Author: Serkadis

  • Weather Betting Odds: Coldest Year Ever?

    Article Tags: Betting

    The Arctic weather conditions are set to continue over the weekend according to the Met Office. They’re warning that the snow that fell over parts of the UK yesterday (Thursday) could continue into next week causing further disruption.

    Meteorologists say that the snow which blanketed parts of Central England yesterday is set to continue well into the weekend. The Met Office has also released a severe weather warning for Monday for much of the country. They’re forecasting that the weather will remain changeable until Thursday with some dry and bright periods but also showers or longer periods of rain. On higher ground rain could turn to sleet or snow.

    Birmingham airport was forced to close its runway this morning after heavy snow fell in the area. The airport has warned that there could be delays and disruption as a result of the earlier closure.

    The National Trust has reported that the cold weather could delay the flowering of early spring flowers by as much a month. They say that the coldest January in 23 years has particularly affected gardens in the south west and south east where plants are flowering up to a month later than average.

    Source: betting.gamingsupermarket.com

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  • ‘Low Cost’ ETFs Actually Cost Investors More Than Some Hedge Funds

    Devil Fire Costume

    ETFs bill themselves as low-cost alternatives to standard mutual funds or even hedge funds. The idea is that their management fees are lower and trading costs are low since you can simply buy and sell them easily through a discount online broker.

    But here’s the problem —  it’s only true if ETFs are actually tracking their benchmarks effectively. Unfortunately they aren’t.

    WSJ:

    In 2009, ETFs missed their targets by an average of 1.25 percentage points, a gap more than twice as wide as the 0.52-percentage-point average they posted in 2008, according to a study of ETF returns released this week by Morgan Stanley.

    Part of this so-called tracking error stems from the recent proliferation of ETFs targeting exotic investments or areas where trading is less frequent, such as emerging-market stocks and junk bonds.

    Last year, 54 ETFs showed tracking errors of more than three percentage points, up from just four funds the prior year. And a handful of the 54 missed by more than 10 percentage points.

    1.25% is more than the management expense of some actively managed funds, or some hedge funds even (before performance fees).

    We think ETFs are great for tracking broad, liquid benchmarks such as the S&P 500 where they are likely to be worthwhile in terms of cost and trading ease. But ETF products for niche investments are highly suspect. The more illiquid investments the worse off ETF investors will be, especially since savvy traders will likely be able to line up and pick-off trades ahead of the ETF. 

    For anything niche, investors are probably better off with old fashioned mutual funds once all of their real expenses are factored in.

    Yet we’re fully aware of the fact that expenses of an ETF such as the above are near-invisible, especially if someone is been trading in and out of an ETF. So we’ll expect investors to keep lapping these products up. In investment management, products with the least visible expenses, and best ability to avoid blame, win.

    (Tip via Abnormal Returns)

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Santa Anita Race Track San Carlos Handicap Horse Racing Betting Pick Saturday 2-20-10

    With our play from horse racing on Saturday we will select from the San Carlos Handicap run at Santa Anita. This Grade 2 stakes will be run at 7 furlongs for four year olds and up on the synthetic main surface. The San Carlos Handicap is race 9 on the Santa Anita card with a 7:45PM Eastern Time post and you can watch it on TVG. With our free pick we will play on #6 Ventana to win.

    Ventana will be ridden by Vic Espinoza and is trained by Bob Baffert. This four year old $410,000 purchase is coming off a good second in a Grade 2 event at 6 ½ furlongs back on January 23rd on this racing surface at Santa Anita. Prior to that it was a victory over an allowance field at 6 ½ furlongs at Santa Anita. He came in with a bullet work on February 14th at this track in preparation for this contest. Baffert 18 wins in 88 mounts at the current meet.

    Play #6 Ventana to win Race 9 at Santa Anita 5-2 on the Morning Line

    Post Time at 7:07PM Eastern Time televised by TVG

    Courtesy of Tonys Picks

  • The crackup of the climate ‘consensus’ by Steven F. Hayward, New York Post

    Article Tags: ClimateGate

    article image

    The climate-change campaign is in catastrophic free fall.

    Nearly every day brings a new embarrassment or retraction for the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the supposed gold standard for “consensus” science. The withdrawal this week of BP, ConocoPhillips and Caterpillar from the main US business lobby for greenhouse-gas controls is the latest political blow to the campaign.

    The anti-warming lobby long demonized skeptics as the moral equivalent of Holocaust deniers while warning of climate “tipping points.” Now, the “Climategate” scandal that broke in November is looking like a true tipping point: The leaked e-mails have done to the climate-change debate what the Pentagon Papers did for the Vietnam War debate 40 years ago — changed the narrative decisively.

