Thursday, 15 March 2012

Stress on economy as China holds annual meetings

China's top parliamentary adviser says 2010 will be critical for maintaining growth, creating jobs, and diversifying away from exports, underscoring the economy's central importance as the annual legislative session prepares to open.

Beijing declared that China had emerged from the global crisis after economic growth rebounded to 10.7 percent in the final quarter of 2009. But authorities say the global outlook is still uncertain, amid worries that a stimulus-driven torrent of lending is adding to inflation and fueling a dangerous bubble in stock and real estate prices.

"The year 2010 is a crucial year for China to respond to the impact of the global …

Stoitchkov, Matthaus lose marquee status

Major League Soccer expected today to be a highlight of its fifthregular season-a head-to-head duel on national television between Hristo Stoitchkov of the Fire and Lothar Matthaeus of the New York/New Jersey MetroStars at Soldier Field.

MLS had counted on Matthaeus and Stoitchkov, both legends inEurope, to build its popularity this season, but neither has been asmashing success.

Matthaeus was playing for Germany and Stoitchkov was injured whenthe teams played for the first time, a 4-1 MetroStars victory atGiants Stadium on May 27. Now Matthaeus has an injury, and Stoitchkovis barely recovered from one. Neither has had much impact on his teamthis season-though both …

Rose, Bulls get back on track vs. Timberwolves

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Derrick Rose had 23 points and 10 assists in three quarters and the Chicago Bulls blew out the Minnesota Timberwolves 108-91 on Wednesday night.

Carlos Boozer had 24 points and 14 rebounds and the Bulls recorded 31 assists on 41 field goals to stay 2½ games ahead of Boston and Miami in the race for the top seed in the Eastern Conference.

Kevin Love had 16 points and nine rebounds, but was limited to 27 minutes in his first game back from a strained left groin. The Timberwolves (17-58) lost their eighth straight game and have sunk to the bottom of the West.

The Bulls, who were missing starting center Joakim Noah because of a sprained right ankle, …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Ohio AG to hold summit over parishioner killings

CLEVELAND (AP) — Ohio's attorney general said Tuesday that his office plans to convene a community summit to address concerns about violence in a northeastern Ohio city where two members of a church were killed.

Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray said that he talked with the Rev. Gregory Maturi of St. Dominic Roman Catholic Church in Youngstown about their mutual concern over the violence that Maturi says is connected to dilapidated houses in the area attracting criminal activity.

An 80-year-old parishioner was killed in the church parking lot in January. Another member was shot and killed and his wife was wounded Saturday while driving home from the church. A suspect has …

Trimsaran

Alma Davies 72 Heol Llanelli,Trimsaran. 01554 810706 Fun dayFollowing a meeting held at Plas y Sarn, a village summer fun daywill be held on Saturday, June 25. Times, theme and programme tofollow.

Anyone wishing to hold a stall on the day should phone 810155.More volunteers are needed. If you can help in any way pleasecontact Maggie on 810155. What's on at Canolfan Plas y Sarn: Monday:kickboxing 5.30pm to 6.30pm; archery: 6.45pm to 7.45pm; basketball7.45pm to 9.15pm. Tuesday: netball 7pm to 8pm; football 8pm to 9pm.Wednesday: aikido 5.15pm to 9pm. Thursday: junior …

Search for Tornado Victims May Take Days

GREENSBURG, Kan. - Most of this southwest Kansas town was destroyed by a tornado, part of a violent storm system blamed for at least nine deaths, officials said Saturday amid warnings of more severe weather.

It may take days for emergency crews to remove all the victims - dead and alive - from the rubble of homes and businesses, the city administrator said Saturday.

The dead included eight in Kiowa County, where Greensburg is located, and one in nearby Stafford County, said Sharon Watson, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Adjutant General's Department.

The tornado that struck Greensburg late Friday damaged about 95 percent of the town about 110 miles west of Wichita, …

Bondholders appeal to GM, gov't for flexibility

Bondholders of General Motors Corp. are appealing to both the government and the Detroit automaker for more flexibility as they try to work through complicated discussions to reduce GM's massive amount of unsecured debt.

General Motors was required to reduce its $28 billion in unsecured debt by two-thirds under terms set by the Bush administration in December on the company's $13.4 billion loan.

Bondholders have talked with GM and the Obama administration's auto task force about a possible exchange of debt for equity. But they also are seeking changes to the proposed structure, said a person familiar with the discussions, who spoke on condition of anonymity …

Evanston's Cockrell plays out a dream

Doyle Cockrell, happy to be back in the United States, walkedinto the athletic department office at Evanston High in July, 1988,and approached the first man he saw.

"Can you tell me where I can find the football coach?" Cockrellasked.

"I'm the coach," came the response. "My name is John Riehle."

