Thursday, March 15, 2012

Honda: Lack of parts may affect N. America plants

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Production will likely be interrupted at Honda Motor Co.'s six North America plants after April 1 due to a lack of critical parts as Japanese suppliers work to recover from earthquake and tsunami damage, the automaker said Friday.

Interruptions are expected at Honda's two Ohio plants and at plants in Alabama, Indiana, Canada and Mexico until the issues are resolved, said spokesman Jeffrey Smith.

Honda said workers at the plants were informed Friday.

The company said on its website that a few suppliers in Japan are still working to re-establish operations, and that Honda is looking for other possible supply sources.

"The vast majority of …

Blood pressure pills could raise cancer risk

Some of the world's most popular blood pressure pills may slightly increase your risk of getting cancer, but doctors say it's too soon to ditch the drugs, according to new research.

In an analysis of five previous studies following about 60,000 patients, experts found a link between people taking medicines known as angiotensin-receptor blockers, or ARBs, and cancer. The drugs are taken by millions of people worldwide for conditions like high blood pressure, heart problems and diabetic kidney disease.

In the analysis, researchers found that people who took the drugs had about a 1 percent higher risk of getting cancer than people who weren't on the drugs. …

IAEA Resolution on Iran

In its Feb. 4 resolution on Iran's nuclear program, the International Atomic Energy Agency Board of Governors said that "a solution to the Iranian issue would contribute to global nonproliferation efforts and to realizing the objective of a Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction, including their means of delivery." Following are key excerpts from the resolution.

1. Underlines that outstanding questions can best be resolved and confidence built in the exclusively peaceful nature of Iran's programme by Iran responding positively to the calls for confidence building measures which the Board has made on Iran, and in this context deems it necessary for Iran to:

* …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Former Indonesian dictator Suharto examined in hospital after 5 days of illness

Former Indonesian dictator Suharto was being examined in a Jakarta hospital Friday after falling ill at his home last week, doctors said.

Suharto, 86, complained about "swelling of his feet and other parts of his body," said Dr. Joko Raharjo, a member of Suharto's medical team at Pertamina Hospital.

His condition was not considered threatening, but he would likely spend the night under observation, said Dr. Brig. Gen. Marjo Subiandono, the head of Indonesia's presidential medical team.

Suharto, who brutally ruled the country for 32 years …

India's richest man caps his salary at $3.3M

India's richest man annouced he will voluntarily cap his compensation at 150 million rupees ($3.3 million) this year, saying Thursday that he will get by on about a third of his take-home pay from the previous year.

Mukesh Ambani's flagship company, Reliance Industries, said his decision reflects his "desire to set a personal example of moderation."

In 2008, he made 66 percent more, or 440.2 million rupees ($9.6 million), a drop in the bucket of his overall wealth, which Forbes magazine puts at $19.5 billion.

In March, Mukesh's younger brother, Anil, decided to forego all compensation this year, Tony Jesudasan, a spokesman for his group …

Preserve Clybourn Corridor

If you listen to some people, you'd think that using the law toprotect the investment people have made in their property is somekind of radical idea. These people would have you believe that thecity has no business trying to protect an important enclave ofmanufacturing on the Near North Side called the "Clybourn Corridor."They argue that Chicago would be better off letting yuppiegentrification sweep through the area, driving out the plants andtheir jobs.

The argument, which conveniently ignores the well-establishedlegitimacy of zoning laws, should not stand in the way of the CityCouncil approving a proposed designation of the Clybourn Corridor asa manufacturing area. …

Dan Rather Joins HDNet, Talking to AOL

PASADENA, Calif. - Saying the news "needs backers who won't back down," former CBS anchor Dan Rather confirmed Tuesday that he's joining Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban for a weekly program that begins in October on HDNet.

The one-hour "Dan Rather Reports" will feature field reports, interviews and investigations. Rather will produce the program and be its host.

"Hard news needs backers who won't back down," Rather said. "Mark Cuban is such a leader. As a team player I intend to give Mark and HDNet all of the hard work, loyalty and fearless, high quality reporting possible."

Rather and Cuban were scheduled to meet with reporters late Tuesday in California.

Analysis: Nuclear concerns still weigh heavy on US

Behind President Barack Obama's toughened but modulated response to the Iranian election crisis is a calculation that when the dust settles, the United States will still face an unpredictable adversary that gets closer every day to producing nuclear weapons.

No one can say whether the unrest following disputed presidential elections will yield an Iran more willing to cut a deal over its disputed nuclear program. But as Obama sees it, the United States must be ready to talk no matter who sits on the other side of the table.

"My position coming into this office has been that the United States has core national security interests in making sure that Iran …

Ski Season: New Name, Old Look // Hot Dog Relishes Change

The Ski Chicagoland Association still includes all five downhillfacilities in the metropolitan area, but one has a new name - andlook - this season.

Americana, which had been for sale for five years, recently wassold to Marcus Hotel Corp. of Milwaukee.

The Lake Geneva facility has been renamed Hot Dog Mountain,and will be part of what is now the Grand Geneva Resort & Spa.

The new owners plan a major renovation of the resort, which wasa hot spot of the 1970s as an offshoot of Chicago's Playboy magazineempire. Playboy, which built the resort on what was then the IndianTrails ski area in 1968, sold it to Americana in 1980.

Among the first …

Boren remembers loss to Appalachian State

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — There's no need to preach to Ohio State offensive lineman Justin Boren about how good an underdog can be, or what one can accomplish.

You see, Boren has firsthand knowledge of one of the biggest upsets in college football history.

On Sept. 1, 2007, Boren played for Michigan when the fifth-ranked Wolverines were shocked 34-32 by championship-subdivision Appalachian State.

"Appalachian State was a good team. People think that these (unranked) teams are so much different, but they're really not," Boren said Tuesday. "They're all very capable teams. Appalachian State was a very good team. People look at it and, like, dang, Michigan must be terrible. …

Citigroup's string of bailouts, at a glance

Citigroup Inc. CEO Vikram Pandit appeared in Washington on Thursday to tell bailout overseers that today's Citi is not the tangled behemoth that required more than $45 billion from the government to survive the financial crisis.

Citi's bailouts have attracted attention because it is the world's largest financial services conglomerate, and because the government seemed endlessly willing to rework the terms of Citi's debt in ways that helped the company _ but not always taxpayers.

Here's a look at the various stages by which the government's stake in Citi ballooned, and how much has been paid back:

_ Oct. 28, 2008: Treasury's first round of capital …

MORNINGLINE

Results Should first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton go to China next month forthe World Conference on Women? Yes: 32% No: 68% …

US looks like target market

The Infiniti M35h hybrid incorporates some intriguing technologyand represents a tempting option for city dwelling executives, butit doesn't offer enough to tempt the vast majority of us from ourdiesel cars. It's well equipped and decently finished but spaceinside is a little disappointing. Interesting, different and worthyenough, the M35h is clearly targeted across the pond.

We've come to expect some sort of technological headliner frommost Japanese hybrid cars and the Infiniti M35h is no different. Itsmost fascinating feature is the Approaching Vehicle Sound forPedestrians (VSP) which utilises a range of distinctive sounds tohelp ensure the safety of other road users.

VSP is computer controlled and links an in-car sound synthesiserwith a speaker built in to the front bumper. It automatically worksfrom start-up to 20mph, cutting back in at 17mph as the vehicleslows. It sounds somewhat like a quieter version of a jet taxiingand gets your attention without sounding harsh or intrusive.

Aside from that, the M35h gets a very punchy 303bhp 3.5-litrepetrol V6 augmented by a 67bhp electric motor, the M35h which meansa very punchy 5.6 second sprint to 60mph. The transmission is anautomatic with internal clutch pack and means that there's not theCVT gearbox whine that often accompanies hybrid cars.

