четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Officials: Suicide bombs kill 34 on Moscow subway

Moscow officials say two female suicide bombers have blown themselves up on the city subway system as it was jam-packed with rush-hour passengers.

Emergency officials say at least 34 people were killed and more than 25 wounded.

Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov told reporters that two female suicide bombers are believed to have set off their explosives as trains were approaching the Lubyanka and Park Kultury stations on Monday morning.

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

MOSCOW (AP) _ Two explosions, one of them blamed on a suicide bomber, slammed Moscow's subway system Monday …

Lending crackdown angers both sides Supporters and opponents alike are unhappy with measure

After five months of contentious negotiations between powerfulinterests, Mayor Daley's watered-down crackdown on predatory lendingcleared a key hurdle Thursday but ended up pleasing no one.

"If the bankers don't like it and the (housing) advocates don'tlike it, there must be something OK with it. If one or the other weresatisfied, there'd be something wrong," said City Council FinanceCommittee Chairman Edward M. Burke (14th).

The committee agreed to make Chicago the first city in the nationto take aim at unscrupulous lending practices that have sentforeclosure rates soaring in many neighborhoods.

But not before Chicago aldermen joined the laundry list …

Slow starts leave Penn State playing catch-up

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — The second half of games belong to Penn State. Too bad for the Nittany Lions the opening 30 minutes count, too.

Sluggish starts have left Penn State (3-2, 0-1 Big Ten) playing catch-up the last few weeks and in big road games. While the defense has pitched second-half shutouts each of the last three weeks, safety Nick Sukay isn't about to gloss over the shortcomings, particularly in the first quarter.

"I would give us a 'C' average. We haven't done anything spectacularly," he said. "Obviously our first-quarter letdowns are not too good ... but we show we have ability once we pick it up."

That's the good news for a defense that hasn't allowed a …

Pioneer League baseball in scenic MT, WY, UT, ID

MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) — Eight baseball games, eight different ballparks, eight days. We would have seen eight home-team wins, but the Missoula Osprey blew the ninth-inning lead in the trip opener.

A motorcycle tour last summer through the stadiums of the Pioneer League took me and my dad through some of the most beautiful parts of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Utah, with some of the parks offering spectacular mountain range views. Catching games in all eight places makes a great theme for a summer road trip through the region, where nearby attractions include Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons.

The league has a Rookie classification, the lowest class of the minor league farm …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

County commission ready to tighten belt as budget deficit looms: Carper cites rising costs of running regional jail, county vehicles' fuel

DAILY MAIL STAFF

Kanawha County commissioners plan to institute tighter cashmanagement polices in an effort to curb a projected $2.4 million cashdeficit by the end of the fiscal year.

The deficit projections are based on the current amount of countycash receipts and remaining expenditures the county faces before thecurrent fiscal year ends June 30.

The county currently has an estimated $4.1 million in cash.

Commission President Kent Carper said the biggest problems appearto be in the rising regional jail costs and the burgeoning gasolinecosts.

Carper said the county has almost exhausted its fuel budget forcounty vehicles, but said the …

NFL Considers Adding 17th Game to Season

NEW YORK - Americans always seem to want more pro football. Yet it's the folks abroad who might be getting an extra taste of the NFL in the future. Although talks are extremely preliminary, the NFL is investigating adding a 17th regular-season game and playing it outside the United States. The extra game would take the place of one in the preseason, allowing every team to play once abroad without sacrificing a home match.

This year, the Dolphins gave up a home date in Miami to play the New York Giants at Wembley Stadium in London. Two years ago, the Arizona Cardinals played a home game in Mexico City against the San Francisco 49ers.

"It is preliminary, but we certainly …

Calif. wildfires force 6,000 more to evacuate

Strong winds have kicked up in Santa Barbara, pushing a fierce wildfire farther to the west toward homes and forcing thousands more to flee the area.

Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown says mandatory evacuation orders were expanded late Thursday, forcing about 6,000 additional people to leave …

Ayer to `Stretch' for new position

What's an ad agency CEO to do if, during his first year on thejob, the company loses two of its biggest accounts and has to shutterone of its important branch offices?

For Jerry J. Siano, chairman and chief executive officer of N WAyer Inc., the answer is to develop a new corporate positioning tostimulate the troops. Today, at the privately held ad agency'sshareholders' meeting, Siano will introduce a system he is calling"Stretch," designed to be the company's new modus operandi.

Siano, the first Ayer chief executive to come from the creativeside of the ad business, is putting increased emphasis on theadvertising output. For every campaign, Siano explained in …

Germany faces Turkey in Group A summit

BERLIN (AP) — Germany hosts Turkey on Friday in a meeting of two teams with perfect European Championship qualifying records that will be something of a home match for both sides.

The visitors can expect vocal support at Berlin's Olympic Stadium from the German capital's large ethnic Turkish community.

Joachim Loew's side is missing key midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger with an injury, but Loew can draw on much of his third-place World Cup squad.

Germany team manager Oliver Bierhoff said Wednesday the players have their feet firmly on the ground after being honored by Germany's president this week, saying "the World Cup is closed and we can no longer draw on it — we face …

Militants turn on spy agency in Pakistan

A suicide attack on the northwestern headquarters of Pakistan's spy agency Friday showed how militants have turned against an institution that once nurtured them and marked an escalation in their war against the U.S.-backed government.

The truck bombing was the second this year against offices of the intelligence agency, which has helped the CIA track down and arrest many al-Qaida suspects since 2001 but is still suspected by some Western officials of sympathizing with extremists, especially those fighting across the border in Afghanistan.

The early morning attack killed 10 people and devastated much of the complex in Peshawar city, which has been hit by many …

It takes a lot more than genes to make a father

You have to wonder where some men get their nerve.

Take William Garland, the New Jersey trucker who tried to gethis hands on half of slain rapper's Tupac Shakur's multimilliondollar estate. Garland was Shakur's absentee father.

A judge in Los Angeles correctly ruled last week that Garlandwasn't entitled to a dime. The only thing the man ever contributed,besides sperm, was "$820, a bag of peanuts and a ticket toRollerblade," the judge found.I guess Garland still doesn't get it, any more than he did whenhe had sex with Shakur's mother. You can skip out on the mother, butyou can never skip out on your own kid. It's the relationshipbetween a man and his child …

Ex-UN climate chief: Cancun won't bring success

BERLIN (AP) — The former U.N. climate chief says he doesn't expect the upcoming summit in Cancun, Mexico, to produce big results and is encouraging delegates to focus on reaching small goals rather trying to secure a major treaty.