Cockrell told Riehle he had just moved back from West Germanyand wanted to play varsity football.

Riehle took one look at Cockrell and knew has the physicalrequirements for the job.

Cockrell attended Evanston as a freshman, moved to Iowa in 1987because of his stepfather's job transfer and went to West Germanyseveral months later because of …

Indian city of Kolkata prepares for Messi mania

KOLKATA, India (AP) — The anticipated announcement of Lionel Messi in an Argentina squad to play Venezuela in an international friendly here next month is expected to unleash what locals are calling Messi mania.

More than 15,000 tickets have already been sold online for the FIFA-sanctioned Sept. 2 match at the 100,000-capacity Salt Lake Stadium, but organizers are predicting a surge of sales in coming days when the squads are announced.

Football frenzies have struck in Kolkata before, most notably when Brazilian great Pele turned out for the U.S. club Cosmos in a friendly against local club Mohan Bagan in 1977 and when German goalkeeper Oliver Kahn played for Bayern Munich …

West Africa's last giraffes make surprise comeback

A crisp African dawn is breaking overhead, and Zibo Mounkaila is on the back of a pickup truck bounding across a sparse landscape of rocky orange soil.

The tallest animals on earth are here, the guide says, somewhere amid the scant green bush on one side, and the thatched dome villages on the other.

They're here, but by all accounts, they shouldn't be.

A hundred years ago, West Africa's last giraffes numbered in the thousands and their habitat stretched from Senegal's Atlantic Ocean coast to Chad, in the heart of the continent. By the dawn of the 21st century, their world had shrunk to a tiny zone southeast of the capital, Niamey, stretching barely …

It puts you in a slaphappy state

K.K., a Chicago reader, writes:

"The current advertising slogan of Illinois is: `Illinois. AMillion Miles From Monday.' I heard this on the car radio today andalmost ran over a Streetwise salesman, I got so befuddled trying tofigure it out. Just what does this slogan mean?"

A call was placed."Illinois Bureau of Tourism."Your new slogan. What does it mean?"I'm not sure. You'll have to talk to someone else."Thank you."Hello?"Your new slogan. What does it mean?"Let me give you to someone else."Thank you."Hello?"Your new slogan. What does it mean?"Oh. What it means is that because Illinois is located within500 miles of a third of the U.S. population, and …

Lille beats CSKA Moscow 2-0 in Champions League

MOSCOW (AP) — Lille drew level on points with CSKA Moscow in Group B of the Champions League by scoring two second-half goals in a 2-0 win at the Russian club on Tuesday.

Lille went ahead 1-0 in the 49th minute when CSKA defender Vasiliy Berezutsky scored an own goal as he tried to deny Moussa Sow from taking on goalkeeper Vladimir Gabulov in a one-on-one.

Sow made it 2-0 in the …

South Korean president: No older US beef

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak pledged to keep U.S. beef out of South Korea unless Washington agrees to ban meat from older cattle, seeking Thursday to defuse a political crisis sparked by health concerns that has derailed his plan to boost U.S. ties and reinvigorate the economy.

In a nationally televised address, Lee said he will "ensure that the U.S. beef older than 30 months will not be put on our dinner tables as long as the people do not want it." Cattle younger than 30 months is considered less at risk for mad cow disease.

The South Korean leader said he had told Bush during a phone call earlier this month that South Korea "would not be able to import U.S. beef" if its demands were not accepted.

Protests prompted by fears of mad cow disease in American beef grew into broader opposition to Lee's policy agenda, and paralyzed his government, as critics blasted him for failing to heed public opinion and accusing him of pandering to U.S. interests. The protests came to a climax with a candlelight rally last week that drew some 80,000 people.

His comments Thursday came as the top trade officials of the two countries held their latest talks in Washington, where Seoul was seeking to restrict beef shipments to cattle younger than 30 months, which are believed to be less at risk of mad cow disease.

On Friday, the South Korean Foreign Ministry said the two sides "neared a result that can satisfy each other." South Korea will announce details Saturday.

"We have made good progress this week and are close to reaching a mutually agreeable path forward," Gretchen Hamel, a spokeswoman for the U.S. trade representative, said in Washington.

South Korea was the third-largest overseas market for U.S. beef until it suspended imports after the first American case of mad cow disease appeared in December 2003. Restricted imports of U.S. beef reached South Korean supermarkets last year, but shipments were put on hold after banned parts, such as bones, were found in a shipment.

Lee also apologized Thursday over his April decision to allow resumed imports of American beef _ made just hours before he met President Bush in Washington _ saying he thought it would help passage of a broader free-trade deal with the United States.

"I and the government are deeply sorry" for not caring about what the people wanted, he said.

