четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Bed-makers, non-makers face challenge of change

You can switch hair colors, you can switch beers, you can switchspouses. But switch bed-making habits? Not likely.

I know this because I asked a bunch of chronic bed-makers andchronic bed-non-makers to completely switch behaviors for three wholedays.

Here's how the bed-makers fared:"Fared?" laughs Julie, "I failed! I couldn't even leave my bedunmade for one whole day. By 5 o'clock on the first day, I flungopen my bedroom door and made the damn thing. It was such a relief.Even though I wasn't home, the thought of that wad of crumpled,twisted sheets ruined my whole day. I felt grungy, distracted, kindof unworthy. The whole 10 hours felt despicable!""Actually, I …

ECB, Bank of Japan keep wary eye on Fed

LONDON (AP) — The U.S. Federal Reserve is poised to pump more dollars into the U.S. economy, casting a long shadow over imminent decisions by other big central banks wary about what the Fed's move might do to the dollar.

The European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan all hold meetings this week, amid concerns the Fed's monetary injection may send the dollar down against the euro and the yen, potentially holding back exports and harming the shaky recoveries in Europe and Japan.

While Jean-Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank, has voiced his concern about excessively volatile exchange rate shifts, it is the Bank of Japan that is particularly …

Gasol to miss basketball worlds for champs Spain

NBA All-Star center Pau Gasol says he will not help Spain defend its title at the world basketball championship because doctors say he needs a rest.

Gasol, preparing for the NBA finals with the Los Angeles Lakers, says "present circumstances advise against my participation" in the championship in Turkey from Aug. 29-Sept. 12.

In a statement on …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Music for the Revolution: Musicians and Power in Early Soviet Russia

Amy Nelson. Music for the Revolution: Musicians and Power in Early Soviet Russia. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004. xvi, 330 pp. Notes. Glossary. Bibliography. Index. Illustrations. Musical Examples. $45.00, cloth.

The question of the relationship between music and politics has been debated for centuries. The difficulty in precisely defining musical meaning or content has made this relationship more complicated than in most other cultural or artistic realms. This was a problem confronted by the Soviet regime in the years following the revolution. How was such an abstract and non-representational art form to be harnessed to promote the aims of the …

Knowing When to Embrace Open Source; Turning to open-source software for an enterprise resource planning system is a big challenge for most companies - so big they steer clear of it.

Turning to open-source software for an enterprise resource planning system is a big challenge for most companies - so big they steer clear of it.

"No matter how bad their current system is, they feel like they can't afford to change," says Don Ladwig, senior business solutions architect at Idalica, a systems integrator in Oceanside, Calif. "But very often, they can't afford not to, either."

In the right business case, Ladwig says, companies can achieve significant savings through lower development and support costs by moving to open-source software.

Those typical business cases, he says, include first-time ERP adapters such as a midsize business looking to bring …

Bangkok's main airport shut until Dec. 15

The head of Thailand's airports says that Suvarnabhumi international airport will remain closed to passenger flights until at least Dec. 15 due to the disruption caused by anti-government protesters.

Acting director Serirat Prasutanont of the Airports of Thailand says in a statement Tuesday that the …

Low rates send sales of used houses soaring

Sales of existing houses in the first half of 1986 were 12.5 percentahead of the same period last year, the National Association ofRealtors reported.

"With mortgage interest rates down nearly two percentage pointsfrom last year, 1.71 million existing homes changed hands the firstsix months this year, compared with 1.52 million in the same periodlast year," noted Clark E. Wallace, president of the NationalAssociation.

"Affordability conditions during the first six months of thisyear were better than at any other time in this decade, luring manyfamilies into the home buying market. As a result, housing was oneof the few bright spots in the over-all economy," Wallace …

Bush to Reaffirm Commitment to Mideast

WASHINGTON - President Bush is set to renew his commitment to Mideast peace and announce new aid to help the embattled Palestinian president create a viable state that can exist with Israel, administration officials said Sunday.

Bush, taking on a more personal, high-profile role in the conflict, planned to speak Monday at the White House about U.S. financial and diplomatic support for President Mahmoud Abbas. He controls just the West Bank after the Islamic militant group Hamas gained authority in Gaza in June.

"The president sees there is an opportunity there now to show the Palestinian people a choice between the kind of violence and chaos under Hamas in Gaza and the …

Far-right Hungarian party wins 3 EU seats

The Hungarian far-right Jobbik party has won three of 22 seats in European Parliament elections.

The National Election Office says the main center-right opposition party, Fidesz, has won 14 seats, the governing Socialist Party four seats and the Hungarian Democratic Forum, one.

Jobbik describes itself as Euro-skeptic and anti-immigration …

Bodzianowski Aims for Title

Tinley Park cruiserweight Craig Bodzianowski expects to land aWorld Boxing Organization title fight soon.

No. 2 WBO contender Tyrone Booze stopped No. 1 contender DerekAngol for the vacant title recently, which should put No. 3 contenderBodzianowski in line for a mandatory shot at the new champion.

Bodzianowski's manager, Jerry Lenza, is hoping to bring thefight to Chicago. Most of Bodzianowski's recent fights have been inEurope.

O'GRADY ON VIDEO: Former lightweight champion and current USAboxing analyst Sean O'Grady will be in Chicago today to promote hisnew video "Boxercise" at the National Sporting Goods Associationmeeting at McCormick Place.

Tour Down Under results

ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) — Results on Sunday from the 90 kilometer (56 mile) sixth and final stage of the Tour Down Under, over 20 laps of the Adelaide street circuit:

1. Andre Greipel, Germany, Lotto-Belisol, 1 hour, 56 minutes, 48 seconds.

2. Mark Renshaw, Australia, Rabobank, same time.

3. Alessandro Petacchi Italy, Lampre, same time.

4. Yauheni Hutarovich, Belarus, FDJ-Big Mat, same time.

5. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Movistar, same time.

6. Edvald Boasson Hagen, Norway, Sky Procycling, same time.

7. Romain Feillu, France, Vaconsoleil-DCM, same time.

8. Jonathan Cantwell, Australia, Saxo Bank, same time.

9. Fabio Sabatini, Italy, …

UN urges money to fight poverty, not for arms

The U.N. Security Council on Wednesday urged all countries to devote as much money as possible to fighting poverty and limit military spending to the lowest level to ensure security.

The statement was read at the end of a day-long open meeting organized by Costa Rica, which holds the council's rotating presidency this month. It said the council "remains convinced of the necessity to strengthen international peace and security through ... disarmament, non-proliferation and arms control."

Costa Rica's President Oscar Arias Sanchez, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987, said Article 26 of the U.N. Charter calls for the council to formulate plans to …

Bahrain's king orders end to emergency law

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Bahrain's king set a fast-track timetable to end martial law-style rule Sunday in a bid to display confidence that authorities have smothered a pro-reform uprising even as rights groups denounced the hard-line measures.

The announcement to lift emergency rule two-weeks early on June 1 came just hours after the start of a closed-door trial accusing activists of plotting to overthrow the Gulf state's rulers.

The decision appears part of Bahrain's aggressive international campaign to reassure financial markets and win back high-profile events. They include the coveted Formula One grand prix that was canceled in March amid deadly clashes and protests by the country's majority Shiites, who are seeking greater rights and freedoms.

But the massive crackdown has come at a high price in the strategic island nation, which hosts the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.

At least 30 people have been killed since the protests began in February, inspired by revolts against autocratic leaders in Tunisia and Egypt. But tiny Bahrain also carries a volatile demographic mix. Shiites account for about 70 percent of the population, but claim widespread discrimination and are denied top posts in the government and security forces.

Tensions in the Gulf have soared between Shiite power Iran and the Sunni Arab rulers backing Bahrain. Iran has sharply condemned the three-month emergency rule imposed March 15 just as a 1,500-strong Saudi-led force arrived in Bahrain to support the monarchy. Gulf leaders, in turn, have strongly warned Iran to halt meddling in their affairs.

