четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Australian twin in suicide pact leaves US hospital

ENGLEWOOD, Colorado (AP) — An Australian twin who police say shot herself in the head at a Colorado shooting range as part of a suicide pact with her sister left a Colorado hospital Friday.

Candice Hermeler, 29, left Swedish Hospital in suburban Denver, said hospital spokeswoman Deborah Gosling, who declined to release further information.

Hermeler had been in the hospital since the Nov. 15 shootings that wounded her and killed her sister, Kristin Hermeler. Their parents, Ernest and Kelsay Hermeler, arrived in Colorado last week.

The sisters, from Australia's Victoria state, had been in the Denver area for about five weeks before the shootings at Cherry Creek State Park …

Spurs bounce back to beat Pistons

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Tony Parker scored 23 points and the San Antonio Spurs bounced back from a humbling loss by beating the Detroit Pistons 111-104 on Wednesday night to clinch a playoff berth.

Tim Duncan, who matched a career low with two points in a blowout loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on Sunday, finished with 15 points and 12 rebounds in 31 minutes.

Richard Hamilton led the Pistons with 20 points off the bench, while Tayshaun Prince added 16.

The Spurs hit their first 14 shots and finished with a season-high 40 points in the first quarter to take a 14-point lead. San Antonio scored just 37 points in the first half in Sunday's loss.

The Pistons cut the lead to …

Salaam . . . shalom . . . peace

Vancouver churches unite with a new name for Christian education conference

This year's annual Christian education event planned by Vancouver area Mennonite churches has a new name: FaithQwest. It was chosen by the organizing committee after much laughter, bad "Menno" jokes, some serious brainstorming and animated discussion, to reflect a commitment to ongoing Christian education with a West Coast flavour. "FaithQwest 2008: Salaam, Shalom, Peace" was hosted by Peace Mennonite Church.

Keynote speaker David Shenk shared stories from his decades of service as a writer, mission leader with Eastern Mennonite Missions, educator and interfaith conversation partner with Muslims in …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Former UBS president wants bank to split off investment unit

A former president of UBS AG urged the Swiss bank to change its business strategy and split off the investment banking unit as a result of massive losses resulting from the subprime crisis.

Luqman Arnold's proposal comes after UBS reported writedowns of US$37.4 billion (euro23.65 billion) for the past nine months _ so far the largest reported by any bank as a result of rising U.S. defaults on risky mortgages.

"We are not convinced that the 'one bank' integrated business model that has served UBS well in the past will survive the damage inflicted by the proprietary trading losses and writedowns," Arnold said in a letter from his London-based …

Sunday's Sports Scoreboard

All Times Eastern
National Basketball Association
Milwaukee 98, Indiana 94 F
Cleveland 104, Boston 93 F
Charlotte 64, Orlando 60 -3
Miami 70, Philadelphia 57 -3
Oklahoma City 35, Utah 31 -2
Minnesota vs Sacramento, 9 p.m.
New …

Henderson wants mark vs. Yankees

OAKLAND, Calif. Slumping, sore and kind of sour about gettinghit by a pitch, the Oakland Athletics' Rickey Henderson pulled evenwith Lou Brock.

But Henderson gets warm all over knowing his first chance toeclipse Brock's all-time record comes tonight against the New YorkYankees, the only other team he has played for.

"The thought of getting the steal against New York is a dream tome," Henderson said after tying Brock's record with his 938th careersteal in Oakland's 7-3 victory against California on Sunday. "Ithought about that after I was taken out of the game."

Henderson, in his 13th season, played for the Yankees in 1985-89and owns the club record for …

O'Malley shuts his eyes to help putting

SYDNEY (AP) — Veteran Australian golfer Peter O'Malley has a new way of coping with the anxiety of troublesome short putts: he shuts his eyes.

O'Malley, 45, said Wednesday the new don't-look-now policy quells "visual anxiety" and helped him break a five-year title drought with a victory at last week's New South Wales Open.

He said putting with his eyes closed …

Correction: Van Morrison story

In a Dec. 28 story, The Associated Press, relying on information from Van Morrison's Hollywood-based publicist and his official Web site, reported erroneously that the Irish singer had a new baby boy with a woman identified as "his wife, GiGi."

Morrison said Thursday in a statement through his Dublin public relations firm that the report was "utterly without foundation" and planted by an unknown hacker. Morrison said he remains "very happily married" to former Miss Ireland Michelle Rocca, with whom he has two children, aged 3 and 2.

An e-mail sent to the …

Adoptive parents-in-waiting need to prepare

As my husband and I waited on the tiny airstrip for our adoptedson to arrive, he was clearly nervous.

"I know I'll love this baby," he told me, "but don't expect itto happen right away. I'll need some time to bond."

"Of course," I responded.

A few minutes later, a tiny bundle was carried across the runwayand placed in my arms. Our son was beautiful, perfect - and I feltnothing. Absolutely nothing.

My husband whisked Michael from my arms, tears streaming downhis cheeks.

"My little boy!" he cried. "I love you so much!"

So much for needing time to bond.

My only recognizable emotion was panic. I had spent the lastthree years …

Construction spending drops 0.7 percent in January

WASHINGTON (AP) — Builders began work on fewer offices, shopping centers and other commercial projects in January, pushing U.S. construction spending down to near a decade low.

The Commerce Department says builders trimmed their activity 0.7 percent in January following a revised 1.6 percent decline in December.

The consecutive declines pushed total spending …

Swiss mulled using force to free citizens in Libya

Switzerland's president said Monday that officials considered using force to free two Swiss citizens who were detained in Libya for more than a year.

Swiss media reported last week that the Foreign Ministry's secret plans to use special forces or intelligence agents to free Rachid Hamdani and Max Goeldi sparked a row when they were disclosed to the Cabinet.

President Doris Leuthard condemned the leaks to the media but said officials had rightly contemplated all options to free Rachid Hamdani and Max Goeldi.

"That the relevant authorities considered the possible use of security forces in a hostage situation is correct and cannot be …

Bitter break sets record

It was the longest divorce trial in Cook County history andperhaps the most heated.

It involved many of the biggest names in Chicago divorce law andhas been the talk of the courthouse for more than a year. Close to $3million of the marital estate has been exhausted in attorneys' fees.And it ain't over yet.

Ted Tetzlaff is a managing partner at Jenner & Block, one ofChicago's biggest law firms. He is close enough to Mayor Daley to getappointed to the Public Buildings Commission. He went to law schoolwith President Clinton and the first lady and is a major fund-raiserfor them.

His wife, Janna Tetzlaff, worked for another powerhouse law firm,Winston & Strawn, …