    For years, skeptics have been pointing out serious defects or gross exaggerations in the climate narrative — glaciers that weren’t actually melting; weak or incomplete data in the records of surface temperature that supposedly proved unprecedented warming; a complete lack of backup for claims that storms and drought are growing more severe. Plus, global temperatures have been flat for the last decade — increasingly falsifying the computer models that project our doom.

    The media long ignored every criticism, and generally joined the climate campaigners in denouncing skeptics for their turpitude. Now it’s playing catch-up.

    Click source to read more

    Source: nypost.com

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  • Editorial: The Political Masters Of Propaganda And Their Well-Intentioned Disasters, Investors.com

    Article Tags: Editorial

    article image

    Leading scientists who preached and promoted global warming from the world’s top center on warming — the Climatic Research Unit at England’s University of East Anglia — have been exposed as frauds due to their falsifying and changing past temperatures to hide facts showing the globe wasn’t warming. Now we are seeing record-busting snow and low temperatures in the U.S. north and south.

    New Democrat progressives must think people are too ignorant or ill-informed to recognize when they’re being conned or lied to. People want jobs, not jawboning.

    A cap-and-trade system — environmentalists’ pie in the sky — could add $2,000 to $4,000 a year to the energy bill of every American household. The U.S. economy, the world’s most inventive and productive based on per capita output, could be easily transformed by draconian, conjured-up cutbacks to become second-class as China moves full-speed ahead

    Click source to read more

    Source: investors.com

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  • Study warns of lead in Galesburg

    Recent drinking water quality monitoring conducted by the city of Galesburg has found elevated levels of lead in some homes and buildings in the community. Although the primary sources of lead exposure are lead-based paint and lead-contaminated dust or soil, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 10 percent to 20 percent of a person’s potential exposure to lead may come from drinking water.

    The city this week advised residents of steps they can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water.

    – Run your water to flush out lead. Run water 15 to 30 seconds to flush lead from interior plumbing or until it becomes cold or reaches a steady temperature before using it for drinking or cooking, if it hasn’t been used for several hours.

    – Use cold water for cooking and preparing baby formula.

    – Look for alternative sources of water, such as bottled or filtered water.

    – Identify and replace plumbing fixtures containing lead.

    Lead can cause serious health problems, especially for pregnant women and children 6 years and younger, if too much enters the body. It can cause damage to the brain and kidneys and can interfere with the production of red blood cells.

    Scientists have linked the effects of lead on the brain with lowered IQ in children. Adults with kidney problems and high blood pressure can be affected by low levels of lead more than healthy adults.

    In 1992, the city tested 60 homes for lead levels in drinking water. Of those homes, more than 10 percent exceeded the EPA action level of 15 parts per billion.

    In 1993, the city began adding a phosphate inhibitor to reduce the lead levels in drinking water. According to the city, the treatment process has been effective, but overall the lead action level has continued to be exceeded.

    The city is required to collect water samples from the original 60 homes tested every six months until the lead action level is not exceeded by more than 10 percent of the homes.

    Residents are warned that they may have a lead water service, which is the responsibility of the property owner.

    For more information on reducing lead exposure and the health effects of lead, visit the EPA’s Web site at www.epa.gov/lead.

     

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • No anesthetic for stunning Rivermen loss

    The Peoria Rivermen turned a feel-good game into a painful experience that left them uncomfortably numb Friday.

    The Chicago Wolves got two goals from sniper Brett Sterling in the final 2:05 — including the game-winner with 5.2 seconds left — to wipe out a Peoria lead and beat the Rivermen, 4-3, before 3,762 at Carver Arena.

    That crowd was almost too stunned to boo as the Wolves went laughing off the ice. Almost.

    “You can’t make this stuff up,” Rivermen head coach Rick Wamsley said. “It’s (expletive) unbelievable. Best team in the West and we’re right there with them, ahead of them, for 58 minutes …”

    Said newly acquired defenseman Nate Guenin, after his debut with Peoria: “It’s like a bad dream.”

    Rivermen veteran Derek Armstrong delivered what appeared to be the game-winner at 5:32 of the third period during a power play. Armstrong, back in the lineup for the first time after missing five games from a concussion, was alone on the back door near the bottom of the left circle, and sent the puck past goaltender Peter Mannino’s outstretched stick for a 3-2 lead.

    The clock dwindled down to near two minutes — Mannino was likely just a few seconds from leaving his net empty for an extra attacker — when it all fell apart for the Rivermen.

    Sterling, parked on a sharp angle deep in the right circle, fired the puck to the front of the net with 2:05 left, and it hit Peoria winger Chris Porter and disappeared into his equipmemt.

    Porter moved, and the puck popped out and plopped into the net.

    “Unbelievable,” Rivermen goaltender Ben Bishop said.

    No, this was unbelievable: With 5.2 seconds left in a now-tie game, the Rivermen appeared to botch a line change and had just four players on the ice as Chicago moved in for a final rush. By the time the fifth player moved off the bench, the Wolves had a three-on-two.

