Thursday, 15 March 2012

U.S. Military Deaths in Iraq at 3,816

As of Monday, Oct. 8, 2007, at least 3,816 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The figure includes seven military civilians. At least 3,105 died as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers.

The AP count is 10 higher than the Defense Department's tally, last updated Friday at 10 a.m. EDT.

The British military has reported 170 deaths; Italy, 33; Ukraine, 18; Poland, 21; Bulgaria, 13; Spain, 11; Denmark, …

Peugeot standing in way of Audi at Le Mans

Peugeot stands in the way of Audi's bid for a sixth straight victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans this weekend.

Defending champions Tom Kristensen of Denmark, Allan McNish of Britain and Rinaldo Capello of Italy were dislodged from pole position after Stephane Sarrazin produced a lightning run in the dark on Thursday to clinch pole position.

The Frenchman in his Peugeot No. 8 clocked the fastest lap in 3 minutes, 22.888 seconds on the 13.629-kilometer circuit, pushing the Audi No. 1 driven by McNish into second place on the grid.

Speed does not guarantee victory at the world's most famous endurance race. Reliability matters just as much in an event …

Roti Begins His Stay In Wis. Prison Camp // He'll Earn 11 Cents an Hour in Minimum Security

Ald. Bernard Stone (50th) ate lunch alone at his City Hall deskMonday. At the same hour, 250 miles away, his closest friend anddaily lunch buddy was reporting to a federal prison.

Former Ald. Fred B. Roti (1st), once one of Chicago's mostpowerful City Council members representing a downtown ward withlegendary ties to organized crime, checked into Oxford prison inrural central Wisconsin to begin serving a four-year sentence onfederal bribery charges.

The 72-year-old Roti was driven to Oxford's minimum securitycamp by his son, Bruno, and two sons-in-law. Back in Chicago, Roti'slongtime home at 25th and Princeton was put up for sale.

Oxford, 60 miles …

Wednesday, 14 March 2012

Officials rescue 37 immigrants from US house

RIVERSIDE, California (AP) — Immigration authorities have rescued more than three dozen immigrants who were locked inside a sweltering boarded-up bedroom in a Southern California house.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said Wednesday some of the 37 immigrants from six Latin American countries had been held for weeks in the 10 foot (3.05 meter)-by-10-foot room in Riverside and had gone several days without food.

The immigrants, mostly men, had been stripped of their shoes and were found lying on the floor. Three children under 3 years old were also found inside the room, said Debra Parker, assistant special agent in charge for ICE Homeland Security Investigations …

MidAmerican Energy to buy Constellation for $4.7B

Constellation Energy Group Inc., the largest U.S. wholesale power seller whose stock has collapsed amid worries about liquidity and accounting issues, agreed on Thursday to be bought by a unit of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. for $4.7 billion.

Des Moines, Iowa-based MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co. will pay $26.50 per share in cash for the Baltimore-based utility, well off its 52-week high of $107.97 reached Jan. 8. The shares had traded as high as $67.87 last week before hitting a low of $13 Tuesday.

The shares rose 23 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $25 in midday trading Thursday.

The companies plan to sign a definitive merger agreement by …

[ NATION&WORLD BRIEFS ]

Blast rocks Gaza

A large bomb went off early today at the house of Gaza policechief Ghazi Jabali shortly after he left the site, witnesses said. Noone was hurt in the blast, but there was considerable damage at thehouse, they said. It was not known who planted the bomb.

Girl alone in car day after crash

An 18-month-old girl survived a near-freezing night beside herfather's dead body after their car cartwheeled off a road and into acreek. Raylynn Miller was found alive …

Jobs are in the bag

Frito-Lay Inc.'s manufacturing plant in West Manchester Township, York County, will add between 40 and 50 workers and spend about $15 million to begin making its third product line, Tostitos, in October.

The plant, which has been in operation since 1997, produces Lay's Potato Chips and Doritos in a variety of textures and flavors.

According to the plant manager, Steve Pfeiffenberger, the Tostitos will be distributed in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, Washington, D.C., and parts of Virginia. Tostitos for those markets are currently made in Williamsport and New York.

Pfeiffenberger said sales have been growing in those states.

Frito-Lay is based in …

McCain shies away from recent days' attacks

Republican John McCain, the clock ticking down on a chance to narrow Democrat Barack Obama's lead in polls, turned away Saturday from visceral attacks on his rival to pivot back toward policy differences.

McCain kept his speech in this Iowa river town focused on the economy and other policies, a striking change from just days ago when his campaign redoubled its challenge to Obama over his association with a former '60s radical. McCain also claimed that American voters didn't really know Obama and his own "radical" views.

But the tone at McCain's and running mate Sarah Palin's events during the past week had been turning toward the sour. Supporters had …

Carmarthen Dairy ; Farming

Dairy Cattle: Averages Dairy Cow avg.1145, max 1800; Dairy Heifer1685, 2150; Recorded Cow 1690, 2000; Recorded Heifer 1776, 2050;Incalvers 1267, 1380; Bulling Heifer 673, 700.

Calf Breed Report: Average: bull calves Pounds 154.37, heifercalves Pounds 129.80 and friesian bulls Pounds 30.

Bull Calf: Friesian avg. 30 max 72; Hereford 152, 265; Charolais254, …

Clinton Launches 2008 White House Bid

NEW YORK - Democratic Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton embarked on a widely anticipated campaign for the White House on Saturday, a former first lady intent on becoming the first female president. "I'm in and I'm in to win," she said on her Web site.

