Author: Serkadis

  • Free classical, jazz performances in West Loop this month

    Advanced conservatory students performing Feb. 19 & 20

    More than 360 of Merit School of Music’s most advanced classical and jazz students are playing free for the public during its “Performathon” extravaganza, Feb. 19 and 20, at the school’s West Loop music center.

    This year’s 29th annual Performathon, at the Joy Faith Knapp Music Center, 38 S. Peoria St., just west of Greektown, will feature close to 100 different performances and events, including:

    • orchestra, band, chorus, jazz and chamber music ensembles
    • original compositions by students
    • jazz legend Ramsey Lewis in-person to accept Merit’s Champion Award at 11:35 a.m. Saturday
    • a salute to notable Chicago arts supporters Russ and Pam Strobel at 1 p.m. Saturday
    • live broadcast by 98.7 WFMT from 8:30 a.m. to noon Saturday

    There is no admission fee and the event is open to the public. Performathon runs 7 – 8 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 19, and 8:30 a.m. – 7 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 20.

    Merit School of Music is a non-profit providing music instruction to 7,000 Chicago-area students, from newborns to age 18. Students in Performathon are Merit’s most advanced; they are accepted into the school’s Tuition-free Conservatory (TfC) through auditions.

    The TfC is true to its name – none of its students pays tuition to participate. Costs for this esteemed program are covered by Merit School of Music’s generous donors.

    Last year, donors contributed $3.2 million to cover more than half of Merit’s operating expenses.

    In addition to keeping the conservatory tuition free, donors subsidize program costs for qualified younger students enrolled in the school’s beginning and intermediate programs, many who will continue mastering their instruments and one day join the TfC.

    A key part of Merit School of Music’s mission is to remove economic barriers to participation in its musical performance programs. In this regard, Merit has been “making music … building lives” in Chicago for 30 years.

    For more information, please visit meritmusic.org.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Biggest challenge in Peterson case: show wife was killed

    The crime scene technician didn’t think twice about the bottle of cleaning fluid near the bathroom where the body of Drew Peterson’s ex-wife lay slumped in her bathtub — or whether it might have been used to wipe away evidence of a crime.

    Six years later, as Peterson prepares to stand trial for murder in Kathleen Savio’s death, the bottle underscores the huge challenge facing prosecutors: Before they ask jurors to convict Peterson of murder, they first must prove a homicide occurred in the first place.

    Police were so sure Savio drowned accidentally that they didn’t look twice at the cleaning fluid, and collected no forensic evidence. Even the coroner who conducted the autopsy in 2004 ruled the death an accident.

    In most murder trials, the evidence of a slaying is as obvious as a bullet hole or a stab wound, and the only question is “whodunnit?” But in Peterson’s case, nothing is obvious.

    “This is a true circumstantial evidence case,’” said Vincent Bugliosi, who won a murder conviction of Charles Manson in the 1969 slayings of Sharon Tate and six others even though Manson was not at the scenes when the slayings occurred. “In circumstantial evidence cases you’re putting one speck of evidence upon each other… You’re putting on evidence showing the unlikelihood that this is an accidental death.”

    At a pretrial hearing to determine what hearsay — or secondhand — evidence a judge will allow a jury to hear at Peterson’s trial, prosecutors have been trying to turn a bathroom into a crime scene. Defense attorneys say they’ll call witnesses beginning Wednesday.

    In a preview of what is sure to be repeated at Peterson’s trial, prosecutors called witnesses to testify about Savio’s medical history, her personal habits, even details about her house. They also questioned a pathologist who conducted a second autopsy on Savio’s body, which was exhumed in 2007 after Peterson’s fourth wife, Stacy Peterson, vanished.

    Longtime pathologist Dr. Larry Blum, who ruled Savio’s death a homicide, testified there were fresh bruises on her body that would not have come in a fall. And a gash on her head, which led investigators to the original conclusion that Savio slipped and fell, could have been made immediately after she died, he said.

    Other witnesses talked about Peterson’s training in subduing suspects, knowledge of choke holds and his background in martial arts — likely signaling that prosecutors will suggest the former Bolingbrook police officer overpowered Savio and put her in the tub.

    Peterson’s attorneys will try to convince a jury that Savio’s medical problems could have caused her to fall.

    Savio had a heart murmur, periodontal disease and cervical vertigo. Although her neurologist testified that in his 30 years of practice, he’d never seen that kind of vertigo cause anyone to fall, he acknowledged Savio’s medical records show she complained of dizziness and numbness.

    “That opens the door for a defense attorney to bring in almost anything, drug use, drinking, whether she walked in her sleep or had dizzy spells,” said Terry Sullivan, a prominent Chicago attorney and former prosecutor.

    Which might explain why prosecutors asked so many questions about Savio’s bathroom.

    Witnesses said there were no towels, no robe and no other clothes near the tub, and toiletry items lining the tub’s edge were undisturbed. Prosecutors likely want jurors to believe if Savio was taking a bath, she’d at least have laid out a towel and if she did fall, she would have knocked something over.

    Then there was Savio’s hair. It was down when her body was found, but a woman who had lived with Savio said Savio always put her hair up in a clip before taking a bath.

    Some of those answers will resonate with jurors, said Marilyn Brenneman, a prosecutor in Seattle’s King County, who’s handling a similar case in which a man was charged with killing his 3 1/2-year-old stepdaughter after the death was originally ruled an accident.

    “Women on the jury will understand putting hair up because they don’t want to have to dry it again,” she said.

    To argue that Savio’s death was a homicide, prosecutors have to overcome something else: There is no evidence of a break-in, and no obvious explanation for how anyone could have gotten inside, killed Savio and gotten out without anyone noticing.

    Witnesses included a man who now lives in Savio’s house who recounted how was able to climb in a window after locking himself out. Peterson’s second wife told of seeing Peterson with locksmith tools. And Peterson friend Rick Mims testified he once followed Savio to work at the request of Peterson, who’d told him he was going to sneak into Savio’s house to retrieve “papers.” When Savio left work, Mims said he alerted Peterson.