Meanwhile, watchdog groups — including the top U.N. rights agency — have accused Bahraini authorities of overstepping their bounds with closed-door trials and mass detentions of hundreds of protesters, activists and others. A major America labor organization, the AFL-CIO, is asking Washington to withdraw from a free-trade pact with Bahrain as punishment for pressuring Shiite-led unions.

U.S. official have tried to straddle two objectives: rapping Bahrain's leaders for violence and urging for reforms, but making sure there are no serious cracks in one of Washington's most important military alliance in the Gulf.

The declaration to remove the emergency rule gave no details of what would take its place, including whether the nighttime curfew would end or if the numerous checkpoints would be dismantled. Last month, Bahrain's foreign minister said the Saudi-led reinforcements would remain as long as there are perceived threats from Iran.

The latest indication of Bahrain's Iran worries came Sunday when 21 opposition leaders and political activists went on trial in a special security court set up under the emergency rule, which gives the military sweeping powers.

The suspects — 14 in custody and the others charged in absentia — are accused of attempting to overthrow the 200-year-old Sunni dynasty and having links to "a terrorist organization abroad working for a foreign country." No additional details were made public, but Bahrain's leaders have claimed that Lebanon's Iranian-backed Shiite militant group Hezbollah is involved in Bahrain's protests.

Lawyers for those in custody entered not guilty pleas. Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, said the closed-door proceedings violated international standards for a fair trial.

Late last month, the security court sentenced four protesters to death for killing two policemen in the unrest. Three other opposition supporters were convicted as accomplices in the murders and were sentenced to life in prison.

Among those charged on Sunday are senior Shiite opposition leaders such as Hassan Mushaima, the leader of Al Haq movement, and some of its senior members including Abdul Jalil al-Singace. Mushaima and al-Singace were among the first political leaders taken into custody after emergency rule was imposed.

Also among the suspects: Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, the kingdom's leading human rights activist; Ibrahim Sharif, a prominent Sunni reform leader, and Ali Abdul Emam, a blogger and founder of a popular discussion forum known as Bahrain-On-Line. Al-Khawaja was beaten unconscious by police in his house in the outskirts of the capital, Manama, according to relatives who witnessed the raid.

Last week, authorities charged 23 doctors and 24 nurses with participating in illegal rallies or attempts to topple the ruling Al Khalifa family.

Some of the medical staff who treated protesters during the unprecedented political unrest will be tried in the same security court. Only select journalists are allowed to cover the trials after authorities put a gag order on legal proceedings against suspected opposition supporters.

Later this month, three former top editors of Bahrain's main opposition newspaper, Al Wasat, will be tried in a criminal court after authorities accused them of unethical coverage of the protests.

Al Wasat was to shut down Sunday, but the paper's board decided to continue publishing despite a significant drop in circulation and revenue since the three editors were forced to resign in April.

The political turmoil forced Bahrain's crown prince, Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, to call off the Bahrain Grand Prix scheduled for March 13.

Last week, Formula One's governing body gave Bahrain until June 3 to decide if a new date could be set for this year. The task of persuading F1 overseers may be tough, however.

In an interview posted on the official F1 website, the sport's boss Bernie Ecclestone said officials would need "a guarantee that there won't be any problems" in Bahrain.

"But right now, I don't know how anybody could guarantee that because it might be peaceful now, but who knows in the future," he added.

___

Associated Press writer Barbara Surk contributed to this report.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Impeachment talk targeting gov heats up: 2 Dems

The impeachment drumbeat at the Statehouse grew louder Wednesday, a day after the blockbuster accusation by a former state official that he got his state job after pouring money into Gov. Blagojevich's campaign fund -- including a $25,000 check in an envelope he presented to the governor.

Two House Democrats said discussions on a possible impeachment resolution targeting Blagojevich accelerated after Tuesday's disclosure by Ali Ata, whom the governor appointed to a $127,000-a-year post running the Illinois Finance Authority.

In his surprise guilty plea to federal corruption charges, Ata said he gave two $25,000 campaign contributions to the governor and then got Blagojevich's assurance of landing a state job in which Ata "could make some money." Ata is expected to testify against indicted former Blagojevich fund-raiser Tony Rezko.

State Rep. Jack Franks (D-Woodstock) and Rep. John Fritchey (D-Chicago) said a decision on impeachment could come within two weeks.

"We now find ourselves in a very different environment, where an individual has pled guilty to being a co-conspirator in transactions involving the governor," Fritchey said. "Can state government be effectively led by a governor who is apparently at the center of some very significant allegations of wrongdoing?"

Blagojevich surfaced Wednesday at a Springfield prayer breakfast that was not disclosed by his staff. In an eight-minute speech that can be heard online at suntimes.com, the governor did not address Ata. But, perhaps offering a glimpse into his current mind-set, Blagojevich closed by invoking the lyrics of an obscure, 1950s Hank Williams song, "Men with Broken Hearts."

" 'You never stood in that man's shoes or saw things through his eyes or watched with helpless hands while the heart inside you dies,' " Blagojevich said. " 'So help your brother along the way no matter where he starts because the same God that made you made him too, these men with broken hearts.' "

Thomas' Walkoff HR Lifts A's Over Angels

OAKLAND, Calif. - Frank Thomas hit a walkoff two-run homer for the seventh home run of the game, lifting the Oakland Athletics to a 7-5 victory Thursday night and snapping the Los Angeles Angels' season-best five-game winning streak.

The Big Hurt sent a 3-0 pitch from Scot Shields (4-6) over the wall in left-center for his 19th home run of the year. It was his fourth career walkoff homer and first since Aug. 16, 2003, also against the Angels while with the Chicago White Sox.

Thomas' two RBIs gave him 1,509 for his career, tying him with Mickey Mantle for 43rd place on the all-time list.

Huston Street (2-3) recorded the final out in the top of the ninth for the win as the first-place A's took the opener of this important four-game series between the two teams usually fighting to win the AL West in September. The Angels are the two-time defending division champions, having clinched in Oakland's ballpark both times.

All-Star Vladimir Guerrero homered, drove in the tying run with a seventh-inning double and reached base five times for the Angels, who were coming off a sweep of the Seattle Mariners. Juan Rivera hit a pair of solo home runs and Mike Napoli also had a solo shot for Los Angeles.

Rivera had his second multihomer game this season after also hitting two on Tuesday at Seattle and the fifth of his career. He homered in back-to-back at-bats Thursday.

He homered to center in the second, raising his right fist in the air in celebration after rounding first. That drew boos from the crowd. Guerrero hit a towering shot to left leading off the fourth to tie the game at 2, then Rivera homered for the 10th time this season three batters later and celebrated the same way.

Thomas threw his right hand in the air after his game-winning homer - No. 467 of his career.

Nick Swisher hit a two-run homer in the fourth and scored three times for the A's after missing two games with food poisoning and Dan Johnson also homered. Swisher, who walked in his first two plate appearances, hit an 0-2 pitch from Kelvim Escobar over the left-field fence for his 20th home run of the year.

Johnson hit a solo shot leading off the fourth for his first home run since June 11, a span of 19 games, and Jay Payton added a two-run single for Oakland.

Escobar, who ended a seven-game losing streak spanning eight starts when he beat the Dodgers on July 1, allowed three earned runs and six hits in six innings, struck out three and walked four.

The teams faced off for the first time since May 2, when A's catcher Jason Kendall charged pitcher John Lackey after Lackey threw inside and yelled at him. Both players were ejected and Kendall was suspended four games.

Esteban Loaiza allowed four home runs to match his career high. It was the third time he's allowed four homers and first since April 13, 2004, against Kansas City while with the Chicago White Sox.

Notes:@ Orlando Cabrera reached base safely in his 63rd straight game for the Angels when he singled in the fifth. ... 3B Eric Chavez also was back in the lineup for Oakland after resting his sore forearms Wednesday in the series finale against Detroit. ... Of Payton's 18 RBIs since June 13, 13 of those have either tied the game or put the A's ahead - nine to go ahead.