Yvo de Boer, who stepped down as head of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change in July, was quoted as saying in an interview with the …

Concert's early flaws eclipsed by gospel-tinged lift-off finale

CONCERT REVIEW

NEIL DIAMOND

At the United Center

In 1969, Neil Diamond went to Memphis for the first time torecord "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show." Diamond always wasopen to gospel influences, dating back to his pop hit "Thank theLord for the Night Time," and the Delta visit inspired Diamond'smost creative period. By 1970, he was exploring African folk idiomsin "Soolaimon" while keeping one hand in the pure pop of "Cracklin'Rosie."

Diamond and his band revisited this era Monday in the first of atwo-night stand at the United Center. His generous two-hour setended with "Brother Love's Traveling Salvation Show," which hestarted as a gospel-folk ballad and ended as a Jimmy Swaggartrevival meeting. Diamond eventually sang from a pulpitlike box thatrose two feet in the air. With his right arm extended, he broke fromhis lyrics and exclaimed, "Gay and straight, we are all God'schildren!" The audience extended their hands and the house lightswent on. Someone shouted "Hallelujah!" At this point a couple ofwhite wiseacres behind me smiled and suggested, "As he said to allthe rich, middle-aged white people, 'We are all God's children.' "

I blame Rick Rubin for these sparks. Rubin is the mysticalproducer who made his name by working with harder-edged acts such asLL Cool J and Rage Against the Machine. He later received criticalacclaim for producing Johnny Cash's final sessions. For the pastseveral months, Rubin has been producing the Dixie Chicks -- andDiamond's upcoming "minimalist" album. I'm sensing country-gospelDiamond, heavy on the guitar strumming style of Sister RosettaTharpe. (Connect the dots. Tharpe's jazzy bent notes and rhythmicblues picking made her Cash's favorite guitarist.) And thissurprising turn in Diamond's career accounted for the best part ofMonday's show.

After bombarding the audience with aerobic anthems like "Desiree"and "Forever in Blue Jeans," Diamond settled in with a tender set onacoustic guitar. The song cycle began with 1969's "Glory Road,"accented by Tom Hensley's sparse gospel organ; the ballad "And theGrass Won't Pay No Mind," from the "Brother Love's" sessions; and ahard-strumming, full-band version of "Look Out, Here ComesTomorrow," a song Diamond never recorded but which was cut by theMonkees on their second album. Diamond was on a roll. He sang thesesongs with a relaxed conviction that was absent from the Vegasmaterial.

Former Elvis Presley drummer Ron Tutt brought a Bo Diddley beatto "You Got to Me," one of Diamond's first hits, and Diamond began"Red, Red Wine" as a country tearjerker before abruptly connectingwith a ska arrangement. Engaging versions of "Soolaimon" and"Cracklin' Rosie" followed. An earlier ringer included a jazzyversion of the rarely covered ballad "Signs," a Robbie Robertsonproduction from Diamond's "Beautiful Noise" record.

The show stopper was, of course, "Sweet Caroline," where handswere touching hands and fans sang along. This was how a BruceSpringsteen concert used to be. Diamond also redid his Monkees hit"I'm a Believer" without guitar but with swirling, sirenlike horncharts.

Too bad the first half of the show wasn't this cool. Diamond'sband opened with "Crunchy Granola Suite" and covered the schmaltzy"Remember Me." And just when you thought Diamond and longtimevocalist Linda Press' version of "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" wasover the top in a dinner-theater way, along came the "JonathanLivingston Seagull" medley of "Be/Lonely Looking Sky/Skybird." Thisselection was more agonizing than a rush-hour security check atO'Hare. If Rick Rubin is helping bring Diamond back down to earth,so to speak, then the pop music world will be a better place.

Margaret Neilson Fix, North Shore Artist

Artist Margaret Neilson Fix, 85, who specialized in miniaturepaintings and taught art to the elderly, died Saturday in EvanstonHospital.

Mrs. Fix, of the North Shore, painted for family and friendswhen not raising her family. Working in oils and watercolors, shecreated remembrances for people by making miniature paintings of thehouses they owned.

She also was a volunteer at the Presbyterian Home of Evanstonfor more than 15 years. Until recently, she was involved in thehome's arts and crafts program, which helped raise money for thehome.

Mrs. Fix, born in Evanston, graduated from New Trier High Schoolin 1925. She attended the Art Institute of Chicago and later movedto Wilmette.

She was the widow of John L. Fix, a former co-owner ofFix-Lipman Co., a Chicago wholesale plumbing company.

Survivors include a son, John, and four grandchildren.

Memorial services will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in KenilworthUnion Church, 211 Kenilworth Ave., Kenilworth. Burial was private.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

City incentives campaign hits... A home run

Home buyers can save thousands of dollars through a variety of incentives that recently have been neatly wrapped into an easily understood new campaign by the city -- "Find Your Place in Chicago" -- designed to turn Chicagoans into homeowners.

Despite the flagging economy, now might be a perfect time to buy a home through these programs. Buyers could see savings of as much as $60,000 under an incentives package put together for the campaign, which is designed to fuel home, town house and condo sales in targeted, emerging mixed-income neighborhoods on the Near West, North, West, Near South, Southeast and Far South sides.

"The campaign is a great opportunity to highlight new and existing housing in Chicago neighborhoods," said Ellen Sahli, commissioner of the Department of Housing. "With all this talk about our economy, it scares buyers and leads them not to buy. But, now is really a good time buy. Chicago has great neighborhoods and great real estate and there are many great products [housing] out there at this time."

Although one of the incentives, a federal tax break, is good on any home anywhere, targeted communities for the other programs include: Avondale, Logan Square, West Town, North and South Lawndale, New City, Woodlawn, Douglas, South Shore, Kenwood and Humboldt Park. Also included are: Englewood, Auburn/Gresham, Beverly, West Pullman, Oakland and New City.