    But nobody testified to actually seeing or hearing Peterson — or anyone else — sneak inside Savio’s house.

    That means the original challenge remains: overcoming a lack of physical evidence, like fingerprints or DNA, to prove she didn’t just drown.

    “You have to pile a lot of suspicious circumstances on top of each other,” Bugliosi said. “You have to get to the point where you can say (to a jury) ‘Come on folks.’”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • T-MO HTC HD2 like putting “Blockbuster in your pocket”, to ship 24th March

    htchd2blockbuster

    Kevin Lewis, SVP of digital entertainment at Blockbuster, appears to have confirmed the March 24th ship date for the T-Mobile HTC HD2.

    And while this may be a few weeks away, T-Mobile users are in for a real treat with their entertainment optimised device, which due to the added services will really live up to its potential.

    Lewis talked about the Blockbuster application on the Windows Mobile handset.

    The service, a first for Blockbuster, will allow users to buy or rent new release movies playable on their phones without first accessing a personal computer or being a Blockbuster subscriber.

    More importantly, owners of a HTC HD2 phone can stop and pause a movie download, and continue watching it on an Internet-connected television or Blu-ray Disc player that features Blockbuster On Demand.

    Lewis called the T-Mobile/HTC deal is akin to putting "Blockbuster in your pocket."

    With a music store by Amazon, book store by Barnes and Noble, streaming TV by MobiTV and of course the full range of Windows Mobile entertainment software the T-Mobile US version of the handset is certainly set to the the best HTC HD2 yet.

    Source: HomeMediaMagazine.com, thanks Reddragon72 for the tip.

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  • Xda brings new front page design?

    image

    XDA, is one of the most popular forums in the world and they have recently been experiencing some changes which have led them to this new front page. The site that is one of the best for all Windows Mobile and more recently Android content has undergone some very impressive design changes which as you can see in the image brings the news to you in a more attractive method.

    The design change is made for the front page only, so no forum changes so far. The front page is most likely one of the least visited page in the whole site and with this new design that might all change.

    “Welcome to the XDA-Developers new portal beta! This is an early glimpse at what we have been working on to help bring forward the best content that XDA has to offer. Please excuse any bugs as we work to officially launch by 26 February. Contact us if you notice any problems, or read about some of our future plans for this portal.

    Many people do not know what the use of the front page is, but since I work for them I shall explain it. The front page is a place where all new/updated interesting content on XDA is posted. This  content ranges from application, themes, projects, leaks and more. The news writers(including me(Wen(WM)) goes hunting through the huge forum for something new and posts them like we also do here at WMPoweruser. With this new page there is most likely going to be a huge flood of readers going to get the latest on XDA content, and they do not have to worry about an unattractive destination.

    Get a view of this here

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  • CORRECTED: Depressing Numbers That Show Foreclosures And Delinquencies Are Still Getting Worse

    CORRECTION: This is old data that we quickly cited without realizing the date. So maybe things aren’t that bad.

    Bloomberg has updated data on foreclosures and delinquencies. A quick look shows there’s very little relief in sight. (via @alea_)

    delinquencies

    delinquencies

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • GM working on next-generation Chevrolet Suburban, Cadillac Escalade for 2013

    Just last summer, the future of General Motors’ full-size SUVs was in doubt. The automaker had put the development of its large full-size SUV lineup, the automaker’s big moneymakers, on hold as it dealt with Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the recession and unstable gas prices.

    Well, times have changed and GM is now working on the next-generation of the Chevrolet Suburban and the Cadillac Escalade, which should be on the road in about three years. The GMC Yukon will also get a next-generation model.

    Rather than switching over to the Lambda large crossover platform, the full-sized SUVs will remain on GM’s rear-wheel-drive platform.

    Click here to get a price quote on the 2010 Chevrolet Suburban.

    “The SUVs are aimed at people who need more than two rows, and they need capability,” said Rick Spina, GM’s global vehicle line executive for full-sized trucks. “They are very fond of their SUVs, and we will continue to serve them. Sales are picking up, plus there aren’t too many players in the game.”

    The automaker sold 184,000 full-sized SUVs in the United States last year, down 25 percent from 2008.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Mortgages and Housing: MBS Spreads Narrow, Westside Short Sale, Double Dip, E-Verify Act, Improved Outlook, China RE Bubble, Refi Unavailable, Small Banks, Home Insurance, Housing Shortage

    bill-coppedge-dec09-1 original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    businessweek

    Fannie, Freddie Spreads Narrowest in 17 Years: Credit Markets – By Jody Shenn – … speculating cash the companies use to buy delinquent loans will be recycled back into the securities. …  The difference between yields on Fannie Mae’s current- coupon 30-year securities, which trade closest to face value, and 10-year Treasuries narrowed to as little as 0.66 percentage point yesterday, matching the lowest since 1992, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.Bloomberg BusinessWeek

    ————

    dhb1 dr-housing-bubble

    Real Homes of Genius – Santa Monica Westside Short Sale Action. How to go from $770,000 to $1,200,000 Million in 3 Years and Lose it All. The Short Sale Valentine Special with No Mortgage Payment for Nearly Two Years.  — Dr. Housing Bubble

    ————

    jl1 seeking-alpha

    Housing Double Dip? Zillow Says Yes, NAR Can’t See It – John Lounsbury – Seeking Alpha

    ————

    ds-news

    Congressman Introduces Mortgage E-Verify Act for GSE and FHA Mods – BY: CARRIE BAY – … Marchant, who is a member of the House Financial Services Committee, said, “My bill will potentially save millions by cutting down on fraudulent claims from illegal immigrants and protect taxpayers from subsidizing the restructuring or renegotiation mortgages of illegal immigrants.”  According to Marchant, mandating the use of the E-Verify program to establish a homeowner’s legal status would help eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse, and bring integrity to the mortgage modification process – DS News

