четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

ALL TARTED UP

"Better hide those dog biscuits if you're comin' home pissed, ya fat cow," said Carol, Shirley's older, fatter sister. 'You'll never get one o' they Frenchies in your bed if your breath smells like Gemma's."

"What're you wearin' tonight?" asked Shirley, changing the subject before the whole Good Boy Choco Drop episode could be re -hashed.

"Ah think ah' m gonny wear ma new jeans wi' ma red shiny blouse. What aboot you? Ah hope you're no wearin' they beige leggi n' s - they make yer arse look massive."

"Cheers." Shirley was going to do her best to get off with one of the French rugby team, in their town in the Scottish borders for the weekend.

"Mum, ah' m …

Georgia boys state track finals

Final results of the Georgia High School Association boys state track and field championships at Memorial Stadium.

Class AAAAA

400 meter relay_1, Redan (Travis Benton, Mack Brown, Steve Emere, Justin Sims), 41.49. 2, Marietta (Trey Charles, Woodrow Randall, Brent Phillip, Charles Francois), 41.67. 3, Douglass (Deanundra Dailey, Tommy Gooden, Marchello Sinkfield, Joshuan Gilliam), 41.74. 4, McEachern (Anthony Anderson, Jaron Roberson, Mallery Richardson, William Wynne), 41.83. 5, Shiloh (Reuban Lacy, Eugene Glenn, Nehemyah Price, Brandon Richardson), 43.90. 6, Tift County (Kaream Hess, Henry Green, Jakevian Rhodes, Blake Reddick).

400 dash_1, …

WHO GETS THE LAST LAUGH? MAYOR OR THE SUN-TIMES?

Caption …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Career evolution

When my sister called to ask if I'd manage a fitness franchise if she were to buy one, it sounded like an idea that would never come to fruition. As an administrative dietitian in need of more work, and never one to turn down a challenge, I responded, "Sure". Our franchise, Curves for Women - Ladner, BC, has been running successfully since September 2002.

I have worked in many aspects of dietetics, from running a food and nutrition department in a large teaching hospital to community nutritionist in a northern BC community. Running Curves for Women has been one of the most rewarding experiences yet! I've had to resurrect things from my years at University of Guelph's Institutional …

Jones' OT goal lifts Avs over Maple Leafs 3-2

TORONTO (AP) — David Jones scored 1:11 into to give the Colorado Avalanche a 3-2 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Monday night.

Jones buried the rebound of Kyle Quincey's shot past goalie James Reimer.

Daniel Winnik and …

Ashley Cole gets driving ban for speeding

Chelsea left back Ashley Cole has been banned from driving for four months and fined 1,000 pounds ($1,620; euro1,160) for doing more than twice the speed limit in his Lamborghini.

The defender told police he was being chased by photographers when a speed gun …

Crusing Alaska // Season offers bounty of options

Alaska travelers will have a choice of 21 of the world's largest andgrandest cruise ships this season.The luxury-liner fleet is expected to carry more than 500,000passengers - almost half of the total number of visitors who will beroaming Alaska from early May to mid-September.In addition, small-ship operators will deploy almost three dozenvessels for journeys ranging from weeklong nature cruises tosingle-day sightseeing in whale waters and glacier fiords."It's shaping up to be another excellent season," says KirkLanterman, chairman and chief executive officer of Seattle-basedHolland America Line.Holland America and Princess Cruises - each with six linersscheduled for Alaska …

Nowitzki's meds: Chicken soup, night-time jumpers

DALLAS (AP) — Dirk Nowitzki went home from his latest dramatic performance in the NBA finals, took a shower then slurped some chicken soup and hot tea. After a good night's rest, he returned to work Wednesday still dealing with a slight temperature and the sniffles, so he took it easy.

For a few hours.

Nowitzki said he was planning to be back in the gym later Wednesday to put up some shots and "at least get the body used to sweating a little bit."

With only two or three games left this postseason, Nowitzki figures he will soon have plenty of time to deal with a sinus infection and everything else that ails him. So he's determined to put whatever energy he has left into …

Carnahan, Blunt capture Missouri Senate nods

Two-term Sen. Sam Brownback sailed to the Republican nomination in Kansas' gubernatorial race Tuesday while Democrat Robin Carnahan _ a member of a famed Missouri political family _ and seven-term Republican Rep. Roy Blunt secured spots on the November ballot in the state's U.S. Senate race.

The outcomes were expected in what otherwise has been a primary season filled with unanticipated results as tea party conservative activists shook up races across the country and voters spurned candidates aligned with the Washington establishment and political parties.

Another longtime politician _ Republican Rep. Jerry Moran _ was leading a fellow congressman, Rep. …

Curbside collected trimmings brought to farm as mulch

A pilot project with the city of Santa Paula is analyzing the economics of lowering a farmer's cost of spreading mulch by using a "tipping fee" to offset the expense of cleaning, grinding and spreading material. Staff of the Ventura County Solid Waste Management Department worked with the Santa Paula recycling coordinator to arrange for several demonstration loads to be delivered to a ranch just outside the city. A recent report in the County's newsletter, The Steaming Heap, provides these details of the pilot:

"The refuse truck delivering the demonstration loads was able to easily maneuver down a row in an immature block and dumped its load (26 cubic yards) in about six clumps. …

Court Denies Alleged Nazi Guard's Appeal

A federal appeals court on Wednesday rejected an alleged Nazi death camp guard's challenge to a final deportation order by the nation's chief immigration judge.

A panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled there was no basis to John Demjanjuk's challenge of a December 2005 ruling that he could be deported to his native Ukraine or to Germany or Poland.

The government initially claimed Demjanjuk was the notoriously sadistic guard at the Treblinka camp known as "Ivan the Terrible." Officials later concluded that he was not, but a judge ruled in 2002 that documents from World War II prove Demjanjuk was a Nazi guard at various death or forced …

NFL appealing StarCaps case to US Supreme Court

The NFL is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a decision that allowed Minnesota Vikings defensive linemen Kevin and Pat Williams to challenge their four-game suspensions for violating the league's anti-drug policy.

The NFL cited the National Labor Relations Act in its filing on Thursday, saying its collective bargaining agreement with the players' union protects its drug policy from lawsuits in state courts.

The Williamses, no relation, tested positive in 2008 for a banned diuretic, bumetanide, that was not listed as an ingredient on the label for the weight-loss supplement StarCaps. The diuretic is not a steroid, but the league said it can be used …

Wie to make first appearance in a full Ladies European Tour at German Open

Michelle Wie will make her first appearance in a full Ladies European Tour field at this week's German Open.

The 18-year-old American was given a sponsor's invitation to play in the event, which begins Thursday. A sore wrist hurt in March and studies at Stanford University have limited her to just two tournaments on the U.S. Tour this year.

"I feel a lot healthier and I want to start playing more and playing some good golf," Wie said Tuesday. "My goal is just to have fun and keep my head on straight and shoot some low scores."

The 172nd-ranked Wie shot a practice round Tuesday with 18-year-old Amy Yang of South Korea, the European Tour's leading money earner. Others in the field include recent winners Lisa Hall, Emma Zackrisson, Gwladys Nocera and Lotta Wahlin.

Wie played the Fields Open in Hawaii and Michelob ULTRA Open in Virginia two weeks ago.

"I found at the last tournament I was really rusty and I needed to play in more tournaments," Wie said. "I thought, 'Wow, Munich,' I've never been there and it's a great opportunity."

The event is the first held by the Ladies European Tour in Germany in seven years.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Mendis destroys India with 6-13 as Sri Lanka retains Asia Cup title by 100 runs

Sri Lanka beat India by 100 runs to successfully defend its Asia Cup title Sunday with spinner Ajantha Mendis taking a record 6-13.