It was Lee's second apology in less than a month over the beef debacle, which has forced all of his top aides and the entire Cabinet to offer to resign and led to weeks of protests. Lee, a former Hyundai CEO and Seoul mayor, took office in February after a landslide election win last year but has seen his popularity plummet over the beef issue.

With the global economy slowing, Lee said he had viewed the U.S.-South Korea free-trade agreement as a "shortcut" to fulfill his campaign promise to boost the South's economy. "I did not want to miss this golden opportunity," he said.

But "there was no possibility of ratification" this year of the free-trade deal if South Korea continued to reject American beef, he said. The free-trade agreement has been approved by both governments but awaits legislative approval in Seoul and Washington.

Lee, a conservative from the Grand National Party, also said he wanted to improve relations with the U.S. to help the country's security, citing the nuclear threat from North Korea. Ties between the longtime allies had become strained during a decade of liberal governments in Seoul.

The scale of the protest rallies against the deal has markedly dropped since last week as the government began seeking to limit the import deal. Only 800 people turned out for the daily candlelight vigil Wednesday, police said.

Protest organizers said they would keep rallying against the beef deal until Lee announces a complete renegotiation of the accord.

"The president virtually rejected calls for a renegotiating so we can't help but continue candlelight resistance," said Jang Dae-hyun, a spokesman for a coalition of civic groups that have spearheaded the demonstration.

Scientists believe mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, spreads when farmers feed cattle recycled meat and bones from infected animals. In humans, eating meat products contaminated with the illness is linked to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare and fatal malady.

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

HAWKS BITS

Not all the streaks are gone. The Hawks are winless in 15straight road games (0-14-1) and have lost 12 straight road games.And they have a two-game trip this week, both against Norris Divisionoppoonents, Wednesday night at Minnesota and Saturday night atToronto. By that time, they will have played 20 of their first 32games on the road. The Hawks are 9-2-1 at home, 2-15-1 on the road. Something else the Hawks couldn't shake: They are still last in theNorris Division, a point behind the fourth-place St. Louis Blues.They have played two more games than the Blues. Goaltender Darren Pang, who made 30 saves, is 4-0-0 at the Stadium."I'm definitely a homer," he said. The Hawks beat Toronto for the first time this season. The Leafswon 7-5 Oct. 8 at the Stadium, and 6-5 Oct. 31 at the Stadium. The Hawks outshot the Leafs 34-31, including 17-8 in the firstperiod. They were 1-for-7 on the power play, holding Toronto0-for-7. The official attendance was 17,472 but there were plenty ofno-shows.

Home Depot Among Wall Street Big Movers

NEW YORK - Stocks that were moving substantially or trading heavily Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market:

NYSE

Home Depot Inc., down $2.09 at $36.22

The home improvement goods retailer said it expects to pay $37 a share in a $10.7 billion stock buyback. That's a little less than half its goal of buying back $22.5 billion in stock, and the price per share is at the low end of the previously announced per-share range of $37 to $42.

Advanced Micro Devices Inc., up 25 cents at $13.25

The chip maker got an upgrade to "Neutral" from "Underperform" from a Credit Suisse analyst, who cited a strong PC market.

NovaStar Financial Inc., down $1.58 at $6.91

The mortgage lender announced it was tightening lending, laying off more than 30 percent of its work force, and pulling a $101 million stock offering.

NASDAQ

Leap Wireless International Inc., up $11.78 at $84.28

In a bid valued at about $5.12 billion, MetroPCS Communications Inc. offered $75.05 worth of its own stock for each share of the cell phone service provider.

Yahoo Inc., up $1.22 at $23.95

A Bear Stearns analyst named the Web portal a "Top Pick," citing branding initiatives, takeover and strategic partnership talks, and the company's new advertising monetization platform, Panama.

ASE Test Ltd., up $2.63 at $14.40

The Taiwanese semiconductor testing services company said ASE Inc., which owns a majority of the company, will take the company private by buying the shares it doesn't directly or indirectly own in a transaction valued at about $784 million.

EU to Decide Carbon Emissions Trade Plan

BRUSSELS, Belgium - The EU will tell governments Wednesday if their plans for the next stage of the EU's emission trading scheme will fly or not, in an effort to fireproof a program criticized for giving industry an easy ride last year.

It is expected to criticize some nations for granting too many emissions permits from 2008 to 2012, warning that this may jeopardize a model aiming to cut back on the gases that cause climate change without making industry bleed.

Emissions trading is the cornerstone of an EU push to reduce greenhouse gas releases by 8 percent below 1990 levels by 2012 as it promised under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on climate change.

"The world is basically watching the European continent," the program's EU co-ordinator Peter Zapfel said. "The most critical voices on the Kyoto Protocol like the U.S., Australia who decided not to ratify ... and Canada which has a big gap to close ... they all discuss or they start or they are in fact introducing emissions trading schemes themselves."

