Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Which Country Came in Last Most Often?

Maybe Italian athletes don't like the pasta in Canada. Italy is taking home only five medals this year, its worst winter performance since the Olympics were held in Calgary in 1988. To add insult to injury, Italy's competitors came in dead last in six different events, more than any other country besides Canada, which at least walks off with 14 gold medals.

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SP_COUNTMK1

Reuters

SP_COUNTMK1

SP_COUNTMK1

But as we've continued our tally of last-place finishes, awarding less-precious "metals" to athletes bringing up the rear—lead medals to those who finish last, tin for second-to-last and zinc to the third-to-last—it was Russia that clunked home with 19 total medals, more than any other nation. Sadly, this is four more than the number of real medals it earned. (In our tally we didn't count anyone who didn't finish or was disqualified, and score differential was used for team tournaments.) But at least Russia can blame a sizable delegation at the Games for its poor showings. Ukraine, Latvia and Poland have no such excuse—all three were in the top 10 in last-place finishes despite having 60 or fewer athletes each.

For some countries—especially those in warmer climates—scoring these dubious medals was still quite a feat. Iran earned two lead medals, thanks to Marjan Kalhor, who finished last in two Alpine-skiing events. And Ghana's Kwame Nkrumah-Acheampong, nicknamed the "Snow Leopard," earned a tin medal in the men's slalom. Let's cut him some slack: He's Ghana's first-ever Winter Olympian.

Write to Hannah Karp at hannah.karp@dowjones.com

Dubious Medalists

Here are the countries that had the most last-place finishes (lead), second-to-last (tin) and third-to-last (zinc).

Country

Lead

Tin

Zinc

Total

Russia

2

6

11

19

U.S.

4

8

5

17

Canada

6

5

3

14

Czech Republic

4

2

8

14

Italy

6

3

4

13

Japan

5

5

1

11

Poland

4

2

5

11

Ukraine

4

3

2

9qtdz

Online.wsj.com

Chronicle critics pick favorite dishes

Anyone who says that eating for a living isn't all it's cracked up to be has some serious issues with the truth.

Eating is an obsession for The Chronicle's Food and Wine staff. Sure, as in any job, there are some drawbacks - such as not getting invited to friends' homes for dinner because they're petrified to cook for us. That only forces us to ferret out even more culinary hot spots.

Each member of the staff has distinctive tastes, yet despite our differences there are some things that we're collectively crazy about. Fresh Dungeness from Swan's Oyster Depot means crab season is here. The lemon meringue cake from San Francisco's Tartine is our dessert of choice for birthdays. The Bostini cream pie from Scala's Bistro has us going back for seconds. We'd drive to Yountville every day if we could for a fix of the "Oreo" cookie at Bouchon Bakery. And we all agree that the burrata from A16 is pretty much as close to heaven as we're likely to ever get.

What about our individual choices? We've come up with a list, each one of us choosing our five favorite food items. Agree? Disagree? Chronicle readers have always been an opinionated lot - so bring it on.

Michael Bauer

Restaurant critic

The salmon cornets amuse bouche at the French Laundry in Yountville - salmon tartare scooped into a crisp savory cone filled with tangy creme fraiche - is an unsurpassed treat.

Beer-battered green beans at Coco500 in San Francisco: I order it every time.

Single cheeseburger at In-N-Out: It's a secret indulgence.

The Rattlesnake at Beretta in San Francisco: I may have a near phobia of snakes, but this cocktail - a blend of rye, lemon, maple syrup, bitters and frothy egg whites - is the best therapy.

Octopus salad at Pesce in San Francisco: I've had many versions, but this is by far the best: tender seafood, crisp celery, tart lemon and creamy potato cubes.

Lynn Char Bennett

Staff writer

Mossabaha at Old Jerusalem Restaurant in San Francisco: This not-too-garlicky hummus with its whole garbanzos, olive oil and fresh lemon juice is soul satisfying.

The Manhattan Antica at Prima Ristorante in Walnut Creek: Bar manager Gwyneth Hogarth creates a standout version of this classic.

Wu gok at King Valley Tea House in Pinole: These crisp taro turnovers are made to order by special request, but well worth the trouble.

Antipasto trippa at Poggio in Sausalito: Chef Peter McNee braises tripe in a wood-burning oven until it's meltingly tender.

The cumin lamb at Sichuan Fortune House in Pleasant Hill.

Janny Hu

Staff writer

Caldo tlalpeŅo at Nopalito in San Francisco: A light and refreshing soup that's deceptively filling.

Kyoto iced coffee from Blue Bottle Coffee: Smooth, delicious and ridiculously strong.

Barbecue pork buns at AA Bakery & Cafe in San Francisco: Near-perfect buns filled with moist, flavorful meat.

Butternut squash pizza at Gialina in San Francisco: The thinly sliced squash and equally thin crust make you wish this pizza was always in season.

Risotto with beets and feta cheese at Specchio in San Francisco: Sweet and savory, and just plain cool to look at.

Stacy Finz

Staff writer

Fried chicken sandwich at Bakesale Betty in Oakland: The only sandwich - the spicy slaw gives it that zing - that would entice me to eat from an ironing-board table.

The morning bun at La Farine in Berkeley: Flaky croissant layers smothered in brown sugar and cinnamon. Need I say more?

Carolina cheese grits at 900 Grayson in Berkeley: This creamy comfort dish served at Saturday brunch makes me wish I came from the South.

Cream of mushroom soup at Martini House in St. Helena: Chef Todd Humphries forages the mushrooms for this rich soup. The mushrooms are safe; the soup is to die for.

Lobster pot pie at Michael Mina in San Francisco: The most deliciously decadent thing I've ever eaten.

Sfgate.com

Icahn Charter Schools slated for Pelham Parkway

When Aging in America shut its doors in August, there was speculation that a charter school was going to occupy the property..

When the building was first vacated, Aging in America declined to confirm its future use. Now, according to confirmation received last week, three separate Icahn Charter Schools will soon be calling the building at 1500 Pelham Parkway South home.

The building once housed Mother Butler Memorial High School for Girls. An additional 10,000 square feet of classroom space will be added to the building, according to a November 10 Department of Buildings filing, and work is already underway preparing the building for a September 2011 opening.

Icahn Charter Schools board member Julie Goodyear confirmed that Icahn Charter School #3, currently located at 108 W. 174th Street, and Icahn Charter School #4, located at the Monroe High School Annex at 1551 East 172nd Street, will be moving into the building. The schools, which will eventually include kindergarten through eighth-grade, will be joined in the building by a new school: Icahn Charter School #5. New construction will allow the building to house close to 1,000 students.

“In order to ultimately have all of the schools be kindergarten through eighth grade, we will have to add space,” Goodyear said. “The construction will not be completed right away, and should continue on past the September 2011 opening. The building currently has a gym and cafeteria, but we would not have enough classroom space without adding to the present building.”

The work on the addition, will include a fourth story, can continue past the September 2011 opening because not all of the space will be needed. The charter schools will only expand one grade per school year. In September 2011 Icahn Charter School #3 will run from k-5th grade, Icahn Charter School #4 will reach to the 4th grade, and Icahn Charter School #5 will service up to the 2nd grade.

Goodyear said that first preference will be given to school children living in the local school district, as well as to siblings of current pupils. There will be 36 students in each school per grade level, each class consisting of 18 students, she said. Students will be selected through a lottery system, and since Icahn Charter Schools are getting great results, Goodyear said, she expects a lot of applicants.

Goodyear said that the building is an obvious choice to locate the schools because the building had previously been a school. She said that the Icahn Charter School model calls for a longer school day typically lasting from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., a longer school year lasting until mid-July, and small class sizes with lots of individual attention paid to each student.

The first Carl C. Icahn Charter School opened on Brook Avenue in 2001, with support from Icahn, a billionaire. Since then, the schools have consistently out performed median test scores from students around the state on standardized English Language Arts and Math tests. Icahn is best known as a financier, corporate raider, and private equity investor.

“Mr. Icahn has a strong commitment to education,” Goodyear said.

Alterations to the building will not be coming before Community Board 11 or the City Council, because it is an as-of-right project.qtdz

Nypost.com

NBA / Nuggets lose Anthony, but beat Suns in scorefest

J.R. Smith scored a season-high 30 points and the Denver Nuggets overcame the absence of Carmelo Anthony to hold off the Phoenix Suns 138-133 Sunday night in the highest-scoring game in the NBA this season.

Chauncey Billups returned to the lineup after missing three games with a sprained right wrist and had 25 points and eight assists for the host Nuggets.

Anthony was feeling ill Friday against Chicago but still played and hit the winner in the final seconds. On Sunday, he lasted just 2:48 before sitting down for good.

Jason Richardson did his best to keep Phoenix in it with 39 points, and Steve Nash had 17 points and 11 assists.

Nash missed a three-point try with 17.8 seconds left that would have tied the game.

Pacers 95, Lakers 92:

Roy Hibbert had 24 points and 12 rebounds, and Kobe Bryant scored 41 points but missed two tying three-point attempts in the final seconds of Indiana's first victory in 12 tries over Los Angeles at Staples Center. ... Danny Granger added 18 points for the Pacers, who followed up their surprising road win over Miami six days ago with an even more stunning victory. ... Bryant scored 23 points in the second half as the two-time defending champions rallied back from a 15-point deficit in the second half, pulling to 93-92 on Pau Gasol's free throws before Hibbert dunked in traffic with 16.4 seconds left.

Spurs 109, Hornets 95:

Manu Ginobili scored 15 of his 23 points in the second half and San Antonio overcame a 17-point deficit to hand New Orleans its first home loss of the season. ... Tim Duncan scored 21 points and Richard Jefferson added 19 for the Spurs, who matched a franchise-best 7-0 start on the road, set in the 2006-07 season. ... David West scored 23 points for the Hornets, who were outscored 65-34 in the second half while losing for the first time in eight home games.

Jazz 109, Clippers 97:

Deron Williams had 26 points and nine assists and visiting Utah won its fifth straight. ... C.J. Miles scored 10 of his 14 points in the fourth quarter for the Jazz, who won their 13th in 16 games after opening the season with one-sided losses to Denver and Phoenix. ... Rookie Blake Griffin had 35 points on 13-for-21 shooting, grabbed 14 rebounds and dished out seven assists for the Clippers, who have lost nine of the past 10 meetings with the Jazz.

Knicks 125, Pistons 116:

Amar'e Stoudemire had 37 points and 15 rebounds, and Raymond Felton added 23 points and 11 assists for New York, which won at Detroit in double overtime. ... Danilo Gallinari hit back-to-back three-pointers to start the second OT, giving the Knicks a 115-109 lead, and Wilson Chandler followed with another three for a nine-point lead. ... Tayshaun Prince led the Pistons with 31 points, including 21 in the fourth quarter and overtime, and Rodney Stuckey scored 29 points.

