Thursday, March 15, 2012

SKorean clubs to get more say after scandal

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean clubs will be given more power in running football in the country as part of reforms designed to overhaul the game in the wake of a match-fixing scandal.

K-League general secretary An Gi-heon told a workshop of league officials and club representatives that the scandal should be a prompt to introduce some changes to the structure of the local game.

"The K-League is now suffering scandals, but we are trying tirelessly to overcome the problems," An was quoted as saying on the Asian Football Confederation's website. "Everyone may perceive many changes are necessary.

"In this regard, the scandal can be an opportunity for us. As you …

Indians' Carmona bounces back to beat Jays 5-4

Fausto Carmona rebounded from his worst start of the season by pitching into the seventh inning and the Cleveland Indians beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-4 on Tuesday night.

Carmona (7-6) gave up four runs _ three earned _ and six hits over 6 1-3 innings to help the Indians to their first three-game winning streak since a four-game …

Apolar and polar solvation thermodynamics related to the protein unfolding process

ABSTRACT Thermodynamics related to hydrated water upon protein unfolding is studied over a broad temperature range (5-125 deg C). The hydration effect arising from the apolar interior is modeled as an increased number of hydrogen bonds between water molecules compared with bulk water. The corresponding contribution from the polar interior is modeled as a two-step process. First, the polar interior breaks hydrogen bonds in bulk water upon unfolding. Second, due to strong bonds between the polar surface and the nearest water molecules, we assume quantization using a simplified two-state picture. The heat capacity change upon hydration is compared with model compound data evaluated …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

2 Foreign Doctors Killed in Somalia

Two foreign doctors working for an international medical aid organization, their Somali driver and a reporter died Monday when the doctors' vehicle hit a land mine in the southern Somali town of Kismayo, police said. Another foreign doctor and three Somalis were injured.

In the Dutch capital, the Dutch branch of Medecins Sans Frontieres said it did not immediately have details on the violence involving its workers, but was evacuating international staff from Kismayo.

The Somali reporter was passing by and was injured in the …

Bomber kills anti-Taliban lawmaker in Pakistan

Pakistan's Supreme Court said Tuesday it will soon begin examining an expired amnesty covering the president and key allies. The decision launches a process that could unseat the U.S.-allied leader just as the Obama administration needs stability in Islamabad to help crack down on the Taliban.

Highlighting the dangers, a suicide bomber killed an anti-Taliban lawmaker in the Swat Valley _ the latest in a series of bombings as the army presses offensives in militant strongholds close to the Afghan border.

President Asif Ali Zardari has been under mounting pressure to resign or relinquish key powers to the prime minister and assume a ceremonial role.

Railroad buff Jim Brady high on whistle-stop era

He grew up to the lonesome whistle of the Illinois Central.

Ever since he was a kid in Centralia, White House presssecretary Jim Brady has been crazy about trains.

Although Brady is fond of traveling on Air Force One and onpolitical charters, he says that the Golden Age of American politicswas the era of whistle-stop campaigning.

His grandfather, the late James Linus Brady of Jacksonville, wasan engineer on the Beardtown run of the Chicago, Burlington andQuincy RR. The press secretary's father, the late Harold James Bradyof Centralia, worked for the Burlington Northern RR.

When it comes to music, Brady has a strong preference for therailroad …

Texan Buys Possible Pollock at Auction

BELOIT, Wis. - A painter who says he is a longtime admirer of Jackson Pollock submitted the winning $53,000 bid Wednesday evening for a painting possibly done by the famed abstract artist.

"I've been looking at them for 40 years. My gut tells me this is real," said Bill Kolb, 62, of Austin, Texas. After a buyer's fee and taxes, Kolb will have to pay $61,215, auction officials said.

Kolb said he does very large abstract paintings and has been heavily influenced by Pollock.

The 15-minute auction opened at $25,000, but dropped to $10,000 when no one bid and then to $5,000 before the bidding heated up. It soon developed into a contest between Kolb and a Florida woman …

Max Mosley announces he won't stand …

Max Mosley announces he won't stand …

Nation/World BRIEFINGS

BOSNIA TROOPS: Planning moved ahead Friday for a massive evacuationof UN forces from Bosnia, a pullout U.S. officials still hope doesn'ttake place. "That's a decision that's going to be made by the UN andgoing to be largely influenced by the countries that have the troopson the ground there," said Defense Secretary William Perry. But hesaid that if U.S. troops take part in an evacuation they will go inprepared to respond to any attacks with "overwhelming force." InBrussels, Belgium, NATO ministers gave the go-ahead to completeplanning for the rescue of UN peacekeepers if the war worsens. TIGHT SECURITY IN PANAMA: U.S. military authorities tightenedsecurity at holding camps for …

Summit aims to renew push for democracy east of EU

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — These are frustrating times for those yearning to see Western democratic standards take root in Ukraine, Georgia and other former Soviet states wedged between Russia and the West.

Most of the troubled region's countries have been backsliding or stagnant regarding democracy recently, damaging their on-and-off struggle for deeper integration with the West.

Meanwhile, the European Union, which has tried to inspire transformative change with promises of eventual EU membership for some, is mostly focused these days on solving its own economic crisis in the euro zone, showing less interest than before in a region still mired in corruption and other …

Conseco seeks OK to change name to CNO Financial

Insurer Conseco Inc. wants to change its name to CNO Financial Group Inc.

The parent of Bankers Life and Casualty Co., Colonial Penn Life Insurance Co., and Washington National Insurance Co. said Thursday that the new name would serve to separate the identity of the holding company from that of its subsidiaries.

Shareholders will vote on the change at …

Games done, Braves can come home at long last

ATLANTA Reliever Mark Wohlers spent almost three weeks away fromhis pregnant wife. Traveling secretary Bill Acree ran out of mealmoney ($60.50 per player per day). Injured and restless shortstopJeff Blauser bemoaned missing the Olympic Games.

For the first time since July 16, after a 20-day trip covering6,493 miles and costing approximately $330,000, the Atlanta Braveswill take the field Tuesday at Fulton County Stadium.

And unlike former Braves pitcher Pascual Perez, they shouldn'thave any trouble finding the place for their game against thePhiladelphia Phillies.

"We've been gone for 17 games, which is a little abnormal," saidcenter fielder Marquis …

Messi gets rare matchup against Argentine club

Argentina international Lionel Messi is looking forward to a new challenge _ playing a club from his native country for the first time.

European champion Barcelona, playing for a sixth major trophy in 2009, will face Estudiantes on Saturday in the Club World Cup final, and the Golden Ball winner will start despite an ankle injury.

"It's special to play against them, a very nice thing since I've never played against an Argentine team," Messi said Friday.

Messi never played in Argentina because Barcelona signed him from Newell's Old Boys when he was only a teenager. Now he can help lead the Catalan club to its first trophy in the Club World Cup in its third final appearance.

"We're conscious of what is possible. We have everything we need," said Messi, who has scored 15 goals in 22 appearances this season. "We need to win to close out the year with another title not only for the historical importance to the club and to world football."

Messi said coming up against Juan Sebastian Veron was an extra incentive since the two bonded when they were Argentina teammates at the 2007 Copa America.

"We got closer there and he helped to give me a lot of confidence," Messi said. "He helped me a lot."

Messi looked set to start after recovering from an ankle injury to score with his first touch in the Spanish champion's 3-1 semifinal win over Mexican club Atlante.

Messi's not worried about getting banged up by what is expected to be a physical game.

"They're like that. But we have to play the same way we always do," Messi said. "It's up to the referee to make the decisions."

Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola said Messi's incredible season was a collective effort.

"This has not just been a good year for Leo in his desire to be the world's best," Guardiola said. "It's also depended on all of his teammates."