Clinton's announcement, days after Sen. Barack Obama shook up the contest race with his bid to become the first black president, establishes the most diverse political field ever.

Clinton is considered the front-runner, with Obama and 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards top contenders. New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who would be the first Hispanic president, intends to announce his plans on Sunday.

"You know …

ICRC loses contact with kidnapped in Philippines

The international Red Cross says it lost direct contact two weeks ago with three of its aid workers being held by al-Qaida-linked militants in the Philippines.

But it says it heard one hostage speaking on the phone Friday with a TV reporter. It believes Swiss Andreas Notter, Filipino Mary Jean Lacaba and Italian Eugenio Vagni are in stable health after 50 days of captivity and it …

National weather

Hi Lo Otlk

Anchorage 30 26 Snow

Baltimore 33 33 Snow

Boston 27 22 Snow

Chicago 25 16 Snow

Dallas-Ft Worth 32 14 Snow

Denver 04 -19 Snow

Detroit 23 17 Snow

Honolulu 82 67 Clr

Houston 63 24 Rain

Indianapolis 28 23 Snow

Kansas City 19 04 Snow

Las Vegas 48 28 Clr

Little Rock 54 23 Rain

Los Angeles 67 48 …

State of their union: No chitchat between Clinton and Obama at president's speech

So close, yet so far away _ and so bitter.

Rival Democrats Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama came within a foot (30 centimeters) of each other just before President George W. Bush's State of the Union speech Monday night and managed not to acknowledge each other, and certainly not touch.

Clinton, clad in scarlet, crossed the aisle between their seats on the House floor. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the Democratic icon who had endorsed Obama earlier in the day over Clinton, reached out his hand when she came close.

She took it; they shook. Meanwhile, Obama, dressed in a dark suit, had turned away.

The rivals then retreated to their seats, only the aisle and four senators between them. Obama sat next to Kennedy during Bush's speech.

It was the latest chapter in the increasingly nasty fight between the two leading candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination and capped a dramatic day.

Hours earlier, Obama received the endorsements of Kennedy and Caroline Kennedy, the brother and daughter, respectively, of President John F. Kennedy. They were joined by Democratic Rep. Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island, the senator's son.

The only Republican senator still running, John McCain of Arizona, skipped the address to campaign in Florida.

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Giambi Placed on DL With Foot Injury

BOSTON - The New York Yankees placed Jason Giambi on the 15-day disabled list Friday with torn tissue in his left foot that is expected to sideline him at least three weeks, and perhaps much longer.

They also sent right-hander Matt DeSalvo to Triple-A Scranton Wilkes-Barre and called up righty Chris Britton and outfielder Kevin Thompson from the club.

Giambi, the Yankees' designated hitter, tore the tissue while running out a home run Tuesday night at Toronto. He was examined in New York on Thursday by Dr. William Hamilton.

Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said before Friday night's game in Boston that surgery was not an option.

Giambi is hitting .262 with seven homers and 23 RBIs. His foot began bothering him soon after he played the field for the first time on April 28, and he hit .117 in May with three homers and six RBIs.

DeSalvo was 1-2 with a 5.40 ERA for the Yankees.

Britton had no record and a 0.78 ERA with five saves in 15 relief outings at Scranton Wilkes-Barre. Thompson was hitting .260 with two homers and 17 RBIs for the Triple-A team.

Time for Leadership: South Korea and Nuclear Nonproliferation

South Korea recently has emerged as a significant nuclear exporter. In December 2009, a South Korean-led consortium won a $20 billion deal to export four nuclear reactors to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).1 South Korea has been in the running for other nuclear reactor deals as well, including with Lithuania and Turkey, and may find itself with the opportunity to operate Jordan's planned power reactors. Buoyed by these achievements, Seoul is aiming to capture 20 percent of the world market for nuclear reactors by 2030. 2

All of a sudden, the countries that have long dominated nuclear sales - Canada, France, Japan, Russia, and the United States - have had to reckon with a serious new competitor.

Seoul's growth as a nuclear exporter is not simply a tale for the business pages. How it carries out its new role matters because nuclear power is like no other industry; its chief materials and technologies can be used to make the world's deadliest weapons. The United States and countries in the region - China, japan, and North Korea in particular - follow events in South Korea carefully and try to shape its nuclear development. Moreover, nuclear technology is of specific concern when it is sold to volatile regions such as the Middle East - South Korea's key export market.

Additional no nprol iteration-related concerns, particularly in Washington, come from South Korea's efforts to develop pyroprocessing, a spent fuel treatment process that Seoul believes it needs in order to manage the increasing amount of nuclear waste coming from its reactors. South Korean officials assure the international community that pyroprocessing is not the same as traditional reprocessing and entails few proliferation risks. Many outside experts and policymakers, however, are concerned that the process would be difficult to safeguard and could allow diversion of sensitive nuclear materials.

In the past, South Korea has been a sometimes-reluctant follower and occasional violator of international nuclear nonproliferation norms and rules. More recently, Seoul has taken steps to upgrade its nonproliferation credentials and comply with relevant nonproliferation obligations. Still, if South Korea is to meet its goals as a nuclear exporter and successfully conclude a new nuclear Cooperation agreement with the United States, it will have to become a leader, rather than a follower, of the international nuclear nonproliferation regime.