    ————

    moodys resrecap

    Slightly Improved US Housing Outlook May Delay Foreclosures But Prolong Price Decline -  Moody’s has raised its house price outlook Research Recap slightly but still does not expect much benefit from loan modification programs. – Research Recap

    ————

    ockham-research-glass   +  tmtgm

    Bloomberg: More Evidence of Chinese Real Estate Bubble – by Ockham Research – … Jack Rodman of President of Global Distressed Solutions LLC, who has lived and worked in Beijing for the last eight years, estimates that nearly half of the office space in Beijing sits vacant …Ockham Research Razor’s Edge

    and
    Where home prices rise 33% in five weeks… – Tim Iacono – This story in MarketWatch tells of one of the hottest new property markets in the world, just off the southern coast of – you guessed it – China, where rising prices make the 10 percent gain on the mainland during the month of January look almost tame by comparison. – The Mess That
    Greenspan Made

    ————

    washington-post

    Refinancing unavailable for many borrowers – By Dina ElBoghdady and Renae Merle – … Half of the nation’s borrowers have mortgages with rates above 6 percent even though the average rate on 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages has been about 5 percent for most of the past year,… Many borrowers who tried to refinance have found they’re stuck because the value of their homes has tumbled and their equity has melted away. Others have been shut out because lenders tightened their requirements, demanding stellar credit and low debt.  – The Washington Post
    ————

    ny-daily-news1

    Small banks to the rescue: A ray of hope in the coming storm of default – ERROL LOUIS – NY Daily News 

    ————

    ed-conarchy1

    video: What Your Home Insurance Does Not Cover – Ed Conarchy – In this week’s Conarchy’s Corner (length: 8 minutes) Ed Conarchy wants to know if you felt the shake, rattle and roll of the 3.8 magnitude earthquake in Northern Illinois at 3:59am Wednesday. It’s a good time then to remind you that your standard homeowners insurance policy does not protect you from many things, including earthquakes. Ed will show you the complete list of things not covered ... – Ed Conarchy Mortgage Planner
    ————

    forbes_home_logo

    Housing Shortage Coming In 2011 – Alexandra Zendrian – If new houses aren’t built soon in the U.S., there won’t be enough next year. – Forbes

    and
    Transript: Brian Wesbury – Steve Forbes – V-Shaped Recovery  -  Brian Wesbury tells Steve Forbes we’re in for a housing shortage next year. – also that mortgage securitization is a long way awayForbes

  • Illinois Department of Insurance encourages consumers to review earthquake insurance coverage

    CHICAGO — In the wake of the 3.8-magnitude earthquake that surprised residents of northern Illinois on Feb. 10, the Illinois Department of Insurance is encouraging consumers across the State to review their earthquake insurance coverage.

    “Even a minor earthquake can be a frightening event but it can also serve as an important reminder to the people of Illinois,” said Michael T. McRaith, Director of the Illinois Department of Insurance.

    “By taking a few simple steps today, Illinoisans can ensure that their families, homes, and businesses are protected against future disasters.”

    The Department offers the following advice on earthquake insurance and some simple steps to take before an earthquake or other disaster strikes.

    Earthquake Insurance

    It is important to understand that standard homeowners, condo, and rental insurance policies do not cover damage due to earthquakes, but coverage may be purchased as an endorsement or a separate policy.

    Premium rates for earthquake insurance may vary widely depending on the coverage, where you live, the age and build of your home, and other factors. Contact your insurance agent or company to find out what the costs would be for your home.

    There are several factors to consider when evaluating your insurance options, including:

    • Does the policy cover only the dwelling? Are accessory structures, such as garages, also included?
    • Will your policy pay for the contents of your home and for additional living expenses if your home is badly damaged or destroyed?
    • Are there any exclusions or limitations to coverage? o What deductible must you pay before the insurance kicks in?

    Earthquake insurance policies can have a high deductible – up to 20 percent of the total amount of insurance you carry for each coverage under the policy.

    For example, if a homeowner’s policy provides $100,000 of coverage on the dwelling, $50,000 on the contents, and $10,000 on an unattached garage, and the earthquake deductible is 10 percent, you would have to pay a deductible of $10,000 on the dwelling, $5,000 on the contents, and $1,000 on the unattached garage before your insurance kicks in.

    You should review your insurance policy, or check with your insurance agent or company, to determine whether your earthquake insurance is appropriate for your needs.

    Before Disaster Strikes

    Keep an inventory of your personal property. Record model and serial numbers for more expensive items such as televisions and personal computers.  Keep receipts for all such items.

    You may even consider video recording or taking pictures inside your home. Inventory records should be kept at a location other than your home.

    Make photocopies of your insurance policies and keep the copies in a secure location away from your residence.  Keep important papers together so they will be readily available when you need them.

    Have your insurance agent and insurance company’s telephone numbers readily available. Be familiar with the coverage of your insurance policy.

    Make sure you understand the difference between actual cash value (ACV) and replacement cost coverage.  ACV replaces contents at cost minus depreciation.

    Replacement cost replaces your contents at today’s prices.

    For more information on what to do before, during, and after an earthquake or other disaster, including how to navigate the claims-handling process and to access a list of organizations that assist in disaster response, please visit insurance.illinois.gov.

    Illinois consumers with questions and concerns about their insurance can also call the Department’s toll-free consumer hotline at (866) 445-5364.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Pressure still on Gurnee mayor over memorial

    Another upset crowd showed up at Gurnee village hall to rip Mayor Kristina Kovarik’s recent veto of an agreement to allow a trustee’s foundation to develop a memorial to troops who died in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    In addition to the criticism that flowed during a public comment portion of Monday’s village board meeting, six or so protesters stood outside the building beforehand, some displaying anti-Kovarik signs as they did Feb. 1.