India, chasing 274 runs, was dismissed for 173 in 39.3 overs with Mendis often unplayable in his eight overs.

Sanath Jayasuriya had earlier smashed 125 _ his 27th century in one-day internationals _ after India won the toss and chose to bowl first.

Mendis' figures were the best ever in the nine Asia Cups, beating Pakistan's paceman Aqib Javed's 5-19 against India in 1995 at Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.

The Indian batsmen were facing the 23-year-old Mendis for the first time in the tournament and had no answer to his masterful bowling.

Mendis came on in the 10th over after hard-hitting Virender Sehwag (60 off 36 balls) had pushed the score to 76-1.

Mendis broke through in his second delivery when Sehwag, who had hit 12 boundaries, misread a quick delivery and was stumped. An over later, Mendis clean bowled Yuvraj Singh (0) and Suresh Raina (16) with balls that skidded through the Indian lefthanders before Rohit Sharma was trapped leg before wicket off a pefect off-spinner.

Mendis returned for his second spell and claimed the wickets of Irfan Patan (2) and R.P. Singh (0) before Chaminda Vaas (2-55) ended captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni's innings _ caught behind for 49.

Earlier, Jayasuriya smashed 125 off 114 balls before India bowled out Sri Lanka in 49.5 overs.

Jayasuriya's innings included nine fours and five sixes. The hard-hitting opener revived Sri Lanka's innings by adding 131 runs for the fifth wicket with Tillakaratne Dilshan, who scored 56.

India hit back in the last 10 overs, conceding just 57 runs with R.P. Singh claiming 3-67.

India, which opted to bowl first, struck through its paceman Ishant Sharma (3-52) before Jayasuriya launched a counterattack.

Sharma's triple strike reduced Sri Lanka to 66-4 after 12 overs, including the key run-out for only four runs of Kumar Sangakkara, who was chasing his fourth century in the tournament.

Sharma had captain Mahela Jayawardene (11) caught at point by Rohit Sharma and then removed Chamara Kapugedera (5) and Chamara Silva (0) in his sixth over.

But Jayasuriya felt little pressure from the wickets falling around him and hit paceman Singh for 26 runs in one over with three sixes and two boundaries.

Jayasuriya went on to complete his first century against India in the last four years off 79 balls.

With 27 centuries, Jayasuriya is now the second century-maker in one-day internationals behind India's Sachin Tendulkar, who has 42 centuries.

India came back strongly when it removed both Jayasuriya and Dilshan in the space of 21 deliveries. Ishant Sharma took a well judged catch at deep midwicket as Jayasuriya failed to keep down his sweep shot from part-time off-spinner Virender Sehwag.

Dilshan mistimed a pull shot off left-arm paceman Pathan and skied an easy catch to Dhoni behind the wickets after hitting three boundaries in his 74-ball knock. Parthan finished with 2-67.

Marshall County officials sever ties to emergency group

MOUNDSVILLE - The Marshall County Commission has severed itsrelationship with a voluntary emergency group after allegationssurfaced that members may have used alcohol before rescue runs.

Marshall County Rescue Squad, Station 2 Volunteers Inc., hasoperated the county-sponsored emergency service since 1996. Therelationship was put on hold Nov. 19 after commissioners receivedcomplaints that alcohol was consumed at the station.

An investigation was conducted by the Marshall County prosecutor'soffice.

"There is no proof to say they were legally drunk, however, ouroffice feels there is sufficient evidence at the time to temporarilyterminate the operation as it was," Tom Andrews, a specialinvestigator in the prosecutor's office, said Wednesday. No accidentshave been attributed to the station.

Commissioners voted Tuesday to temporarily transferresponsibilities to the Moundsville Volunteer Fire Department.

Squad President David Swann said the allegations were made byformer squad members.

"We are cooperating fully with the investigators," he said.

Alcohol has been served at the station when members have heldparties and other events, Swann said. However, designated crews wereon hand for emergencies.

Barenboim named La Scala musical director

MILAN (AP) — La Scala has announced that Daniel Barenboim has been named musical director of the famed Milanese opera house, effective Dec. 1.

Barenboim fills a position that has been vacant since Riccardo Muti left La Scala in 2005 amid bitter controversy over artistic and programming differences.

Barenboim for the last five years has been "Maestro of La Scala," a less formal title under which he has produced at least two operas a year. The arrangement was set to expire this year.

Barenboim's tenure as musical director runs through the end of 2016. La Scala on Thursday said he will be present at La Scala 15 weeks a year, for concerts, operas and tours.

Germany captain Lahm says Argentina are bad losers

Germany captain Philipp Lahm has maintained the war of words with Argentina by saying his team's World Cup quarterfinal opponents are bad losers.

Germany team manager Oliver Bierhoff added to the tension on Thursday, calling the Argentines "aggressive" and "provocative" on the pitch.

The statements came a day after midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger said Argentina showed no respect for opponents and referees.

In nearby Pretoria, Argentina coach Diego Maradona said nerves must be getting to Schweinsteiger.

Laughing during an interview Wednesday night with Fox Sports Argentina, Maradona mockingly asked Schweinsteiger whether he was "nervous" and said his players were looking forward to "revenge."

Lahm dismissed suggestions his teammates were nervous.

"We are tense but not nervous," Lahm said. "We are looking forward to the game."

The unusually bellicose German comments appear designed to raise the stakes in the mind games ahead of the match on Saturday in Cape Town.

The two teams have history, fighting on the field after Germany beat Argentina on penalties in the quarterfinals at the 2006 tournament.

"We have to concentrate on our own game. They are temperamental, we'll see how they deal with defeat on Saturday," Lahm said. "They are impulsive, temperamental and they don't know how to lose."

Bierhoff said he had played with many Argentines and found them "friendly, warmhearted people."

"But on the pitch they are different. They become aggressive and provocative. We should keep a cool head and concentrate on our own game," the former Germany striker said.

Referring to the post-match fight in 2006, Bierhoff said, "emotions run high after a game but we should put it behind us."

Asked if the team's staff had talked to Schweinsteiger about his comments the day before, Bierhoff said he saw no need for that.

"I don't think there were so inflammatory. It was not his intention to start a fire. He is a fair sportsman," Bierhoff said.

A day earlier, Schweinsteiger had said that the fight after 2006 quarterfinal still weighed heavily on his teammates' minds.

"When you look at their body language and gesticulations, they way they try to influence the referees, they have no respect," Schweinsteiger said. "It's their mentality and character and we'll have to adjust."

Bierhoff said the German team had a "healthy doze of self-esteem" but would not be overestimating itself and Lahm said there was no such danger.

"We are playing the top favorite and we won't be over confident," Lahm said.

Germany beat England 4-1 in the round of 16 by exposing England's defensive weaknesses and Bierhoff said the team has devised a game plan for Argentina, although he would no reveal details.

"We see Argentina as a stronger team than England. We could learn ourselves in March how strong they are," Bierhoff said. "They are ambitious and have a strong team spirit and use every chance they get. They have fewer weaknesses than England, but we have detected some."

Argentina beat Germany 1-0 in a friendly in Munich in March.

"We have a lot of quality and we must play as a team, as we did against England. We'll be well prepared and we'll know how to beat a strong opponent," Lahm said. "We have to show that we can beat a really strong rival, it's been a long time."

City Colleges needs leadership

City Colleges Chancellor Nelvia M. Brady's charges that boardChairman Ronald Gidwitz is guilty of "sexist" and "demeaning"behavior have turned her current contract negotiations into adecision based on race and/or gender.

Frankly, we find that discouraging.

