Author: Serkadis

  • 6 to 8 inches of snow expected by midday Monday

    After a few days of sunshine, snow has returned to the Peoria area and will continue until about midday Monday, leaving some locals a little chilly.

    “It’s getting to be a long winter,” said Phil Krajewski of Peoria as he walked his sheepdog Toby near Bradley Park on Sunday afternoon.

    “My dog loves the snow – the colder, the better,” he said. “But I’m just the opposite of my sheepdog.”

    The National Weather Service in Lincoln issued a winter storm warning until 6 p.m. Monday for Peoria County and counties west and north of the Illinois River.

    Counties east of the river are under a snow advisory.

    A mix of snow and rain began to fall about noon Sunday, turning to snow later on.

    Meteorologist Brad Churchill said Peoria could see accumulations of up to 6 inches by midday Monday, with areas to the west of the city receiving between 7 to 8 inches. Areas east of Peoria and toward Bloomington will see only a few inches.

    “I’m ready for the snow to be done,” said Sherry Thorn of Peoria as she trudged through the snow with her dog. “It seems like a lot more snow this year, somehow.”

    This winter has been far snowier than last. Peoria has seen about 37 1/2 inches of snow since July 1, about 11.2 inches more than last year at the same time.

    February 2010 has seen 12.3 inches of snow. That’s almost 9 inches more than last February and nearly three times as much as the normal February snowfall of about 4.2 inches, according to the Weather Service.

    Snowfall in Peoria is creeping closer to the record set in 1978 for the snowiest winter, with 51.6 inches. That may be good news to sledders and bad news for others.

    “I love the snow,” Ben Weaver of Dunlap said as he and his son sledded in Bradley Park. “But I’m in the auto business, and it puts a damper on things.”

    Weaver said dusting snow off cars and having to move cars to plow the parking lot at his work is “getting old.”

    “I’d rather take a beating,” he said. “I’ve been doing this winter crap for 25 years.”

    But meteorologist Dan Kelly said there is a higher chance in the next two weeks of precipitation being below normal, which means snowfall may be light again.

    The Weather Service was not aware of any weather-related accidents Sunday afternoon, but said snow-covered highways will mean hazardous travel conditions Sunday night into Monday. Police did not report any major accidents related to the weather.

    Wind will pick up Monday afternoon, blowing snow and causing low visibility. Two flights were canceled at the Peoria International Airport on Sunday, with more cancellations or delays possibly coming Monday.

    Lauren Rees can be reached at 686-3251 or [email protected].

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Soros: Even if You Save Greece, The Euro Is Doomed

    georgesoros profile tbi

    In a Financial Times opinion piece, George Soros adds his massive weigh to the I-told-you-so chorus trashing the euro’s.

    While he makes an old, fundamental argument against the euro, this long-forgotten criticism seems more valid than ever right now:

    FT:

    [Emphasis added] Otmar Issing, one of the fathers of the euro, correctly states the principle on which the single currency was founded. As he wrote in the FT last week, the euro was meant to be a monetary union but not a political one. Participating states established a common central bank but refused to surrender the right to tax their citizens to a common authority. This principle was enshrined in the Maastricht treaty and has since been rigorously interpreted by the German constitutional court. The euro was a unique and unusual construction whose viability is now being tested.

    The construction is patently flawed. A fully fledged currency requires both a central bank and a Treasury. The Treasury need not be used to tax citizens on an everyday basis but it needs to be available in times of crisis. When the financial system is in danger of collapsing, the central bank can provide liquidity, but only a Treasury can deal with problems of solvency. This is a well-known fact that should have been clear to everyone involved in the creation of the euro. Mr Issing admits that he was among those who believed that “starting monetary union without having established a political union was putting the cart before the horse”.

    So makeshift assistance should be enough for Greece, but that leaves Spain, Italy, Portugal and Ireland. Together they constitute too large a portion of euroland to be helped in this way. The survival of Greece would still leave the future of the euro in question. Even if it handles the current crisis, what about the next one? It is clear what is needed: more intrusive monitoring and institutional arrangements for conditional assistance. A well-organised eurobond market would be desirable. The question is whether the political will for these steps can be generated.

    Continue reading at the Financial Times >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Leaked: 2011 Audi RS5 images leak before official release

    A couple of days before its official debut at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show, high-res photos of the 2011 Audi RS5 have been leaked onto the web – that means we have no official press release or official technical details to go with this wonderful set of pictures.

