Monday, March 12, 2012

Chicago opens its heart for Art Against AIDS

An uncharacteristically somber Oprah Winfrey made a briefappearance at the Art Against AIDS/Chicago benefit Wednesday night.

She wasn't able to stay because she was on her way to the wakeof her former producer.

Bill Rizzo, 33, died of complications from AIDS last Monday.

It's reasonable to believe that almost everyone in the crowdhad been similarly touched.

And that's why guests in the crowd of 400-plus paid anunusually high tariff ($500 to $1,000 each) to attend the fund-raiserat the Four Seasons Hotel.

Lest you think the evening lacked merriment, rest assured itwas a celebration of hope for the future.

Marshall Field & Co. CEO Phil Miller chaired the Chicagofund-raiser, and by the end of the evening reported that more than$800,000 had been raised to fight this terrible disease.

It was the first time in memory that anyone has been able toattract such magnificent support from such a wide cross-section ofour community.

Corporate donors and foundations joined social types andmembers of fine old families to respond to Miller's irresistiblerequests for contributions.

He's quite a guy.

Sara Lee Corp. led the pack with a $50,000 contribution.Winfrey and her Harpo Productions were the first major corporatedonors with a $25,000 gift.

John Wilson delivered a check for $47,000 from his LakesideGroup.

Elizabeth Arden, the Leslie Fay Companies, JockeyInternational, the John Buck Co. and Marshall Field's eachcontributed $25,000.

Honorary co-chair Gov. Jim Thompson and Jayne, just back froman economic development trip to Japan, admitted to being slightlywoozy from a case of jet lag. Jayne Thompson had heads turningagain - the result of a white lace minidress.

The Guv said he had met with more than 100 Japanese businessexecutives while there and "that might mean some good news forIllinois."

The other co-chair, Mayor Richard M. Daley, was on a shortEaster holiday with his family. He was ably represented by Chicago'sdirector of special events, Kathy Osterman. She was sporting alittle tan - and a big fish story about a 36-inch tuna caught offSarasota, Fla. It is being stuffed and will hang in her office verysoon.

Jason Spahn of Jason-Richards Florists said House & Gardenphotographed his weekend home in New Buffalo, Mich., and will featureit in the magazine this summer.

Miller visited with guests at every table in the ballroom, andthen thanked the crowd for their support. "We will find a cure forthis disease," he said.

Amen.

Sally and Miles Berger, Alberta and Bill Smithberg and WilliamWood Prince hosted a party Monday night at the Mayfair Regent Hotelin honor of Ballet Chicago.

The company will be seen at the Civic Opera House on April 25,27 and 28.

Jack Staley, president of the board of directors, said "thecompany has a million-dollar budget - and I think we'll finish thisfiscal year ending April 30 with money in the bank. Of course,that's music to my ears," said Staley, chairman of the accountingfirm of Ernst & Young.

There was a lot more glasnost going on at the Civic Theaterlast week than there was in Moscow or Lithuania.

Mikhail Shatrov's play "The Peace of Brest-Litovsk" (aboutLenin and the peace treaty signed there) was written in the 1960s butwas banned in the Soviet Union until last year.

Moscow's Vakhtangov Theatre brought the show, performed inRussian, to the Civic for a three-week engagement through May 6.Monday night's opening, with thundering organ music and simultaneoustranslation into English headphones, was compelling.

Jane Sahlins, executive director of the Chicago InternationalTheatre Festival, which opens May 23, said: "It's wonderful. I wishit was part of our festival."

Robert Falls, artistic director of the Goodman Theater, said,"It's one of the most important plays to be presented in the SovietUnion, and the fact that Chicago got the premiere in the UnitedStates is wonderful."

The play's presentation here has been orchestrated largely byNancy Haggerty of American Express, working with the Illinois RussianTheatre Association and the Union of Theatre Workers of the RussianFederation.

Actor Mikhail Ulyanov, who also heads the Russian union, playsthe tormented Lenin.

In remarks to opening-night guests at dinner in the lobby ofthe Civic Opera House, Ulyanov (a Spencer Tracy look-alike) referredto Haggerty as "the godmother of glasnost in the Russian theater.And I think of myself at the godfather."

And then he raised his glass of vodka and toasted just abouteverything he could think of, including the vodka.

FTSE-100 share index down 20.59 points at 3968.40

Share prices on the London Stock Exchange closed lower Wednesday.

The FTSE-100 share index closed down 20.59 points, or 0.52 percent, at 3968.40.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

'60s Killings Trial Opens With Klan Talk

JACKSON, Miss. - Prosecutors in the kidnapping and conspiracy trial of James Ford Seale promised jurors during opening arguments Monday that they will prove the reputed Klansman was among those who abducted, beat and drowned two black teenagers in 1964.

Defense attorneys set out to divorce Seale's reputation from the facts of the charges and said the government's case will be based largely on a member of the Ku Klux Klan who has changed his story in the 43 years since Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore were dumped in the Mississippi River to die.

Seale, now 71, has pleaded not guilty in the attacks on Dee and Moore, both 19. He also has denied being involved in …

Waste not: Mayor Bloomberg says it's Manhattan's turn to help take out New York's trash. His Gracie Mansion neighbors vow to stop a garbage station from opening on their riverbank. Welcome to environmental justice, East Side style.

Marta Rodriguez is well acquainted with the reek of trash. For the past 18 years, a steady stream of roachlike trucks has heaved past her house on Bryant Avenue, bearing the city's garbage to transfer stations dotted around the South Bronx. Rodriguez knows that the trucks bring vermin, spread bad smells and belch diesel fumes. She's seen them attract prostitutes who come to service idling drivers.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In the storefront office of Sustainable South Bronx, on Hunts Point Avenue, Rodriguez, a petite mother of two, talks about her nieces and nephews with asthma and the 6-year-old neighbor who was hit and killed by a speeding garbage truck this spring. "You go to other areas, and you see how different it is," she says. "Here there's always garbage, garbage, to the point you just don't pay no mind to it." But the more Rodriguez, a recently minted community activist, learned about garbage in New York City, the more she did mind. "Manhattan generates 5,000 tons a day of commercial waste, but a few neighborhoods in the Bronx and Queens take it," Rodriguez says. "Eleven thousands trucks pass through this neighborhood every day. Manhattan dumps on the poorer neighborhoods."

Yet these days, Manhattanites feel dumped on, too. From the entrance of the Vinegar Factory, an industrial site-turned-gourmet shop at 91st Street, just off the FDR, Carol Tweedy points across the street. A narrow asphalt ramp rises there, smack between an Astroturf athletic field and the five-story gym of the Asphalt Green recreation facility. At the end of the ramp is a dock that dates to the 1940s, which used to load 1,200 tons of garbage each day onto barges bound for the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

When the landfill closed down a few years ago, the transfer station did, too, but Tweedy, who directs Asphalt Green, still hasn't forgotten their nauseating smell. "When the garbage trucks ran next door to our center, I had parents pulling their kids out of lessons," she says. "We've been able to expand our neighborhood programs immensely since then."

Upper East Siders have been told that their respite may be temporary. This fall, the Department of Sanitation is slated to release its plan for how New York City will dispose of its garbage for the next two decades. Reopening--and expanding--the 91st Street station, along with seven others around the five boroughs, is at the heart of the new blueprint.

The prospect of reviving the marine transfer station is encountering staunch resistance from Manhattanites who live near the sites, and they are determined to do whatever they can to make sure that the stations are not reopened. For their part, outer borough residents are preparing to fight any version of the citywide plan that doesn't reopen all eight of the old waterfront transfer stations--including Manhattan's. As community groups sharpen their plans of attack, the city's plan to deal with garbage--to get rid of it at a low cost, in a way that minimizes environmental consequences--hangs in the balance. The plan meant to solve the city's trash woes may be headed for deadlock.

Deadlock is the last thing New York can afford right now. Besides the environmental strain of thousands of diesel trucks hauling garbage and recyclables on city streets, highways and the George Washington Bridge, the cost of transporting and dumping trash has exploded to record levels--nearly $70 a ton last year. The city has come to depend on a single private contractor, Waste Management, Inc., to process refuse after it leaves the curb. The city's garbage budget has ballooned to nearly a billion dollars. Vito Turso, deputy commissioner for the Department of Sanitation, calls the arrangement a "fiscal disaster."

