, an army statement said. It said 13 civilians and 10 soldiers were also wounded.

Though Pakistan is a key U.S. ally in the war on terror, Taliban and al-Qaida fighters have extended their influence over parts of the northwest in the past two years, and have launched numerous suicide attacks in recent months.

On Friday a suicide bomber, apparently targeting former Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao, blew himself up in a village mosque. Sherpao said the blast killed 56 people. As interior minister, Sherpao _ now a candidate in the election _ helped lead the government's fight against militants.

Leader of S. African Opposition Retires

CAPE TOWN, South Africa - The leader of South Africa's main opposition party stepped down Saturday after 13 years of relentless criticism of the ruling African National Congress, calling for his successor to take on crime, HIV/AIDS and other problems besetting the country.

Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon, 50, was known for modernizing the party and decrying government corruption and inefficiency, domestic policy weaknesses and foreign policy failures.

Leon, who like many party members is white, also constantly criticized the government's affirmative action policy, which gave preference to blacks disadvantaged by apartheid.

Saying it was time to make way for new blood before general elections in 2009, Leon called on the Democratic Alliance to "stand up against the new racial nationalists ... revive the winning spirit of the rainbow nation, which the politics of racial transformation has eclipsed."

However, Leon himself was criticized for alienating potential black and mixed-race voters, as well as more progressive whites who perceived him to be arrogant and intolerant.

"There is a broad layer of liberal intelligentsia who have been really turned off by Tony Leon," political analyst Adam Habib said.

Leon also had a frosty relationship with President Thabo Mbeki and was openly scornful of many Cabinet members. At a farewell meeting Thursday, journalists had to ask the two men to sit closer together for photographs, even though Leon later described the talks as cordial.

Leon told more than 1,100 delegates at a congress near Johannesburg that the challenges facing South Africa were greater than when he launched his political career 21 years ago.

"Crime haunts the streets of our nation in a way we could never have imagined it would. HIV/AIDS was a disease that few South Africans had; today it kills hundreds of thousands every year," he said.

"Our economy is growing, but more than 8 million South Africans are out of work. Education is actually in worse shape today than it was under apartheid and investment levels are still much lower than we need them to be."

Denmark sentences Greenpeace activists for stunt

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — A Danish court on Monday handed two-week suspended sentences to 11 Greenpeace activists who gatecrashed a climate summit banquet in Copenhagen two years ago.

The activists unfurled a banner at a December 2009 banquet of world leaders after gaining access to the building in a limousine equipped with a false police light that joined a convoy of vehicles en route to the venue.

The Copenhagen City Court found the protesters guilty of trespassing, falsifying a license plate and impersonating a police officer. The Greenpeace Nordic office in the Danish capital, which planned the stunt, was fined 75,000 kroner ($14,500).

The activists included demonstrators from Spain, Switzerland, Norway and Netherlands.

In Belgium, 10 Greenpeace protesters were given one-month suspended sentences in March for a similar stunt at a 2009 European Union climate summit.

The activists got into the Brussels meeting by arriving in a shiny Mercedes, using fake accreditation and wore suits to blend in with European leaders. In front of dozens of cameras and journalists a demonstrator read from a text urging more EU action on climate change before being whisked away.

Romanian minister fired after wedding copter ride

A Romanian Cabinet minister was fired Tuesday after he used a government helicopter to make it to his wedding on time.

Romanian Prime Minister Calin Popescu Tariceanu fired Education Minister Cristian Adomnitei, 33, after it emerged that Adomnitei and another minister had attended a government meeting in Bucharest on Saturday, then rode the helicopter 300 miles (485 kilometers) to Iasi, where Adomnitei was getting married that day.

Using government property for personal reasons is forbidden in Romania. The other minister was traveling on government business.

However, Tariceanu insisted later Tuesday that he fired Adomnitei, who is also a legislator, because he joined a majority of legislators in Parliament last week who voted to raise teachers' salaries by 50 percent.

Tariceanu says the country can't afford that, and Adomnitei later apologized for his vote.

Adomnitei also has been criticized while serving as education minister for a series of gaffes, including speaking Romanian incorrectly and not knowing how many stars are on the European Union flag.

Malaysia PM: Anwar threats to seize power a bluff

Malaysia's leader on Thursday dismissed his rival Anwar Ibrahim's threat to seize power as a "bluff," but ruled out imposing emergency measures if street violence breaks out to protest a sodomy accusation against the opposition figurehead.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi also promised justice would be served in the sodomy case against Anwar, the second time he is facing such an accusation.