    “Gurnee, we’re really heading in the wrong direction. We really are,” said one of the evening’s speakers, Peter Karlovics, an attorney and local political activist who’s been a Kovarik critic.

    Kovarik contends Trustee Kirk Morris’ foundation accomplished little in the nearly five years it was unofficially in charge of building Heroes of Freedom Memorial Park where the police headquarters once stood on Old Grand Avenue. She said the lack of progress is why Morris’ group should not lead the project.

    Last week, Morris responded with a lawsuit against the village and Kovarik over her veto of the deal that would have officially named his foundation to raise private money and build the memorial on the publicly-owned land by Dec. 31, 2014.

    Village board members in December voted 5-0 in favor of the agreement with the Pfc. Geoffrey Morris Memorial Foundation, named for the trustee’s Marine son who died in the Iraq war in 2004.

    Kovarik vetoed the agreement in early January, and the board later in the month voted 3-2 against overriding the mayor’s action. Morris has recused himself from all votes or discussion on the issue.

    Roughly 40 spectators attended Monday’s board meeting, with most in the crowd against Kovarik. However, the first speaker, Gurnee resident Elmer Fallos, backed the mayor and jabbed Morris for suing the village he was elected to represent in 2009.

    Fallos said Gurnee will waste public money fighting Morris’ lawsuit instead of spending it on village services for residents and businesses.

    “This is how it’ll affect all of us,” Fallos said. “And for what? A piece of dirt in the flood plain. I want everyone to know I respect and am forever grateful to everyone who served in our armed services.”

    Kovarik said she wants a smaller-scale memorial different from the plan Gurnee architect Dan Robison voluntarily created for Morris, which includes benches, flags, walkways and statues estimated to cost $250,000.

    Saying he was speaking for a group of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans “against Kovarik park,” Marine Sgt. Jason Jerik of Gurnee said at the meeting that anything other the Robison-crafted memorial plan would not be acceptable.

    “It’s a memorial that should be done right,” Jerik said, “and up to the standards of all other veterans memorials.”

    In his lawsuit, Morris wants a judge declare he and the foundation have a right to exclusive use of the “Heroes of Freedom Memorial” name he trademarked, and the village can’t block him from completing the project.

    Morris also seeks unspecified damages from the village for work the private foundation performed to improve the publicly owned 1-acre site on Old Grand. The foundation spent an estimated $200,000 on the park.

    Kovarik has said the village couldn’t afford to maintain the park if it were built.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Rescuers struggle to reach man in Mount St. Helens

    SEATTLE — Rescuers struggled against bad weather Tuesday to reach a climber who fell 1,500 feet into the dormant crater of Mount St. Helens, but they faced uncertain prospects after observers in helicopters reported seeing no movement by the man.

    Two attempts to reach climber Joseph Bohlig, 52, of Kelso by helicopter were turned back Monday by winds and fading daylight.

    “There was no movement of the head, no attempt to signal,” said Lt. Brooks Crawford, the pilot of a Coast Guard helicopter. He said the man’s torso was covered with snow, with his arms, legs and head sticking out.

    The National Weather Service said the overnight temperature on the mountain likely dropped to the upper 20s.

    A helicopter from Whidbey Island Naval Air Station was dispatched Tuesday despite lingering clouds and winds on the mountain. Avalanche danger prevented a ground rescue attempt.

    Bohlig had been standing on the rim of the crater with a climbing partner when a snow overhang gave way and he fell into the volcano, Skamania County Undersheriff David Cox said.

    Other climbers called 911. Bohlig’s climbing partner made it safely down the mountain.

    Bohlig was alive and blowing a rescue whistle soon after the fall. He had climbed the volcano 68 times before Monday’s accident, Cox said.

    The operation was still considered a rescue mission and not yet an effort to recover a body.

    Richard Bohlig, the climber’s 84-year-old father, waited for updates at his Kelso home, saying it was the only thing he could do.

    He said his son is an avid mountaineer who has climbed peaks in many countries, but Mount St. Helens was his home mountain.

    “He used to go up even before the eruption as a child, play in the snow and that,” Richard Bohlig said. “I don’t know why he liked it, but he does. … I guess it’s a challenge for him. He likes to take people up to St. Helens.”

    Richard Bohlig said his son was climbing with an old friend Monday.

    North Country Emergency Medical Services Chief Tom McDowell said two rescuers in a private helicopter were unable to land close to Bohlig on Monday. The Coast Guard helicopter also reported no signs of life.

    Crawford said Bohlig fell into an area between the slope of the crater wall and a magma dome on the crater floor.

    The pilot said he had to leave the mountain because his helicopter didn’t have enough power to hover at that altitude in those conditions.

    The volcano about 100 miles south of Seattle exploded in a massive eruption in 1980 but has been quiet in recent years.

    The U.S. Forest Service said the climbing route provides views of the crater, lava dome and eruption area. Most climbers can complete the round trip in seven to 12 hours.

    The trail reaches an elevation of 8,365 feet. Climbers are advised to stay well back from the rim due to its instability.

    McDowell, who has been with the local emergency agency for 39 years, said the only other time a person fell from the rim was in 2008 when a snow cornice gave way under a snowmobiler. He was rescued by a helicopter and suffered a knee injury.

    About 13,000 people climb the mountain each year, mostly in the summer months.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Survivor: Accused Ala. prof in slayings shot methodically

    HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — A professor who survived a deadly university shooting rampage said the colleague charged in the attack methodically shot her victims in the head until the gun apparently jammed and she was pushed out of the room.

    Associate professor Joseph Ng told The Associated Press on Tuesday he was one of 12 people at a biology department meeting Friday at the University of Alabama-Huntsville. He described the details in an e-mail to a colleague at the University of California-Irvine.

    Ng said the meeting had been going on for about half an hour when Amy Bishop “got up suddenly, took out a gun and started shooting at each one of us. She started with the one closest to her and went down the row shooting her targets in the head.”