The extra 120kg of weight added by the hybrid system means thatyou shouldn't expect the M35h to feel as wieldy through corners as aconventional petrol-powered M37. It's possible to drive at up to60mph on electric power alone, but you'll need to have the tactilefinesse of a bomb disposal expert with the throttle. Give it anymore than about a quarter of the pedal's travel and the petrolengine thrums smoothly into life.

The design of the Infiniti M35h appears to draw upon a number ofinfluences. There's something rather Maserati GranTurismo about thefront wheel arches and undeniably overtones of Jaguar XF around thefront grille and headlamps.

The rear end is less distinguished, tapering to a rather genericblend of Japanese and American design cues. The net result is a carthat doesn't quite hang together a cohesive package, lacking thedynamic tension of a modern European design. That said, it is quitedistinctive.

The Infiniti M35h hybrid is an impressive foray into a marketthat has yet to bloom in this country. Executive class buyers remainfirmly wedded to their diesel cars and although the Japanese companyhas clearly thrown a lot of resources at this model and pioneeredsome intriguing technical innovations, it's not a car that makes anoverwhelmingly convincing case on the balance sheet.

What you do get is a very well finished car that makes light workof city driving and offers an alternative to the 'too cool forschool' understatement of the German marques.

Ultimately this car feels exactly what it is - a car targeted atthe American market that will garner only very minority interest inthe UK. Still, as an example of what Infiniti is capable of, itbodes extremely well for when they design some more Eurocentricproducts.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Turkey asks NATO to help clear mines near Syria

Turkey is seeking help from NATO to help clear land mines from the country's border with Syria.

The announcement Tuesday by the Defense Ministry ends a dispute over who would do the job.

The military and opposition parties had strongly opposed a government-drafted law that allowed private foreign companies to clear the mines in return for the right to farm the fertile land for up to 44 years.

The Defense Ministry says talks have begun with the NATO Maintenance and Supply Agency, which is NATO's principal logistics support management agency.

Turkey, a NATO member and U.S. ally, planted more than half a million mines along the 500-kilometer (310-mile) Syrian border in the 1950s to secure the frontier.

Massa recovering, communicating 'passively'

Felipe Massa's health was improving Monday after the Formula One driver communicated passively with doctors, and medical scans provided encouraging signs after surgery on multiple skull fractures.

Department of defense ministry spokesman Istvan Bocskai told the Associated Press that Massa was not speaking but that the 28-year-old Brazilian reacted when spoken to and was moving his hands and feet.

Massa was in life-threatening but stable condition following surgery on multiple skull injuries sustained during a violent crash in his Ferrari Saturday at the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Bocskai said that military hospital doctors were reassured after no complications were uncovered by a CT scan. An ultrasound performed Sunday night to check on internal injuries revealed "nothing that would give cause for concern."

The sedated Massa was also being woken up more frequently.

"These are definitely positive signs," Bocskai said.

Massa received a concussion after a loose car part hit his helmet during a qualifying run on Saturday.

He then slammed into a protective tire barrier at about 120 mph causing multiple skull injuries that were operated on around one hour after being taken from the Hungaroring circuit.

Although Massa was in stable condition in the intensive care unit at AEK hospital following surgery, doctors called Massa's condition as life-threatening due to the severity of the injuries.

Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo was scheduled to join the 11-time Grand Prix winner's family _ which includes pregnant wife Anna Rafaela _ on Monday.

F1's governing body is investigating the crash, which came amid a string of safety mishaps.

A Formula 2 driver was killed six days earlier after being struck in the head by a loose tire from another car and crashing into a barrier.

Motorsport authorities also suspended Renault from the next round of the championship for jeopardizing Fernando Alonso's safety when it failed to inform the two-time world champion of a nut wheel problem at Budapest. Alonso's wheel subsequently came off and bounced wildly down the track.

No F1 driver has died on the track since Ayrton Senna 15 years ago. The three-time champion died from head injuries after a violent crash in Italy.

___

AP Auto Racing Writer Paul Logothetis contributed to this report.

Level 3 Communications names new head of legal

BROOMFIELD, Colo. (AP) — Level 3 Communications Inc., which provides wholesale Internet networking services, has named John M. Ryan as chief legal officer.

He will succeed Thomas C. Stortz, 59, who will retire at year's end, the company said Wednesday.

Ryan, 47, has been with the company since 1999 and has led its public policy group since 2005.

He was previously an associate and partner at Fraser Stryker Law Firm, where he dealt with the communications industry.

Storz will stay on as an adviser through the first quarter of 2011, the company said.

Level 3 shares rose 2 cents to close at $1.11.

Skyrocketing costs may have doomed NYC trial plan

A letter and a speech may have doomed plans to bring the Sept. 11 terror trial to New York.

The letter written by Mayor Michael Bloomberg to Washington earlier this month set a whopping $200-million-a-year price tag to secure the city during the trial _ more than double the original estimate. The speech by Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly detailed a planned lockdown of lower Manhattan certain to set new standards for gridlock.

The resulting political and public outcry has forced the Obama administration to consider looking for a more suitable home for the high-profile trial, even as the legitimacy of the New York Police Department's security plan and its estimated cost goes unchallenged.

Kelly insists the plan is necessary _ a reality that started to sink in after his remarks before business leaders.

"The investment that the department would have to make ... and the details of the plan itself, how it would've impacted the traffic in lower Manhattan," he told reporters Friday. "That was the first time they heard it in one fell swoop, so to speak, and it raised their concerns."

By announcing late last year that New York would host the trial of admitted 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four alleged al-Qaida cohorts, the Obama administration stumbled into a political fire that had burned the previous administration.

Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center, New York and federal officials have quarreled over how much of the city's security costs should be borne by Washington. New York officials, led by Bloomberg, have complained for years that the government does not pay enough of those costs. The Bush administration long argued they have to spread resources to protect the entire country.

The latest round of that long-running fight began when the Bloomberg administration circulated a Jan. 5 letter to reporters from the mayor to the Office of Management and Budget in Washington.

The letter put the cost of stepped-up security at $216 million for the first year after Mohammed and the others arrive in Manhattan from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. After that, the mayor said it would cost $200 million annually for as long as the men are detained in the city _ mainly overtime for extra police patrols.

The police department had given an initial estimate of $75 million a year but later warned it could be higher. Officials said a second, more careful analysis produced the totals cited by the mayor, who warned the trial would strain the resources of the nation's largest police department.

"As 9/11 was an attack on the entire nation, we need the federal government to shoulder the significant costs we will incur and ease this burden," Bloomberg wrote.

The mayor left Kelly to explain the threat _ and the extensive plans to thwart it.

"Given the unprecedented media attention the trial will attract, one concern is that terrorists may attempt to strike again in an effort to garner the publicity," he said in the Jan. 13 speech to a police organization.

On Friday, Kelly told reporters that public backlash made it "unlikely" the case would go forward in New York City. Two Obama administration officials said the Justice Department is drawing up plans for alternate locations for the terror trials. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the deliberations.

Pennsylvania officials expressed early concerns about the possibility of moving the trial to their state, where one of the hijacked airliners crashed. Gov. Ed Rendell told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review that officials are not "dead-set" against the idea but worry about safety and want to know how much of the cost the federal government would pick up.

Holding the trial in New York City created concerns, on both sides, about protests. The NYPD planned a show of force involving thousands of officers on foot, in mobile guard towers and in patrol cars. An outer perimeter would be created with checkpoints for inspecting private cars, along with an inner frozen zone around the courthouse that would ban them altogether.

The courthouse area would be protected by car checkpoints, bomb-sniffing dogs, rooftop sharpshooters and helicopter patrols. Workers would endure long lines to enter.