One of the best deals at the moment may be from the Partnership for New Communities organization, which is providing a $10,000 grant (you don't have to pay it back) to buyers who purchase a new or rehabbed residence in developments in targeted mixed-income city neighborhoods. Buyers can use the money for whatever they want, including down payments and closing costs. There are no income eligibility requirements for the special incentive; however, the homes must be priced at under $450,000 at participating developments. Only 100 grants are available.

COMMUNITY SUPPORT

Under the campaign, buyers opting for one or more housing incentives may choose from nearly 200 available residences priced from $150,000 to $450,000. They include new or rehabbed single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and two-flats at participating developments. For example, a participating development in the The Partnership for New Communities grant program is Oakwood Shores, a 94-acre South Side, mixed-income community developed by Granite Development Corp., MB Real Estate and UJIMA Venture. It's being built along Oakwood Boulevard (39th Street) between Langley and Ellis avenues.

Darrel and Jennifer Nabers, and their 5-year-old son, Darius, have been shopping for a home for the past several months. The couple is currently considering purchasing in Oakwood Shores or Renaissance Estates (a townhouse development at 12201-55 S. Justine). Both developments offer incentives through the Find Your Place in Chicago campaign.

"We've lived in this area for three years and want to continue to live here, and it's interesting as we shop to see how many different things are being done to encourage development and confidence in the community," said Darrell Nabers, 39, an analyst for the University of Chicago. Jennifer Nabers is a teacher at the Latin School of Chicago.

"We don't qualify for some of the incentives because we make too much money," Darrell said. "The more money you make, the less the incentive. Part of our frustration is that you are required to make a moderate wage, which we don't. So, most of the incentives we qualify for are from the lenders and developers. Incentives are supposed to help the middle class afford homes, but most of these incentives are targeted to lower income buyers. However, we do qualify for the $10,000 grant for first-time buyers, so that's nice."

Row homes, townhomes and condominiums in the first two phases of Oakwood Shores currently are priced from $299,900 to the $534,900, and nine completed homes are ready for immediate occupancy, according to co-developer Joseph A. Williams of Granite Development.

(For more information call 773-538-0001 or visit www.oakwoodshoreschicago.com.)

SAVED $80,000

Also on the South Side, 23-year-old Aaron Mays recently saved about $80,000 through multiple incentives in the Find Your Place in Chicago program to buy a one-bedroom condo at Lake Park Crescent, a town house development at 41st Street and Lake Park. Mays closed on his condo in Oct. 30 and moved in the same day.

"I got a $10,000 grant which was applied to closing costs and loan and lawyer fees. It was wonderful. Oh my God, it was such a blessing to stumble upon these incentives," Mays said. "I had been looking at a condo at Lake Park Crescent and was just ecstatic to find these financial incentives in place."

As for qualifying, Mays said his annual income just made it. "I was just under the limit to qualify," he said. "I feel so lucky. I come from an African-American family that believes in home-ownership. So, it was important for me to buy. Today, thanks to the incentives I own a prime piece of real estate. I have a beautiful view of the downtown skyline and a few blocks east is a beautiful park along Lake Shore Drive. It's great."

(For information on Lake Park Crescent, call (773) 268-0400, or visit www.lakeparkcrescent.com.)

Photo: Brian Jackson, Sun-Times / Aaron Mays stands in the doorway of his Lake Park Crescent town house, which he bought with the help of Find Your Place in Chicago housing incentives. "I was just under the limit to qualify," he said. "I feel so lucky." ; Photo: Keith Hale, Sun-Times / Darrell Nabers (right) and his wife, Jennifer, survey a model home at the Oakwood Shores development, which lies within a targeted area in the "Find Your Place in Chicago" campaign. ; Photo: Brian Jackson, Sun-Times / Aaron Mays, 23, poses in the kitchen of the one-bedrooom condo at Lake Park Crescent that he bought through the Find Your Place in Chicago program. He closed on his property Oct. 30 and moved in the same day. ;

Monroe leads Hoyas into Big East title game

Greg Monroe had 23 points and 13 rebounds, and No. 22 Georgetown finally got the better of Marquette in a 80-57 victory Friday night that sent the Hoyas to the Big East tournament title game for the third time in four years.

Chris Wright followed his 27-point performance against top-seeded Syracuse in the quarterfinals with 15 points for Georgetown (23-9), which put the game away with a 14-1 run with under 10 minutes to go. The Hoyas will play Notre Dame or West Virginia on Saturday night, looking to extend their record to eight tournament championships.

Jason Clark also had 15 points for Georgetown, while Austin Freeman had 12 points and eight rebounds in his fourth game since being diagnosed with diabetes last week.

Jimmy Butler scored 17 points to lead Marquette (22-11), which had won three straight against Georgetown, including their only meeting during the regular season. The Golden Eagles had not lost a game by more than nine points all season.

They still have won only one league tournament title, when they were a member of Conference USA in 1997. They also lost to Pittsburgh in the 2008 Big East semifinals.

It looked for a while as though they might finally reach Saturday night at Madison Square Garden, closing to 56-51 on Maurice Acker's basket with 10:48 to go, but the Hoyas always seemed to have an answer. Wright made two free throws to begin their big run, Monroe added a basket and 3-pointer moments later, and the lead swelled to 70-53.

The run was reminiscent of a 22-4 spurt in the second half that carried Georgetown past third-ranked Syracuse. By the time Dwight Buycks made a free throw with about 4 minutes left, the Georgetown student section seated near the bench was chanting "Let's go Hoyas!"

Acker wound up with 16 points for Marquette, and Lazar Hayward had 15.

Both teams had played two games to reach the semifinals, and early on it look as though the Hoyas were the only ones with any legs left. They made their first six field goals and had built a 15-4 lead by the first media timeout.

Acker started shooting Marquette back into it, though, and Hayward hit a 3-pointer later in the half to cap a 15-5 run that tied the game at 29-all.

The Golden Eagles just couldn't keep it up against the bigger Hoyas in the second half. Monroe took a seat with about 12 minutes to go and returned refreshed, and the 6-foot-6 Hayward struggled to contain the 6-11 Georgetown star. Hayward eventually fouled out with 3:47 remaining and the outcome no longer in doubt.

Marquette shot 42.9 percent from the field in the first half but cooled off after the break. While the Hoyas were going on their big run, the Golden Eagles went more than 7 minutes without a field goal, shooting only 30.8 percent in the second half.