Mixed Nonproliferation Record

In 1968, South Korea signed the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPF), but concerns about its security environment in the 1970s led Seoul to consider a military nuclear option. In the early 1970s, South Korean President Park Chung-hee made the acquisition of a reprocessing capability to separate plutonium for nuclear weapons a top priority. After the United States threatened to withdraw its security guarantees if Seoul did not halt its weapons development plans, South Korea ratified the NPT in 1975 and adopted an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards agreement.1

The announcement by President Jimmy Carter in the late 1970s that the United States intended to withdraw all ground troops from the Korean peninsula revived Park's interest in a nuclear weapons option. Seoul renewed its efforts to acquire a reprocessing capability from France, an effort thwarted by Carter's personal intervention and his nearly simultaneous decision not to withdraw U.S. forces from the peninsula.4

Soon after the Cold War ended, Seoul and Pyongyang in 1992 signed the "Joint Declaration of South and North Korea on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," whereby both Koreas agreed not to "possess nuclear reprocessing and uranium enrichment facilities."5 The two sides also declared they "would not test, manufacture, produce, receive, possess, store, deploy or use nuclear weapons." It is widely agreed that North Korea's nuclear activities during the past decade, particularly its enrichment and reprocessing programs and nuclear tests, have been in clear violation of the 1992 agreement. Despite this, South Korea has never abandoned the joint declaration officially and has called on Pyongyang to abide by the pact, despite occasional suggestions in South Korean elite circles that Seoul should renounce the agreement.

South Korea's additional protocol to its IAEA safeguards agreement entered into force in February 2004.'' The additional protocol provides IAEA inspectors greater access to a country's nuclear facilities, materials, and records, particularly undeclared facilities. When South Korea submitted its initial declaration, however, it disclosed to the IAEA a series of previously undeclared laboratory-scale experiments conducted by scientists at the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAlTtI).

The resulting IAEA investigations revealed that South Korean scientists had engaged in experiments related to uranium enrichment and conversion and plutonium separation.7 Although the experiments produced very small quantities of nuclear material and did not appear to have been part of an organized nuclear weapons effort, the activities involved technical skills that would be applicable in a weapons program. IAEA DirectorGeneral Mohamed ElBaradei determined that the undeclared use of nuclear material in the experiments constituted a matter of serious concern.8 According to the ????, South Korea informed the agency that the "experiments were performed without the knowledge or authorization of the government" and were "conducted solely to satisfy the scientific interest of the scientists involved.'"' In May 2008, the IAEA concluded that it "considers all past undeclared activities involving uranium enrichment. ..conversion, and plutonium separation experiments as resolved."1"

Since then, Seoul has implemented several institutional reforms and educational programs aimed at strengthening its oversight of the activities taking place in its nuclear research facilities." These past activities, however, have made it even more difficult for South Korea to gain support for acquiring dual-use technologies, such as those for uranium enrichment or spent fuel reprocessing, which could be used to produce nuclear weapons as well as nuclear energy.

Enrichment and Reprocessing

As South Korea has emerged as a nuclear exporter (see sidebar), its officials privately have voiced increasing interest in acquiring enrichment and reprocessing technology, in part to be able to provide potential customers with the full range of services for fueling their reactors and disposing of the spent fuel as many of its competitors already do.12 South Korea's civil nuclear objectives currently include attaining full self-sufficiency, which appears to include some increased capacity with regard to the nuclear fuel cycle.11

To be sure, South Korea's interest in pyroprocessing primarily results from the country's failure to solve its domestic spent-fuel management crisis. South Korea is far from alone in its failure to find a permanent site at which to dispose of its spent fuel, but the failure to win domestic political support for additional interim storage sites has led to an imminent crisis. Only a few years from now, South Korean scientists predict, the spent fuel pools at South Korea's nuclear plants will begin to reach capacity.14 South Korea has explored pyroprocessing as a potential long-term technical solution to this problem, although officials acknowledge that other measures such as interim storage would be needed lor some time.1''

Pyroprocessing treats spent fuel to remove its extremely radioactive but relatively short-lived beta-emitter constituents, such as strontium, cesium, and iodine, and leaves behind unused uranium and the extremely long-lived transuranic alpha-emitters plutonium, americium, and neptunium. South Korea plans to irradiate these latter materials in yet-to-be-designed fast-burner reactors, ultimately reducing the overall quantity of waste requiring permanent disposal. Some in South Korea, particularly those in the Ministry of Education, Science, and Technology and in KAERI, which is part of the ministry, see this as particularly advantageous because South Korea's high population density makes it difficult to find sufficient space for a single, large, permanent underground repository for nuclear waste.

Although other elements within the South Korean government may not be convinced of the wisdom of this approach, Seoul has reached a consensus that the option of moving forward with this technology should be preserved in negotiations with the United States on a new bilateral nuclear cooperation agreement. The old agreement, set to expire in 2014, prevents South Korea from carrying out any "alteration in form and content," such as traditional reprocessing, pyroprocessing, or enrichment, of U.S. -origin fuel without Washington's permission. Seoul is hoping to relax some of Washington's long-standing restrictions on the processing of spent fuel. The U.S. government has yet to give its blessing because it is worried that the process or its output could be too easily altered to produce a less benign product, that it will be too difficult to implement safeguards aimed to prevent such changes, and that any relaxation of U.S. rules would harm Washington's broader global and regional nonproliferation efforts.

In particular, U.S. officials are concerned about how South Korean pyroprocessing would affect the 1992 denuclearization pact. Many in Washington fear that if South Korea were to break with the agreement openly by constructing its own reprocessing facilities, that action might provide a pretext for North Korea to claim its behavior was no more illegitimate than that of its southern neighbor. In addition, China and Japan see the denuclearization agreement as a cornerstone of the six-party talks, and U.S. officials will not want to provoke a rupture with Beijing or Tokyo.