Aging presidential chopper may force Obama's hand

President Barack Obama may have no choice but to spend billions of taxpayer dollars to buy a new fleet of White House helicopters, defense analysts say.

The existing 19 helicopters built by United Technologies Corp.'s Sikorsky Aircraft are more than 30 years old, and several have broken down on presidential trips. But most worrisome is that the current fleet does not meet the communication and protection needs of the White House, according to military analysts.

Obama on Monday said the helicopter he has now seems "perfectly adequate," adding that he never had one before and didn't see a need for a more costly aircraft, but "maybe I've been deprived and I didn't know it."

"The president's comments are certainly understandable given the level of White House scrutiny regarding the compensation and travel perks for bank executives and auto manufacturers," said Jim McAleese, a Virginia-based defense analyst.

And during an interview Tuesday on CNN's "American Morning," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs reiterated the president's sentiment, saying "we don't need any new helicopters at the White House."

But Loren Thompson, a defense consultant for the Lexington Institute in Virginia, disagrees. The current presidential helicopter is "dangerously outdated," he said.

Thompson's clients include Lockheed Martin Corp., the prime contractor on the new helicopters, though he is not working for the company on the program.

Cost overruns and delays have plagued Lockheed's helicopter program due partly to aggressive plans by the Bush administration to incorporate anti-missile defenses, communications equipment, hardened hulls and other advanced capabilities on the aircraft following the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Analysts say those efforts _ which have inflated the cost of the fleet of 28 new Marine One helicopters _ have not been wasted. "You can't lose the president of the United States," McAleese said. "This aircraft only has one purpose and that is to protect the president."

But the new fleet _ with a price tag of $11.2 billion that is nearly double the original budget_ will cost more than Air Force One.

The Navy _ which is in charge of overseeing the helicopter program _ told Congress in January that the program's price tag had soared. That notification triggered a formal process mandating the program be re-certified as a national security requirement by senior Pentagon leadership.

The Navy waited nearly a year before formally disclosing the information to lawmakers as it sought to find ways to keep the program within budget. Those efforts failed.

Part of the review being conducted by the Pentagon will include evaluating every feature of the program and determining what capabilities can be removed to help lower the cost.

Lockheed spokesman Troy Scully reiterated Tuesday that the Bethesda, Maryland-based defense contractor and the Navy are continuing to support the ongoing Pentagon review.

Lockheed's vice president for the presidential helicopter program, Jeff Bantle, said late Tuesday the company has worked diligently with the Navy to find ways to lower costs on the program. He called the Pentagon's review a "healthy process" that would help answer what requirements are essential for the helicopter and at what cost.

Wayne Plucker, a senior aerospace analyst for Frost and Sullivan, said it would be difficult to cancel the entire helicopter program because of the political implications.

But Sen. Carl Levin said the Pentagon "can't just send a boiler plate certification."

"They're going to have to go through the kind of a financial assessment that they do when they start up a weapons system," the chairman of Senate Armed Services Committee told reporters Tuesday.

Levin and Sen. John McCain introduced a bill Tuesday to prevent cost overruns and schedule delays in many Pentagon weapons programs.

Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said as an expensive program that has not gone well, the helicopter purchase will definitely be reviewed.

"We are committed to looking at expensive programs and particularly those programs that are underperforming," Whitman told Pentagon reporters Tuesday. "We're going to look at all of our programs ... and certainly (Marine One) is going to be something that's part of that review."

___

Associated Press writers Anne Flaherty and Pauline Jelinek contributed to this report.

BACTERIA-BASED BIOMASS-TO-ETHANOL PROCESS IS OPTIMIZED

At the World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology and Bioprocessing in Orlando, FL (Apr. 19-22, 2005), Univ. of Florida (UFL; Gainesville; www.ufl.edu) microbiology professor Lonnie Ingram unveiled a new technology that can be used to produce ethanol for about $1.30/gal - genetically engineered E. coli bacteria that convert biomass and other farm wastes into fuel ethanol at yields of 90-95%.

The organisms were created by cloning two genes from Zymomonas mobilis (Z. mobilis) and inserting them into the E coli. "The gene adhB encodes for alcohol dehydrogenase B (ADHB), while pdc encodes for pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC)," explains Ingram. "This replaces the fermentation-acid producing pathways in E coli with the alcohol-producing pathway in Z. mobilis," he adds. PDC converts pyruvic acid, the common intermediate in all sugar metabolism, to carbon dioxide and acetaldehyde. ADH converts the acetaldehyde to ethanol. Like yeast, Z. mobilis is limited in the types of sugars it can metabolize, but is ideal for making ethanol. E coli is able to metabolize all plant sugars, but normally makes a mixture of acids as products. "Our work combined the best of both organisms," says Ingram.

This bioconversion technology, selected by the U.S. Dept. of Commerce to become Landmark Patent No. 5,000,000, is being commercialized with help from the U.S. Dept. of Energy (DOE; Washington, DC; www.doe.gov). BC International Corp. (BCI; Dedham, MA; www.bcintlcorp. com), which holds exclusive rights to use and license the UFL-engineered bacteria, plans to build a 30-million gal/yr biomass-to-ethanol plant in Jennings, LA, based on Ingram's microbial platform. Slated to start up in late 2006, the facility will process wastes from Louisiana's sugarcane industry and produce ethanol for industrial chemical and clean-burning fuel applications, according to Greg LuIi, vice president of research for BC International's laboratory in Alachua, FL. "Other potential feedstocks include rice hulls, forestry and wood wastes," adds Ingram.

"To date, all of the world's fuel ethanol has been produced from high-value materials such as cornstarch and cane syrup using yeast fermentations," says Ingram. "The chemical makeup of biomass prevented it from being used to make ethanol economically, until now. "Ingram underscores the impact of his bioengineering innovation with a report by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture and DOE, which states that more than 1 billion ton/y of biomass can be produced on a sustainable basis. "Converting this to fuel ethanol, now a very real possibility, could replace half of all imported petroleum in the U.S."

Blockbuster blasts investor seeking board seat

Blockbuster Inc. fired back Thursday at activist investor Gregory S. Meyer for trying to take a seat on its board, urging shareholders to vote instead for Blockbuster's own candidate.

Blockbuster told shareholders in a letter that Meyer, "is not qualified to serve on your board and ... if elected, he would pose a significant risk to the future of our company."

The shareholders are to vote on board nominees at Blockbuster's annual meeting June 24. Meyer wants to replace director Gary J. Fernandes, the chairman of a real estate investment company called FLF Investments.

Meyer founded a DVD rental kiosk business in 2001 called DVDXpress and later sold it to Redbox operator Coinstar Inc., which has emerged as a major competitor for Blockbuster. It rents DVDs from vending machines for $1 a night.

Blockbuster's letter said Meyer has not been as successful in the DVD rental business as his credentials might imply. The company pointed out that Meyer is no longer an executive at Coinstar and said that DVDXpress was heavily indebted when he sold it.

Meyer said in an interview that Blockbuster was trying to smear him. He said he has never taken credit for the success of Redbox and finds it "laughable" that Blockbuster would criticize another company for having debt.

Meyer declined to comment on how much debt DVDXpress was carrying when he sold it.

Blockbuster warned investors in March that it may need to file for Chapter 11 protection because of nearly $1 billion in outstanding debt.

Reflecting the risk of default, the company's shares have remained under $1 since last year. They rose less than one-third of a penny, or less than 1 percent, to 34.5 cents in afternoon trading Thursday.

Carlsberg redirects sponsor money from golf to soccer

Carlsberg A/S is moving its sponsorships away from golf and skiing and over to soccer, a company official said Friday.

"We get more value for the money there," sponsorship manager Keld Strudahl said. "When it comes to values, beer fits better with football than golf, for instance. The social element in it is important."

Since the late 1980s, the Copenhagen-based brewery has been sponsoring major international soccer tournaments. The current sponsor of the UEFA Cup is also one of the main commercial contributors to the European Championship, which starts June 7.