Rockets 99, Thunder 98:

Kevin Martin scored 23 points and Shane Battier hit 4 of 6 attempts from three-point range for host Houston. ... Battier scored 18 points, Kyle Lowry had 14 points and Luis Scola 13 for the Rockets, who won their 11th straight at home over the Thunder. ... Russell Westbrook had 23 points and 10 assists as Oklahoma City's road winning streak ended at five games.

Hawks 96, Raptors 78:

Josh Smith had his third career triple-double and Marvin Williams added 17 points and 12 rebounds for visiting Atlanta. ... Smith finished with 12 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists as the Hawks won their third straight after losing seven of nine. Joe Johnson and Al Horford scored 16 points apiece. ... Andrea Bargnani, limited to a season-low 11 points Friday, led Toronto with 14 points, and DeMar DeRozan scored 13.

Nets 98, Trail Blazers 96:

Devin Harris had 25 points, including a clutch three-pointer with 1:11 left, and eight assists to lead host New Jersey. ... Anthony Morrow scored 14 points and Brook Lopez added 13 for the Nets, who snapped a two-game losing streak and handed the Trail Blazers their third straight loss. ... Reserve Wesley Matthews scored 25 points, Brandon Roy had 21 and LaMarcus Aldridge added 20 for the Blazers.

This article appeared on page B - 4 of the San Francisco Chronicleqtdz

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The people's champ: Boxer Manny Pacquiao a winner in political ring, too

ARLINGTON – In boxing, distractions typically come from government's judicial branch, not its legislative.

The likes of assault, breach of contract, possession, DUI and bankruptcy litter the sentences spoken and written about the sport.

Now along comes Manny Pacquiao, whose training staff has bemoaned the time he's spent politicking along the post-election trail.

When Pacquiao last fought at Cowboys Stadium in March, he was merely a boxing phenom. When he enters the same ring Saturday night, announcer Michael Buffer is almost sure to introduce Pacquiao as a "seven-time world champion and congressman representing the Philippine province of Sarangani."

The "seven-time" is open for debate among boxing aficionados who question the validity of a couple of the titles, if not his skill in the ring. "Congressman" is not. In May, Pacquiao won election in a landslide, defeating a heavily favored candidate described by AOL as a member of "an entrenched billionaire clan."

Not that Pacquiao, 31, is a poor man. He could earn more than $15 million for Saturday's fight against Antonio Margarito. But big paydays are a relatively new phenomenon for him. And it's not Kennedy wealth or Bush family money or the dynastic dollars that were at the disposal of Roy Chiongbian.

According to The Philippine Star , the losing candidate is "gatekeeper of the vast Chiongbian business empire involved in shipping, real estate, agri-business and others." His mother is a former governor of the province. His father was a congressman. His brother was the congressman Pacquiao replaced.

By contrast, Pacquiao's is a rags-to-riches story. It's pure Hollywood, told lovingly by CBS' 60 Minutes five days ago without a hint of the show's signature ferocity and skepticism.

Boxing made Pacquiao an international star and a Philippine icon. Rich people's billions can be no match for a people's champion, provided he runs a serious, smart campaign that is well-funded and guided by political professionals.

National hero

When he enters the ring here Saturday night, it will be around noon Sunday in the Philippines. Churches will cancel afternoon mass. A nation will be glued to its television sets, which will offer the live broadcast for free. A diminutive 5-5 ½ and bulked up to all of 147 pounds, Pacquiao means as much to his country as the soccer team does to Brazilians, the hockey team does to Canadians and the Packers do to Green Bay.

To listen to Paccquiao speak about his legislative agenda for his impoverished constituency would make even the most cynical observer dig deep for a few dollars for the cause.

Seated on a ring apron minutes after his only public workout Tuesday, Congressman Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao of the People's Champ Movement party spoke of rampant unemployment, education inequity, lack of health care and sickening human trafficking in his district. His mission: to eradicate all.

"It is also God's mission for me," he said quietly, without the least hint of evangelistic fervor.

It is also a full-time job. As such, Pacquiao said he is in constant communication with staff members who accompanied him to the fight as well as those back home to keep him "updated."

But preparing for a championship fight against Margarito, a former world champion, Paquiao's boxing staff would argue, must be a full-time endeavor as well.

Full schedule

Trainer Freddie Roach complained when early preparation for Margarito was disrupted daily by politics for a few hours or for a full day to allow Pacquiao to travel from Sarangani to the nation's capital in Manila to meet with President Benigno Aquino III.

After training was moved to Los Angeles, there was further grumbling when promoter Bob Arum asked Pacquiao to spend a late October evening in Las Vegas campaigning among Filipino voters for his friend, U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, who was in a desperate fight for re-election.

"You know Filipinos are a huge voting block in Nevada," Arum said. "Manny did it as a personal favor for me and for Harry. The senator will never forget it."

Not to comprehend Roach's annoyance with such frivolity during fight preparation is not to understand the single-minded focus of a football coach before a Super Bowl or a gymnastics coach on the eve of an Olympics. Even one step from the routine is viewed as an unnecessary and unwelcome distraction.

Roach volunteered this week that during the eight weeks of training, Pacquiao has confessed to missing working in his congressional office. At the same time, Roach said his fighter is 100 percent ready to step into the ring against an opponent who is listed as 4 ½ inches taller and could outweigh him by as much as 15 pounds when they enter the ring about 28 hours after the weigh-in.

"Manny has spoiled us because he is usually ready after three weeks of training," said Roach, who grades this training camp experience as a B. "This time it has taken a little longer, but he is ready now."

Pacquiao, who has never weighed more than 147 pounds for a fight, said he planned to bulk up to today's 150-pound weigh-in limit, but could not. He found the extra weight made him feel heavy and sluggish and, most importantly, it affected his speed.

He is counting on that speed to offset the relatively hulking Margarito, who plans to weigh more than 160 on fight night.

"We have some strategy to counter his size," Pacquiao said.

As often happens in a Pacquiao media session that includes a throng of reporters from the Philippines, the subject swung back and forth between boxing and politics.

"What draws people to you?" an inquiring mind wanted to know.

Pacquiao, as he often does, took a moment to think before answering.

"I come from nothing," he said. "I can box. I care. I'm still humble and I'm nice to people."

Fight at a glance

Who: Manny Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 knockouts) vs. Antonio Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs)

What: Bout for the vacant World Boxing Council 154-pound championship

Where: Cowboys Stadium

When: Saturday around 10 p.m.

Tickets: Available

TV: HBO pay-per-view with suggested retail price of $54.95Around 10 p.m. Saturday, Cowboys Stadium (HBO pay-per-view)

Dallasnews.com

Monday, November 29, 2010

Singsing lead dancer

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Singsing lead dancer

Alotau Canoe & Kundu Festival 2010, Papua New Guinea

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Is Sarah Palin coming to a city near you?

Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin announced the schedule for her latest book tour on Thursday, which will include stops throughout the middle of the US – but barely on either coast.

Palin, according to her publisher HarpersCollins, will sign her new book "America by Heart: Reflections on Family, Faith, and Flag," which comes out November 23, in 16 different places.

Her only stop outside of the heartland will be Charleston, South Carolina, according to the release.

In the book, she talks about her "strong belief in the importance of family, faith and patriotism" as well as people she met while touring to promote her book "Going Rogue" last year.

On her latest tour, Palin will visit Des Moines and Spirit Lake, Iowa; Tulsa, Okla. on the day after Thanksgiving. She'll also be in Phoenix, Nebraska, New Orleans, Dallas, Houston and more.

Palin also won't be making any appearances in Alaska, her home state.

The former Vice Presidential candidate will be joined by her family members in some of the stops, according to Politico. There's no word if her oldest daughter, Bristol, who recently advanced on "Dancing With The Stars" will join her after her television show is over.

For Palin, the tour is just her latest trip into the spotlight. Her reality show on TLC, "Sarah Palin's Alaska," premieres Sunday on TLC.

 

Nydailynews.com

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NYC's clean-air peddlers

THE ISSUE: The 1,745-plus citations issued to pedicab operators by the city this year.

***

How disappointing that you have joined the City Council in making life miserable for pedicabs ("Target: Pedicabs," Editorial, Nov. 23).

Pedicabs are a nonpolluting form of public transportation, powered by people, not fossil fuels, and they represent a free-market service with no government subsidy.

The excuse that pedicabs contribute to congestion and threaten the health of New Yorkers is absurd.

Several hundred pedicabs are outnumbered by tens of thousands of other vehicles that take up far more space, create more pollution and are involved in more pedestrian accidents and deaths.

Larry Penner

Great Neck

***

The issuance of NYC pedicab driver's licenses solely to candidates possessing valid quad-state driver's licenses remains at the very top of the priority list of the New York City Pedicab Owners' Association.

Our concern is with illegal activity by J-1 visa holders. The best way to shut off the flow in this massive, illegal pipeline is to require a higher standard of licensing for pedicab practitioners -- the same standard as for every other passenger-toting industry (save horse-carriages) in New York City.

The NYCPOA is pro-competition -- but it's also pro-standards. Without appropriate standards, responsible industry participants will continue to drown in a sea of unsafe, reckless and illegal service providers who ultimately set the tone for the NYC pedicab experience, now with the city's blessing, no less.

Gregg Zukowski

President

NYCPOA

Manhattanqtdz

Nypost.com

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Slow Growth Stymies Portugal

[PORTUGAL] Credit: Yaroslav Trofimov/ the Wall Street Journal

Employees work at the J. Sampaio & Irmao shoe factory in Felgueiras. Shoes are a major export for the country, but the industry is suffering.

FELGUEIRAS, Portugal—Unlike Greece, Portugal didn't falsify its public accounts, and unlike Ireland or Spain, it didn't have a property bubble that saddled the banking system with mountains of bad real-estate debts.

Instead, the country is finding itself in the cross hairs of investors largely because of a chronic weakness: Over the past decade, it couldn't adapt to globalization and failed to grow. The cost of this failure is now being laid bare in the euro zone's gathering financial crisis that has sharply driven up the cash-strapped government's cost of borrowing.

"We have faced huge difficulties because of competition in the world markets from the new entrants that produced the same goods as Portugal, but at lower prices," said Goncalo Pascoal, chief economist at Millennium BCP, Portugal's biggest traded bank. Yet, because of cheap funding in euros, until recently "these difficulties were not impacting our life patterns."