Athletics 6, Red Sox 3

98Athletics 6, Red Sox 3
BOSTON @ OAKLAND @
ab r h bi @ab r h bi
Ellsbry cf 5 0 0 0 Hnnhan 3b 5 2 2 2
Pedroia 2b 3 1 0 0 Crosby ss 4 0 0 0
Ortiz dh 3 1 1 1 MSwny 1b 4 0 1 1
MRmrz lf 4 0 3 2 DBartn 1b 1 0 0 0
Lowell 3b 4 0 1 0 FThms dh 4 0 2 0
Yukilis 1b 4 0 0 0 Petit dh 0 1 0 0
JDrew rf 4 0 1 0 EBrwn rf 4 0 1 1
Varitek c 4 0 0 0 Cust lf 4 1 1 2
Lugo ss 2 1 1 0 RDavis cf 0 0 0 0
Ellis 2b 3 1 0 0
RSwny cf 4 1 1 0
KSuzuk c 4 0 3 0
Totals @ 33 3 7 3 Totals @37 6 11 6
Boston 100 020 000_3
Oakland 101 200 20x_6
E_MRamirez (1), Lugo (12), Lester (2). DP_Boston 1, Oakland 1. LOB_Boston 7, Oakland 9. HR_Ortiz (11), Cust (8).
IP H R ER BB SO
Boston @
Lester L,3-3 5 7 4 3 2 3
Hansen 1 2-3 2 1 1 0 1
JLopez 1-3 1 1 1 0 0
Timlin 1 1 0 0 0 2
Oakland @
Blanton W,3-6 6 5 3 3 4 7
Foulke 1 0 0 0 0 1
Devine 2-3 1 0 0 0 0
Embree 1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Street S,11 1 1 0 0 0 1
Umpires_Home, Jeff NelsonFirst, Adrian JohnsonSecond, Tim TschidaThird, Jim Joyce.
T_2:39. A_35,067 (35,067).

Benet's LeFevour has physical tools, stellar college stats

As a youngster, Central Michigan quarterback Dan LeFevour always had an eye toward the NFL. After his senior year at Benet, he told a reporter he would get there.

''You don't realize when you're raising your children that they could perform at such a level,'' said Dan's mother, Judy. ''If you would have told me five years ago before he went to college that this would be where he would land, on a pro team, I would have said, 'Well, he always felt so,' but that's asking an awful lot of a child to have those expectations.''

Those expectations were realized when the Bears drafted LeFevour, a Downers Grove native, in the sixth round Saturday. He was the 181st player selected.

LeFevour didn't just dream. Blessed with physical ability -- he stands 6-3, weighs 229 pounds and runs the 40-yard dash in 4.66 seconds -- he made the most of it. LeFevour finished his Central Michigan career with 15,853 yards of total offense, second in NCAA history. He is the only NCAA player with at least 12,000 passing yards (12,905) and 2,500 rushing yards (2,948).

He earned positive feedback at the Senior Bowl, raising expectations heading into the NFL combine. But he drew heavy criticism for his decision not to throw. It put added focus on his pro day, when he completed 55 of 62 passes. It was attended by 22 teams and led to invitations to several private workouts, but not all draft prognosticators were impressed.

''Everyone can have an opinion. Whether it's good, bad or indifferent, there's an opinion out there and there's not a whole lot you can do to change that,'' LeFevour said. ''I'm just trying to do what I think is best for me, and whatever people think, I can't really control that too much.''

''It's been a lot of fun, just having different experiences a lot of people my age don't get to experience. But at the same time, I'm working hard and I'm not trying to get too caught up with everything. You've just got to realize it's not the end of the road yet.

''I'm sure looking back on the experience, in 10, 15, hopefully 20 years, I'll have a Brett Favre-type experience and I'll think it's the most fun I've had in my life.''

Photo: Carlos Osorio, AP / Downers Grove native Dan LeFevour had 15,853 yards of total offense, second in NCAA history, with Central Michigan.

Rehabbers on move, Juice bar, masonry office planned for York

Most people would agree that a dollar doesn't go as far as it used to.

Not Sheldon Lloyd and Kenneth Oatman.

The two businessmen recently purchased separate downtown properties from the city of York for a buck apiece. But each will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to renovate the historic buildings, which have been vacant for years.

Lloyd's building will include a new juice bar, retail space and a pair of two-bedroom apartments. He will occupy one apartment and rent out the other. Oatman's acquisition will allow him to move his masonry business headquarters from Baltimore to York.

The juice is loose

Lloyd is the new owner of a nearly 5,000-square-foot parcel of land at 232-234 W. Market St., York. He bought the three-story building from the city for $1 on Oct. 18. Lloyd and Oatman's buildings are in the Keystone Opportunity Zone.

The Keystone Opportunity Zone, which was signed into law in 1998, waives state and local taxes for businesses that develop in the esignated properties. The tax benefits expire in 2011.

Lloyd plans to split up the first floor - 750 square feet will be a juice bar, and 1,200 square feet will be flexible retail space.

Lloyd said he is unsure how many employees he will hire. The menu will include exotic tropical fruit juices and citrus blend mixtures, filled with vitamins, he said.

On the second floor, there will be a two-bedroom apartment that Lloyd will occupy; and on the third floor will be another two-bedroom apartment, which he will rent.

Lloyd estimates the renovation work will cost $250,000, and he expects the 125-year-old building to be complete in a year. The city is giving him a $122,500 grant, Lloyd said, and he will pay the remainder of the renovation costs with money he made by completing a similar renovation project in California, where he used to live.

Lloyd's building has been vacant for about five years, and formerly housed a porn shop and an art gallery - in separate store fronts.

Lloyd grew up in York, but moved to California about 20 years ago to teach industrial education, he said. While there, Lloyd worked as a computer consultant before he renovated and sold an old commercial property in Gilroy, Calif. He rented the building out to multiple business tenants.

Lloyd is glad to be back.

"As a kid, I used to run up and down this street and I loved it," he explained. "When I moved to California, I continued to keep my ears open for any business opportunities here. When opportunity knocked, I answered, and now I'm home again."

The knocking Lloyd refers to is Millersville University, his alma mater, contacting him and asking him to teach industrial studies there. Lloyd accepted, and began teaching in fall 1999. While living in Lancaster, Lloyd searched for a business opening in York, which he found.