Not long ago, the city ran the show. Garbage trucks took their loads to municipal waterfront transfer stations, and the waste got barged from there to Fresh Kills. The stations handled household waste, which was carted by city trucks, as well as trash that private companies hauled from businesses. But in 1987, in an attempt to appease disgruntled Staten Islanders, the Department of Sanitation raised fees of private haulers, and those truck companies started building cheaper alternatives. Private waste-transfer stations sprouted in the semi-industrial zones of outer-borough neighborhoods, including Red Hook, Hunts Point and Williamsburg. After Fresh Kills closed in 2001, the city shut down its marine transfer stations entirely and began sending 13,000 tons a day of household waste through these private street-side stations--a costly and unpopular solution.

After nearly two decades of wrangling with outraged outer-borough communities, the Department of Sanitation wants to tout its plan as the blueprint for a new, neighborhood-friendly era in municipal waste management. It's a major victory for the citywide Organization of Water-front Neighborhoods (OWN) and its members--environmental justice groups, including Sustainable South Bronx, that have fought for years for a fairer and healthier solution.

But when the city unveils its plan this fall, it is hardly likely to meet a welcome wagon. Each neighborhood presents its own potential for quagmire. On the Upper East Side, Tony Ard, a snowy-haired former gas industry executive from Indiana, heads the Gracie Point Community Council, a neighborhood group backed by real estate interests, deep pockets and a 3,500-member email list. GPCC has hired a Rubenstein and Associates publicist to handle media queries, as well as a prominent environmental attorney to defend its interests as an environmental review process gets underway. Gracie Pointers say that the new facility would block their waterfront park and esplanade. Stinky barges would idle at the dock. Queuing trucks would block an already congested corner near the FDR. The facility would process 4,200 tons of waste per day--more than triple what the marine transfer station last handled in the 1990s. "We're talking about hundreds of children playing on the field right next to that constant barrage of noise and stench!" exclaims Tweedy. Adds Ard: "These stations were built at a time when this neighborhood was industrial. This is a completely inappropriate space for a garbage facility."

Rick Leland, the group's legal counsel, says that the group's position is that "no residential neighborhood should have to accommodate this type of facility." He has spent the summer scheduling meetings all over Manhattan to make East 91st Street's objections clear to city and state officials. Leland notes that the community he's representing includes poor people as well as wealthy ones, a fact he hopes the state's environmental review process will consider. "There are the Stanley Isaacs Houses, facilities for seniors and people of color, and, of course, Asphalt Green," he ticks off. And then he moves on to a second list: the numerous clearances the city will need to get to reopen the site. "There are city zoning regulations. The city EIS [environmental impact statement] process may or may not represent an opportunity for litigation. There is the state environmental quality review process. There is the process of getting permits for marine construction." He doesn't mention it, but the city's overall plan also needs to be approved by the City Council and the state's Department of Environmental Conservation. Each permit presents an opportunity to shut down the process entirely.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Gracie Point residents aren't the only Manhattanites gearing up to fight the mayor's plan. Across town, Manhattan's leading environmental justice group sees the Bronx's gain as another long-suffering community's loss. In Harlem, next door to a waste-water treatment plant that already churns torrents of New York City sewage, the Department of Sanitation wants to retrofit a station on the Hudson River at 135th Street to handle roughly 4,000 tons of waste per day. Cecil Corbin-Mark, the program director at West Harlem Environmental Action, has spent the summer mobilizing 45 community organizations, 13 churches, state and local politicians, and a 3,300-person mailing list to protest. Corbin-Mark is looking for legal counsel as well. "We already have the lion's share of Manhattan's scourge," he says. "We have the diesel bus depots. A quarter of the kids in this neighborhood have asthma." He points out that a reopened waste facility will be right next door to a state park, a proposed city park, public housing and schools. "This neighborhood should not have to handle another facility of this type," he says. "And we are confident that the state will recognize it."

Even as it prepares to release its plan this fall, the Department of Sanitation seems to recognize it will be a hard sell. Vito Turso wants to reassure OWN members that when the Solid Waste Management Plan is released this fall, all eight transfer stations will still be slated for reopening. "But," he admits elliptically, "there's no telling where the permitting process will lead." He concludes with a grim smile: "The environmental review process will certainly be interesting."

All the opposition puts OWN activists in a hard place. Every day that the new plan stalls is another day filled with trucks, stench and vermin. But Elena Conte, Solid Waste Coordinator for Sustainable South Bronx, says that the outer boroughs won't accept a plan that doesn't include trash facilities in Manhattan. She says that OWN has two issues they consider non-negotiable: "The plan must make Manhattan deal with Manhattan's waste, and it must lead to a way to shut down commercial land-based transfer stations. If the plan doesn't do these things, we will mobilize all our efforts to block it." Like the Manhattan groups, OWN is poised to challenge the city's coming environmental impact statement--in OWN's case, they'd contest the EIS if the document does not effectively support the plan to reopen the Manhattan waste transfer stations. Challenging state permits is a possibility down the line, says Conte. Of the tons and tons of garbage New York throws out, she declares, "We'll take our share, but we won't settle for a plan where we take more."

OWN has already lined up a core group of five City Council members representing members' neigborhoods--including David Yassky and Diana Reyna in Brooklyn and the Bronx's Jose Serrano--who will have to figure out how to sell other members on the mayor's plan. That includes Council Speaker Gifford Miller, whose district includes the 91st Street site.

So far, communication between the embattled camps has been scarce. There are a few alternative ideas floating around: Some environmental justice groups talk about pushing to open another Manhattan transfer station in the meatpacking district, at Gansevoort Street. Others have suggested including a new garbage facility as part of the World Trade Center redevelopment site. Corbin-Mark, in particular, stresses the need to find places in lower Manhattan to deal with commercial waste. "Commercial waste is a large part of what started all this," he says, "and 70 percent of the city's commercial waste is generated below 59th Street."

Indeed, the prospect of dealing with trash from businesses poses the messiest problem of all. Even if the city avoids a showdown between neighborhoods and reopens the marine transfer stations swiftly, commercial transfer stations may continue to plague Hunts Point and other neighborhoods. Current plans propose building facilities with the capacity to take commercial waste but don't yet specify a mechanism that would make commercial haulers use them. In order to get private haulers to use the new transfer stations the city would need to establish private franchise agreements to regulate where commercial haulers dump--a long and potentially contentious process, likely to be unpopular with private sector carting interests. Alternatively, the Department of Sanitation (DOS) could try to entice private haulers by making its prices cheaper than the private stations'--even while investing between $50 and $100 million to retrofit each of its new facilities.

The bottom line for neighborhoods is that the city has no obligation to shut down the commercial transfer stations. The city's own recent commercial waste study, released earlier this year, asserts that commercial haulers don't adversely impact the neighborhoods they're in.

Even if they end up keeping commercial transfer stations as neighbors, the Hunts Point activists say there's a deep benefit to getting Manhattan back in the game--and face to face with its own garbage. Says Conte, "Right now, only poor people deal with trash. If the stations were equitably distributed, everyone would have an incentive to push for better systems of dealing with waste." Rodriguez agrees. "What if, instead of just shutting us down, the Manhattanites used their resources working to make the DOS not use diesel fumes, or to recycle even more effectively, or to make better laws for commercial waste?" she asks. "We'd all work together, and we might get somewhere."

Tess Taylor is a Brooklyn-based freelance writer.

Waste not: Mayor Bloomberg says it's Manhattan's turn to help take out New York's trash. His Gracie Mansion neighbors vow to stop a garbage station from opening on their riverbank. Welcome to environmental justice, East Side style.