Now, this spigot has been shut. And, as Portuguese government bonds trade at record spreads above similar German paper, the economy's growth is likely to be further choked off. Next year's budget that the Portuguese parliament is slated to approve on Friday includes some €3 billion ($4 billion) in spending cuts andabout €1.5 billion in additional taxes, on top of earlier austerity measures. The country's two major unions held a nationwide strike against the budget on Wednesday, shutting down public transport, hospitals and some factories in a sign of rising social tensions.

Portugal Idles During Strike

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[SB10001424052748703572404575634890798250832]

REUTERS

A man walked next to a banner that reads "Don't cross the picket line" at a university in Lisbon Wednesday.

The troubles of Portugal's shoe-making industry—one of the country's main exporters—illustrate the challenges that the country has faced over the past decade. China's entry into the World Trade Organization opened the floodgates of cheap imports just as the euro's relatively high value priced Portuguese products out of the market. Other traditional industries, such as textiles and clothing, were similarly affected.

Since 2001, the country's shoe production shrank by 40% to 63.7 million pairs, as sales dropped to €1.3 billion from €1.9 billion, according to industry statistics. Closed-down shoe factories, some of them with broken windows, line up the roadsides in the industry's hub around this town in northern Portugal.

In places like Italy or Switzerland, large, well-capitalized shoemakers have managed to offset the Asian competition by creating global luxury brands, and making up for lost volume with premium prices.

For Portugal, Western Europe's poorest country, this has proven difficult to pull off. Despite investments, Portugal's old reputation for cheap, shoddy footwear still lingers. "The markets do not have the correct perception of the quality of Portuguese products," lamented Alfredo Jorge Moreira, executive director of APICCAPS, the country's shoe and leather producers' association.

Portuguese shoe companies are usually small family-owned firms—and they simply lack the scope and resources to launch a global brand of their own, said Leandro de Melo, director of CTCP, the Portuguese footwear industry's technology and research center. "A lot of money is necessary to create an image, and we haven't been able to do that yet," he said.

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PORTUGAL

Yaroslav Trofimov/The Wall Street Journal

Employees work at the J. Sampaio & Irmao shoe factory in Felgueiras. Shoes are a major export for the country, but the industry is suffering.

PORTUGAL

PORTUGAL

One of the few Portuguese companies that has tried developing an international brand is J. Sampaio & Irmao, which makes the Eject line of bright-colored women's shoes. Despite the national strike, local women in blue overalls toiled Wednesday on stitching machines amid the acrid smell of glue in the company's small Felgueiras factory, tucked in the vine-covered hills of northern Portugal.

Margins are low because, with 300 different models, the factory produces as few as 100 pairs of each type. Sampaio, which sells some €10 million worth of shoes a year, virtually all of them outside Portugal, hasn't had a profit for two years, said the owner and CEO, Joaquim Carvalho.

The company is now forced to reduce spending on investment and marketing, further undercutting its ability to break out into the premium leagues. "The whole country is tightening its belt, and so are we," Mr. Carvalho said. "Consumers are scared to buy because they fear they may become unemployed tomorrow."

Funding, relatively easy to get a year ago, has also dried up, Mr. Carvalho said: "The Portuguese banks themselves don't have any money—and they don't give it to us." Though the company doesn't rely on Portugal for sales, it's far too small to tap international capital markets—and remains hostage to Portugal's liquidity crisis.

Portuguese officials insist the crisis isn't justified, and that the markets are lumping their country with Greece and Ireland unfairly. They point out that the deficit is relatively low and, despite the previous round of austerity cuts, the economy grew a relatively healthy 1.5% in the third quarter. "Portugal has historical problems with growth, but we're sorting them out. We're changing the structure to high-value-added products," said Joao Galamba, a lawmaker with the ruling Socialist Party who sits on the finance and economy committees. "The problem," he added, "is that it takes time."

Write to Yaroslav Trofimov at yaroslav.trofimov@wsj.comqtdz

Online.wsj.com

Owls to compete in 2011 hoops tournament in Cancn

The Rice Owls men's basketball team will compete in the 2011 Cancún Governor's Cup.

The eight-team tournament will be held in late December at Poliforum Benito Juarez in Cancún, Mexico. The field will include Rice, Kansas State, College of Charleston, Massachusetts, Southern Illinois and Utah. Two other teams will be announced at a later date.

The Cancún Governor’s Cup will be a bracket-format tournament featuring 12 games over three days. The two teams that remain undefeated will meet in a championship game.

The exact date of the tournament has not been finalized, but it is expected to be around the Christmas holiday.

joseph.duarte@chron.com

Chron.com

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Coconut silhouettes

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Coconut silhouettes

Garewa village, Tufi, Papua New Guinea

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Cathie Black's book is hot

headshotKeith J. Kelly - Media Ink

Sales of Cathie Black's business memoir, "Basic Black," have spiked since Mayor Mike Bloomberg unveiled his decision last week to tap the media executive as the new chancellor of the Department of Education.

"There's no question her appointment has had an impact at retail," said Stuart Appelbaum, a spokesman for Random House Inc., which published the book in 2007 through its Crown/Business imprint. He said sales are up 400 percent in New York City since the surprise announcement that she was picked to succeed outgoing chancellor Joel Klein, who is headed to the News Corp. board (parent company of The Post).

The book, when it first appeared, was helped through excerpts in Hearst magazine, O, The Oprah Magazine, and by Black's appearance on Oprah Winfrey's talk show.

The book also rankled some of the Hearst brass at the time, who felt Black was being too self promotional while the magazine empire of Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, Red Book and Marie Claire was starting to show some signs of stress.

The book sold "more than 130,000 copies," according to Applebaum and ended up becoming a national bestseller. Sales of the paperback which hit in 2008, were a little more tepid.

To-do list

Tina Brown, the incoming editor-in-chief of Newsweek Daily Beast Co., has been trying to calm worried staffers primarily on the Newsweek side of the proposed merger between Sidney Harman's Newsweek and the Barry Diller-owned Daily Beast.

Today, Brown is slated to journey to the embattled Washington, D.C., bureau of Newsweek where Bureau Chief Jeff Bartholet had already announced he was leaving. Brown had hired media critic Howard Kurtz from the Washington Post weeks ago and installed him as the bureau chief of the Daily Beast.

Sources say that Brown would also like Evan Thomas to do more writing for the magazine.

In August, long before the merger talk surfaced, the veteran editor-at-large, with 25 years experience on the weekly, was one of the high-profile people to say they would exit.

He agreed to do a few long pieces per year while he teaches at Princeton and works on a bio of President Dwight Eisenhower.

Said Thomas via e-mail: "I will not be at the meeting. I have told Sidney that I will write six pieces a year (the first is in the magazine this week). I have not heard from Tina."

Brown's bigger problem may be trying to quell the panic in the ranks that erupted at Newsweek.com when a report surfaced late last week that it was going to be shut down.

Brown was quick to try to stamp out that brushfire as quickly as possible. Last Friday, she tweeted: "Woah! Newsweek.com's superb content will live on under its own banner & in URLs on the new site. Not shutting down, combining."

Brown dispatched the Daily Beast's Tom Watson to meet with worried Newsweek.com staffers on Wednesday to further try to calm nerves, Joe Pompeo was reporting on Yahoo! News. Although nothing concrete emerged, Watson was basically telling staffers "to sit tight and don't panic," he quoted one staffer as saying.

Brown was at the National Book Awards on Wednesday night at Cipriani Wall Street where she gave the keynote address to introduce "Bonfire of the Vanities" author Tom Wolfe, who, in a lengthy address, reminisced about his days in daily journalism at the Springfield Union, the Washington Post and the Herald Tribune.

The Daily Beast also sponsored the after-party, but Brown did not stick around for the festivities which went until after 1 a.m.

Among the invited guests on hand was Maer Roshan, who was famously raided from his job at New York to take on the task of trying to save the ill-fated Talk, Tina's last magazine. Roshan, who saw his own Radar magazine crash and burn three times, was quick to spike talk that he was hooking up with Brown again. "I love work ing with Tina, but at the moment I'm happily pursuing my own projects," he said.

The tentative pact that was signed to merge Beast and Newsweek was unveiled last Friday. One source said the deal might be finalized by early December, although no firm date has been put out. The new team has pledged only "modest cuts" but the anticipation is that most of the cuts will come from the Newsweek side in part because previous owner Washington Post Company will be picking up some of the severance costs.

Said one insider, "I think they are just getting down to brass tacks to try to come up with a plan."

Final cut

Staffers at Bloomberg BusinessWeek who made the move after the sale of the weekly by McGraw-Hill Companies last year are nervously watching the calendar.

Any of the surviving staffers who made the move will still collect severance from McGraw-Hill provided they are downsized or laid off on or before Dec. 1 -- the one-year anniversary of the $9 million sale.

Several weeks ago, three were laid off in the Bloomberg BusinessWeek online operation -- Patricia O'Connell, Will Andrews and Phil Mintz, but nobody knows if that was the final cut or not.

kkelly@nypost.com

Nypost.com

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Alaba painted hut

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Alaba painted hut

Ethiopia.
Traveling from Nazeret to Arba Minch (southern Ethiopia)
The Alaba people, living en route between Shashemene and Sodo (Soddo) , are known for painting the interior and/or exterior of their tukul houses.

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Warm Weather Plagues Vancouver

An army of meteorologists at these Games are responsible for bringing weather forecasts to nervous venue managers. In the first days of the Olympics, they had almost nothing but bad news: drenching rains and temperatures in the mid-50s in some places and sudden blizzards and fog in the mountains.

"I've never been on a chairlift with an umbrella before," said Canadian silver-medal winning moguls skier Jennifer Heil.

In recent days, a cold front made everyone forget these early troubles. But spring-like conditions are coming back. From Wednesday, the forecast calls for warm, rainy days with temperatures downtown back in the 50s, about nine degrees higher than average.

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Fans from the U.S. cheer during the third run of the men's singles luge competition.

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And there's snow in the forecast, but not where's it wanted or needed. On Cypress Mountain, the white stuff started to fall Tuesday, but a spokesman for the Vancouver Organizing Committee said the dusting would hurt more than help the remaining events.

Even on the clearest day, ski cross is a sport that makes its best athletes look accident-prone. Canadian Julia Murray said that from her limited vantage point, there were "quite a few" spills Tuesday. She also said the jumps at the top were harder to get started on because of the snow.

The temperate spell could once again put the squeeze on the 27 meteorologists at work here.

At all hours of the night, calls from worried venue managers come in to the command center. At each of the five venues, three meteorologists, working in shifts, produce forecasts hourly. These meteorologists are wielding high-tech gear that can "see" the wind in 3-D and simulate weather conditions at one-kilometer intervals.

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Phred Dvorak/The Wall Street Journal

Trevor Smith, lead meteorologist at Environment Canada's Olympics command center.