    We’ve previously heard rumors that the RS5 will be powered by a 4.2L twin-turbo V8 making 450-hp with a maximum torque of 332 lb-ft. 0-60 mph should come in the low 4-second range.

    Stay tuned for official details.

    2011 Audi RS5 (Leaked Images):

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Straightline


  • MIDEAST: Opposition Grows Against Egypt-Gaza Barrier

    By Adam Morrow and Khaled al-Omrani CAIRO, Feb 22 (IPS) Activists and opposition groups are stepping up pressure on the Egyptian government to stop constructing a barrier along the border with the Gaza Strip. Officials say the barrier will prevent cross-border smuggling, but critics say it will seal the fate of the people on the Gaza Strip.

    "The Egyptian border was the only opening left to the Gazans – their only means of staying alive," Gamal Fahmi, political analyst and managing editor of opposition weekly ‘Al-Arabi Al-Nassiri,’ told IPS.

    On Feb. 13, hundreds of activists from across the political spectrum convened in downtown Cairo to protest construction of the barrier. Demonstrators held banners reading: "The wall of shame must come down" and "No to sponsoring Israeli crimes." The same day also saw anti-wall demonstrations in Lebanese capital Beirut.

    Ever since news of the barrier was first reported by Israeli daily ‘Haaretz’ late last year, officials have attempted to justify it by citing Egypt's right to protect its national sovereignty and security.

    "Egypt has the right to take whatever measures necessary to protect its borders in accordance with prerequisites of Egyptian national security," presidential spokesman Suleiman Awad said late December. "The sovereignty of Egyptian territories is sacred."

    On Jan. 25, President Hosni Mubarak declared that the barrier was intended to "protect our nation from terrorist plots."

    Despite widespread criticism of the barrier, both domestic and international, construction has reportedly continued apace.

    On Feb. 14, independent Egyptian daily ‘Al-Masry Al-Youm’ quoted a worker at the construction site as saying that the barrier's iron panels had been adjoined with steel connections. They were in the process of being sunk into the ground to a depth of 18 to 25 m, he added.

    On the following day, another independent daily ‘Al-Dustour’ reported that Egypt was also building an anchorage for patrol boats on its sea border with the Gaza Strip. The new anchorage, a North Sinai security source was quoted as saying, would "enhance the work of the Egyptian patrol boats on the sea border with Gaza and prevent any attempts at smuggling by sea."

    According to Hamdi Hasan, parliamentarian for the Muslim Brotherhood opposition movement, the United States, Israel and the NATO alliance are already monitoring the Egypt-Gaza maritime border "with a mandate to intercept any boats carrying aid to Gaza. ’’This,’’ said Hasan, "is well known."

    The border barrier and anchorage are only the most recent additions to a longstanding, internationally sanctioned siege of the Gaza Strip.

    After Palestinian resistance group Hamas swept democratically-held Palestinian legislative elections in early 2006, Israel sealed its six border crossings with the territory. When Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in a pre-emptive coup the following year, Egypt followed suit by sealing its own 14-km border with the coastal enclave.

    In line with the U.S. and Israeli demands, Egyptian officials claimed the closure was aimed at stanching the flow of arms smuggled into the Hamas-run territory.

    With Israel long in control of the Gaza Strip's air space and territorial waters, the move served to hermetically seal the enclave's 1.5 million inhabitants off from the rest of the world. Since then, the lack of badly needed food, medicines and fuel has brought the territory to the verge of humanitarian disaster.

    Egypt's border policy came in for particularly vehement condemnation — both at home and abroad — during Israel's ‘Cast Lead’ assault on the Gaza Strip in late 2008/early 2009. For three long weeks — with the Palestinian death toll rising by the hundreds — Egypt maintained its strict border closure, forbidding any movement of the desperately needed humanitarian supplies.

    Critics of Egypt's border policy warn that the new barrier will represent the final nail in the embattled territory's coffin.

    "With the completion of the new border barrier, the siege on the Gaza Strip will be made airtight," said Fahmi. "The territory will literally become the biggest open-air prison in the world."

    "Construction of this wall, which will seal the fate of the Gazan people, represents a historical crime committed by the Egyptian regime," said Hasan. "By agreeing to build the wall, the government has signed on to U.S.-Israeli designs for the region."