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

NHS blamed for 17,000 extra deaths

More than 17,000 people die unnecessarily every year due to poorNHS - performance, a study suggested today.

The figure is more than five times the number dying in roadaccidents in 2004, it said.

Researchers compared the UK with France, Germany, the Netherlandsand Spain for the TaxPayers' Alliance report.

If the UK were to achieve the same level as the average of theother European countries, there would have been 17,157 fewer deathsin 2004.

Schools urged to sign up for fun

Local primary schools have only three weeks left to sign up forMini Pots of Care, a fun planting and painting activity that raisesmoney for Marie Curie Cancer Care.

Marie Curie Cancer Care is looking for primary schools and youthgroups (aged 3-11) to take part in their annual Mini Pots of Carecampaign, sponsored by Yellow Pages.

So far over 160,000 children from 1,400 schools and groups havesigned up.

Everyone taking part receives a free planting kit and activityguide. Daffodils are planted in the mini-pots in October, and whenthe bulb has bloomed the children then take part in the national'paint your pot' competition held on February 29.

Marie Curie Cancer Care provides high-quality nursing, totallyfree, to give terminally ill people the choice of dying at homesupported by their families.

Teachers are urged to sign up their schools before the closingdate of October 1 2007. Registrations can be made by phone on 08700340 040 or online at www.mariecurie.org.uk/ minipotsofcare.

Many thanks.

CLAIR CUSACK

Community fundraising manager

Marie Curie Cancer Care

Bristol, Bath, Wiltshire & N Somerset

North Road

St Andrews

Bristol BS6 5AQ

Iran budgets for $60 price for crude oil

Iran planned next year's budget based on an oil price of $60 per barrel, nearly double the price from the last year, the official news agency reported on Sunday, indicating rising optimism over energy prices.

Last year, the parliament approved a budget based on $37.5 per barrel for the fiscal year ending in March, reflecting the steep drop in prices that severly impacted the economy. About 80 percent of Iran's foreign revenue comes from oil exports.

Earlier on Sunday President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad submitted the budget to the Iranian parliament for approval, saying more money would be allocated to agriculture, education and research, as well as to the poor.

He did not give the size of the budget only saying there was "nothing complicated or untransparent" in it.

Iran's parliament speaker Ali Larijani said the amount would be revealed later, according to IRNA. The budget requires approval of the parliament and a constitutional watchdog.

Semi-official Mehr news agency, however, said the amount of the budget was about $368 billion, some $89 billion more than the current Iranian year.

The report said some $270 billion of the budget is predicted for state banks and public sector companies, a mainstay of the economy.

Correction: Mississippi health house story

In a story June 2 about a project to bring Iran's health house model to the Mississippi Delta, The Associated Press erroneously reported the Delta region's infant mortality rate as 281 deaths per 1,000. Over a five-year period in the region, there was a total of 281 deaths, according to the Mississippi Department of Health. The infant mortality rate was 13.8 per 1,000 per year.

The story also erroneously reported the Delta's infant mortality rate was 10 times that of Iran's. The Delta's rate is less than Iran's current infant mortality rate in rural areas of 26 per 1,000.

Watch your backup

Ownership might not be the only change for the Cubs this season.

How about the 13 different faces on the roster since Opening Day a year ago? The fourth closer in as many seasons? The three rookies in the bullpen, the reborn pitcher they got for Milton Bradley and the new kid lurking in the outfield?

All of these might be just the start of the shifts and changes to come for a team that takes a different urgency into this season. Manager Lou Piniella and a handful of players are in the final year of their contracts, and general manager Jim Hendry could gain some job security with a return to the playoffs.

The Cubs set their Opening Day roster earlier than anyone around this team can remember, but don't count on much being finalized.

More than just the usual minor moves every team goes through early in the season because of injuries or poor starts by young guys, keep an eye on potential bigger moves as the first month or so of the season plays out.

The handwriting already is on the wall.

Beyond just the expected additions of Ted Lilly to the rotation when he's stretched out and Jeff Gray to the bullpen when the first reliever stumbles, the Cubs seem in no mood to be patient with underperforming veterans who might have gotten a pass at times last year or even in 2008.

They seem to have the bench and just enough potential depth at Class AAA Iowa to keep some fires lit under the backsides of a few guys with more than a little to prove in 2010 -- even those with a lot more than a little guaranteed money left on their contracts.

''I'm going to go with my veteran players, and I feel confident that they'll get the job done,'' Piniella said, ''but if not, then we can always make some adjustments.''

Piniella already made the move Cubs fans clamored to see for more than two years when he took slumping $136 million left fielder Alfonso Soriano out of the leadoff spot for good last July.

Piniella has Hendry's unqualified blessing to distribute playing time this season without regard for contract length or salaries. Just win, baby.

For starters, that puts Kosuke Fukudome on notice in right field. The Japanese MVP has been a .258-hitting bust in two seasons in the United States since signing a four-year, $48 million deal.

He has $13 million and $13.5 million coming the next two seasons, but he also has Piniella publicly expecting a .285-to-.290 season out of him -- not to mention top outfield prospect Tyler Colvin hovering not so quietly in the wings.

Asked whether he thinks there's more pressure on him this season, Fukudome said through his team interpreter: ''I don't have pressure. Every year I just need to do the best I can do.''

He's not the only one who needs to perform well -- and early -- to keep the heat off.

Catcher Geovany Soto looks Slim-Fast serious about returning to Rookie of the Year form after a terrible sophomore season, but he won't get an especially long leash coming off a .218 season and a lukewarm spring at the plate.

Soto was one of the guys Piniella sent to the video room and batting cage with hitting coach Rudy Jaramillo on Thursday. With capable backup Koyie Hill on the bench, Piniella isn't afraid of making a change.

Hill's 26 consecutive games behind the plate when Soto got hurt last summer were the longest for a Cubs catcher since Jody Davis in 1986. One of Piniella's favorite stats around that time was the Cubs' exceptional record with Hill starting -- 60-36 (.625) over the last three seasons.

To be sure, the Cubs culture has changed on Piniella's watch as significantly as the payroll and expectations have risen. With the options he appears to have in Colvin, Chad Tracy and Xavier Nady, what looked at times in '09 like a culture of job entitlement might be about to change, too.

Comment at suntimes.com.

Photo: AP Photos / Right fielder Kosuke Fukudome could be challenged by Tyler Colvin (left). Catcher Geovany Soto needs to rebound from a sophomore slump with Koyie Hill (right) waiting in the wings. Photo: AP Photos / (See microfilm for photo description).

`Juno,' `No Country for Old Men' take top honors at Writers Guild of America Awards

"Juno" and "No Country for Old Men" won top honors at the Writers Guild of America Awards.

The guild announced the winners after canceling its awards ceremony set for Saturday night because its members were on strike. Writers on both coasts were meeting Saturday to review a tentative agreement that could end a walkout that began Nov. 5.

Diablo Cody won the original screenplay prize for "Juno," a tale of a wisecracking teen who gets pregnant and decides to give her baby up for adoption.

Brothers Ethan and Joel Coen received the adapted screenplay award for "No Country for Old Men," which features a relentless hit man played by Javier Bardem searching for Josh Brolin, who makes off with a fortune left behind at a drug deal gone awry.

Cody and the Coen brothers are nominated in the same categories for the Academy Awards later this month. Both films also are competing for the best-picture prize.

Alex Gibney won the WGA's documentary screenplay award for "Taxi to the Dark Side," which is nominated for best documentary at the Oscars.

In the television categories, "The Wire" won for dramatic series, while "30 Rock" earned an award for best comedy series.

Other awards included:

_ New Series: "Mad Men."

_ Episodic Drama: "The Sopranos" (The Second Coming).