    Bishop, a Harvard-educated neurobiologist, was arrested and charged with one count of capital murder and three counts of attempted murder.

    It’s not the first time Bishop has been accused in a killing. In 1986, she killed her 18-year-old brother with a shotgun at their suburban Boston home. She told police she had been trying to learn how to use the gun, which her father had bought for protection, when it accidentally discharged.

    The killing was ruled an accident, but John Polio, who headed the Braintree, Mass., police department at the time, now has questions about the investigation.

    Polio, 87, at first defended the handling of the case. But he said Tuesday he has “myriad” concerns about a report on it, which he saw for the first time over the weekend.

    Polio said the district attorney’s office was not obligated to provide him with the reports, but as a common courtesy, he usually received them. He did not in Bishop’s case.

    “When I first read them, from a police standpoint and a professional standpoint, I would have wanted a lot more questions answered,” he said.

    He said there were no ballistics tests included, and he also thought it odd that there was an 11-day gap between the death and interviews with family members, apparently because they were too distraught to talk sooner.

    The Norfolk County district attorney at the time was William Delahunt, now a Democratic congressman from Massachusetts. He was traveling in Israel and could not immediately be reached for comment on the case.

    John Kivlan, the former assistant district attorney who reviewed the case, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that there was nothing then to indicate Seth Bishop’s death was anything but an accident. He said a joint investigation by state and local police as well as the medical examiner’s office all came to that conclusion.

    But current Braintree police Chief Paul Frazier questions how the investigation was handled. Frazier said Amy Bishop also fired once into a wall before hitting her brother, then fired a third time into the ceiling.

    An auto mechanic who worked at a dealership near Bishop’s home in 1986 told the Boston Herald and The Boston Globe that Bishop ran in after shooting her brother, waved a gun and demanded a getaway car.

    Tom Pettigrew, 45, recalled that Bishop said she had had a fight with her husband and he was going to come after her, so she needed to flee. Pettigrew said Braintree police briefly questioned him and several other employees, but authorities never contacted him again.

    Kivlan, who is now retired and living in Sarasota, Fla., said he did not recall that element of the case.

    Some victims’ relatives have questioned how Bishop was hired at the university in 2003 after she was involved in her brother’s killing and another, separate probe.

    In 1993, Bishop and her husband, James Anderson, were questioned by investigators looking into a pipe bomb sent to one of Bishop’s colleagues, Dr. Paul Rosenberg, at Children’s Hospital Boston. The bomb did not go off, and nobody was ever charged.

    Anderson defended himself and his wife as innocent people questioned by investigators casting a wide net. He said the case “had a dozen people swept up in this and everybody was a subject, not a suspect.”

    “There was never any indictment, arrest, nothing, and then everyone was cleared after five years,” he said.

    University President David Williams said Tuesday that a review of Bishop’s personnel file and her hiring file raised no red flags. He said a criminal background check after Friday’s deadly shooting turned up neither of the previous cases because charges were never filed.

    Huntsville police spokesman Sgt. Mark Roberts also said his department didn’t find out about either of the older cases until after the shooting on campus. He said police were checking to confirm details of the pipe bomb probe.

    Killed in Friday’s shooting were Gopi K. Podila, the chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences, and professors Adriel Johnson and Maria Ragland Davis. Two were wounded — professor Joseph Leahy remained in critical condition and staffer Stephanie Monticciolo was in serious condition Tuesday. The third, Luis Cruz-Vera, was released from the hospital.

    Ng, the professor who survived, said all six of those shot were on one side of an oval table.

    “The remaining 5 including myself were on the other side of the table (and) immediately dropped to the floor,” he wrote.

    Ng told the AP the shooting stopped almost as soon as it started. He said the gun seemed to jam and he and others rushed Bishop out of the room and then barricaded the door shut with a table.

    Ng said the charge was led by Debra Moriarity, a professor of biochemistry, after Bishop aimed the gun at her and attempted to fire. When the gun didn’t shoot, Moriarity pushed her way to Bishop, urged her to stop, and then helped force her out the door.

    “Moriarity was probably the one that saved our lives. She was the one that initiated the rush,” he told the AP. “It took a lot of guts to just go up to her.”

    Ng said the survivors worried she would shoot her way through the door, and frantically worked up a backup plan in case she burst through. But she never did.

    “There was a time when I didn’t think I’d come out of the room alive,” he said. “I don’t think any of us thought we’d come out alive.”

    Anderson said his wife had practiced at a shooting range not long before the shooting. Anderson said she acted normally while they were at the range and none of her behavior in recent days foreshadowed Friday’s rampage.

    “She was just a normal professor,” he told The Associated Press during an interview at his home Monday.

    Madison County District Attorney Robert Broussard said Bishop was arraigned in jail Monday but no court date has been set. He also said no decision has been made on whether to ask for the death penalty if she is convicted. She is on suicide watch, which is routine in such cases.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • COTE D’IVOIRE: Policy Changes Revive Poultry Industry

    By Fulgence Zamblé ABATTA, Côte d'Ivoire, Feb 16 (IPS) Ivorian poultry producers are enjoying strong growth thanks to the imposition of a tax on imports of poultry products from the European Union and South America.

    Five years ago, the Ivorian poultry industry was under strong competition from imported products flooding the local market. Poultry production, on which the livelihoods of a million people in Côte d'Ivoire depend directly or indirectly, suffered multiple blows beginning in the 1990s.

    A Food and Agriculture Organisation review of import surges reported that 2003 production of 7,500 tonnes was almost a third lower than in 1997; imports grew during the same period from 1,815 tonnes to 17,226. Poultry industry association IPRAVI (the Interprofession avicole de Côte d’Ivoire) says 1,500 producers went out of business, taking as many as 15,000 jobs with them. Farmers who were growing maize and other crops for animal feed were also affected.