Marta Rodriguez is well acquainted with the reek of trash. For the past 18 years, a steady stream of roachlike trucks has heaved past her house on Bryant Avenue, bearing the city's garbage to transfer stations dotted around the South Bronx. Rodriguez knows that the trucks bring vermin, spread bad smells and belch diesel fumes. She's seen them attract prostitutes who come to service idling drivers.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In the storefront office of Sustainable South Bronx, on Hunts Point Avenue, Rodriguez, a petite mother of two, talks about her nieces and nephews with asthma and the 6-year-old neighbor who was hit and killed by a speeding garbage truck this spring. "You go to other areas, and you see how different it is," she says. "Here there's always garbage, garbage, to the point you just don't pay no mind to it." But the more Rodriguez, a recently minted community activist, learned about garbage in New York City, the more she did mind. "Manhattan generates 5,000 tons a day of commercial waste, but a few neighborhoods in the Bronx and Queens take it," Rodriguez says. "Eleven thousands trucks pass through this neighborhood every day. Manhattan dumps on the poorer neighborhoods."

Yet these days, Manhattanites feel dumped on, too. From the entrance of the Vinegar Factory, an industrial site-turned-gourmet shop at 91st Street, just off the FDR, Carol Tweedy points across the street. A narrow asphalt ramp rises there, smack between an Astroturf athletic field and the five-story gym of the Asphalt Green recreation facility. At the end of the ramp is a dock that dates to the 1940s, which used to load 1,200 tons of garbage each day onto barges bound for the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

When the landfill closed down a few years ago, the transfer station did, too, but Tweedy, who directs Asphalt Green, still hasn't forgotten their nauseating smell. "When the garbage trucks ran next door to our center, I had parents pulling their kids out of lessons," she says. "We've been able to expand our neighborhood programs immensely since then."

Upper East Siders have been told that their respite may be temporary. This fall, the Department of Sanitation is slated to release its plan for how New York City will dispose of its garbage for the next two decades. Reopening--and expanding--the 91st Street station, along with seven others around the five boroughs, is at the heart of the new blueprint.

The prospect of reviving the marine transfer station is encountering staunch resistance from Manhattanites who live near the sites, and they are determined to do whatever they can to make sure that the stations are not reopened. For their part, outer borough residents are preparing to fight any version of the citywide plan that doesn't reopen all eight of the old waterfront transfer stations--including Manhattan's. As community groups sharpen their plans of attack, the city's plan to deal with garbage--to get rid of it at a low cost, in a way that minimizes environmental consequences--hangs in the balance. The plan meant to solve the city's trash woes may be headed for deadlock.

Deadlock is the last thing New York can afford right now. Besides the environmental strain of thousands of diesel trucks hauling garbage and recyclables on city streets, highways and the George Washington Bridge, the cost of transporting and dumping trash has exploded to record levels--nearly $70 a ton last year. The city has come to depend on a single private contractor, Waste Management, Inc., to process refuse after it leaves the curb. The city's garbage budget has ballooned to nearly a billion dollars. Vito Turso, deputy commissioner for the Department of Sanitation, calls the arrangement a "fiscal disaster."

Not long ago, the city ran the show. Garbage trucks took their loads to municipal waterfront transfer stations, and the waste got barged from there to Fresh Kills. The stations handled household waste, which was carted by city trucks, as well as trash that private companies hauled from businesses. But in 1987, in an attempt to appease disgruntled Staten Islanders, the Department of Sanitation raised fees of private haulers, and those truck companies started building cheaper alternatives. Private waste-transfer stations sprouted in the semi-industrial zones of outer-borough neighborhoods, including Red Hook, Hunts Point and Williamsburg. After Fresh Kills closed in 2001, the city shut down its marine transfer stations entirely and began sending 13,000 tons a day of household waste through these private street-side stations--a costly and unpopular solution.

After nearly two decades of wrangling with outraged outer-borough communities, the Department of Sanitation wants to tout its plan as the blueprint for a new, neighborhood-friendly era in municipal waste management. It's a major victory for the citywide Organization of Water-front Neighborhoods (OWN) and its members--environmental justice groups, including Sustainable South Bronx, that have fought for years for a fairer and healthier solution.

But when the city unveils its plan this fall, it is hardly likely to meet a welcome wagon. Each neighborhood presents its own potential for quagmire. On the Upper East Side, Tony Ard, a snowy-haired former gas industry executive from Indiana, heads the Gracie Point Community Council, a neighborhood group backed by real estate interests, deep pockets and a 3,500-member email list. GPCC has hired a Rubenstein and Associates publicist to handle media queries, as well as a prominent environmental attorney to defend its interests as an environmental review process gets underway. Gracie Pointers say that the new facility would block their waterfront park and esplanade. Stinky barges would idle at the dock. Queuing trucks would block an already congested corner near the FDR. The facility would process 4,200 tons of waste per day--more than triple what the marine transfer station last handled in the 1990s. "We're talking about hundreds of children playing on the field right next to that constant barrage of noise and stench!" exclaims Tweedy. Adds Ard: "These stations were built at a time when this neighborhood was industrial. This is a completely inappropriate space for a garbage facility."

Rick Leland, the group's legal counsel, says that the group's position is that "no residential neighborhood should have to accommodate this type of facility." He has spent the summer scheduling meetings all over Manhattan to make East 91st Street's objections clear to city and state officials. Leland notes that the community he's representing includes poor people as well as wealthy ones, a fact he hopes the state's environmental review process will consider. "There are the Stanley Isaacs Houses, facilities for seniors and people of color, and, of course, Asphalt Green," he ticks off. And then he moves on to a second list: the numerous clearances the city will need to get to reopen the site. "There are city zoning regulations. The city EIS [environmental impact statement] process may or may not represent an opportunity for litigation. There is the state environmental quality review process. There is the process of getting permits for marine construction." He doesn't mention it, but the city's overall plan also needs to be approved by the City Council and the state's Department of Environmental Conservation. Each permit presents an opportunity to shut down the process entirely.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Gracie Point residents aren't the only Manhattanites gearing up to fight the mayor's plan. Across town, Manhattan's leading environmental justice group sees the Bronx's gain as another long-suffering community's loss. In Harlem, next door to a waste-water treatment plant that already churns torrents of New York City sewage, the Department of Sanitation wants to retrofit a station on the Hudson River at 135th Street to handle roughly 4,000 tons of waste per day. Cecil Corbin-Mark, the program director at West Harlem Environmental Action, has spent the summer mobilizing 45 community organizations, 13 churches, state and local politicians, and a 3,300-person mailing list to protest. Corbin-Mark is looking for legal counsel as well. "We already have the lion's share of Manhattan's scourge," he says. "We have the diesel bus depots. A quarter of the kids in this neighborhood have asthma." He points out that a reopened waste facility will be right next door to a state park, a proposed city park, public housing and schools. "This neighborhood should not have to handle another facility of this type," he says. "And we are confident that the state will recognize it."

Even as it prepares to release its plan this fall, the Department of Sanitation seems to recognize it will be a hard sell. Vito Turso wants to reassure OWN members that when the Solid Waste Management Plan is released this fall, all eight transfer stations will still be slated for reopening. "But," he admits elliptically, "there's no telling where the permitting process will lead." He concludes with a grim smile: "The environmental review process will certainly be interesting."

All the opposition puts OWN activists in a hard place. Every day that the new plan stalls is another day filled with trucks, stench and vermin. But Elena Conte, Solid Waste Coordinator for Sustainable South Bronx, says that the outer boroughs won't accept a plan that doesn't include trash facilities in Manhattan. She says that OWN has two issues they consider non-negotiable: "The plan must make Manhattan deal with Manhattan's waste, and it must lead to a way to shut down commercial land-based transfer stations. If the plan doesn't do these things, we will mobilize all our efforts to block it." Like the Manhattan groups, OWN is poised to challenge the city's coming environmental impact statement--in OWN's case, they'd contest the EIS if the document does not effectively support the plan to reopen the Manhattan waste transfer stations. Challenging state permits is a possibility down the line, says Conte. Of the tons and tons of garbage New York throws out, she declares, "We'll take our share, but we won't settle for a plan where we take more."

OWN has already lined up a core group of five City Council members representing members' neigborhoods--including David Yassky and Diana Reyna in Brooklyn and the Bronx's Jose Serrano--who will have to figure out how to sell other members on the mayor's plan. That includes Council Speaker Gifford Miller, whose district includes the 91st Street site.