If the chancellor now wants to publicly argue the merits of hercontract renewal, let's hear about her track record as chancellorsince 1988 and what she hopes to do to improve the educationalopportunities for students.

What her predecessors got in the way of privileges and benefitsaren't for us to negotiate. And what's so wrong about being heldresponsible in return for turning around a failing system?

What we care about are the 200,000 students who enroll annuallyin the City Colleges, students who for years have gotten the shortend of the stick throughout a system - deficient in remedial skillstraining, vocational education and the academic transfer programs -that doesn't meet students' needs.

The only clear thing coming out of Brady's accusations andGidwitz's defense this week about her new contract is that theleadership of the City Colleges isn't united at a time that realleadership is called for, at a time when it seems that just abouteveryone involved in the college system, from the faculty to Brady tothe board, blames one another for its problems and disagrees abouthow to fix them.

Given the complaints about Brady's performance and the Sun-Timesreports in January about questionable contract awards, Gidwitz andthe board would be remiss to tie the system and taxpayers to amultiyear contract with Brady at this point.

If the board and Brady can't sort out their disagreements over aone-year contract, which isn't all that unusual in higher educationin Illinois, then say so and move on to other issues.

If Mayor Daley has pressured the board to renew Brady's contractand if he's now being pressured to choose between her and Gidwitz,then it only shows that public education in Chicago is so tied up inpolitical knots that education reform can't occur.

Stocks open lower as dollar slide eases

Stocks are drifting lower in early trading as the dollar heads higher.

Investors are cooling their buying after sending the Dow Jones industrials up 200 points on Monday for the second time in three days.

Low interest rates and the dollar's subsequent decline are two major drivers of the surge in stocks over the past several months. A weaker dollar gives investors access to cheap debt and enables them to buy more assets like stocks, commodities and bonds.

On Tuesday, the dollar is slightly higher against other major currencies.

The Dow is down 7 at 10,219. The Standard & Poor's 500 index is down 1 at 1,091, while the Nasdaq composite index is down 2 at 2,151.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

NEW YORK (AP) _ Stock index futures pointed to a lower open on Wall Street Tuesday as the dollar, which powered Monday's huge rally, eased its slide.

Investors paused after sending the Dow Jones industrials up 200 points for the second time in three days on the back of a weaker dollar. Low interest rates and the greenback's subsequent decline are two major drivers of the surge in stocks over the past several months. A weaker dollar gives investors access to cheap debt and enables them to buy more assets with the potential to yield better returns, like stocks, commodities and bonds.

The falling dollar has enabled many investors to look past some of the economy's trouble spots, including rising unemployment. The unemployment rate now sits at 10.2 percent.

Some analysts, though, are warning that this rally, which has taken stocks to new highs for 2009, is unwarranted given the still-uncertain economy.

The ICE Futures US dollar index, which measures the dollar against other currencies, crept up 0.2 percent in morning trading. Gold prices were slightly higher, while oil prices also rose.

Commodities prices have benefited from the weak dollar as well, helping to send the stocks of energy and materials producing companies higher.

In early corporate news Tuesday, Beazer Homes USA posted a fourth-quarter profit despite a plunge in revenue. The Atlanta-based homebuilder said high unemployment and rising foreclosures continue to make it difficult to predict when the housing market will recover.

Ahead of the market's open, Dow futures fell 24, or 0.2 percent, to 10,168. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures fell 3.40, or 0.3 percent, to 1,088.30, while Nasdaq 100 index futures fell 3.00, or 0.2 percent, to 1,763.50.

Investors continue to seek guidance about the economy, hoping retailers' earnings reports later in the week will give a sense of how much consumers are spending. Without the help of the consumer, which accounts for around for 70 percent of the U.S. economy, any economic recovery will be modest.

After its earnings report, Beazer shares jumped 8.5 percent, adding 40 cents to $5.09.

Light, sweet crude added 28 cents to $79.71 a barrel in electronic premarket trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gold rose a dollar to $1,102 an ounce.

Markets overseas were higher, catching up to the advance in the U.S. on Monday.

Japan's Nikkei stock average rose 0.6 percent. In afternoon trading, Britain's FTSE 100 was up 0.2 percent, Germany's DAX index was up 0.1 percent, and France's CAC-40 dipped 0.02 percent.

Bond prices rose. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.46 percent from 3.49 percent late Monday.

Sonics (snow)storm by Magic

SEATTLE Derrick McKey scored eight of his 33 points in the finalfour minutes Tuesday night, helping the Seattle SuperSonics to a122-105 victory over the Orlando Magic in a game delayed an hour by asix-inch snowstorm.

A late afternoon snowstorm snarled Seattle traffic, preventingplayers and fans from arriving at the game. The games officialattendance was 10,400 because of tickets sold, but only 1,568actually were at the arena.

HOME STREAKS

The Bulls' NBA-record home streak ends at 44. They also hold therecord for home victories to start a season (37). The Magic issecond at 33:44 - BULLS, March 30, 1995-April 4, 1996 (7 in 1994-95; 37 in1995-96).40 - Magic, March 21, 1995-March 26, 1996 (7 in 1994-95; 33 in1995-96).38 - Celtics, Dec. 10, 1985-Nov. 28, 1986 (31 in 1985-86; 7 in1986-87).36 - 76ers, Jan. 14, 1966-Jan. 20, 1967 (14 in 1965-66; 22 in1966-67).34 - Trail Blazers, March 5, 1977-Feb. 3, 1978 (8 in 1976-77; 26 in1977-78).33 - Celtics, Dec. 17, 1986-Nov. 18, 1987.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

caption for pic on 8A

Charleston firefighters battle a blaze about 5:30 p.m. Wednesdayat a vacant home at 1633 Clay Ave. on the West Side. Firefightersresponded to four other calls around the city between 5:30 and 7 p.m.

New Zealand opener in hot water over hospital incident

New Zealand opening batsman Jesse Ryder abused hospital staff while receiving treatment for a cut hand suffered in a barroom incident early Sunday morning, New Zealand Cricket said.

Ryder, who will be sidelined by his injury for three months, will write letters of apology to hospital staff, a bar owner and New Zealand teammates and will do charity work to atone for his misbehavior, team manager Lindsay Crocker added.

The 23-year-old batsman, who made his international debut and played all five of New Zealand's recent limited overs matches against England, suffered a badly cut hand when he broke a glass panel to gain access to a locked toilet at a Christchurch bar around 5:30 a.m. local time Sunday.

Ryder underwent surgery on the injury later that day and is expected to regain full use of his hand after a three-month rehabilitation.

Crocker arrived at Christchurch hospital Sunday morning after hearing of the barroom incident and witnessed some of Ryder's behavior.

"I heard him being disrespectful to a staff member there," Crocker said. "I ticked him off immediately and from then on he seemed OK."

Crocker said hospital staff told him Ryder had been abusive throughout his stay in the emergency department.

"That's clearly unacceptable, so I've talked to him about that as well," he said.

Ryder would apologize to the owner of the bar in which his injury occurred and pay for the damage he caused, Crocker said.

"He's aware of my disappointment. He's under no illusions in that regard. But we don't intend imposing any further punishment upon him," he said.

"We feel as though he's suffered sufficient penalty in that regard."

New Zealand Cricket chief executive Justin Vaughan said his organization would work with Ryder to improve his behavior.

"We have to come up with ways to help Jesse through this," Vaughan said. "He's had a lot of work done on him in the past."

Duffin replaces injured Mawoyo for Zimbabwe

CHENNAI, India (AP) — Former captain Terry Duffin was summoned as an injury replacement for Zimbabwe's World Cup squad on Thursday for the first time since the last tournament four years ago.