While denying any government conspiracy, Abdullah indicated that the complaint to police made by a 23-year-old former aide of being sodomized by Anwar would not be taken lightly.

"This man pleads for justice," Abdullah said. "We care about (Anwar) more than we care about this man? That is very odd. He needs justice; that is what he is crying for. We cannot ignore that."

The comment indicated that authorities would not be slowed down by a medical report by a doctor who examined the male aide on June 28. The doctor found no evidence of sodomy, and sent the aide to a government hospital for a second opinion.

The result of the second examination is not known, but the aide made the police complaint the same day.

Anwar says the charges were fabricated to stop him from challenging the government. After leading the opposition to spectacular results in the March general elections, Anwar has been threatening to bring down the government with parliamentary defections.

Asked whether Anwar was bluffing, Abdullah said that "so far, it is going toward that direction."

"Whether he bluffs or not (it seems) he wants to keep his popularity afloat all the time like a stock market share," Abdullah added.

He ruled out imposing emergency rule if Anwar's supporters hold street protests to denounce the latest accusation.

"I don't think we are going down that road; definitely not," Abdullah said. "Why should (protests) get out of hand? That would be very unbecoming of the party that intends to be the government of Malaysia, to take laws into their own hands and demonstrate as they wish."

Abdullah said he believes Anwar is trying to bribe government lawmakers to defect.

"I've heard so much stories, many stories of his buying, tempting them with monetary offers to cross over to the opposition," said Abdullah, whose ruling coalition holds a slim 30-seat majority over Anwar's opposition alliance in the 222-member Parliament.

"If it were true that money were being offered, to me it would be the worst form of corruption," Abdullah said.

He claimed that a majority of ruling party member are loyal to him. Asked if he has the support of 80 to 90 percent of party bosses, he said: "Certainly around that area."

Anwar denies the bribery accusation.

The sodomy accusation has revived memories of how Anwar was ousted from the Cabinet in 1998 after serving as former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's deputy for five years. Anwar was then accused of sodomizing his family driver and abusing his power to cover up the deed.

Anwar was convicted of both charges and sentenced to 15 years in prison, despite his claim that he was framed to quash his challenge to Mahathir. Malaysia's highest court freed Anwar in 2004 when it overturned his sodomy conviction.

The corruption conviction, however, barred him from contesting the March elections. The ban expired in April, and he is expected to contest a by-election soon in a bid to return to Parliament.

Estonia holds Albania to 0-0 draw in friendly

Estonia held Albania to a 0-0 draw Saturday in an international friendly.

The best chance for the hosts came in the 44th minute when Kristen Viikmae broke free close to edge of the penalty area and shot powerfully straight at Albania goalkeeper Isli Hidi.

Albania had a few opportunities to take the lead. The best chance came in the 23rd minute when Elis Bakaj sent a scissor-kick close to the penalty area but the shot missed the net by a large margin.

___

Lineups:

Estonia: Sergei Pareiko, Tihhon Sisov (Enar Jaager, 46), Taavi Rahn (Ragnar Klavan, 46), Raio Piiroja, Dmitri Kruglov, Ats Purje (Alo Barengrub, 88), Aleksandr Dmitrijev, Konstantin Vassiljev, Joel Lindpere, Kaimar Saag (Vladimir Voskoboinikov, 60), Kristen Viikmae (Andrei Sidorenkov, 46).

Albania: Isli Hidi, Armend Dallku (Andi Lila, 90), Lorik Cana, Debatik Curri, Ansi Agolli, Klodian Duro, Ervin Skela, Jahmir Hyka, Elis Bakaj (Emiljan Vila, 71), Gilman Lika (Muzaka Gjergji, 75), Hamdi Salihi (Edmond Kapllani, 75).

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Tillman: Storm damage resembles `war zone'

After damage by winds as high as 88 m.p.h. - winds so powerful they uprooted old trees, blowing them onto the tops of houses, and cars - Ald. Dorothy Tillman (3rd), who was joined by the city's top brass, Sunday said parts of her ward resembled a "war zone."

Tillman asked for federal emergency funds to help clean up and completely restore the services that were knocked out as a result of two days of very stormy weather.