So far, communication between the embattled camps has been scarce. There are a few alternative ideas floating around: Some environmental justice groups talk about pushing to open another Manhattan transfer station in the meatpacking district, at Gansevoort Street. Others have suggested including a new garbage facility as part of the World Trade Center redevelopment site. Corbin-Mark, in particular, stresses the need to find places in lower Manhattan to deal with commercial waste. "Commercial waste is a large part of what started all this," he says, "and 70 percent of the city's commercial waste is generated below 59th Street."

Indeed, the prospect of dealing with trash from businesses poses the messiest problem of all. Even if the city avoids a showdown between neighborhoods and reopens the marine transfer stations swiftly, commercial transfer stations may continue to plague Hunts Point and other neighborhoods. Current plans propose building facilities with the capacity to take commercial waste but don't yet specify a mechanism that would make commercial haulers use them. In order to get private haulers to use the new transfer stations the city would need to establish private franchise agreements to regulate where commercial haulers dump--a long and potentially contentious process, likely to be unpopular with private sector carting interests. Alternatively, the Department of Sanitation (DOS) could try to entice private haulers by making its prices cheaper than the private stations'--even while investing between $50 and $100 million to retrofit each of its new facilities.

The bottom line for neighborhoods is that the city has no obligation to shut down the commercial transfer stations. The city's own recent commercial waste study, released earlier this year, asserts that commercial haulers don't adversely impact the neighborhoods they're in.

Even if they end up keeping commercial transfer stations as neighbors, the Hunts Point activists say there's a deep benefit to getting Manhattan back in the game--and face to face with its own garbage. Says Conte, "Right now, only poor people deal with trash. If the stations were equitably distributed, everyone would have an incentive to push for better systems of dealing with waste." Rodriguez agrees. "What if, instead of just shutting us down, the Manhattanites used their resources working to make the DOS not use diesel fumes, or to recycle even more effectively, or to make better laws for commercial waste?" she asks. "We'd all work together, and we might get somewhere."

Tess Taylor is a Brooklyn-based freelance writer.

Monday, March 5, 2012

DIGICEL SUES C&W.(Cable & Wireless)(Brief Article)

Denis O'Brien's Caribbean mobile operation Digicel has commenced a legal action against local market rival Cable & Wireless, it was reported on Dec. 13, 2002. Digicel is accusing UK-based giant C&W of delaying an interconnection agreement which is preventing it from launching its services in St Lucia and St Vincent. Digicel already runs a successful mobile operation in …

Seven-up Strikers could yet avoid wooden spoon position.

THERE is still hope for Minnesota Strikers in their attempt to avoid the embarrassment of finishing last among the 22 teams in Ballymena and District League.

A home defeat against fellow-strugglers Dunloy Cowboys would have consigned Strikers to the wooden spoon in Division Three, but Trevor Alexander's outfit won emphatically for the fourth time in 21 matches, to move to within four points of Cowboys. What's more, Aidan McErlain's team has played one game more than the backmarkers.

Meanwhile, Fountain Jokers captain Robin McCaughey conceded the title to Rafters Juniors after the 'helping hand' he hoped for when the leaders tackled their Hotshots' …

FINDING PROFESSIONAL MECHANICS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: Special to the Times Union From the Car Care Council

Fall is the perfect time to undo the damage done by summer driving and to get ready for the rigors of winter driving ahead. So, it should come as no surprise that October is National Car Care Month.

However, given the complexity of today's vehicles, many motorists, including former do-it-yourselfers, are looking for professional technicians as ``tune-ups'' have become ``engine performance diagnoses.'' We also now have on-board computer systems, electronic climate control, antilock brakes, digital dash boards and other advanced systems that are growing increasingly popular.

The following …

Stocks open moderately higher ahead of earnings

Stocks are extending recent gains at the start of a busy week of earnings.

Major market indicators are slightly higher early Monday, getting a boost from European stocks, which jumped after Royal Philips Electronics issued a better-than-expected profit report.

Trading on Monday is expected to be fairly light as much of the U.S. observes the Columbus Day holiday. No major economic reports are scheduled and bond markets are closed.

A flurry of earnings reports, including ones from the nation's largest banks, will occupy the market's attention later in the week.

The Dow Jones industrials are up 37 at 9,902. The Standard & Poor's 500 …

Mackie joins Fifth Third to lead St. Louis office

Peter Mackie has been named to lead Fifth Third Bank's Investment Advisors office in St. Louis. He resigned as vice chairman of UMB Bank's trust services division last month. He also has served as executive vice president, overseeing the trust and investment management business for Commerce Bank. While both banks were headquartered in Kansas City, Mackie …

Why Not Engineering?

Regardless of the recent plague of layoffs, many U.S. manufacturers are still faced with a serious shortage of qualified engineers. Those that aren't right now, soon will be when we start pulling out of the current economic doldrums. Yet a vast pool of potential engineering talent continues to be untapped. Why? Because most of the folks in this talent pool--which comprises a bit more than half of the U.S. population--generally don't even consider a career in engineering.

Writing in the March 2001 issue of Prism, published by the American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE), Margaret Mannix notes that it is no secret there is a paucity of women in engineering. She …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Attritor.(WHAT'S NEW)

Union Process, Inc.

This company recently produced a special Q-6 Circulation Attritor for a start-up orthopedic medical company. To ensure a metal-free environment as required by this customer's application, the Attritor was constructed with an 8.5-gal, polyurethane-lined grinding tank and a plastic-coated agitator shaft with polyurethane-coated agitator arms. The upper discharge chamber was constructed of Halar-coated stainless steel. Q-Series …

WE CARE COUNTING ON VOLUNTEER WORKERS NISKAYUNA FIRE BLAMED ON LIGHT FIXTURE.(Local)

Byline: Bill Eager Staff writer

The We Care social services hot line was restored for 1992 when the departing Town Hall Democrats voted to donate $25,000 late in 1991.

However, its organizers are still acting as if the Town Board did not step in where the Saratoga County Board of Supervisors stepped out - because they doubt that they'll see the public funding again.

"We are changing the program; we're bringing in more volunteers," said Cheryl Pollock, executive director of the Community Action Program for Teens and Interested Neighbors. "It has been a staff-run service supported by volunteers. Now it's going to be a volunteer operation supported by …

Arizona shelves idea of changing immigration law

Arizona legislators are setting aside Gov. Jan Brewer's suggestion that lawmakers consider changing parts of the state's controversial immigration law.

Brewer on July 30 floated the idea of making "tweaks" to the law shortly after a federal judge blocked implementation of numerous provisions. Legislative aides said Tuesday the idea has been shelved, at least temporarily, mainly because of the state's pending appeal to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

"Everyone agreed ... that it would have been acting in haste to act at this point," said Victor Riches, chief of staff for the House of Representatives' Republican majority.

Malaysian GP Results

SEPANG, Malaysia (AP) — Leading free practice times for Friday's Malaysian Moto GP on the 5.543-kilometer (3.44-mile) Sepang International Circuit:

MotoGP

1. Dani Pedrosa, Spain, Honda, 2 minutes, 01.250 seconds.

2. Casey Stoner, Australia, Honda, 2:02.070.

3. Andrea Dovizioso, Italy, Honda, …

Dallapozza, Adolf

Dallapozza, Adolf

Dallapozza, Adolf , Italian-born Austrian tenor; b. Bolzano, March 14, 1940. His parents settled in Austria when he was 5 months old. He received his musical education at the Vienna Cons.; then joined the Chorus of the Volksoper; in 1962 he made his debut as soloist in the role of Ernesto in Donizetti's Don Pasquale. In 1967 he became …

Outlets abound for MIP's Asia programming: inter-Asian programming sales set the tone, but some major international deals are signed. (International Marketplace for Buyers and Sellers of Television Programs)

If there was a theme at this year's MIP' Asia convention in Hong Kong, it was regional consolidation and high expectations for the escalation of Asia's digital DTH rollout.

Buyers in all sectors looked for Asian product to place on Asian networks. Asia's major terrestrial networks--57 of them in 13 countries, plus 900 in China--were also in a mood to buy and sell Asian programing, while using Western products as "make-weights" to bulk up their schedules.