South Korean officials seek to sidestep this problem by differentiating pyroprocessing from standard reprocessing, claiming, contrary to the opinion of many U.S. experts, including U. S government officials and those at U.S. national laboratories, that pyroprocessing is substantially more proliferation resistant."' Traditional reprocessing uses liquid solvents and ultimately separates pure plutonium, a weapons-usable material. Pyroprocessing leaves the plutonium mixed with other transuranic elements, such as americium and neptunium.

The United States and South Korea recently agreed to sign a memorandum of understanding to conduct a 10-year joint feasibility study on ways of handling spent nuclear fuel, including pyroprocessing. The study will be conducted in parallel with negotiations on the other issues related to the nuclear cooperation agreement. If the sides are not able to reach an understanding on pyroprocessing by 2014, when the current cooperation agreement expires, the two sides will have to agree whether and how to address the issue of pyroprocessing in the agreement.17

South Korean officials have talked privately and with increasing frequency of the need to build their own facilities to enrich uranium. To date, South Korea has relied on importing enriched uranium from Europe and the United States and then fabricating the fuel domestically. Yet, South Korea's domestic market alone, which currently includes 21 nuclear power reactors (see sidebar), has approached the point at which it could make economic sense for South Korea to enrich the fuel itself. As that market grows and new overseas sales opportunities beckon, the lure of building enrichment facilities is likely to grow. This interest comes as the United States, in its bilateral nuclear cooperation agreements and in international venues such as the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) and the IArLA, continues to try to limit the spread of enrichment facilities.

Seoul's Nonproliferation Role

Given Seoul's mixed nonproliferation record and the 1992 denuclearization agreement that disallows enrichment or reprocessing technology on the Korean peninsula, the United States and key regional states such as Japan and China are concerned about South Korea launching programs that involve such technologies. They fret that because of South Korea's other capabilities, such as in missile technology, the possession of such technologies could bring the country within a few months of being able to build a nuclear weapon. They also worry that South Korea's action might make it even more difficult to convince North Korea to return to the terms of the 1992 denuclearization agreement. South Korean officials counter that the United States and China long have had this concern about Japan's extensive reprocessing program as well, but that the United States has granted Japan permission to reprocess U. S. -origin fuel. In contrast to South Korea, however, Japan developed its reprocessing program before U.S. views on reprocessing changed in the mid-1970s following India's test of a "peaceful nuclear explosive," which used plutonium from reprocessed spent fuel. Also, Tokyo did not agree to restrictions such as those included in the Korean denuclearization agreement and has no known violations of its IAEA safeguards agreement.

South Korea's rise as a nuclear exporter has made its policies on these issues not only a regional but also a global concern. Nevertheless, Seoul has hesitated to take a leading role in global nonproliferation efforts. Notably, it has been quiet about efforts by some NSG members, particularly the United States, to increase restrictions on the trade of enrichment and reprocessing technology.18 Moreover, unlike Japan (explicitly) and the United States (de facto), South Korea has not made adoption of an IAEA additional protocol a condition for supplying nuclear technology. Jordan, Turkey, and the UAE had agreed to abide by this protocol long before negotiating with South Korea, but other potential South Korean customers have not. South Korean officials have said they will support this requirement if the NSG endorses it, but not beforehand.19

Also, Seoul has been slow to cooperate with recent international efforts aimed against Iran's nuclear program. This hesitation is based on economic interests: Tehran is an important trading partner for Seoul, and South Korea gets about 10 percent of its oil from [ran.20 In September 2010, under U.S. pressure, South Korea announced new national sanctions on Iran. These measures included placing 102 Iranian firms and 24 people on a list "banning financial transactions without central bank approval," more thoroughly inspecting cargo from Iran, and curbing South Korean investment in Iranian oil and gas enterprises.21 South Korea also temporarily closed the Seoul branch of Bank Mellat, which is the Iranian bank's only office in East Asia.22 This bank is reported to have been involved with about 70 percent of all South KoreanIranian transactions.2' The Seoul branch also was suspected of being used to transfer payments for Iranian-North Korean weapons transactions.24 Washington had been pressuring Seoul to close the Bank Mellat branch permanently, but the branch was reopened in December 2010, signifying that Seoul is still concerned about alienating a major trading partner. That same month, a South Korean company, DK Tech Corp., signed a $750 million agreement with Iran to develop two phases of the giant South Pars natural gas field. The deal was signed six months after another South Korean company withdrew from the project due to "mounting pressures of some [W]estern powers" related to the sanctions against Iran's nuclear program. 2S

Despite its reluctance to impose sanctions on Iran, Seoul recently has taken some very public strides toward playing a greater leadership role in global nonproliferation efforts. After hesitating for many years, Seoul agreed in 2009 to join the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI). The apprehension of earlier South Korean governments about the PSI was largely based on concerns that North Korea would see South Korean participation as a hostile move. The election of the more conservative Lee Myung-bak and the second North Korean nuclear test, in 2009, resulted in Seoul's decision to become an active participant in the U.S. -led initiative. In fact, in November 2010, South Korea became the 21st member of the PSI Operational Experts Group, the guiding policymaking and operational body for the initiative.26

Additionally, at the April 2010 nuclear security summit in Washington - a gathering of global leaders intended to carry out President Barack Obama's goal of securing all vulnerable materials, particularly highly enriched uranium and plutonium, from terrorists in four years - Seoul offered to host the next such summit in 2012. 27 In June 2010, South Korea agreed to host the next plenary meeting of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism.28 Since May 2007, Seoul has been an active member of that initiative, which focuses on law enforcement intelligence gathering to strengthen global capacity to prevent, detect, and respond to nuclear terrorism.29

Officials tout the value of South Korea's experience as a country that developed a strong nuclear energy program without developing nuclear weapons as a model for nuclear novices in the developing world. Already the South Korean government has several programs aimed at exporting this model to other countries. KAERI provides training to new nuclear states in how to operate and manage nuclear technology, while other entities within the Korean nuclear establishment, such as the Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety and Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Company, provide training for foreigners as well as Korean workers in safety, operation, and management aspects of nuclear facilities. At the nuclear security summit, South Korea pledged to build a nuclear security training facility that will serve as a simulation center.