Lloyd said he believes the location - near popular eateries like Speeder & Earl's Coffee Shop and Sam & Tony's will help him draw customers, too.

Libbie Falzone, owner of Sam & Tony's, an italian restaurant, noted there is already a juice bar in Sarah's Garden, a health food restaurant in the 100 block of North George Street. The facility is three blocks away from where Lloyd's operation will be, she added.

Yet, she does believe Lloyd has a chance of doing well because the location is thriving. "We have more foot traffic here than we ever did, and there aren't a lot of empty store fronts or residences," she said.

Fired up

Oatman, the owner/president of Oatman Masonry and Restoration bought the former Rescue Fire Station at 344 S. George St., York, on Oct. 26. Oatman plans to renovate the three-story facility, make it his company headquarters and use it as a showpiece for the historic restoration work he'd like to do more of.

Established in 1874, the brick building has not been used much over the past 25 or so years, and it shows. Since the firemen vacated the premises in the mid1970s, the majestic edifice has been used to store city lawnmowers - and collect dust.

Oatman said he will spend more than $100,000 on the rehab.

"I'll have a dozen of my guys helping me every weekend until it's done," he said. "And during the week, there will be four or five people working every night."

Oatman predicts it will take about six months to complete work on the project. He wants to begin working with some of the city's bigger construction players Kinsley Construction Inc. at 2700 Water St., York, Richard D. Poole Inc. at 150 Farm Lane Drive, York, and Wagman Construction Inc. at 3290 Susquehanna Trail, York.

If he succeeds, Oatman said he won't have to drive from York to Baltimore, and/or Washington, D.C., for work. Oatman estimated he travels between 700 and 800 miles a week in his pickup truck.

The 54-year-old, third-generation bricklayer has already done his fair share of traveling, having moved to Central Pennsylvania from Arlington, Texas, five years ago. Oatman said the industrial hub's beautiful historic brick and cast-iron architecture won him over.

"York's got a real working heritage and we're (his family) working people," he explained. "It's a perfect fit." Oatman plans to restore, not change, the building's historic look for him, his wife and his two sons to work in. If he succeeds in doing so, Oatman will receive a tax credit. He will add a 24-foot brass pole (like the one the firefighters used to slide down), restore the call box and its control panels, and begin reusing at least two of the building's fireplaces.

Oatman will store some equipment and trucks in the building's first-floor garage. The second floor will be primarily converted into office space, for Oatman to do most of his job bidding. The third floor will be a recreation/relaxation area.

The biggest challenge, Oatman notes, is repairing the bell tower atop the old fire house, 100-feet high. The old bell is at the Fire Museum of York County at 757 W. Market St.

"We don't intend to change the character at all, we want it to be as if the firemen woke up from a long sleep," he said.

Tenants fearing their homes face the bulldozer are reassured

Tenants worried by a council planning blueprint have been assuredthere are no plans to knock down their flats.

A strategic report looking at possible development sites in theBath area has pinpointed the Rosewell Court flats in Monmouth Streetas part of an area ripe for new building schemes.

Local councillor Andy Furse has now suggested that Bath and NorthEast Somerset Council holds a public meeting to tell the flats'Somer Housing tenants what is going on.

He has written to the residents of the 120 flats highlighting thearea's inclusion in the document and says he has been contacted bythree tenants worried about the matter. But Somer, the city'sbiggest landlord, said it had no plans to demolish the complex.

Managing director Angela Gascoigne said: "I know that there aresome residents at Rosewell Court who have been very worried becausethey are afraid they may lose their homes. Somer Community HousingTrust has no plans whatsoever to demolish Rosewell Court."

She added that the housing trust would itself be responding tothe council's latest draft core strategy, which looks at wherehomes, offices and other developments might be built between now and2026, and which is currently out to public consultation.

The number of new homes likely to be allowed in B&NES has beensharply reduced by the council from a figure backed by the oldLabour Government after the Coalition administration gave greaterpowers to local authorities over such planning.

Ms Gascoigne added: "We would also encourage all of our residentsto get involved in the consultation process and have their say onany issues that interest or concern them.

"We welcome any opportunities for our residents to find out moreabout the draft core strategy and to engage in the council'sconsultation.

"We would therefore be pleased to help facilitate any meetingsbetween Bath and North East Somerset Council and our residents atRosewell Court, or indeed with any of our residents, to discuss thedraft core strategy further."

The flats are bracketed with the empty Kingsmead House officeblock, offices at Plymouth House - which B&NES itself is vacating -and the city's telephone exchange as a location where the localauthority would "welcome" what are described as mixed usedevelopment proposals.

A planning application by developer Telereal Trillium to knockdown Kingsmead House to make way for a 190-room hotel has beenlodged with the council.

Mr Furse (Lib Dem, Kingsmead) said tenants wanted to know whatthe designation in the blueprint meant.

In an email to senior council figures, he says: "I am nowreceiving a number of phone calls from Rosewell Court residentsasking what this means to them. In fact, today one resident isasking whether she should go ahead with her planned redecoration ofher flat in the next few months.

"I raised at full council that specifically mentioning people'shomes would lead to anxiety and concern. I now ask what the councilproposes to offer to residents to offset these concerns now that thedraft core strategy is released to the public."

The area around the flats is one of nine locations in and aroundthe city centre where the council says such development plans wouldbe welcomed, providing they fit in with national planningregulations and its other policies. Many include buildings which arecurrently in active use such as parts of Walcot Street around theHilton Hotel and Podium centre, a stretch of Manvers Streetincluding the police station, and Green Park Station, as well asderelict spots such as the Stothert and Pitt site.

A council statement said: "The draft core strategy looks at thepotential to redevelop many locations within Bath in the long term,including the Kingsmead area. It is a plan that looks forward to2026, and within this period it is a valid objective to try to im-prove areas such as Kingsmead while maintaining affordable housingin and around the city centre.

"Potential schemes for the area, which includes Rosewell Court,Kingsmead House, Plymouth House and the short stay car park, wouldnot necessarily directly affect Rosewell Court. It is unlikely thata financially viable scheme would be forthcoming for Rosewell Courtwithin the next ten years."

Montgomery group awarded federal grant

The Tech Foundation Inc. in Montgomery, has been awarded a$108,000 federal grant for economic development efforts.