    Hamas spokesman Mushir al-Masri, speaking late last month, said the barrier "has killed the last lifeline keeping the Gaza Strip alive after two-and-a-half years of siege." Al-Masri added that the wall "does not serve the interests of any Arab party" and that it "only benefits the Israeli occupation."

    Critics, meanwhile, remain unconvinced by government attempts to justify the project by appealing to Egyptian "sovereignty" and "security."

    "Egypt could protect its sovereignty on the border by simply operating the Rafah border crossing, in which case the Gazans would not have to resort to smuggling tunnels," said Fahmi. "Control of the border doesn't need a barrier, it simply needs intelligent security procedures."

    "The government now says the wall is meant to stop weapons being smuggled into Egypt from Gaza," Fahmi went on to point out. "But before the barrier was announced, all official statements were about arms being smuggled from Egypt to Gaza — not the other way around."

    "The government is fond of talking about Egypt's 'sovereignty'," said Hasan. "But when the Israeli navy detained a Lebanese ship in Egyptian waters last summer, Egypt didn't say a word about its vaunted sovereignty."

    Egypt's construction of the barrier also has a political dimension. Within the last year tremendous pressure has been brought to bear on Hamas to sign an Egypt-proposed "reconciliation agreement" with the U.S.-backed Fatah movement of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

    Hamas has until now refused to sign the agreement, which includes commitments to recognise Israel and renounce armed resistance — both of which run counter to the group's founding principles. Egyptian officials, for their part, say the border will remain sealed until Hamas signs the proposal without preconditions.

    "Egypt is building the wall to punish Hamas politically for refusing to sign Egypt's reconciliation agreement," Emad Gad, expert on Israeli affairs at the semi-official Al-Ahram Centre for Strategic and Political Studies, told IPS.

    Late last month, Palestinian Parliamentary Speaker Aziz Al-Duweik said that inter-Palestinian reconciliation could not be forced through "unjust conditions." Reconciliation, he said, could not be achieved through "an atrocious war on Gaza, nor by starving the Palestinian people through siege and a policy of slow death."

    "Neither can it be achieved," he added, "by a steel wall that increases the brutality of hunger and siege."

  • Braves line up special win

    Every time Bradley and Drake have gotten together lately, something special has happened.

    On Sunday, the Braves women’s basketball team defeated the Bulldogs, 63-55, hitting 9-of-10 free throws to close out the game.

    “Free throws are huge,” Bradley coach Paula Buscher said. “You knock down those free throws, it changes possessions.

    “You don’t knock down those free throw, to me, it’s just like a turnover on the offensive end.”

    The Braves (14-10, 10-4) had been shooting 58 percent from the line. They finished the game 13-of-16, using that performance to pull away from a team that had given BU fits the last two meetings. The Braves needed a buzzer-beater and double overtime to win the last two in the Missouri Valley Conference series.

    Sunday’s win was important for BU, but what happened off the court made it special.

    The school raised nearly $7,000 from its seventh annual Pink Zone game. Of the funds raised, $1,500 came from specialized donations and the rest from $25 pledges for each 3-pointer hit by the Braves.

    “It was a great atmosphere,” said Bradley athletics director Michael Cross, who was in attendance for his first Pink Zone game since coming to Bradley in January.

    “I think its a tremendous organizational effort on the part of coach Buscher and her team … to unify everybody around a really important cause.”

    The Braves hit two of their six 3-pointers in the first half, and trailed 28-26 at the break after committing 15 turnovers.

    Turnovers have been a problem for Bradley all season. The Braves are averaging 21 a game.

    “At the times that we were turning the ball over we weren’t as composed as we needed to be,” Buscher said. “We weren’t as confident as we needed to be.”

    Although Buscher didn’t like how her team performed in the first half, the coach said she was glad the team was able to hang around enough to keep it close.

    “Our defensive intensity in the first half wasn’t where I wanted it to be,” she said. “I thought Drake came out to start the game as the aggressors and I didn’t think we matched that aggressiveness.”

    The Braves came out firing in the second half.

    Sonya Harris scored the first points of the half to tie the game at 38-38. Drake (13-11, 6-8) answered before Bradley went on a 24-9 spurt to go up 52-39.

    Renee Frericks, who hit five threes in last season’s Pink Zone game, had three 3-pointers in the stretch.