    As policies aimed at self-sufficiency were abandoned in the late 1990s, there was a shift towards consumption of imported food. In line with a general liberalisation of trade policy, government lowered or eliminated import duty on many foodstuffs; free import licences for poultry were granted in 2002, coinciding with an effort to avoid food shortages as agricultural production was hit by the outbreak of civil war.

    In 2005 the Ivorian government imposed a new tax on imported poultry by-products. With this measure, the price per kilo for products imported from Europe or Latin America rose from 500 to 1,000 FCFA (doubling to roughly $2 per kilo). The goal was to discourage imports and increase local production.   "Since then we've been able to hold our own against fierce competition from the imports. And we're also happy to note that this policy didn't cause the slightest shortage or price hike in the cost for chicken or eggs on the national market," IPRAVI president Philippe Ackah told IPS.

    On a poultry farm in Abatta, in southeastern Côte d'Ivoire, Charles Koné is chatting with his feed supplier, Amadou Koné Traoré. Traoré takes an order for 100,000 CFA francs ($220) worth of corn and cottonseed meal for the chickens.

    "I've been supplying different farms in the area for three years, to our mutual benefit. Thanks to my ten acres (four hectares) of corn and three acres of cotton," Traoré tells IPS.

    He explains that his yearly sales went up from around $1,110 in 2005 to $8,890 in 2009. He expects to reach $13,330 by the end of 2010. Around the country, throughout the production chain for poultry, similar growth is being reported.   "We're more comfortable with local suppliers who have the most affordable rates, whereas before we were paying three times more to importers," says poultry farmer Ettien Koffi.

    "It's a pity the government didn't act sooner to support this industry which plays such a key role in the rural economy. It would have developed very rapidly and created a number of jobs across the country."   Koffi sells 100 chickens a day from his operation in Anyama, just north of the economic capital of Abidjan. "Local production has surpassed imported chickens," he says, looking pleased. According to him it's a consequence of the government's decision to support the industry.   According to Ackah, the new tax saw investment in the poultry industry increase by nearly 11 million dollars over four years. The result: from producing 9,000 tonnes of poultry in 2005, the industry expanded to 20,000 tons in 2009 and a total value of 110 million dollars. Egg production reached 800 million units versus 435 million over the same period, with approximately 39,000 new jobs created.   Moreover, Ackah adds, the industry generated 31.5 million dollars worth of sales for corn and other bird feed for producers between 2005 et 2009.   The Ivorian government, responding to input from the poultry producers, announced in January that it would maintain the import duties.

    "This regulation saved the Ivorian poultry industry from ruin. Only a few years ago despair was gaining ground and producers were without options," adds Alain Bouabré, an Abidjan-based economist.   "The industry was on the verge of total collapse when the measure went through. Now the industry should get better organised to truly benefit from the situation. Its simply a matter of time before importers find a way around the policy and regain a footing on the market," warned Bouabré.

    Poultry industry actors announced an additional investment of 315 million dollars, and the creation of 10,000 additional jobs; they also hope to benefit from further tax advantages.

    (FIN/IPS/AF/WA/DV/IF/AG/HU/MD/FZ/AIT/TRAENG-NM/TG/10)

  • Geneva Preview: Techart to debut 911 Turbo, Turbo S

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    2010 Techart 911 Turbo – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The Geneva Motor Show is just a few short weeks away, and the list of international debuts is quickly growing. We can now add one more to the list, with the announcement from Techart that the tuner will be unveiling their personalization program for the new Porsche 911 Turbo and 911 Turbo S.

    The upgrades for the 911 Turbo start with two separate aerodynamic kits that both reduce lift and improve airflow around the coupe Techart is also offering a selection of forged wheels, available in up to 20 inch sizes, as well as a hydraulic system that can lift the nose of the car 60mm. Finally, a variety of interior components are available a three-spoke steering wheel, aluminum pedals or a complete makeover with all-new leather. Hit the jump for the official details from Techart, and be sure to check back next month for live photos from Geneva.

    [Source: Techart]

    Continue reading Geneva Preview: Techart to debut 911 Turbo, Turbo S

    Geneva Preview: Techart to debut 911 Turbo, Turbo S originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 16 Feb 2010 17:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Missing Oak Forest woman, 3-year-old safe

    Woman missing since Thursday called police to say she’s in a shelter

    Oak Forest police today said a missing 27-year-old woman has called authorities to report that she and her 3-year-old son are both safe in an area shelter.

    Christina Crowley, 27, and her son, Jonathan, of the 5000 block of 159th Street, last were seen about 3:30 p.m. Thursday walking along 159th Street near LeClaire Avenue toward the Metra train station at 159th Street and Cicero Avenue.

    Police Monday said Crowley’s husband arrived at the couple’s apartment about 8 p.m. Thursday and reported them missing a few hours later.

    Police today said Crowley contacted them to say she willingly left for a shelter and had no plans to return home. Her exact whereabouts are unknown.

    Police said Crowley had less than $20, no credit cards and no cell phone with her at the time of her disappearance. But a neighbor told police she was carrying a backpack that day packed with several items.

    Lt. Mark Jensen said even though there are no indications of foul play, family and friends found it odd that she left without much money.

    Police said Crowley told a family member she was going to an unspecified location the day of her disappearance. But family and friends said they had not heard from her since.

    Crowley’s husband, family and friends have been cooperating with police and their investigation, police said.

    Frank Crowley said Monday he and his wife had been having marital problems lately and that Christina had talked about moving out. But there was no physical or mental abuse between the two and the manner in which his wife left was uncharacteristic of her, he said.

    Neighbors said they knew Christina Crowley to be a nice woman.

    They could not remember any disturbances or arguments at the couple’s home nor the police ever having been called there.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Audit finds U.S. census preparations wasted millions

    WASHINGTON (AP) – The Census Bureau wasted millions of dollars in preparation for its 2010 population count, including thousands of temporary employees who picked up $300 checks without performing work and others who overbilled for travel costs.