Duffin replaced opening batsman Tinotenda Mawoyo, who tore an abdominal muscle in training in Dubai last week without adding to his two caps from 2006.

Mawoyo, himself, was a replacement two weeks ago for Sean Ervine, who pulled out for personal reasons.

The 28-year-old Duffin played the last of his 23 one-day internationals for Zimbabwe against Ireland at the 2007 World Cup in the Caribbean. In his ODI career, during which he was captain in 2005-06, he scored three half centuries for an average of more than 23.

Meanwhile, Zimbabwe coach Alan Butcher believes his team was coming into form at the right time ahead of the World Cup.

Zimbabwe has been struggling for results recently, and lost a one-day series in Bangladesh in December.

But Butcher said on Thursday his team was ready to rediscover its form as it sets its sights on a quarterfinal place.

"We have to play to our plans and give our best in the tournament," he said. "We need to execute our plans well.

"We need to have self-belief to perform well in the World Cup."

Captain Elton Chigumbura said the team had benefited from a productive training camp in Dubai, where it beat Netherlands and Ireland in warmup matches, as well as the input of West Indies great Brian Lara, who has been used as a batting consultant.

Chigumbura said Lara had helped the team and "hopefully we will be able to put it into practice."

The main concerns over Zimbabwe's squad is the absence of a quick bowler, and its lack of experience on Indian pitches.

But Butcher said the recent tour of Bangladesh, which provides similar surfaces to India, would stand his team in good stead, while he expected his selected medium-pacers to make up for the lack of a pace bowler in prevailing conditions.

The Zimbabwe team led by Chigumbura arrived in Chennai on Wednesday where it plays a practice match against South Africa on Saturday.

Zimbabwe's first match in the World Cup is against three-time defending champion Australia at Ahmedabad on Feb. 21.

"If we can play our best cricket, then we can expect to do well in the tournament," Chigumbura said.

Montenegro at a glance

Facts about Montenegro, which holds its first presidential election Sunday since gaining independence:

___

PEOPLE: The population of 620,000 is predominantly Christian Orthodox. Up to 15 percent are Slavic Muslims, and ethnic Albanians account for 7 percent.

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HISTORY: Montenegro was recognized as an independent state in 1878, when it became a monarchy. After the end of World War I in 1918, it merged with Serbia and some Slav-populated parts of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire to form what later became Yugoslavia. After World War II, communists took over. In the 1990s, the countryunraveled along ethnic lines. Four republics seceded, while only Serbia and Montenegro stayed together. In a referendum on independence on May 21, 2006, 55.5 percent of Montenegrins voted to split from Serbia. On June 28, 2006, it become the 192nd member of the United Nations.

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LANGUAGE: Serbian, formerly known as Serbo-Croat, is the majority language. Separatists call their slightly different dialect Montenegrin.

___

GOVERNMENT: Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic's Democratic Party of Socialists runs the government. The former Communists modernized and stayed in power when a multiparty system was introduced in 1990. Djukanovic, a former ally of Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic, launched a pro-independence movement that culminated with the May referendum.

___

ECONOMY: With its industrial output stagnating, Montenegro relies on tourism along its 290-kilometer (180-mile) stretch of Adriatic Sea coast. Annual economic growth is about 8 percent, and foreign investment since 2006 has been about euro1 billion (US$1.6 billion) _ largely owing to the real estate sales boom on the coast. The average monthly salary is euro400 (US$630) and unemployment is officially about 25 percent.

CHA CEO Peterson reveals 12,000 arrests by CPD

CHA CEO Peterson reveals 12,000 arrests by CPD

Replacing CHA's cops with the Chicago Police has been a difference between "night and day," CHA's CEO Terry Peterson said on Wednesday.

He said under the Authority's watch only 1200 drug dealers and gangbangers were arrested in a year vs. 12,000 by Chicago Police for similar crimes in the same time frame.

"We're now putting individuals out who are involved in drug activity. It's like day and night. We're now doing vertical patrols in three-shifts. We have officers walking from the 16th floor to the first floors, residents are getting involved in the CAPS program, and we've got resident participation," he said.

Peterson said CHA residents want what others do in Chicago--a safe environment. "The residents are happy to see this...," he said. "The drug dealers have had to retreat because we're lighting it (the developments) up...."

Vowing to clean up public housing, Peterson said: "There is no place for drugs and gangs, and if you're involved in those kinds of activities, you have to get out of CHA.

"We will continue to increase the presence of the Police Department. We're implementing CAPS throughout the CHA." Peterson said he's just spent more than $1 million in a lighting program Mayor Daley wanted to beef up security.

"We're changing not only the perception but also changing the message of public housing which is a privilege, not an entitlement, and if you're going to be a resident of CHA, you can't be involved in drugs and gangs."

Asked about President Bush's intent to impose faith-based involvement in solving community problems, Peterson said: "I don't necessarily think that's a bad thing. You have churches throughout the community...like Saint Sabina that has been at the forefront in social services in the community.... Faith-based initiatives are not new to Chicago...."

However, Peterson said Bush's threat to take away the federal funds he uses to pay for police security would place him between a rock and a hard place. He's hoping those proposed cuts won't materialize.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Israel: 16,200 Jewish immigrants arrived in 2009

Israeli authorities say 16,200 Jews moved to the country in 2009, the first yearly increase in a decade.

The quasi-governmental Jewish Agency handles immigration to Israel. In a statement, it said in 2008, almost 14,000 Jews came to live in Israel.

The statement said 7,120 immigrants came from the former Soviet Union this year, and 5,300 came from English-speaking countries. Both increased over 2008.

The overall number of new arrivals has been dropping since immigration from the former Soviet Union peaked in the 1990s. Sunday's statement said a total of 221,000 Jews immigrated over the past decade.

Israel offers automatic citizenship to Jews who move there. About 80 percent of the nation's 7 million residents are Jewish. Most of the rest are Arabs.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Guard to St. Louis; Heat Deaths Rise

ST. LOUIS - The governor sent in the National Guard to evacuate people from their sweltering homes Thursday after storms knocked out power to more than half a million St. Louis-area households and businesses in the middle of a deadly heat wave.

Utility crews raced to restore electricity, and Gov. Matt Blunt declared a state of emergency, granting the mayor's request to send in nearly 300 troops to take people to air-conditioned public buildings and to clear debris.

"We can't overemphasize the danger of this heat," Mayor Francis Slay said. "The longer the heat goes on and the power is out, the riskier it is."

The heat has contributed to at least 20 deaths across the country in the last week.

Police used public-address speakers from their squad cars to announce locations of the community centers and other places designated as cooling centers. Volunteers went door to door, checking on people with no power to run fans or air conditioners.

Utility workers urged customers to find a cool place to stay. They warned that power could be out in some areas for three to five days.

The day's high was 97 degrees, but the humidity made it feel like 111. The region could get some relief on Friday, when the high was expected to drop to the mid-80s.

The storms tore through the city a day earlier, ripping off a section of airport roof and dumping it on a highway. Windows were blown out of a hotel restaurant and a press box at baseball's Busch Stadium. At least three buildings collapsed, and more than 30 people were injured.

"I've never seen this many people without power, this much debris, buildings collapsed, lines down," the mayor said.

By Thursday evening, power had been restored to 160,000 customers, but new reports of outages kept coming in.

St. Louis-based AmerenUE, the utility serving Missouri and Illinois, said it would restore power to hospitals, nursing homes, water-treatment plants and other "critical facilities" first.

"If you're out of power, go to family, a friend or a cooling shelter," Vice President Richard Mark said. "Take whatever means necessary, but stay out of your home."

City Health Director William Kincaid cautioned that the city's older housing, much of it made of red brick, can heat up like furnaces in the summer heat.