    “I just came out and did what my team needed,” said the senior, who scored nine. “I got some open looks and I was able to drop them.”

    The Braves were 6-of-23 from long range in the game, which is tied for the third-most attempts by the team this season.

    Buscher, who pledged $25 for each 3-pointer her team made, said the Pink Zone had no effect on her game plan.

    “We’ve got some shooters and when they’re in there and when they’re open they’re going to go ahead and let it fly,” she said. “It didn’t have anything to do with that, but I am more than glad to pay up.”

    Freshman Katie Yohn had two 3-pointers for the Braves, and finished with a team-high 16 points. Hanna Muegge had one three.

    Drake’s Kristin Turk, who scored the Bulldogs’ first eight of the game, finished with 22.

    The Braves win — and a loss later Sunday by Creighton (15-9, 10-5) — put Bradley alone in second place in the MVC.

    “This weekend was very big,” Frericks said. “It was a huge positioning game. It keep us in the hunt for one of those top two spots.”

    Alex Mayster can be reached at 686-3214 or [email protected]
     

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Not a miracle, but still a win

    The United States pulled off its biggest Olympic hockey upset since the Miracle on Ice, stunning Canada 5-3 on Sunday to advance to the quarterfinals of an already mixed-up tournament.

    Brian Rafalski scored two goals and set up another, and Ryan Miller held off a flurry of shots to lead the Americans.

    One day short of the 30th anniversary of the country’s greatest hockey victory — the unfathomable win over the Soviet Union in Lake Placid — these underrated Americans were faster, more disciplined and more determined than Canada’s collection of all-stars.

    Better, too.

    Canada outshot the U.S. 45-22 yet couldn’t badly dent Miller, the goalie the Americans felt could best stand up to all of Canada’s might. He did just that, making 42 saves in the victory of a lifetime.

    These Americans didn’t believe in miracles. They just believed.

    Depending on the later Finland-Sweden game that concluded hockey’s Super Sunday in Vancouver, the United States could go into Wednesday’s quarterfinals not only as a group winner but as the top-seeded team, something almost no one predicted when the tournament began.

    Chris Drury, a former Little League World Series star, and Jamie Langenbrunner scored to put the U.S. up 4-2 and hold off a relentless late surge by Canada that included Sidney Crosby’s power play goal with 3:09 remaining.

    Miller made an exceptional save on Rick Nash’s shot from the slot with two minutes left to preserve it, and Ryan Kesler put it away by swiping in an empty-net goal with one hand with 45 seconds remaining.

    Rafalski, Langenbrunner and Drury are three of the older, steadying hands on one of the youngest U.S. Olympic teams in history, one that averages 5 years younger per man than the 2006 team that didn’t medal in Turin.

    Canada, the gold-medal favorite, was expected to coast into the medal round. But now, after nearly losing to Switzerland and being outplayed on home ice by the Americans, it must win a play-in game Tuesday to reach the quarterfinals. The Canadians still have a chance to win a gold medal, but now face a much tougher road that would include an additional game.

     

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Yuan Soaring On Hints Of A Hike

    Obama Hu Jintao China

    The Chinese yuan spiked to a 11-month high on hike speculation given China’s strong export rebound (up 21% year over year in January), which allows leeway to inflict some currency discomfort on China’s export industry:

    Bloomberg:

    The currency gained 0.07 percent to 6.8280 per dollar as of 10:24 a.m. in Shanghai, the biggest gain since March 2009, according to China Foreign Exchange Trade System. That’s the third fluctuation of 0.05 percent or more in four trading days, the same tally as for the previous seven months. Local financial markets were closed last week for the Lunar New Year holiday.

    Twelve-month non-deliverable forwards climbed 0.2 percent to 6.6425, indicating bets the yuan will rise 2.8 percent in a year. Zhao forecast the yuan will strengthen no more than 3 percent against the dollar this year.

    Read more here >

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  • Multiple injuries in Winthrop Harbor crash

    Several people were injured, some seriously, in a multicar crash at the intersection of Green Bay and Kenosha roads in Winthrop Harbor at 10 a.m. Saturday, fire officials said.

    Fire Capt. Alicia McCoy said rescue crews from six area departments responded to the crash.

    The injured were taken to Vista East Medical Center in Waukegan and Advocate Condell Medical Center in Libertyville.

    McCoy could not comment on the cause of the crash or tell how many vehicles were involved.