The EU scheme is the world's largest so far, worth 7.2 billion euros ($9.44 billion) last year when it traded 362 million tons of carbon. It has already exceeded both those values and volumes during the first six months of 2006.

"It has to be and will be the nucleus of an international carbon market," Zapfel said.

Starting last year, companies that produce large amounts of carbon dioxide can trade allocations for how much they can release. The aim is to give them a financial incentive to cut back.

But putting a price on carbon has not been a glorious success so far - even though the European Commission stresses that the program is in its early days and everyone involved is still learning what works and what doesn't.

What definitely doesn't work is supplying too many credits because there is no incentive for companies to reduce emissions.

"The key point there is the emissions trading market will only work - in the economic sense that it helps reach Kyoto targets at least cost and in an environmental sense that it actually reduces emissions - if we have scarcity in the market," Zapfel said.

Last year, there was a large surplus of permits. Environmentalists blamed governments for handing out too many. Germany reported the largest surplus of emissions credits, after producing 21.4 million tons, or 4.3 percent less in emissions than its average annual cap allowed.

When news of a surplus broke last May, the price of carbon went into a nose dive, falling from over 30 euros ($39.34) a ton to under 10 euros ($13.11) a ton in three days.

Zapfel said the EU did not have a target price for carbon in mind, saying public authorities had no role to set prices.

Allocations are fixed once they are granted, making Wednesday's decision the EU's only real chance to demand changes. "Governments cannot go back and say we want to give more or fewer allowances," he said.

To prepare for the next stage, nations have to decide how many allocations they will give out and who gets them, balancing the needs of different sectors from heavy carbon polluters such as power plants to steel makers and paper factories. It can give away at least 90 percent free of charge and auction up to 10 percent.

On Wednesday, the EU will say what it thinks about 11 national allocation plans from Britain, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Slovakia and Sweden.

It has received another eight that it still has to assess and says it knows that another five are at a draft stage - including one from Spain which has the most ground to make up toward the Kyoto target. But Denmark has so far failed to hand one in and risks court action, Zapfel said.

"Basically our planet is getting warmer," he said. "What we are all concerned about is both balancing the economic cost of reducing our emissions ... with the economic costs that we would have to adapt to with a warmer climate."

The EU is already laying plans for the program's third stage starting 2013, saying it wants to bring in more gases and sectors. Separately, it is planning to draw in airlines at a yet-to-be-decided date.

Moorer's 19 lead Virginia past High Point

Ariana Moorer scored 19 points in her collegiate debut, Monica Wright added 16 and No. 15 Virginia got double-figure scoring from three others Friday night in a 78-48 victory against High Point.

The Cavaliers (1-0), tuning up for a game on Monday at No. 7 Tennessee and then a visit to No. 25 state rival Old Dominion four days later, led 34-19 despite shooting under 27 percent in the first half and dominated the Panthers of the Big South throughout.

High Point (0-1) got 12 points each from Jurica Hargraves and Mackenzie Maier, but the Panthers committed 37 turnovers and were outrebounded 52-34. Virginia had 27 offensive rebounds and turned them in 21 second-chance points, while the Panthers had no putbacks.

Message from the president/Message de la présidente

A business perspective

The practice of health care has been, for several years now, tinted with administrative terms which we are not necessarily familiar with because of our initial training in health sciences. How often do we hear of evaluation of financial trends, departmental reorganization, importability effective and efficient management, and much more? The practice of nephrology care must now include these terms in order to remain effective in the delivery of care to an increasing patient population.

Our association, like many nonprofit organizations, is aware and continues to be attentive to this phenomenon. The survival of CANNT depends on effective management by its board of directors, the recruitment and retention of its members, the partnerships with the members from the industry, and an image that reflects us as a Canadian reference in nephrology.

With this intention in mind, the board of directors has developed a strategic plan. This plan constitutes a "care map" that will ensure the development and the viability of the association while ensuring its mission. The broad outline of the plan is communication, service to the members and development of it's professional practice.

Already, the plan is starting to blossom. Among other things, the renewal of website at www.cannt.ca reflects the vitality and the dynamism of an association in full growth. Statistical data (2000-2004) show that retention of the members is marked by a rate of 82%, twinned with an increase of 24.2% of new members. The increased numbers of unit liaisons in several units across the country also contributes to this development. Consider these professional colleagues as a bond with the association and also as a source of support and an undeniable wealth of information in your practice.

Moreover, the popularity of the national symposium means that the board of directors must be attentive to the operational needs for such an activity at the time of the selection of its host sites. Congratulations to the Niagara team for exemplary work!

Lastly, these examples show that the association and its membership continue to strive towards excellence by leadership and innovation in the practice of nephrology care. The official launch of the strategic plan 2004-2007 is only the beginning and is the tool of reference to ensure we attain these goals. We are definitively turned towards the future!