According to Swapna Vora, a buyer from the Asia Television Network (ATN) satellite broadcaster in Bombay: "It's easy to purchase international products at these shows, but to purchase relevant Asian …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

ST. JOHN'S, UCONN REACH FINAL 8.(SPORTS)

Byline: Combined wire services

It's a wild and crazy ride -- and it's still going on.

Gonzaga continued its unexpected spin through the NCAA Basketball Tournament on Thursday night, shocking Florida 73-72 in a West Regional semifinal to move within one victory of a berth in the Final Four.

The Bulldogs earned a Saturday date with the region's No. 1 seed Connecticut, which put an end to Iowa's run, 78-68, and to coach Tom Davis' career at the Hawkeyes' helm.

In the South Regional, the matchup pitting Maryland against St. John's was the heavyweight battle everyone had anticipated. The Red Storm put the Terps on the ropes earlier than anyone …

TARGET KILLS SMART CARD PROGRAM, CITING LOW ADOPTION.

In a blow to smart cards in the United States, Target Corp. confirmed today that it plans to phase out its smart card program over the next 12 months. "We are doing this because of low adoption of the smart couponing program by our guests," a Target spokesperson tells CardLine. The nation's No. 2 retailer issued a statement calling the Target Visa credit card "one of the most successful financial products ever introduced at Target, with more than 9 million accounts opened since the card launched in fall 2001." The statement, however, went on to say that the only feature requiring a chip, the "smart coupon" program that allows consumers to download coupons onto the smart card …

Gonzales Rapped as President's 'Yes Man'

WASHINGTON - Attorney General Alberto Gonzales says his long friendship with President Bush makes it easier to say "no" to him on sticky legal issues. His critics, however, say Gonzales is far more likely to say "yes" - leaving the Justice Department vulnerable to a politically determined White House.

Probably not since Watergate has an attorney general been so closely bound to the White House's bidding. In pushing counterterror programs that courts found unconstitutional and in stacking the ranks of federal prosecutors with Republican loyalists, Gonzales has put Bush's stamp on an institution that is supposed to operate largely free of the White House and beyond the reach of …

Nutritional advice online.(NATIONAL NEWS)(Brief article)

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Initiatives to improve the nutritional profile of Australia's food supply are now available online. The new government Food and Health Dialogue Website provides conversation between the government, industry and public health groups with the aim of addressing poor dietary habits and making healthier food choices easier and more accessible for all Australians. The website is aimed to keep …

TIE-UP IN BELLSOUTH.(SPORTS)

Byline: Associated Press

DULUTH, Ga. -- Bob Tway and Lee Janzen are in position to win halfway through the BellSouth Classic, a spot neither has been in too often during long losing streaks.

Tway and Janzen made the best of late tee times Friday and finished tied at 136, 8 under par, in the second round of the final tuneup before the Masters. Defending champ Retief Goosen was two shots back, with four more players tied another shot behind.

Tway hasn't won in more than eight years, and Janzen's last victory came in the 1998 U.S. Open. In his past three tournaments, Tway hasn't finished worse than 17th, with a tie for fourth at the Chrysler Classic …

NedCar boss loves a challenge.(News)

Byline: Wim Oude Weernink

Gunter Butschek is a daring adventurer who is not afraid of new experiences. Butschek has lived in four different countries, backpacked in Indonesia and gone whitewater rafting in South Africa. He is passionate about diversity and change and believes that one of his leadership strengths is his ability to adapt to different cultural environments. Butschek is CEO of NedCar, the only series car manufacturer in the Netherlands. The company builds models for Volvo and Mitsubishi. Before joining NedCar, Butschek was DaimlerChrysler South Africa's board of management member in charge of manufacturing. There, he was part of the successful …

Navy to help fund and conduct clinical trial of Hemopure in trauma.

2003 APR 3 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Biopure Corp. (BPUR) announced that it has signed a cooperative research and development agreement (CRADA) with the U.S. Naval Medical Research Center (NMRC) that will enable the NMRC to participate in a pivotal clinical trial of the company's investigational oxygen therapeutic Hemopure [hemoglobin glutamer - 250 (bovine), or HBOC-201] in prehospital trauma.

Participation in this collaborative effort is estimated to cost the NMRC at least $4 million.

Biopure will contribute an estimated $8.7 million, of which at least $643,000 will be provided during the first year.

The funding is intended to support a …

BIRTH CONTROL: A DISCIPLINE'S DEVOLUTION.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Byline: BOYCE RENSBERGER Washington Post

Because natural birth-control chemicals exist in so many plants, it is not unreasonable that ancient peoples would have discovered them, John M. Riddle of North Carolina State University suggested.

He also proposed that the widespread use of these substances would explain periods in ancient history when the population remained stable or even declined. During the first five centuries A.D., for example, historians estimate that the population of Europe fell from 32.8 million to 27.5 million in the absence of major wars or epidemics.

The population declines have usually been attributed to infanticide, but …

Friday, March 2, 2012

FEDERAL GRAND JURY RETURNS MULTIPLE INDICTMENTS IN TYLER, TEXAS

TYLER, Texas, June 3 -- The U.

S. Department of Justice's U.

S. Attorney's office for Eastern District of Texas issued the following press release:

A federal grand jury returned multiple indictments charging individuals with separate federal crimes in the Eastern District of Texas announced U.

S. Attorney John M. Bales today. The indictments were returned late Thursday afternoon.

Stephen Wayne Perritte, 66, of Henderson, Texas, was indicted on charges of enticement of a minor. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in federal prison. According to the indictment, from May 23, 2011 to May 25, 2011, Peritte allegedly used a computer to communicate with a minor in an attempt to engage in sexual activity. This case is being investigated by the Longview Police Department's Internet Crimes Against Children Unit and prosecuted by Assistant U.

S. Attorney Christopher T. Tortorice.

Charles Abner Richey, Jr., 62, of Christianburg, Virginia, was indicted on charges of enticement of a minor. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in federal prison. According to the indictment, from Apr. 19, 2011 to May 5, 2011, Richey allegedly used a computer to communicate with a minor in an attempt to engage in sexual activity. This case is being investigated by the U.

S. Secret Service and prosecuted by Assistant U.

S. Attorney Christopher T. Tortorice.

Concepcion Baldelamar, 49, of Mexico, was indicted for failing to register as a sex offender and illegally being present in the United States after having been previously deported. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in federal prison for the first charge and up to 20 years for the immigration violation. According to the indictment, in March 2009, Baldelamar allegedly returned to Texas after having been deported to Mexico. Baldelamar is also alleged to have failed to register as a sex offender as required by the Sex Offender Notification Act. This case is being investigated by the U.

S. Marshals Service and prosecuted by Assistant U.

S. Attorney Christopher T. Tortorice.

Lisa Godfrey, 50, of Tyler, Texas, was indicted on charges of theft of government property, making a false statement and social security benefits fraud. If convicted, she faces up to 10 years in federal prison. According to the indictment, from February 2007 and March 2011, Godfrey is alleged to have made false statements claiming that a minor lived with her resulting in the payment of approximately $29,490.00 of Child Insurance Benefits of which she was not entitled. During that same time, Godfrey failed to report that the child left the residence and was no longer living with her. This case is being investigated by the Office of the Inspector General and prosecuted by Assistant U.

S. Attorney Jim Noble.

Charles Kevin Clayton, 36, of Texarkana, Texas, was indicted on charges of counterfeiting. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in federal prison. According to the indictment, on May 21, 2011, Clayton is alleged to have attempted to pass a counterfeit $50 bill at a Dairy Queen. Further investigation revealed Clayton possessed approximately 7 counterfeit $50 bills and 12 counterfeit $20 bills. This case is being investigated by the U.

S. Secret Service and prosecuted by Assistant U.

S. Attorney Denise Simpson.

Dustin James Poole, 31, of Mabank, Texas, was indicted on charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in federal prison. According to the indictment, on May 12, 2011, Poole is alleged to have been found in possession of two firearms and ammunition. Further investigation revealed Poole was previously convicted of possession of a stolen firearm in federal court in 2003 and theft in Henderson County in 2004. It is a violation of federal law for a convicted felon to possess or own firearms or ammunition. This case is being investigated by the ATF and the Henderson County Sheriff's Office and prosecuted by Assistant U.