Harbor patrols would monitor the East and Hudson rivers to prevent a Mumbai-style attack. The department also envisioned constant radiation sweeps to detect dirty bombs.

Experts say the threat assessment and cost projections were not overkill.

The plan is warranted "because downtown Manhattan had been the focus of terrorist attacks on at least two prior occasions, one of them Sept. 11, leading to the greatest loss of life on American soil," said Randy Mastro, former deputy mayor for Rudy Giuliani. "We sometimes have short memories. After Sept. 11, downtown was, understandably, locked down for many, many weeks."

The price tag "is obviously large," said Rick Nelson, a security expert with the Center for Strategic & International Studies. "But this is not something you cut corners on. ... A failure would be devastating."

By backpedaling, the administration could set a precedent that might make it more difficult to follow through with other planned terror trials in Washington, D.C., and northern Virginia, said Patrick Rowan, once the top counterterrorism official in the Bush Justice Department.

"If it's too risky to hold a major terrorism trial in downtown Manhattan, then they're going to face the same argument from civic leaders in other metropolitan areas," Rowan said.

"If you follow the logic behind this decision, they may quickly find themselves in a position where they need to create a single facility," he added, "perhaps on a military base in the middle of a cornfield."

___

Associated Press writer Devlin Barrett in Washington contributed to this report.

Fears in Post-Communist Societies: A Comparative Perspective

Eric Shiraev and Vladimir Shlapentokh, eds. Fears in Post-Communist Societies: A Comparative Perspective. New York: Palgrave, 2002. xi, 163 pp. Tables. References. Index. $45.00, cloth.

Eric Shiraev and Vladimir Shlapentokh's edited volume, Fears in Post-Communist Societies: A Comparative Perspective, is based on a three-year cross-national research project sponsored by the National Council for Eurasian Studies. The editors have recruited authors from across the former Soviet Union and East-Central Europe to write individual chapters on the worries and concerns of people in Russia, the Czech Republic, Poland, Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania. Additional chapters address the fears of emigrants from the Soviet Union presently living in the United States or Israel. Relying on the results of many public opinion surveys, some conducted as part of this research project but most apparently not, the authors conclude that most of the fears experienced by citizens of post-communist countries are rational, based on a realistic assessment of the conditions in which they find themselves.

If popular fears in the post-communist world have a rational basis, it is fairly easy to predict what they will be. Consequently, many of the findings reported in this book are not overly surprising. Citizens in most post-Communist countries are very worried about economic conditions, but this is less true for those who live in countries where the economy is doing better, like the Czech Republic or Poland. Citizens in Ukraine and Belarus are more likely to worry about the effects of radiation exposure than are people who live farther from the site of the Chernobyl nuclear accident. Younger, more successful people tend to worry less about economic hardship, except in Belarus, where the lack of reform has left these same groups of people more dissatisfied. Some results are more unexpected. Poles, for instance, seem to be more worried about the imperialist aspirations of Americans than of Russians. Immigrants from the Soviet Union to the United States worry more about the return to mass repression in Russia than Russians still in Russia do.

In their concluding chapter, Shiraev and Shlapentokh hint that what worries ordinary citizens matters because demagogues can manipulate popular fears to rouse a troubled citizenry to extra-constitutional action. If so, the data in this book are somewhat encouraging. Mostly, citizens in post-Communist countries are worried about real things: rising prices, threats of unemployment, increasing crime rates, terrorism, environmental degradation, and the health and welfare of their families. Only small minorities are afraid of imaginary threats, like Masonic conspiracies or that an eclipse of the sun might result in the end of the world. As David W. Rohde points out in a brief essay at the end of the book, when people are preoccupied with real-world concerns, there is generally less room for politicians and the media to breed less grounded fears. Of course, the overwhelming preoccupation with economic difficulties remains a potential source for mobilization or manipulation.

Some aspects of presentation make this book less satisfying than it might have been. The treatment of people's fears is mostly descriptive, with some speculation about why people might worry about the things they do, but with little statistical analysis. Each chapter deals with one country, occasionally with some comparable data from other countries. If readers are interested in comparing the fears of one country to another, mostly they will have to do that for themselves. That said, it is not always clear that they can do so. Although each chapter deals with similar issues, there is not enough information about how survey questions were worded to be confident that results can be compared across chapters. For instance, one of the most widespread worries of Russians is the arbitrariness of authorities. This concern is not mentioned for any of the other countries. It is hard to know whether that is because Russians worry about different things than citizens in other former communist countries or because they were asked different questions. Overall, it seems that people in the various countries were asked similar, but not identical questions, at various points over the last decade. Direct comparisons across countries may be hazardous.

Much of the information reported in this book is quite current, from surveys conducted within the past five years. However, the haste to get the book out is evident in the final product. There are rather too many typographical and grammatical errors. Sources referenced in the text are not always included in the bibliography. Insufficient information is provided on the surveys upon which most of the conclusions are based. Some chapters are notably stronger than others. Even so, this slim volume is packed with pieces of information that probably would be hard to find elsewhere. A prodigious number of opinion surveys and some exceptional survey researchers from formerly communist areas contributed to this book. For readers interested in what troubles the citizens of post-communist countries, Fears in Post-Communist Societies is a useful resource.

[Author Affiliation]

Ellen Carnaghan, Saint Louis University

What's in a name? For Omari Hardwick, everything's cool

Clifford and Joyce Hardwick, he the attorney, she the educator, were more into brand name designers than off-the-rack dashikis, deeper into Black prosperity than the Black Panthers by the time their four children came along into a world that was quickly changaing, and not necessarily for the better.

Dad was Clifford Hardwick IV, rare for a naming lineage to go so deep during that time. So it must have been a difficult choice for Clifford Hardwick to snap the legacy with the naming of Malik, Jamil and Omari. There's also a Shani, the only girl.

Omari remembers how his name was perceived then and particularly how it's received now.

Few things areconsidered to be more personally revealing than a name, except, say, whether a sister's hair is straight or natural, short or long, braided or locked.

So it comes as little surprise the type of reception actor Omari Hardwick, star of the new TNT paramedic series Saved, received when he tried to get a bite from casting directors who didn't quite know what to make of him.

Hollywood is a strange, cautious, insular place where fear is factored into nearly every decision. Money is the root of daily life.

Omari was a star defensive back for the University of Georgia who washed out in the pros due to injury but wasn't limping into the Hollywood pool just to see if the strapping brother easy on the eyes (5-foot-ll, 190, little body fat to speak of) could merely shift into another on-camera career. He was one of those thespians who also played football, or a football player who also acted, depending on the day, as early as high school. He took formal acting training during his junior year at Georgia, nabbing the lead role in August Wilson's acclaimed stage play Fences at the Athens Theater Company. It wasn't the need for strutting in front of a crowd. He loved the taste of going into another character, of living lives other than his own, of saying things he normally wouldn't say.

He landed work on series like LL Cool J's series In The House, starred in several low-budget films like Circles and Within the Wall, stage plays like Michael Heath's All Good Soldiers in the West End and Shelly Garrett's famed Beauty Shop.

His first major role was as Dante in Spike Lee's Sucker Free City. He even turned up in Beauty Shop with Queen Latifah.

In Saved, a well-done drama that wants to make flawed heroes out of paramedics the way ER has done with doctors and Rescue Me with firefighters focuses on the partnership of Oman's Sack and Tom Everett Scott's Wyatt, a pair of Cowboy medics with baggage. (Wyatt is a gambler with daddy issues and Sack is a brother looking at his family from the outside in.)

Saved producers went with a more cool nickname instead of something along the lines of Oman, and that's fine with the star. It's a personal choice.

"My parents weren't hippies, they weren't into the Black Panthers," Oman says, explaining his parent's name choice. "My dad especially just wanted to get back to his ancestral roots."