    Federal investigators caution the excessive charges could multiply once the $15 billion headcount begins in earnest next month unless the agency imposes tighter spending controls, according to excerpts of a forthcoming audit obtained by The Associated Press.

    On a positive note, investigators backed the Census Bureau’s decision to spend $133 million on its advertising campaign, saying it was appropriate to boost public awareness. The spending included a $2.5 million Super Bowl spot that some Republicans had criticized as wasteful.

    The findings by Todd Zinser, the Commerce Department’s inspector general, highlight the difficult balancing act for the Census Bureau as it takes on the Herculean task of manually counting the nation’s 300 million residents amid a backdrop of record levels of government debt.

    Because the population count, done every 10 years, is used to distribute U.S. House seats and billions in federal aid, many states are pushing for all-out government efforts in outreach since there is little margin for error – particularly for Democratic-leaning minorities and the poor, who tend to be undercounted.

    At the same time, the national headcount will employ 1 million temporary workers and is the most expensive ever, making it a visible sign of rising government spending.

    The federal hiring has been widely touted by the government as providing a lift to the nation’s sagging employment rate – but investigators found it also had waste.

    The audit, scheduled to be released next week, examined the Census Bureau’s address-canvassing operation last fall, in which 140,000 temporary workers walked block by block to update the government’s mailing lists and maps.

    While the project finished ahead of schedule, Census director Robert Groves in October acknowledged the costs had ballooned $88 million higher than the original estimate of $356 million, an overrun of 25 percent.

    He cited faulty assumptions in the bureau’s cost estimates.

    Among the waste found by investigators:

    • More than 10,000 census employees were paid over $300 apiece to attend training for the massive address-canvassing effort, but they quit or were otherwise let go before they could perform any work. Cost: $3 million.
    • Another 5,000 employees collected $300 for the same training, and then worked a single day or less. Cost $1.5 million.
    • Twenty-three temporary census employees were paid for car mileage costs at 55 cents a mile, even though the number of miles they reported driving per hour exceeded the total number of hours they actually worked.
    • Another 581 employees who spent the majority of their time driving instead of conducting field work also received full mileage reimbursements, which investigators called questionable.

    Census regional offices that had mileage costs exceeding their planned budgets included Atlanta; Charlotte, N.C.; Chicago; Dallas; Denver; Detroit; Kansas City and Seattle.

    Most of the nation will receive census forms in mid-March, and the Census Bureau is asking residents to return them by April. For those who fail to respond, the government will dispatch some 700,000 temporary workers to visit homes in May.

    In response to cost overruns, Groves has said he would work to prevent expenses from ballooning further and reevaluate budget estimates for the entire census operation. He has made clear his goal of returning tens of millions of dollars to government coffers by motivating more U.S. residents to mail in their form, which avoids costly follow-up visits by census takers.

    As to the Super Bowl ads, Republicans including Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., have questioned the $2.5 million purchase, which included two 30-second pregame spots, on-air mentions and a 30-second ad during the third-quarter.

    The ads, featuring Ed Begley Jr. humorously extolling a new project called a “Snapshot of America,” was widely panned as weak and ineffective by media critics.

    “There is a general move in the United States toward more government involvement in the economy. Seeing the U.S. Census spot gives us little confidence that this is going to solve our issues,” blogged Tim Calkins and Derek Rucker, both marketing professors at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management.

    The inspector general’s report said the census advertising was consistent with the government’s goals of boosting participation in the count.

    The agency has said that if 1 percent of Super Bowl viewers change their minds and mail in their form, it will save taxpayers $25 million to $30 million in follow-up costs.

    On the Web

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Bayh cites strident partisanship in leaving Senate

    WASHINGTON (AP) – Two-term Sen. Evan Bayh says ever-shriller partisanship and the frustrations of gridlock made it time for him to leave Congress. Republicans aren’t buying it, saying he and fellow Democrats sense that voters will be after their heads this fall.

    The Indiana Democrat, a moderate who twice came close to being added to his party’s national ticket, said Monday he will not seek re-election this November. The announcement gives Republicans a strong chance of capturing his seat and makes it likelier that the 59 votes that give Democrats command of the 100-seat Senate will dwindle.

    Bayh, 54, said his passion for helping people is “not highly valued in Congress.” He said he did not love the institution in which his father, Birch Bayh, had also represented Indiana.

    “There’s just too much brain-dead partisanship,” Bayh said in a nationally broadcast interview Tuesday. He said the public will continue to harbor hostile feelings toward Congress “until we change this town.” He also said that “the extremes of both parties have to be willing to accept compromises.”

    Bayh denied an interest in running for president in 2012 either as a Democrat or independent. Asked on MSNBC if there were any chance he would run, Bayh said, “None, whatsoever.”

    But he also said the American people could deliver “a shock” to Congress by voting many incumbents out if the institution doesn’t curb its divisiveness. Bayh said voters could simply decide they want to vote out people they believe are too partisan and said Congress should change its rules of operation “so that sensible people can get the job done.”

    Bayh’s disillusionment with the Senate came as no surprise to other Democrats.

    “The story line that people want is to say this was all about the bad political environment,” said John Anzalone, a Democratic pollster. “But I believe it’s about the bad quality of life” in the Senate caused by long hours and constant bickering.

    “It’s not like going to work every day, it’s like going to war,” Dave Nagle, a Democratic political activist and former congressman from Iowa, said in an interview. “You can only hear the bugle on the Hill so many times, then you grow tired of it. It just isn’t worth it.”

    Republicans saw a more partisan motivation in Bayh’s departure.

    “The fact of the matter is Senator Evan Bayh and moderate Democrats across the country are running for the hills because they sold out their constituents and don’t want to face them at the ballot box,” Michael Steele, chairman of the national Republican Party, said in a written statement.