Conclusion

South Korea should be congratulated for its recent nonproliferation initiatives, which show a welcome recognition that its new role as a global nuclear exporter comes with new global responsibilities for preventing nuclear weapons proliferation. However, if South Korea is serious about its goal of becoming one of the world's top nuclear exporters, it also will have to become more serious about nonproliferation. In particular, it will have to change from being, at best, a follower of international nonproliferation norms to a leader in forging new ones. That will mean that Seoul will have to be willing at times to sacrifice potential business or take on strong domestic political constituencies, whether protesters or industry, in order to advance global nonproliferation goals by imposing sanctions on nonproliferation rogues, forgoing pyroprocessing, taking a more active role in supporting NSG efforts to restrict the spread of enrichment and reprocessing technologies, or requiring that potential customers have concluded an additional protocol to their IAEA safeguards agreements.

South Korea's hosting of the 2012 nuclear security summit and its difficulties in dealing with spent fuel offer two particular opportunities to exercise leadership. If Seoul agrees to a cautious agenda for the 2012 meeting, it will be sacrificing a chance to make its own mark. South Korean officials should consider proposing a bold initiative of some type, such as seeking to conclude an agreement to phase out highly enriched uranium (HEU) in the civilian sector. At a time when U.S. funding for this effort faces cuts, South Korea should provide funding to help bring this about and urge other countries whose economies are faring reasonably well to follow suit.

Although South Korea's research reactors now rely only on low-enriched uranium, which is not suitable for nuclear weapons, research reactors in other countries still use enough HEU every year to make as many as 30 nuclear weapons."1 Because reprocessing raises nonproliferation concerns, Seoul should consider multilateral alternatives to its national effort to pyroprocess spent fuel. Such an effort would allow South Korea to address its spent fuel problems without undermining U.S. and global efforts to minimize the spread of enrichment and reprocessing technologies."

Seoul could take the lead in establishing a new regional forum for more consistently and openly discussing possible options for dealing with regional spentfuel stockpiles. Numerous emerging Asian economies, such as Indonesia and Vietnam, are contemplating nuclear power development, and many regional players are facing similar spent-fuel challenges. Although some of these states' nuclear authorities are proposing similar solutions, there is little regional discussion or coordination of such issues. Sharing of best practices and lessons learned would be beneficial.

South Korea's rise as a nuclear exporter is good news for the country's nuclear industry and workers. Should Seoul embrace more nonproliferation responsibilities, it will be good news for South Korean and global security as well.

[Sidebar]

Turkish President Abdullah GuI (left) and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak inspect a South Korean honor guard during a welcoming ceremony at the presidential Blue House in Seoul on June 15, 2010. South Korea is seeking to strike a nuclear power reactor deal with Turkey.

Seoul's Nuclear Energy Outlook

Today, South Korea boasts the world's fifth-largest nuclear reactor fleet. The country utilizes 21 nuclear power reactors providing 40 percent of the nation's electricity supply. According to its 2008 National Energy Basic Plan, South Korea plans to increase the share of nuclear energy in its domestic electricity generation to 59 percent by 2030 by building roughly 14 more nuclear reactors.1 The South Korean government set this goal in part to combat rising carbon emissions; South Korea posted the world's largest increase in greenhouse gas emissions per capita during the last two decades.2

South Korea has been playing a growing role in the international nuclear market. Under a contract with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the UAE will pay $20.4 billion for construction of four 1,400-megawatt reactors by 2020. Following the UAE deal, South Korea announced its objective to export 80 nuclear reactors by 2030.! It has been targeting contracts in India, Indonesia, Lithuania, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, Vietnam, and others.4 South Korea wants to expand in the long term into bigger markets such as China and United States, and Korean firms involved in export, such as Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Company, are looking to export expertise to Europe, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East.5

Although South Korea's plans are extensive, a number of factors may slow its export growth. For instance, South Korean nuclear consortia are at a disadvantage in comparison to established exporters from other countries in financing projects. Although it did loan the UAE $10 billion to construct its nuclear reactors,'1 South Korea has tended to avoid riskier deals that require the exporter to front the costs of constructing the reactor and to recover the investment from the longterm sale of electricity from the reactors. This limitation already had led South Korea to pull out of a reactor deal with Jordan, and it appears to be harming its current bid to construct reactors in Turkey.7- CHEN KANE, STEPHANIE C. LIEGGI, and MILESA. POMPER

ENDNOTES

1. Ministry of Knowledge Economy [South Korea], "National Energy Basic Plan, 2008," August 28, 2008.

2. Kevin A. Baumert et al., Navigating the Numbers: Greenhouse Gas Data and International Climate Policy (Washington, DC: World Resources Institute, 2005), http://pdf.wri.org/navigating_numbers.pdf; Moon Hee-chang, statement at KAERI, Daejeon, July 21, 2010.