Clifford Hardwick wasn't thinking that a person's name can have a subtle or not-so-subtle effect on career advance-ment because, let's face it, there are certain connotations with Katie, others with JaQuinisha, a name I heard the other day while waiting in line at the 7-Eleven.

But with Oman, "each time I walked into a casting session you could tell they were wondering about my ethnicity," says the 32year-old actor, who added that his Saved character wasn't written as a black man. "My first name tossed them; the second completely throws them off."

"You can get in the door but it's up to you to nail the audition. They didn't hire me for Saved because they think my name is intriguing."

Saved airs Mondays at 9 on TNT.

[Author Affiliation]

Ken Parish Perkins, one of the nation's top television critics, writes a weekly TV/media column for the Chicago Defender.

FINDING OSCAR

Find the winners, and find some great prizes. Correctly select whowill win this years Academy Awards to win one of the prizes listedbelow: Best picture The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Lost in Translation Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World Mystic River Seabiscuit Best actor Johnny Depp, Pirates of theCaribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl Ben Kingsley, House of Sandand Fog Jude Law, Cold Mountain Bill Murray, Lost in Translation Sean Penn, Mystic River Best actress Keisha Castle-Hughes, WhaleRider Diane Keaton, Somethings Gotta Give Samantha Morton, InAmerica Charlize Theron, Monster Naomi Watts, 21 Grams Bestsupporting actor Alec Baldwin, The Cooler Benicio Del Toro, 21Grams Djimon Hounsou, In America Tim Robbins, Mystic River KenWatanabe, The Last Samurai Best supporting actress ShohrehAghdashloo, House of Sand and Fog Patricia Clarkson, Pieces of AprilMarcia Gay Harden, Mystic River Holly Hunter, thirteen ReneeZellweger, Cold Mountain Best director Fernando Meirelles, City ofGod Peter Jackson The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Sofia Coppola, Lost in Translation Peter Weir, Master and Commander:The Far Side of the World Clint Eastwood, Mystic River Tie breakers:Best animated feature film Brother Bear Finding Nemo The Tripletsof Belleville Best original song Into the West, The Lord of theRings: The Return of the King A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow AMighty Wind Scarlet Tide, Cold Mountain The Triplets of Belleville,The Triplets of Belleville You Will Be My Ain True Love, ColdMountain

First prize: Two-night midweek getaway at a West Virginia StatePark Lodge. Second prize: Eight-hour pontoon boat rental and eight-hour fishing boat rental from Beech Fork Lake Marina. Third prize:Two passes and a prize pack from WaterWays Water Park along CorridorG in Boone County. Pick one nominee for each category. If there is atie, a random drawing will be held. Entries must be postmarked orreceived by Feb. 27. Charleston Newspapers employees and relativesare not eligible. One entry per person. Entry forms are alsoavailable in the lobby of Charleston Newspapers. Mail or bring couponto: Charleston Daily Mail, Oscar Contest 1001 Virginia Street E.,Charleston, WV 25301

Name: (Please print) _____________________________________Address: _______________________________________________ City:___________________________________________________ State: _________Zip: _____________________ Daytime phone:________________________________________

Athletics 4, Giants 0

4Athletics 4, Giants 0
OAKLAND @ SAN FRAN @
ab r h bi @ab r h bi
Ellis 2b 5 1 2 0 FLewis lf 3 0 1 0
RSwny rf 4 1 2 0 Drham 2b 4 0 0 0
Cust lf 3 0 1 1 Winn rf 2 0 2 0
RDavis cf 0 0 0 0 BMolna c 4 0 0 0
ErChvz 3b 4 0 0 0 Rwand cf 4 0 1 0
Crosby ss 4 0 0 0 Bowker 1b 2 0 0 0
CGnzlz cf 4 1 1 0 Aurilia 1b 2 0 2 0
KSuzuk c 4 1 3 0 JCstillo 3b 4 0 0 0
DBartn 1b 2 0 0 1 Vizquel ss 3 0 0 0
Harden p 2 0 0 0 Cain p 2 0 0 0
EBrwn ph 1 0 0 0 Tschnr p 0 0 0 0
Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Horwitz ph 1 0 0 0
Embre p 0 0 0 0 Sadler p 0 0 0 0
Foulke p 0 0 0 0
Hnnhan ph 1 0 0 0
Street p 0 0 0 0
Totals @ 34 4 9 2 Totals @31 0 6 0
Oakland 100 000 111_4
San Francisco 000 000 000_0
E_ErChavez (1). DP_Oakland 2. LOB_Oakland 6, San Francisco 7. 2B_Cust (8). 3B_KSuzuki (1). CS_RDavis (2), FLewis (3). SF_DBarton.
IP H R ER BB SO
Oakland @
Harden W,4-0 6 1 0 0 2 9
Ziegler 2-3 1 0 0 0 0
Embree 1-3 1 0 0 0 1
Foulke 1 1 0 0 0 1
Street 1 2 0 0 1 0
San Francisco @
Cain L,3-5 7 6 3 3 1 11
Taschner 1 1 0 0 0 0
Sadler 1 2 1 1 1 1
Cain pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
WP_Taschner, Sadler.
Umpires_Home, Laz DiazFirst, Wally BellSecond, Paul SchrieberThird, Kerwin Danley.
T_2:45. A_40,873 (41,907).

Monday, March 12, 2012

Google's China answer page inaccessible

A Google question-and-answer page for Chinese users was inaccessible from mainland China on Tuesday less than a month after the search giant's Internet license was renewed amid a dispute over online censorship.

The company found no technical problems with the Hong Kong-based service, said a Google Inc. spokewoman, Courtney Hohne, in an e-mail. Phone calls to China's Internet regulator, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, were not answered and the agency did not respond to questions sent by fax.

Beijing encourages Web use for education and business but tries to block material deemed subversive and closely watches sites where China's public can leave comments. Regulators block access to social networking sites abroad such as Facebook that pro-democracy and Tibet activists have used to criticize the communist government.

Google's future in China has been uncertain since the company announced in January it no longer wanted to cooperate with Beijing's Web censorship and shut down its China-based search engine in March. Mainland Web surfers can reach Google's Chinese-language site in Hong Kong, which has no online censorship, but industry analysts say users might defect to local rivals, eroding its advertising revenues.

Beijing renewed Google's Internet license last month despite the censorship dispute, which embarrassed communist officials and prompted questions about whether they might punish the U.S. company by barring it from China. The country is the world's most populous Internet market, with 420 million people online.

The answer page, http://www.google.com.hk/wenda, allows Chinese Web surfers to leave questions for other users to answer. Most of those posted since the service was launched two weeks ago are about consumer products and housing prices.

Google launched the site after announcing last month it would end a similar service run in partnership with a Chinese website, tianya.com.

The search page of Google's Hong Kong site was accessible from the mainland on Tuesday.

Last week, Google triggered a false alarm when it posted a notice saying its access to its search engine and several other services from China were blocked. A few hours later, the company said its system for tracking Internet access appaered to have misinterpreted what was happening to its search, mobile and advertising searches in China.

The uncertainty over Google in China has helped rival Baidu Inc., operator of the country's most popular search engine.

Google's share of search revenues fell from 31 percent in the first three months of the year to 24 percent in the second quarter, according to Analysys International, a research firm in Beijing. It said Baidu's share rose to 70 percent in the second quarter for the first time, up from 64 percent in the previous quarter.

___

Google question-and-answer page (in Chinese): http://www.google.com.hk/wenda

Volkswagen's 2010 outlook brightens

Automaker Volkswagen AG has raised its sales and operating profit forecast for 2010 after its performance in the first five months exceeded expectations.