"It could be a very dangerous day," Police Chief Joe Mokwa said.

John Swapshire, 39, grabbed the next-to-last window fan at a hardware store for $14.99. The electricity at his home was out, but he had a gas-powered generator.

"I had to go to six stores to get this. They were either closed because of the electricity or sold out," Swapshire said. "I don't think you can buy a cube of ice in all of St. Louis, either."

Stanley Shelton, 53, found a cool spot under a tree in a downtown park where piles of broken limbs and branches covered the grass.

"I've never experienced anything like this. I don't know anyone with power," Shelton said. "I'll just sit in my yard with a big jug of water and wait for it to pass. Maybe I'll take a couple cold showers. That works too."

The death toll from the heat wave that has gripped much of the country for the past week rose to at least 20 people in seven states. Four more people died in the Chicago area, bringing the total number there to seven, officials said. Two have died in the Philadelphia area, two in Oklahoma City, two in Arkansas, two in Indiana and one each in South Dakota and Tennessee.

In St. Louis, officials reported the death of a 93-year-old woman who had air conditioning but no power. In Indiana, a 25-year-old woman taking medications that might have affected her body's ability to stay cool died from heat exposure when temperatures inside her apartment reached 100 degrees, officials said Thursday.

Also Thursday, authorities in Kansas confirmed that two men in their 60s died from the heat. One was homeless and died in a Witchita park. The other did not have air conditioning.

In Wisconsin, a 6-year-old girl was killed Thursday when storms knocked part of a tree onto a tent at a park.

The storms also brought heavy rain, hail and 80 mph winds to Illinois on Wednesday night. Roughly 79,000 homes and businesses remained without power Thursday, but the weather was cooler in the central and northern parts of the state, with temperatures in the upper 70s or lower 80s.

Three people were injured in St. Louis when a residential building collapsed in a neighborhood south of downtown, police said. The historic Switzer building near the Mississippi River, once home to the famous licorice maker, also partially collapsed.

Many of the injuries were to baseball fans waiting for a St. Louis Cardinals-Atlanta Braves game. Winds blowing at nearly 80 mph blew out press box windows and ripped the tarp, injuring at least 30 people, five of whom were taken to hospitals, said Norm Corley, a supervisor with Accu-Care, which handles medical problems at the stadium.

---

Associated Press reporters Jeff Douglas, Jim Suhr and Jim Salter in St. Louis contributed to this report.

Guard to St. Louis; Heat Deaths Rise

ST. LOUIS - The governor sent in the National Guard to evacuate people from their sweltering homes Thursday after storms knocked out power to more than half a million St. Louis-area households and businesses in the middle of a deadly heat wave.

Utility crews raced to restore electricity, and Gov. Matt Blunt declared a state of emergency, granting the mayor's request to send in nearly 300 troops to take people to air-conditioned public buildings and to clear debris.

"We can't overemphasize the danger of this heat," Mayor Francis Slay said. "The longer the heat goes on and the power is out, the riskier it is."

The heat has contributed to at least 20 deaths across the country in the last week.

Police used public-address speakers from their squad cars to announce locations of the community centers and other places designated as cooling centers. Volunteers went door to door, checking on people with no power to run fans or air conditioners.

Utility workers urged customers to find a cool place to stay. They warned that power could be out in some areas for three to five days.

The day's high was 97 degrees, but the humidity made it feel like 111. The region could get some relief on Friday, when the high was expected to drop to the mid-80s.

The storms tore through the city a day earlier, ripping off a section of airport roof and dumping it on a highway. Windows were blown out of a hotel restaurant and a press box at baseball's Busch Stadium. At least three buildings collapsed, and more than 30 people were injured.

"I've never seen this many people without power, this much debris, buildings collapsed, lines down," the mayor said.

By Thursday evening, power had been restored to 160,000 customers, but new reports of outages kept coming in.

St. Louis-based AmerenUE, the utility serving Missouri and Illinois, said it would restore power to hospitals, nursing homes, water-treatment plants and other "critical facilities" first.

"If you're out of power, go to family, a friend or a cooling shelter," Vice President Richard Mark said. "Take whatever means necessary, but stay out of your home."

City Health Director William Kincaid cautioned that the city's older housing, much of it made of red brick, can heat up like furnaces in the summer heat.

"It could be a very dangerous day," Police Chief Joe Mokwa said.

John Swapshire, 39, grabbed the next-to-last window fan at a hardware store for $14.99. The electricity at his home was out, but he had a gas-powered generator.

"I had to go to six stores to get this. They were either closed because of the electricity or sold out," Swapshire said. "I don't think you can buy a cube of ice in all of St. Louis, either."

Stanley Shelton, 53, found a cool spot under a tree in a downtown park where piles of broken limbs and branches covered the grass.

"I've never experienced anything like this. I don't know anyone with power," Shelton said. "I'll just sit in my yard with a big jug of water and wait for it to pass. Maybe I'll take a couple cold showers. That works too."

The death toll from the heat wave that has gripped much of the country for the past week rose to at least 20 people in seven states. Four more people died in the Chicago area, bringing the total number there to seven, officials said. Two have died in the Philadelphia area, two in Oklahoma City, two in Arkansas, two in Indiana and one each in South Dakota and Tennessee.

In St. Louis, officials reported the death of a 93-year-old woman who had air conditioning but no power. In Indiana, a 25-year-old woman taking medications that might have affected her body's ability to stay cool died from heat exposure when temperatures inside her apartment reached 100 degrees, officials said Thursday.

Also Thursday, authorities in Kansas confirmed that two men in their 60s died from the heat. One was homeless and died in a Witchita park. The other did not have air conditioning.

In Wisconsin, a 6-year-old girl was killed Thursday when storms knocked part of a tree onto a tent at a park.

The storms also brought heavy rain, hail and 80 mph winds to Illinois on Wednesday night. Roughly 79,000 homes and businesses remained without power Thursday, but the weather was cooler in the central and northern parts of the state, with temperatures in the upper 70s or lower 80s.

Three people were injured in St. Louis when a residential building collapsed in a neighborhood south of downtown, police said. The historic Switzer building near the Mississippi River, once home to the famous licorice maker, also partially collapsed.

Many of the injuries were to baseball fans waiting for a St. Louis Cardinals-Atlanta Braves game. Winds blowing at nearly 80 mph blew out press box windows and ripped the tarp, injuring at least 30 people, five of whom were taken to hospitals, said Norm Corley, a supervisor with Accu-Care, which handles medical problems at the stadium.

---

Associated Press reporters Jeff Douglas, Jim Suhr and Jim Salter in St. Louis contributed to this report.

Guard to St. Louis; Heat Deaths Rise

ST. LOUIS - The governor sent in the National Guard to evacuate people from their sweltering homes Thursday after storms knocked out power to more than half a million St. Louis-area households and businesses in the middle of a deadly heat wave.

Utility crews raced to restore electricity, and Gov. Matt Blunt declared a state of emergency, granting the mayor's request to send in nearly 300 troops to take people to air-conditioned public buildings and to clear debris.

"We can't overemphasize the danger of this heat," Mayor Francis Slay said. "The longer the heat goes on and the power is out, the riskier it is."

The heat has contributed to at least 20 deaths across the country in the last week.

Police used public-address speakers from their squad cars to announce locations of the community centers and other places designated as cooling centers. Volunteers went door to door, checking on people with no power to run fans or air conditioners.

Utility workers urged customers to find a cool place to stay. They warned that power could be out in some areas for three to five days.

The day's high was 97 degrees, but the humidity made it feel like 111. The region could get some relief on Friday, when the high was expected to drop to the mid-80s.