    Winthrop Harbor Police were not releasing information on the accident Sunday.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • On Shelves This Week: February 21-27, 2010

    It’s here. The week of the much-awaited release of the groundbreaking, emotionally-stressful action-packed thriller title, Heavy Rain, is finally here. And everyone else is cast in its shadow. Understandably so.
     
     
     
     

  • MILF Monday: Amy Adams

    I have seen Enchanted roughly four million times because of my small child, and I’m ok with that because hey, Amy Adams.

    (Holy Taco)


  • Hayden Panettiere’s New Boob Job [PICS]

    A to C, big improvement? I’m sure the 73 year old she’s dating appreciates the new look.

    (Daily Fill)


  • Crimes recently reported in Champaign-Urbana

    In crimes reported recently to area police:

    CHAMPAIGN
    — 1900 block of West Bradley Avenue: Two wooden front doors broken in the forced entry of a building; Samsung surveillance camera, wooden office door and ATM damaged; and cash stolen Saturday.
    — 2100 block of Round Barn Road: Fruit punch, Red Bull and two Hostess chocolate doughnuts stolen Thursday.
    — 500 block of Bash Court: Windshield, two mirrors and rear window of one vehicle, rear window from a second vehicle and a mirror and rear window of a third vehicle broken with a bat Saturday.

    URBANA
    — 700 block of South Goodwin Avenue: Cell phone reported stolen Saturday.
    — 300 block of South Broadway Avenue: Cell phone, black purse, University of Illinois identification card and cash stolen Saturday.
    — 700 block of South Goodwin Avenue: Wristlet purse, driver’s license, red digital camera, cell phone and cash stolen Saturday.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Coast Guard Rescues Woman In Lake Michigan

    CHICAGO (CBS) ― A young woman survived a plunge into the icy waters of Lake Michigan thanks to a quick response from the U.S. Coast Guard. But as CBS 2’s Vince Gerasole reports, officers rushed to her aid not by boat but on foot.

    Survival for this young woman came thanks to a few fortunate circumstances. She fell into waters in the shadow of the U.S. Coast Guard Station at Wilmette Harbor. An open window there helped officers hear her frantic calls for help in the middle of the night.

    “Down at the end of the harbor there’s a few benches and it was right off one of the benches and she was clinging onto one of the tires on the break wall,” said Petty Officer Chris Summers as he pointed to the spot where a young woman was holding on to save her life.

    It was one a.m, and the waters were lethally cold. Fortunately the U.S Coast Guard Station at Wilmette Harbor was barely a football field away, and the officers there heard the young woman’s cries for help through a cracked window.

    “It was so clear and loud and it was piercing,” said Seaman Reginald Edwards.

    “We were running full speed to the sound of her voice,” said Summers.

    In an instant Petty Officers Summers and Kevin Ray dashed to her aid in the dark, still wearing their pajamas.

    “We looked over the edge here,” said Ray.

    He said as Summers lay flat on the ground reaching over into the water he could not touch the victim. Ray grabbed Summers feet and lowered him closer to the woman.

    Ray said he took off his shirt and sweatshirt and took off her soaking clothes. He held her, warming her body with his own body heat.

    At times the young woman began to slip in and out of consciousness. The officers eventually wrapped her in blankets and set her on a heat protective hypothermia capsule until EMS crews could arrive.

    Summers said she was never coherent enough to say what happened.

    Still, the woman did survive her plunge into the icy waters of Lake Michigan, thanks to the servicemen who came running from a stone’s throw away.

    “In this case your training pays off you have a job to do and that’s what you do,” said Ray.

    Water temperatures at the time of the accident were roughly 35 degrees, which could lead to hypothermia and death in a matter of minutes. The woman’s name isn’t being released, but she was taken to Evanston Hospital where authorities say she is listed in stable condition.

    Wilmette police had no additional information on the incident.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • O’Callahan recalls America’s miraculous moment

    CHICAGO (WBBM)  — Where were you 30 years ago?

    It was February 22, 1980 when the world witnessed the “Miracle on Ice” as the U.S. defeated the heavily favored Soviet Union, 4-3, in men’s hockey at the Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.

    The Americans would then go on to defeat Finland to win the Gold Medal two days later.

    The gold medal run by the Americans, highlighted by that win over the Soviets during the height of the “Cold War,” remains a favorite sports memory for many Americans and made celebrities out of the players, including defenseman Jack O’Callahan who would go on to have a solid five-year career with the Blackhawks.