S. Attorney Allen Hurst.

A grand jury indictment is not evidence of guilt. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

RIBBON-CUTTING TO BE HELD FOR EXPRESS CLEANERS AT ONE UNIVERSITY PLACE

JACKSON, Miss., Jan. 19 -- Jackson State University issued the following news release:

The Greater Jackson Chamber Partnership will hold a ribbon cutting ceremony at 10 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, for Express Cleaners, which is the first business to open at One University Place, 1100 John R. Lynch Street in Jackson. The new business is located on Dalton Street across the street from Jackson State University.

One University Place is the largest private real estate development in west Jackson in 30 years. Other businesses slated for opening in the mixed-use building include an art gallery and an internet cafe.

Residents have been filling up the building's luxury one- and two-bedroom apartments since they opened in September. Apartments are conveniently located above retail shops and include hardwood and ceramic tile floors, in-unit washers and dryers, stainless steel appliances and free parking. Residents enjoy easy access to the intellectual and cultural life of Jackson State University, including live theater and sporting events, and discounts at the campus book store, dining facility and fitness center.

Regular lease rates range from $675 for a one bedroom, one bath, to $1,550 for a two bedroom, two bath unit. Renters who sign a lease before the end of February will pay $500 for the first half of a six- or 12-month lease for a one bedroom and $1,300 for a two bedroom.

For more information about One University Place, call 769-233-8180 or visit www.universityplaceofjackson.com or facebook.com/oneuniversityplace. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Molecular Autopsy with Pharmacogenomics - A Multi-Center Study for Certifying Methadone Deaths: 2006 Update on Data Acquisition and Multiplex Genotyping CYP 450 2D6, 2C9, 2C19, 3A4 and 3A5 by Pyrosequencing(TM)

B-61

S. H. Wong1, B. C. Schur2, J. M. Jentzen3, S. Gock3, P. Jannetto2, R. Z. Shi1, R. J. Schneider1, R. Winecker4, B. Logan5, B. Hepler6, L. Langman7, M. Lehrer8, C. V. Wetli8, A. Jenkins9, M. Wagner10, et al. 1 Medical College of Wisconsin and Milwaukee County Medical Examiner's Office, Milwaukee, WI, 2 Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, 3 Milwaukee County Medical Examiner's Office and Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, 4 Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, 5 Forensic Lab Services Bureau - Washington State Patrol, Seattle, WA, 6 Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office, Detroit, MI, 7 Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, 8 Suffolk County Medical Examiner's Office, Hauppauge, NY, 9 Cuyahoga County Coroner Office, Cleveland, OH, 10 Department of Safety of New Hamsphire, Concord, NH,

Methadone has been used in the treatment of heroin addiction and for pain management. In selected regions of the United States, methadone intoxication due to abuse and diversion has recently increased. This is partially influenced by the concerted effort by governmental agencies to lower oxycodone diversion and abuse, resulting in the alternate use abuse of methadone. Further, methadone is also used for the treatment of opioids addiction such as oxycodone. The multi-pathways metabolism of methadone is partially mediated by CYP 2B6, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, and 3A4/5 and are encoded by their respective polymorphic genes. This multi-center study was organized to enroll an adequate number of methadone cases to evaluate the potential contribution of genetic variation to methadone related deaths Pharmacogenomics as an aspect of Molecular Autopsy. Personnel from eleven medical examiner coroner offices and several academic departments formed the Forensic Pathology Toxicology Pharmacogenomics Methadone Study Group (FPTPMSG) and received IRB approval. Two other academic centers would provide additional data analysis and case review. In 2005, one site withdrew while another added, maintaining the total number of participating offices sites to be 11. Inclusion criteria were: cases from 2002 to 2003, certified as methadone toxicity or as methadone related, and methadone and for its metabolites present and quantified. The MS-ACCESS database was redesigned in 2005. Critical design changes included restructuring and securing forms and data, and adding a data merging utility. This final version of the database was released July 2005. Of the 11 copies distributed, 3 have been completed and returned to the core laboratory where case history and toxicology results will be combined with genotyping data to form a master database for detailed statistical analysis. Of the 1100 samples expected, all but 50 have been received without incident and are stored in the core laboratory. Approximately 200 of these samples have been processed and genotyped for CYP 2D6, 2C9, 2C19, and 3A4/5 by Pyroscquencing(TM) With the current analysis of some of the samples, the following prevalence were established: 2D6 (n=187): *3, 0.8%., *4, 15.2%., *5, 5.1%., *6, 1.1%., *7 and *8, 0%., 2C9 (n=135); *2, 9.3% and *3, 5.6%., 2C19 (n=152); *2, 14.8%, *3 and *4, 0%., 3A4* 1B (n=184): 6.0%., and 3A5*3 (n=184): 90.2%. For the 2006 update, the study demonstrated: the feasibility of coordinated planning of the eleven sites and two academic centers., sample collection without incident., the need for modification of the database tor the initial data entry and transfer to the core pharmacogcnomics laboratory via Internet by several centers., and the feasibility of routine multiplex genotyping reliably performed on previously collected postmortem whole blood samples.

Stake bought in net firm

Tesco has snapped up a majority stake in an online video-on-demand service from a Bath investment fir m.

The supermarket giant has bought an 80 per cent stake in blinkboxfrom Widcombe Crescent-based Eden Ventures and Nordic VenturePartners. Tesco believes the acquisition puts it in a strongposition to compete "in the internet-driven revolution in homeentertainment". The value of the deal has not been disclosed.

Blinkbox has a catalogue of 9,000 movies for customers to streamonto computers, tablets and internet-enabled televisions. It hasabout 2 million users each month.

It offers movies to buy or rent, although some content, includingTV series, is free.

Eden invests in young technology companies and helps them grow.It is currently investing in Bath start-up The Filter, which is alsosupported by musician and digital entrepreneur Peter Gabriel.

Clydesdale strengthens Antipodean connection:New chief executive aims to raise profile of bank as part of a global institution

CLYDESDALE Bank's new chief executive, Stuart Grimshaw, outlinedhis determination yesterday to integrate the Glasgow-based outfiteven further with its National Australia Bank (NAB) parent.

He revealed plans to introduce NAB's global Internet bankingservice to Clydesdale in the first quarter of 2001, emphasising theimportance of security in the online offering. The Scottish bank iswithout an Internet offering just now.

Giving his first interview since he succeeded John Wright at thehead of Clydesdale and sister bank Yorkshire on August 7, Grimshawhighlighted the importance of increasing awareness that Clydesdalewas part of a big global institution.

But he emphasised there were no plans to change the ClydesdaleBank brand name.

And he was unable to say whether or not NAB would even retainmajority control, following its planned demerger of Europeaninterests which also include Belfast-based Northern Bank andNational Irish Bank.

Asked about the demerger plans, Grimshaw replied: "Theunderstanding I have is they are still talking to the regulators. Itis still an option that is being pursued."

He said initially that it was his "expectation" that NAB wouldretain majority control. But he then retreated from this positionand said the question of ownership would depend on NAB's "strategicdirection globally, the direct-ion the group determines to take".

He also noted NAB had talked about raising "acquisition currency"through the planned London flotation of the European operations.

Presumably, its remaining stake will depend on how much cash itwants to raise by selling equity.

However, Grimshaw indicated continuing commitment from NAB.

"One of the things I want to do is make sure it is understoodClydesdale is part of a large global institution. I don't think thatis clear."

The former New Zealand hockey international, who brings with himbusiness banking expertise from his two-year stint as NAB's globalhead of business financial services in Sydney, also highlighted thetransplanting of products developed elsewhere in the group.

NAB products already introduced at Clydesdale include the"tailored business loan", which allows firms to manage theirinterest rate exposure by offering various options such as fixed orcapped rates. This was developed in Australia and has been offeredby Clydesdale since January.

In May, when NAB announced Grimshaw would be moving toClydesdale, he expressed a desire to raise the bank's share of thebusiness banking market.

He noted this had been static for some time.