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An international team of researchers is here testing new methods of forecasting dubbed "nowcasting" that can give pinpoint weather predictions that take effect right away. "It's high pressure," says lead forecaster Trevor Smith.

On Feb. 12, the first day of the Games, the Olympic forecasters gave Whistler's downhill skiing organizers some bad news: Course groomers typically inject water into the snow so it will freeze, but forecasters said the temperatures at the bottom of the track wouldn't be cold enough to do that—at least not until later in the weekend. At 3 a.m. that Saturday they called the weather center, and ski officials later postponed the race until the following Monday.

When that day arrived, forecasters were fixated on "Harvey's cloud," a dense foggy patch that tends to appear mid-mountain on Whistler, right in the middle of the downhill course. At the command center, George Isaac, a Canadian scientist who's part of the Vancouver nowcasting team, pointed at the nascent patch, which appeared as a blotch on the computer screen in front of him. "We were worried that this would come down," he said.

On Sunday morning, Feb. 14, monitors stationed at Whistler Mountain north of Vancouver saw another worrisome blotch on their radar and called central command to get the time of impact. The nowcasters answered that the blizzard would hit Whistler right in the middle of the biathlon competition.

What they didn't realize was that the half-hour storm would blind all the top biathlon athletes, throwing them out of contention, says Roy Rasmussen, senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., who generated the prediction.

"To be truthful, we didn't know it was going to impact the competition," says Mr. Rasmussen.

—Adam Thompson contributed to this article

Write to Phred Dvorak at phred.dvorak@wsj.com and Geoffrey A. Fowler at geoffrey.fowler@wsj.com

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honk the horn!

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honk the horn!

Providence, RI - October 2010

from the Providence Honk Festival.

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Chuck 'Loko' over caffeine

Sen. Charles Schumer yesterday urged the state to ban "deadly" caffeinated alcoholic beverages such as "Four Loko" and "Joose."

"Four Loko, and drinks like it, are a toxic, dangerous mix of caffeine and alcohol, and they are spreading like a plague across the country," said Schumer.

Schumer has also asked the Food and Drug Administration to investigate the safety of these drinks.

The canned drinks, popular with young adults, contain as much as two to three coffee cups worth of caffeine and twice the amount of alcohol as beer.

Nypost.com

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Bode Miller Is a Rare Olympic Bird

Vancouver, British Columbia

On Saturday, in what could be his last run at the Winter Olympics, Bode Miller will try to win his first medal in an Olympic men's slalom event.

No matter what happens, this Olympics has already cemented Mr. Miller's place as the most successful skier in U.S. history. If he can pull off a win in the slalom, he'll rival French legend Jean-Claude Killy as one of the greatest and most versatile Olympic skiers of all time.

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Bode Miller races in the men's downhill on Feb. 15.

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Saturday may be a last chance for a glimpse at a skier rarer than most people realize. Heading into Saturday's slalom, Mr. Miller, 32 years old, has five Olympic medals, including one gold, spread among four of skiing's five disciplines.

Mr. Miller broke onto the scene as a slalom specialist in the mid-1990s, wearing the first generation of curved skis to help him power through turns in a way no one had before. His two silver medals at the Salt Lake City Games in 2002 came in combined and giant slalom.

As he shifted his focus to speed events, coaches worried his reckless style would lead to a career-ending injury.

That didn't happen, and now, far beyond the age when most skiers win slaloms, Mr. Miller still judges himself by how quickly he can dance through the gates.

"It's always been my dream to win in slalom," Mr. Miller said after taking his first gold medal in the combined in Vancouver. "I've always said, when you're skiing well, there's nothing better than slalom."

Mr. Miller hasn't said he'll retire after the Olympics, and now that he's winning again, he has suggested he may well return to the World Cup circuit.

Professional skiing is a grind, both mentally and physically, and especially for Americans—who often spend up to seven months far away from home each year. Mr. Miller has noted how his desire to spend time with his 2-year-old daughter often outweighs his desire to ski faster than anyone else. So it seems unlikely that Mr. Miller will still be on the slopes in Sochi, Russia, in 2014.

He has won five world-championship medals and 32 World Cup races, but he also has 68 World Cup podiums and two overall World Cup titles. That's a résumé that rivals that of France's Mr. Killy—who is still considered the gold standard of skiing. Mr. Killy famously swept the alpine competitions at the 1968 Olympics.

"You're just not going to see a skier like Bode come around ever again," said Tom Kelly, the longtime spokesman for the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association. "A guy who's won World Cup races, overall titles and Olympic medals. That just doesn't happen."

By now, Mr. Miller's return to the U.S. team last year is part of skiing lore. He'd quit two years earlier to form his own, self-financed team because he didn't like the way Team USA was being run.

This came a year after Mr. Miller had boasted of his late-night carousing during the Turin Olympics, where he won no medals, despite hype that made him a favorite in all five competitions before the Games.

Mr. Miller said this week his behavior in Turin was his way of taking back his identity after seeing it hijacked by the media.

More

Mavericks Win Medals

Bode Miller Wins Gold in Super Combined

Even Bad Boys Turn Good in Vancouver

Last spring, Sasha Rearick, the men's alpine coach for the U.S. team, called Mr. Miller and asked if he wanted to return. Mr. Miller told him no thanks and spent the summer playing golf and fooling around on the beach with his daughter.

"After everything I'd done, I thought I deserved some time not trying to kill myself every day," Mr. Miller said.

But by September, Mr. Miller was considering a comeback and flew to Utah to discuss it with Mr. Rearick. "I saw the problems he'd had in the past that forced him to leave the team as opportunities," said Mr. Rearick.

He welcomed Mr. Miller back even though a World Cup season was just six weeks away and Mr. Miller was completely out of sync physically with his teammates. "I was pretty much on my own," Mr. Miller said.

He'll be on his own on the hill Saturday, trying to win that elusive slalom medal.

Write to Matthew Futterman at matthew.futterman@wsj.com

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Friday, November 26, 2010

2010-11-11 Violin Playing 014 Stitch

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2010-11-11 Violin Playing 014 Stitch

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Mod squad

* Jonathan Adler 47 Greene St., 212-941-8950

Delicately treading the line between kitsch and cool, Jonathan Adler’s designs have become de rigueur in NYC abodes. His style, called “happy chic,” brings modern designs, geometric patterns and witty sayings to everything from rugs to pillows to pottery.

* Alessi 130 Greene St., 212-941-7300

This Italian company has collaborated with some of the biggest international designers (including Michael Graves, Ron Arad and Norman Foster) to introduce kitchen products with a quirky bent, like this tea strainer by Alan Chan (right). You can also find other items for the home — clocks, bathroom accessories — as well as a Tarallucci e Vino espresso bar, at the 980-square-foot New York flagship. (Also, tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. only, get 20 percent off the entire store.)

POP LIFE: Jonathan Adler’s Greene Street boutique is fun and affordable.

POP LIFE: Jonathan Adler’s Greene Street boutique is fun and affordable.

* Artemide 46 Greene St., 212-925-1588

Light up your life with groovy architectural lamps from this Italian lighting store. A dizzying array is on display — table, desk and floor lamps, sconces, ceiling and outdoor lights, and some incredible chandeliers — as well as the latest high-tech, LED-based models.

* Blu Dot 140 Wooster St., 212-780-9058

No need to take the water taxi to IKEA to find affordable modern and contemporary furniture. (Blu Dot’s motto: “Good design at good prices.”) Take, for example, the ’60s-style Paramount sofa ($1,359), available in five shades of gray (ranging from charcoal to stone to even “smog”). The 2,500-square-foot showroom also stocks modular shelving systems that are ideal for small NYC pads.

* Kartell 39 Greene St., 212-966-6665

Like a candy store, Kartell displays its signature lollipop-colored plastic furnishings from floor to ceiling — tempting you with designs like the ingenious Front Page magazine rack, the adorable TipTop side table and the company’s first night table, the Ghost Buster (left). Known for producing Philippe Starck’s Ghost chair (in myriad colors), Kartell also works with the likes of Piero Lissoni, Marcel Wanders and Tokujin Yoshioka.

* Scavolini 429 WEST Broadway, 212-219-0910

This sleek Italian kitchen manufacturer has just opened its 10,000-square-foot, bi-level US flagship. The hardest thing will be making up your mind — there are 15 kitchen designs (including one by Karim Rashid) and over 500 door finishes alone, and just about every type of organization and storage option available.

Nypost.com

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Autumnal park path

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Autumnal park path

© All rights reserved.
Taken in Beaumont Park, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England.
Beaumont Park is a magnificent Victorian Park situated on a valley side on the edge of Huddersfield. The Park features cascades, grottos, steep cliffs and picturesque woodland walks that can be enjoyed by the whole family.

Please flickrmail me, if you wish to use this or any of my photos in any way

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Thursday, November 25, 2010

Dressing her Child ...

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Dressing her Child ...

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Ground Zero hero donates Rockefeller Center Christmas tree

The tree taking center stage at Rockefeller Center this Christmas was donated Thursday by the family of a veteran FDNY firefighter who toiled at Ground Zero.

Beaming with pride, Peter Acton and his wife, Stephanie, watched alongside 50 onlookers as their 74-foot-tall Norway spruce was cut down in the backyard of their Mahopac, NY home, about 50 miles from Manhattan.

"It's a sense of pride," said Peter Acton, 38, who works at Engine 79 in the Bronx. "It's a tree from a small house, a small town and it's going to a big city."

The 40-foot-wide, 18,000-pound tree will be raised at Rockefeller Center Friday. The annual tree lighting will take place on Nov. 30.

The Actons first learned the soaring centerpiece of their yard was in the running when they received a knock on their door on Sept. 11 from a Rockefeller tree scout.

At the time, Peter Acton, a 9/11 first responder, was at a ceremony honoring those who died in the Sept. 11 attacks.

He said he was amazed by the symbolism.

"It's an uncanny story," said Peter Acton, who has two kids.

Stephanie Acton, a part-time administrative worker at Macy's, said she's sorry to bid farewell to the family's tree - but she's ecstatic it will provide joy to so many others.

"I think it was its time and what a great way for it to end," said Stephanie Acton, 34.

Nydailynews.com

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The Finished Product

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The Finished Product

Fresh cinnamon rolls, right out of the oven. They taste as good as they look!!

Strobist info: Canon Digital Rebel XS w/50mm f1.8 lens; exp. 1/80 f1.8 ISO 100 Orbis Ring Flash used with a Canon 430EXII Speedlite TTL.

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Canada Goose

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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Liblula

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Liblula

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Stoudemire questions Knicks teammates after fifth straight loss

Amar'e Stoudemire hit the panic button last night after absorbing his first Garden boos as a Knick. Stoudemire blistered his teammates for "a lack of urgency," lack of "heart" and going as far as to question whether winning matters to them.