_ Episodic Comedy: "The Office" (The Job).

_ Comedy/Variety: "The Colbert Report."

_ Daytime Serials: "The Young & the Restless."

___

On the Net:

http://www.wga.org

Syria: Twin suicide bombs shake capital, kill 40

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Twin suicide car bombs blasted outside two buildings of Syria's powerful intelligence agencies Friday, killing at least 40 people and wounding more than 100, authorities said, in the first such attacks since the country was thrown into turmoil by the 9-month-old uprising against the rule of President Bashar Assad.

The government quickly held up the explosions as proof of its claims that it is battling not a popular uprising but terrorists intent on overthrowing the regime. But its opponents cast doubt on its account, hinting that the regime itself could be behind the attack to make its case to Arab observers who arrived in the country only a day earlier.

The morning explosions left a swath of destruction, with torn bodies on the ground outside the headquarters of the General Intelligence Agency and a nearby branch of military intelligence, two agencies that have played a significant role in the bloody campaign against anti-Assad protests since March. All the windows in the military building were blown out and dozens of burned out cars lined the street.

State TV said initial investigations indicated possible involvement by the al-Qaida terror network. Government officials brought the advance team of Arab League observers to the scene to see the wreckage. The team arrived on Thursday, the start of a mission to monitor Syria's promises to end its crackdown.

"We said it from the beginning, this is terrorism. They are killing the army and civilians," Deputy Foreign Minister Faysal Mekdad told reporters outside the intelligence headquarters.

Alongside him, the advance team's head, Sameer Seif el-Yazal, said, "We are here to see the facts on the ground. ... What we are seeing today is regrettable, the important thing is for things to calm down."

Assad's regime has long contended that the violence in the country is being fueled by terrorists and foreign-backed armed gangs. In recent months, dissident soldiers have broken from the military to side with peaceful protesters and have carried out attacks on government forces. But Friday's attack was qualitatively different from any past attacks — the first suicide bombings seen during the conflict — and whoever was behind them, they add new and ominous dimensions to a conflict that has already taken the country to the brink of civil war.

An opposition leader raised doubts over the authorities' version of events, suggesting the regime was trying to make its case to the observers.

Omar Idilbi, a member of the Syrian National Council, an anti-regime umbrella group, called the explosions "very mysterious because they happened in heavily guarded areas that are difficult to be penetrated by a car."

He stopped short of accusing the regime in the bombings, but he said authorities wanted "to give this story" to scare observers from moving around the country and send a message that "Syria is being subjected to acts of terrorism by members of al-Qaida."

Friday's two blasts went off within moments of each other at 10:15 a.m., echoing across the city. Authorities said the vehicles detonated at the gates of the two walled compounds.

Outside the two buildings, mutilated and torn bodies lay amid rubble, twisted debris and burned cars in Damascus' upscale Kfar Sousa district. Bystanders and ambulance workers used blankets and stretchers to carry bloodstained bodies into vehicles. All the windows were shattered in the nearby state security building, which was targeted by the other bomb.

"The explosions shook the house; it was frightful," said Nidal Hamidi, a 34-year-old Syrian journalist who lives in Kfar Sousa. He said gunfire was heard immediately after the explosion and said apartment windows in a 200-yard (meter) radius from the explosions were shattered.

A military official told reporters that more than 40 people were killed and more than 100 wounded. He spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity in accordance with military rules. Earlier, state TV said most of the dead were civilians but included military and security personnel.

Security officials showed journalists at the scene two mangled vehicles they said were used in the attack.

Maj. Gen. Rustom Ghazaleh, head of military intelligence, said the attacks were proof of a foreign project to strike at Syria. "We will fight this project until the last drop of blood," he declared.

A Syrian military official said the bomb targeting the military intelligence building, the bigger of the two blasts, weighed more than 660 pounds (300 kilograms) and gouged a crater into the ground that was 2 yards deep and 1.5 yards wide. It killed 15 people, among them a retired brigadier general.

In the years before the uprising, Syria had occasional clashes with al-Qaida-linked militants, and the Sunni terror network has denounced the regime, which is largely secular and led by Assad's minority Alawites, a Shiite offshoot. Bombings in the country are rare, though in September 2008 a suicide car bomb struck outside a security building on Damascus' southern outskirts, killing 17 people, the deadliest attack in decades.

The blasts came as the Syrian government escalated its crackdown ahead of the arrival Thursday of the Arab League observers. More than 200 people were killed in two days this week, particularly in a bloody attack Tuesday, when activists and witnesses say troops pounded more than 100 fleeing villagers trapped in a valley with shells and gunfire, killing all of them.

The observer team is supposed to verify Syria's implementation of promises to pull back its troops and halt the crackdown. But the regime has said the team will vindicate its claims that terrorists are behind the country's turmoil, with Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem saying it's in Syria's interest for the observers to see what is really happening in the country.

David Hartwell, Middle East political analyst at IHS Jane's in London, said the timing "is certain to be viewed with suspicion by the opposition." He said government critics are likely to highlight the timing of the attacks as "more than a little coincidental."

He added that the Arab League "will need to work extremely hard" to show it is not being played by the Syrians in an effort to stall for time.

The United Nations says more than 5,000 people have been killed since March, when the uprising began, prompting an immediate crackdown that continues nine months later.

Activists reported anti-government protests in several locations across Syria after Friday prayers during which security force shot dead at least eight people, mostly in the restive central province of Homs, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The Local coordination Committees, another activist group, put the toll at 10 dead.

Throughout the turmoil, Assad's regime has warned that the upheaval will throw the country into chaos, religious extremism and sectarian divisions, a message that resonates among Alawites and minority Christians who fear reprisals from the Sunni majority.

Haifa Nashar, a 45-year-old Sunni living in Kfar Sousa, was shocked and wailing as she stood taking in the scene outside the General Intelligence Agency.

"I've never seen anything like this in my life, may God curse their souls!" she cried. She denounced Qatar, the Arab Gulf nation that has been at the forefront of criticism of Syria and pushed for Arab League sanctions against it.

"This is what Hamad wants," she said, referring to Qatar's prime minister. "There was never any difference between Syrians, Sunnis, Christians and Alawites. But if this is what they want, then I say Alawites are above anyone else."

___

Karam reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Bassem Mroue contributed to this report from Beirut.

WADA to close doping loophole

A major loophole in the global anti-doping battle is about to be closed.

The World Anti-Doping Agency expects to shortly circulate new instructions for its accredited drug testers that will allow them to use revised methods to catch athletes cheating with EPO, one of the most widely abused banned substances in sports.

EPO-abusers who thought they had slipped through the cracks could now be in for a nasty surprise, because some samples that couldn't previously be declared positive but nonetheless seemed suspicious could now be retested. Those samples have been stored in freezers, waiting for WADA's new anti-EPO tools.

"There could be interesting cases to come," Olivier Rabin, WADA's science director, told The Associated Press.

The revised testing methodology should help confound cheats who have been using so-called biosimilars, copies of the U.S.-invented drug that are being produced by the dozens in some 20 countries around the world, in such places as China, India, Brazil and elsewhere, because manufactured EPO is crucial in medicine and thus worth billions of dollars each year.

Some of these copies are thought to have been slipping through sports' doping controls, allowing cheats to use them without being caught.

In medicine, manufactured EPO is of dramatic benefit for kidney and cancer patients suffering from anemia, a shortage of red blood cells that transport oxygen around the body. EPO _ short for erythropoietin _ counters the potentially lethal condition by stimulating patients' bone marrow to produce more red cells. For athletes who cheat with EPO, more red cells mean more oxygen for their muscles, allowing them to ride, run or swim faster for longer.