Tuesday's Major League Linescores

San Diego 000 000 000_0 7 3
New York (A) 020 500 01x_8 11 0
Wolf, MAdams (5), Guevara (7) and BarrettPettitte, Veras (8), Traber (8), MRivera (9) and Posada. W_Pettitte 7-5. L_Wolf 5-5. HRs_New York, ARodriguez (13), Giambi 2 (17).
___
Washington 001 000 000_1 5 1
Minnesota 000 002 00x_2 5 0
Lannan, Manning (8) and FloresLiHernandez, Guerrier (8), Nathan (9) and Mauer. W_LiHernandez 7-4. L_Lannan 4-8. Sv_Nathan (18). HR_Minnesota, Morneau (11).
___
Boston 020 001 000_3 7 0
Philadelphia 000 000 000_0 7 0
Lester, Okajima (8), Papelbon (9) and VaritekMoyer, Madson (6), Seanez (8), Condrey (9) and Ruiz. W_Lester 6-3. L_Moyer 7-4. Sv_Papelbon (20). HR_Boston, Crisp (5). .
___
Houston 100 031 000_5 8 0
Baltimore 002 100 12x_6 12 0
Backe, Byrdak (6), Geary (7), Brocail (7), Valverde (8) and QuinteroOlson, Albers (5), JJohnson (8), Sherrill (9) and RHernandez. W_JJohnson 2-2. L_Brocail 2-2. Sv_Sherrill (23). HRs_Houston, CaLee (15). Baltimore, Markakis (12), Huff (11).
___
Toronto 000 000 000_0 4 0
Milwaukee 011 201 02x_7 7 0
McGowan, Wolfe (5), Carlson (7), Frasor (8) and BarajasParra, Difelice (8) and Kendall. W_Parra 6-2. L_McGowan 5-5. HRs_Milwaukee, Counsell (1), Braun 2 (20), Fielder (12), Branyan (8).
___
Chicago (N) 000 010 001_2 6 1
Tampa Bay 010 001 10x_3 10 0
Dempster, Cotts (6), Wuertz (7), Eyre (7), Howry (8) and HBlancoKazmir, Balfour (5), Howell (7), Wheeler (8), Percival (9) and Navarro. W_Balfour 1-0. L_Cotts 0-1. Sv_Percival (16). HRs_Tampa Bay, Longoria (11), CFloyd (6).
___
Kansas City 000 010 010_2 8 0
St. Louis 001 000 000_1 5 1
Davies, Mahay (8), Soria (9) and OlivoPineiro, Villone (8), Springer (8), Isringhausen (9) and LaRue. W_Davies 3-0. L_Villone 1-2. Sv_Soria (16). HR_Kansas City, Aviles (3). .
___
Atlanta 000 002 030_5 5 0
Texas 104 011 00x_7 9 1
THudson, Ridgway (5), Boyer (7), Ring (8) and McCannPadilla, JWright (7), Guardado (8), CWilson (9) and Laird. W_Padilla 9-3. L_THudson 7-5. Sv_CWilson (14). HRs_Atlanta, McCann (13), Infante (1). Texas, Hamilton (19), MByrd (3).
___
Pittsburgh 040 100 000_ 5 6 0
Chicago (A) 203 023 51x_16 19 1
Snell, Osoria (5), MSalas (7), SBurnett (7) and Doumit, RChavez (7)JVazquez, Dotel (7), Masset (8), Russell (9) and Pierzynski. W_JVazquez 7-5. L_Snell 3-7. HRs_Pittsburgh, JBautista (6). Chicago, OCabrera (5), Thome (14), Dye (12), Crede (15).
___
Cleveland 000 010 010_ 2 9 0
Colorado 002 212 30x_10 17 0
PByrd, Elarton (5), Bauer (7) and ShoppachReynolds, RSpeier (7), Vizcaino (9) and Iannetta. W_Reynolds 2-4. L_PByrd 3-7. HRs_Colorado, JBaker (2), Hawpe (8).
___
Oakland 211 310 016_15 15 0
Arizona 000 010 000_ 1 5 0
Duchscherer, ABrown (9) and KSuzukiWebb, EGonzalez (4), TPena (8), Lyon (9), Slaten (9) and CSnyder. W_Duchscherer 7-4. L_Webb 11-3. HRs_Oakland, Ellis 2 (8), RDavis (1), ErChavez (2), Crosby (4), KSuzuki (2).
___
New York (N) 100 000 000_1 6 3
Los Angeles (A) 301 001 01x_6 11 0
JSantana, Heilman (7), Vargas (8) and SchneiderLackey, SShields (8) and Mathis. W_Lackey 4-1. L_JSantana 7-5. Sv_SShields (2). HR_Los Angeles, Mathis (5).
___
Florida 010 002 100_4 6 2
Seattle 200 210 00x_5 13 1
Olsen, Kensing (5), Waechter (7) and TreanorFHernandez, SGreen (8), Rhodes (8), Morrow (9) and Johjima. W_FHernandez 6-5. L_Olsen 4-4. Sv_Morrow (2). HR_Florida, Uggla (20). .
___
Detroit 000 001 022_5 9 0
San Francisco 000 001 000_1 9 0
Rogers, Miner (8), TJones (9) and IRodriguezJSanchez, Sadler (8), Chulk (9) and BMolina. W_Rogers 5-4. L_JSanchez 6-4. HRs_Detroit, Thames (13), Raburn (2).
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles (N) 001 100 010_3 7 0
Cincinnati 000 000 100_1 6 0
Billingsley, Beimel (7), Broxton (8), Saito (9) and MartinCueto, Burton (8), Weathers (9) and Bako. W_Billingsley 5-7. L_Cueto 5-7. Sv_Saito (9).

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Voters can now request absentee ballots

With the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners Monday proclaiming the March 19th "Bill of Rights" Day, Cook County Clerk David Orr said voters can now request absentee ballot applications.

On the city side of government, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners Chairman Langdon D. Neal and his board adopted a ten-point program aimed at informing voters of their rights so their votes will be counted fairly and accurately.

For the first time, Langdon said there will be posters proclaiming the "Bill of Rights" posted at each of the city's 2,556 polling places on March 19th.

"Although some of the ten points are fairly basic, I think it is important that we re-emphasize to the voters that these are their rights which will be observed in every Chicago polling place," said Neal. I think it will help eliminate any confusion as to what a voter can and cannot do," Neal said.

The Bill of Rights, which is printed in English and Spanish, says: Cast your ballot in a non-disruptive atmosphere free of interference, vote if you're in line by 7 p.m., vote by affidavit if your registration is mistakenly challenged, vote at your old polling place if you have moved within 30-days of the election; request assistance in voting, if needed; bring newspaper endorsements or sample ballots into the voting booth; protect the secrecy of your ballot; receive a new ballot if you make a mistake or change your mind; screen your ballot after voting to ensure it's complete and correct; and have your ballot counted fairly and impartially.

Also taking a pro-active stance was Orr who too was not wasting any time in notifying suburban voters who will be out of the country for the primary election that they may apply for a mail-in absentee ballot from his office.

Voters may order a mail-in absentee ballot application by calling his office at: 312-6030906, log on to his website at: www.voterinfonet.com, write him at 69 W. Washington St., Suite 500, Chicago, IL 60602 or they may pick one up at their local municipal or township hall.

Orr said he'll begin mailing out these applications later this month and that voters have until March 14th to request a mail-in absentee ballot.

Once filled out, they should return it to Orr's office and once he has determined if the voter is eligible to receive a ballot, it will be mailed out to them.

To be counted, Orr said the absentee ballots must be received in his office by election day (March 19th) to be counted.

Those eligible for absentee ballots include voters who cannot make it to their polling placed on March 19th, will be out of the country or who are physically disabled. Others qualifying for these ballots include election judges, those serving on a jury, voters observing a religious holiday or students who are away at school.

According to Orr, there will be in-person absentee voting beginning Feb. 25 through March 18th at most municipal, township clerk's office in suburban Cook County and at his office as well.

For further information call Orr's office at: 312-603-0906.

And, for the physically disabled voters, Orr said with a physician's signature along with the applicant's notarized signature, they can take advantage of the Disabled Voter Absentee program where they can receive an absentee ballot application before each election for the next five-years.

Those who qualify for this program should call: 312-603-0930.

Article copyright REAL TIMES Inc.

Clinton says Obama campaign "distorting" comments on race, Obama says that's "ludicrous"

Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton suggested that Barack Obama's campaign had distorted some of her comments to make racial tension a theme of the presidential contest.

"This is an unfortunate story line the Obama campaign has pushed very successfully," the former first lady said in a spirited Sunday appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press." "I don't think this campaign is about gender, and I sure hope it's not about race."

Obama, who hopes to be America's first black president, called Clinton's allegations "ludicrous."

Both New York Sen. Clinton, who is campaigning to be the first woman president, and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, have engaged in damage control this week after black leaders criticized them for comments made shortly before the New Hampshire primary last Tuesday.

Hillary Clinton was quoted as saying U.S. civil rights icon Martin Luther King's dream of racial equality was realized only when President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, while Bill Clinton said Illinois Sen. Obama was telling a "fairy tale" about his opposition to the Iraq war.

Bill Clinton has appeared on several black radio programs to say he was referring to Obama's record on opposition to the Iraq war, not on his effort to become the first black president.

Clinton taped the show Sunday before appearances in South Carolina, whose Jan. 26 primary will be the first in America's state-by-state nominating process to include a significant representation of black voters. Blacks were 50 percent of primary voters in the state in 2004 and the number is expected to swell this time.

At an awards dinner Sunday in Atlanta celebrating black achievement, Michelle Obama said Sunday her husband is the person America needs in the White House right now and was critical of anyone who would "dismiss this moment as an illusion, a fairytale." He is the right candidate "not because of the color of his skin, but because of the quality and consistency of his character," she said.