The company said Wednesday that it now expects the 2009 figures "will be significantly exceeded" but didn't offer more specific guidance. It had previously forecast only that the 2010 figures would be above last year's.

Volkswagen said it has been helped by strong demand in key markets such as western Europe, China and North America.

It also said exchange rate effects "had a positive impact on profit." The euro has weakened this year.

Volkswagen cautioned that the outlook for the second half "still entails uncertainties" _ pointing to fierce competition and a difficult overall environment.

Florida highway pileup kills at least 10 people

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A long line of cars and trucks collided one after another early Sunday on a dark Florida highway so shrouded in haze and smoke that drivers were instantly blinded. At least 10 people were killed.

When rescuers first arrived, they could only listen for screams and moans because the poor visibility made it difficult to find victims in wreckage that was strewn for nearly a mile, police said.

Authorities were still trying to determine what caused the pileup south of Gainesville on Interstate 75, which had been closed for a time before the accidents because of the mixture of fog and heavy smoke from a brush fire that may have been intentionally set. At least a dozen cars and six tractor-trailers were involved, and some burst into flames.

Steven R. Camps of Gainesville said he and some friends were driving home several hours before dawn when they were drawn into the pileup.

"You could hear cars hitting each other. People were crying. People were screaming. It was crazy," he said. "If I could give you an idea of what it looked like, I would say it looked like the end of the world."

Photographs of the scene taken hours later revealed an aftermath that resembled a Hollywood disaster movie. Twisted, burned-out vehicles were scattered across the pavement, with smoke still rising from the wreckage.

Cars appeared to have smashed into the big rigs and, in one case, a motor home. Some cars were crushed beneath the heavier trucks.

Reporters who were allowed to view the site saw bodies still inside a burned-out Grand Prix. One tractor-trailer was burned down to its skeleton, charred pages of books and magazines in its cargo area. And the tires of every vehicle had burned away, leaving only steel belts.

Before Camps hit the fog bank, a friend who was driving ahead of him in a separate vehicle called to warn of the road conditions. The friend said he had just seen an accident and warned Camps to be careful as he approached the Paynes Prairie area just south of Gainesville.

A short time later, Camps said, traffic stopped along the northbound lanes.

"You couldn't see anything. People were pulling off the road," he said.

Camps said he began talking about the road conditions to a man in the car stopped next to them when another vehicle hit the man's car.

The man's vehicle was crushed under a semi-truck stopped in front of them. Camps said his car was hit twice, but he and another friend were able to jump out. They took cover in the grass on the shoulder of the road.

All around them, cars and trucks were on fire, and they could hear explosions as the vehicles burned.

"It was happening on both sides of the road, so there was nowhere to go. It blew my mind," he said, explaining that the scene "looked like someone was picking up cars and throwing them."

Authorities had not released the names of victims Sunday evening, but said one passenger car had four fatalities and a "tour bus-like" vehicle also was involved in the pileup.

At least 18 people were taken to a hospital.

All six lanes of the interstate — which runs virtually the entire length of Florida — were closed most of Sunday afternoon as investigators surveyed the site and firefighters put out the last of the flames.

The northbound lanes of I-75 were reopened around 5:30 p.m. EST, but the southbound lanes remained closed.

"Our standard operating procedure is to get the road open as quickly as possible but let's not forget we have 10 people who are not with us today," said Lt. Patrick Riordan, a Florida Highway Patrol spokesman. "So we are going to take our time assessing the situation."

It was not clear when the highway would fully reopen because part of the road melted, police said.

At some point before the pileup, police briefly closed the highway because of the fog and smoke. The road was reopened when visibility improved.

Riordan said he was not sure how much time passed between the reopening of the highway and the first crash.

Traffic was being diverted much of Sunday onto U.S. 301 and State Road 27, Riordan said.

A spokeswoman for the Florida Forest Service, Ludie Bond, said the fire began Saturday, and investigators were trying to determine whether the blaze had been intentionally set. She said there were no controlled burns in the area and no lightning.

Bond also said the fire had burned 62 acres and was contained but still burning Sunday. A similar fire nearby has been burning since mid-November because the dried vegetation is so thick and deep. No homes are threatened.

Four years ago, heavy fog and smoke were blamed for another serious crash.

In January 2008, four people were killed and 38 injured in a series of similar crashes on Interstate 4 between Orlando and Tampa, about 125 miles south of Sunday's crash. More than 70 vehicles were involved in those crashes, including one pileup that involved 40 vehicles.

___

Associated Press Writer Freida Frisaro in Miami contributed to this report.

Gleb Galperin win's 2 golds at diving Grand Prix event

World champion Gleb Galperin won two golds on the men's 10-meter platform at a diving Grand Prix on Sunday.

Galperin finished the men's 10-meter platform competition with 523.25 points for his first international victory since winning the world championships in Melbourne in 2007. China's Li Junbai was 13.15 points behind for second. Russia's Viktor Minibaev had 488.75 for third.

Later, Galperin paired with two-time Olympic champion Dmitry Sautin to win the synchronized platform ahead of China's Ying Hong and Li Junbai by just 2.17 points. The Russians collected 463.86.

The second Russian pair of Viktor Minibaev and Semen Kokunov came in third with 444.03.

Dong Jun led a Chinese double in the women's 3-meter springboard. Dong collected 347.40 points, 19.75 points ahead of Qu Lin. Germany's Katja Dieckow was third with 313.80.

City schools are struggling with budgets

A Robertson's letter ("It makes sense to look at budgets", EveningExpress, October 4) makes reference to no cuts having been made atthe moment.

I presume, Mr Robertson has no connection with the schoolcommunity as the schools in Aberdeen are currently suffering fromhuge cuts to their budget.

Examples of this are schools struggling to purchase necessarymaterials such as jotters and books; restricted budgets resulting inprimary teachers having to teach specialised subjects to theirpupils, knowledgeable parents being called upon to assist in othersubjects.

Where does it end?

So I disagree with A Robertson - it is in no way too premature forthe citizens of Aberdeen to be concerned.

Let's look at it this way - Aberdeen's largest income comes fromthe business and tourism community.

Marischal College is one of the most beautiful buildings in theworld and would perhaps lend itself better to an upmarket hotel thana council headquarters.

Now is the time for the council to re-think its plans.

The money saved could be ploughed back into the area which needsit most ... education, education, education.

J MannDanestoneAberdeen

Web ads, Automated calls, Canvassing

ALSO: How to balance a healthy life with campaign pressures

Are dot-com TV ads going to make political commercials more expensive in this fall's elections?

Yes, and by as much as 10 percent, according to Advertising Age.

Background: Dot-com advertising exploded from $650 million in 1998 to $4 billion in 1999. Some cable networks experienced their "first-ever sellout of inventor)," and now they and local network affiliates arc increasing their prices.

Big bucks: Media buyers expect nationwide ad sales for dot-coms to total between S7 billion and SlO billion in 2(HX). The biggest increase will be in the holiday-driven 4th quarter (October-December), which begins in the final month of the election. That means more traffic and higher rates for political advertising.

But not everywhere. Whereas campaigns "spend most heavily for news programs in states with tight races," dot-com companies buy primetime and remain "mostly a major market phenomenon" in Washington, Seattle, San Francisco, Boston and other urban areas. That means potentially more stable political advertising rates in smaller markets.

Another caveat: Dot-coms are more prone to buyouts and consolidations, further complicating long-term advertising projections.

Bottomline: Expect higher political rates, buy earlier to avoid getting locked out in October, but don't settle for a one-size-fits-all strategy. This year, if your ad plays in Peoria, it might cost too much to play in Chicago.

How do you balance your life while working in the business? I'm talking about family time, exercise program, errands, etc.