The storms tore through the city a day earlier, ripping off a section of airport roof and dumping it on a highway. Windows were blown out of a hotel restaurant and a press box at baseball's Busch Stadium. At least three buildings collapsed, and more than 30 people were injured.

"I've never seen this many people without power, this much debris, buildings collapsed, lines down," the mayor said.

By Thursday evening, power had been restored to 160,000 customers, but new reports of outages kept coming in.

St. Louis-based AmerenUE, the utility serving Missouri and Illinois, said it would restore power to hospitals, nursing homes, water-treatment plants and other "critical facilities" first.

"If you're out of power, go to family, a friend or a cooling shelter," Vice President Richard Mark said. "Take whatever means necessary, but stay out of your home."

City Health Director William Kincaid cautioned that the city's older housing, much of it made of red brick, can heat up like furnaces in the summer heat.

"It could be a very dangerous day," Police Chief Joe Mokwa said.

John Swapshire, 39, grabbed the next-to-last window fan at a hardware store for $14.99. The electricity at his home was out, but he had a gas-powered generator.

"I had to go to six stores to get this. They were either closed because of the electricity or sold out," Swapshire said. "I don't think you can buy a cube of ice in all of St. Louis, either."

Stanley Shelton, 53, found a cool spot under a tree in a downtown park where piles of broken limbs and branches covered the grass.

"I've never experienced anything like this. I don't know anyone with power," Shelton said. "I'll just sit in my yard with a big jug of water and wait for it to pass. Maybe I'll take a couple cold showers. That works too."

The death toll from the heat wave that has gripped much of the country for the past week rose to at least 20 people in seven states. Four more people died in the Chicago area, bringing the total number there to seven, officials said. Two have died in the Philadelphia area, two in Oklahoma City, two in Arkansas, two in Indiana and one each in South Dakota and Tennessee.

In St. Louis, officials reported the death of a 93-year-old woman who had air conditioning but no power. In Indiana, a 25-year-old woman taking medications that might have affected her body's ability to stay cool died from heat exposure when temperatures inside her apartment reached 100 degrees, officials said Thursday.

Also Thursday, authorities in Kansas confirmed that two men in their 60s died from the heat. One was homeless and died in a Witchita park. The other did not have air conditioning.

In Wisconsin, a 6-year-old girl was killed Thursday when storms knocked part of a tree onto a tent at a park.

The storms also brought heavy rain, hail and 80 mph winds to Illinois on Wednesday night. Roughly 79,000 homes and businesses remained without power Thursday, but the weather was cooler in the central and northern parts of the state, with temperatures in the upper 70s or lower 80s.

Three people were injured in St. Louis when a residential building collapsed in a neighborhood south of downtown, police said. The historic Switzer building near the Mississippi River, once home to the famous licorice maker, also partially collapsed.

Many of the injuries were to baseball fans waiting for a St. Louis Cardinals-Atlanta Braves game. Winds blowing at nearly 80 mph blew out press box windows and ripped the tarp, injuring at least 30 people, five of whom were taken to hospitals, said Norm Corley, a supervisor with Accu-Care, which handles medical problems at the stadium.

---

Associated Press reporters Jeff Douglas, Jim Suhr and Jim Salter in St. Louis contributed to this report.

Russian gas firm linked to Weldon probe courted others.

Byline: Thomas Ginsberg

Oct. 22--A Russian gas company under FBI investigation for its links to U.S. Rep. Curt Weldon has courted him and other U.S. politicians in recent years as it expands from Russia's rough-and-tumble energy industry into a new market: the United States. The 14-year-old Itera Group, run and partly owned by a former Soviet cycling champion, Igor V. Makarov, has acquired or created a large number of U.S. real estate firms, U.S. energy and gas-exploration companies, and even the U.S. distributorship of "Ivanabitch" brand vodka. Its core business, however, remains the production and distribution of natural gas, a lucrative but highly regulated industry in which the friendship of politicians is considered crucial in any country, according to experts in the U.S. and Russian energy business. Employees of Itera's Florida-based subsidiaries and related companies have contributed at least $41,000 to federal candidates or campaign committees over the last decade, according to campaign disclosures. Weldon got $10,000 for his election campaigns and an additional $5,500 for his political action committee. Those contributions were second only to U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown (D., Fla.), whose district includes Jacksonville, home since 2003 to Itera's U.S. subsidiary, Itera International Energy Corp. She has received $18,200. Itera also helped Weldon's daughter, Karen, and his former campaign manager, Charles Sexton Jr., launch a consulting business in 2002 by becoming their first client for $500,000, according to information obtained and published in 2004 by The Inquirer and other newspapers.The company, as well, contributed $60,000 in 2003 to the Freedoms Foundation, a Valley Forge nonprofit educational group near Weldon's district, for a student-exchange program proposed by Karen Weldon, according to the group's director, Aaron Siegel. Siegel said Itera had given no further grants. After his daughter's consulting business and several Itera locations were raided by the FBI on Monday, Weldon acknowledged that he was under investigation but declined to discuss the Russian business deals under scrutiny. "In the end, I think you will find that there was nothing done that was wrong," Weldon told reporters. "I haven't helped get my daughter anything." Itera made its move into the United States as questions arose in Russia over its dealings with the state-dominated energy behemoth Gazprom, corporate filings show. Itera had grown into a multibillion-dollar gas company in just a few years after the Soviet collapse through barter and asset-transfer deals with Gazprom, and investors began wondering whether Gazprom executives were secretly benefiting -- an allegation that Makarov has vociferously denied. "Itera won the deals by some kind of personal agreement," said Mikhail Korchemkin, a former University of Pennsylvania lecturer and now Malvern-based analyst of the East European gas industry. But whether Gazprom executives were benefiting, "nobody knows." Itera did not respond to questions Friday about its business activities, and it declined to answer questions about the FBI investigation.

U.S. officials said that in response to the complaints in early 2002, U.S. officials froze a $868,000 development grant to Itera, demanding more information on the Gazprom dispute and the company's ownership. One of Itera's responses was to call on its contacts in Washington.

Brown, the Florida congressional representative, has known Itera officials "for over 10 years. When they came here, they did seek out the congresswoman and introduced themselves. Most companies do likewise" when they move into her district, said Ronnie Simmons, Brown's chief of staff. "She was there for their ribbon cutting." One executive, Lazar Finker of Jacksonville, met with Brown in her Jacksonville office to request help in the issues over Gazprom, according to Brown's office.

"We didn't do anything. We had no authority over Gazprom," Simmons said. Weldon apparently was more amenable. According to his own public statements in 2002, Brown had asked him to meet Itera officials. He, in turn, tried to intercede with the U.S. Trade and Development Agency and later hosted a dinner for Makarov. Itera around the same time signed its contract with his daughter. Itera's goal was not simply restoring the grant, which was minuscule compared with its estimated $3 billion in revenue at the time, according to Korchemkin, the industry analyst. The issue was its reputation and future business. "Itera may have thought they needed U.S. governmental links to position themselves as an American firm in Russia. Curt Weldon may have wanted to feel himself more important in the U.S.-Russia business relations," Korchemkin said. Today, Itera is the third- or fourth-biggest natural gas company in the former Soviet Union, with revenue estimated about $5 billion, the analysts said. But in the face of Gazprom's dominance, its prospects are dwindling there and growing elsewhere, including the United States, where gas companies are maneuvering for a hoped-for boom in Liquified Natural Gas, said Kent Moors, a Duquesne University professor and private consultant on post-Soviet markets. "That's where you need the lobbyists. Because there are billions and billions of dollars to be made from the downstream consequences of LNG coming to North America," Moors said. While still run and apparently owned mostly by Russians, Itera's parent holding company, Itera Group N.V., is now based in Dutch Antilles, a Caribbean tax haven. It has three main subsidiaries: Itera International Energy of Jacksonville; Kayton Corp. N.V. of the Dutch Antilles; and Itera Holding B.V. of Amsterdam.