As evidence the Obama campaign had pushed the story, Clinton advisers pointed to a memo written by an Obama staffer compiling examples of comments by Clinton and her surrogates that could be construed as racially insensitive. The memo later surfaced on a handful of political Web sites.

Obama later called Clinton's accusations "ludicrous," and said he found Clinton's comments about King to be ill-advised and unfortunate.

"If Senator Clinton wants to be distracted by the sorts of political point-scoring that was evident today then that is going to be her prerogative," Obama said.

Another rival, John Edwards, added his voice to the chorus of criticism of Clinton's comments about King.

"I must say I was troubled recently to see a suggestion that real change that came not through the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King but through a Washington politician. I fundamentally disagree with that," Edwards told more than 200 people gathered at a predominantly black Baptist church in Sumter, South Carolina.

During the televised interview on Sunday, Hillary Clinton praised King as one of the people she "admired most in the world," and suggested his record of activism stood in stark contrast to Obama's, who spent years as a Chicago community activist.

"Dr. King didn't just give speeches. He marched, he organized, he protested, he was gassed, he was beaten, he was jailed," she said, noting King had campaigned for Johnson because he recognized the need to elect a president who could enact civil rights into law.

While Clinton praised Obama's eloquence, she also stepped up her contention that his record did not match his rhetoric.

She noted that while he had spoken out eloquently against the war in 2002 before coming to the Senate, he voted repeatedly to fund the war once in office.

"If you are part of American political history, you know that speeches are essential to frame an issue, to inspire, and lift up," Clinton said. "But when the cameras are gone and when the lights are out, what happens next?"

Obama scoffed at her suggestion of an inconsistent record on the war. Campaigning in Las Vegas, he said he voted for war funding out of an obligation to support the troops, and noted other prominent Democrats, such as liberal Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who voted the same way.

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott and Seanna Adcox contributed to this report from Columbia, South Carolina, and AP Writer Kathleen Hennessy contributed from Las Vegas.

Lessons from high-resolution satellite SST's

Since satellite-derived sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are retrieved from measurements of emission from the ocean surface skin, their utility in characterizing the temporal and spatial variability of oceanographic features has been questioned. However, analyses derived from a 10-yr archive of 1-km resolution SST data-called the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) SST Archive (NSA)-are providing new insights into the complex physical oceanography of the southwest Pacific region.

For example, the annual mean (Fig. 1) reveals clear signatures of many of the important features in the region, including the mean locations of current systems and fronts. Further, these "skin-deep" SST measurements clearly contain information about the effects of vertical mixing and/or flow diversion caused by bathymetric features far below the surface (e.g., over the Kermadec Ridge). The amplitude and phase of the annual cycle (Fig. 2) also reveal additional detail about mixed layer stratification. Specifically, regions where the annual cycle has small amplitude and late phase seem associated with bathymetric features, while the absence of bathymetric features leads to more spatially uniform amplitudes. Exceptions are also evident, such as in the sub-Antarctic watermass south of the Chatham Rise, where the annual cycle displays an uncharacteristically large signal (and early phase), perhaps due to early summer stratification of the water column or advection of subtropical waters over the Chatham Rise. (A concomitant analysis of monthly mean chlorophyll-a data from the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-View Sensor (Sea WiFS) mission, lends some support to the advection suggestion.) Regardless of the explanation, though, the spatially varying features evident in SST data are robust and appear in climatologies derived from both 5 and 10 years of data.

SST data also allow testable hypotheses to be posed. For example, the location of the Sub-Tropical Front (STF) east of New Zealand is still unknown, but the NSA suggests that it dips southward east of the Chatham Rise. Recent research voyages have found evidence to support this hypothesis.

A comparison of the NSA and NOAA Pathfinder SST reanalysis datasets indicates that the former is warmer (mean difference over the region is 0.216[degrees]C), but the location and magnitudes of all features, including those in the highly varying Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), are identical. Given the difference in resolution of the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) data sources utilized (4 km for Pathfinder, 1 km for NSA) and the completely different cloud-detection methods employed in the Pathfinder (decision tree) and NSA (Bayesian) data, this is an encouraging result.

Last, while some evidence of ocean warming has previously been reported in this region, a watermass-dependent analysis of SST anomalies over the region, and the period 1985 to the present, reveals only ENSO-related climate signals. There is no evidence of ocean warming.

[Author Affiliation]

-MICHAEL J. UDDSTROM (NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF WATER AND ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH). "Ten Years of High-Resolution Sea Surface Temperatures-What Have We Learned?"

Wag Walk to raise funds

A fundraising walk for Bath Cats and Dogs Home takes place nextmonth.

The Wag Walk on Sunday, May 8 takes in the Bath Skyline route,with options of three or six miles.

Walkers can either bring their own pet or take one of theClaverton Down complex's animals out.

The event starts at the home at 10am, although walkers will leaveat staggered intervals until 11am to avoid congestion.

The route offers views from the University of Bath and Widcombeand finishes at Rainbow Woods. Free parking is available at thehome.

The charity, which looks after around 3,000 animals a year, ishoping to raise crucial funds to help with its Pounds 3,000-a-dayrunning costs.

Spokeswoman Rachel Phelps-Allen said: "The Wag Walk is a greatopportunity for individuals, couples, families or groups of friendsto have a fun day out in the fresh air, while raising crucial fundsto help care for our hundreds of needy animals.

"We are trying to encourage walkers to take one or more of ourdogs out to ensure all our dogs on site will be able to take part inthe event this year.

"This event is always popular and attracts hundreds ofenthusiastic walkers."

Walkers should allow around three hours, including a picnic stop,to complete the walk and are advised to wear suitable footwear, tobring wet weather clothing and their own lead.

Anyone interested in taking part should call 01225 787334 for aregistration pack and sponsorship form, or download one fromwww.bathcatsanddogshome.

org.uk.

Bush, Cheney hit the tracks

George W. Bush and Dick Cheney stormed into the Midwest on Friday,hoping to transfer the energy generated by the Republican NationalConvention into popular support in a part of the country that coulddecide the outcome of the November election.

In Pittsburgh, the two men boarded a campaign train that took themto a rally in Youngstown, Ohio, on Friday afternoon and will carrythem through parts of Michigan and Illinois over the weekend.

The Republican ticket was taking part in a tradition ofpresidential politics-the post-convention campaign swing by a party'stwo top candidates in an attempt to sustain the excitement of thenomination pageant. Bill Clinton and Al Gore did that with greatsuccess in 1992, leaving the Democratic National Convention in NewYork at the head of a bus caravan that carried them to St. Louis.

That began a campaign that drove Bush's father from the WhiteHouse.

"This convention has given us tremendous momentum," said KarenHughes, Bush's communications director. "We're traveling key, swing,battleground states and using the trip to capitalize on the momentumthat we built in Philadelphia."

It was no accident that the Republicans began their campaign inthe Midwest and likely will end it here. The four states that Bushand Cheney will visit on this first swing account for 84 electoralvotes, more than 30 percent of the 270 electoral votes needed to winthe presidency. The states usually are closely contested and can holdthe key to the outcome in a close election.

Aboard his campaign plane on the way to Pittsburgh to begin thetrain trip, Bush rejected criticism from Democrats that his attacksthe night before on Clinton and Gore violated his pledge to have apositive, uplifting convention.

"When I say I'm going to bring honor and dignity to the WhiteHouse, that's what I'm going to do," he said. "And if people drawconclusions other than that, so be it."

Bush argued that many of his references to Gore were meant to behumorous, including his reference to the vice president's claim tohave invented the Internet. "The idea of needling the opponent withgood humor, that's what American politics should be about, as opposedto trying to tear people down and distort," Bush said. "And I'm goingto keep pointing out differences. And I will do so in a respectfulway."

NKorea shows leader, son watching live-fire drills

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean television has aired footage of leader Kim Jong Il and his son watching massive live-fire drills.

The footage aired on state television Tuesday showed Kim and his heir-apparent Kim Jong Un watching tanks, aircraft, warships and rocket launchers firing at targets on mountains. Dozens of troops were seen parachuting from a plane.

The two Kims were seen speaking to each other as they watched the drills from an enclosed viewing stand with senior military officers.

The drill involving army, navy and air force power came tensions between North and South Korea remain high.

State television said the exercises took place in September. North Korean media reports on Kim routinely are delayed.