The Knicks shockingly were blown out by the Rockets, 104-96, last night to drop their fifth straight game to fall to 3-7 at the boo-filled Garden, with the West Coast beckoning and Stoudemire finally going off on a rant on his teammates.

Amar'e, you're not in Phoenix anymore.

"I don't understand why we're not playing with the urgency," Stoudemire said. "I'm not used to that. We're not playing like we're on a four-game losing streak, now five. It almost seems as if it doesn't matter."

TAKING HIS SHOTS: Amar'e Stoudemire, shooting over the Rockets' Luis Scola, ripped the team after its fifth straight loss, 104-96 to the Rockets.

Neil Miller

TAKING HIS SHOTS: Amar'e Stoudemire, shooting over the Rockets' Luis Scola, ripped the team after its fifth straight loss, 104-96 to the Rockets.

"It's a foreign land for me right now," Stoudemire added.

The Knicks are in crisis mode. Co-captains Stoudemire and Raymond Felton each met separately with Mike D'Antoni in his office well after the reporters left the area, The Post learned.

"I can't keep saying the same things, that we have to step it up," Stoudemire added. "I keep saying it and we're having no reaction. I'm one of the leaders and trying to instill a sense of urgency we have to play with. We didn't win four games in a row. We lost four games in a row. We're not playing like we want it. We're not digging out loose balls, diving on the floor."

Nobody could have expected the revamped Knicks to be world-beaters this season, but they also wouldn't have expected them to be a disgrace.

And that's what they are as they head into a four-game West Coast trip, starting with a match with Carmelo Anthony, with a chance of returning at 3-11.

It was the last game Donnie Walsh watched in person before he undergoes hip replacement surgery this week. When he returns, the Knicks could already be irrelevant and perhaps D'Antoni will be on the hot seat.

"I'm talking to them constantly," Stoudemire said. "Maybe I'm talking too much. I'm not accustomed to it. We have to do a much better job out there. It's not fun. I know we are a young team, but we can't keep doing the exact same thing."

"It is more attitude and more heart, we have to show more heart and go after it," Stoudemire said.

The Knicks rolled over and quit in the fourth quarter against the listless Rockets, who entered at 2-6. It was a must-win situation before their Western escapade and because Houston is able to swap draft picks this June, it could cost the Knicks another lottery pick.

Trailing by nine, the Knicks started the fourth quarter by missing their first eight shots and committing four turnovers.

"Everybody is pressing," D'Antoni said. "Somehow we have to get over the insecurity or whatever causes us to falter at crucial parts of the game."

D'Antoni added shot-making is "definitely a problem" -- something that surfaced in the preseason.

After Stoudemire drove and lost the ball out of bounds with 6:45 left, he heard his first boos as a Knick as the team trailed 93-77. Stoudemire finished with 25 points but was ineffective during meaningful stretches of the fourth, driving against double-teams to the basket and missing a handful of runners.

"I don't think he's the problem," D'Antoni said. "We are asking him to do a lot."

The Knicks didn't notch their first field goal of the fourth quarter until 5:37 left -- a putback by Landry Fields.

As sweet-shooting Kevin Martin (28 points) held the ball to count down the final seconds, the boos rained down loud and good.

"We couldn't score the ball. We have to find ways to score," Stoudemire said. "It's tough when you have to work for every basket."

marc.berman@nypost.com

Nypost.com

Making friends with ska pays off

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Making friends with ska pays off

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Anisimov's OT goal propels Rangers

This time, the Rangers got the break. This time, Buffalo somehow failed to even get a shot on net off an overtime 2-on-0. This time, the one overtime shot the Rangers got hit the back of the net.

"We were able to stop the bleeding," Martin Biron, who got the emergency start when Henrik Lundqvist reported to the Garden feeling ill, said after the Blueshirts' 3-2 victory over the Sabres last night at the Garden. "After losing the first two on this homestand, we had to have this one."

They got it when Artem Anisimov pounced on a loose puck in the slot and sent a wrist shot past Jhonas Enroth at 1:32 for the victory right after the Thomas Vanek-Derek Roy combination botched its chance at the other end of the ice. It was the second of the night for Anisimov, who had endured a nine-game drought.

YEAH! Artem Anisimov (center) accepts congratulations from teammates after scoring the game-wining goal in overtime of the Rangers' 3-2 victory over the Sabres last night at the Garden. It was Anisimov's second goal of the game.

AP

YEAH! Artem Anisimov (center) accepts congratulations from teammates after scoring the game-wining goal in overtime of the Rangers' 3-2 victory over the Sabres last night at the Garden. It was Anisimov's second goal of the game.

"The first couple of games without a goal I put pressure on myself, but it was too much and hurt me," the maturing sophomore pivot said. "After that, I knew I needed to relax so I just went out to play hockey."

Marian Gaborik played hockey for the first time since Oct. 15 and was reasonably sharp after a 12-game absence, but though the match was an Artem success it was hardly an artistic smash, with both teams playing a dump and chase game that funneled toward each net.

"I felt better than I expected for the first game," said Gaborik, who had three shots on net in 18:40. "It was a huge win for us with the way we've struggled in our building."

Inferior records at home (18-17-6) and in overtime (1-7) combined to keep the Rangers out of the playoffs last year. This victory lifted the Blueshirts to 3-5-1 at the Garden with the Oilers due in on Sunday to conclude the four-game homestand, and to 1-1 in overtime.

"I think we deserved to win the last two games also," Anisimov said, alluding to the defeats to St. Louis and Washington. "Winning at home is so important."

The Rangers played in fits and starts. They grinded and stuck with it, but the recklessness that marked much of the opening month seemed absent. There was little momentum generated from one shift to the next.

The reunited Gaborik-Erik Christensen-Alex Frolov combination was less than the sum of its parts, and the newly formed Sean Avery-Derek Stepan-Todd White line generated little.

"It wasn't a pretty game to watch," Gaborik said. "But everybody chipped in."

Fedotenko jammed in a puck from the crease for a 1-0 lead in the first before the Sabres tied at 15:33 of the second when Tyler Ennis poked one in. But when Anisimov converted Brandon Dubinsky's centering feed at 19:12, it appeared that the Rangers would escape a sloppy second, Mike Grier tied it with 2.9 seconds remaining.

"A bummer," Gaborik said.

"We were brutal the whole second," coach John Tortorella said. "We lost battles. Our second period stunk."

Biron, who has given the Rangers three strong games in four starts, held his team in through the period in which the Blueshirts failed on an extended power play of 3:21 that included a 39-second two-man advantage on which the team failed to get a shot on net.

Those types of failures almost invariably spell doom, but not last night, when the Rangers got a break and took advantage of it.

larry.brooks@nypost.com

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

You're the Boss: A Web Retailer Starts Over

Catherine Wood Hill, chief executiveCourtesy La Grande Dame Catherine Wood Hill, chief executive

She Owns It

In July, She Owns It introduced readers to La Grande Dame, an online retailer of high-end, plus-size designer clothing for women. The post chronicled the start-up’s experiences with Google AdWords and search engine optimization and its eventual decision to cut Google’s pay-per-click advertising product from its marketing mix. Several readers commented that La Grande Dame’s Web site contributed to its S.E.O. challenges and urged an overhaul to address that issue and improve the site’s appearance and functionality. La Grande Dame took the comments — and similar ones from its customers — to heart, and unveiled its new site last week. “Our ultimate goal was to improve the user experience and make it easier for shoppers to find what they want,” said Catherine Wood Hill, La Grande Dame’s chief executive.

To build its first site, which made its debut in April 2009, La Grande Dame used multiple coders. The result, said Ms. Hill, was multiple coding errors. Fixing them was a high priority. Google rankings, Ms. Hill said, are affected by the quality of a Web site’s code. Before the redesign, La Grande Dame appeared on page 12 of Google’s search results for the term “plus size clothing” (recently, the company appeared on page 2 following the same search).

Ms. Wood was initially leery of hosted shopping cart solutions, which contain the coding e-commerce sites need. “I’d always thought they were hokey and looked cheap,” she said. But a conversation with a venture capitalist who  works with online retailers persuaded Ms. Wood to reassess them. She found the offerings much improved and opted to have her site hosted by BigCommerce. “We basically rent our site’s internal code from them, and customize on top of that,” she said. La Grande Dame pays BigCommerce $79.95 a month to host its site.

The start-up also hired the Web design firm Schawel, which Ms. Hill found through an online search for e-commerce Web designers. Ms. Hill instructed Mike Schawel, the firm’s founder, to make her site “look expensive.” She is thrilled with the results and the cost — $6,000 for the entire redesign, which compares favorably with the $25,000 La Grande Dame spent on its first site.

To optimize the site’s content, Ms. Wood did a lot of rewriting. “On the old site, we had all these words floating around that weren’t connected to the term ‘plus size,’” she said. As a result, Google didn’t recognize La Grande Dame primarily as a retailer of plus-size clothes. Instead, as Ms. Hill discovered by using the Google keyword tool, the search engine most frequently pegged the company as a retailer of women’s or designer clothing. This time, whenever she wrote a word that described a type of clothing, she prefaced it with the term ‘plus size.’ For example, “lingerie” became “plus size lingerie.”

In response to a She Owns It, commenter, Jonathan Bouman, who noted that Google “factors page load time into its rankings,” La Grande Dame decided to speed things up. Previously, its pages took more than 2.7 seconds to load. It turned out that the site’s photos, which were as large as 2,000 by 2,000 pixels in some cases, could be downsized. La Grande Dame now uses a standard 1,000-by-1,000 pixel size for all images. Ms. Hill does not yet know precise load times for the new pages. “But it feels much faster,” she said. The old site also lacked a zoom function for photos, a serious liability for a clothing retailer that has been addressed as well.

Other changes include a more prominent newsletter sign-up option, de-cluttered landing pages, and a more intelligent search tool for use within the site. The old site’s tool left room for human error when tagging items with their descriptions. As a result, searches could be either over- or under-inclusive, pulling up, for example, a dress mistakenly linked to the wrong designer or missing a dress that was improperly tagged. Now the search tool hunts the entire site to find what shoppers want. The new site also adds rotating front pages; user reviews; a PayPal payment option; and, for every outfit, a Facebook “like” — a tool that didn’t exist when the first site was designed.

While it’s too early to assess the new site’s impact on sales, traffic has increased sharply. From Oct.  1 to Nov. 1, Ms. Hill said, La Grande Dame averaged 300 unique visitors and 370 total visitors a day. In the first six days following the redesign, she reports a daily average of 626 unique visitors and 689 total visitors.