3. Cho Chung-un, "Korea Aims to Be No. 3 in Nuclear Power Sector," Korea Herald, January 14, 2010, www.koreaherald.com/national/Detail. jsp?newsMLId=201001 14000059.

4. "South Korea Seeks to Boost Reactor Exports," World Nuclear News, January 13, 2010, www.world-nuclear-news.org/NP-South_Korea_seeks_ to_boost_reactor_exports-1301 104.html; Lee i'.un-joo, "For Nuke Plants, Korea Now Targets Lithuania," Korea ioongAng Daily, November 18, 2010, http://joongangdaily.joms. com/article/view.asp?aid=2928547.

5. "Korea Needs Foreign Nuclear Partners," Korea ioongAng Daily, June 24, 2010, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view. asp?aid=2922226; "KHNP Foremost in Nuclear Plant Operation," Korea Herald, March 25, 2010, www.koreaherald.com/specialreport/Detail. jsp?newsMLId=20100325000840.

6. Seoul's loan has generated controversy in South Korea because of its belated revelation and what some saw as its overly generous terms. See Lee Soon-hyuk, "S. Korea Found to Loan $10B for UAE Power Plant," The Hankyoreh, February 1, 2011, http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_ edition/e_national/461 703.html.

7. For more analysis on the issue of financing of South Korea's nuclear exports, see "Keys to Winning Nuclear Bids," Korea ioongAng Daily, December 28, 2010, http://joongangdaily. joins. com/article/view.asp?aid=29301 67.

[Sidebar]

[South Korean] officials privately have voiced increasing interest in acquiring enrichment and reprocessing technology, in part to be able to provide potential customers with the full range of services for fueling their reactors and disposing of the spent fuel.

[Sidebar]

In this undated photo, Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute engineers work to develop pyroprocessing, a spent fuel treatment process, at the Advanced Spent Fuel Conditioning Process Facility in Daejeon.

ENDNOTES

1. In March 2010, South Korea signed a second reactor-supply agreement - a $130 million contract to construct a nuclear research reactor at the Jordan University of Science and technology. The reactor is to be constructed by the Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KALRI) and the South Korean industrial conglomerate Daewoo. The five-megawatt reactor, upgradable to 10 megawatts, is a smaller version of KAERl's HANARO research reactor. South Korea agreed to finance most of the project, with Seoul initially providing a $70 million soft loan. Some countries, such as Argentina, that export research reactors, however, do not export the far more lucrative power reactors.

2. "South Korea Seeks to Boost Reactor Exports," World Nuclear News, January 13, 2010, www.world-nuclear-news.org/NPSouth"Korea_seeks_to_boost_reactor_ exports-130] 104.html/.

3. Fred McGoldrick, "The Peaceful Nuclear Program of the Republic of Korea and Global Nonproliferation Considerations" (paper prepared for "CEIP-KAERI-IPC Joint Seminar on ROK-U. S. Nuclear Cooperation in the 21st Century," Washington, DC, July 14, 2008).

4. Ibid.; Kim Seung-young, "Security, Nationalism, and the Pursuit of Nuclear Weapons and Missiles: South Korean Case, 1 970-82," Diplomacy and Statecraft, Vol. 1 2, No. 4 (December 2001); "Official Hints South Korea Might Build Atom Bomb," New York Times, June 30, 1977.

5. "Joint Declaration of South and North Korea on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," www.nti.org/e_research/official_ docs/inventory/pdfs/aptkoreanuc.pdf.

6. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), "Protocol Additional to the Agreement of 31 October 1975 Between the Government of the Republic of Korea and the International Atomic Energy Agency for the Application of Safeguards in Connection With the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons," INFCIRC/236/Add.l,June 18, 2004, www.iaea. org/Publications/Documents/Infcircs/2004/ infcirc236al.pdf.

7. Daniel A. Pinkston, "South Korea's Nuclear Experiments," CNS Research Story, November 9, 2004, http://cns.miis.edu/stories/041109. htm; IAEA, "Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Republic of Korea," GOV/2004/84, November 11, 2004, www.iaea.org/PubIications/Documents/ Board/2004/gov2004-84.pdf; IAEA, "Safeguards Implementation Report for 2007," GOV/2008/14, May 7, 2008.

8. IAEA, "Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Republic of Korea."

9. Ibid.

10. IAEA, "Safeguards Implementation Report for 2007."

11. Wan Ki Yoon, "Enhanced Transparency and Its Harmonization With Safeguards" (paper presented at the Japan Atomic Energy Agency International Forum, June 25, 2008), www.jaea.go.jp/04/np/activity/2008-0624/2008-06-24-3-4. pdf.

12. One South Korean official said that South Korea's inability to enrich and reprocess would likely be a barrier to export growth. See Kim Ji-hyun, "Seoul Considering Options to Improve Nuke Efficiency," Korea Herald, March 30, 2010, http://biz.heraldm. com/com mon/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20 090708000058. In the case of such other exporters as France and Russia, the ability to offer these services has been seen as a benefit. France supplies enriched uranium and nuclear fuel for reactors and provides reprocessing services although it sends back high-level waste, shorn of plutonium, to its customers. In some cases, such as its deal for the Bushehr reactor in Iran, Russia provides j nuclear fuel or enriched uranium, takes back the spent fuel, and does not return high-level waste to the customer.

13. Choi Kyung-hwan, "Korea's Strategy to Become Nuclear Exporter," Korea Herald, February 23, 2010, http://blog.daum.net/ ibanpeace/2193.