Large shipments of cement, spart parts flow across wide-open Gaza-Egypt border

Large shipments of cement, spare parts and fuel flowed from Egypt into Gaza across a wide-open border Thursday, a day after militants blew down the border wall and tens of thousands of locked-up Gazans streamed into Egypt for shopping and a whiff of freedom.

Egyptian border guards at first stood by as huge crowds surged into Egypt, but on Thursday tried to direct the increasingly chaotic traffic of pedestrians, donkey carts and bicycles.

Israel, meanwhile, said it would not send emergency shipments of industrial diesel fuel on Thursday, as it had promised earlier in the week. The fuel is needed to run Gaza City's power plant, which had shut down for two days after Israel imposed a complete closure on Gaza last week, in response to rocket attacks.

The Palestinian Energy Authority said the Gaza plant would have to shut down again by Sunday, unless shipments are renewed.

An Israeli defense officials said the border breach "reduces pressure on us a little" to provide the basics in Gaza. When Israel initially imposed a complete blockade last week, tacitly backed by Egypt, international aid groups voiced concern about an impending humanitarian crisis.

Israel is still trying to get clarifications from Egypt on if and when it plans to close the border, said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the issue.

The border breach has boosted the popularity of Gaza's Hamas rulers, who in recent months had struggled to rule because of border closures imposed by Israel and Egypt.

The closures, which were tightened after Hamas seized control of Gaza by force in June, led to severe shortages of cement, cigarette and other basic goods, deepened poverty and drove up unemployment.

Hamas has seized the border breach _ carefully planned, with militants weakening the metal wall with blow torches about a month ago _ to push its demand for reopening the border passages, this time with Hamas involvement. Such an arrangement would in effect end the international sanctions against the Islamic militants.

Hamas government spokesman Taher Nunu suggested Thursday that Hamas would seek a role in a future on the Gaza-Egypt border. "An open border like this has no logic," he said. "We are studying the mechanism of having an official crossing point."

However, it's not clear whether Egypt will acquiesce. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has been under intense public pressure at home in recent days to alleviate the suffering of Gazans under blockade. However, Egypt would likely be reluctant to have an open border with a territory ruled by Islamic militants.

An Arab diplomat said Egypt told the U.S. it expects the Palestinians' exodus from Gaza to end by midday Thursday, but a senior U.S. official said Egypt has not been precise about when it will stop the flow.

In Tel Aviv, visiting US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns said that while Hamas itself was to blame for the shortages in the Gaza Strip, it was for Egypt to restore order at the frontier.

"Obviously it is going to be up to the Egyptian government to bring under control the situation along the border," he said at the start of a meeting with Israeli Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai.

Egyptian border guards were patrolling access roads to the border Thursday. Police in helmets and with sniffer dogs used batons to beat the hoods of private cars and pickup trucks that massed at the border to carry Palestinians further into Egyptian territory.

The flow of people over the border appeared to increase midday Thursday, with Gazans saying they feared the Egyptian authorities would soon close the crossing.

"Everyone is rushing into Egypt before they seal it off," said Mohammed Abu Amra, a Palestinian man walking with crutches. He slipped and fell as he passed into Egypt. "The Egyptians started doing good deeds by letting us in. For God's sake, why don't they keep allowing us to pass through?"

Cargo shipments across the border picked up Thursday, using the back-to-back system. Trucks and donkey carts pulled up to the Egyptian side, the goods were unloaded and carried across to the Gazan side were they were put in waiting trucks.

Gaza businessman Abu Omar Shurafa received a shipment of 100 tons of cement, seizing an opportunity to stock up before the border closes again. "Everyone is exerting all efforts to stock the reserves for six to seven months. We have to find a way to continue living," he said.

Still, he was also hopeful that this could be the beginning of a new arrangement. "A solutation has to be like this," he said, referring to the flow of goods from Egypt.

Huge crowds of Gazans crossed into Egypt again, as they did on Wednesday. Some just wanted to get out of Gaza, even for a few hours.

"We just want freedom," said Adel Tildani, who was bringing his mother-in-law from Egypt into Gaza to meet grandchildren she had never seen before. "I don't need to buy anything. Freedom is more important."

Hamdi al-Masri returned from Egypt to Gaza with several canisters of diesel fuel. He had walked more than 10 kilometers (six miles) to reach an Egyptian town where fuel was not sold out.

Official reaction to the border events ranged from dismay to embarrassment to outright anger.

Israel, which withdrew from Gaza in 2005 after 38 years of occupation, expressed concern that militants and weapons might be entering Gaza to bolster rocket launchings toward Israel, and said responsibility for restoring order lies with Egypt. Israel had imposed the blockade in response to a spike in rocket attacks that came after an especially deadly raid against Gaza militants last week.

The United States expressed concern about the border breach. Hamas called on its bitter rival, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah party, to help come up with new arrangements for Gaza's crossings. And Egypt's leader said he had no choice but to let in the beleaguered Palestinians.

The chain of border events began before dawn Wednesday when masked gunmen used 17 explosive charges to tear down the border wall _ erected in 2001 by Israel when it controlled Gaza.

After news of the breach spread, people across Gaza boarded buses and piled into rickety pickup trucks heading for Egypt. It was a rare chance to escape Gaza's isolation.

By nightfall Wednesday, more than 1,000 Gazans reached El-Arish, an Egyptian town about 60 kilometers (37 miles) south of Rafah, walking the streets and shopping in stores that stayed open late.

Egyptian security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity since they were not authorized to talk to the media, said that Palestinians were not being allowed to travel further south than El-Arish. Egypt bused riot police into the area.

___

AP reporter Omar Sinan contributed to this report from Rafah, Egypt.

County women's award named in Peggy Montes' honor

Defender Staff Report

As a champion of women's rights, Peggy A. Montes chairs the Cook County Commission on Women's Issues and is the driving force behind the creation of the Unsung Heroine Award for the women of Cook County. Additionally, she's an educator, fundraiser, community leader and probably best known as founder-director of the Bronzeville Children's Museum. For the last 27 years, she has volunteered with the DuSable Museum of African American History where she was at the forefront of the effort to build a $3.5 million Harold Washington wing there.

As a way to recognize and salute her remarkable achievements and contributions, the county's award will be renamed the Cook County Commission on Women's Issues: Peggy A. Montes Unsung Heroine Award.

Celebrating Women's History Month, County Board President Todd Stroger, Cook County Board of Commissioners and The Cook County Commission on Women's Issues hosted the 13th Annual Cook County Unsung Heroine Awards Breakfast on March 25 at the Chicago Cultural Center. Every year the Commission honors one woman from each of the 1 7 county districts "for her vital contributions to her community." The award was created in 1995 to advise board members on ways to elevate the status of local women, improve the delivery of services to them and their families and eliminate inequities in laws, practices and conditions which impact Cook County women.

Some 21 women of various racial, economic and occupational backgrounds, including its 17 districts, make up the commission, which is charged with assuring women's issues, and perspectives are considered in the formation of public policy. Just a few of the remarkable women listed on the honor roll: Barbara D. Cole, DeAnna McCleary, Dr. Addie E. Spikner Stanton, Dorothy White and Carol Lisa Alexander. And among the commissioners are Carolyn Curry, Dr. Frances Carroll, 'Ttffany Randle, Jennifer Artis and Mary Morris.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

American League Standings

All Times EDT
East Division
W L Pct GB
New York 20 13 .606
Tampa Bay 20 14 .588 ½
Boston 17 18 .486 4
Toronto 15 20 .429 6
Baltimore 14 19 .424 6
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Cleveland 22 11 .667
Kansas City 18 17 .514 5
Detroit 18 18 .500
Chicago 14 22 .389
Minnesota 12 21 .364 10
West Division
W L Pct GB
Los Angeles 20 16 .556
Oakland 19 17 .528 1
Texas 18 18 .500 2
Seattle 16 19 .457

___

Monday's Games

Detroit 10, Toronto 5

Boston 2, Minnesota 1, 11 innings

Oakland 7, Texas 2

Chicago White Sox 8, L.A. Angels 0

Tuesday's Games

N.Y. Yankees 3, Kansas City 1

Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.

Seattle at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.

Boston at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.

Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.

Detroit at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.

Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

Wednesday's Games

Detroit at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.

Oakland at Texas, 2:05 p.m.

Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.

Kansas City at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.

Seattle at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.