The money will enable economic development agencies and localcommunities to finance feasibility studies and gather data foreconomic development projects, said a spokesman for the U.S.Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

BP says it's sorry - and guarantees $20B for Gulf

President Barack Obama wrested a $20 billion compensation guarantee and an apology to the nation from British oil giant BP Wednesday, announcing the company would set up a major claims fund for shrimpers, restaurateurs and others whose lives and livelihoods are being wrecked by the oil flooding into the Gulf of Mexico.

Applause broke out during a community meeting in Orange Beach, Ala., on the news.

"We asked for that two weeks ago and they laughed at us," Mayor Tony Kennon said. "Thank you, President Obama, for taking a bunch of rednecks' suggestion and making it happen."

Obama had said he would "make BP pay," and the company's chairman said after four hours of intense White House negotiations that BP was ready.

The unending oil spill saga had yielded almost no good news before this. Creation of the fund _ to be run by an administrator with a proven track record _ is the first big success Obama has been able to give to Gulf residents and the nation in the eight weeks since the explosion, a period during which the spill has taken ever more of the public's attention, threatening anything else the president hoped to focus on or accomplish.

Huge as the $20 billion seems, both Obama and London-based BP PLC said it was by no means a cap.

The deal also adhered to what Obama had said was his non-negotiable demand: that the fund and the claims process be administered independently from BP. It won't be a government fund, either, but will be led by the administration's "pay czar," Kenneth Feinberg, better known as the man who oversaw the $7 billion government fund for families of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The April 20 explosion of an offshore oil rig killed 11 workers and sent millions of gallons of crude spewing into the water from the broken well a mile below the ocean's surface _ as much as 118 million gallons so far and still flowing. More wildlife, beaches and marshlands are fouled every day, jeopardizing not just the region's fragile ecology but a prized Gulf way of life that is built on fishing and tourism.

On Wednesday, BP began burning oil siphoned from the ruptured well as part of its plans to more than triple the amount of crude it can stop from reaching the sea by the end of the month, the company said. It's the first time this particular burner has been deployed in the Gulf.

Though the company hopes to install equipment soon to capture as much as 90 percent of the escaping oil, the leak is expected to continue at least until relief wells are finished in August.

The use of the BP escrow fund is intended to avoid a repeat of the painful aftermath of 1989 Exxon Valdez oil disaster in Alaska, when the fight over money dragged out in courts over roughly two decades.

"What this is about is accountability," said Obama in brief remarks in the State Dining Room after a four-hour, on-again, off-again White House negotiation session with BP executives. "For the small-business owners, for the fishermen, for the shrimpers, this is not just a matter of dollars and cents. ... A lot of these folks don't have a cushion."

On the driveway outside, BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg apologized for "this tragic accident that should never have happened."

"We care about the small people," he said.

That comment wasn't as well-received as the promise of compensation.

"We're not small people," said Justin Taffinder of New Orleans. "We're human beings. They're no greater than us. We don't bow down to them."

Added Terry Hanners, who has a small construction company in Gulf Shores, Ala.: "These BP people I've met are good folks. I've got a good rapport with them. But BP does not care about us. They are so far above us. We are the nickel-and-dime folks of this world."

By evening Svanberg was apologizing again. "I spoke clumsily this afternoon, and for that, I am very sorry," he said in a statement. "What I was trying to say _ that BP understands how deeply this affects the lives of people who live along the Gulf and depend on it for their livelihood _ will best be conveyed not by any words but by the work we do to put things right for the families and businesses who've been hurt."

The apologetic talk was expected to continue Thursday when company CEO Tony Hayward will face sharp questions from lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

In prepared testimony obtained by The Associated Press, Hayward expressed contrition for the spill and its effects and said he was "personally devastated" by "these tragic events." He pledged, "We will not rest until the well is under control, and we will meet all our obligations to clean up the spill and address its environmental and economic impacts."

In creating a victims' compensation fund, BP will use noncore U.S. assets as security for its $20 billion obligation. Chief Financial Officer Byron Grote stopped short of calling it a lien, but he said the assets will be used as security.

If BP had to borrow money in the future to pay any of its obligations, that might prove difficult because rising investor concerns could raise the company's borrowing costs. As of the end of March, BP reported only $6.8 billion in cash and cash equivalents. Grote said the amount has not changed "materially" since then.

Svanberg announced the company would not pay dividends to shareholders for the rest of the year, including one scheduled for June 21 totaling about $2.6 billion. The company will make initial payments into the escrow fund of $3 billion this summer and $2 billion in the fall, followed by $1.25 billion per quarter until the $20 billion figure is reached.

Aware that a healthy BP is in everyone's interest, Obama gave a plug for what he called "a strong and viable company" _ a day after he had accused it of recklessness. The viability of the compensation fund could be on shaky ground if BP eventually were forced to file for bankruptcy as some fear.

BP shares gyrated as the events unfolded. They rose more than 5 percent to $33 after Obama's words of support. But they slipped back as investors digested the full extent of BP's commitments, ending the day with a gain of 45 cents to close at $31.85 per share.

The company's potential liabilities, including cleanup costs, victims' compensation and civil fines, are breathtaking to consider _ stretching far beyond the $20 billion fund.

For example, civil penalties can be levied under a variety of environmental protection laws, including fines of up to $1,100 for each barrel of oil spilled. That alone could translate to as much as $3 billion. If BP were found to have committed gross negligence or willful misconduct, the civil fine could be up to $4,300 per barrel, approaching $12 billion.

So far, 66,000 claims have been filed, $81 million awarded and 26,000 checks cut, said Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen.

The $20 billion escrow fund can be used to pay all claims, including environmental damages and state and local response costs, with the exception of fines and penalties.

Resolving one particularly thorny dispute between BP and the government, the company also agreed to establish a separate $100 million fund to support oil rig workers idled by Obama's post-spill six-month moratorium on new deep-sea oil drilling. The administration also was to ask Congress for special unemployment insurance for the workers.

There has been little love lost between Obama and BP recently, with the president's rhetoric becoming increasingly sharp. In yet another jab at BP, the deal was made public by Obama aides even while the much-anticipated White House confrontation was under way.

The showdown opened with an apology from Svanberg and a recitation from Obama of the ills he has seen on his visits to the Gulf. The two sides broke up several times to talk privately or for Obama's aides to go consult with him, as the president stayed for the first 20 minutes but only ducked in and out after that. At one point, Obama and Svanberg spent 25 minutes alone in the Oval Office.