Since the 1990s, EPO has made the difference between winners and also-rans at cycling's Tour de France. It was among the banned drugs used by disgraced former U.S. track star Marion Jones, court documents showed. A test to detect the use of EPO in sports was first introduced for the Sydney Olympics in 2000, where Jones won three gold and two bronze medals, and scores of athletes have since been caught and sanctioned.

Testing for EPO is tough, not least because traces of the banned substance don't stay in athletes' urine for long.

Testers have also in recent years sometimes struggled with the additional headache of copied versions of EPO. Because of the ways in which they are manufactured, some of the copies have their own peculiar chemical signatures that that can throw off the delicately calibrated WADA-approved EPO test.

This problem has seen WADA-approved labs confronted with urine samples from athletes that they are certain contained traces of copied EPOs but which they were unable to declare as positive, meaning that the cheating went unpunished. Such cases have increased as the market for EPO copies has flourished. Up to 80 such copies may now be in production, with at least a dozen in China alone, according to WADA-funded research by experts Iain Macdougall and Michael Ashenden.

EPO copies are offered for sale on the Internet. A Web site hosted in Ukraine, for example, offers a Russian-made EPO copy, Epocrin, for euro320 for 10 vials. Epocrin is among EPO copies that are likely difficult to declare as positive using the current WADA-approved test but should be easily sanctioned with the revised method, according to one WADA-approved lab.

Rabin of WADA says he is confident that the imminent strengthening of the EPO test will "cover the field as we know it today," able to catch all EPO copies that currently exist.

The proposed changes, being fine-tuned now, will initially be circulated to labs, anti-doping agencies and others in coming days for discussion, so they can be approved at a May 9 meeting of the WADA executive committee. The changes will for the first time give laboratories the option of using a testing technique called SDS-Page in cases where the current EPO test doesn't offer a clear-cut result.

Arne Ljungqvist, chairman of the International Olympic Committee's medical commission, called the beefed-up testing "a step in the right direction for sure" but added that the IOC hasn't yet considered whether to retest samples collected at the Beijing Olympics last August using the revised method.

The revised test could, however, be applied to some samples that labs previously weren't sure about, Rabin said.

"We have got a few urine samples in the freezers that wait to be retested," he said.

Rasmus Damsgaard, a Danish anti-doping expert for the International Ski Federation, suspects that five cross-country skiers whose tests came back negative from a WADA-accredited lab in Europe last year were using an EPO copy, possibly from Russia. The skiers are still competing.

Damsgaard also believes that word spread among athletes that EPO copies were slipping past controls. The revisions now planned by WADA, he added, will mark "a milestone in the EPO test."

"A lot of people came through the loophole," he said.

Monday, March 12, 2012

When the Seller Decides to Not Sell the House After All?

One of the things that happens in the real world is that homesellers sometimes change their minds about moving.

Sometimes the job in the next state doesn't come through.Sometimes housing in that nice, move-up neighborhood is a little moreexpensive than they thought.

And sometimes life just happens: Situations change and would-besellers decide maybe they should stay where they are.

The situation gets a little awkward, however, when the sellerand a real estate agent sign a legal "listing agreement" giving theagent six months to sell the house, but three months later thesellers change their minds.

The situation gets even more awkward when suddenly a buyer showsup with an offer. Then something like what happened to this womantakes place:

"The house had been on the market four months," she said, askingthat her name not be used. "Nothing was happening. We hadn't heardfrom the agent. We hadn't had any offers. And we pretty muchdecided it wasn't going to sell.

"So we started making plans (based on living where we were). Wekind of figured we'd just let the listing agreement expire and thatwould be that."

And then? "They came back with a better offer. But we didn'twant to take it."

Getting to the punch line: "They finally came in with a fullprice offer. They met every one of our terms. We didn't budge onanything, and they still wanted it.

"We sold it. We felt we pretty much had to. We bought anotherhouse (not far away) and moved."

While the awkwardness of the situation may have beenunavoidable, what turned out to be a nearly forced move certainlydidn't have to happen.

"The first mistake the sellers made was assuming that justbecause they hadn't heard from the agent, the agent wasn't working tosell the house," said James F. Bruce of Coldwell Banker Premier inMilwaukee.

"When the sellers changed their mind, they should have talked tothe agent right away."

Bruce pointed out that in Wisconsin, as well as most otherstates, a "listing agreement" is not a contract between a seller andan agent to sell the house - it is a contract for a commission to bepaid to the agent as soon as that agent produces a "willing and able"buyer.

Nothing in that agreement requires a seller to go through withthe deal.

A buyer arriving at a seller's door with cash in hand legallycould be told to hit the road. That would, however, leave the peskyproblem of the real estate agent's commission to be dealt with.

Legally, the agent will have fulfilled his or her obligation tothe sellers under the contract - having produced a "willing and ablebuyer." An argument could be made, therefore, that the agent isentitled to the commission - whether the house actually sells or not.

As a practical matter, however, Bruce said that issue usually isnot pursued. It's the kind of thing that could end up in a lawsuitthat costs everyone money.

What would have saved everyone some grief, said Bruce, is if theseller had been candid in the first place.

"We've had situations where sellers have decided not to sell,and have offered to reimburse the agent for his expenses," he said,such as money paid to advertise the home and other out-of-pocketexpenses. "I think that's only reasonable."

And what about the buyer, who has fallen in love with the house,only to be jilted. Is there any recourse for the buyer?

"Not really," said Gail Lyons, a Boulder, Colo., broker andexpert on real estate law. "You can't really force someone to sell.You can make a stink, threaten to file a lawsuit, but the likelihoodof it getting anywhere isn't very great.

"If the seller hasn't signed any kind of contract (with abuyer), then a buyer can't come back and claim lack of performance ofthat contract."

One caveat: If you decide not to sell the house after you'veseen the potential buyers, you could have problem - especially ifthose buyers are members of a "protected class" under fair housingrights laws.

For instance, you could be subject to a lawsuit if you refusedto sell to someone on the basis of race, religion, sexual preferenceor family status (such as the number of children in the family).

By the same token, however, not everyone is a protected class.

"We had a condo owner who refused to sell his condo to alawyer," Bruce said. "The lawyer wanted to file suit, claimingdiscrimination. But lawyers aren't protected."

Indians Fall Short Once Again

BOSTON - With Kenny Lofton racing around third, Cleveland's comeback - and a season stuffed with them - came to an abrupt halt.

More heartache, decade upon decade of it, persists for the Indians.

Months of surprises, whipped-cream pies in the kisser, late-inning rallies and an unexpected jaunt through October ended short of a World Series title for Cleveland, which lost 11-2 to the Boston Red Sox in Game 7 of the AL championship series Sunday night.

So close. So tantalizingly close. Again.

Lofton, the speedy 40-year-old outfielder who had returned in a July trade for a third try at winning an elusive Series ring with the Indians, was on his way to scoring the tying run in the seventh inning when third-base coach Joel Skinner cautiously held him up in a 3-2 game quickly turning Cleveland's way.

"I didn't know what was going on," Lofton said. "The ball was behind me. It's not my job. My job is to pick up the third base coach. He stopped me. I just got to do what he says. He's the third base coach."

It was Skinner who stopped Lofton, not the Red Sox.

"The ball kicked off hard there and it's hard to tell exactly where it is," Skinner said. "I've seen it bounce right back to the shortstop. When you have to make a decision and that's what I did. The ball ended up a little deeper than I thought. But it was one out, runners at first and third. We were OK."

But Casey Blake grounded into an inning-ending double play, and the Indians never recovered.

If Lofton had scored and tied it, then who knows?

Instead, another year passed in Cleveland without a championship, a soon-to-be 60-year-old dry spell crossing generations in a city still waiting for one of its three professional sports teams to finally deliver the biggest trophy.