    Sterling was alone on the left hashmarks, where he took a pass from Johnny Pohl and ripped it under Bishop’s right arm for the winner.

    Before that, the last-place Rivermen were right in the game against the first-place Wolves, who have won 22 of their last 27.

    Peoria got a first-period goal from Aaron Palushaj and a second-period net-crashing goal from Julian Talbot.

    “We play 57+ great minutes and then we give away the game,” Rivermen All-Star defenseman Jonas Junland said. “It’s just (expletive) horrible. It’s embarrassing.

    “It’s like we’re afraid to win games.”

    YOU’RE FIRED: Rivermen director of corporate sales/marketing David Rak was fired by the parent club Blues on Friday, as was Rivermen comptroller Karen Doering.

    Rak was the longest-tenured member of the AHL club’s business staff, in his seventh season. Three of the top five front office execs for the Rivermen have been fired or left the team since Christmas.

    “It was just time for a change,” Blues chief marketing executive and Rivermen president Dave Bullock said. “We’re bringing in some more sales staff, and rebuilding our business team.”

    RIVER READINGS: St. Louis Blues head coach Davis Payne was in the house Friday, and shot an episode with Ice Time Online. You can catch it next Wednesday on pjstar.com. … Chicago goaltender Peter Mannino was 5-0-0 with a 1.38 goals-against and .961 saves rate against Peoria this season before Friday’s game. … The Rivermen lost for the first time this season when scoring at least three goals in regulation. … The Rivermen made a move with their crowd emcee as well, replacing Tony Esposito with ticket executive Megan Miller. Miller, 21, is an Illinois State grad from Coal City. … Minnesota Wild director of hockey operations Chris Snow was in attendance.

    Dave Eminian can be reached at [email protected] or 686-3206.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Letter: The sound of alarm by Richard Linzen, The Boston Globe

    Article Tags: Richard Lindzen

    KERRY EMANUEL’S Feb. 15 op-ed “Climate changes are proven fact’’ is more advocacy than assessment. Vague terms such as “consistent with,’’ “probably,’’ and “potentially’’ hardly change this. Certainly climate change is real; it occurs all the time. To claim that the little we’ve seen is larger than any change we “have been able to discern’’ for a thousand years is disingenuous. Panels of the National Academy of Sciences and Congress have concluded that the methods used to claim this cannot be used for more than 400 years, if at all. Even the head of the deservedly maligned Climatic Research Unit acknowledges that the medieval period may well have been warmer than the present.

    The claim that everything other than models represents “mere opinion and speculation’’ is also peculiar. Despite their faults, models show that projections of significant warming depend critically on clouds and water vapor, and the physics of these processes can be observationally tested (the normal scientific approach); at this point, the models seem to be failing.

    Finally, given a generation of environmental propaganda, a presidential science adviser (John Holdren) who has promoted alarm since the 1970s, and a government that proposes funding levels for climate research about 20 times the levels in 1991, courage seems hardly the appropriate description – at least for scientists supporting such alarm.

    Richard S. Lindzen
    Cambridge
    The writer is Alfred P. Sloan professor of atmospheric sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    Source: boston.com

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  • Pothole patrol has its hands full

    Holding a giant stop sign, Fred Wright stands at Sommer Avenue off Pioneer Parkway, coaxing cars around two dump trucks as another worker smooths fresh asphalt mix over a gouge in the road.

    “Everyone likes a smooth ride,” said Wright, a city maintenance worker. Wright and Pam Cunningham, another city worker, spent eight hours a day each day this past week cruising sectors of the city and patching potholes.

    “The first few days, we went through three truckloads of this mix,” Cunningham said. That’s about three to four tons of cold mix asphalt. Jim Clark, a city maintenance worker who also patches roadways, said on a bad street, crews will fix between 100 and 125 holes.

    The city has crews out often repairing the car-rattling holes, but during winter, repairs are an-ongoing process, said David Haste, manager of streets/sewer and forestry for the city.

    After a snow storm or freeze, the city will send six to eight crews to repair new holes and resurface old ones.

    Workers pack cold mix into a hole and tamp it down, which “holds pretty well,” Haste said.

    But cold mix isn’t a permanent patch, especially during winter conditions, said Director of Public Works David Barber.

    “It’s not as strong, not as durable and not as long-lasting” as hot mix asphalt, but using the hot mix is inefficient in cold months and requires a “hot box” to heat up a patch of roadway, Barber said.

    “That’s still not a long-lasting solution, and it would never be finished,” Barber said. “Unless you permanently fix the street, (potholes) are going to pop up. They can pop up overnight. The cold mix is just to get us through the winter.”

    The city budgets between $30,000 and $35,000 for cold mix each year, though not all mix is used for pothole repair, he said.