La Grande Dame continues to steer clear of Google AdWords text ads. However, Ms. Hill is experimenting with the search engine’s newly available Product Ads, which are paid product listings that appear in search results. Unlike AdWords, Product Ads list a company’s products individually with their images and details. Product Ads appear when the user’s query matches information provided in an e-commerce site’s product feed, the file that holds product list information. Ms. Wood will test the service on a cost-per-click basis, starting with a $10 daily budget.

Unaided by AdWords or Product Ads, La Grande Dame had its best month ever in September, with sales of $16,000. There was a slight dip in October, but Ms. Wood believes November and December sales will top $20,000.

You can follow Adriana Gardella on Twitter.

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Hit by AIDS, Africa welcomes Pope's condom message

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -- From clerics to AIDS activists, Africans applauded Pope Benedict XVI's suggestion that condoms could be used in limited situations to protect partners - a shift that could make a dramatic impact in a continent that is both battling an HIV pandemic and increasingly turning to Catholicism.

"I say hurrah for Pope Benedict," exclaimed Linda-Gail Bekker, chief executive of South Africa's Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation. She said the pope's statement may prompt many people to "adopt a simple lifestyle strategy to protect themselves."

In comments made public last weekend, the pope said condoms could be morally justified in some cases, such as with male prostitutes to prevent the spread of HIV. The Vatican went even further on Tuesday, saying the comments also apply to women. About 54 percent of those infected with HIV in Africa are women.

Reacting to the expanded statement, a senior official with the United Nations AIDS agency said: "I think it will have a very positive impact ... Catholics consider the Pope infallible. He cannot err in what he's teaching. That way, they will now be able to use condoms, and I can see further decline in the AIDS epidemic."

Sheila Tlou spoke with The Associated Press during a meeting Tuesday in Johannesburg in which UNAIDS announced a nearly 20 percent drop in new HIV infections around the world over the past decade - largely due to increased condom use. Tlou, the eastern and southern Africa regional director for UNAIDS and a former Botswana health minister, said other churches should follow the pope's lead.

More than 20 million people across Africa are infected with HIV - more than the rest of the world combined.

In Sierra Leone, the director of the National AIDS Secretariat predicted condom use would now increase, lowering the number of new infections.

"Once the pope has made a pronouncement, his priests will be in the forefront in advocating for their perceived use of condoms," said the official, Dr. Brima Kargbo.

Sello Hatang, spokesman for the Nelson Mandela Foundation, applauded the pope Monday, saying "condom use is essential in the fight against HIV.

While some church leaders in Africa disagreed with the new approach and others said they are waiting for an official church communique, Bishop Valentine Seane, the leader of Botswana's 70,000 Catholics, said he is open to the idea of condom use.

"The lesser evil is to use available means of protection," Seane told AP.

The Catholic Church rejects the use of condoms as part of its overall teaching against artificial contraception. Senior Vatican officials have advocated fidelity in marriage and abstinence from premarital sex as key weapons in the fight against AIDS.

Seane said of the pope's latest comments: "The intention is very important here because it is to safeguard one from viruses such as the pandemic," and not to sanction birth control.

During a visit to Africa last year, the pope said condoms are not the answer to the AIDS epidemic and even declared that distributing condoms "increases the problem." But in comments made public last weekend, he said using condoms could represent a first step in assuming moral responsibility "in the intention of reducing the risk of infection."

This could have a big effect in Africa, the fastest-growing region for the Roman Catholic church. Nearly 20 percent of the continent's 1 billion people are Catholic.

Caroline Nenguke of the Treatment Action Campaign, an advocacy group for people with HIV, said more people will now accept the use of condoms, saving lives.

"He has a wide following and there are some people who take his word as gospel truth," said Nenguke, whose group is based in Cape Town, South Africa. "If condom use has more credibility, then more people will use condoms and therefore infection rates will reduce."

Many others embraced the pope's new stance.

Melrosa Williams, a churchgoer in Sierra Leone, said: "I support what the pope has said 100 percent since prevention is better than a cure."

The pope sought to "kick-start a debate" when he said some condom use may be justified, Vatican insiders said on Monday. For many, there is little to debate.

In Nigeria, Charles Oluwarotimi, who works in the financial field, interpreted the pope's statements as sanctioning condom use in many risky situations, even before the Vatican amplified the remarks.

"I think it's good as a lifesaving device, especially for married couples when one of them has HIV and they want to continue the marriage," Oluwarotimi said. "It is also good for the youths who still indulge in sins."

But Rev. Venicious Reeves, a Pentecostal preacher in Monrovia, Liberia, disagreed with the pope's statement about condoms and male prostitutes.

"The pope should instead encourage people he classifies as male prostitutes to get out of prostitution and live in morality," said Reeves.

---

Associated Press reporters across Africa contributed to this report. Gross reported from Johannesburg, South Africa.

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Monday, November 22, 2010

PSAL girls basketball preseason rankings

The stage is set for an incredibly interesting season. South Shore and John F. Kennedy each have almost their entire teams back and ready to make a run at powerhouse Murry Bergtraum, which is still the favorite to win a 13th straight and 14th overall PSAL Class AA city title.

After the big three heavyweights, there are plenty of question marks. Manhattan Center, Francis Lewis, McKee/Staten Island Tech and Midwood were all in the quarterfinals last year, but lost key pieces and have a lot of uncertainty. Will an unheralded team like Truman, Grand Street Campus or Banneker take that big step up? Only time will tell.

Bergtraum's Cori Coleman will have to take on even more of starring role this year.

Damion Reid

Bergtraum's Cori Coleman will have to take on even more of starring role this year.

Check out the first rankings of the year:

1. Murry Bergtraum (0-0)

The 12-time defending PSAL city champion Lady Blazers might be more motivated than ever to prove they can win yet again despite losing four starters from last year. Guards Cori Coleman, Canisius-bound Ashley Gomez and Shequana Harris and power forward Monae Abrams make up the returning core, while transfers Shaniqua Reese (Oak Hill Academy) and Amber Furtado (Bishop Loughlin) will make an impact right away. Unfortunately, star guard Tayshana (Chicken) Murphy from closed St. Michael Academy will be out for the season with a torn ACL.

Next: No. 4 Manhattan Center (Dec. 1, 5 p.m.)

2. South Shore (0-0)

Talent alone doesn’t win championships. That’s what coach Anwar Gladden wants to get through to his team. South Shore has All-City guard Jasmine Odom, burly forward Fannisha Price and Francis Lewis transfer Tatiana Wilson, among a host of others. Sophomore sharpshooter Aliyah Cooley is out for a month (sports hernia).

Next: @ No. 5 Francis Lewis (Nov. 22, 5 p.m.)

3. John F. Kennedy (0-0)

Everyone knows the kind of hard-nosed, high-intensity defense coach O’Neil Glenn’s teams play. But he thinks this team will be able to score plenty, too. Led by returning forwards Sarah (Bama) Vann and Leshauna Phinazee, the Knights are arguably the deepest team in the PSAL.

Next: Nazareth (Nov. 27, 5 p.m.)

4. Manhattan Center (0-0)

Aziza Patterson and Nijah LaCourt both graduated, so expect forwards Brea Castro Gambrell and Janicha Diaz Carrion to step in as the Lady Rams’ stars. Coach Jaywana Bradley will also have a strong supporting cast, that’s a year older and a year more mature. The question right now for Center is leadership.

Next: Bishop Kearney (Nov. 27, 1 p.m. @ South Shore HS)

5. Francis Lewis (0-0)

The Patriots are going to go as far as juniors Jasmine Davis and Tyese Purvis take them. Davis was already the team’s heart and soul last year and Purvis will be needed to step up in every aspect of the game. St. Michael Academy transfers Jazmine Hamlet and Erica Ward will also be expected to make an impact.

Next: No. 2 South Shore (Nov. 22, 5 p.m.)

6. McKee/Staten Island Tech (0-0)

Coach Peter LaMarca is going to miss sharpshooter and leader Kristen Markoe and sophomore point guard Kelin Walsh won’t be 100 percent at the start of the season after tearing her ACL in last year’s playoffs. But pure scoring junior Kaitlyn Astel is back and LaMarca’s teams are always well-organized and sound defensively.

Next: @ New Dorp (Nov. 30, 6 p.m.)

7. Midwood (0-0)

The Hornets are going to be young, but they still have one of the best shooters in the city in Francess Henry and a budding sophomore in Monet Keane Dawes. First-year coach Mike Moore, who excels at developing individual skills, could have Midwood peaking near the end of the season.

Next: Kellenberg (L.I.) (Nov. 27, 1:40 p.m. @ St. Anthony’s L.I.)

8. Truman (0-0)

Remember the name Krystal Pearson. The athletic, 5-foot-10 wing might be recovering from shoulder surgery, but she’s already impressing opposing coaches in early-season scrimmages. She’ll be the big key as Truman looks to take that next step into becoming one of the PSAL’s elite teams.

Next: Kellenberg (L.I.) (Nov. 27, 3 p.m. @ St. Anthony’s L.I.)

9. Grand Street Campus (0-0)

With Dinero Young joining head coach Corey McFarlane, it might not be long before Grand Street is being talked about among the best teams in the league. The Wolves already have athletic wing Quanisha Ratley, star post Tamara Jones and sharpshooter Clarissa Gallagher. The future is bright.

Next: Boys & Girls (Nov. 24, 5 p.m.)

10. Banneker (0-0)

For assistant coach Munch Llopiz’s money, there might not be a better backcourt in the PSAL than his combination of Bishop Ford transfer Africa Williams, Christ the King transfer Jenipher (J.R.) Rodriguez and Diara Adger. Banneker could be a team to keep an eye on.

Next: Medgar Evers (Nov. 22, 5 p.m.)

On the bubble: Wings (0-0), Boy & Girls (0-0), Brooklyn Collegiate (0-0), Medgar Evers (0-0), Lincoln (0-0), Goldstein (0-0) and West 50th Street Campus (0-0)

mraimondi@nypost.com

Nypost.com

People's Pharmacy: Cutting carbs from diet might reduce heartburn

Q: Heartburn has been my constant companion for years.

I was always taking antacids or acid-suppressing drugs.

My acid reflux disappeared last year when I stopped eating bread. I also cut back on starch, sugar and other carbs. I learned that foods like bagels, crackers or pretzels made me feel tired. When I quit, I discovered to my delight I had no more symptoms.

A: Although there are few studies to support such restrictions, research backs up your experience that cutting back on carbs can relieve reflux (Digestive Diseases and Sciences, August 2006).

Q: When I was a teenager, I had a brief bout with acne. A friend of my mother's said I should take baker's yeast. I took it for two weeks, and it cleared up my skin. I hated the taste, though, so I switched to brewer's yeast tablets. I have been taking five a day for 40 years.