Guess what: Campaigns aren't about balancing your life. They are 24-7, win-or-losc propositions. Boilerplate advice: Eat healthy, don't smoke, drink alcohol in moderation, force yourself to find time to work out. In other words, vow to do what very few do by the end of a campaign.

Stress is the adrenaline of campaign life; it gives you the power to do what you thought was impossible. Some can hack it, many can't. If you can't, get another job and get your political fix from watching "Inside Politics."

You recently called automated phoning "old technology," but I recently won election using it to contact 9,000 voters on the day before the election. Only 8,500 ballots were cast in this atlarge election with nine candidates. Only 99 votes separated the winning third-place candidate from the fourthplace loser. Although I came in first a majority of my campaign team opposed the tactic, and think I actually lost votes using automated phoning. What is your advice? Does it gain or lose votes? Is it worth $2,000, 10 percent of our budget? What would you do instead to get out the vote?

Automated phoning does not lose votes, unless the recording is obnoxious or poorly timed.

Consider: Earlier this year, because of a computer error, "some 2,000 automated political calls" paid for by a congressional candidate "started ringing district phones around midnight." The phone vendor apologized for the technical glitch again using a recorded message to contact the bythen irate voters. The candidate lost, despite outspending his opponent by at least 4-to-1 .

Even with a well-timed, poll-tested message, the real question is value: Arc there better ways to persuade voters and turn them out?

In top-of-the-ballot races (e.g., Senate, Governor, Mayor, etc.), it's far more effective to use TV, radio and mail for persuasion. During GOTV in any campaign, it's more effective to use live callers or door-to-door canvassers.

As for a "majority of my campaign team opposing the tactic," that's fine unless they had their own profit motive constituting a conflict of interest (e.g., contract to do media buys, direct-mail, hire paid walkers, etc.).

Is it better to use volunteers for phone banks or canvasses? We have a limited budget and are in a five-way primary.

One: Pay for phone banks; they ensure accuracy and accountability, especially when you call back to turn out your vote.

Two: Recruit volunteers for canvasses - at least on the weekends, though you may need to pay for week-day activities when most potential volunteers are working.

And for the record: Everybody has a "limited budget."

How do you force opponents to stay within the bounds of election finance law?

You can't. But sometimes their non-compliance will open political opportunities for you.

Toothless tigers: Most campaign regulatory agencies - federal, state and local - lack the resources to audit reports and discipline scofflaws, even when the law is clearly on their side. However, law-breaking invites punishment from ethics watchdogs, editorial boards, opponents and voters.

As Richard Nixon said of his enemies after resigning the presidency: "I gave them a sword. And they stuck it in. And they twisted it with relish. And, I guess, if I'd been in their position I'd have done the same thing."

[Author Affiliation]

Craig Varoga is a partner in Varoga & Rice with offices in Texas and California. Fax questions to 713-529-1998, or e-mail to cvaroga@ix.netcom.com.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

A look at short selling

WHAT IS IT: Short selling is when investors borrow shares and sell them in the hope that they will go down. Then they buy them back at the lower price and pocket the different. It's risky _ if the stock goes up, short sellers lose.

WHY OBJECT: Short selling is hardly new, but it's being blamed by companies and politicians for accelerating the demise of companies such as Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns. Britain and the United States have temporarily barred short selling in financial companies' stocks in an attempt to stabilize markets.

BUT WAIT: Experts say it's companies underlying problems _ owning securities are sharply devalued or unsellable, for instance _ that drag their shares down, not short selling.

Hybrid Car Owners Testify To Vehicles' Benefits, Drawbacks.

By Erika Stutzman, Daily Camera, Boulder, Colo. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 4--On a perfect day, when the sun was shining and there was no wind or heavy traffic, Jim Shapiro got 103.3 miles per gallon from Superior to Denver, where he met a friend for lunch.

With gas prices flirting with $2 a gallon, the savings over the summer will add up to more than just lunch money.

"It's pretty small, and noisy at high speeds, but for what I need it for, it's perfect," said Shapiro, a Boulder physicist and programmer who bought his Honda Insight a year ago.

The two hybrid-electric cars on the market -- the Insight and the Toyota Prius -- run on both gasoline and electricity. They use less fuel, and generate fewer pollutants.

Dealers say about 20,000 hybrid cars will be sold in the United States this year -- solidifying public interest, but representing a very slim number of the 15 million or more new cars sold each year.

The hybrids use a fuel-efficient gas engine spurred on by an electric motor -- so they don't need down time to charge as do all-electric cars. The cars' computers "tell" the engine and motor how to get the best possible fuel economy.

Shapiro's Insight gets so much attention, he's printed up a sheet with frequently asked questions to hand out to people who ask him about the car.

"People are curious in parking lots, even at intersections," he says. "So I printed this up. But I usually will sit and talk to people anyway."

What Shapiro tells people is the Insight -- which he bought with a list price of $19,320 without air conditioning -- is the right car for him, but not a perfect car.

The mileage is outstanding, averaging 75 miles per gallon. Shapiro fills the tank every six weeks, though he generally commutes to his job at the Denver Tech Center by bus.

It's fast enough -- 75 miles per hour is no problem, but as a very quiet car, it picks up a lot of road noise above 50 mph.

"It's fun to drive. It's low to the ground so it corners great," he said.

Shapiro's "fun" quotient is high, too. His first car was a '36 Ford three-window coupe which he had as a Massachusetts Institute of Technology undergraduate in 1957. He replaced the engine with a racing engine. More recently, he had a '66 Mustang, which he gave to his grown son.

But buying the Insight wasn't as fun as driving it, he said. Dealers don't keep a lot in stock -- and often don't have any at all -- so browsing and even test driving isn't always possible.

"And you give up things. You can't take this thing off road. It's a two-seater, and you can't tow anything."

In fact, the carrying capacity is just 360 pounds.

"My wife and I can't gain a lot of weight!" he said. When buying or toting heavy items, like bags of cat food or mulch, a second car is needed, he said.

But, then again, there is that mileage.

"Saving money on gas is nice, but I bought the car because it just seemed like the right thing to do," Shapiro said.

Steve Ertzberger, a sales manager at Fisher Honda, said the dealership sells two or three Insights a month.

He said Boulder's environmentally friendly attitude helps move the cars -- but most buyers are more interested in the fuel economy.

Which means the hybrids couldn't have come at a better time. Gas prices were high last summer, high this year, and show no signs of dropping precipitously anytime soon.

Scott Reed, a spokesman with Regional Transportation District, said ridership tends to peak when gas prices are at their highest -- though the last two years' high prices have coincided with low unemployment, which also stimulates increased usage of public transportation.

RTD has also launched a hybrid-electric program of its own. So far, the district has received 23 hybrid-electric buses for downtown Denver.

About 20 are already in use along the 16th Street Mall, Reed said.

"It meets the needs on the mall -- they are ultra-low emission vehicles and really quiet," Reed said.

The City of Denver is also using hybrid and all-electric vehicles. The city's "Take Charge" program, funded by federal grant, includes 39 Toyota Priuses and seven all-electric RAV4-EVs, also by Toyota.

The Priuses are used by the city's public works and fire departments, while the RAV4's are leased by organizations and companies.

Boulder's FreeWave Technology, a wireless applications company, is leasing one of the cars, which charges at the solar-powered home of its chief technology officer and chairman.

CTO Jonathan Sawyer said the RAV4 is used as a company car. The firm is in the process of building a solar-powered station to charge it, and possibly additional electric cars.

"I've personally been an electric car advocate for years," Sawyer said. "I'm tickled pink that we got to participate in the program."

The lease is an expensive $600 a month. Sawyer said the car has a 120 mile range, followed by four to five hours of charging time. More typically, FreeWave's electric car travels about 25 miles a day, followed by a one-hour needed charge time.