Carlsberg had been sponsoring international golf tournaments and events like the Alpine World Ski Championships in Are, Sweden, in February.

However, "we are stopping golf on an international level," Strudahl said.

He declined to disclose the size of Carlsberg's sponsor budget but said no extra funds had been freed to support soccer.

"Resources are being moved around and we will spend more resources on football," Strudahl told The Associated Press.

Carlsberg had bid against Dutch brewer Heineken NV for the Champions League sponsorship.

However, Heineken paid more to UEFA for the three-season sponsorship of Europe's top club competition until 2012, allowing them to sign a deal earlier this month. It was not disclosed how much Heineken will pay.

"We felt it was too expensive," Strudahl said, adding the Danes would be bidding again next time.

Carlsberg's sponsorship includes the Champions League in 1993 and 1994, and the 1990 World Cup.

The brewer supports the national teams of Denmark, England, Ireland, Switzerland and Serbia, and clubs including Liverpool.

Its soccer sponsorship began in the 1970s, when the company became the first financial contributor to Denmark's national team and the then-amateur domestic league. Internationally, the company has supported soccer through sponsorships since 1988.

____

On the Net:

http://www.carlsberggroup.com

Obese mom dies in Romania, 5 months after birth

A 25-year-old Romanian woman who weighed 528 pounds (240 kilograms) when she gave birth to a baby girl more than 5 months ago, has died, media reported Monday.

Relatives of Victoria Lacatus said she died of a heart attack Sunday after developing a high fever and breathing problems.

Doctors from Craiova hospital in southern Romania said Lacatus' heart stopped. Hospital manager Florin Petrescu said doctors tried to resuscitate Lacatus for 30 minutes, a task made difficult because of her extreme obesity.

After she gave birth by cesarean section to a 6.4 pounds (2.9 kilograms) baby girl on Feb. 18, Lacatus gained another 44 pounds (20 kilograms), her sister Cristina Sosoiu told the daily Libertatea. Doctors had told Lacatus to go on a diet but she apparently kept eating, the paper reported.

Her daughter, Anisoara, currently weighs just a little over 9 pounds (4 kilograms), the paper said. She lives with her maternal grandmother. It is not clear why the baby does not live with her father, Costica Lacatus.

Lacatus fell ill with a fever last week and was hospitalized in her home town of Caracal in southern Romania before she was moved to the main regional hospital where she died.

When Lacatus gave birth on Feb. 18, Dr. Daghni Rasasingham, of Britain's Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in London said the case was rare, given the mother's weight and height of 5 feet and 3 inches (1.6 meters).

Rasasingham said she would be at risk of clots, diabetes, post-birth bleeding and infection.

Nicolae Cernea, a doctor from the southern city of Craiova _ where Lacatus was hospitalized for a month before delivery _ said her case was unique in Romania.

In August 2008, a heavier obese woman _ 560-pound (255-kilogram) Leanne Salt _ gave birth to triplets in Britain.

Palestinians resigned to defeat in UN bid

RAMALLAH, West Bank (AP) — Palestinians officials say they are resigned to defeat in their quest for full membership at the United Nations and have resorted to a backup plan.

The officials said they would seek an upgraded observer status that would give them access to key international organizations. They were speaking Wednesday on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue.

Palestinians petitioned the U.N in a unilateral bid for statehood in September. Since then, they have apparently failed to muster the nine votes needed in the 15-member Security Council to approve their membership as a full member state.

The U.S. has already promised to veto the request.

Israel, the U.S. and others say Palestinian statehood should be achieved via negotiations.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Swedes shoot 63 to win World Cup of Golf

Robert Karlsson and Henrik Stenson of Sweden came from behind Sunday for a three-stroke victory in the World Cup of Golf, shooting a remarkable 9-under 63 to overtake third-round co-leaders Spain and Australia.

Miguel Angel Jimenez and Pablo Larrazabal finished with a 70 _ three behind. The Australian pair of Richard Green and Brendan Jones slumped to a 76, nine off the pace of Sweden's winning total of 27-under 261 at Mission Hills in southern China.

Ryuji Imada and Toru Taniguchi (68) of Japan also finished nine shots behind with Martin Kaymer and Alex Cjeka (73) of Germany 11 shots back.

Defending champion Scotland (72) led by Colin Montomgerie finished on 281 _ 20 behind. Americans Ben Curtis and Brandt Snedeker (73) were 13-under 275.

The Swedes started the day four behind Spain, but notched five brides on the front nine to catch their fellow Europeans at 23-under. Playing a group ahead of Spain, Stenson missed a short birdie putt on 10 that would have put them at 24-under.

However, Sweden pulled into the outright lead with birdies on Nos. 11, 12, 14 and 15 to reach 27-under _ four clear of Spain. Stenson missed a 10-footer on No. 13 that would have extended the lead even further.

The key was mastering the difficult foursomes (alternate shot) format, played Friday and Sunday. In foursomes, teams play only one ball and alternate shots. Fourballs (best ball) is easier. Each golfer plays his own ball and counts the best score on each hole.

Sweden shot 67-63-130 playing foursomes and 65-66-131 playing fourball.

The Swedes were the favorites entering the tournament, and had two of only three players in the field ranked in the top 20. Karlsson, who won the European money title this season, is No. 6 and Stenson is 12th. Spain's Jimenez is ranked 20th.

Each of the leading teams seemed to have a hot day _ Germany on Thursday, Spain on Friday and Australia on Saturday.

"I thought it was our turn today," Stenson said.

The victory caps a great season for Karlsson, who won Europe's money title and also had two victories on the European tour. Stenson is winless this season in individual play.

"I'm starting to run out of tournaments," Stenson said. "This is my third last. So I've got two more to go in South Africa. But winning for Sweden in nice. It's been a while."

Australia had bogeys on two of the first six holes and was never in the running for the title.

"Things didn't happen for us early," Jones said. "We were just making little mistakes, which we had not made the first three days. ... It's a different golf course coming from the rough."

The Australians complained earlier in the week that coverage of their play was being ignored back home _ partly because the top two Australians _ Geoff Ogilvy and Adam Scott _ declined invitations to play in the event.

Spain has won the event four times, the last in 1984 with Jose Maria Canizares and Jose Rivero. Sweden's only other victory was in 1991 with Per-Ulrik Johansson and Anders Forsbrand.

All four days were played in perfect, warm conditions with a light breeze stirring through the hilly, tree-lined course designed by two-time Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal. The rolling layout would look familiar anywhere. Only a 100-foot-high stone statue of Guanyin along the 18th fairway _ a Chinese female goddess with Buddhist origins _ suggests the club's location.

The Swedes split $1.7 million in prize money, a big chunk of the $5.5 million purse. Despite the global economic downturn, the purse offered by sponsor Omega was 10 percent above last year.

This year's event was the second of a 12-year contract at Mission Hills, the sprawling golf estate that boasts the world's largest layout with 216 holes.

Dating from 1953, almost every great player has won the event _ Palmer, Nicklaus, Hogan, Snead, Woods and Ballesteros. Though it's still failing to attract a top field, it's being given an economic boost by its sponsor and Mission Hills chairman and founder Dr. David Chu.

Chu has made the top 10 in one magazine's list of the most powerful people in golf.

"Joint Dialogue"

"Joint Dialogue"

OVERDUlN AND KITE

A pervasive sense of slippage - between the personal and professional, between art and life - governed this group exhibition, curated by Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer, that tied together work by Dan Graham, Stephen Kaltenbach, and Lee Lozano. The show's title puns on Dialogue Piece and Grass Piece by Lozano (both 1969, and represented in the show as actual-size facsimiles of notebook pages), two durational, diaristic works that overlapped in execution; but it also points to personal entanglements between Lozano and Graham, and between Kaltenbach and Lozano. Works by the former pair (mostly text based) mingled in one gallery space, and works by the latter pair (including several pieces attributed to "Lee Lozano as remembered by Stephen Kaltenbach") inhabited the other.