The longing endures.

There were hugs and tears in Cleveland's clubhouse. At one end, Blake, Grady Sizemore and Jason Michaels talked in a close circle, while at the other end, catcher Victor Martinez's shoulders heaved as he choked back emotion.

"We needed something special to happen," Blake said. "We needed things to go our way, and they didn't."

With three chances to get one win and a World Series date with Colorado, the Indians whiffed - big time. After taking a 3-1 lead in the series, they were outscored 30-5 in the final three games.

"It's a tough loss to take right now," said ace C.C. Sabathia, who lost twice to the Red Sox. "We had the upper hand, and then let it slip away."

The one play that long-suffering Cleveland fans will remember, is the one linking Lofton, Skinner and Manny Ramirez, a former Indian - of course.

The Red Sox wound up blowing it open, but that hardly mattered.

The Indians were finished when Lofton was stranded.

With Lofton at second after Boston shortstop Julio Lugo had dropped his popup, Franklin Gutierrez hit a line drive that skirted down the third-base line and quickly caromed off the jutting wall and rolled into shallow left.

Ramirez, who had thrown Lofton out at second in the fifth, was playing back toward the Green Monster and was still charging the ball when Skinner raised his arms overhead like a traffic cop to stop Lofton.

"That's a Fenway Park double," Indians manager Eric Wedge said. "That's a tough read."

Right away, Lofton knew that it was the wrong call. Nearly rolling both ankles when he hit the brakes at the bag, Lofton threw his head back in disbelief and then glared at Skinner.

And when Blake bounced into the double play moments later, Lofton's worst fears were realized, stranded 90 feet from the plate.

The chance to tie had vanished, the Indians had lost all their momentum, and their final push at winning Game 7 was over, too.

Blake compounded the problem with an error to start the seventh, and when rookie Dustin Pedroia's two-run homer made it 5-2, Skinner sat in Cleveland's crowded dugout staring straight ahead.

His mind was undoubtedly replaying the crucial seconds as Lofton approached the base, a sequence he said he doesn't regret.

Down 3-0, the Indians could have packed it in. But as they did while staging 44 comeback wins - 26 in their final at-bat, victories Trot Nixon celebrated by smashing teammates with postgame pies, the Indians kept plugging away.

Before the first pitch, general manager Mark Shapiro, the man responsible for dismantling the Indians and rebuilding them, calmly addressed news that pitcher Paul Byrd had used HGH and then turned his attention toward Game 7.

Shapiro had no doubt his team would respond.

"This club has been so resilient all year long. We've had so many opportunities to turn adversity or distractions into excuses, and we've never done it," he said.

Jake Westbrook recovered after a shaky start and kept the Indians within striking distance.

Lugo's blunder then seemed to open the door for Cleveland, but as quickly as it cracked, it slammed shut.

Lofton wouldn't even entertain the idea of what his run could have meant.

"What if?" he said. "Can't talk about what if."

Israeli minister: Gaza decisions made day-by-day

Any decision by Israel to end fighting in Gaza will depend on a daily assessment of its military operations against the militant Islamic group Hamas, the Israeli foreign minister said Thursday in Paris.

Tzipi Livni reiterated that a pause in Israel's six-day assault on Gaza would depend on Hamas suspending rocket attacks on southern Israel.

"We affected most of the infrastructure of terrorism in Gaza Strip, and the question (of) whether it's enough or not will be according to our assessment on a daily basis," Livni told reporters after meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and her French counterpart, Bernard Kouchner.

Sarkozy, who made no statement after meeting Livni, has been vocal in the diplomatic push for peace in Gaza and is set to travel to the Middle East next week.

Livni said the violence could only stop completely once Hamas showed an understanding that "enough is enough."

She said Hamas had taken advantage of a six-month truce with Israel that expired last month to build up its arsenal.

"Even when we accept something in order to have a peaceful period of time, they abuse it in order to get stronger and to attack Israel later on," Livni said at the news conference in the courtyard of the Elysee presidential palace.

The minister gave no details of her hourlong meeting with Sarkozy, but thanked him for "standing for the right thing."

France chaired an emergency European Union meeting Tuesday to discuss the Gaza conflict.

Sarkozy plans to meet Monday with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Cairo and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah before dining with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in Jerusalem. On Tuesday, the French president will travel to Syria and Lebanon for further talks.

Livni also said Israel was doing its best to help Gaza civilians caught in the cross fire.

More than 400 residents have been killed and about 1,700 wounded in the renewed fighting, Gaza health officials said. Israeli officials rejected calls for a 48-hour pause in fighting, which France had campaigned for to ensure humanitarian aid could get to victims.

"Israel distinguished the war against terror, against Hamas members, from the civil population in Gaza Strip and in doing so, we keep the humanitarian situation in Gaza Strip completely as it should be. The crossings are open, more than it used to be before the military operation," she said.

ROAD SHOW; WEIRD WAR

If you heard that the Scene Creamers were coming to town, you heard wrong. Sort of. They are coming; they are just coming as Weird War. This band-o'-many-names is reborn from the ashes of Make-Up and Nation of Ulysses, and graces our fair city with their old/new post-glam rock sound. This is one band who definitely defies pigeonholing.

As specifics on the band are oft times scarce, it must be stated in no definitive terms that members of the band probably include Ian Svenonius, Michelle Mae, Alex Minoff and Sebastian Thomson. Weird War plays music reminiscent of T-Rex and somehow still sounds like nothing you've heard before. Confused? That's nothing. Here's a discography: In 2002, Weird War put out a self-titled album. In 2003, Scene Creamers put out a 7" single AK-47 and a full-length album I Suck On That Emotion (which did not include the AK-47 single). In 2004, Weird War put out If You Can't Beat 'Em, Bite 'Em (which did include Scene Creamers' single AK-47). And now in 2005, they are back to Weird War and have blessed us with a new album, Illuminated By The Light, which has a sound as circular as the chronology of band names.

Ultimately it doesn't matter who they might sound like, what bands they played in before and what name they want to be called. Their music can stand alone. But don't let it. Get down to this show and let that music know you care. And, when the next rash of name changes comes along, you can say you knew the band when they were Weird War. Or Scene Creamers. Or Weird War.

Article copyright Bar Bar Inc.

Photograph (Weird War)

Thai police probe club fire that killed dozens

Thailand's interior minister said Friday that a Bangkok nightclub fire that killed about 60 New Year's Eve partygoers could further damage the country's image, already battered by widespread political protests and a recent weeklong closure of the capital's two airports.

The statement came as police investigated the cause of the fire and grieving families prayed for the spirits of their loved ones. Police Maj. Gen. Jongrak Jutanont said authorities were focusing on whether the blaze was sparked by a countdown fireworks display organized by the club owners or by firecrackers brought in by guests.

A Singaporean was among the dead, while injured foreigners were from Australia, Belgium, Britain, France, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and the United States, according to officials and reporters.

Interior Minister Chavarat Charnvirakul said the blaze could further damage the country's image, already hurt by months of anti-government protests that culminated in an occupation of Bangkok's airports. The unrest has crippled the country's essential tourism industry at a time when the economy was already sagging amid the global financial meltdown.

"It's about the lax law enforcement which we need to strengthen," he told reporters while visiting victims at Chulalongkorn Hospital. "But an accident like this can happen everywhere and in every country. But I really don't want this to happen because it came from carelessness."

The fire broke out shortly after midnight and raced through the jammed two-story club, trapping many as they tried to flee through one main door.

Nicole Trau, an Austrian woman who survived the blaze, told the Austria Press Agency that her group initially thought the fire was part of the festivities.