Since 2004, Itera's Jacksonville-based subsidiary has acquired full or partial control of at least two U.S. energy companies: Grayson Hill Energy L.L.C. of Raleigh, Ill., and Dune Energy Corp., of Houston, according to corporate filings. Through them, Itera has expanded into natural gas production and distribution in the South and Midwest.

Like other companies flush with cash, Itera has made forays into other businesses. Its real estate companies include Itera Timberland and Development Strategies L.L.C., which is developing exclusive residential acreages across the Southeast. Its subsidiary Eaglestar Intertrade Ltd., which owned a Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., mansion raided by the FBI, describes itself as a "marketing research and public opinion polling firm." Itera's International Spirits L.L.C. is the marketer of "Ivanabitch" vodka in the United States, in a stab for the designer vodka market. Its Web site says the vodka is named for "Dimiti Ivanabitch -- yes, there really existed such a person (we're almost positive)."

During its U.S. expansion in recent years, Itera has continued to support U.S. politicians. In the last six months, board members and executives of its companies have given $12,000 to Weldon and Brown.

Among the contributors were Finker and his wife, Raissa M. Frenkel, a Russian-born Itera board member and co-owner. Together they gave $4,000 to the candidates. Neither is registered to vote in Florida, where they live, according to Florida state voter registration records. It could not be determined if they are naturalized citizens. Noncitizens are barred both from voting and giving to political candidates. Others receiving campaign contributions from Itera officials in the last five years were U.S. Sens. Carl Levin (D., Mich.) and Saxby Chambliss (R., Ga.). Finker is listed as giving $5,500 from 2002 to 2004 to Weldon's political action committee, the Committee for a United Republican Team (CURT PAC). Contact staff writer Thomas Ginsberg at 215-854-4177 or tginsberg@phillynews.com.

Copyright (c) 2006, The Philadelphia Inquirer

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business

News.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

TICKER SYMBOL(S): RTS:GSPBEX

Russian gas firm linked to Weldon probe courted others.

Byline: Thomas Ginsberg

Oct. 22--A Russian gas company under FBI investigation for its links to U.S. Rep. Curt Weldon has courted him and other U.S. politicians in recent years as it expands from Russia's rough-and-tumble energy industry into a new market: the United States. The 14-year-old Itera Group, run and partly owned by a former Soviet cycling champion, Igor V. Makarov, has acquired or created a large number of U.S. real estate firms, U.S. energy and gas-exploration companies, and even the U.S. distributorship of "Ivanabitch" brand vodka. Its core business, however, remains the production and distribution of natural gas, a lucrative but highly regulated industry in which the friendship of politicians is considered crucial in any country, according to experts in the U.S. and Russian energy business. Employees of Itera's Florida-based subsidiaries and related companies have contributed at least $41,000 to federal candidates or campaign committees over the last decade, according to campaign disclosures. Weldon got $10,000 for his election campaigns and an additional $5,500 for his political action committee. Those contributions were second only to U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown (D., Fla.), whose district includes Jacksonville, home since 2003 to Itera's U.S. subsidiary, Itera International Energy Corp. She has received $18,200. Itera also helped Weldon's daughter, Karen, and his former campaign manager, Charles Sexton Jr., launch a consulting business in 2002 by becoming their first client for $500,000, according to information obtained and published in 2004 by The Inquirer and other newspapers.The company, as well, contributed $60,000 in 2003 to the Freedoms Foundation, a Valley Forge nonprofit educational group near Weldon's district, for a student-exchange program proposed by Karen Weldon, according to the group's director, Aaron Siegel. Siegel said Itera had given no further grants. After his daughter's consulting business and several Itera locations were raided by the FBI on Monday, Weldon acknowledged that he was under investigation but declined to discuss the Russian business deals under scrutiny. "In the end, I think you will find that there was nothing done that was wrong," Weldon told reporters. "I haven't helped get my daughter anything." Itera made its move into the United States as questions arose in Russia over its dealings with the state-dominated energy behemoth Gazprom, corporate filings show. Itera had grown into a multibillion-dollar gas company in just a few years after the Soviet collapse through barter and asset-transfer deals with Gazprom, and investors began wondering whether Gazprom executives were secretly benefiting -- an allegation that Makarov has vociferously denied. "Itera won the deals by some kind of personal agreement," said Mikhail Korchemkin, a former University of Pennsylvania lecturer and now Malvern-based analyst of the East European gas industry. But whether Gazprom executives were benefiting, "nobody knows." Itera did not respond to questions Friday about its business activities, and it declined to answer questions about the FBI investigation.

U.S. officials said that in response to the complaints in early 2002, U.S. officials froze a $868,000 development grant to Itera, demanding more information on the Gazprom dispute and the company's ownership. One of Itera's responses was to call on its contacts in Washington.

Brown, the Florida congressional representative, has known Itera officials "for over 10 years. When they came here, they did seek out the congresswoman and introduced themselves. Most companies do likewise" when they move into her district, said Ronnie Simmons, Brown's chief of staff. "She was there for their ribbon cutting." One executive, Lazar Finker of Jacksonville, met with Brown in her Jacksonville office to request help in the issues over Gazprom, according to Brown's office.

"We didn't do anything. We had no authority over Gazprom," Simmons said. Weldon apparently was more amenable. According to his own public statements in 2002, Brown had asked him to meet Itera officials. He, in turn, tried to intercede with the U.S. Trade and Development Agency and later hosted a dinner for Makarov. Itera around the same time signed its contract with his daughter. Itera's goal was not simply restoring the grant, which was minuscule compared with its estimated $3 billion in revenue at the time, according to Korchemkin, the industry analyst. The issue was its reputation and future business. "Itera may have thought they needed U.S. governmental links to position themselves as an American firm in Russia. Curt Weldon may have wanted to feel himself more important in the U.S.-Russia business relations," Korchemkin said. Today, Itera is the third- or fourth-biggest natural gas company in the former Soviet Union, with revenue estimated about $5 billion, the analysts said. But in the face of Gazprom's dominance, its prospects are dwindling there and growing elsewhere, including the United States, where gas companies are maneuvering for a hoped-for boom in Liquified Natural Gas, said Kent Moors, a Duquesne University professor and private consultant on post-Soviet markets. "That's where you need the lobbyists. Because there are billions and billions of dollars to be made from the downstream consequences of LNG coming to North America," Moors said. While still run and apparently owned mostly by Russians, Itera's parent holding company, Itera Group N.V., is now based in Dutch Antilles, a Caribbean tax haven. It has three main subsidiaries: Itera International Energy of Jacksonville; Kayton Corp. N.V. of the Dutch Antilles; and Itera Holding B.V. of Amsterdam.

Since 2004, Itera's Jacksonville-based subsidiary has acquired full or partial control of at least two U.S. energy companies: Grayson Hill Energy L.L.C. of Raleigh, Ill., and Dune Energy Corp., of Houston, according to corporate filings. Through them, Itera has expanded into natural gas production and distribution in the South and Midwest.

Like other companies flush with cash, Itera has made forays into other businesses. Its real estate companies include Itera Timberland and Development Strategies L.L.C., which is developing exclusive residential acreages across the Southeast. Its subsidiary Eaglestar Intertrade Ltd., which owned a Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., mansion raided by the FBI, describes itself as a "marketing research and public opinion polling firm." Itera's International Spirits L.L.C. is the marketer of "Ivanabitch" vodka in the United States, in a stab for the designer vodka market. Its Web site says the vodka is named for "Dimiti Ivanabitch -- yes, there really existed such a person (we're almost positive)."