14. Spent fuel from South Korea's four CANOU reactors is now in interim dry cask storage at a reactor site in Wolsong, but this facility will be full by 2017. Additional construction of any interim spent-fuel storage facilities at Wolsong is effectively prohibited by the special law established on March 31, 2005 (law no. 7444), which prohibits any construction of spent fuelrelated facilities in the same region as the low- and intermediate-level radioactive-waste disposal facility. Such a facility is now under construction near the Wolsong reactors in Gyeongju. For the text of the law in Korean, see http://likms.assembly.go.kr/law/jsp/ I.aw.jsp?WORK_TYPE=LAW_BON&LAW_ ID=A1885&PROM_NO=09885&PROM_ DT=20091230&HanChk=Y.

15. South Korean officials believe that many of these interim storage facilities could be located at the pyroprocessing facility, thus obviating some of the need for more politically contentious separate facilities or transshipments to other reactor sites.

16. Several recent reports from the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and national laboratories indicate that U.S. government experts do not see a substantial difference in proliferation resistance between pyroprocessing and traditional reprocessing. Office of Nonproliferation and International Security, NNSA, "Nonproliferation Impact Assessment for the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership - Draft," December 2008, http://brc.gov/ library/docs/GNEP_NPIA.pdf ; Robert A. Bari et al., "Proliferation Risk Reduction Study of Alternative Spent Fuel Processing," BNL-90264-2009-CP, July 2009, http://brc. gov/pdfFiles/January2011_Meetings/Jan67mtg/Tom%20Clements%20Brookhaven% 20on%20reprocessing%20risks%202009. pdf; Charles G. Bathke et al., "An Assessment of the Attractiveness of Material Associated With a MOX Fuel Cycle From a Safeguards Perspective," LA-UR-09-03637, July 2009, http://permalink.lan I.gov/object/tr?what=info: lanl-repo/lareport/l.A-UR-09-03637. Some in the U.S. government assert that a recent Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) analysis provides a response to South Korean attempts to assert a legal distinction between pyroprocessing and traditional reprocessing. NRC, "Update on Reprocessing Regulatory Framework - Summary of Gap Analysis," SECY-09-0082, May 28, 2009, www.nrc. gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/commission/ secys/2009/secy2009-0082/2009-0082scy.pdf. For comments by U.S. Department of Energy official Carter "Buzz" Savage on whether pyroprocessing is a form of reprocessing, see Kyle Fishman, "IAEA South Korean Concerns Resolved," Arms Control Today, July/August 2008; Daniel Horner, "S. Korean Pyroprocessing Awaits U.S. Decision," Arms Control Today, July/August 2009.

17. Hwang Doo-hyong, "S. Korea, U.S. Agree to Begin Joint Study of Pyroprocessing Spent Nuke Fuel," Yonhap News Agency, October 26, 2010, http://english. yonhapnews. co. kr/national/2010/ 10/26/46/ 0301000000AEN20101026004200315F.HTML.

18. Daniel Horner, "Accord on New Rules Eludes Nuclear Suppliers," Arms Control Today, July/August 2009.

19. Mark Hibbs, "Nuclear Suppliers Group and the IAEA Additional Protocol," Nuclear Energy Brief, August 18, 2010, http:// carnegieendowment.org/publications/index. cfm?fa=view&id=41393.

20. Chico Harlan, "Iran Sanctions Challenge South Korea to Balance Interests," Washington Post, August 20, 2010.

21. Borni Lim and EunkyungSeo, "South Korea to Ban New Oil, Gas Investments in Iran on Nuclear Program," Bloomberg, September 8, 2010, www.bloomberg.com/ news/2010-09-08/south-korea-to-ban-newoil-gas-investments-in-iran-on-nuclearprogram.html; Donald Kirk, "South Korea Sanctions Iran - Under U.S. Pressure," Christian Science Monitor, September 8, 2010.

22. Evan Ra m S tad, "South Korea to Close Iranian Bank Branch," Wall Street Journal, Septembers, 2010.

23. Kirk, "South Korea Sanctions Iran - Under U.S. Pressure."

24. "N. Korean Arms Payments 'Passed Through Seoul,'" Chosun Ubo, January 18, 2011, http://english.chosun.eom/.site/data/html_dir/ 2011/01/18/201 101 1800S20.html.

25. Benoit Faucon, "South Korea's DK Tech Signs Deal for Iran Gas Field - Filing," Wall Street Journal, December 17, 2010; "Iran, S Korea sign $750mn Gas Deal," Press TV, December 9, 2010.

26. "Nation Joins Leadership of US-led PSIOEG," KBS World, November 1, 2010, http:// world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news Po detail. htm?No=76829.

27. Office of the Press Secretary, The White House, "Communiqu� of the Washington Nuclear Security Summit," April 13, 2010, www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/ communiqu-washington-nuclear-securitysummit.

28. Office of the Spokesman, U.S. Department of State, "Joint Co-Chair Statement Regarding the 2010 Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism Plenary Meeting," June 29, 2010, www. state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2010/06/143754.htm.

29. See "The Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism," www.state.gov/ t/isn/cl8406.htm; Choe Kwan-kyoo, "ROK's Contribution to Global Nuclear Nonproliferation," Nautilus Institute, January 28, 2010, http://www.nautilus.org/projects/ civil-society-verification/korea.

30. Globally, research reactors require 750 kilograms of highly enriched uranium (HEU) per year. That quantity of HEU could be used to create approximately 30 nuclear weapons, using the IAEA definition of the minimum amount of HEU needed to produce a weapon (25 kilograms). See tile Reistad and Styrkaar Hustveit, "HEU Fuel Cycle Inventories and Progress on Global Minimization," The Nonproliferation Review, July 2008, p. 265; "IAEA Safeguards Glossary 2001 Edition," International Nuclear Verification Series, No. 3, www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publications/I'DF/ nvs-3-cd/PDF/N VS3_scr.pdf.