"At the beginning, it was really small, and we thought it was part of the show," Trau, who escaped injury, was quoted as saying. "But then it started looking extremely hot and we knew something wasn't right. Within minutes, the entire upper floor was in flames."

Alex Wargacki, a British foreign exchange trader, said an "angel" dragged him out of the club after he became unconscious from smoke inhalation, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported on its Web site.

"I woke up and heard this voice saying, 'come on, come on this way.' Then I felt myself being dragged towards an exit," the BBC quoted him as saying from the hospital where he is in intensive care. "Had it not been for this voice with the hand of an angel I would not be alive today."

No charges related to the fire have yet been filed, but the owner, Thai-Chinese businessman Wisuth Setsawat, was initially charged with allowing underage customers into the Santika Club, Jongrak said. A 17-year-old high school student was found among the dead, he said.

The government's insurance commission said it was likely that the club had not renewed its fire insurance, which expired before the incident.

Families of victims gathered at the gutted, charred club in a Bangkok entertainment district to take part in Buddhist prayers, beseeching the spirits of the dead to make their way back home.

The Phranakorn Center, an official agency that deals with accidents in Bangkok, said Thursday that at least 61 people died while more than 200 were injured. The Public Health Ministry revised earlier estimates of foreigners injured, saying Friday the number stood at 41. It said a complete list had not yet been compiled.

The state-owned Radio Thailand gave the death toll Friday as 58 while some Thai media said 59 had perished.

Jongrak said that 21 bodies, burned beyond recognition, have yet to be identified.

He said that an investigation into the club's history found that its application for operation five years ago was turned down by the metropolitan police because the building "wasn't ready." But the club opened anyway on the basis of a court appeal.

"Even now, the court still hasn't issued a ruling," he said.

The party at the wildly popular, classy Santika was billed as both a New Year's blowout and a last celebration at the club before it moved to a new location. The promotion poster read, "Goodbye Santika."

Sompong Tritaweelap, who lives in an apartment behind the nightclub, said the fire spread through the entire building within 10 minutes.

"People were screaming for help from every window. It was a terrible sight. Their hair and clothes were on fire but there was nothing they could do as the fire engulfed them," he said.

___

Associated Press writer William J. Kole contributed to this report from Vienna, Austria.

AMERICAN LEAGUE BITS

Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Chris Bosio was charged Tuesday withassault and battery after being accused of breaking a parking lotattendant's nose in a fight last month. Bosio faces a maximum fineof $500. Baltimore's Cal Ripken played in his 877th consecutive game Monday,the longest current streak and the seventh longest in major leaguehistory. Ripken has Stan Musial (895) within reach; his target datefor passing record-holder Lou Gehrig (2,130) is June, 1995.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Jonas Brothers to play Cowboys' Thanksgiving game

The Jonas Brothers will perform during halftime of the Dallas Cowboys' nationally televised Thanksgiving Day football game against the Seattle Seahawks.

The band will officially kick off the 2008 Salvation Army Red Kettle Christmas campaign at the November 27 contest. The fundraising drive continues through Christmas Eve.

Since its partnership with the Cowboys, which began in 1997, the annual Red Kettle campaign has raised more than $1 billion, helping the Salvation Army, an international organization that provides money for such efforts as disaster relief and helping the poor, serve 30 million people each year nationwide. Last year, the campaign raised a record $118 million.

Previous halftime performers include Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, Sheryl Crow, Destiny's Child, Toby Keith, LeAnn Rimes, Jessica Simpson, Randy Travis and Reba McEntire.

OBITUARIES TO DIE FOR.(Entertainment/Weekend/Spotlight)(Review)

Byline: John C. Ensslin

52 McGs: The Best Obituaries from Legendary New York Times Reporter Robert McG. Thomas Jr.

By Robert McGill Thomas Jr. Scribner, 192 pages, $20.

Grade: A

One fall afternoon a few decades ago, when I was in the habit of organizing literary events at unusual locations, I came home to find a message on my family's answering machine.

``This is Robert Thomas from The New York Times,'' the man with the Tennessee accent drawled. ``I have this press release on the Kerouac reading on the 23rd Street Pier. I just wanted to let you know what a pleasure it is to get something well written. I get an awful lot of crap.''

Back then, Thomas was re-writing press releases for a daily happenings column in The New York Times, a relatively mundane task, to which he consistently brought some verve and style.

I floated on his compliment for weeks.

The recent (and sadly, posthumous) publication of 52 McGs, a collection of obituaries that Thomas wrote between 1995 and his death in January 2000, dredged up the memory of that long ago phone message.

Thomas was a gifted craftsman who valued good, concise writing, whether it came in the form of a press release, an event listing or an obituary. There was something almost heroic in the way Thomas applied his craft during his final assignment at the Times, where he began as a copyboy in 1959.

At most American newspapers, obits are scut work. Frequently, they are assigned to interns or at random to whoever happens to be near the city desk when an editor clutching the just-faxed notice of the dearly departed scans the newsroom.

Thomas took this often-undervalued wretch of an assignment, grabbed it by the shoulders and shook the gold coins out of its pockets. He did it so well that the Times nominated him as a Pulitzer candidate for deadline reporting in 1995.

Fans took to calling them McGs. In this collection, we get 52 of these sharply minted pieces along with Thomas' own obituary, written in true McG fashion by a colleague.

The Times had a practice of assigning someone (often the very able Alden Whitman, a descendant of Walt Whitman) to write obits of famous figures in advance of their demise. Thus, a visit by Whitman became something akin to a preliminary house call by the grim reaper.

Thomas, on the other hand, mined a more obscure vein of obituaries and did most of his work in a day, usually within a few hours. Something in his subject's less-than-famous lives often gave the McGs their considerable charm. For what they lacked in notoriety, they often made up for with singular obsessions or strange twists of fate.

Thus, we have irresistible accounts of such faux-luminaries as ``Toots Barger, the Queen of the Duckpins Wobbly World'' or ``Charles McCartney, Known for Travels with Goats.''

Common obituaries often overlook the dark side of a person's life and instead present an overly rosy (and mostly unreadable) account. Not so with McGs, where Thomas was unafraid to do the math in summing up a life.

Take for example, this summary of ``Anton Rosenberg, A Hipster Ideal, Dies at 71.''

``Anton Rosenberg, a storied sometime artist and occasional musician who embodied the Greenwich Village hipster ideal of 1950s cool to such a laid-back degree that he never amounted to much of anything, died on Feb. 14 at a hospital near his home in Woodstock, N.Y.''

His subjects were people whose eccentricities or passions had been the subjects of stories written before their death. So McGs often are derivative of earlier accounts.

But there is something so abidingly decent in the way he treats his subjects, never dipping into parody or scorn. They are colorful, but not derisive.

Listen to his take on McCartney, the man who loved goats.

``You take a fellow who looks like a goat, travels around with goats, lies down among goats and smells like a goat and it won't be long before people will be calling him the Goat Man.''

There is another hallmark of the McG: his distinctive habit of cramming so much life into the opening paragraph that the obit practically burst open upon the reader.

Journalists are taught to write short, concise opening paragraphs, ordinarily no more than 30 words or less. But there was nothing ordinary about Thomas' leads, composed as they were, of energetic sentences that did not so much run on as they ran up to their subject.

Here, for example is an average-sized McG lead:

``Francine Katzenbogen, a Brooklyn-born lottery millionaire who loved cats so much she worked tirelessly for animal adoption agencies, donated generously to their support and housed 20 beloved strays in luxury at her own suburban Los Angeles mansion, died on Oct. 30 at her home in Studio City. She was 51 and may have loved cats more than was good for her.''

At this point, breathless readers know all they probably needed to know about the late Ms. Katzenbogen. But it would be difficult, if not irresistible, not to read further.