Chantal Saumure, RN, BSN, MBA, CANNT President

Message de la pr�sidente

Perspective de gestion

La pratique des soins de sant� est depuis, plusieurs ann�es maintenant, teint� de terme administratif qui bien souvent ne font pas parti du jargon familier des sciences de la sant�. Combien souvent entendons nous, �valuation des tendances financi�re, restructuration des services, imputabilit�, gestion efficace et efficiente, et j'en passe. La pratique en n�phrologie doit maintenant compos�e avec ces termes afin de demeurer efficace dans la livraison des soins � une client�le de plus en plus omnipr�sente.

Notre association, comme bien d'autre organisation � but non lucratif, est aussi aux prises par ce virement administratif. La survie de l'ACITN d�pend d'une gestion des ressources efficace par son conseil d'administration, du recrutement de la r�tention de ses membres, des partenariats avec les membres de l'industrie ainsi que de l'image qu'elle projette � titre d'association de r�f�rence canadienne en n�phrologie.

Pour ce faire, l'�quipe de gestion a d�velopp�e un plan strat�gique. Ce dernier constitue une feuille de route permettant le d�veloppement continu et la viabilit� de l'association tout en assurant sa mission. Les grandes lignes du plan sont la communication, le service aux membres et le d�veloppement de la pratique professionnelle.

D�j� le plan porte fruits. Entre autre, le renouvellement du site internet; www.cannt.ca refl�te la vitalit� et le dynamisme d'une association en pleine croissance. Les donn�es statistiques (2000-2004) d�montrent que la r�tention des membres est marqu� par un taux de 82%, jumel� � une augmentation de 24.2% de nouveaux membres. Lajout de membres de liaison dans plusieurs unit�s aux pays a aussi contri bue � ce d�veloppement. Consid�rez ces personnes ressources votre lien avec l'association en plus d'�tre une source de support et une mine d'information incontestable dans votre pratique.

De plus, la popularit� du symposium national fait en sorte que nous devons �tre attentif aux besoins op�rationnels d'une telle activit� lors de la s�lection des sites h�tes. F�licitations � l'�quipe de Niagara pour un travail exemplaire!

Enfin, ces quelques exemples d�montrent que l'association ainsi que ces membres continuent de poursuivre le d�veloppement de notre association tout en faisant preuve de leadership et d'innovation dans la pratique de soins n�phrologiques. Le lancement du plan strat�gique 2004-2007 est l'outil par excellence pour atteindre ces objectifs. Nous sommes d�finitivement tourn� vers l'avenir!

Chantal Saumure, Inf., Bacc. Sc.lnf., MBA Pr�sidente de I'ACITN

Jimmy Guilford celebrates 90th

Jimmy Guilford celebrates 90th

Ever the debonair man about town, the astonishing Jimmy Guilford celebrated his 90th birthday (that's right, 90th!) with a party at Scullers Jazz Club, Oct. 6.

Sixty or so of his friends and family, including his equally amazing 88-year-old sister, the elegantly attired and lively Agatha Howard, toasted the dapper nonagenarian throughout a gala time. Younger guests may have wearied, but the honorees began celebrating at seven in the evening and went on into the wee hours.

Guilford was a great pal of jazz maestro Duke Ellington who also sparkled at the thought of a good time.

The evening at the sleek Double-tree Guest Suites Hotel began with a reception and sit down dinner in a room next to Scullers. Every so often, when there was a tiny pause in the bubbling conversation, you could tune into melodic phrases from the wonderfully accomplished John Andrews Ross at the piano. And now and again, his sister Paula Ross got our attention for a special moment such as when president of the Boston City Council Charles Yancey appeared with a proclamation giving official notice that the city applauded James E. Guilford, Jr.'s 90th.

At eight, the Guilford party filed into the nightclub to hear from the acknowledged creme de la creme of the cabaret scene, singer/pianist Bobby Short.

In manner and at first glance, you'd guess he's the epitome of how life is spent on Easy Street. Mr. Short looks as if he has put his martini down just for the moment at the urging of his idle rich pals who are pleading that he play a tune or two as the yacht rocks gently at the mooring.

He got you there, because Bobby Short is far, far removed from a doodler. This night, with Jimmy Guilford patting his foot at the stage center front row table, Bobby Short and his energetic, eight piece, bright and brassy jazz band swing handsomely. The man with the mega smile, Mr. Short himself, leads the charge. Between you and me, he seemed turned on playing to a houseful of mostly African Americans, reputedly a change of pace for the reigning ruler of N.Y.'s Cafe Carlyle supper club.

Bobby Short has diction to die for. It's ideal for the witty repertoire of Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Rogers & Hart and others of that show tune upper echelon. Moreover, Short's fished through their songbooks with a finely meshed net bringing up tunes long overlooked by everyone but the composers's heirs.