    Freezing water exerts a huge amount of pressure, and as it seeps into cracks in the road and freezes, then thaws on warmer days, the constant pressure change causes portions of asphalt to come loose and separate from the road, Barber said.

    This cycle of nature does a number on many vehicles that run over potholes.

    “We’ve seen blown struts, minor suspension components broken, and a rash of blown tires,” said Wes Miller, manager at Meineke Car Care Center.

    Miller said potholes are a problem even near his shop at 3722 N. Prospect Road. A large hole near Meineke on Prospect and some crumbling of the drive pulling out onto Prospect are common customer complaints, he said.

    Lake Avenue between Sheridan Road and Knoxville Avenue also can be a headache for drivers, said Don Shipp, who works at the Circle K at Lake and Knoxville.

    “(Customers) say they wish they’d fix them and fix them right,” he said. “They’re to the point where they’re two feet apart. They’ll swallow your tire.”

    Barber said Rockwood Drive, a common pothole complaint road, is scheduled for reconstruction this summer, and Northmoor Drive between Sheridan and Knoxville will undergo work, too. Other roads, such as Interstate 474 and state or county routes, aren’t a city responsibility.

    While Barber said the best thing is to avoid potholes completely, if a vehicle is damaged by a hole in the road, the driver can turn in a claim to a risk management officer at City Hall.

     

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

     

    Report a pothole: Call public works at 494-8850.

     

     

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • DS homebrew – NotePaint v1.0

    Homebrew coder RRRDGames has recently released a new version of NotePaint, a handy text/drawing editor for the Nintendo DS. Notable features of the latest update of the brew includes a much improved graphics, multiple fonts, changeable keyboard

  • How to watch starcraft 2 beta replays (Tutorial)

    Tutorial :: Playing Starcraft 2 Beta Replay files for non-beta users.

    Impt note: If you want to share this, just link to this site instead of copy pasting all the stuff
    Can’t wait to try out Starcraft 2 beta? Oh wait you didn’t get included in the first wave of Starcraft 2 beta testers? Well […]

    No related posts.


  • Hearsay hearing for Drew Peterson comes to an end

    A hearing for Drew Peterson ended Friday night with the same question it began with a month ago: Is there enough evidence to convince a judge that the former police officer may have killed his third and fourth wives to keep them from testifying before a jury?

    In dramatic closing statements after the last of more than 70 witnesses testified, prosecutors portrayed Peterson as a coldblooded killer who took the lives of Kathleen Savio in 2004 and Stacy Peterson three years later to keep them from getting his money.

    “They are killed so they can’t take the witness stand in a divorce proceeding,” Will County Assistant State’s Attorney John Connor said.

    But defense attorneys said the case against Peterson is built on lies.

    Savio’s death was a tragic accident, they said, and Stacy Peterson may have vanished in 2007, but she’s not dead.

    “For someone to say five, six, seven, eight, nine times that she’s dead doesn’t mean she’s dead,” defense attorney George Lenard said. “The reason she is not here with Mr. Peterson is that she left, and she left with another man.”

    The former Bolingbrook police sergeant is charged with Savio’s death, but no charges have been filed in Stacy Peterson’s disappearance. Friday’s closing statements marked the first time they said outright they believe he killed Stacy Peterson.

    The unprecedented hearing is easily the most extensive use of a state law allowing a judge to admit hearsay evidence in first-degree murder cases if prosecutors can prove a defendant may have killed a witness to prevent him or her from testifying. The law was passed after authorities named Peterson a suspect in the 2007 disappearance of his fourth wife, Stacy, then exhumed Savio’s body and reopened her death investigation.

    The statements that prosecutors want Judge Stephen White to admit as testimony are those in which the women allegedly expressed to friends and family that they were afraid Peterson would kill them.

    Prosecutors want friends and relatives of Savio to be allowed to testify about a threat she described, in which Peterson reportedly held a knife to her throat and allegedly told her he could kill her and make it look like an accident. They also want the judge to allow a friend of Stacy Peterson to testify Peterson had told her he killed Savio.

    Defense attorneys argued that many of the statements shouldn’t be admitted. For example, they pointed to statements Savio gave police after the alleged knife incident in which Savio never said Peterson had a knife.

    “She describes things the way she wants in order to make people feel sorry for her,” said Andrew Abood, saying Savio wasn’t a credible witness.

    White also must consider testimony from three pathologists. They all agreed Savio drowned, but two – including Dr. Michael Baden, a former New York City chief medical examiner who testified Friday – contended Savio’s death was a homicide. The other pathologist backed the original finding that her death was an accident.

    Baden was the last of 70 witnesses called during the hearing. ABC 7 reports Peterson’s defense team went on the attack and accused Baden of bias. They contend the network news consultant reached the conclusion to please his TV bosses and went so far as to allow a Fox News producer help him with the autopsy on Savio by taking photos and moving the body.