Boston at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.

Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

Thursday's Games

Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 12:05 p.m.

Kansas City at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.

Seattle at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.<

Daley not backing off 'prevailing wage' pact; Ten-year deal placates organized labor, but skirts issue of funding pensions, health care, budget gap

For a mayor whose re-election bid got the cold shoulder from allbut one major union, Richard M. Daley sure is cozying up toorganized labor these days.

But at what cost?

On Tuesday, Daley defended his decision to lock in the costly"prevailing wage" for the next decade for 8,000 members of thebuilding trades at a time when Chicagoans are bracing for a barrageof post-election tax increases to close a $217 million budget gap.

The new deal also includes no immediate solution to the city'slooming pension crisis. That hot potato was handed off to a newlycreated Labor Management Cooperation Committee also charged withholding the line on skyrocketing health care expenses.

Whenever those annual costs are projected to rise by 8 percent ormore, the committee would make changes to accommodate it -- eitherby raising employee deductibles and co-pays, or changingprescription drug plans.

The prevailing wage agreement has no monitor.

"I believe in the prevailing wage.," the mayor said. " . . .That's the foundation of the City of Chicago. . . . There's nothingwrong with men and women earning a decent salary and prevailingwages."

Civic Federation President Laurence Msall applauded the city fortaking other cost-saving steps: reduced overtime, broader use of"break-in pay" for newly hired employees, and implementing agroundbreaking incentive plan to encourage employees to undergo"health risk assessments," lose weight, and lower their bloodpressure and cholesterol.

The wellness program is expected to save the city $6.3 million in2008 alone.

But Msall said the prevailing wage should also be part of the mixto avoid "unnecessary taxes."

"City pensions, health care and vacations are much more generousthan the private sector. There are good reasons the city should benegotiating lesser wages, rather than the prevailing wage," he said.

The 10-year contract with 8,000 members of the building tradesguarantees labor peace through June 30, 2017, the year after

Daley hopes to play host to the Summer Olympic Games. Every year,the 33 unions have agreed to enroll at least 100 graduates ofChicago Public Schools and City Colleges in their apprenticeshipprograms.

Unions representing 10,000 non-teaching employees alsotentatively agreed with the Chicago Public Schools to accept payraises totaling 15.75 percent over the next five years. The divide-and-conquer strategy puts pressure on the Chicago Teachers Union,which has not yet come to terms and must if schools are to open ontime.

WHAT IS THE PREVAILING WAGE?

The "prevailing wage" is established by the U.S. Department ofLabor and is based on the hourly wage, usual benefits and overtimepaid in the largest city in each county to the majority of workers,laborers and mechanics. Prevailing wages are established for eachtrade and occupation employed in the performance of public work.

In Chicago, the prevailing wage dates back to the mayor's father,former Mayor Richard J. Daley. In exchange for handshake agreements,the elder Daley paid city trades the same hourly rate as theirprivate sector counterparts -- even though city trades work year-round with generous benefits while private sector work is seasonalwith fewer fringes.

Davis holds reparations/anti-drug rally

Saying he is campaigning by issues, Rep. Danny K. Davis (D-7th) Wednesday announced he is holding a reparations meeting Saturday and a separate event supporting drug treatment on demand, in an effort to help make people whole and to return them to society as taxpayers, rather than tax burdens.

Davis, who appeared on WVON's Cliff Kelley Show, later told the Chicago Defender he is holding a reparations meeting at 10 a.m. Saturday at Quinn Chapel A.M.E Church, 2401 S. Wabash Ave. He will also be introducing a resolution to make August 17 "National Reparations Day" in the U.S. and, at 2 p.m. the same day, Davis is holding a "Treatment, not Jails" rally at Malcolm X College, 1900 W. Van Buren, that's sponsored by the Citizens Activate to Change Health Care (C.A.T.C.H.).

Davis, is trying to get a referendum on the ballot to "help people get treatment on demand" for substance abuse.

"We decided to put the notion before the Illinois voters that there ought to be treatment on demand for individuals who are ready and seeking treatment," he said. He's hoping to gather 300,000 signatures to put the initiative on the November ballot.

"We've had people going out all winter," said Davis, explaining when he began the initiative.

"We've got people who go out no matter how cold...how difficult it is. We've planned a massive effort on March 16, because we're going to have people at polling places who will be collecting signatures as people leave their voting place," Davis said.

"This way, we know that those people are also registered to vote," he said, referring to the 300,000 signatures that must be submitted in May. We've developed a network of facilities, churches, institutions...all over the state of Illinois, and we've collected 25,000 signatures," he said, asking those who want to volunteer to call James Shannon at: 773-638-1998.

Article copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photograph (Rep. Danny K. Davis)

KITCHEN NETWORKING

NEW YORK The Recipe Center of Better Homes and Gardens Online, atwww.bhg.com, puts around 2,000 kitchen-tested recipes at the cook'sfingertips.

Site visitors can make text searches to find a dish, compile amenu, make a shopping list and organize future schedules.

Recipe collections were combined to help find specific types ofdishes, says Nancy Byal, executive food editor of Better Homes andGardens magazine.

"Consumer research led us to include obvious choices like `low-fat' and `quick-to-table' but also some less obvious collections like`recipes with eight or fewer ingredients,' " says Byal. Recipesinclude nutritional information.

One feature on the Web site offers: "Tell us what you have onhand, and we'll find recipes that include those ingredients."

A test run naming eggs, spinach and bread produced threesuggestions. A query for onion soup found 129 references.

US Airways says bankruptcy won't hurt service

ALEXANDRIA, Va.--US Airways, hard hit by slumping travel after theSept. 11 terrorist attacks, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcyprotection Sunday, the company said.

The airline, which had mentioned bankruptcy as a possibility afterit lost $2.1 billion during 2001, said all of its flights areexpected to continue without interruption. The Arlington, Va.-basedairline said it received $500 million in financing to keep operatingwhile it reorganizes.

"US Airways will continue to operate while we complete ourfinancial restructuring, and our customers should be confident thatwe will continue service to the more than 200 communities in ournetwork," said US Airways president and chief executive David Siegel.

The airline, the nation's seventh-largest, listed $7.81 billion inassets and $7.83 billion in liabilities. United Airlines tried to buyUS Airways two years ago, but Justice Department oppositionultimately scuttled the deal.

Although US Airways didn't lose any planes Sept. 11, its businesswas severely hurt when Reagan National Airport was shut down forthree weeks and reopened with only a limited schedule.

US Airways has since been trying to wring $950 million in costcuts from its 40,000 employees, reaching agreement last week withunions representing pilots and flight attendants.

The machinists and aerospace union said it would submit thecompany's proposal to a vote.

"Our members will not give up on US Airways, and neither shouldanyone else," Robert Roach Jr., general vice president of the union,said after the bankruptcy filing. AP

Honda connects brain thoughts with robotics

Opening a car trunk or controlling a home air conditioner could become just a wish away with Honda's new technology that connects thoughts inside a brain with robotics.

Honda Motor Co. has developed a way to read patterns of electric currents on a person's scalp as well as changes in cerebral blood flow when a person thinks about four simple movements _ moving the right hand, moving the left hand, running and eating.

Honda succeeded in analyzing such thought patterns, and then relaying them as wireless commands for Asimo, its human-shaped robot.

In a video shown Tuesday at Tokyo headquarters, a person wearing a helmet sat still but thought about moving his right hand _ a thought that was picked up by cords attached to his head inside the helmet. After several seconds, Asimo, programmed to respond to brain signals, lifted its right arm.

Honda said the technology wasn't quite ready for a live demonstration because of possible distractions in the person's thinking. Another problem is that brain patterns differ greatly among individuals, and so about two to three hours of studying them in advance are needed for the technology to work.

The company, a leader in robotics, acknowledged the technology was still at a basic research stage with no immediate practical applications in the works.

"I'm talking about dreams today," said Yasuhisa Arai, executive at Honda Research Institute Japan Co., the company's research unit. "Practical uses are still way into the future."

Japan boasts one of the leading robotics industries in the world, and the government is pushing to develop the industry as a road to growth.

Research on the brain is being tackled around the world, but Honda said its research was among the most advanced in figuring out a way to read brain patterns without having to hurt the person, such as embedding sensors into the skin.