    GOP pollster Neil Newhouse saw Bayh’s decision through the prism of the GOP’s startling capture of the Senate seat in Massachusetts that had been held by the late Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy.

    “Don’t kid yourself. Scott Brown claims another victim,” Newhouse said of Massachusetts’ new GOP senator. “It’s mostly Democrats seeing the handwriting on the wall.”

    Bayh joins a growing roster of recent Democratic retirees. Others include Rep. Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island and Sens. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and Byron Dorgan of North Dakota. Yet the congressional casualty list has a decidedly bipartisan flavor, with recent retirement announcements coming from Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., and GOP House members from Michigan, Indiana, Arkansas and Arizona.

    “Whether you’re a Republican or a Democrat, you’ve probably had some very nasty town hall meetings lately, and most normal human beings don’t enjoy being yelled at,” said Jack Pitney, a political scientist at Claremont-McKenna College in Claremont, Calif. “Democrats stand to lose more than Republicans because they’re the in party, but Republicans are catching some of this too.”

    Democrats have a 255-178 edge in the House, with two Democratic-held seats vacant.

    The public has been upset by job losses, growing federal deficits and spending, huge bonuses awarded to executives of bailed-out financial institutions, and Washington’s yearlong preoccupation with health care. One need look no further than recent polls to gauge the poisonous political atmosphere facing members of Congress seeking re-election:

    –In an Associated Press-GfK poll in mid-January, just 32 percent approved of how Congress was handling its job, including just 4 percent strongly approving, though Democrats got higher marks than Republicans. People were split about evenly over whether they wanted their own members of Congress to be re-elected, an unusually poor showing. And while nearly everyone named the economy as the most important issue, just one in five considered the economy in good shape.

    –A CBS News/New York Times poll in early February found 81 percent saying it’s time to elect new people to Congress. Just 8 percent said most members deserve re-election.

    Bayh’s departure sent deeper shock waves than most. Telegenic and considered by some to have a promising national future, Bayh is known more for the moderate tone of his politics than for any particular legislative achievements. His parting words Monday had a notably plaintive tenor.

    “To put it in words most Hoosiers can understand: I love working for the people of Indiana, I love helping our citizens make the most of their lives, but I do not love Congress,” Bayh said.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Three arrested in two-ton cannabis bust in Douglas County

    TUSCOLA — A Moultrie County judge Tuesday ordered three California men held on $1 million bond each after their arrests Monday night in northern Douglas County for hauling more than two tons of cannabis from Texas.

    Douglas County State’s Attorney Kevin Nolan said preliminary information he received from Illinois State Police at Pesotum is that a trooper made a stop of a semi-trailer tractor truck on Interstate 57 northbound north of Tuscola about 8:30 p.m.

    “There was a log book violation and a consent to search,” Nolan said, adding that the district’s drug-sniffing dog alerted and troopers found 4,400 pounds of cannabis tucked among crates of vegetables.

    “That’s a record for me,” said Nolan, who has been in office six years and is no stranger to interstate drug busts. “My previous big ones have been about 200 pounds.”

    Nolan said the probable cause affidavit he received from troopers listed the amount as 1,999,995 grams of cannabis. There were about 270 shrink-wrapped bundles, Nolan said.

    Nolan said the trio, Jesus Guzman, 31, Eric Cabrera, 35, and Joshua Cornillez, 32, from the Livingston, Calif. area, gave statements to police indicating they had started their trip in San Antonio and Dallas and were headed to Chicago.

    Judge Chris Freese set bond at $1 million each and ordered the trio back in court Feb. 23.

    Nolan said he needs reports from state troopers before deciding exactly what charges to file but said it would likely be cannabis trafficking, which carries a prison term of 12 to 60 years upon conviction for that amount.
     

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Brady’s lead grows by 6 votes in Champaign County

    URBANA — Newly certified election totals in Champaign County give Bill Brady a six-vote gain in his tight Republican gubernatorial race with Kirk Dillard.

    Thirty-one Republican absentee and provisional ballots were counted Tuesday morning in the Champaign County clerk’s office, giving Brady 12 more votes, and six more for Dillard and former Illinois attorney general Jim Ryan, plus two more votes apiece for Andy McKenna, Dan Proft and Adam Andrzejewski and one more for Bob Schillerstrom.

    In the most recent, unofficial statewide count following the Feb. 2 primary election, Brady had a 420-vote lead over Dillard. By the end of the day today, Republican officials should have a much better idea if Brady will be their gubernatorial nomineee.

    Forty-one Democratic absentee and provisional ballots were counted in Champaign County today, giving Gov. Pat Quinn 3,986 votes to 3,463 for Dan Hynes. Hynes added 20 votes, Quinn got 13 more.
     

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Ford to lay off 900 workers at Mustang plant due to slow sales

    FoMoCo said today that it plans to cut 900 workers from its AutoAlliance International plant in Flat Rock that makes the Ford Mustang, after slow sales last year due to the tough economic condition and competition from the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro.

    Ford spokeswoman Marcey Evans said that the company will reduce shifts from two to one on July 12 at the plant, which is jointly owned with Mazda and also makes the Mazda6 sedan.

    The Flat Rock plant employs nearly 2,300 people. Evans said that most of the layoffs will come from hourly manufacturing workers but some salaried staff may also be cut.

    Click here to get pricing on the 2011 Ford Mustang.

    Ford Mustang sales were down 27 percent last year. The Camaro come within 5,000 units of outselling the Mustang. The Camaro hasn’t outsold the Ford pony car since 1985.

    2011 Ford Mustang GT:

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    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Free Press


  • Truck hits power pole in Champaign

    CHAMPAIGN – Emergency personnel are at the scene of a crash in which a semitrailer truck struck a power pole in the 2100 block of West White Street in Champaign about 1:49 p.m. Tuesday.

    AmerenIP spokesman Leigh Morris said it does not appear that any electrical customers lost power as a result of the incident.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services