Afterward, the two men had respectful words for each other, with the chairman seeming to praise what he called the president's evident frustration on behalf of Gulf residents.

Feinberg ran the government compensation program for 2001 attacks for nearly three years, deciding how much families should get based largely on how much income the victims would have earned in a lifetime.

As Obama's "pay czar," he sets compensation limits for executives at banks and other companies getting the most aid from the $700 Wall Street bailout fund, with the aim of keeping runaway bonuses and salaries in check for those seen as most at fault for the economic meltdown.

BP has taken the brunt of criticism about the oil spill because it was leasing and operating the Deepwater Horizon rig that sunk. It also is a majority owner of the undersea well.

But several others companies involved in the failed oil may well be required to chip in as well. Swiss-based Transocean Ltd. owned a majority interest in the rig. Anadarko Petroleum, based in The Woodlands, Texas, has a 25 percent non-operating interest in the well.

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Associated Press writers Harry Weber in Houston, Jay Reeves in Orange Beach, Ala., Ray Henry in New Orleans and Ben Feller, Erica Werner and Matthew Daly in Washington contributed to this story.

Rulers, Guns, and Money: The Global Arms Trade in the Age of Imperialism

Rulers, Guns, and Money: The Global Arms Trade in the Age of Imperialism. By Jonathan A. Grant. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007. xi + 288 pp. Notes, index. Cloth, $49.95. ISBN: 0-674-02242-7.

Reviewed by Jeffrey A. Engel

Arms manufacturers have a public-relations problem. They make money selling violence. They find it difficult to put a positive spin on the sale of weapons, even those made for defensive purposes. Politicians and celebrities in search of global fame conduct public campaigns against their products, rallying to stanch the global flow of arms, to purge the scourge of land mines, and to encourage regimes to spend their limited funds on improving the lives of their citizenry rather than on the means of war. Meanwhile, manufacturers of the world's weapons maintain a low profile while conducting their profitable dealings, continuing to court global buyers whose current spending exceeds a trillion dollars annually.

Arms merchants have earned a poor reputation in history as well. They are the "warhogs," to borrow historian Stuart Brandes's title from his 1997 study of American war profiteers since colonial times, who profit from death. Their reputation reached a low point after World War I, which was blamed by a steady stream of pundits on these manufacturers. If they did not start the conflict, it was argued, then at least their feverish quest for sales in the preceding decades made the war more deadly than it needed to be. This became a fashionable argument, one that was widely adopted, even when proof for such allegations remained elusive. If, by the late summer of 1914, Europe resembled a powder keg that the diplomats traversing the continent were desperately trying to damp down, the arms merchants, according to observers who considered a massive conflagration inevitable, were the ones supplying the powder. Throughout the early 19305, Senator Gerald Nye lambasted munitions manufacturers from his seat on Capitol Hill, assigning to them the responsibility for the Great War, a view that was seconded by many in the international press and by the League of Nations, which came to a similar conclusion in a well-publicized 1921 report. Even famed journalist Walter Lippmann rushed to pin blame on the gunmakers, arguing, "Big warships meant big wars. Smaller warships meant smaller wars. No warships might eventually mean no wars."

In Rulers, Guns, and Money: The Global Arms Trade in the Age of Imperialism, Jonathan Grant has written an extensive, well-researched, and probing account of the companies that built those warships in the decades before the Great War. He explores both gunmakers and bullet producers, though he does not attempt to evaluate Senator Nye's claim. Nor does he directly address the role arms merchants play in wars, including World War I. Rather, he has written a historical account, in which he is less concerned with debates over events than he is with discerning what happened during the decades at the end of the nineteenth century, a period often overlooked by contemporary scholars. This is not Grant's first foray into the subject, as he (with Donald Stoker) previously edited a collection devoted to the global arms trade before 1940. The literature on cold-war arms sales is vast, forming part of a general discussion of what has been termed the "military-industrial complex." Works on the era before 1914, especially accounts like Grant's that do not seek to tell a story about the Great War to come, are rarer and thus of considerable value. In this book, Grant demonstrates in detail how businesses in the developed world (to the degree that it had become industrialized during this era) sold weapons to clients on the periphery of the global market. His impressive research spanning a number of nations and various national archives reveals in some depth the diplomatic struggles that prompted nations to seek arms and the competition among firms to win contracts. The book will serve readers interested more narrowly in the subject of arms sales and, more broadly, in globalization and business history. As a monograph, it will be useful primarily to scholars, since, while it is wide in scope, the story it tells is narrow. By and large, Grant does not attempt to draw broad lessons from his research, and he makes only cursory attempts to connect his case studies.

Grant's overall contribution offers broader conclusions, in fact, than he offers himself, especially when this book is considered in light of the recent trend in the field of international history to consider the local and human consequences of global affairs and to write diplomatic history from the ground up. His work helps put a human face on history, as authors writing within this trend intend, even though Grant never explicitly states a desire to engage this new current in historical writing. He paints a picture of a global business whose results were less often based on the technological virtues of one weapons system or on the influence of great powers and more often on the particular domestic considerations of individual states. The decisions by small states in Africa, Asia, or Eastern Europe to purchase arms from one company rather than from another were driven most often, Grant concludes, by domestic factors. "The greater emphasis should be placed on domestic agency over foreign manipulation as the key to understanding the growth of arms imports," he argues (p. 238). Since his study was designed to demonstrate the seeds of globalization in an industry of contemporary importance, this is indeed a significant statement.

Rulers, Guns, and Money should find a place on the shelves of historians of the period, whether their interests lie in colonialism, international relations, or business. Nevertheless, we will have to wait to discover the answer to the query posed by Nye: Are the merchants of death the cause of war, or do they merely fatten themselves on the suffering of others?

[Author Affiliation]

Jeffrey A. Engel is assistant professor of history and public policy at Texas A&M University's Bush School of Government and Public Service. He is the author of Cold War at Thirty Thousand Feet: The AngloAmerican Fight for Aviation Supremacy (2007) and The China Diary of George H. W. Bush: The Making of a Global President (2008). At present, he is writing a history of the tendency of American leaders since Thomas Jefferson to personify their foreign threats.