The mix of the fondly remembered with the rarely heard keeps Short's program fresh. At Scullers some of the songs that elicited sighs of pleasure and rousing applause included "Taking A Chance on Love" from the Broadway show "Cabin in the Sky" that starred Ethel Merman, "We're in the Money" from "Golddiggers of 1933," and "Sand in my Shoes" which he notes was "a big hit in Boston only because the radio disc jockey Bill Marlowe liked it so well."

Short, himself a vital 74, as he took in the array of platinum dudes and silver foxes in the audience, quipped, "anyone who doesn't know who Cole Porter is, you are obviously at the wrong party."

Mid set, Short, who's had a large turnout over the three nights he's been at Scullers, stepped into the audience to embrace Jimmy Guilford.

At the show's conclusion Jimmy returns the compliment by giving Bobby Short a Standing "O" (as does the entire packed house).

Now the Guilford party moves on for champagne and birthday cake. The large reception hall has been remade into an art gallery with a nice selection of Guilford's prints, pastels, charcoals, and oils (including two nifty landscapes of Franklin Park) decorating the walls. As a party favor, Jimmy gives every guest a print of his very lifelike portrait of Martin Luther King, Jr. There's more of John Ross's piano playing with Barbara Rucker coming to the mike for a bluesy rendition of Nat King Cole's "Nature Boy."

A Bostonian all his life, Jimmy Guilford, born Oct. 7, 1911, got his first job at 12 years old as an apprentice to barber Robert Gordon of the Progressive Barbershop at 724 Shawmut Ave. Guilford, who was a student at Boston Latin, would later open his own barbershop in 1934 at 810 Tremont St. His sister Agatha, with whom he shared birthday honors, entered the education field completing her career as principal of the Mattahunt School in Mattapan.

They were surrounded on the splendid occasion by a bevy of relatives. There was his nephew Richard and his wife Cheryl Guilford, cousin Wilfred with Melinda Johns, his daughter Jeanne Eason and her daughter Lena Eason and her son Bryent Eason-Johnson. Jimmy's son James E. Guilford, III was there with Deniaque LaBaptiste and grandson James E. Guilford, IV. Cousins Alton and Joyce Reed were up from Virginia and nephew Allen Furey came in from Washington, D.C. There too was Jimmy's ex wife Maryalice Guilford, a dear friend.

Boston Black Artists Association president Rebecca Hill gave Jimmy a framed tribute from the BBAA which he has belonged to since he took up painting after retiring from barbering. Other artists at the party included Milton Derr, Frank Morris, and Linda Clave, who was Jimmy's first art teacher. Mr. Guilford reminisced that at the time she had a studio across from his barbershop at 832-834-836 Tremont St. in Lower Roxbury. Other careers on Mr. Guilford's resume include bail bondsman and booking agent for entertainers. He served in the military in World War II, earning a Purple Heart.

Other friends attending were a contingent from New York of Brenda Turner, Estelle Robinson, Maurice Callendar, and Edna Williams. A cluster of Nubian Notion people were there reminding Jimmy of his friendship with the late Malik Abu Abdul Khallaq that began in the '40s. Representing that family were Mrs. Eva Khallaq, Mr. and Mrs. Abu Abdul Khallaq, and Sharif Abu Abdul Khallaq. There also was Eleanor Walcott, whose father founded Wally's jazz club and who has been friends with Jimmy since they were teenagers. So too was Marian Spencer, formerly the head nurse at Jewish Memorial Hospital and a retired professor from Boston University School of Medicine.

Other notables included Mildred Otway, a vibrant 88, retired Judge Harry Elam and his wife Barbara, a retired Boston Public Library librarian, as well

Photo (Jimmy Guilford)

Cowboys TE Witten has rib injury

Cowboys tight end Jason Witten was knocked out of Sunday's game because of a rib injury, though he's hopeful that it is not bad enough to keep him from missing a game.

"I took a shot. It doesn't feel good right now, obviously," Witten said after the Cowboys' 13-9 victory over Tampa Bay. "I'm hoping for the best and hopefully get back to it next week,"

After Witten was hurt at the end of the first quarter, it was announced that he had bruised ribs. But the four-time Pro Bowl tight end said after the game that he planned to get some tests to "find out what it is. I don't know."

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said cornerback Anthony Henry, who left in the third quarter with a bruised thigh, would be doubtful for next week's road game against the rival New York Giants.

The only notable injury for the Buccaneers was safety Jermaine Phillips, who left with an arm injury.

"I'm worried about him," coach Jon Gruden said, without elaborating about the type or extent of Phillips' injury.

With the Cowboys already playing without Pro Bowl quarterback Tony Romo (broken pinkie on throwing hand), Witten got hurt on one of the last two plays of the first quarter, either his 8-yard catch or blocking on a running play.