Sawyer scoffs at the hybrids, calling them "marketing gimmicks" that still burn gas and produce smog.

But the public may be more apt to accept the hybrids over the electrics, and manufacturers have been moving to embrace them.

General Motors already has an all-electric that flopped -- its EV1, which Sawyer also owned, was released in 1999. The car, with a maximum driving range of 95 miles and downtime for recharges clocking in at six hours, was discontinued.

The list price on the RAV4 is $42,000, which will price it out of many garages, and drivers may be held at bay by the driving range and needed downtime.

Price is hardly the only factor keeping hybrids and electrics a specialty market. Consumers continue to favor gas guzzlers over fuel-efficient compact cars. Sales of sport-utility vehicles were up 9 percent last year to 3.5 million, even as the whole car and truck market declined by 7 percent.

And as gas prices soared the summer of 2000, and again this year, Americans are snapping up cars with the poorest fuel economy since 1980, the government says.

The Transportation Department reports that for purchases of model year 2001 cars -- based on March figures -- cars are getting an average fuel economy of 28.7 miles a gallon, and light trucks are getting only 20.9.

But there may be light at the end of the SUV-packed tunnel. Detroit is following Japan's lead, with Ford, DaimlerChrysler and General Motors expecting to make hybrid versions of their highly popular SUVs in the next few years.

Ford's Escape, Explorer and Daimler's Dodge Durango are expected to be first off the line, with hybrid-electric versions being planned for 2003.

To see more of the Daily Camera, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.bouldernews.com/

(c) 2001, Daily Camera, Boulder, Colo. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

TOYOY, HMC, F, DCX, GM,

Hybrid Car Owners Testify To Vehicles' Benefits, Drawbacks.

By Erika Stutzman, Daily Camera, Boulder, Colo. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 4--On a perfect day, when the sun was shining and there was no wind or heavy traffic, Jim Shapiro got 103.3 miles per gallon from Superior to Denver, where he met a friend for lunch.

With gas prices flirting with $2 a gallon, the savings over the summer will add up to more than just lunch money.

"It's pretty small, and noisy at high speeds, but for what I need it for, it's perfect," said Shapiro, a Boulder physicist and programmer who bought his Honda Insight a year ago.

The two hybrid-electric cars on the market -- the Insight and the Toyota Prius -- run on both gasoline and electricity. They use less fuel, and generate fewer pollutants.

Dealers say about 20,000 hybrid cars will be sold in the United States this year -- solidifying public interest, but representing a very slim number of the 15 million or more new cars sold each year.

The hybrids use a fuel-efficient gas engine spurred on by an electric motor -- so they don't need down time to charge as do all-electric cars. The cars' computers "tell" the engine and motor how to get the best possible fuel economy.

Shapiro's Insight gets so much attention, he's printed up a sheet with frequently asked questions to hand out to people who ask him about the car.

"People are curious in parking lots, even at intersections," he says. "So I printed this up. But I usually will sit and talk to people anyway."

What Shapiro tells people is the Insight -- which he bought with a list price of $19,320 without air conditioning -- is the right car for him, but not a perfect car.

The mileage is outstanding, averaging 75 miles per gallon. Shapiro fills the tank every six weeks, though he generally commutes to his job at the Denver Tech Center by bus.

It's fast enough -- 75 miles per hour is no problem, but as a very quiet car, it picks up a lot of road noise above 50 mph.

"It's fun to drive. It's low to the ground so it corners great," he said.

Shapiro's "fun" quotient is high, too. His first car was a '36 Ford three-window coupe which he had as a Massachusetts Institute of Technology undergraduate in 1957. He replaced the engine with a racing engine. More recently, he had a '66 Mustang, which he gave to his grown son.

But buying the Insight wasn't as fun as driving it, he said. Dealers don't keep a lot in stock -- and often don't have any at all -- so browsing and even test driving isn't always possible.

"And you give up things. You can't take this thing off road. It's a two-seater, and you can't tow anything."

In fact, the carrying capacity is just 360 pounds.

"My wife and I can't gain a lot of weight!" he said. When buying or toting heavy items, like bags of cat food or mulch, a second car is needed, he said.

But, then again, there is that mileage.

"Saving money on gas is nice, but I bought the car because it just seemed like the right thing to do," Shapiro said.

Steve Ertzberger, a sales manager at Fisher Honda, said the dealership sells two or three Insights a month.

He said Boulder's environmentally friendly attitude helps move the cars -- but most buyers are more interested in the fuel economy.

Which means the hybrids couldn't have come at a better time. Gas prices were high last summer, high this year, and show no signs of dropping precipitously anytime soon.

Scott Reed, a spokesman with Regional Transportation District, said ridership tends to peak when gas prices are at their highest -- though the last two years' high prices have coincided with low unemployment, which also stimulates increased usage of public transportation.

RTD has also launched a hybrid-electric program of its own. So far, the district has received 23 hybrid-electric buses for downtown Denver.

About 20 are already in use along the 16th Street Mall, Reed said.

"It meets the needs on the mall -- they are ultra-low emission vehicles and really quiet," Reed said.

The City of Denver is also using hybrid and all-electric vehicles. The city's "Take Charge" program, funded by federal grant, includes 39 Toyota Priuses and seven all-electric RAV4-EVs, also by Toyota.

The Priuses are used by the city's public works and fire departments, while the RAV4's are leased by organizations and companies.

Boulder's FreeWave Technology, a wireless applications company, is leasing one of the cars, which charges at the solar-powered home of its chief technology officer and chairman.

CTO Jonathan Sawyer said the RAV4 is used as a company car. The firm is in the process of building a solar-powered station to charge it, and possibly additional electric cars.

"I've personally been an electric car advocate for years," Sawyer said. "I'm tickled pink that we got to participate in the program."

The lease is an expensive $600 a month. Sawyer said the car has a 120 mile range, followed by four to five hours of charging time. More typically, FreeWave's electric car travels about 25 miles a day, followed by a one-hour needed charge time.

Sawyer scoffs at the hybrids, calling them "marketing gimmicks" that still burn gas and produce smog.

But the public may be more apt to accept the hybrids over the electrics, and manufacturers have been moving to embrace them.

General Motors already has an all-electric that flopped -- its EV1, which Sawyer also owned, was released in 1999. The car, with a maximum driving range of 95 miles and downtime for recharges clocking in at six hours, was discontinued.

The list price on the RAV4 is $42,000, which will price it out of many garages, and drivers may be held at bay by the driving range and needed downtime.

Price is hardly the only factor keeping hybrids and electrics a specialty market. Consumers continue to favor gas guzzlers over fuel-efficient compact cars. Sales of sport-utility vehicles were up 9 percent last year to 3.5 million, even as the whole car and truck market declined by 7 percent.

And as gas prices soared the summer of 2000, and again this year, Americans are snapping up cars with the poorest fuel economy since 1980, the government says.

The Transportation Department reports that for purchases of model year 2001 cars -- based on March figures -- cars are getting an average fuel economy of 28.7 miles a gallon, and light trucks are getting only 20.9.

But there may be light at the end of the SUV-packed tunnel. Detroit is following Japan's lead, with Ford, DaimlerChrysler and General Motors expecting to make hybrid versions of their highly popular SUVs in the next few years.

Ford's Escape, Explorer and Daimler's Dodge Durango are expected to be first off the line, with hybrid-electric versions being planned for 2003.

To see more of the Daily Camera, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.bouldernews.com/

(c) 2001, Daily Camera, Boulder, Colo. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

TOYOY, HMC, F, DCX, GM,

Hybrid Car Owners Testify To Vehicles' Benefits, Drawbacks.