From the handwritten notes of Dialogue Piece we learn that Kaltenbach visited Lozano in her loft on May 24 (we trade a lot of our art ideas & Discuss doing a piece together); Graham visited six days later to have an important dialogue in that definite CHANGES WERE IMMEDIATELY EFFECTED BECAUSE OF IT. The exact nature of these changes and the full content of the dialogue remain unknown - at least to the viewer. Like many of Lozano's handwritten pieces, Dialogue Piece is at once revealing and restrained, exposing circumstantial details (personal and potentially embarrassing information about fellow artists who visited her apartment, for example) while largely avoiding the subject matter of the dialogue facilitated by the piece.

Graham's works in the show also share an interest in quasi-scientific (or legalistic) inquiry, even when a hypothesis is seemingly absent. His Income (Outflow) Piece, 1969, presents a typed and hand-annotated scheme for selling stock in "Dan Graham Inc.," in order to pay himself the salary of an "average American citizen" - but also, the work claims to "chang[e] the homeostatic balance of his life (environment) support by re-relating the categories of private sector and public sector" (emphasis Graham's). The radicality of Graham and Lozano's textbased works is not their supposed "dematerialization" but their intensive attempt to erase - or "re-relate" - the perceived boundaries of art and life, typically with a modest sheet of paper as interface.

Kaltenbach's works from the same period - and his manifestations of remembered Lozano pieces - further erode such thresholds. A series of twelve advertisements placed in Artforum in 1968 and 1969, displayed here two to a shelf along a gallery wall, drop instructive phrases such as tell A lie, START A rumor, teach art, and trip without attribution, dates, or context beyond the expectations attendant to the ad section of this periodical. The "Joint Dialogue" installation suggests that these pieces - or is it one cumulative piece, or not a "piece" or "pieces" at all? - might still be operative to anyone reading them in the present.

Dirty Laundry, 1969/2010, is a Lozano work "remembered" by Kaltenbach. (Lozano died in 1999 but had long since withdrawn from the art world.) Presumably evidence of an interpersonal "collaboration" (before or after the "dialogue," one wonders), the unwashed bedsheet, draped and hung on the wall, somewhat humorously recalls the Shroud of Turin, but also opens serious ontological questions: Was the work intended (by Lozano) to be shown in the context of a gallery? If so, did she title it - or did Kaltenbach? Where did this sheet come from? Similar questions arise with Disarticulated Skeleton, ca. 1968/2010, a full human skeleton arranged and rearranged in three different configurations (on its back, in the shape of a mandala, in a rectangular spiral) by the curator over the show's run, following from Kaltenbach's recollection of a skeleton Lozano kept, and manipulated, in her studio.

Perhaps it is more ethically sound to view these as Kaltenbach's works, rather than Lozano's, but the issue of authorship - or its attribution - points to both artists' embrace of open-ended, evolving strategies. Lehrer-Graiwer organized the show with the participation of Graham and Kaltenbach (both of whom reenacted performances during the show's opening); hence her own position, as curator, occasionally appears to overlap that of the artists - or vice versa. Then again, Graham, Kaltenbach, and Lozano's joint commitment to exploding the assumed frame of artworks (exemplified by the synecdochic nature of the word piece: piece of what whole, exactly?) practically demands a curator operating on the slippery slope between conservation and reenactment: Lehrer-Graiwer's own blurring of that boundary facilitates a continuing line of inquiry - and dialogue - initiated by the artists, rather than relegating such questions, conclusively, to history.

- Michael Ned Holte

Sundance honors `Push,' `We Live in Public'

The Sundance Film Festival's prizes for best U.S. drama on Saturday went to "Push," the dark yet hopeful story of a young woman finding her way out of nightmarish circumstances in 1980s Harlem.

Based on the 1996 first novel by the poet Sapphire and directed by Lee Daniels, "Push" won both the grand jury and audience awards. The film version is subtitled "Based on the novel by Sapphire" to distinguish it from the Dakota Fanning-Chris Evans sci-fi thriller due out next month.

The penultimate night of the 11-day festival, the nation's premiere showcase for independent film, was marked by political references and jangled nerves.

Sundance Institute executive director Ken Brecher hoisted an honorary festival pass with the new U.S. president's name on it, and presenter Joseph Gordon-Levitt tugged at his red Barack Obama T-shirt, saying: "These awards are exercises in democracy, and it's a good time for democracy right now."

Gordon-Levitt cheered and gave Daniels a big hug before presenting the audience award to his film, which stars Mo'Nique, Mariah Carey and Paula Patton alongside newcomer Gabourey Sidibe, who plays pregnant 16-year-old Precious Jones.

"This is so important to me because this is speaking for every minority that's in Harlem, that's in Detroit, that's in Watts, that's being abused, that can't read, that's obese and that we turn our back on," Daniels said. "And this is for every gay little boy and girl that's being tortured. If I can do this ... ya'll can do this."

When he picked up the grand jury prize later in the evening, Daniels acknowledged: "I'm drunk. I got like three shots right after we got the last one."

The grand jury prize for U.S. documentary went to "We Live in Public," focusing on little-known Internet pioneer Josh Harris and his failed "lifecasting" art projects in 1999 and 2000. The film was directed by Ondi Timoner, whose "Dig!" won the same award in 2004.

Timoner dedicated the honor to Harris, calling him "the first subject I've ever had that said I don't care how you portray me as long as you make a great film."

Nicholas Jasenovec and Charlyne Yi won the Waldo Salt screenwriting award for "Paper Heart," a hybrid documentary-improv road movie featuring Yi and Michael Cera.

"I feel sick. I'm sweaty. I smell bad," said Yi, a performance artist and comedian best known for a bit part in "Knocked Up" and her relationship with Cera.

She finished by addressing other filmmakers in the audience: "Who knows what'll happen to our films but at least they were seen."

___

On the Net:

http://www.sundance.org

Foreign demand for US Treasury debt declines

WASHINGTON (AP) — Foreign demand for U.S. Treasury debt fell slightly in December after hitting a record high the previous month. A key reason for the drop was that China, the largest holder of Treasury debt, cut its purchases for a third straight month.

Total foreign holdings dipped 0.4 percent in December to $4.73 trillion, the Treasury Department reported Wednesday. It was the first drop in foreign holdings of Treasury debt since July.

China cut its holdings 2.8 percent to $1.1 trillion. Japan, the second-largest buyer of Treasury debt, increased its holdings 0.3 percent to $1.04 trillion.

U.S. government debt is still considered an ultra-safe investment. And it's been in demand as worries about the European debt crisis have intensified.

That demand has remained strong despite the first-ever downgrade of the government's credit rating. Standard & Poor's lowered its rating on long-term Treasury debt one notch from AAA to AA+ last August following a prolonged debate in Congress over increasing the nation's borrowing limit.

The nation's borrowing needs will remain high based on the projections in President Barack Obama's latest budget released Monday. The administration estimated that this year's deficit would total $1.33 trillion, marking the fourth consecutive year that the imbalance has topped $1 trillion. The administration projected that the deficit for 2013 would be $901 billion.

The drop in overall Treasury holdings by foreigners came after four consecutive monthly gains.

Britain, the third-largest foreign holder of Treasury debt, cut its holdings 2.6 percent in December to $414.8 billion. A group of 15 oil exporting countries boosted their holdings 0.6 percent to $233.5 billion.

Smoker is hoping to shrink wrinkles

Q. Smoking for years left me with fine lines and deep wrinkles around my mouth. What moisturizer should I use to decrease them? -- Hrefna

A. Don't expect too much from a moisturizer. It may help soften the appearance of your wrinkles, but nobody's going to wonder secretly whether you've had work done. Even moisturizers packed with the antioxidant vitamins C and E can't undo the damage that years of oxygen deprivation and inflammation from smoke exposure have done. Nor can they reverse the wrinkles created by continually pursing your lips around those burning sticks. If you really want to minimize those grooves, here's what to do:

u Quit smoking! Cigarettes steal a gas called nitric oxide from your arteries. This gas gives skin some of its flexibility, so your looks suffer when it's not around. After you quit, nitric oxide levels will return to normal in your arteries and blood flow to your skin will improve, allowing it to regain some flexibility.

u Get a prescription for tretinoin cream (Retin A). This cream can actually reverse wrinkles, increasing the skin's stretchy fibers, rebuilding some damaged collagen and replenishing the skin's natural moisturizer, hyaluronic acid. No non-Rx moisturizer will do as much.

u Get those wrinkles "filled." An injectable filler -- such as one using hyaluronic acid -- will temporarily plump up the crevices.