    O’Callahan is now a businessman in the Chicago area and he spoke to Newsradio 780 about that magical time 30 years ago as well as the Olympics today.

    O’Callahan told Newsradio 780 that every year on February 22nd his phone keeps ringing and his email inbox fills up as people call to to remind him of that win over the Russians. O’Callahan says it’s “one of the nice things about having been part of it….it’s something that I really enjoy. I can’t say enough how proud I am to have been a part of it (the entire Olympic experience)…I’m so thankful.”

    O’Callahan says the Soviets in 1980 were possibly the “greatest hockey team ever assembled” and the U. S. margin for error was “razor thin.”

    Olympic hockey was far different in 1980 than it is today. Back then, the U.S. used amateurs, college kids, even though the Russians and some other nations were professionals. Now, the U.S. team is full of NHL veterans but O’Callahan thinks that’s fine, saying he actually things Olympic hockey is better now because the best players in the world are playing. As for those who pine for the old days of “amateurs” O’Callahan says it’s never going to happen, just like we’ll “never going to go back to rotary dial phones!”

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • NW Ind. town mourns marine killed in Afghanistan

    WESTVILLE, Ind. (STMW)  — The town was coping this weekend with the loss of one of its own. On Main Street, the Blackhawk Inn was a place to reminisce over beers about Marine Lance Cpl. Joshua Birchfield, 24, of Westville, who was killed Friday in Afghanistan.

    Jonn Elkin, 49, remembered Birchfield on Saturday as “an awesome human being” who was “a lot of fun.”

    A sign reading “We Will Miss You Birch — God Bless” hung outside the Blackhawk, which Birchfield had visited in the past.

    “He went and fought for our country,” Elkin, a Westville resident, said. “He wanted to be a Marine.”

    Mike Siddall of Westville recalled Birchfield’s generous side.

    “He’s a good ol’ country boy — take the shirt right off his back for you,” said Siddall, who fought back tears. “He will never be forgotten.”

    Rick Gillespie of Chesterton painted the 2004 graduate of Westville High School as an unassuming young man.

    “He was down to earth,” Gillespie said at the Blackhawk Inn. “He just did good for our country. He died for our country.”

    Across the street from the Blackhawk, Steve Bachman of Michigan City recalled his “very personable” buddy while socializing at Karla’s Pub & Grill.

    “He was funny — funniest guy I ever met in my life,” Bachman, 33, said. “He should have been a stand-up comedian.”

    Calling Birchfield the “best guy I ever met,” Bachman said his pal entered military service for the right reasons.

    “He didn’t go because he didn’t have a job. … He went because he felt it was the right thing to do,” Bachman said.

    A canister for monetary donations for the Birchfield family was placed in the Blackhawk bar.

    At the Westville American Legion Post 21, a sign read “LCPL JOSH BIRCHFIELD YOU ARE NOT FORGOTTEN — WE LOVE YOU.”

    Those who knew Birchfield remembered him as a baseball fan from LaPorte County who was approachable and likable, and “just knew everybody.”

    Details as to how Birchfield died in Afghanistan were not available.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Hearing Moved In NU Journalism Students’ Case

    CHICAGO (AP) – A hearing involving Northwestern University journalism students whose grades were subpoenaed in connection with an investigation of a decades-old murder case is scheduled for Monday.

    Cook County Circuit Judge Diane Cannon told attorneys to be in court, but didn’t give a reason.

    That’s according to Cook County State’s Attorney spokeswoman Saly Daley.

    A hearing had been scheduled for March 10.

    The state’s attorney’s office subpoenaed professor David Protess seeking his syllabus, grades and e-mails.

    That was after his classes said they had uncovered evidence that Anthony McKinney was wrongfully convicted for a 1978 murder.

    Prosecutors claim students may have been under pressure to prove McKinney’s innocence for good grades.

    Protess and the students deny that.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Panetta: Arts in trouble

    What a difference a few years make.

    I still remember that stellar January 2004 weekend on the local arts scene. Friday: At the Peoria Art Guild, an opening of modern art by Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Arshile Gorky and a host of other 20th luminaries. Saturday: A concert of Mozart at the Peoria Symphony Orchestra. Sunday: A haunting concert of medieval music at St. Mary’s Cathedral by a top Chicago ensemble.