During the past few years, I have had trouble with numbness in my feet. A neurologist sent me for a battery of blood tests to rule out a vitamin B-6 deficiency. He said it could cause peripheral neuropathy like mine.

My test results came back sky-high. My B-6 levels were seven times normal. Brewer's yeast is high in vitamin B-6. It turns out that either too little or too much of this vitamin can cause peripheral neuropathy.

A: Neurologists describe the nerve damage that occurs from vitamin B-6 (pyridoxine) toxicity as having a "stocking-glove" distribution. The numb sensation you described was a red flag. It is usually recommended that people keep their vitamin B-6 intake under 100 mg daily.

Q: I heard a rumor that a drink made from dried hibiscus flowers can lower blood pressure. Is there any truth to this?

A: Hibiscus flower tea is part of traditional folk medicine in many cultures around the world. Scientific scrutiny shows that its effect on blood pressure is more than a rumor, however. A study at Tufts University found that several cups a day can help lower blood pressure in people with mild hypertension (Journal of Nutrition, February 2010).

Mexican scientists found that the red pigments in hibiscus flowers, anthocyanins, act like antihypertensive medicines called ACE inhibitors (Journal of Ethnopharmacology, Jan. 8, 2010). This is the same action that makes drugs like captopril and lisinopril so effective.

www.PeoplesPharmacy.com

JOE GRAEDON AND TERESA GRAEDON

300 W. 57th St., 15th Floor

New York, NY 10019

Chron.com

It's live with Kelly Ripa and entrepreneurs on 'Homemade'

Here come the judges: Jennifer Cotter, left, Chris Nicola, Kelly Ripa and James Mischka and Mark Badgley of Badgley Mischka fame.By Cindy Clark, USA TODAY

Like most people, Kelly Ripa has often dreamt of coming up with that one genius, money-making invention.

Obviously, it hasn't worked out that way.

She has, however, been the recipient of many a product hoping for prime placement on her morning show Live With Regis & Kelly. It was from that her latest TV venture was born.

"People send me so many things a week," says Ripa, calling to chat post-show from her Live dressing room. "People will say, 'My husband is in Iraq and I created this product, and if you could hold it up on the air, maybe I could sell some.' "

Ripa found that with each product came a "compelling story. It was always something created at home by the person sending it to me, and usually it was the only one that they had created."

"In general, women have been very good to me in supporting my career," says Ripa, 40. Now with her three children with husband Mark Consuelos all in school, Ripa "found that there were a couple hours in the day where I was looking for things to do."

So, with the help of Milojo, the production company she owns with Consuelos, Ripa turned her idea into Homemade Millionaire. The reality competition show, which premieres tonight at 10 ET/PT on TLC, gives women the chance to pitch their products and land a deal with the mega multichannel retailer HSN.

"I constantly am going, 'Gosh, why didn't I think of that?!' " says Ripa, who is just as fun and talkative and personable as she is on morning television. "And my mom is constantly inventing things that already exist."

And yes, Ripa says she has spent time at home watching the network and even "bought a pair of pants from HSN back when they were the Home Shopping Network. It's great for a myriad of reasons," Ripa explains of the at-home-shopping aspect. "This is the original way of getting something without having to schlep out to the mall. And by the way, it is like a mall on television. It's everything — makeup, jewelry, houseware."

The inventions by the women are just as varied, and each week there are three competitors and one is declared a winner.

Why an all-female cast of competitors? "That's just because the majority of people sending things are women. ... Initially, it was just going to be mothers, but there are a lot of women who don't have kids who have great ideas."

The timing seemed especially ripe. "More and more people are having to stretch the dollar and come up with more ways to make money," says Ripa. "These women stand to really turn their inventions into brands. They stand to make a lot of money."

As for her own good fortune, Ripa says she and her family are looking forward to spending Thanksgiving this year in Las Vegas, where Live is filming — which for Ripa means no cooking and no cleanup.

"Forget slot machines, I hit the jackpot!"

Usatoday.com

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Ireland Applies for Bailout

DUBLIN—Ireland applied Sunday for a bailout worth tens of billions of euros from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to prop up its ailing banks and public finances, bending to pressure from other European countries which fear Ireland's financial crisis could spread to other members of the euro currency area.

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1121ireland

Associated Press

Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan leaves a European finance ministers meeting in Brussels on Wednesday.

1121ireland

1121ireland

EU finance ministers "welcome" the application, they said in a statement late Sunday, and indicated they were prepared to endorse a package of loans from two European stability mechanisms, the International Monetary Fund, and possibly the U.K. and Sweden.

The rescue package would include money both to fill the Irish government's fiscal gap and to rescue Ireland's ailing banking sector. No figures were announced Sunday, but it  is expected to be in the "high double-digit billions," according to a senior European official.

The size of the bailout is still being negotiated, along with the conditions that the EU and IMF would impose on Irish fiscal policy, European officials said Sunday. Analysts say Ireland may need at least €80 billion ($109.5 billion) to convince financial markets that it can stay solvent in the face of an outsized budget deficit and rising losses in its banking system.‬

Earlier Sunday, after a week of declining offers of a bailout, Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said he would recommend his government formally apply for an aid package from the EU and the IMF to shore up its public finances.

Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan recommends that Ireland seek international bailout. Video courtesy of Reuters.

The finance minister said Ireland's banks have become "too big a problem for the country."

The government must now ensure that it is able to fund itself, that the economy remains stable and that Ireland can still borrow money in the financial markets, he added.

"So for all these reasons I will be recommending to the government that we should apply to a program and open formal negotiations," he said.

The step paves the way for the 16-country euro zone's second government bailout this year, following the emergency €110 billion ($150 billion) bailout plan for Greece in May.

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Ireland will have to knuckle down on public spending to meet EU guidelines, which many worry will trigger protests like the ones seen in Greece. The Irish Congress of Trade Unions already has planned a protest Nov. 27 against more government cuts.

Irish bond investors could become better protected against default risk. But market watchers worry whether the latest blow to the prestige of the euro will intensify scrutiny on the finances of other fiscally weak governments, such as in Portugal or Spain.

Mr. Lenihan said he made the decision after officials from the EU, the IMF and the European Central Bank concluded their examination of Ireland's banks and budget deficit.

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Mr. Lenihan said there is no firm figure on the aid package, adding that the amount will be decided in formal discussions. "Of course we are talking about tens of billions [of euros]," he said. He added that the amount "certainly will not be a three-figure sum" in billions.

Mr. Lenihan said the aid will be in the form of a "contingency fund" used to restore confidence in Ireland's banking sector and to send a message to the markets that Ireland has "firepower." He stressed the entire fund might not be drawn down.

Formal discussions on the aid package will "take weeks," he said. The interest rate applied to the aid is subject to negotiations.

A spokesman for the Irish Department of Finance said specific details about where the aid will come from haven't been finalized and aren't likely to be announced until after the formal application is made.

After Greece's bailout, the EU set up a general €440 billion government support package to prevent a future member government from defaulting on its debt.

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron Thursday said that he isn't ruling out any options for offering possible financial support to Ireland, but didn't say how the U.K. might offer financial support.

Mr. Lenihan also emphasized in the interview Sunday that a rise in Ireland's corporate tax rate of 12.5% is "off the agenda."

Ireland's cabinet also was set to finalize details of its four-year budget plan on Sunday.

Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen and his cabinet will discuss the plan that will detail how the government will make €15 billion of budget cuts over the next four years. The cuts are needed to reduce the country's budget deficit—forecast to reach 32% of gross domestic product by the end of the year—to the EU's target of 3% of GDP by 2014.

The plan is expected Tuesday.

EU and IMF officials in recent weeks have said they would be ready to act if Ireland decided it couldn't emerge from its crisis without help. Germany, in particular, had been urging that Ireland ask for help to prevent a contagion from spreading to other European government bond markets.

Ireland has pushed for the rescue to be billed not as a bailout but as a special facility to underpin the country's troubled banking system.

Allied Irish Banks PLC Friday confirmed the urgency of the banking situation, disclosing the government will have to provide more funds to fill holes created by growing losses on real-estate loans, following Ireland's crashing property market after a decade-long boom.

The government has been poised to own more than 90% of Allied Irish once it helps the bank raise more capital in coming months.

Ireland has said it will pump €50 billion into its banks, and is spending billions to buy bad assets. That rescue plan has inflated the Irish government's budget deficit.

The €50 billion of bank aid is believed to represent the minimum of an Irish aid package. Other estimates stretch to more than twice that level if the fiscal budget needs gaps filled.

Pressure for Ireland to seek help came from financial markets, where investors had been demanding higher premiums on Irish government debt to offset perceptions of rising risk of a sovereign default. Unless corrected, Ireland wouldn't be able to finance itself when it re-enters the capital market next year.

In addition to the volume and nature of the EU-IMF loan facility, financial markets are awaiting details, such as how the interest rate will be structured, to see how much of a break Ireland's treasury will get from the high yields demanded in markets last week.

—Ainsley Thomson and Jason Douglas contributed to this article.

Online.wsj.com

Arizona conservation project aims to fight fire, save forests

SHOW LOW - Forest Road 267 slices through the ponderosa pines in Arizona's White Mountains like a dividing line between "before" and "after" pictures.

On one side of the road, dense stands of trees crowd out the undergrowth, the sparse vegetation starved for water and sunlight, the cramped treetops lined up like an expressway for a catastrophic wildfire, a threat all too familiar to locals who lived through the Rodeo-Chediski Fire eight years ago.

slideshow Plan to protect Arizona's forests against fire

On the other side, empty spaces stretch between pines, the ground stippled with bunches of new grass and fresh stumps where crews have finished work thinning the trees, producing a landscape closer to what nature once maintained. This forest could survive a wildfire and even thrive once the flames died.

The "after" picture has emerged five years into the White Mountain Stewardship Project, an attempt to restore ecological health to parts of the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests by undoing decades of management decisions. Those decisions - suppressing fire, harvesting old-growth trees, allowing livestock to overgraze - produced overgrown forests at great risk of wildfires.

The goal of the public-private project is to thin and restore a natural fire cycle to as many as 150,000 acres of pines over 10 years, removing younger, small-diameter trees in a way that will reduce wildfire risk to communities and preserve the unique biological diversity in one corner of the world's largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest.

What makes the project more remarkable are the players - an alliance of former adversaries - and their roles: Private businesses cut down trees and use the wood to make products, reducing costs to taxpayers. Conservation groups, whose lawsuits all but killed timber harvesting in Arizona, monitor the thinning for its effects on the forest. State and federal agencies oversee the work.

Since 2004, more than 46,000 acres have been thinned.

Now, many of the same players, who once clashed over the future of the forests, have united to try to create an even larger "after" picture with a healthy-forest project unprecedented in its scope.