He yesterday put this share at 13% of lending to small and medium-sized businesses in Scotland - a figure which rises to 24% ifcalculated on the number of customers - but he would not set atarget for any increase he hoped to achieve.

He emphasised instead the need to be profitable, rather than buymarket share.

Clydesdale claims 22% of the personal banking market in Scotland.

A "rapid repay" mortgage developed at Bank of New Zealand andalready on offer at Yorkshire will soon be launched by Clydesdale.

Grimshaw also highlighted plans to ramp up Clydesdale's presencein the structured finance market.

David Peebles, Clydesdale's head of Treasury, will lead a newEdinburgh operation focused on the top 300 quoted UK companies anddebt finance deals of more than #20m.

Grimshaw, who is 39, also acknowledged the possibility ofreducing the number of Clydesdale branches. The bank has 265branches in Scotland, and about half-a-dozen in England.

But he was extremely cagey on this politically sensitive issue.

Grimshaw said: "It is a big dilemma for any institution. You aredealing with shareholders for economic returns as well as communityinterest. That is a debate that rages long and hard, as it doesinternally."

Asked if there would be a need to reduce branch numbers, hereplied: "Potentially there may be. I can't say categorically thenumber will stay as it is. There could be a situation where we willincrease the numbers as well."

He noted branches were becoming sales, rather than transactions-focused, outlets.

And he raised the possibility of having branches in othercompanies' outlets, noting NAB's presence within the stores of largeAustralian retailers.

Grimshaw, who has spent the last couple of weeks "getting roundto see as many people in the organisation as time permits", willalso continue Clydesdale's focus on products and services which willentice wealthy customers.

Grimshaw, who is living in Pollokshields on Glasgow's South Sidewith wife Sue, daughters Victoria and Laura, and son George, is afan of devolution.

Clydesdale's chief executive before Wright was Fred Goodwin, nowchief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland. Goodwin earned thenickname "Fred the Shred" while in this role.

Asked if he had any nicknames, Grimshaw replied: "Not to my faceanyway. He joked: "Fred the compassionate. No, nothing like that."

A Clydesdale spokeswoman noted NAB was the largest employer inthe financial sector in Glasgow, with 3200 employees within the cityboundary.

Ath: Olympic athletics results


AAP General News (Australia)
08-25-2004
Ath: Olympic athletics results

ATHENS, Aug 24 Reuters - Olympic athletics results



Decathlon

Pole vault

Group A

1. Erki Nool (EST) 5.40, 2. Paul Terek (USA) 5.30, 3. Roland Schwarzl (AUT) 5.10, 4.

Stefan Drews (GER) 5.00, 5. Aleksandr Pogorelov (RUS) 5.00, 5. Florian Schoenbeck (GER)
5.00, 5. Roman Sebrle (CZE) 5.00, 8. Bryan Clay (USA) 4.90, 9. Laurent Hernu (FRA) 4.80,
10. Aleksandr Parkhomenko (BLR) 4.80, 11. Indrek Turi (EST) 4.80, 12. Eugene Martineau
(NED) 4.80, 13. Santiago Lorenzo (ARG) 4.50, 13. Qi Haifeng (CHN) 4.50, 15. Paolo Casarsa
(ITA) 4.40, Tom Pappas (USA) NM, Lev Lobodin (RUS) DNS, Jon Arnar Magnusson (ISL) DNS,

Dennis Leyckes (GER) DNS.



Group B

1. Chiel Warners (NED) 4.90, 2. Pavel Andreyev (UZB) 4.90, 3. Nikolay Averyanov (RUS)
4.80, 4. Attila Zsivoczky (HUN) 4.70, 5. Prodromos Korkizoglou (GRE) 4.70, 6. Vitaliy
Smirnov (UZB) 4.70, 7. Romain Barras (FRA) 4.60, 7. Dmitriy Karpov (KAZ) 4.60, 9. Jaakko
Ojaniemi (FIN) 4.60, 10. Janis Karlivans (LAT) 4.50, 11. Hans Olav Uldal (NOR) 4.50, 12.

Dean Macey (GBR) 4.40, 13. David Gomez (ESP) 4.40, 14. Claston Bernard (JAM) 4.40, 15.

Maurice Smith (JAM) 4.20, Luiggy Llanos (PUR) NM, Victor Covalenko (MDA) NM, Tomas Dvorak
(CZE) DNS, Kristjan Rahnu (EST) DNS, Ahmad Hassan Moussa (QAT) DNS.



REUTERS rca

KEYWORD: OLYR ATH RESULT 15

2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

QLD: Rainforest Aborigines to be part of wet tropics management


AAP General News (Australia)
04-18-2004
QLD: Rainforest Aborigines to be part of wet tropics management

By Lloyd Jones

CAIRNS, April 18 AAP - Rainforest Aboriginal groups in Queensland have reached a landmark
agreement on a structure to give them a greater say in management of the Wet Tropics World
Heritage Area.

Delegates from 26 tribal groups from Cooktown south to Paluma have voted for an Aboriginal
Rainforest Council to deal with federal and state government agencies charged with managing
the heritage area.

The agreement follows a three-day workshop that ended today at Lake Tinaroo on the
Atherton Tablelands.

Allison Halliday, co-chair of the Aboriginal Negotiating Team, said the agreement would
lead to meaningful involvement of Aboriginal people in the world heritage area management.

The new statutory rainforest council would represent more than 20,000 Aboriginal people
in the wet tropics region of Queensland.

It was hoped the workshop, attended by about 150 Aboriginal delegates, would pave the
way for the official signing of the Wet Tropics Regional Agreement with government officials
by July.

When finalised, the regional agreement would mean the advice of rainforest Aboriginal
groups would have to be taken into account when making heritage area management decisions.

Ms Halliday said the agreement was the first of its kind in Australia and could become
a model for other indigenous partnerships that had to deal with a range of government
departments.

Jim Petrich, the government-appointed facilitator for the negotiations, said it was
a trailblazing agreement and today was one of the most satisfying of his life.

He said it was probably the first time such a large number of Aboriginal tribal groups
had achieved such a regional agreement.

AAP ldj/sjb/bwl

KEYWORD: RAINFOREST

2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Australia to help boost South Pacific students' links


AAP General News (Australia)
02-11-2004
Fed: Australia to help boost South Pacific students' links

A $2 million Australian aid project will boost global links for students in the South Pacific.

Foreign Minister ALEXANDER DOWNER says Australia will fund a high-speed broadband connection
for the Fiji-based University of the South Pacific.

He says the connection to the Southern Cross undersea fibre optic cable will give students
and academics better access to the internet and improve their links to international research.

The project is part of Australia's $200 million commitment to the Virtual Colombo Plan
-- a joint project with the World Bank to improve education and access to knowledge through
the developing world.

AAP RTV dw/sb/rcg/swe

KEYWORD: AID (CANBERRA)

2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NT: ATSIC criticises journalist trespass decision


AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2003
NT: ATSIC criticises journalist trespass decision

DARWIN, Dec 12 AAP - A decision to overturn the conviction of a journalist who trespassed
on Aboriginal land has been criticised as an attack on indigenous property rights.

The Northern Territory Court of Appeal yesterday overturned the conviction against
Walkley Award winning journalist Paul Toohey, formerly with The Australian newspaper.

But peak Aboriginal body ATSIC has expressed disappointment at the decision, saying
it "makes a mockery of the permit laws".

"This decision is an attack on Indigenous property rights and the permit system operating
under the Aboriginal Land Act," ATSIC NT Commissioners Kim Hill and Alison Anderson said
in a joint statement.

Mr Toohey was arrested in November last year at the Port Keats Aboriginal Community,
south-west of Darwin.

He had gone to the remote community to report on the death of an 18-year-old man allegedly
shot by police, despite earlier having been refused a permit by the Port Keats council.

Appeal Court Justices Dean Mildren, Sally Thomas and Steven Bailey found there were
extenuating circumstances which could justify Mr Toohey's visit to the community.

"It's disappointing Mr Toohey's role as an investigative journalist has been placed
above the protection of indigenous property rights and the permit system," the ATSIC commissioners
said.