According to Roderick Drew, a mayoral aide, city officials will meet today with state authorities including representatives from the governor's office to tour the damaged areas "to see if they will ask for federal funding."

Over the holiday weekend, some of Chicago's neighborhoods like the areas in Tillman's ward around 51st and Princeton and 45th and Marshfield, known as the Back-Of-The-Yards community, were dotted with police cars and a bevy of downed live electrical wires.

Inspecting the damage with Tillman were: Cortez Trotter, director of Chicago's Emergency Management and Communications System (OEMC), Police Supt. Terry Hillard, and ComEd President/CEO Frank Clark who told the Chicago Defender across Illinois more than 140,000 customers lost their services with the bulk, or 50,000, in Rockford. As of Sunday, however, 90 percent of the services had been restored.

Tillman was also joined by John Hooker, president of ComEd who said that restoring services which would normally have been a two-and-a-half day job, is being accomplished with Tillman were Chicago Fire Department Commissioner James Joyce, Streets and Sanitation Commissioner Al Sanchez, Ron Carlson, of the Illinois Emergency Management, and many others.

Clark told the ??? "We got it [the number ??? services] down from ??? 70,000, but [Sunday's] ??? resulted in the loss ??? another 40,000 customers. ??? said as of Sunday, there are between 80,000 to 90,000 without service including 20,000 (across Northern Illinois) from the last wave of storms.

Photograph (A home damaged in storm)

YANKS SURVIVE SCARY NIGHT ON TOP OF WILD-CARD HILL

Last night, the Yankees proved they are survivors, which is notto say that Buck Showalter's club will endure and finish on top ofthe wild-card race. It's just saying that, somehow, they survivedon a night when they easily could have come away looking bad.

To beat the Indians, 9-2, at Jacobs Field, for their sixthstraight win and Showalter's 300th as manager, the Yankees had tosurvive a number of dilemmas, things the final margin would neversuggest.

Before they laid it on with six runs in the ninth, the Yankeeshad to survive Darryl Strawberry's ungraceful debut in left field.Strawberry misplayed two balls in one inning and it cost theYankees only one run.

They had to survive five walks by starter Scott Kamieniecki,who had the bullpen warming in the third but hung on for sixinnings.

They had to survive a physical and mental error by TonyFernandez, who, with the score 3-2, botched Alvaro Espinoza'sseventh-inning ground ball, then sulked while Espinoza took second.Relievers Bob MacDonald and Bob Wickman pitched Fernandez off thehook.

And they had to survive one final scare courtesy of Steve Howe,who, with a one-run lead and a man on base in the eighth, gave up athreatening-looking, warning-track fly ball to Eddie Murray.

"The Indians didn't play real well," said Kamieniecki, whoevened his record at 5-5. "And we didn't play well, either. We justplayed well enough to win the game."

The Yankees put the game away in the ninth. Paul O'Neill had atwo-run homer, Wade Boggs had a two-run single.

So now the Yankees, who put David Cone on the mound fortonight's series finale, are very much alive and can't help butthink, if they can snatch the wild card, they have a very goodchance of going to the World Series, what with the way they'vehandled the Indians lately. The Yankees have now won four straightfrom the team with baseball's best record.

"We're not thinking about down the road right now," saidShowalter. "We're thinking about getting to the postseason andnothing else.

"Now that we're ahead in the race, we don't want to flip-flopback and forth -- go ahead, fall behind," Showalter added.

The win guaranteed the Yankees would hold onto theirfirst-place standing in the wild-card race, a half-game ahead ofthe Mariners, who clobbered the Twins, 14-3.

"It was as much a team effort as any win we've had this year,"said Showalter. "A lot of people stepped up and did the job."

If there was one key moment for the Yankees, it may haveoccurred in the third, after Strawberry dropped a fly ball for atwo-base error and Kamieniecki gave up a home run to Kenny Loftonthat put the Tribe ahead, 2-1. With two out in that inning,Strawberry waved awkwardly at Albert Belle's line-drive double asit sailed over his head, and Kamieniecki walked two men to load thebases.

Paul Sorrento lined a would-be double down the third-base linethat Boggs speared with a full dive, saving two, maybe three runs.After that, Kamieniecki got his legs and, it seemed, the Yankeeswere able to survive everything that came their way.

"They could have easily scored two or three more that inningand really put us in a hole," Kamieniecki said.

"I was sort of like a boxer, getting off the ropes there. ThenI got to start new the next inning."