    And that wasn’t all. A real, bona fide Equity Theater was making a go of it on Main Street. A real, bona fide opera company was about to mount “Die Fledermaus.” Meanwhile, the Peoria Ballet was building up a resident corp of dancers and staging work by George Balanchine.

    Hmmm. Ballet, symphony, professional theater, 20th century art and opera – this wasn’t the Peoria that outsiders typically think of, where heavy equipment reigns and everyone bleeds yellow.

    Every boom is followed by a bust, and that’s what has happened since 2004: A slow but so far inexorable diminution of the local arts scene brought on by the economy, long-term demographic trends and leadership that in some cases has been less than constructive.

    Only last week, for instance, the Peoria Art Guild said it would temporarily suspend classes, exhibitions and its retail store at 203 Harrison starting April 1 while it figures out how to continue operating in a recession-bound economy where fewer people are willing to give money.

    “We had a 50 percent cut in grant funding from both private foundation grants and Illinois Arts Council grants,” said Sheryl Cohen, Art Guild board member. “We had corporate donations that were reduced. We had individual contributions that were reduced. This is what all the nonprofit world is going through.”

    Just ask the leaders of the not-for-profit Peoria Ballet, which only a few weeks ago had to let go of its well-thought-of artistic director. For the first time, in this venerable organization’s 40-plus-year existence, the Peoria Ballet is without artistic leadership entirely, and it may not get any new leadership soon.

    Of course, in the case of the ballet, the difficulty isn’t merely financial: It’s also a question of butts in the seats – specifically the 2,200 seats that make up the Civic Center Theater and which the Peoria Ballet traditionally has trouble filling.

    As was the case with Opera Illinois, which also struggled for an audience and which eventually folded – but not without an unnecessarily divisive and bitter backstage struggle that alienated long-term supporters. A similar self-defeating scenario unfortunately repeated itself at the Peoria Symphony Orchestra last year. On the plus side, the Peoria Symphony continues to do better than Opera Illinois ever did in terms of attracting audiences. However, like orchestras across the nation, its subscriber base is getting older. As these older patrons die, will they be replaced by younger people?

    That’s the question that’s also confronting community theater – which is why organizers there have tried a newly revamped winter season of so-called “edgy” new work in an attempt to go beyond its traditionally older base. And whatever happened to that Equity Theatre on Main Street? It’s gone with the wind.

    Meanwhile, several arts leaders are looking for ways to move ahead: A new creative co-op of sorts called CI Creative and the city-supported ArtsPartners – which has somehow survived the slash-and-burn era – are trying to encourage arts groups to start talking and working with one another. Let’s hope something comes of it. In the current climate, arts leaders can hang together or hang separately. The time for turf battles is over.

    Gary Panetta is the fine arts columnist and a critic for the Journal Star. He can be reached at 686-3132 or [email protected]. Write to him at 1 News Plaza, Peoria, IL 61643.

     

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Video: Icelandic Hillclimbing at its finest

    Filed under: , ,

    Iceland Hillclimb Nuttiness

    Hillclimbs in Iceland – Click above to watch video

    One of the many things we love about Iceland is that it has a more extreme version of just about everything, or, if it’s only just as extreme, there’s a lot more of it in one concentrated place. That’s certainly the case with this hillclimbing video, featuring madly-engined, purpose-built buggies running up dirt, grass, volcanic rock, and any other terrain that points at the sky. So few people, so many gearheads. Follow the jump to watch, and enjoy the gent at 1:35 who believes that throttle can cure everything.

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading Video: Icelandic Hillclimbing at its finest

    Video: Icelandic Hillclimbing at its finest originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 21 Feb 2010 19:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Following in his father’s footsteps

    It was the day after a snow storm, but Michael Reagan received a warm welcome at Tampico, his father’s birthplace, when he visited Feb. 6 on what would have been Ronald Reagan’s 99th birthday.

    This was Michael Reagan’s first visit to his father’s early stomping grounds.

    Tampico, population 800, is where the president spent the first three months of his life.

    The central Illinois town was the first stop of a bus tour planned by Eureka College staff.

    Grade school beauty queens wore crowns, and people gathered around to show Michael Reagan the building where his grandparents once made their home.

    In Tampico, Michael Reagan met his third cousin, Ronald Habbe of Coleta, for the first time.