During its U.S. expansion in recent years, Itera has continued to support U.S. politicians. In the last six months, board members and executives of its companies have given $12,000 to Weldon and Brown.

Among the contributors were Finker and his wife, Raissa M. Frenkel, a Russian-born Itera board member and co-owner. Together they gave $4,000 to the candidates. Neither is registered to vote in Florida, where they live, according to Florida state voter registration records. It could not be determined if they are naturalized citizens. Noncitizens are barred both from voting and giving to political candidates. Others receiving campaign contributions from Itera officials in the last five years were U.S. Sens. Carl Levin (D., Mich.) and Saxby Chambliss (R., Ga.). Finker is listed as giving $5,500 from 2002 to 2004 to Weldon's political action committee, the Committee for a United Republican Team (CURT PAC). Contact staff writer Thomas Ginsberg at 215-854-4177 or tginsberg@phillynews.com.

Copyright (c) 2006, The Philadelphia Inquirer

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business

News.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

TICKER SYMBOL(S): RTS:GSPBEX

Russian gas firm linked to Weldon probe courted others.

Byline: Thomas Ginsberg

Oct. 22--A Russian gas company under FBI investigation for its links to U.S. Rep. Curt Weldon has courted him and other U.S. politicians in recent years as it expands from Russia's rough-and-tumble energy industry into a new market: the United States. The 14-year-old Itera Group, run and partly owned by a former Soviet cycling champion, Igor V. Makarov, has acquired or created a large number of U.S. real estate firms, U.S. energy and gas-exploration companies, and even the U.S. distributorship of "Ivanabitch" brand vodka. Its core business, however, remains the production and distribution of natural gas, a lucrative but highly regulated industry in which the friendship of politicians is considered crucial in any country, according to experts in the U.S. and Russian energy business. Employees of Itera's Florida-based subsidiaries and related companies have contributed at least $41,000 to federal candidates or campaign committees over the last decade, according to campaign disclosures. Weldon got $10,000 for his election campaigns and an additional $5,500 for his political action committee. Those contributions were second only to U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown (D., Fla.), whose district includes Jacksonville, home since 2003 to Itera's U.S. subsidiary, Itera International Energy Corp. She has received $18,200. Itera also helped Weldon's daughter, Karen, and his former campaign manager, Charles Sexton Jr., launch a consulting business in 2002 by becoming their first client for $500,000, according to information obtained and published in 2004 by The Inquirer and other newspapers.The company, as well, contributed $60,000 in 2003 to the Freedoms Foundation, a Valley Forge nonprofit educational group near Weldon's district, for a student-exchange program proposed by Karen Weldon, according to the group's director, Aaron Siegel. Siegel said Itera had given no further grants. After his daughter's consulting business and several Itera locations were raided by the FBI on Monday, Weldon acknowledged that he was under investigation but declined to discuss the Russian business deals under scrutiny. "In the end, I think you will find that there was nothing done that was wrong," Weldon told reporters. "I haven't helped get my daughter anything." Itera made its move into the United States as questions arose in Russia over its dealings with the state-dominated energy behemoth Gazprom, corporate filings show. Itera had grown into a multibillion-dollar gas company in just a few years after the Soviet collapse through barter and asset-transfer deals with Gazprom, and investors began wondering whether Gazprom executives were secretly benefiting -- an allegation that Makarov has vociferously denied. "Itera won the deals by some kind of personal agreement," said Mikhail Korchemkin, a former University of Pennsylvania lecturer and now Malvern-based analyst of the East European gas industry. But whether Gazprom executives were benefiting, "nobody knows." Itera did not respond to questions Friday about its business activities, and it declined to answer questions about the FBI investigation.

U.S. officials said that in response to the complaints in early 2002, U.S. officials froze a $868,000 development grant to Itera, demanding more information on the Gazprom dispute and the company's ownership. One of Itera's responses was to call on its contacts in Washington.

Brown, the Florida congressional representative, has known Itera officials "for over 10 years. When they came here, they did seek out the congresswoman and introduced themselves. Most companies do likewise" when they move into her district, said Ronnie Simmons, Brown's chief of staff. "She was there for their ribbon cutting." One executive, Lazar Finker of Jacksonville, met with Brown in her Jacksonville office to request help in the issues over Gazprom, according to Brown's office.

"We didn't do anything. We had no authority over Gazprom," Simmons said. Weldon apparently was more amenable. According to his own public statements in 2002, Brown had asked him to meet Itera officials. He, in turn, tried to intercede with the U.S. Trade and Development Agency and later hosted a dinner for Makarov. Itera around the same time signed its contract with his daughter. Itera's goal was not simply restoring the grant, which was minuscule compared with its estimated $3 billion in revenue at the time, according to Korchemkin, the industry analyst. The issue was its reputation and future business. "Itera may have thought they needed U.S. governmental links to position themselves as an American firm in Russia. Curt Weldon may have wanted to feel himself more important in the U.S.-Russia business relations," Korchemkin said. Today, Itera is the third- or fourth-biggest natural gas company in the former Soviet Union, with revenue estimated about $5 billion, the analysts said. But in the face of Gazprom's dominance, its prospects are dwindling there and growing elsewhere, including the United States, where gas companies are maneuvering for a hoped-for boom in Liquified Natural Gas, said Kent Moors, a Duquesne University professor and private consultant on post-Soviet markets. "That's where you need the lobbyists. Because there are billions and billions of dollars to be made from the downstream consequences of LNG coming to North America," Moors said. While still run and apparently owned mostly by Russians, Itera's parent holding company, Itera Group N.V., is now based in Dutch Antilles, a Caribbean tax haven. It has three main subsidiaries: Itera International Energy of Jacksonville; Kayton Corp. N.V. of the Dutch Antilles; and Itera Holding B.V. of Amsterdam.

Since 2004, Itera's Jacksonville-based subsidiary has acquired full or partial control of at least two U.S. energy companies: Grayson Hill Energy L.L.C. of Raleigh, Ill., and Dune Energy Corp., of Houston, according to corporate filings. Through them, Itera has expanded into natural gas production and distribution in the South and Midwest.

Like other companies flush with cash, Itera has made forays into other businesses. Its real estate companies include Itera Timberland and Development Strategies L.L.C., which is developing exclusive residential acreages across the Southeast. Its subsidiary Eaglestar Intertrade Ltd., which owned a Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., mansion raided by the FBI, describes itself as a "marketing research and public opinion polling firm." Itera's International Spirits L.L.C. is the marketer of "Ivanabitch" vodka in the United States, in a stab for the designer vodka market. Its Web site says the vodka is named for "Dimiti Ivanabitch -- yes, there really existed such a person (we're almost positive)."

During its U.S. expansion in recent years, Itera has continued to support U.S. politicians. In the last six months, board members and executives of its companies have given $12,000 to Weldon and Brown.

Among the contributors were Finker and his wife, Raissa M. Frenkel, a Russian-born Itera board member and co-owner. Together they gave $4,000 to the candidates. Neither is registered to vote in Florida, where they live, according to Florida state voter registration records. It could not be determined if they are naturalized citizens. Noncitizens are barred both from voting and giving to political candidates. Others receiving campaign contributions from Itera officials in the last five years were U.S. Sens. Carl Levin (D., Mich.) and Saxby Chambliss (R., Ga.). Finker is listed as giving $5,500 from 2002 to 2004 to Weldon's political action committee, the Committee for a United Republican Team (CURT PAC). Contact staff writer Thomas Ginsberg at 215-854-4177 or tginsberg@phillynews.com.

Copyright (c) 2006, The Philadelphia Inquirer

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понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

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