A coalition of federal and state agencies, conservation groups and private businesses signed an agreement in April 2009 to thin and restore 1 million acres in four national forests in the state over 20 to 30 years, reshaping the landscape from the South Rim of the Grand Canyon all the way to Arizona's border with New Mexico.

The Four Forests Restoration Initiative is based on many of the same principles as the White Mountain project but on what foresters call "landscape scale." It will require help from cities, counties, the state and federal government and could cost as much as $1 billion, a price tag supporters hope private industry can cover.

Environmental groups and scientists have promoted forest restoration for years, but it took the devastation of the 2002 Rodeo-Chediski Fire to bring such a diverse array of interests to the table. People who spent their lives fighting one another came together with a shared vision for restoring Arizona's forests, saving communities from wildfire and re-creating a new timber industry and the jobs that go with it.

Supporters acknowledge the challenges of trying to restore such a vast area and are keenly aware of the obstacles, which include attracting private-sector financing to cover most of the cost.

Time is also a critical factor, both in keeping the alliance together and in taking advantage of political support in Arizona and in Washington at a time when big-government projects are becoming endangered species. Although there are no deadlines to start work, backers have lined up an ambitious schedule, one that will outline the private-sector role in the coming weeks and start environmental studies early next year.

The project's players believe their proposal can serve as a blueprint for other regions of the country and for other cooperative efforts that could draw new support for environmental causes. The initiative, they say, could be a game-changer for the nation's forests.

"This turns everything on its head," said Ethan Aumack, director of restoration projects for the Grand Canyon Trust, one of the conservation groups behind the Four Forests project. "We have aligned ecological need with economic need and community benefit, and now we have the opportunity to do what's right."

Turning point

Navajo County Supervisor David Tenney still wonders sometimes how he wound up working side by side with the same environmentalists who ruined much of his family timber business with an onslaught of lawsuits in the 1980s and 1990s.

Ten years ago, Tenney admits, he probably would not have supported the Four Forests Initiative with the same fervor he does now. The son and grandson of mill owners, he might have opposed it altogether. But a red flag changed his view of the forests.

In 2002, the Rodeo-Chediski Fire scorched the Mogollon Rim, incinerating forests that had grown dangerously dense and tangled after decades of suppressing even the smallest fires, disrupting natural cycles that kept trees healthy. Thousands of people were evacuated, and about 400 homes were destroyed. Tenney's home near Heber was in the path of the flames.

"They used colored flags to mark all the homes," Tenney said. "Green meant they could defend the home, yellow meant they will try, red meant they couldn't defend it. We got home when the evacuation order was lifted and found a red ribbon in our oak tree. That drove it home."

Tenney had seen his family's businesses collapse in the 1990s after the Center for Biological Diversity and other environmental groups won a series of court decisions over the Mexican spotted owl. Hundreds of people lost their jobs across the Rim.

But as he watched the Rodeo-Chediski Fire devastate the forests, he realized that the forests needed help, that he had to do something - anything - to prevent another fire.

"There's just no reason for that to ever happen," he said. "We can live in and off the forest."

The fire was a turning point for others, as well. Then-Gov. Janet Napolitano created the Forest Health Advisory Council, which found the state's forests overgrown and unhealthy, stressed by drought and vulnerable to disease, insect infestations and increasingly destructive wildfires.

The forests were in this condition not because of neglect but because of management policies that once seemed correct, beginning with attempts to eradicate natural fire as people built high-country communities.

The council recommended landscape-level restoration and thinning, strategic use of fire and a plan to bring back sustainable forest industries that could help achieve restoration goals and still create jobs in the forest communities.

"There are jobs to be had just as there are ecosystems to be restored," said Taylor McKinnon, public-lands program director for the Center for Biological Diversity. "That creates a pretty big tent. It's a tremendous opportunity. But it's risky for everyone, and it's a test for everyone."

Environmentalists embracing the industry, even one reduced to cleaning up scraps, represented a profound shift in policy, a decision to work with the other side.

"Rodeo-Chediski really reset our collective worldview about forest health and wildfire in this region," said Aumack of the Grand Canyon Trust. "This sort of landscape-scale restoration showed us all the need for and an opportunity for an appropriately scaled industry."

The proposal that emerged brought together a coalition that includes the state and federal agencies, five Arizona counties, universities, industry groups and interest groups as diverse as the Sierra Club and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation.

Some of the initiative's strongest supporters are occasionally surprised to find themselves working side by side with each other.

"Dave Tenney's dad owned one of the mills we shut down," McKinnon said, a fact not lost on Tenney but one that he set aside in signing on with Four Forests.

"It is in my mind our Number 1 priority," Tenney said. "Without the forests, what do we have in Arizona? Burn it all down, and you've got nothing."

Bottom-line conservation

On the outskirts of Show Low, on a sprawling industrial lot, a company called Forest Energy Corp. has helped solve one of the obstacles in the path of forest-restoration work: Where do you get the money to restore a damaged forest?

The timber industry was long gone, and the small-diameter ponderosa pines that would be marked for removal offered mostly low-value wood that, in days past, would have been fed to a pulp mill.

Forest Energy takes the chipped trees and manufactures pellets for wood-burning stoves, primarily for the consumer market. The plant operates 24 hours a day, every day of the year, processing wood harvested from the White Mountain project.

"We get 30 truckloads a day into the plant," said operations director Gary Moore as he watched a semitruck deposit the morning's fourth load in a towering stack on the side of the lot. "We can't keep up with the demand" as consumers look for cheaper fuel alternatives to oil or natural gas.

Forest Energy works with Eagar-based WB Contracting under a stewardship contract, an agreement with the Forest Service that spreads the work and the cost of thinning the woods. The Forest Service pays the contractors a fee to cut and chip the trees - in an average year, the payout would total about $2.5 million - and the contractors cover the rest of their costs and earn a small profit by selling the products on the open market.

Without the industry on board, the Forest Service could never afford to thin the forests. Even with the contracts, the government knows it needs to reduce the cost per acre, about $500 on average for the White Mountain project.

The work is deliberate. The Forest Service conducts environmental reviews on a section of forest targeted for thinning, evaluating density of the trees, the slope of terrain (steep hills are left intact to prevent erosion), wildlife habitat (a squirrel's nest or a goshawk breeding area can dictate removal patterns) and fire risk.

The aim is to remove the small-diameter trees, typically those with trunks between 9 and 16 inches around, and leave the older, larger trees, whose age and size are critical to sustain a robust, healthy forest ecosystem. The approach is nearly the reverse of what the old timber industry did when it harvested old-growth, high-value trees.

In some areas, trees are marked individually to tell work crews whether to remove them. In others, the loggers are given discretion within guidelines. Once the site is marked, crews sweep in, cut down the trees, run them through a chipper and truck them to Forest Energy or other customers.

A review of the project's first five years found measurable effects. The trees are healthier, the forest floors are alive with vegetation, and songbirds and other wildlife are returning. The project supports more than 300 jobs a year and has injected $13 million into the regional economy, according to the review, produced by the Nature Conservancy and the Forest Service.

Less measurable, supporters say, but just as critical is the way the coalition has stuck together.

"It's working because people don't have lines drawn in the sand," said Sue Sitko, White Mountains program manager for the Nature Conservancy, one of the groups that produced the review. "It's been more 'we'll make something happen' than 'let's see if we can.' A lot has to do with putting aside those lines and finding the common ground."

In some areas, the thinning probably hasn't been aggressive enough.

Ed Collins, Lakeside district ranger for the Apache-Sitgreaves forests, points to one stand of trees that was "treated" during an earlier pilot project in which trees were cut down or cleared with prescribed fires. The taller pines are spaced farther apart than in untreated areas, but the ground is a thicket of waist-high pine seedlings, all tightly packed.

The forest's unpredictable response to restoration work fuels the project's ticking clock, already set in motion by the uncertainty of politics and financing.

"Mother Nature is a prolific reproducer," Collins said. "If we don't move faster, she's going to clear this with another wildfire, and that resets it all to square one. We really didn't think big enough here."

No time to waste

"Big" is a word frequently used to describe the Four Forests Restoration Initiative, which also has been called "White Mountains on steroids." While the White Mountain project has thinned 46,000 acres in five years, the Four Forests project could treat up to 50,000 acres a year for the next 20 years or more.

The vast scale of the project is important on two counts, said Henry Provencio, the project's team leader for the Forest Service. Forest health can be best achieved when the largest possible tracts are thinned and treated. And private industry, whose participation is so critical to the project's success, needs the certainty of a long-term supply of trees.

Thinning and treating the forests could cost as much as $1,000 an acre, or about $1 billion for the entire project. There will never be enough money in the Forest Service budget, Provencio said, which is why the work can't proceed without an industry commitment.

One company already has staked out its interest in the project. Arizona Forest Restoration Products wants to build a plant to manufacture oriented strand board, a pressed-wood product popular in construction. The plant would operate on wood from the restoration project.

"The trees we need to take off the landscape is wood that simply has no value economically for traditional sawmilling," said Pascal Berlioux, the company's president, who moved to Arizona in 2002 as the Rodeo-Chediski Fire burned. "We need to give the wood economic value so it could pay for restoration."

The pressed wood is not the holy grail, Berlioux said, "just an economic engine," a view also expressed by conservation groups that find themselves in the unfamiliar position of advocating for the wood-manufacturing industry.

"We see restoration as a corrective step," said McKinnon of the Center for Biological Diversity. "The industry is an economic tool to get the job done. It is an interesting evolution for everyone."

But to stoke the engine, to attract financing and investment and keep finished products flowing into the market, the plant needs a large, steady supply of trees, which is why Berlioux said the scale of the Four Forests project is so critical.

One issue unresolved so far is the length of the contract with wood-production businesses. Federal regulations generally cap contracts for private companies doing government work at 10 years; industry officials say banks want to see contracts extend as long as 20 years.

Project supporters believe the work can eventually support up to 600 jobs, cutting down trees, hauling the wood out of the forests and making wood products. The first contract descriptions are set to be distributed in late December and will offer the first concrete evidence of whether industry will invest in the project.

"The jobs side of this is huge," said the Grand Canyon Trust's Aumack. "Right now we have this confluence of economic need and the need for restoration. There is an urgency to get this started. We have a unique window of opportunity that we need to wedge open."

The Forest Service awarded the project a $2 million landscape-restoration grant earlier this year, money that can help speed up environmental reviews of the Four Forests project's first phase.

The 15,000-acre Schultz Fire that burned close to homes in Flagstaff this summer underscored the forests' precarious condition.

"There's nothing like big smoke to get people's attention," Provencio said. "We need to make this happen in the time frame when we can find strong support. Industry tells us they can't languish out there and keep investors on hold indefinitely. And the forests aren't getting any healthier."

Azcentral.com