    Throughout the hearing, it became clear the hearsay evidence is critical for prosecutors. They presented no physical evidence linking Drew Peterson to Savio’s death, and Stacy Peterson remains missing.

    Abood characterized the weakness of the case against Peterson this way: “They (prosecutors) want to come in here and say it’s a staged crime scene because they have no evidence.”

    But prosecutors said the only explanation for the deaths of both women is that Peterson killed them. Both, they said, posed a threat to Drew Peterson. They said he was worried his property settlement with Savio would wipe him out financially, and that Stacy Peterson’s planned divorce from him would do the same.

    What happened, Connor said, is exactly what Savio and Stacy Peterson feared would happen, as friends and family described.

    “Mr. Peterson’s wives are two-for-two in predicting their own murders,” he said.

    White did not say when he would rule on the hearsay, but he did say he would order the ruling sealed until a jury is selected. He explained that he didn’t want his decision to influence potential jurors.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • The Role Of Curation In Journalism

    Jay Rosen points us to an article out of France that takes a stab at presenting what a modern internet-era newsroom should look like. The point that I find most interesting, that helped clarify a few different ideas for me, is that it splits “journalism” into three distinct categories, all of which have a role in the newsroom:

    1. Reporters — who go out and do first person reporting — creating original stories, not just reposting rewritten wire copy.
    2. Columnists — who “start conversations and give stories another perspective.”
    3. Curators — who “‘cover’ the news by sorting, verifying and editing live everything good existing on the web and in the media. They make link journalism, they make the news more accessible.”

    Now, this is interesting in a few respects. First, many “reporters” today don’t really do what is described as reporting above. That is, they often do try to take wire copy or stories that were written elsewhere, and go through the wasted process of “re-reporting” them just to pretend it’s a new and unique story for that publication. In many ways, this is a waste of resources. What would be better is if they actually encouraged #3 above — let a “curator” handle that sort of news.

    Unfortunately, for the most part, newspapers seem to look down on “curating” as if it’s some sort of lesser form of journalism, and this is a sticking point that they’re going to need to get past if they want to understand how people engage with the news today. These days, everyone is a curator of the news in some fashion: they share news, comment on it, post about it, etc. But they also look to the “pros” to add more value to it as well. But if the traditional press looks down on this function, they won’t do a particularly good job of it. It’s sometimes tough for a press who used to want itself to be “the final word” on every story to admit that others may have reported it better/faster, as well as the fact that sometimes it’s better to involve the community, rather than treating the community as riffraff waiting for the word from the god-like journalists.

    If a newsroom were set up with a focus on those three roles (I would add editors as well…), with the understanding that they work together as a team to both bring the most information and community to a particular story, I doubt we’d see newspapers struggling as much as they are today.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Coalition presses legislative maps issue

    While GOP lawmakers want to change how the state maps its legislative districts with a constitutional amendment, a coalition isn’t banking on that happening.

    The Illinois Fair Map Amendment coalition is growing with partners the League of Women Voters, Illinois Chamber of Commerce, Illinois Farm Bureau and more. They launched a citizen-led petition drive to get a constitutional amendment on the November election ballot and are holding a kickoff rally Saturday in Peoria.

    State Sen. Christine Radogno of Lemont and state Rep. Tom Cross of Oswego this week introduced joint resolutions that would change who draws the maps to a nine-member commission. But an unlikely three-fifths majority is required in both houses by May 2 for the amendment to appear on the November ballot.

    “I find it highly unlikely that’s going to happen in the Illinois General Assembly. Any legislative constitutional amendment has to have bipartisan support in Springfield to pass,” said Brad McMillan, who heads the Institute for Principled Leadership in Public Studies at Bradley University. “The powers that be who are currently in control don’t want to lose control.”

    Every 10 years after the U.S. census, lawmakers redraw legislative maps. Republicans and Democrats usually deadlock and put the names of each party in a hat, granting the winning party complete control of the redistricting process and protection for incumbents.

    To change the way that’s done, there must be a constitutional amendment – either driven through legislative leaders or a citizen-led petition drive.

    The Fair Map Amendment would require districts to be compact, protect minority voting rights, respect municipal boundaries and eliminate political favoritism. A new bipartisan advisory committee would create maps with limitations on who can serve to ensure fairness and allow for public input.

    Any plan would have to be approved by a two-thirds House and Senate majority. Barring a decision there, the decision would go to an independent “special master” to decide.

    Petitions to get the issue on the ballot have to be filed by May 2.

    “We were told by legislative leaders that they were going to address redistricting reform last year. That never happened. We waited as long as we possibly could, but we had to act,” said McMillan, who also served on the Illinois Reform Commission, a temporary group appointed to tackle redistricting and other issues.