Honda has made robotics a centerpiece of its image, sending Asimo to events and starring the walking, talking robot in TV ads. Among the challenges for the brain technology is to make the reading-device smaller so it can be portable, according to Honda.

Arai didn't rule out the possibility of a car that may some day drive itself _ even without a steering wheel.

"Our products are for people to use. It is important for us to understand human behavior," he said. "We think this is the ultimate in making machines move."

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Report: Lack of attention on US nuclear arms

The U.S. nuclear mission is suffering from a widespread, distressing lack of attention and interest from the Defense Department, a failing that worries allies who depend on America's nuclear protection, an independent panel has concluded.

The task force, which released its report Thursday, issued 82 recommendations, largely centered on the need to beef up resources, staffing and training to restore credibility to the nation's management of its nuclear arsenal.

James Schlesinger, a former defense secretary who chaired the task force on nuclear weapons management, told reporters Thursday that he believes "there is a willingness" among the Pentagon leadership to go along with one of the key suggestions _ that a new assistant secretary position be created to oversee the nuclear mission.

The recommendations have been forwarded to Defense Secretary Robert Gates. He issued a statement saying that "no one should doubt our capabilities or our resolve to defend U.S. and allies' interests by deterring aggression."

Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell later said Gates wants to discuss the recommendations with new Pentagon leaders who will be named by President-elect Barack Obama before accepting or rejecting any of the report's recommendations. Gates is staying on as the Pentagon's top civilian leader, but Obama is expected to replace most of Gates' underlings.

"It has been warmly received, it is going to be thoroughly reviewed," Morrell said. "There will be determinations made at a future date as to which of the recommendations to proceed with."

Gates said the report identifies numerous short and long term trends that may warrant correction.

The report is the second part of a broad review that in September condemned the Air Force for a dramatic deterioration in managing the nation's nuclear arsenal. It is one of several studies triggered by Air Force blunders, most notably the mistaken shipment to Taiwan of four electrical fuses for ballistic missile warheads and the flight across the U.S. by an Air Force bomber mistakenly armed with nuclear-tipped cruise missiles.

The missteps prompted Gates to sack the top civilian and military leaders of the Air Force last year.

In early June, Gates sacked then-Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Michael Moseley and Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne, blaming them for failing to fully address the service's nuclear-related mishaps: The mistaken shipment of the ballistic missile fuses to Taiwan and the August 2007 incident when an Air Force B-52 bomber armed with six nuclear-tipped cruise missiles flew across the U.S.

At the time, the pilot and crew were unaware they had nuclear weapons aboard.

Schlesinger and other panel members praised the Air Force for implementing a series of changes to address the problems.

At the same time, however, Schlesinger said the panel noted that many of the gaps found in the Air Force oversight of its nuclear arsenal were also evident across the Defense Department. He said there has been a downgrading in the personnel, a dilution of authority, a lack of training and a failure to understand the unique role deterrence must play in the world.

He said the Air Force gaffes prompted allies such as Japan and eastern European nations to worry about how well protected they were under the U.S. nuclear umbrella.

The one exception noted by the panel was the Navy's nuclear weapons. The group found no degradation in that mission.

The Air Force already has made a series of changes to improve its oversight and management of the nuclear mission, particularly control of its inventory. Air Force Gen. Norton Schwartz, the new chief of staff, has said he plans to use the reinstatement of about 14,000 jobs in the service to use some of those posts to bolster its nuclear staffing and enhance intelligence and surveillance.

___

On the Net:

Defense Department: http://www.defenselink.mil

With each breath, awaken to life. (Conversation).(Poem)

Human being is a breath that passes.

--PSALMS 104:29

We are breathing together. While doing anything we are breathing--outbreaths, inbreaths, like waves of the ocean, our perpetual movement of being, almost imperceptible. Our lifetime is based on breath; it is our treasure, our bottom line, our condition for being alive, for everything we do. Upon this breath we build all of living.

Our word for this little toe-in-the-ocean entry in our dictionary for living is BREATH. Like a finger pointing to the moon, this word points to the most ordinary, extraordinary action of our daily life. With each breath we are in the world, creating the world. With each breath we put the past away and open to the next astonishment. With each breath we are alive. By revealing this simplicity, I assert we are more, not less awake to being.

Ask lovers who experience breathtaking love what "breath" is for. And we are these lovers, each breath a gift of life to itself, each breath a gift of love, simple, unadorned, precious. A kiss is an exchange of breath, a conspiring, an inspiring with another, a breathing together. We marry daily our breath in the mystery of existence. My friend told me the love story of his great aunt and uncle, together so many years. She died in her beloved's arms saying, "Kiss me, just keep kissing me, don't stop kissing me." He breathed with her until he was alone with breath.

I love thee with the breath,

Smiles, tears, of all my life!

--ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING

Our first breath is a definitive moment of existence. We go from breathing with the blood corded to our mother to breathing the air common to all being. Until the last breathing, the ongoing breathing in and out cradles us, outlines and underscores the wonder of being alive. I think about times when my babies were small and their breath so quiet that I would put a mirror to their nostrils to check if they were still breathing. King Lear speaks of Cordelia in the same way:

Lend me a looking-glass;

If that her breath will mist or

stain the stone,

Why, then she lives

And later, realizing she is dead, Lear says,

Why should a dog, a horse,

a rat, have life,

And thou no breath at all?

Thou'It come no more,

Never, never, never,

never, never!

--WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Think of a breath and a deep bow as the same. Sometimes simply the awareness of breath as a blessing is sufficient to call me to the simple experience of being alive and awake in this moment. What if I see to it that every breath is a reminder of the awe of life, an "Ahhh"? Each inspiration is a call to the breathtaking beauty of being. As I give each breath that meaning, it then has that meaning.

John is 46 years old, a pediatric surgeon who comes to me for acupuncture treatment. The label "asthma" brought him to me. When I asked "What does 'asthma' mean to you?" John said, "It means I am very aware of my breathing. I do not, I cannot take it for granted. I have medicine I take to help me breathe." "What is your embodied experience of this 'asthma'?" I asked. He then described sensations of heat and pressure in his upper chest and head, accompanied by thoughts such as "Uh-oh. I'm going to die if I can't get my breath." "I wonder if I can do the next surgery successfully?" "This young life under my hands is depending on me. What if I can't help?"

I asked him if he ever allows himself to be thanked by the parents of the children he operates on. "Usually not," he said. "Usually I'm thinking something self-deprecating, something like 'I took too long--I should have done it in four hours rather than six.'" As John revealed his sentencing of himself, I offered, "Suppose you take 'breathing' and 'thanking' as the same word? What if you simply went still and allowed yourself to be thanked? What if you allowed the parents to bow to you for the gifts you give to their children? They are thanking you for the continued breath of their beloved babies. What if, in a quiet, reflective way, you simply say, 'You are welcome.' In doing so you can call them to remember we are here together, breathing together. You call them to cherish this gift, all the while knowing that someday it will be otherwise and our breath-time will be over." Then I said, "John, you already call all of us to this anyway--life has asked you to be wide awake about breathing in bearing this word- world called 'asthma.' Through you, this wakefulness to breath, to life, belongs to all of us."

Data indicate that one in 20 of us in this country bears some "squawk" about breathing as a chronic concern. "Asthma" and "allergy" have become shorthand words. Even as we use these words as labels for ailments, we must not miss the glory of the phenomenon they point to--our breath. Breath is serious. It weds us to life and death. All of us. Always. All ways.

During the months before she died, my patient Bonnie used her pain as a drillmaster, an instructor. When she felt a wave of sharp constriction in her chest, she practiced coming to attention, absolutely still and alert, expecting nothing, listening to what she described as "babies breathing." She said she felt so free in those moments. She was pure being, doing nothing, simply breathing in the present moment. Bonnie practiced "now" and "breath" as the same word.

I, as you, dear reader, can practice wakefulness with each breath. We could, like Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk dedicated to peace on earth, add a word to each inhalation and each exhalation: "Breathing in, I breathe peace; breathing out, I smile," is one example. We can make our own breath prayers to call ourselves to mindful breathing. This day, my practice is to breathe in with the word "love" and to breathe out with "compassion." Thich Nhat Hanh reminds us: "Breathe! You are alive. Keep fully aware of it."