The Indians played possibly their ugliest game of the year,committing a season-high five errors -- two of them during NewYork's six-run ninth inning.

Bernie Williams started the ninth with a walk, and O'Neillfollowed with a home run, his 20th, off Julian Tavarez. Sorrentolet Ruben Sierra's ground ball get through for an error, and Sierraeventually scored on an error by right fielder Manny Ramirez. JimLeyritz drove in a run with a groundout, and Boggs capped theinning with a two-run single.

"I'm willing to file it and forget it," Indians manager MikeHargrove said. "I don't think those guys will forget it. They(Indians) don't take embarrassment lightly, and tonight wasembarrassing for all of us."

YANKS SURVIVE SCARY NIGHT ON TOP OF WILD-CARD HILL

Last night, the Yankees proved they are survivors, which is notto say that Buck Showalter's club will endure and finish on top ofthe wild-card race. It's just saying that, somehow, they survivedon a night when they easily could have come away looking bad.

To beat the Indians, 9-2, at Jacobs Field, for their sixthstraight win and Showalter's 300th as manager, the Yankees had tosurvive a number of dilemmas, things the final margin would neversuggest.

Before they laid it on with six runs in the ninth, the Yankeeshad to survive Darryl Strawberry's ungraceful debut in left field.Strawberry misplayed two balls in one inning and it cost theYankees only one run.

They had to survive five walks by starter Scott Kamieniecki,who had the bullpen warming in the third but hung on for sixinnings.

They had to survive a physical and mental error by TonyFernandez, who, with the score 3-2, botched Alvaro Espinoza'sseventh-inning ground ball, then sulked while Espinoza took second.Relievers Bob MacDonald and Bob Wickman pitched Fernandez off thehook.

And they had to survive one final scare courtesy of Steve Howe,who, with a one-run lead and a man on base in the eighth, gave up athreatening-looking, warning-track fly ball to Eddie Murray.

"The Indians didn't play real well," said Kamieniecki, whoevened his record at 5-5. "And we didn't play well, either. We justplayed well enough to win the game."

The Yankees put the game away in the ninth. Paul O'Neill had atwo-run homer, Wade Boggs had a two-run single.

So now the Yankees, who put David Cone on the mound fortonight's series finale, are very much alive and can't help butthink, if they can snatch the wild card, they have a very goodchance of going to the World Series, what with the way they'vehandled the Indians lately. The Yankees have now won four straightfrom the team with baseball's best record.

"We're not thinking about down the road right now," saidShowalter. "We're thinking about getting to the postseason andnothing else.

"Now that we're ahead in the race, we don't want to flip-flopback and forth -- go ahead, fall behind," Showalter added.

The win guaranteed the Yankees would hold onto theirfirst-place standing in the wild-card race, a half-game ahead ofthe Mariners, who clobbered the Twins, 14-3.

"It was as much a team effort as any win we've had this year,"said Showalter. "A lot of people stepped up and did the job."

If there was one key moment for the Yankees, it may haveoccurred in the third, after Strawberry dropped a fly ball for atwo-base error and Kamieniecki gave up a home run to Kenny Loftonthat put the Tribe ahead, 2-1. With two out in that inning,Strawberry waved awkwardly at Albert Belle's line-drive double asit sailed over his head, and Kamieniecki walked two men to load thebases.

Paul Sorrento lined a would-be double down the third-base linethat Boggs speared with a full dive, saving two, maybe three runs.After that, Kamieniecki got his legs and, it seemed, the Yankeeswere able to survive everything that came their way.

"They could have easily scored two or three more that inningand really put us in a hole," Kamieniecki said.

"I was sort of like a boxer, getting off the ropes there. ThenI got to start new the next inning."

The Indians played possibly their ugliest game of the year,committing a season-high five errors -- two of them during NewYork's six-run ninth inning.

Bernie Williams started the ninth with a walk, and O'Neillfollowed with a home run, his 20th, off Julian Tavarez. Sorrentolet Ruben Sierra's ground ball get through for an error, and Sierraeventually scored on an error by right fielder Manny Ramirez. JimLeyritz drove in a run with a groundout, and Boggs capped theinning with a two-run single.

"I'm willing to file it and forget it," Indians manager MikeHargrove said. "I don't think those guys will forget it. They(Indians) don't take embarrassment lightly, and tonight wasembarrassing for all of us."