"I didn't feel it until the next play, so I don't know if it was during that next blocking play or it was during the catch," Witten said.

Teams trainers looked at him on the sideline before taking him into the locker room. X-rays were negative, and Witten returned the sideline before halftime, though he went back into the locker room before the 2-minute warning.

Witten got back on the field for the Cowboys' first play after halftime, lined up as a fullback. He took part in several plays that series, but didn't play again after that.

"I tried to doctor it up a little bit at halftime and come out, but just didn't have it in me," Witten said. "I've just got to fight through and hopefully get back to it next week."

In the Cowboys home opener against Philadelphia, Witten left midway through the second quarter with a separated shoulder. He took a shot to kill the pain, caught a long pass to set up a field goal just before halftime, and had another big catch that set up the winning score in a 41-37 victory.

Car Plows Into D.C. Festival, 35 Injured

WASHINGTON - A woman sped through a crowded street festival Saturday night, injuring about 35 people including two police officers who drove their motor scooters into the path attempting to stop the driver, authorities said.

The injured, including at least seven critically, were taken to area hospitals, said Alan Etter, a spokesman for the District of Columbia fire department.

Etter said authorities believe the driver was going about 70 mph when she came through the Unifest festival at about 8 p.m. The woman fled the scene and was caught about a block away, he said.

Police identified the driver as Tanya Bell, 35, of Oxon Hill, Md. They said there was a 7- or 8-year-old child in the car with her.

"We're still trying to piece together exactly just what happened that led up to this," District of Columbia Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier said at the scene.

Monday, 12 March 2012

Drug might help some compulsive shoppers

The annual rush to the mall is just part of the holidays for mostpeople, but for those who suffer from a serious compulsive shoppingdisorder all year, an anti-depressant drug is showing promise,researchers reported Monday.

Although it's classified as an impulse-control disorder,compulsive shopping (actually compulsive buying) has often beenassociated with depression.

"This chronic impulse, often used to relieve feelings of anxietyand depression in a patient, can be difficult to treat," said Dr.Lorrin Koran, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences atStanford University Medical School who's heading an ongoing study ofthe drug.

The disorder is marked by preoccupation with purchasing unneededitems to an extent that it causes distress, social or occupationalimpairment or financial problems, with many sufferers running up hugecredit card debt, taking out second mortgages on homes or divorcing aspouse.

Estimates of the extent of the disorder range from 2 percent to 8percent of the adult U.S. population, with women making up more than90 percent of the sufferers.

A preliminary test of the drug Citalopram, brand name Celexa, in19 women and two men showed that 80 percent of those taking it had apositive response, based on scores from two standardized measures ofcompulsive behavior taken before and during the 12-week study, whichwas sponsored by the manufacturer of the drug, Forest Laboratories.

"They reported feeling less anxiety, less depression, lessimpulsiveness," said Koran, who also heads the Obsessive-CompulsiveDisorder Clinic at Stanford. "The women in the study reported theystopped thinking about shopping."

The researchers suspect the drug works to reduce the compulsivebehavior much as it does for depression-by selectively inhibiting theuptake of the mood-altering brain chemical serotonin.

The test results were presented by Dr. Kim Bullock, a member ofthe team, during a meeting of the American College ofNeuropsychopharmacology in Puerto Rico.

The 'Jackass' machine keeps rolling

The men of "Jackass" need to keep working. And if those jobs could involve less chance of spinal cord injury then so much the better. And to that end, Johnny Knoxville has a couple of new projects lined up. The first one, called "First Man," is a script about a rowdy hellraiser whose wife is elected president. His response? Goofy post-adolescent (OK, more like creeping middle-age) rebellion. And after that Knoxville is planning to re-team with "Jackass" colleagues Bam Margera and Ryan Dunn for a crime comedy called "Mustache Riders." It'll co-star Willie Nelson as a veteran outlaw who leads three small-time crooks on a buried treasure hunt and will, in keeping with the three "actors'" abilities, provide them with the opportunity to do their own stunts. Now, it's presumed that none of those stunts will involve two naked men being superglued to one another like in "Jackass 3D," but you never know. Don't underestimate these guys and their love of the gay-adjacent scenario.

Is global warming forcing lobsters north?

FRIENDSHIP, Maine -- It's summer on Maine's coast, but thismorning, Philip Bramhall pulls on a hooded fleece shell with hisrubber overalls to heave 50-pound lobster traps around his boat'sdeck.

He doesn't mind the early chill and wet fog. Lobsters like cold,and Bramhall likes lobsters.

Maine's lobstermen have been hauling up phenomenal numbers foralmost 15 years. Their 62.3 million pounds in 2002 set a record --triple the typical catch in the 1980s. That's more than $200 millionworth of lobster and by far the dominant share of the Northeast'smost valuable fishery. But can it last?