At various points in his career, Thomas clashed with his editors at the Times, who tried to rein in his sentences when they seemed to be out-racing the facts.

``Of course I go too far,'' he is quoted as saying in his obituary. ``But unless you go too far, how are you ever going to find out how far you can go?''

Be glad his editors let him go on. Be sad he will not be going further. Be smart and pick up this volume of 52MGs.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Book Cover / 52 McGs: THE BEST OBITUARIES FROM LEGENDARY NEW YORK TIMES REPORTER ROBERT McG. THOMAS JR.

OBITUARIES TO DIE FOR.(Entertainment/Weekend/Spotlight)(Review)

Byline: John C. Ensslin

52 McGs: The Best Obituaries from Legendary New York Times Reporter Robert McG. Thomas Jr.

By Robert McGill Thomas Jr. Scribner, 192 pages, $20.

Grade: A

One fall afternoon a few decades ago, when I was in the habit of organizing literary events at unusual locations, I came home to find a message on my family's answering machine.

``This is Robert Thomas from The New York Times,'' the man with the Tennessee accent drawled. ``I have this press release on the Kerouac reading on the 23rd Street Pier. I just wanted to let you know what a pleasure it is to get something well written. I get an awful lot of crap.''

Back then, Thomas was re-writing press releases for a daily happenings column in The New York Times, a relatively mundane task, to which he consistently brought some verve and style.

I floated on his compliment for weeks.

The recent (and sadly, posthumous) publication of 52 McGs, a collection of obituaries that Thomas wrote between 1995 and his death in January 2000, dredged up the memory of that long ago phone message.

Thomas was a gifted craftsman who valued good, concise writing, whether it came in the form of a press release, an event listing or an obituary. There was something almost heroic in the way Thomas applied his craft during his final assignment at the Times, where he began as a copyboy in 1959.

At most American newspapers, obits are scut work. Frequently, they are assigned to interns or at random to whoever happens to be near the city desk when an editor clutching the just-faxed notice of the dearly departed scans the newsroom.

Thomas took this often-undervalued wretch of an assignment, grabbed it by the shoulders and shook the gold coins out of its pockets. He did it so well that the Times nominated him as a Pulitzer candidate for deadline reporting in 1995.

Fans took to calling them McGs. In this collection, we get 52 of these sharply minted pieces along with Thomas' own obituary, written in true McG fashion by a colleague.

The Times had a practice of assigning someone (often the very able Alden Whitman, a descendant of Walt Whitman) to write obits of famous figures in advance of their demise. Thus, a visit by Whitman became something akin to a preliminary house call by the grim reaper.

Thomas, on the other hand, mined a more obscure vein of obituaries and did most of his work in a day, usually within a few hours. Something in his subject's less-than-famous lives often gave the McGs their considerable charm. For what they lacked in notoriety, they often made up for with singular obsessions or strange twists of fate.

Thus, we have irresistible accounts of such faux-luminaries as ``Toots Barger, the Queen of the Duckpins Wobbly World'' or ``Charles McCartney, Known for Travels with Goats.''

Common obituaries often overlook the dark side of a person's life and instead present an overly rosy (and mostly unreadable) account. Not so with McGs, where Thomas was unafraid to do the math in summing up a life.

Take for example, this summary of ``Anton Rosenberg, A Hipster Ideal, Dies at 71.''

``Anton Rosenberg, a storied sometime artist and occasional musician who embodied the Greenwich Village hipster ideal of 1950s cool to such a laid-back degree that he never amounted to much of anything, died on Feb. 14 at a hospital near his home in Woodstock, N.Y.''

His subjects were people whose eccentricities or passions had been the subjects of stories written before their death. So McGs often are derivative of earlier accounts.

But there is something so abidingly decent in the way he treats his subjects, never dipping into parody or scorn. They are colorful, but not derisive.

Listen to his take on McCartney, the man who loved goats.

``You take a fellow who looks like a goat, travels around with goats, lies down among goats and smells like a goat and it won't be long before people will be calling him the Goat Man.''

There is another hallmark of the McG: his distinctive habit of cramming so much life into the opening paragraph that the obit practically burst open upon the reader.

Journalists are taught to write short, concise opening paragraphs, ordinarily no more than 30 words or less. But there was nothing ordinary about Thomas' leads, composed as they were, of energetic sentences that did not so much run on as they ran up to their subject.

Here, for example is an average-sized McG lead:

``Francine Katzenbogen, a Brooklyn-born lottery millionaire who loved cats so much she worked tirelessly for animal adoption agencies, donated generously to their support and housed 20 beloved strays in luxury at her own suburban Los Angeles mansion, died on Oct. 30 at her home in Studio City. She was 51 and may have loved cats more than was good for her.''

At this point, breathless readers know all they probably needed to know about the late Ms. Katzenbogen. But it would be difficult, if not irresistible, not to read further.

At various points in his career, Thomas clashed with his editors at the Times, who tried to rein in his sentences when they seemed to be out-racing the facts.

``Of course I go too far,'' he is quoted as saying in his obituary. ``But unless you go too far, how are you ever going to find out how far you can go?''

Be glad his editors let him go on. Be sad he will not be going further. Be smart and pick up this volume of 52MGs.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Book Cover / 52 McGs: THE BEST OBITUARIES FROM LEGENDARY NEW YORK TIMES REPORTER ROBERT McG. THOMAS JR.

OBITUARIES TO DIE FOR.(Entertainment/Weekend/Spotlight)(Review)

Byline: John C. Ensslin

52 McGs: The Best Obituaries from Legendary New York Times Reporter Robert McG. Thomas Jr.

By Robert McGill Thomas Jr. Scribner, 192 pages, $20.

Grade: A

One fall afternoon a few decades ago, when I was in the habit of organizing literary events at unusual locations, I came home to find a message on my family's answering machine.

``This is Robert Thomas from The New York Times,'' the man with the Tennessee accent drawled. ``I have this press release on the Kerouac reading on the 23rd Street Pier. I just wanted to let you know what a pleasure it is to get something well written. I get an awful lot of crap.''

Back then, Thomas was re-writing press releases for a daily happenings column in The New York Times, a relatively mundane task, to which he consistently brought some verve and style.

I floated on his compliment for weeks.

The recent (and sadly, posthumous) publication of 52 McGs, a collection of obituaries that Thomas wrote between 1995 and his death in January 2000, dredged up the memory of that long ago phone message.

Thomas was a gifted craftsman who valued good, concise writing, whether it came in the form of a press release, an event listing or an obituary. There was something almost heroic in the way Thomas applied his craft during his final assignment at the Times, where he began as a copyboy in 1959.

At most American newspapers, obits are scut work. Frequently, they are assigned to interns or at random to whoever happens to be near the city desk when an editor clutching the just-faxed notice of the dearly departed scans the newsroom.

Thomas took this often-undervalued wretch of an assignment, grabbed it by the shoulders and shook the gold coins out of its pockets. He did it so well that the Times nominated him as a Pulitzer candidate for deadline reporting in 1995.

Fans took to calling them McGs. In this collection, we get 52 of these sharply minted pieces along with Thomas' own obituary, written in true McG fashion by a colleague.

The Times had a practice of assigning someone (often the very able Alden Whitman, a descendant of Walt Whitman) to write obits of famous figures in advance of their demise. Thus, a visit by Whitman became something akin to a preliminary house call by the grim reaper.

Thomas, on the other hand, mined a more obscure vein of obituaries and did most of his work in a day, usually within a few hours. Something in his subject's less-than-famous lives often gave the McGs their considerable charm. For what they lacked in notoriety, they often made up for with singular obsessions or strange twists of fate.