To erase the lines permanently, you need a heavy hitter, such as laser resurfacing, which blasts away the top layers of skin. Consult at least two dermatologists who specialize in wrinkle removal before going this costly route, especially if you have dark skin.

Q. I'm 69 and had measles when I was in my 30s. Do I still need to get a shingles vaccination? -- Anonymous

A. Yes, but not for the reasons you think. You've got your diseases mixed up: Painful shingles -- a k a herpes zoster -- can occur years after chicken pox, not measles. Even if you don't remember it, you likely had chicken pox as a kid. It's one of the most common childhood diseases, and most Americans over 40 have had it.

The virus can lie dormant in your body for decades, then reactivate and cause the painful rash known as shingles (unless you've already had it, in which case it's known by a few choice words we can't print here). The onetime shingles or zoster vaccine (Zostavax) won't protect you 100 percent, but will do these things:

- You'll have a 50-50 chance of avoiding shingles altogether.

- If you do have an outbreak, it's likely to be less severe and less painful.

- You're 67 percent less likely to develop post-herpetic neuralgia, a sometimes excruciating complication: The rash goes away, but the pain doesn't.

We recommend the vaccine to anyone over 60 who has a normal immune system. It may be less effective after 69, but you still get some protection. And trust us, you want that protection.

Q. What causes high triglycerides? What can I do to lower them? -- Anonymous

A. Triglycerides have a bad reputation, but these fatty molecules serve a useful purpose: storing energy until you need it. However, like wine, chocolate and other basically good things, too much can do you in. Levels above 150 mg/dL of triglycerides in your blood can thicken the walls of your arteries and increase your risk of heart attack and stroke.

Bringing down your triglycerides to healthy levels calls for some serious waist management. That's because belly fat -- specifically, the apron of fat inside your belly known as the omentum -- is a key player in raising your triglyceride levels (not to mention your cholesterol count and pants size). Your ideal waist size is 32� inches if you're female, 35 if you're male.

What you eat can bring these fats down, too. Serve yourself plenty of fish that are high in omega-3 fatty acids, including mackerel, lake trout, herring and salmon. Cut out sugary, refined foods that spike insulin levels and, in turn, raise triglycerides. And, sorry, but give up alcohol. Even a little sends triglycerides skyward.

Submit questions at RealAge.com. Dr. Oz appears on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" and gives more advice in his podcast at suntimes.com.

Michael Roizen will sign copies of his books at Borders, 830 N. Michigan, from 5-7 p.m. Saturday.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Industry Calendar 2006

JANUARY

9-13: Cambridge Health Institute's 5th Annual Peptalk Protein Information Week Location: hotel Del Coronado, Coronado, CA. Contact: chi@healthtech.com, Tel. 61 7-630-1 300, www.chipeptalk.com.

25-27: The 10th Annual Drug Delivery Partnerships Location: JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort and Spa, Phoenix, AZ. Contact: www.iirusa.com/ drugdeliverypartnerships/.

Jan. 30 - Feb. 1: Phacilitate Cell & Gene Therapy and North American Vaccine Forums 2006 Location: The Baltimore Marriott Waterfront hotel, Baltimore, MD. Contact: David McCaII at david@phacilitate.co.uk, Tel. +44 (O) 20 7839, www.phacilitate.co.uk.

30-31: Bio-Asia Partnering Conference 2006 …

Feng Shui, more than just a moving experience; If you thought feng shui was all about hanging wind-chimes around the house, think again. Abigail Hughes takes a master class in this Chinese art and returns - little the wiser.(News)

Byline: Abigail Hughes

I'M sitting, trying to blend in, right at the back of the class. In front of me, a dozen fully-focused students are frantically scribbling notes and listening intently to their teacher. On an overhead projector at the front of the room is an extremely complicated-looking pie-chart, which everyone is staring and nodding sagely at. Every now and then,I pick up the odd familiar word,like ``ox'', ``snake'' and ``rooster''.

But this is no zoology lesson. Rather, the topic in question is the ancient Chinese practice of feng shui. And it is becoming rapidly obvious that I won't be fooling anyone with my misguided beliefs that there is little more to feng shui than painting your house calming,muted colours and shifting the sofa every couple of months.

In fact, this lecture, held in a Llandudno seafront hotel and headed by Malaysian feng shui supremo,Yap Cheng Hai - otherwise known as the Grand Master - sounds to my untrained ear a bit too much like hard work, involving complex mathematical formulas, never my strongest subject, and a specially crafted Chinese compass to tap into earth's most beneficial energies and avoid the negative ones.Phew!

``We teach classical feng shui, which is entirely different to modern forms,'' explains the 77-year-old Grand Master. ``It is not at all about decoration, rather it uses the earth's energies to benefit us. Using the date and time of an individual's birth, we can calculate which energy directions are best for that person.''

White-haired, suit-wearing Grand Master, who co-founded his Feng Shui Centre of Excellence with Young Master,charming 27-year-old Joey Yap,began studying the art half a century ago.

``My son had been ill for five years and we went from hospital to hospital, but nothing could cure him,''he explains. ``So I read my feng shui book and discovered he was sleeping in the wrong bed, in the wrong room. I moved him and within two months,he was cured. Feng shui was better than the doctor, so I followed feng shui.''

Sleeping and eating right is central to the feng shui belief that a healthy person will think clearer and be blessed with good luck. But this does not simply mean eating five portions of fruit and veg a day and getting your full eight hours kip.

``We turn our beds and ovens to the direction that will benefit us,'' says Joey. ``If you sleep in the wrong direction,over a long period of time you'll get headaches and ill-health as well as sleepless nights and a hot temper. We eat food cooked in the oven,but if this is facing the wrong way, you'llget sick.''

Aileen Penn is proof that followers really do heed this advice. She has travelled from Hampshire for theweek's course and every night, stands before her hotel bed, gripping her feng shui compass and calculating which angle she should sleep at.

Unfortunately for Aileen, every morning the hotel's super efficient cleaners move the bed back to its original position.

``I'm an east group person,'' she says. ``So south, north, east and south-east are good directions for me. If I tap into one of my good directions,I'll sleep better.''

And she's not the only one to benefit from mattress-twisting.

``My baby granddaughter had very bad chest problems, so I worked out her good energy directions and discovered she needed to be turned round in her cot and the cot needed moving a foot because she was sleeping in an area afflicted with negative energy.

``Within days, she improved and hasn't suffered since.''

But Rhuddlan-based feng shui consultant,Jayne Goodrick goes much further. She explains that the home she shares with husband Chris and their three children, will soon be undergoing some serious structural changes.

``I'm having my back door moved 40 degrees,'' she says. ``At the moment it's is facing west, which is OK,but I'm moving it to face south-west which is a fabulous direction for me.'' And while the construction work will cost thousands of pounds,Jayne insists: ``I can't afford not to have it done - I'll get the cost back through the energies coming into the house.''

And that's not all. Because Jayne will also be removing tiles from her roof, leaving a gaping hole - to enable the chi to circulate.

``Energies are changing because we're currently moving from feng shui's Period Seven to Period Eight,'' she says. ``Each period lasts 20 years and it's based on astrology and mathematical formulas because the planet Jupiter takes 180 years to orbit the sun. This is divided into three cycles of 20 years each. ``As we leave one period and enter a new one, there is always turmoil in the world.''

As for the gaping hole in her roof,it will be left there for a fortnight and yes,Jayne is well aware that it could mean soggy carpets and windswept wallpaper. But that's all part of the deal.