    “The coalition firmly believes it will result in better government, more accountability and a healthy two-party system with balance – something voters have been saying loud and clear is what they want,” McMillan said.

     

    Karen McDonald can be reached at 686-3285 or [email protected].

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • State’s attorney says District 150 ‘meet and greet’ violated law

    A half-hour scheduled “meet and greet” Peoria School District 150 officials held Tuesday with the apparent next superintendent and members of the media violated the state’s Open Meetings Act, Peoria County State’s Attorney Kevin Lyons said Friday.

    “Violations of this act always involve quirky levels, and this one is no different,” Lyons said in an e-mail response, “. . . the meeting was clearly a public meeting with notification deficits and exclusion problems. The members present were in noncompliance of the act and the (State’s Attorney’s Office) could sanction, charge, or otherwise seek any level of ‘penalty’ or remedy available.”

    On Tuesday, four members of the District 150 School Board were present when they introduced Grenita Lathan, an interim deputy superintendent at San Diego Unified School District, as the district’s new superintendent.

    District officials said Lathan would be taking no questions shortly before she walked in, noting the “meet and greet” was “just to introduce her” and her schedule was tight.

    Lathan spoke briefly and left.

    Members of the School Board – President Debbie Wolfmeyer, Vice President Linda Butler and board members Martha Ross and Laura Petelle – then took questions from the media.

    Wolfmeyer said they planned to vote on Lathan’s contract at Monday’s meeting, saying Lathan “has full support of the board.” She later noted that the board also will contemplate hiring a “mentor” or “coach” to help Lathan acclimate into the new position, as well as addressing how they would look to Lathan for guidance in filling the associate superintendent’s position, which is being vacated by Herschel Hannah.

    “Even a casual gathering, such as a dinner party or coincidental meeting on the sidewalk, becomes a public meeting if a majority of a quorum of a public body (or a committee, etc. thereof) is present, and discussion occurs regarding business that is before, or is likely to come before, that public body,” Lyons said.

    A meeting is defined by the Open Meetings Act as any gathering of a majority of a quorum of the members of a public body, or in this case three School Board members, held for the purpose of discussing public business.

    The law is intended to ensure that public business is conducted in public.

    Obviously, the district didn’t intend to hide anything if it invited the media.

    The law also requires public notice when a majority of a quorum of a public body meets.

    In the school district’s defense, sources there say three of the four board members showed up unannounced. The fourth gave about an hour’s notice.

    And District 150 did offer some notice.

    On Feb. 12, a simple, single sentence explaining the event was sent to local TV and radio stations, a couple of newspapers and a magazine noting the time and location. It ended with a line: “This opportunity is for our professional media partners and is not open to the public.”

    Of that Lyons noted: “A public body, no matter how well-intentioned, may not hold a public meeting and define for itself who may and may not attend the meeting. Public means everyone unless they, for cause, have been ejected or barred (disruption, etc.). Posting and distribution of notices for all public meetings are set out in the act and may not be narrowed by the public body.”

     

    Dave Haney can be reached at 686-3181 or [email protected].

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Apologetic Tiger Woods unsure of return to golf

    Standing at a podium before a presidential-blue backdrop in a hushed room of his closest associates, Woods stumbled a few times as he read a 13½-minute statement. He offered no new details of what happened or what’s next, except that he was leaving on Saturday for more therapy.

    “I have made you question who I am and how I could have done the things I did,” Woods said.

    Woods’ wife, Elin, did not attend his first public appearance since he crashed his car into a tree outside their home three months ago, setting off shocking allegations of rampant extramarital affairs.

    “I was unfaithful. I had affairs. I cheated,” Woods said. “What I did was not acceptable.”

    Woods alternately looked into the camera and at the 40 people in the room, raising his voice only to deny that his wife ever hit him and to demand that the paparazzi leave his family alone. Beyond that, there were stretches when Woods — with his formidable business empire — could have been reading from a tough corporate report.

    He entered the room alone. When he finished, he stopped for a long embrace with his mother, Kultida, who said she whispered in his ear, “I’m so proud of you. Never think you stand alone. Mom will always be there for you, and I love you.”

    Regaining trust and support from everyone else might not be so easy.

    Woods already has lost two corporate endorsements — Accenture and AT&T — and he has gone from being perhaps the most famous athlete in the world to the butt of jokes.

    “It’s now up to me to make amends, and that starts by never repeating the mistakes I’ve made,” Woods said. “It’s up to me to start living a life of integrity.”

    Woods left therapy on Feb. 11 and has been spending time with his two children and his mother — but not his wife — in Orlando, according to a person with knowledge of Woods’ schedule. The person, not authorized to release such information, spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Woods did not say how much longer he would be in therapy, only that “I have a long way to go.”