Thus, we have irresistible accounts of such faux-luminaries as ``Toots Barger, the Queen of the Duckpins Wobbly World'' or ``Charles McCartney, Known for Travels with Goats.''

Common obituaries often overlook the dark side of a person's life and instead present an overly rosy (and mostly unreadable) account. Not so with McGs, where Thomas was unafraid to do the math in summing up a life.

Take for example, this summary of ``Anton Rosenberg, A Hipster Ideal, Dies at 71.''

``Anton Rosenberg, a storied sometime artist and occasional musician who embodied the Greenwich Village hipster ideal of 1950s cool to such a laid-back degree that he never amounted to much of anything, died on Feb. 14 at a hospital near his home in Woodstock, N.Y.''

His subjects were people whose eccentricities or passions had been the subjects of stories written before their death. So McGs often are derivative of earlier accounts.

But there is something so abidingly decent in the way he treats his subjects, never dipping into parody or scorn. They are colorful, but not derisive.

Listen to his take on McCartney, the man who loved goats.

``You take a fellow who looks like a goat, travels around with goats, lies down among goats and smells like a goat and it won't be long before people will be calling him the Goat Man.''

There is another hallmark of the McG: his distinctive habit of cramming so much life into the opening paragraph that the obit practically burst open upon the reader.

Journalists are taught to write short, concise opening paragraphs, ordinarily no more than 30 words or less. But there was nothing ordinary about Thomas' leads, composed as they were, of energetic sentences that did not so much run on as they ran up to their subject.

Here, for example is an average-sized McG lead:

``Francine Katzenbogen, a Brooklyn-born lottery millionaire who loved cats so much she worked tirelessly for animal adoption agencies, donated generously to their support and housed 20 beloved strays in luxury at her own suburban Los Angeles mansion, died on Oct. 30 at her home in Studio City. She was 51 and may have loved cats more than was good for her.''

At this point, breathless readers know all they probably needed to know about the late Ms. Katzenbogen. But it would be difficult, if not irresistible, not to read further.

At various points in his career, Thomas clashed with his editors at the Times, who tried to rein in his sentences when they seemed to be out-racing the facts.

``Of course I go too far,'' he is quoted as saying in his obituary. ``But unless you go too far, how are you ever going to find out how far you can go?''

Be glad his editors let him go on. Be sad he will not be going further. Be smart and pick up this volume of 52MGs.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Book Cover / 52 McGs: THE BEST OBITUARIES FROM LEGENDARY NEW YORK TIMES REPORTER ROBERT McG. THOMAS JR.

OBITUARIES TO DIE FOR.(Entertainment/Weekend/Spotlight)(Review)

Byline: John C. Ensslin

52 McGs: The Best Obituaries from Legendary New York Times Reporter Robert McG. Thomas Jr.

By Robert McGill Thomas Jr. Scribner, 192 pages, $20.

Grade: A

One fall afternoon a few decades ago, when I was in the habit of organizing literary events at unusual locations, I came home to find a message on my family's answering machine.

``This is Robert Thomas from The New York Times,'' the man with the Tennessee accent drawled. ``I have this press release on the Kerouac reading on the 23rd Street Pier. I just wanted to let you know what a pleasure it is to get something well written. I get an awful lot of crap.''

Back then, Thomas was re-writing press releases for a daily happenings column in The New York Times, a relatively mundane task, to which he consistently brought some verve and style.

I floated on his compliment for weeks.

The recent (and sadly, posthumous) publication of 52 McGs, a collection of obituaries that Thomas wrote between 1995 and his death in January 2000, dredged up the memory of that long ago phone message.

Thomas was a gifted craftsman who valued good, concise writing, whether it came in the form of a press release, an event listing or an obituary. There was something almost heroic in the way Thomas applied his craft during his final assignment at the Times, where he began as a copyboy in 1959.

At most American newspapers, obits are scut work. Frequently, they are assigned to interns or at random to whoever happens to be near the city desk when an editor clutching the just-faxed notice of the dearly departed scans the newsroom.

Thomas took this often-undervalued wretch of an assignment, grabbed it by the shoulders and shook the gold coins out of its pockets. He did it so well that the Times nominated him as a Pulitzer candidate for deadline reporting in 1995.

Fans took to calling them McGs. In this collection, we get 52 of these sharply minted pieces along with Thomas' own obituary, written in true McG fashion by a colleague.

The Times had a practice of assigning someone (often the very able Alden Whitman, a descendant of Walt Whitman) to write obits of famous figures in advance of their demise. Thus, a visit by Whitman became something akin to a preliminary house call by the grim reaper.

Thomas, on the other hand, mined a more obscure vein of obituaries and did most of his work in a day, usually within a few hours. Something in his subject's less-than-famous lives often gave the McGs their considerable charm. For what they lacked in notoriety, they often made up for with singular obsessions or strange twists of fate.

Thus, we have irresistible accounts of such faux-luminaries as ``Toots Barger, the Queen of the Duckpins Wobbly World'' or ``Charles McCartney, Known for Travels with Goats.''

Common obituaries often overlook the dark side of a person's life and instead present an overly rosy (and mostly unreadable) account. Not so with McGs, where Thomas was unafraid to do the math in summing up a life.

Take for example, this summary of ``Anton Rosenberg, A Hipster Ideal, Dies at 71.''

``Anton Rosenberg, a storied sometime artist and occasional musician who embodied the Greenwich Village hipster ideal of 1950s cool to such a laid-back degree that he never amounted to much of anything, died on Feb. 14 at a hospital near his home in Woodstock, N.Y.''

His subjects were people whose eccentricities or passions had been the subjects of stories written before their death. So McGs often are derivative of earlier accounts.

But there is something so abidingly decent in the way he treats his subjects, never dipping into parody or scorn. They are colorful, but not derisive.

Listen to his take on McCartney, the man who loved goats.

``You take a fellow who looks like a goat, travels around with goats, lies down among goats and smells like a goat and it won't be long before people will be calling him the Goat Man.''

There is another hallmark of the McG: his distinctive habit of cramming so much life into the opening paragraph that the obit practically burst open upon the reader.

Journalists are taught to write short, concise opening paragraphs, ordinarily no more than 30 words or less. But there was nothing ordinary about Thomas' leads, composed as they were, of energetic sentences that did not so much run on as they ran up to their subject.

Here, for example is an average-sized McG lead:

``Francine Katzenbogen, a Brooklyn-born lottery millionaire who loved cats so much she worked tirelessly for animal adoption agencies, donated generously to their support and housed 20 beloved strays in luxury at her own suburban Los Angeles mansion, died on Oct. 30 at her home in Studio City. She was 51 and may have loved cats more than was good for her.''

At this point, breathless readers know all they probably needed to know about the late Ms. Katzenbogen. But it would be difficult, if not irresistible, not to read further.

At various points in his career, Thomas clashed with his editors at the Times, who tried to rein in his sentences when they seemed to be out-racing the facts.

``Of course I go too far,'' he is quoted as saying in his obituary. ``But unless you go too far, how are you ever going to find out how far you can go?''

Be glad his editors let him go on. Be sad he will not be going further. Be smart and pick up this volume of 52MGs.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Book Cover / 52 McGs: THE BEST OBITUARIES FROM LEGENDARY NEW YORK TIMES REPORTER ROBERT McG. THOMAS JR.

Monday, March 5, 2012

REGIONAL

Hi Lo Otlk

Akron 74 52 Cldy

Charlotte 81 54 PCldy

Cincinnati 79 53 Clr

Cleveland 74 52 Cldy

Columbus,Ohio 78 54 Clr

Dayton 78 55 Clr

Daytona Beach 84 59 PCldy

Greensboro,N.C. 82 54 …

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Byline: -- Associated Press

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INFORMATION ACCESS

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