Breath transcends time zones, cultures, and places. It immerses all of us together in air as in a bath of being, a broth of oneness. We could not be without it. It is our quickening. With each breath, the blowing wind of being moves through us.

Student, tell me,   what is God? He is the breath inside   the breath.  KABIR 

Dianne M. Connelly, Ph.D., M.Ac.(UK), Dipl. Ac. (NCCA), is cofounder and chancellor of the Tai Sophia Institute in Laurel, Maryland, where she teaches and practices acupuncture. She is author of Traditional Acupuncture: The Law of the Five Elements and All Sickness is Home Sickness.

With each breath, awaken to life. (Conversation).(Poem)

Human being is a breath that passes.

--PSALMS 104:29

We are breathing together. While doing anything we are breathing--outbreaths, inbreaths, like waves of the ocean, our perpetual movement of being, almost imperceptible. Our lifetime is based on breath; it is our treasure, our bottom line, our condition for being alive, for everything we do. Upon this breath we build all of living.

Our word for this little toe-in-the-ocean entry in our dictionary for living is BREATH. Like a finger pointing to the moon, this word points to the most ordinary, extraordinary action of our daily life. With each breath we are in the world, creating the world. With each breath we put the past away and open to the next astonishment. With each breath we are alive. By revealing this simplicity, I assert we are more, not less awake to being.

Ask lovers who experience breathtaking love what "breath" is for. And we are these lovers, each breath a gift of life to itself, each breath a gift of love, simple, unadorned, precious. A kiss is an exchange of breath, a conspiring, an inspiring with another, a breathing together. We marry daily our breath in the mystery of existence. My friend told me the love story of his great aunt and uncle, together so many years. She died in her beloved's arms saying, "Kiss me, just keep kissing me, don't stop kissing me." He breathed with her until he was alone with breath.

I love thee with the breath,

Smiles, tears, of all my life!

--ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING

Our first breath is a definitive moment of existence. We go from breathing with the blood corded to our mother to breathing the air common to all being. Until the last breathing, the ongoing breathing in and out cradles us, outlines and underscores the wonder of being alive. I think about times when my babies were small and their breath so quiet that I would put a mirror to their nostrils to check if they were still breathing. King Lear speaks of Cordelia in the same way:

Lend me a looking-glass;

If that her breath will mist or

stain the stone,

Why, then she lives

And later, realizing she is dead, Lear says,

Why should a dog, a horse,

a rat, have life,

And thou no breath at all?

Thou'It come no more,

Never, never, never,

never, never!

--WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Think of a breath and a deep bow as the same. Sometimes simply the awareness of breath as a blessing is sufficient to call me to the simple experience of being alive and awake in this moment. What if I see to it that every breath is a reminder of the awe of life, an "Ahhh"? Each inspiration is a call to the breathtaking beauty of being. As I give each breath that meaning, it then has that meaning.

John is 46 years old, a pediatric surgeon who comes to me for acupuncture treatment. The label "asthma" brought him to me. When I asked "What does 'asthma' mean to you?" John said, "It means I am very aware of my breathing. I do not, I cannot take it for granted. I have medicine I take to help me breathe." "What is your embodied experience of this 'asthma'?" I asked. He then described sensations of heat and pressure in his upper chest and head, accompanied by thoughts such as "Uh-oh. I'm going to die if I can't get my breath." "I wonder if I can do the next surgery successfully?" "This young life under my hands is depending on me. What if I can't help?"

I asked him if he ever allows himself to be thanked by the parents of the children he operates on. "Usually not," he said. "Usually I'm thinking something self-deprecating, something like 'I took too long--I should have done it in four hours rather than six.'" As John revealed his sentencing of himself, I offered, "Suppose you take 'breathing' and 'thanking' as the same word? What if you simply went still and allowed yourself to be thanked? What if you allowed the parents to bow to you for the gifts you give to their children? They are thanking you for the continued breath of their beloved babies. What if, in a quiet, reflective way, you simply say, 'You are welcome.' In doing so you can call them to remember we are here together, breathing together. You call them to cherish this gift, all the while knowing that someday it will be otherwise and our breath-time will be over." Then I said, "John, you already call all of us to this anyway--life has asked you to be wide awake about breathing in bearing this word- world called 'asthma.' Through you, this wakefulness to breath, to life, belongs to all of us."

Data indicate that one in 20 of us in this country bears some "squawk" about breathing as a chronic concern. "Asthma" and "allergy" have become shorthand words. Even as we use these words as labels for ailments, we must not miss the glory of the phenomenon they point to--our breath. Breath is serious. It weds us to life and death. All of us. Always. All ways.

During the months before she died, my patient Bonnie used her pain as a drillmaster, an instructor. When she felt a wave of sharp constriction in her chest, she practiced coming to attention, absolutely still and alert, expecting nothing, listening to what she described as "babies breathing." She said she felt so free in those moments. She was pure being, doing nothing, simply breathing in the present moment. Bonnie practiced "now" and "breath" as the same word.

I, as you, dear reader, can practice wakefulness with each breath. We could, like Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk dedicated to peace on earth, add a word to each inhalation and each exhalation: "Breathing in, I breathe peace; breathing out, I smile," is one example. We can make our own breath prayers to call ourselves to mindful breathing. This day, my practice is to breathe in with the word "love" and to breathe out with "compassion." Thich Nhat Hanh reminds us: "Breathe! You are alive. Keep fully aware of it."

Breath transcends time zones, cultures, and places. It immerses all of us together in air as in a bath of being, a broth of oneness. We could not be without it. It is our quickening. With each breath, the blowing wind of being moves through us.

Student, tell me,   what is God? He is the breath inside   the breath.  KABIR 

Dianne M. Connelly, Ph.D., M.Ac.(UK), Dipl. Ac. (NCCA), is cofounder and chancellor of the Tai Sophia Institute in Laurel, Maryland, where she teaches and practices acupuncture. She is author of Traditional Acupuncture: The Law of the Five Elements and All Sickness is Home Sickness.

With each breath, awaken to life. (Conversation).(Poem)

Human being is a breath that passes.

--PSALMS 104:29

We are breathing together. While doing anything we are breathing--outbreaths, inbreaths, like waves of the ocean, our perpetual movement of being, almost imperceptible. Our lifetime is based on breath; it is our treasure, our bottom line, our condition for being alive, for everything we do. Upon this breath we build all of living.

Our word for this little toe-in-the-ocean entry in our dictionary for living is BREATH. Like a finger pointing to the moon, this word points to the most ordinary, extraordinary action of our daily life. With each breath we are in the world, creating the world. With each breath we put the past away and open to the next astonishment. With each breath we are alive. By revealing this simplicity, I assert we are more, not less awake to being.

Ask lovers who experience breathtaking love what "breath" is for. And we are these lovers, each breath a gift of life to itself, each breath a gift of love, simple, unadorned, precious. A kiss is an exchange of breath, a conspiring, an inspiring with another, a breathing together. We marry daily our breath in the mystery of existence. My friend told me the love story of his great aunt and uncle, together so many years. She died in her beloved's arms saying, "Kiss me, just keep kissing me, don't stop kissing me." He breathed with her until he was alone with breath.

I love thee with the breath,

Smiles, tears, of all my life!

--ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING

Our first breath is a definitive moment of existence. We go from breathing with the blood corded to our mother to breathing the air common to all being. Until the last breathing, the ongoing breathing in and out cradles us, outlines and underscores the wonder of being alive. I think about times when my babies were small and their breath so quiet that I would put a mirror to their nostrils to check if they were still breathing. King Lear speaks of Cordelia in the same way:

Lend me a looking-glass;

If that her breath will mist or

stain the stone,

Why, then she lives

And later, realizing she is dead, Lear says,

Why should a dog, a horse,

a rat, have life,

And thou no breath at all?

Thou'It come no more,

Never, never, never,

never, never!

--WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Think of a breath and a deep bow as the same. Sometimes simply the awareness of breath as a blessing is sufficient to call me to the simple experience of being alive and awake in this moment. What if I see to it that every breath is a reminder of the awe of life, an "Ahhh"? Each inspiration is a call to the breathtaking beauty of being. As I give each breath that meaning, it then has that meaning.