    Pool photos were released on Thursday of Woods hitting golf balls on the practice range.

    “I do plan to return to golf one day,” Woods said. “I just don’t know when that day will be. I don’t rule out that it will be this year. When I do return, I need to make my behavior more respectful of the game.”

    Just as unpredictable was the future of his marriage. Woods said he and his wife have started discussing the damage he has done.

    “As Elin pointed out to me, my apology to her will not come in the form of words. It will come from my behavior over time,” Woods said. “We have a lot to discuss. However, what we say to each other will remain between the two of us.”

    After an embrace with his mother, Woods hugged the two women who sat on either side of her — Amy Reynolds, formerly of Nike who now works for Tiger Woods Design, and Kathy Battaglia, who is Woods’ administrative assistant at ETW Corp.

    He made his way down the front row and greeted others — his chief financial officer, Web site administrator, U.S. PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem and Notah Begay, who played with Woods at Stanford University and withdrew from the U.S. PGA Tour event in Mexico.

    Woods remained composed throughout the statement, pausing briefly before the first of several apologies. At times, however, he looked into the camera almost on cue. Begay said he got choked up listening, and felt his words were sincere.

    “This is as emotional as I’ve ever seen him in public,” Begay said.

    “He’s an American hero. And he’s had his issues,” Finchem said. “At the end of the day, he’s a human being. We all make mistakes. My personal reaction was that his comments were heartfelt. He clearly recognizes that there has been serious impact to a wide range of individuals and organizations.”

    Some of the players at the Accenture Match Play Championship in Arizona watched the coverage before the third round.

    “From a guy that’s done a lot of tough things in golf over the years, it was probably one of the most difficult things he’s ever had to do,” British Open champion Stewart Cink said. “And it was something probably that’s going to help him along the way of healing.”

    In Sweden, Elin’s father, Thomas Nordegren, saw Woods’ confession.

    “I watched it but I have nothing to say right now,” Nordegren told The Associated Press. Elin’s mother, Barbro Holmberg, declined to comment through her spokeswoman.

    Friday’s event was tightly controlled, with only a few journalists allowed to watch Woods live. The confession became a major television event with networks breaking in to show it.

    Said golf analyst David Feherty on CBS: “The vast number of people just want their Tiger Woods back.”

    Certainly, no other U.S. PGA Tour player could command this kind of attention.

    But Woods has always been special on the course and in popular culture. Television ratings double when he is in contention, which has happened a lot on his way to winning 82 times worldwide and 14 majors, four short of the record held by Jack Nicklaus.

    Nicklaus watched the announcement, but a spokesman said he would have no comment.

    Most of the associates left the room when Woods finished speaking. Among those who stayed were Mrs. Woods, who rarely gives interview but in this case said, “I would like to talk.”

    She said her son has a “good heart and good soul” but made a mistake. Mrs. Woods, raised in Thailand, also claims the media showed a “double standard” by keeping the sex scandal in the news for so long.

    “Some of media, especially tabloid, hurt my son bad,” Mrs. Woods said. “He didn’t do anything illegal. He didn’t kill anybody. But he try to improve himself. He try to go to therapy and help. He change that and making better. When he go do all this thing, he will come out stronger and a better person.”

    As his Thai-born mother sat with arms folded across her chest, Woods said part of his rehab would include a return to his Buddhist faith. Woods said his mother raised him as a Buddhist, and he practiced his faith “until I drifted away from it in recent years.”

    “Buddhism teaches that a craving for things outside ourselves causes an unhappy and pointless search for security,” Woods said. “It teaches me to stop following every impulse and to learn restraint. Obviously I lost track of what I was taught.”

    Veronica Siwik-Daniels, one of Woods’ alleged mistresses and a former pornographic performer, watched the event with her attorney in a Los Angeles radio studio. She said she wants an apology for the unwanted attention the scandal has brought her.

    “I really feel I deserve to look at him in person face to face in the eyes because I did not deserve this,” she said.

    ___

    AP Sports Writer Bob Baum in Marana, Arizona, Associated Press writers Antonio Gonzalez in Ponte Vedra Beach, John Rogers in Los Angeles, and AP Retail Writers Ashley Heher in Chicago and Sarah Skidmore in Portland, Oregon contributed to this report.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Supreme Court: Ryan must forfeit all of state pension

    The high court said in a 6-1 decision that state law “plainly mandates that none of the benefits provided for under the system shall be paid to Ryan.”

    “The forfeiture, in other words, is total,” said the 23-page decision written by Justice Bob Thomas. “Ryan gets nothing.”

    “As the victims of Ryan’s crimes, the taxpayers of the State of Illinois are under no obligation now to fund his retirement,” the decision said.