Starting in the late 1990s, in the southern reaches of its near-shore commercial range, the big-clawed American lobster has beenwithering at an alarming rate from New York state to Massachusetts.Signs of decline have crept as far north as the southern Gulf ofMaine, the edge of the country's lobster mother lode.

Finding an explanation has been a problem. Government biologistshave said the lobster is overfished off the Northeast, but thatdoesn't account for Maine's extravagant abundance. Researchers haveblamed the trouble on diseases, pollutants and predators. But thatfails to explain any larger pattern.

In recent months, however, a scientific consensus has begun tocongeal. It centers on global warming. The theory holds that warmingis already killing off the American lobster in its southern near-shore range, where it lives near its heat tolerance. In Maine, whereit is well within its comfort zone, more warmth -- up to a point --may be making it proliferate.

If temperatures rise too high, though, even Maine may ultimatelyturn less hospitable to lobster, some researchers say. Last year'sstate catch fell back almost 14 percent, to 53.9 million pounds.

For the five years ending in 2002, the surface waters off Bostonwere more than 2 degrees warmer than their historical averages,according to government data. In recent summers, some waters offsouthern New England have warmed into the low 70s, the upper limit ofwhat lobsters can tolerate, researchers say.

This spring, about 60 lobster researchers brainstormed in Groton,Conn. They agreed that, perhaps more than any other single factor,warming water seems to account for the lobster's decline, severalparticipants say.

"We're hoping our cold water will keep it to the south because somuch of our economy is dependent on lobstering," says Pat White, CEOof the Maine Lobstermen's Association and an overseer of the fisheryfor a committee of northeastern states. "If it hit us, it'd be adisaster."

AP

Schwarzenegger to share special election spotlight: Warren Beatty and Rob Reiner oppose GOP governor's agenda

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will share thespecial election spotlight this week with a couple of Hollywoodcounterparts from the opposite side of the political fence.

Warren Beatty and Rob Reiner are working with groups opposing theRepublican governor's agenda to campaign against his initiatives.Both are actors and directors who have long supported Democraticcauses.

Beatty, an outspoken critic of the governor, has taped a radio adfor the California Nurses Association that calls on voters to turnout next week and turn down Schwarzenegger's "year of reform"initiatives.

Reiner, meanwhile, will staff a phone bank in Los Angeles onWednesday evening in an effort to convince voters to vote againstProposition 75, an initiative that seeks to reduce the money publicemployee labor unions can raise for political purposes.

He will be joined by other members of the American Federation ofTelevision and Radio Artists, said Chad Griffin, Reiner's politicalconsultant.

Schwarzenegger is promoting the union dues measure and three otherinitiatives on the Nov. 8 ballot: one that lengthens the probationaryterm for new teachers, one that imposes a cap on state spending andgives the governor authority to cut funding without legislativeapproval, and one that gives authority for drawing legislative andcongressional districts to a panel of retired judges.

Beatty said he believes the special election has been orchestratedso most voters will not participate and give Republicans a betterchance of passing their agenda.

"To me, it's a misuse of the initiative process," Beatty told TheAssociated Press on Tuesday.

In a campaign appearance last month, Reiner said the union duesmeasure was designed specifically to stifle political speech ofunionized workers.

Schwarzenegger defended the initiative Tuesday on a San Diegoradio program, saying the state's public employee unions have toomuch influence over the Legislature, which is controlled byDemocrats.

"It is wrong for the politicians to go and ask the union bosseswhether to make a move or not," the governor said.

California voters are inclined to oppose all four ballot measuressupported by Schwarzenegger, according to a pair of special electionpolls released Tuesday.

The Field Poll was the second in a week to show momentum movingagainst Schwarzenegger and his four "year of reform" measures. Itsfindings were largely echoed in another poll, released a few hourslater by the Los Angeles Times.

That survey found none of the governor's proposals holding amajority among those likely to go to the polls next week.

FREE COUNTRY

FREE COUNTRY: Crisco has put together a nice booklet of favoriterecipes and down-home memories of top country music entertainers. Allit takes is one proof of purchase of a Crisco product and $1.50 forshipping/handling. Visit www.Crisco.com.

DAD & DAUGHTER: Rick Bayless, of Frontera Grill and Topolobampo,teams up with his 13-year-old daughter, Lanie, to do a cooking demoand sign copies of their cookbook, Rick and Lanie's Excellent KitchenAdventures, at 1 p.m. Saturday at Marshall Field's, 111 N. State.

DEEP FREEZE: Finding quality fresh vegetables at this time of yearcan be a challenge. Don't despair. Instead, put frozen vegetables towork. Today the Dinner Doctor shows how to take frozen peas to newheights. See Page 3.