Mr Toohey was convicted in May of entering Aboriginal land without a permit, after
the NT Supreme Court overturned an earlier decision not to convict or penalise him.

The NT Court of Appeal yesterday set aside the conviction, allowing Mr Toohey's appeal
against the Supreme Court ruling.

The successful appeal has been described by some as a win for press freedom.

Journalists are often denied access to Aboriginal land, which accounts for half the
land in the NT.

AAP km/drp/jlw

KEYWORD: TOOHEY

2003 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

WA: Crean pledges to restore bulk billing without extra taxes

00-00-0000
WA: Crean pledges to restore bulk billing without extra taxes

PERTH, Aug 6 AAP - Labor was committed to saving Medicare and restoring the rate ofbulk billing without increasing taxes, Opposition Leader Simon Crean said today.

He said the federal government was not using its health budget effectively and hadfailed to address the dramatic decline in bulk billing over the past three years.

"The package that I've developed involves no increase in taxes, a rearrangement ofthe funding, a reordering of priorities to get bulk billing back to where it was beforeHoward came in - back over the 80 per cent," Mr Crean told Perth radio 6PR.

He said Labor would restore the patient rebate to doctors to 100 per cent, up fromthe present 85 per cent, which would help restore bulk billing rates.

However, Mr Crean refused to be drawn on whether he planned to abolish the privatehealth insurance rebate.

"People and families have factored that in to their cost of living," he said.

"We're not going to put them under more financial pressure.

"But the truth of it is, we must look at how that money is being spent because it'suncapped ... and we've got to look at all of the health expenditure and see if that canbe reordered."

AAP alm/ldj/jlw

KEYWORD: MEDICARE CREAN

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Qld:Crean says his support is rock solid

00-00-0000
Qld:Crean says his support is rock solid

Opposition leader SIMON CREAN says support within his party is rock solid and he'scommitted to taking Labor to the next federal election.

Mr CREAN has told Brisbane's 4BC radio people underestimate his determination to leadthe party, following criticism that his position on Iraq is overshadowing domestic issues.

Mr CREAN says he's …

FED: NSW man charged with Qld outback double murder

00-00-0000
FED: NSW man charged with Qld outback double murder

A 31-year-old NSW man has been charged with double murder after a woman and her boyfriendwere found dead in a car boot in an outback town in Queensland yesterday.

Two children spent last night in protective custody after the bodies of their 26-year-oldmother and her 21-year-old boyfriend were discovered by police in a car boot in bushlandnear Goondiwindi in south-west Queensland.

Police from NSW and Queensland had been searching for a 31-year-old man believed tobe travelling with his eight-year-old son.

A NSW police spokesman says a 31-year-old Port Macquarie man surrendered himself atBathurst Police station in the state's central west yesterday afternoon.

The man was arrested and charged with two counts of murder.

He says investigations are continuing into the whereabouts of the eight-year-old child.

The 31-year-old man will appear in Bathurst Local Court later today.

AAP RTV nd

KEYWORD: BODIES CHARGE (SYDNEY)

Fed: Govt meanness pressures sports women to pose nude - ALP

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Fed: Govt meanness pressures sports women to pose nude - ALP

CANBERRA, Aug 15 AAP - The federal government was forcing female athletes to pose nudeto attract sponsorship dollars by ignoring women's sport, Labor sports spokeswoman KateLundy said today.

Senator Lundy said since coming to power in 1996, the government had scrapped a numberof women's sport programs and support services, including the Prime Ministerial Womenin Sport Award.

In 1999-2000, female participation in sport had dropped by 5.4 per cent, hitting sportssuch as basketball, netball and soccer hard.

"This is a direct result of policy inaction by the Howard government," Senator Lundy said.

"Consequently, some female athletes are being pressured to pose nude or in revealingoutfits in order to garner sponsorship dollars and a higher profile for their sport."

A prime example was the revelation this week that the cash-strapped Australian women'ssoccer team, the Matildas, had been pressured into appearing topless for a foreign toothpastetelevision commercial.

Senator Lundy said the government had ignored a 1996 report on how to improve the coverageof women's sport in the media, with the result that female athletes continued to suffer.

"The coalition has a clear responsibility to address the gender inequities, includingthe structural, cultural and financial barriers confronting sportswomen," she said.

A spokesman for Federal Sports Minister Rod Kemp said since the introduction of thesports funding component of the Backing Australia's Ability package, spending had increasedon all sport, including for women.

He said backing of the women in sport unit at the Australian Sports Commission hadbeen boosted by almost $500,000 for the period until 2005.

"In addition, all program areas across the ASC are increasingly targeting funds specificallyto address gender issues," Senator Kemp's spokesman said.

AAP rft/sw/jnb

KEYWORD: SPORT WOMEN

Fed: Aust says can help in Mideast peace plan

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Fed: Aust says can help in Mideast peace plan

By Linda McSweeny

CANBERRA, April 7 AAP - Australia has offered diplomatic help to Arab countries seekingMiddle East peace but is shying away from committing peacekeepers to the region.

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer recently met with ambassadors from the United ArabEmirates, Egypt, Lebanon and the Palestinian representative in Canberra, Ali Kazak.

But he remains under fire from the opposition for failing to take a stand.

Mr Downer told the group Australia was prepared to play a role in peacekeeping in theMiddle East.

"Australia is happy to play a bigger role than just the role of making statements andparticipating in votes in multilateral organisations, in particular the United Nations,"

Mr Downer told ABC TV today.

He said Australia would consider requests for it to play a more active role, givenits experience in bringing peace to different parts of the Asia-Pacific region.

"We'd be happy to look at any proposals and they were going to transmit that messageback to their capital cities."

Catholic and Anglican bishops in Canberra last week urged the government to play apeacekeeping role in the Middle East.

A spokesman for Mr Downer later said participating in a peacekeeping force was notan issue on the table.

Australia could, however, provide diplomatic aid in negotiating peace.

"Mr Downer told them that if there was any proposal ... on a resolution to the crisis,whether that was a particular role for Australia to assist with, whether that was helpingwith negotiation or diplomatic presence to try to bring about resolution, that would besomething we would be happy to consider," the spokesman said.

Israel has continued with a 10-day offensive in the West Bank despite US pleas to withdraw.

Mr Downer said the Middle East situation was disturbing and he hoped a ceasefire wouldhappen soon.

It was important that the Palestinian authorities took stronger action against terroristorganisations, Mr Downer said.

And an Israeli withdrawal was fundamental to a ceasefire, he said.

"What's acceptable is when both sides agree to a ceasefire," Mr Downer said.

But opposition foreign spokesman Kevin Rudd criticised the government for failing tosupport Labor's plan for a bipartisan plea to the US to bring about a ceasefire.

"It seems that his [Mr Downer's] approach and that of the Prime Minister's when itcomes to Middle East policy is wait for the policy debate to be resolved in Washingtonfirst and then say `me too'," Mr Rudd told the Seven Network.

Considerable influence from Australia must be brought to bear, Mr Rudd said.

"I think sometimes in this country we underestimate the extent to which this country'svoice is actually listened to with respect in Washington," he said.

While European Union ministers had been calling on the US for action in the MiddleEast last week, Australia had remained mute, he said.

"Australian foreign policy is not much better than some kind of Greek chorus for Americanpolicy decisions once taken."

AAP lm/pw/sb

KEYWORD: MIDEAST AUST NIGHTLEAD

Vic: Two criminal associates ID'd as Gagitano suspects

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Vic: Two criminal associates ID'd as Gagitano suspects

Two criminal associates of slain Melbourne gangster ALPHONSE GANGITANO have been namedat a coronial inquest as suspects in his murder.

Lawyer JEREMY RAPKE, QC, counsel assisting the coroner, says the two men -- GRAEMEKINNIBURGH, 60, and JASON MORAN, 34 -- were both present on the night of the murder.

Mr RAPKE says there's considerable suspicion surrounding Mr KINNIBURGH and Mr MORANconcerning the murder.

Mr RAPKE -- in an opening address -- described how GANGITANO, 40, was fatally shotin the head and back in his Templestowe home on January 16, 1998.

Mr RAPKE described …