    “Yes, we are also Ronald and Nancy,” Habbe said grinning. “No, we were never mistaken for the president and first lady.”

    In Dixon, where the president spent most of his childhood, and Eureka College, which organized its famous alum’s birthday observances, the red carpet was again rolled out for the son.

    Michael Reagan’s message as he shook hands and greeted crowds was to continue his father’s legacy.

    As the bus set off from Eureka College, the stories about the 40th president began to unfold. Brian Sajko, Eureka College vice president and curator of the Ronald Reagan Museum, began the stories, and Michael Reagan added his own memories of Dad.

    One advantage to having a famous father, he said, “Every one of us offered our father up as a commencement speaker at the high school graduation.”

    Along the Reagan Trail, the day was marked with decorations, cake, candles and the traditional birthday song.

    At the little museums in these towns, Reagan memorabilia included his days as a member of the football team and when he worked as a lifeguard to earn money for his college tuition.

    In 1932, Reagan earned a bachelor’s degree from Eureka College, where he became hooked on acting. One movie that made him famous was playing college football star George Gipp in the movie “Knute Rockne – All American.”

    The family moved several times as Jack Reagan tried to provide for his family.

    When Ronald was 9, the family moved to Dixon and remained there until he grew to adulthood. His parents never owned their own home until Ronald Reagan bought them a house and moved them to California.

    In Tampico, as Reagan’s eldest son walked through the modest apartment where his father was born above what used to be a bank, Michael Reagan said, “You see this house is no different from the ranch in California. It is still as simple as this place.”

    He commented often that his father’s adobe ranch was far from palatial: “He built all of the fences and dug all the post-holes.” Despite his fame as a movie star and later in political life, Michael Reagan said his father, “never let people forget that his real home was right here in the Midwest.”

    At Sauk Valley Community College near Dixon, students served a luncheon attended by prominent members of the community.

    “I think it’s really neat to see someone who would take the time to come and talk to students,” said DeAndre Kocsis, a second year student from Arizona.

    Sarah Giroux, a freshman from Sterling, said she was pleasantly surprised by the president’s son because, “I didn’t know what a jokester he was.”

    When Michael Reagan was adopted by Ronald Reagan and actress Jane Wyman, they already had a daughter, Maureen, with whom he shared a close relationship.

    She died in 2001 after a five-year struggle with melanoma. Another baby daughter died in infancy.

    Ronald Reagan married Nancy Davis four years after his divorce from Wyman.

    They had two children, Patricia and Ron. The former president developed Alzheimer’s disease around 1994, and died in Los Angeles at age 93 on June 5, 2004.

    Before his beloved sister, whom he called Merm, died, Michael Reagan said she told him to carry on his father’s legacy, and that is what he does these days – tell the story of Ronald Reagan and what he stood for.

    “All the way throughout his life, my father stayed true to himself,” Michael Reagan said.

    He lamented the lack of education about his father’s role in bringing down the Berlin Wall.

    When he was in Berlin recently during the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Michael Reagan said despite his father’s call for Mr. Gorbachev to tear down the infamous wall, “there was no mention of Ronald Reagan there.”

    Misconceptions about the Berlin Wall continue to abound, he said. “Young people (in Germany) actually tell you that Americans put up the Berlin Wall to keep the Communists out of America.”

    He said if Americans don’t tell the story of what happened there, then “the other side will fill in the hole, and it’s their version that everyone will learn.”

    He hopes the Ronald Reagan exhibit he opened at the Checkpoint Charlie Museum in Berlin, will help fill in the gaps. This year, he is taking high school students from the U.S. to the Czech Republic where they can see the bunkers and other artifacts of the Iron Curtain.

    They also will visit Berlin and the Checkpoint Charlie Museum, and a concentration camp.

    The Liberty Education Tours also will bring students from the former Eastern bloc countries to the U.S., including the Reagan ranch near Santa Barbara, Calif.

    Eureka College senior Mark Kline from Lewistown who was one of the Reagan Fellows who went on the bus tour, said the day-long trip was worth the time.

    “My newfound appreciation for Ronald Reagan comes from seeing the communities in his life, the values he learned, the culture and his upbringing.”

    With all the publicity as an actor, governor and president, Kline said, “It’s amazing that he never lost sight of who he was and didn’t look down on his roots. I really enjoyed the trip.”

    Catharine Schaidle can be reached at [email protected].

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services