    Supreme Court Justice Anne M. Burke dissented, saying she understood “the very human impulse to want to punish Ryan for his wrongdoings by depriving him of all of his pension benefits.” But she said that in her view, the majority broke with a previous decision in a similar but unrelated case, and as “an unjustified departure from precedent I cannot join it.”

    The high court’s decision overturned a previous Illinois Appellate Court ruling that would have left the former governor with at least a partial pension.

    After his conviction in April 2006, the General Assembly Retirement System suspended Ryan’s pension of $197,037 a year. Ryan’s attorneys argued that he should get a partial pension of $60,000 a year, earned while he served as a member of the state House and as Illinois lieutenant governor.

    Ryan was not convicted of engaging in any wrongdoing while in those offices.

    The former governor, who will be 76 on Wednesday, is serving a 6½-year federal prison sentence at the federal prison at Terre Haute, Ind. He is expected to be released in July 2013, but Ryan’s attorney, former Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson, and wife, Lura Lynn, have said they will ask President Obama to release him early because she is ill and needs him home.

    Thompson said Thursday in a telephone interview the decision was “very disappointing” but there appeared to be nothing more that could be done to secure a pension for him. “This is the end,” Thompson said.

    “I agree with Justice Burke that they’ve changed the law,” he said.

    At his tumultuous six-month trial, Ryan was convicted of racketeering, conspiracy, tax fraud and making false statements to the FBI when he was secretary of state and later governor from 1999 to 2003.

    Prosecutors presented evidence that thousands of dollars in bribes paid in exchange for commercial drivers licenses ended up in Ryan’s campaign fund. They also claimed that when state investigators from the office of the Secretary of State’s inspector general began to look into the payoffs and the campaign fund, Ryan had his aides dismantle the inspector general’s office.

    Ryan also used state employees and taxpayer money to operate his campaigns while steering lucrative state contracts to cronies who showered him with gifts, prosecutors claimed. Ryan’s attorneys maintained that he had violated no laws.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Turns Out That People Are Actually Pretty Honest About Themselves Online

    Many people think that when people set up their online social networking profiles, they may be prone to… exaggerating a bit. Given that they can control what they say about themselves, many have posited that those profiles really represent an idealized version of themselves. Yet, perhaps that’s not true. Jose Luis Campanello points us to a recent study that found that people actually tend to be pretty honest in their social networking profiles. This really doesn’t seem all that surprising when you think about it. I would guess that the results might be a bit different if they looked at dating sites, rather than social networking sites. On a social networking site, you’re connecting with a lot of people you probably already really know in real life. As such, it makes little sense to present much of an idealized version of yourself, because your friends already know you — and might even call you out for being fake. Still, as the report notes, there are still some people who believe that the norm is for people to lie about themselves, when the truth is that, in such realms, people really do tend to be pretty honest. And that’s a good thing.

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  • Thief rams gas station and ATM in quest for cash

    Too early to find an open bank, a man attempted a unique type of cash withdrawal Friday morning.

    East Peoria police said a suspect slammed a stolen pickup truck through the glass entry area to the Hucks gas station at 101 Farmdale Road about 2:30 a.m. The truck barreled into an ATM and knocked the machine off bolts connecting it to a wall.

    The suspect then loaded the cash machine into the back of the pickup and drove it toward the Sunnyland area, police believe. The burglar stopped at the East Peoria Event Center at the Oaks, 4200 E. Washington Road.

    There, the suspect propped the stolen machine against an outer wall and attempted to gain access to the cash by ramming the stolen pickup against the ATM.

    Although the ATM was badly damaged, it did not come open. The truck, a pickup with ladders on the sides, was stolen from C&G Concrete, 1906 Meadows Ave., police said.

    Officers responding to an alarm at the event center located the ATM and truck still running in the parking lot. The exterior brick wall was cracked. A hole was punched through the wall and a large interior window was shattered, police said.

    After the suspect gave up on getting to the money after a few minutes, police believe he then stole a van from Spectacular Floor Care, 200 Sunrise Ave., located near the event center. The floor business reported the cargo van missing around 9 a.m. Friday.

    Surveillance video shows the suspect is a white male, about 5 feet 10 inches to 6 feet tall, with a thin build. Police remain on the lookout for the suspect and the stolen van.

    Police urge anyone with information to call CrimeStoppers at 673-9000 or 347-9000, or East Peoria police at 698-4700.

    For more complete details, please see tomorrow’s Journal Star or check pjstar.com later.

     

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    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • CROI 2011 Dates: February 27-March 3, Boston

    croi 2011 dateCROI just about wrapping up — excellent, as usual.  Hope to provide some “greatest hits” shortly.

    But since John Mellors announced the dates of next year’s conference — and because the CROI web site can be “leisurely” in posting this information — I offer the following evidence as a public service to researchers, teachers, clinicians, and schedule-makers out there in HIV/ID Land.

    Come for the conference, stay for the weather!