John is 46 years old, a pediatric surgeon who comes to me for acupuncture treatment. The label "asthma" brought him to me. When I asked "What does 'asthma' mean to you?" John said, "It means I am very aware of my breathing. I do not, I cannot take it for granted. I have medicine I take to help me breathe." "What is your embodied experience of this 'asthma'?" I asked. He then described sensations of heat and pressure in his upper chest and head, accompanied by thoughts such as "Uh-oh. I'm going to die if I can't get my breath." "I wonder if I can do the next surgery successfully?" "This young life under my hands is depending on me. What if I can't help?"

I asked him if he ever allows himself to be thanked by the parents of the children he operates on. "Usually not," he said. "Usually I'm thinking something self-deprecating, something like 'I took too long--I should have done it in four hours rather than six.'" As John revealed his sentencing of himself, I offered, "Suppose you take 'breathing' and 'thanking' as the same word? What if you simply went still and allowed yourself to be thanked? What if you allowed the parents to bow to you for the gifts you give to their children? They are thanking you for the continued breath of their beloved babies. What if, in a quiet, reflective way, you simply say, 'You are welcome.' In doing so you can call them to remember we are here together, breathing together. You call them to cherish this gift, all the while knowing that someday it will be otherwise and our breath-time will be over." Then I said, "John, you already call all of us to this anyway--life has asked you to be wide awake about breathing in bearing this word- world called 'asthma.' Through you, this wakefulness to breath, to life, belongs to all of us."

Data indicate that one in 20 of us in this country bears some "squawk" about breathing as a chronic concern. "Asthma" and "allergy" have become shorthand words. Even as we use these words as labels for ailments, we must not miss the glory of the phenomenon they point to--our breath. Breath is serious. It weds us to life and death. All of us. Always. All ways.

During the months before she died, my patient Bonnie used her pain as a drillmaster, an instructor. When she felt a wave of sharp constriction in her chest, she practiced coming to attention, absolutely still and alert, expecting nothing, listening to what she described as "babies breathing." She said she felt so free in those moments. She was pure being, doing nothing, simply breathing in the present moment. Bonnie practiced "now" and "breath" as the same word.

I, as you, dear reader, can practice wakefulness with each breath. We could, like Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk dedicated to peace on earth, add a word to each inhalation and each exhalation: "Breathing in, I breathe peace; breathing out, I smile," is one example. We can make our own breath prayers to call ourselves to mindful breathing. This day, my practice is to breathe in with the word "love" and to breathe out with "compassion." Thich Nhat Hanh reminds us: "Breathe! You are alive. Keep fully aware of it."

Breath transcends time zones, cultures, and places. It immerses all of us together in air as in a bath of being, a broth of oneness. We could not be without it. It is our quickening. With each breath, the blowing wind of being moves through us.

Student, tell me,   what is God? He is the breath inside   the breath.  KABIR 

Dianne M. Connelly, Ph.D., M.Ac.(UK), Dipl. Ac. (NCCA), is cofounder and chancellor of the Tai Sophia Institute in Laurel, Maryland, where she teaches and practices acupuncture. She is author of Traditional Acupuncture: The Law of the Five Elements and All Sickness is Home Sickness.

With each breath, awaken to life. (Conversation).(Poem)

Human being is a breath that passes.

--PSALMS 104:29

We are breathing together. While doing anything we are breathing--outbreaths, inbreaths, like waves of the ocean, our perpetual movement of being, almost imperceptible. Our lifetime is based on breath; it is our treasure, our bottom line, our condition for being alive, for everything we do. Upon this breath we build all of living.

Our word for this little toe-in-the-ocean entry in our dictionary for living is BREATH. Like a finger pointing to the moon, this word points to the most ordinary, extraordinary action of our daily life. With each breath we are in the world, creating the world. With each breath we put the past away and open to the next astonishment. With each breath we are alive. By revealing this simplicity, I assert we are more, not less awake to being.

Ask lovers who experience breathtaking love what "breath" is for. And we are these lovers, each breath a gift of life to itself, each breath a gift of love, simple, unadorned, precious. A kiss is an exchange of breath, a conspiring, an inspiring with another, a breathing together. We marry daily our breath in the mystery of existence. My friend told me the love story of his great aunt and uncle, together so many years. She died in her beloved's arms saying, "Kiss me, just keep kissing me, don't stop kissing me." He breathed with her until he was alone with breath.

I love thee with the breath,

Smiles, tears, of all my life!

--ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING

Our first breath is a definitive moment of existence. We go from breathing with the blood corded to our mother to breathing the air common to all being. Until the last breathing, the ongoing breathing in and out cradles us, outlines and underscores the wonder of being alive. I think about times when my babies were small and their breath so quiet that I would put a mirror to their nostrils to check if they were still breathing. King Lear speaks of Cordelia in the same way:

Lend me a looking-glass;

If that her breath will mist or

stain the stone,

Why, then she lives

And later, realizing she is dead, Lear says,

Why should a dog, a horse,

a rat, have life,

And thou no breath at all?

Thou'It come no more,

Never, never, never,

never, never!

--WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Think of a breath and a deep bow as the same. Sometimes simply the awareness of breath as a blessing is sufficient to call me to the simple experience of being alive and awake in this moment. What if I see to it that every breath is a reminder of the awe of life, an "Ahhh"? Each inspiration is a call to the breathtaking beauty of being. As I give each breath that meaning, it then has that meaning.

John is 46 years old, a pediatric surgeon who comes to me for acupuncture treatment. The label "asthma" brought him to me. When I asked "What does 'asthma' mean to you?" John said, "It means I am very aware of my breathing. I do not, I cannot take it for granted. I have medicine I take to help me breathe." "What is your embodied experience of this 'asthma'?" I asked. He then described sensations of heat and pressure in his upper chest and head, accompanied by thoughts such as "Uh-oh. I'm going to die if I can't get my breath." "I wonder if I can do the next surgery successfully?" "This young life under my hands is depending on me. What if I can't help?"

I asked him if he ever allows himself to be thanked by the parents of the children he operates on. "Usually not," he said. "Usually I'm thinking something self-deprecating, something like 'I took too long--I should have done it in four hours rather than six.'" As John revealed his sentencing of himself, I offered, "Suppose you take 'breathing' and 'thanking' as the same word? What if you simply went still and allowed yourself to be thanked? What if you allowed the parents to bow to you for the gifts you give to their children? They are thanking you for the continued breath of their beloved babies. What if, in a quiet, reflective way, you simply say, 'You are welcome.' In doing so you can call them to remember we are here together, breathing together. You call them to cherish this gift, all the while knowing that someday it will be otherwise and our breath-time will be over." Then I said, "John, you already call all of us to this anyway--life has asked you to be wide awake about breathing in bearing this word- world called 'asthma.' Through you, this wakefulness to breath, to life, belongs to all of us."

Data indicate that one in 20 of us in this country bears some "squawk" about breathing as a chronic concern. "Asthma" and "allergy" have become shorthand words. Even as we use these words as labels for ailments, we must not miss the glory of the phenomenon they point to--our breath. Breath is serious. It weds us to life and death. All of us. Always. All ways.

During the months before she died, my patient Bonnie used her pain as a drillmaster, an instructor. When she felt a wave of sharp constriction in her chest, she practiced coming to attention, absolutely still and alert, expecting nothing, listening to what she described as "babies breathing." She said she felt so free in those moments. She was pure being, doing nothing, simply breathing in the present moment. Bonnie practiced "now" and "breath" as the same word.

I, as you, dear reader, can practice wakefulness with each breath. We could, like Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk dedicated to peace on earth, add a word to each inhalation and each exhalation: "Breathing in, I breathe peace; breathing out, I smile," is one example. We can make our own breath prayers to call ourselves to mindful breathing. This day, my practice is to breathe in with the word "love" and to breathe out with "compassion." Thich Nhat Hanh reminds us: "Breathe! You are alive. Keep fully aware of it."

Breath transcends time zones, cultures, and places. It immerses all of us together in air as in a bath of being, a broth of oneness. We could not be without it. It is our quickening. With each breath, the blowing wind of being moves through us.

Student, tell me,   what is God? He is the breath inside   the breath.  KABIR 

Dianne M. Connelly, Ph.D., M.Ac.(UK), Dipl. Ac. (NCCA), is cofounder and chancellor of the Tai Sophia Institute in Laurel, Maryland, where she teaches and practices acupuncture. She is author of Traditional Acupuncture: The Law of the Five Elements and All Sickness is Home Sickness.