``The fabric of the house has to get wet,'' she says. ``I either do this or move house.''

There is some good news, though. According to the Grand Master,North Wales possesses very beneficial chi, thanks to its proximity to the sea and abundance of mountains, providing easy-to-tap- intoenergies. Residents of Llandudno's West Shore are particularly fortunate.

``The Great Orme looks like a dragon's head rising out of the ocean,'' he says. ``The chi remains right at the back of the mountain, so the people who live in that specific area should be happy,healthy and prosperous.

``Many big financial centres of the world are near the sea,like New York, Singapore and Tokyo.''

Jayne, who has studied feng shui for seven years, turned to the classical style after dismissing modern feng shui as little more than hype.

``Someone bought me a book on new age feng shui and I thought it's is too easy if I can read a book and become a master. So I started looking for a master and found Grand Master Yap,'' she says.

Now she believes feng shui helps her avoid potential problems and make the most of good happenings.

``My family still has all the normal problems every family has,but feng shui affects how we come out of the problems. We will stub our toe instead of breaking our neck. Years ago,I had a serious motor bike accident that broke both my legs,but had I done feng shui then, I would have been aware of the potential for an accident at that point in my life and the severity of it would have been reduced.''

And while husband Chris does not actively practice it himself,he is happy to leave Jayne to get on with reordering the family home.

``He has given up putting things down to coincidence and these days does exactly as I ask.''

For a feng shui consultation,contact Jayne on 01745 590410.

Six strategies to feng shui your life

Your home may have charming olde worldy beamed ceilings, but you should ensure you don't sleep beneath a beam - it oppresses the positive energies.

Beware - energy can escape if your staircase faces your front door. If the door is within 10 feet of the stairs, keep it shut and let the chi circulate.

Plants don't do anything for feng shui, so there's no need to live with that rubber plant that's growing out of control.

This year,houses facing south-east may suffer more problems and if you sleep in the south-east of your house, you may want to shift your bed to another room.Similarly, homes facing north may have more sickness this year.

West is definitely best this year and occupants of homes facing west are more likely to strike it rich, so fling open those west facing doors and windows.

If you're working at a desk with your back to the door, make sure it is closed. Otherwise the force of energy is too strong against your back, affecting concentration.

CAPTION(S):

Young Master of feng shui Joey Yap with the Chinese compass; The shi compass; (left) which Jayne Goodrick (right) uses to align the bedroom furniture; Malaysian feng shui supremo, Yap Cheng Hai - otherwise known as the Grand Master Picture: RICHARD WILLIAMS

Feng Shui, more than just a moving experience; If you thought feng shui was all about hanging wind-chimes around the house, think again. Abigail Hughes takes a master class in this Chinese art and returns - little the wiser.(News)

Byline: Abigail Hughes

I'M sitting, trying to blend in, right at the back of the class. In front of me, a dozen fully-focused students are frantically scribbling notes and listening intently to their teacher. On an overhead projector at the front of the room is an extremely complicated-looking pie-chart, which everyone is staring and nodding sagely at. Every now and then,I pick up the odd familiar word,like ``ox'', ``snake'' and ``rooster''.

But this is no zoology lesson. Rather, the topic in question is the ancient Chinese practice of feng shui. And it is becoming rapidly obvious that I won't be fooling anyone with my misguided beliefs that there is little more to feng shui than painting your house calming,muted colours and shifting the sofa every couple of months.

In fact, this lecture, held in a Llandudno seafront hotel and headed by Malaysian feng shui supremo,Yap Cheng Hai - otherwise known as the Grand Master - sounds to my untrained ear a bit too much like hard work, involving complex mathematical formulas, never my strongest subject, and a specially crafted Chinese compass to tap into earth's most beneficial energies and avoid the negative ones.Phew!

``We teach classical feng shui, which is entirely different to modern forms,'' explains the 77-year-old Grand Master. ``It is not at all about decoration, rather it uses the earth's energies to benefit us. Using the date and time of an individual's birth, we can calculate which energy directions are best for that person.''

White-haired, suit-wearing Grand Master, who co-founded his Feng Shui Centre of Excellence with Young Master,charming 27-year-old Joey Yap,began studying the art half a century ago.

``My son had been ill for five years and we went from hospital to hospital, but nothing could cure him,''he explains. ``So I read my feng shui book and discovered he was sleeping in the wrong bed, in the wrong room. I moved him and within two months,he was cured. Feng shui was better than the doctor, so I followed feng shui.''

Sleeping and eating right is central to the feng shui belief that a healthy person will think clearer and be blessed with good luck. But this does not simply mean eating five portions of fruit and veg a day and getting your full eight hours kip.

``We turn our beds and ovens to the direction that will benefit us,'' says Joey. ``If you sleep in the wrong direction,over a long period of time you'll get headaches and ill-health as well as sleepless nights and a hot temper. We eat food cooked in the oven,but if this is facing the wrong way, you'llget sick.''

Aileen Penn is proof that followers really do heed this advice. She has travelled from Hampshire for theweek's course and every night, stands before her hotel bed, gripping her feng shui compass and calculating which angle she should sleep at.

Unfortunately for Aileen, every morning the hotel's super efficient cleaners move the bed back to its original position.

``I'm an east group person,'' she says. ``So south, north, east and south-east are good directions for me. If I tap into one of my good directions,I'll sleep better.''

And she's not the only one to benefit from mattress-twisting.

``My baby granddaughter had very bad chest problems, so I worked out her good energy directions and discovered she needed to be turned round in her cot and the cot needed moving a foot because she was sleeping in an area afflicted with negative energy.

``Within days, she improved and hasn't suffered since.''

But Rhuddlan-based feng shui consultant,Jayne Goodrick goes much further. She explains that the home she shares with husband Chris and their three children, will soon be undergoing some serious structural changes.

``I'm having my back door moved 40 degrees,'' she says. ``At the moment it's is facing west, which is OK,but I'm moving it to face south-west which is a fabulous direction for me.'' And while the construction work will cost thousands of pounds,Jayne insists: ``I can't afford not to have it done - I'll get the cost back through the energies coming into the house.''

And that's not all. Because Jayne will also be removing tiles from her roof, leaving a gaping hole - to enable the chi to circulate.

``Energies are changing because we're currently moving from feng shui's Period Seven to Period Eight,'' she says. ``Each period lasts 20 years and it's based on astrology and mathematical formulas because the planet Jupiter takes 180 years to orbit the sun. This is divided into three cycles of 20 years each. ``As we leave one period and enter a new one, there is always turmoil in the world.''

As for the gaping hole in her roof,it will be left there for a fortnight and yes,Jayne is well aware that it could mean soggy carpets and windswept wallpaper. But that's all part of the deal.

``The fabric of the house has to get wet,'' she says. ``I either do this or move house.''

There is some good news, though. According to the Grand Master,North Wales possesses very beneficial chi, thanks to its proximity to the sea and abundance of mountains, providing easy-to-tap- intoenergies. Residents of Llandudno's West Shore are particularly fortunate.

``The Great Orme looks like a dragon's head rising out of the ocean,'' he says. ``The chi remains right at the back of the mountain, so the people who live in that specific area should be happy,healthy and prosperous.

``Many big financial centres of the world are near the sea,like New York, Singapore and Tokyo.''

Jayne, who has studied feng shui for seven years, turned to the classical style after dismissing modern feng shui as little more than hype.

``Someone bought me a book on new age feng shui and I thought it's is too easy if I can read a book and become a master. So I started looking for a master and found Grand Master Yap,'' she says.

Now she believes feng shui helps her avoid potential problems and make the most of good happenings.

``My family still has all the normal problems every family has,but feng shui affects how we come out of the problems. We will stub our toe instead of breaking our neck. Years ago,I had a serious motor bike accident that broke both my legs,but had I done feng shui then, I would have been aware of the potential for an accident at that point in my life and the severity of it would have been reduced.''