By Erika Stutzman, Daily Camera, Boulder, Colo. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News

Jun. 4--On a perfect day, when the sun was shining and there was no wind or heavy traffic, Jim Shapiro got 103.3 miles per gallon from Superior to Denver, where he met a friend for lunch.

With gas prices flirting with $2 a gallon, the savings over the summer will add up to more than just lunch money.

"It's pretty small, and noisy at high speeds, but for what I need it for, it's perfect," said Shapiro, a Boulder physicist and programmer who bought his Honda Insight a year ago.

The two hybrid-electric cars on the market -- the Insight and the Toyota Prius -- run on both gasoline and electricity. They use less fuel, and generate fewer pollutants.

Dealers say about 20,000 hybrid cars will be sold in the United States this year -- solidifying public interest, but representing a very slim number of the 15 million or more new cars sold each year.

The hybrids use a fuel-efficient gas engine spurred on by an electric motor -- so they don't need down time to charge as do all-electric cars. The cars' computers "tell" the engine and motor how to get the best possible fuel economy.

Shapiro's Insight gets so much attention, he's printed up a sheet with frequently asked questions to hand out to people who ask him about the car.

"People are curious in parking lots, even at intersections," he says. "So I printed this up. But I usually will sit and talk to people anyway."

What Shapiro tells people is the Insight -- which he bought with a list price of $19,320 without air conditioning -- is the right car for him, but not a perfect car.

The mileage is outstanding, averaging 75 miles per gallon. Shapiro fills the tank every six weeks, though he generally commutes to his job at the Denver Tech Center by bus.

It's fast enough -- 75 miles per hour is no problem, but as a very quiet car, it picks up a lot of road noise above 50 mph.

"It's fun to drive. It's low to the ground so it corners great," he said.

Shapiro's "fun" quotient is high, too. His first car was a '36 Ford three-window coupe which he had as a Massachusetts Institute of Technology undergraduate in 1957. He replaced the engine with a racing engine. More recently, he had a '66 Mustang, which he gave to his grown son.

But buying the Insight wasn't as fun as driving it, he said. Dealers don't keep a lot in stock -- and often don't have any at all -- so browsing and even test driving isn't always possible.

"And you give up things. You can't take this thing off road. It's a two-seater, and you can't tow anything."

In fact, the carrying capacity is just 360 pounds.

"My wife and I can't gain a lot of weight!" he said. When buying or toting heavy items, like bags of cat food or mulch, a second car is needed, he said.

But, then again, there is that mileage.

"Saving money on gas is nice, but I bought the car because it just seemed like the right thing to do," Shapiro said.

Steve Ertzberger, a sales manager at Fisher Honda, said the dealership sells two or three Insights a month.

He said Boulder's environmentally friendly attitude helps move the cars -- but most buyers are more interested in the fuel economy.

Which means the hybrids couldn't have come at a better time. Gas prices were high last summer, high this year, and show no signs of dropping precipitously anytime soon.

Scott Reed, a spokesman with Regional Transportation District, said ridership tends to peak when gas prices are at their highest -- though the last two years' high prices have coincided with low unemployment, which also stimulates increased usage of public transportation.

RTD has also launched a hybrid-electric program of its own. So far, the district has received 23 hybrid-electric buses for downtown Denver.

About 20 are already in use along the 16th Street Mall, Reed said.

"It meets the needs on the mall -- they are ultra-low emission vehicles and really quiet," Reed said.

The City of Denver is also using hybrid and all-electric vehicles. The city's "Take Charge" program, funded by federal grant, includes 39 Toyota Priuses and seven all-electric RAV4-EVs, also by Toyota.

The Priuses are used by the city's public works and fire departments, while the RAV4's are leased by organizations and companies.

Boulder's FreeWave Technology, a wireless applications company, is leasing one of the cars, which charges at the solar-powered home of its chief technology officer and chairman.

CTO Jonathan Sawyer said the RAV4 is used as a company car. The firm is in the process of building a solar-powered station to charge it, and possibly additional electric cars.

"I've personally been an electric car advocate for years," Sawyer said. "I'm tickled pink that we got to participate in the program."

The lease is an expensive $600 a month. Sawyer said the car has a 120 mile range, followed by four to five hours of charging time. More typically, FreeWave's electric car travels about 25 miles a day, followed by a one-hour needed charge time.

Sawyer scoffs at the hybrids, calling them "marketing gimmicks" that still burn gas and produce smog.

But the public may be more apt to accept the hybrids over the electrics, and manufacturers have been moving to embrace them.

General Motors already has an all-electric that flopped -- its EV1, which Sawyer also owned, was released in 1999. The car, with a maximum driving range of 95 miles and downtime for recharges clocking in at six hours, was discontinued.

The list price on the RAV4 is $42,000, which will price it out of many garages, and drivers may be held at bay by the driving range and needed downtime.

Price is hardly the only factor keeping hybrids and electrics a specialty market. Consumers continue to favor gas guzzlers over fuel-efficient compact cars. Sales of sport-utility vehicles were up 9 percent last year to 3.5 million, even as the whole car and truck market declined by 7 percent.

And as gas prices soared the summer of 2000, and again this year, Americans are snapping up cars with the poorest fuel economy since 1980, the government says.

The Transportation Department reports that for purchases of model year 2001 cars -- based on March figures -- cars are getting an average fuel economy of 28.7 miles a gallon, and light trucks are getting only 20.9.

But there may be light at the end of the SUV-packed tunnel. Detroit is following Japan's lead, with Ford, DaimlerChrysler and General Motors expecting to make hybrid versions of their highly popular SUVs in the next few years.

Ford's Escape, Explorer and Daimler's Dodge Durango are expected to be first off the line, with hybrid-electric versions being planned for 2003.

To see more of the Daily Camera, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.bouldernews.com/

(c) 2001, Daily Camera, Boulder, Colo. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

TOYOY, HMC, F, DCX, GM,

Monday, March 5, 2012

Newsbriefs

Alabama governor

punishes two aides

MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Two more aides have been punished by Gov. DonSiegelman for their role in Alabama's ticket-fixing scandal.

The two-week suspensions of Siegelman's legislative liaison,Sheron Rose, and Chris Pitts, his community relations director, cameTuesday as the governor's legal adviser issued a report on thescandal showing there have been favors with traffic tickets in thestate for many years.

Such abuse "undercuts public confidence in government, and I amproud to be the governor who puts a stop to it," Siegelman said.

Pitts and Rose, who were suspended without pay, had admittedtheir …

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QUALCOMM FEELS HEAT FROM RIVAL.(BUSINESS)

Byline: -- Bloomberg News

SAN DIEGO -- Shares of Qualcomm Inc., which developed the world's second-most popular wireless phone technology, fell as much as 10 percent after Motorola Inc. said it will make semiconductors for phones to compete with Qualcomm.

Qualcomm fell 7 3/16 to 145 5/16 in late trading. The stock is the best performer on the Standard & …

Tyco Electronics shareholders approve name change

NEW YORK (AP) — Tyco Electronics Ltd. said Thursday it will officially change its name to TE Connectivity Ltd. by March 25.

The company said shareholders approved the change on Wednesday. The Swiss company, which makes electronic components, network products and undersea telecommunications systems, first proposed the name change …

State Rep. Howard pushes criminal expungement bill

State Rep. Howard pushes criminal expungement bill

State Rep. Constance "Connie" Howard (D-32nd) is urging African Americans to lobby her white peers to support legislation that if passed will help expunge criminal records for certain crimes so ex-offenders can find employment.

That, she said during WVON's "Mo in the Midday" show, is needed so people of color can obtain employment once they've served their time.

Howard, who introduced HB-2033, had to amend it under HB-3654. She admitted it was "watered down" by her opponents to eliminating just misdemeanors.

"The initial bill called for greater time periods, those with misdemeanors could expunge their records …