Sources: Clinton plans to name NKorea envoy soon

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton hopes to appoint a special envoy to deal with U.S. policy on North Korea before she leaves on a trip to Asia next week to demonstrate the Obama administration's commitment to dealing with North Korea's nuclear weapons program, The Associated Press has learned.

Clinton leaves this weekend on a tour of Japan, Indonesia, South Korea and China. Clinton could make the announcement on Friday when she is to give a speech in New York outlining the administration's view of Asia and its growing global importance, according to three sources familiar with the matter. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the appointment has not yet been made public.

The officials said Stephen Bosworth, a former senior State Department official and U.S. ambassador to South Korea, has been offered the job. Bosworth currently is dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts.

The officials said Clinton would like to make the announcement before her Sunday departure for Asia, although they stressed that details of the timing and specifics of the job still were being worked out.

Bosworth's office did not respond to a message seeking comment about the post.

Clinton's trip coincides with new worries that North Korea might be preparing to test a long-range missile.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Wednesday that a vehicle carrying radar equipment was seen moving to a launch site on the North's eastern coast from a munitions factory near Pyongyang.

South Korean and Japanese media said last week that intelligence agents had spotted a train carrying a long, cylinder-shaped object, believed to be a long-range missile, to the launch site at Musudan-ni.

Bosworth, returning from an unofficial trip to the secretive communist nation this past weekend, told reporters in Beijing that North Korean officials had expressed to him a willingness to move forward with long-stalled denuclearization talks.

He also said officials in Pyongyang he had spoken with had minimized reports that the North was preparing to test-fire a missile.

That message was in contrast to increasingly belligerent rhetoric from North Korea in recent weeks during which Pyongyang has announced it would scrap peace agreements with South Korea, warned that the peninsula was on the brink of war and appeared to be preparing to test a missile capable of reaching the western United States.

Bosworth said the officials he saw were upbeat about the nuclear talks and showed a willingness to talk to U.S. President Barack Obama's administration. He also said the delegation of academics he was traveling with had expressed misgivings about the alleged missile launch plans.

"We indicated there was concern that they might be preparing for a missile launch. They said that we should all wait and see," he said.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates also has played down reports of possible North Korean missile launch preparations. He noted this week that Pyongyang's last such test in 2006 was a failure, and the United States could shoot down a North Korean missile "should we deem it necessary."

Still, North Korea's saber-rattling has been interpreted as an attempt to grab Obama's attention, especially ahead of Clinton's visit to Japan, South Korea and China, three nations that, along with the United States and Russia, are pressing the North to abandon its nuclear weapons program in the so-called six-party talks.

Those talks currently are stalled, with the North refusing to agree to a protocol to verify an accounting of its nuclear activities. Pyongyang's declaration last year led the Bush administration to remove North Korea in October from its list of state sponsors of terror.

Despite the stalled talks, the State Department said Wednesday that U.S. officials would attend a related six-party meeting of a Northeast Asia peace and security working group in Russia on Feb. 19-20.

Other ancient sites, museums in Iraq

Babylon is the most famous of Iraq's more than 12,000 archaeological sites. The ancient capital developed into one of the world's first urban societies more than 4,000 years ago. But it went into decline after Persia captured it 2,500 years ago.

Other ancient sites and museums in Iraq and their status, when known:

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_ The Sumerian city of Ur, near Nasiriyah in the south and, according to the Bible, the home of Abraham, the biblical patriarch. The ruins contain a largely intact ziggurat, or temple structure. A team led by the British Museum concluded some damage may have been done by coalition troops from nearby Tallil air base. Access is now restricted.

_ Uruk, a Sumerian city southeast of Baghdad. Gilgamesh, a legendary king of the city, became the subject of an epic tale. The British Museum says the earliest evidence of writing was found in Eanna, an original settlement of Uruk. The writing appears on clay tablets later used as building foundations.

_ Ctesiphon, capital of the Persian empire, on the Tigris river southeast of Baghdad. The Roman emperor Julian II was so entranced by Ctesiphon's architecture that he ordered his legions to leave it alone. During the 1991 Gulf War, shock waves from bombing triggered cracks at the ruins, which contain the world's widest single-span arch of unreinforced brickwork.

_ Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrian empire, in northern Iraq. The Bible's Book of Jonah mentions the city, said to have had magnificent gates and canals. Nineveh lies across the Tigris from Mosul, where insurgents are active today.

_ Nimrud, another ancient Assyrian city near Mosul. The Bible refers to it as Kalakh. Excavations in the 19th century uncovered huge sculptures of winged lions. Iraqi experts uncovered hundreds of pieces of gold jewelry and ornaments there in the late 1980s.

_ The National Museum in Baghdad remains closed after severe 2003 looting and is expected to remain closed to the public for up to two more years until security in Baghdad is better, according to director Amira Eidan. The U.S. and Iraq recently said they will open a conservation and historic preservation institute in Irbil in Iraq's north. That $14 million plan will also refurbish the National Museum.

190,000 Romanian teachers plan strikes over pay

About 190,000 teachers in Romania said Thursday they will strike next month to protest a delay in receiving a 50 percent raise.

Prime Minister Calin Popescu Tariceanu issued a decree Tuesday delaying the raise, which had been approved by Parliament, saying it must wait until April 1 given Romania's economic problems.

He warned that other public workers would demand big pay increases, too. Hundreds of thousands of them have threatened a strike Nov. 20 if they do not also get a 50 percent raise.

President Traian Basescu called on workers not to strike before elections Nov. 30. But he added that Romania should redirect resources to education and health, saying teachers and doctors were emigrating due to low salaries and poor conditions.

The teachers plan to walk off the job for two hours Nov. 10, then to begin an indefinite strike Nov. 18.

Lucy Williams

Lucy Williams, 100, died Saturday in her South Side home.

Called "Sweet Lucy" because of her pleasant disposition, Mrs.Williams was well known in the Park Manor neighborhood, where shewould put children on her knees and tell them stories.

Mrs. Williams was a member of Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, Mt.Vernon Baptist Church and Pisidia Baptist Church and was an associatemember of Commonwealth Community Church.

Survivors include three daughters, Murdell, Eva and Mayola; ason, John; a sister and two brothers.

Visitation will be at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Commonwealth CommunityChurch, 140 W. 81st. A funeral will follow at 8 p.m. Burial will bein Burr Oak Cemetery, Alsip.