And while husband Chris does not actively practice it himself,he is happy to leave Jayne to get on with reordering the family home.

``He has given up putting things down to coincidence and these days does exactly as I ask.''

For a feng shui consultation,contact Jayne on 01745 590410.

Six strategies to feng shui your life

Your home may have charming olde worldy beamed ceilings, but you should ensure you don't sleep beneath a beam - it oppresses the positive energies.

Beware - energy can escape if your staircase faces your front door. If the door is within 10 feet of the stairs, keep it shut and let the chi circulate.

Plants don't do anything for feng shui, so there's no need to live with that rubber plant that's growing out of control.

This year,houses facing south-east may suffer more problems and if you sleep in the south-east of your house, you may want to shift your bed to another room.Similarly, homes facing north may have more sickness this year.

West is definitely best this year and occupants of homes facing west are more likely to strike it rich, so fling open those west facing doors and windows.

If you're working at a desk with your back to the door, make sure it is closed. Otherwise the force of energy is too strong against your back, affecting concentration.

CAPTION(S):

Young Master of feng shui Joey Yap with the Chinese compass; The shi compass; (left) which Jayne Goodrick (right) uses to align the bedroom furniture; Malaysian feng shui supremo, Yap Cheng Hai - otherwise known as the Grand Master Picture: RICHARD WILLIAMS

Feng Shui, more than just a moving experience; If you thought feng shui was all about hanging wind-chimes around the house, think again. Abigail Hughes takes a master class in this Chinese art and returns - little the wiser.(News)

Byline: Abigail Hughes

I'M sitting, trying to blend in, right at the back of the class. In front of me, a dozen fully-focused students are frantically scribbling notes and listening intently to their teacher. On an overhead projector at the front of the room is an extremely complicated-looking pie-chart, which everyone is staring and nodding sagely at. Every now and then,I pick up the odd familiar word,like ``ox'', ``snake'' and ``rooster''.

But this is no zoology lesson. Rather, the topic in question is the ancient Chinese practice of feng shui. And it is becoming rapidly obvious that I won't be fooling anyone with my misguided beliefs that there is little more to feng shui than painting your house calming,muted colours and shifting the sofa every couple of months.

In fact, this lecture, held in a Llandudno seafront hotel and headed by Malaysian feng shui supremo,Yap Cheng Hai - otherwise known as the Grand Master - sounds to my untrained ear a bit too much like hard work, involving complex mathematical formulas, never my strongest subject, and a specially crafted Chinese compass to tap into earth's most beneficial energies and avoid the negative ones.Phew!

``We teach classical feng shui, which is entirely different to modern forms,'' explains the 77-year-old Grand Master. ``It is not at all about decoration, rather it uses the earth's energies to benefit us. Using the date and time of an individual's birth, we can calculate which energy directions are best for that person.''

White-haired, suit-wearing Grand Master, who co-founded his Feng Shui Centre of Excellence with Young Master,charming 27-year-old Joey Yap,began studying the art half a century ago.

``My son had been ill for five years and we went from hospital to hospital, but nothing could cure him,''he explains. ``So I read my feng shui book and discovered he was sleeping in the wrong bed, in the wrong room. I moved him and within two months,he was cured. Feng shui was better than the doctor, so I followed feng shui.''

Sleeping and eating right is central to the feng shui belief that a healthy person will think clearer and be blessed with good luck. But this does not simply mean eating five portions of fruit and veg a day and getting your full eight hours kip.

``We turn our beds and ovens to the direction that will benefit us,'' says Joey. ``If you sleep in the wrong direction,over a long period of time you'll get headaches and ill-health as well as sleepless nights and a hot temper. We eat food cooked in the oven,but if this is facing the wrong way, you'llget sick.''

Aileen Penn is proof that followers really do heed this advice. She has travelled from Hampshire for theweek's course and every night, stands before her hotel bed, gripping her feng shui compass and calculating which angle she should sleep at.

Unfortunately for Aileen, every morning the hotel's super efficient cleaners move the bed back to its original position.

``I'm an east group person,'' she says. ``So south, north, east and south-east are good directions for me. If I tap into one of my good directions,I'll sleep better.''

And she's not the only one to benefit from mattress-twisting.

``My baby granddaughter had very bad chest problems, so I worked out her good energy directions and discovered she needed to be turned round in her cot and the cot needed moving a foot because she was sleeping in an area afflicted with negative energy.

``Within days, she improved and hasn't suffered since.''

But Rhuddlan-based feng shui consultant,Jayne Goodrick goes much further. She explains that the home she shares with husband Chris and their three children, will soon be undergoing some serious structural changes.

``I'm having my back door moved 40 degrees,'' she says. ``At the moment it's is facing west, which is OK,but I'm moving it to face south-west which is a fabulous direction for me.'' And while the construction work will cost thousands of pounds,Jayne insists: ``I can't afford not to have it done - I'll get the cost back through the energies coming into the house.''

And that's not all. Because Jayne will also be removing tiles from her roof, leaving a gaping hole - to enable the chi to circulate.

``Energies are changing because we're currently moving from feng shui's Period Seven to Period Eight,'' she says. ``Each period lasts 20 years and it's based on astrology and mathematical formulas because the planet Jupiter takes 180 years to orbit the sun. This is divided into three cycles of 20 years each. ``As we leave one period and enter a new one, there is always turmoil in the world.''

As for the gaping hole in her roof,it will be left there for a fortnight and yes,Jayne is well aware that it could mean soggy carpets and windswept wallpaper. But that's all part of the deal.

``The fabric of the house has to get wet,'' she says. ``I either do this or move house.''

There is some good news, though. According to the Grand Master,North Wales possesses very beneficial chi, thanks to its proximity to the sea and abundance of mountains, providing easy-to-tap- intoenergies. Residents of Llandudno's West Shore are particularly fortunate.

``The Great Orme looks like a dragon's head rising out of the ocean,'' he says. ``The chi remains right at the back of the mountain, so the people who live in that specific area should be happy,healthy and prosperous.

``Many big financial centres of the world are near the sea,like New York, Singapore and Tokyo.''

Jayne, who has studied feng shui for seven years, turned to the classical style after dismissing modern feng shui as little more than hype.

``Someone bought me a book on new age feng shui and I thought it's is too easy if I can read a book and become a master. So I started looking for a master and found Grand Master Yap,'' she says.

Now she believes feng shui helps her avoid potential problems and make the most of good happenings.

``My family still has all the normal problems every family has,but feng shui affects how we come out of the problems. We will stub our toe instead of breaking our neck. Years ago,I had a serious motor bike accident that broke both my legs,but had I done feng shui then, I would have been aware of the potential for an accident at that point in my life and the severity of it would have been reduced.''

And while husband Chris does not actively practice it himself,he is happy to leave Jayne to get on with reordering the family home.

``He has given up putting things down to coincidence and these days does exactly as I ask.''

For a feng shui consultation,contact Jayne on 01745 590410.

Six strategies to feng shui your life

Your home may have charming olde worldy beamed ceilings, but you should ensure you don't sleep beneath a beam - it oppresses the positive energies.

Beware - energy can escape if your staircase faces your front door. If the door is within 10 feet of the stairs, keep it shut and let the chi circulate.

Plants don't do anything for feng shui, so there's no need to live with that rubber plant that's growing out of control.

This year,houses facing south-east may suffer more problems and if you sleep in the south-east of your house, you may want to shift your bed to another room.Similarly, homes facing north may have more sickness this year.

West is definitely best this year and occupants of homes facing west are more likely to strike it rich, so fling open those west facing doors and windows.

If you're working at a desk with your back to the door, make sure it is closed. Otherwise the force of energy is too strong against your back, affecting concentration.

CAPTION(S):

Young Master of feng shui Joey Yap with the Chinese compass; The shi compass; (left) which Jayne Goodrick (right) uses to align the bedroom furniture; Malaysian feng shui supremo, Yap Cheng Hai - otherwise known as the Grand Master Picture: RICHARD WILLIAMS

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

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