31. For more details on these alternatives, see Miles Pomper et al., "Nuclear Power and Spent Fuel in East Asia: Balancing Energy, Politics and Nonproliferation," Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus, June 2010, www.japanfocus. org/-Ferenc-Dalnoki_Veress/3376. Among the alternatives this article proposes are a spent fuel repository or interim storage outside East Asia, traditional PUREX reprocessing in France or Russia, or a multinational pyroprocessing center outside or within the region.

[Author Affiliation]

The authors are staff members of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. This article draws from their paper "Going Global: Issues Facing South Korea as an Emerging Nuclear Exporter" for the Korea Economic Institute.

[Gastric metastases] [Soft-tissue case 26]

The 3 images shown here are air contrast studies of the stomach from 3 different patients. The diagnosis is the same for all 3 patients. Can you make this diagnosis?

Soft-tissue case 26. diagnosis

Metastatic disease to the stomach is an unusual finding, accounting for less than 2% of patients who die of carcinoma.(f.1) Nevertheless, metastases to the stomach are encountered more frequently as combined treatment with surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy has led to prolonged survival. Metastases to the stomach are hematogenous, usually from malignant melanoma, carcinoma of the breast or carcinoma of the lung. Melanoma metastases usually present as discrete masses, which may be ulcerated (target lesion). Metastatic disease from carcinoma of the breast resembles "linitis plastica," and metastatic disease from lung usually presents in the form of discrete masses.(f.2)

These 3 patients all had metastatic disease to the stomach from breast, 1 as discrete masses (Fig. 1), 1 having the appearance of linitis plastica (Fig. 2) and the third having marked fold thickening in the gastric fundus resembling lymphoma (Fig. 3).

References

(f.1) Menuck LS, Amberg JR. Metastatic disease involving the stomach. Am J Dig Dis 1975;20:903-13.

(f.2) Gore RM, Levine MS, Laufer I. Textbook of gastrointestinal radiology. Vol 1. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1994. p. 684-716.

Head of Hungary's diluted Fiscal Council resigns

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — The head of Hungary's Fiscal Council says he is resigning because of the government's decision to weaken the independent budget watchdog.

George Kopits said in a statement Monday that the "evident cessation of trust" in him and the lack of continuity between the new, three-member council and the one he headed for the past two years were behind his resignation effective Feb. 8.

Last year, lawmakers from Prime Minister Viktor Orban's governing Fidesz party replaced the original council — whose three members, backed by several dozen analysts, prepared studies and opinions of the state budget and the economy — with a new board made up of the heads of the central bank and the state audit office and an expert named by Hungary's president.

Hong Kong's key stock index drops on declines in mainland China, Wall Street

Hong Kong stocks dropped Thursday as investors locked in profits, taking cue from declines in mainland China and Wall Street overnight.

The blue chip Hang Seng Index fell 528.19 points, or 2.26 percent, to finish at 22,797.61.

The market was dragged down by sharp losses in mainland China bourses where the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index shed 6.5 percent after a rally in the previous session, analysts said.

"Given the plunge in mainland China markets, there's no way Hong Kong market can escape," said Castor Pang, an analyst at Sun Hung Kai Financial. "It's not likely the market will bottom out soon. Any positive news will only give investors an excuse to cash in gains and leave."

Francis Lun, a general manager at Fulbright Securities, also said investors are disappointed and dumped shares on false hope that the Chinese government would introduce market-boosting measures.

"Investors feel so hopeless now. There's a sinking feeling that this bearish market will never end," Lun said.

The market also tracked overnight weakness in Wall Street where the Dow Jones industrial average lost more than 130 points Wednesday on renewed concerns about the financial sector.

Shares across the board were lower in Hong Kong. Fixed-line phone company China Netcom lost 4.1 percent to HK$22.05, while its soon-to-be owner, China Unicom, also shed 4.1 percent to HK$14.8. China Telecom fell 4.3 percent to HK$4.48.

Developer Sun Hung Kai Properties dropped 2.6 percent to HK$115.3 after rising 3.6 percent on rating upgrade Wednesday. Sino Land was 4.7 percent lower to HK$16.5.

Higher crude prices pushed oil companies lower. China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., or Sinopec, lost 4 percent to HK$7.99, PetroChina moved 3.4 percent lower to HK$10.3.

Chinese financials also slipped following weakness in mainland China markets. ICBC, China's biggest lender by assets, lost 2.3 percent to HK$5.45, China Construction Bank was 1.7 percent lower to HK$6.37.

___

On the Net:

Stock Exchange of Hong Kong: http://www.hkex.com.hk

Box Office Preview: 'Rango' rides into top spot

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Paramount's animated Western spoof "Rango" is set for a wild debut that should boot it to the top of the box office chart with an expected weekend gross in the mid $30 million or even low $40 million range.

Boasting an all-star voice cast led by Johnny Depp, the film about a chameleon hero sheriff of a lawless Wild West town is the first animated feature for special effects company Industrial Light & Magic, founded by George Lucas in 1975.

Paramount's recent animated releases "How To Train Your Dragon" and "Megamind" both posted solid debuts with $43.7 million and $46 million respectively and "Rango" has the potential to match that level of success.

Universal has a solid debut awaiting its mind-bending romance thriller "The Adjustment Bureau," starring Matt Damon and Emily Blunt and loosely based on the Philip K. Dick short story "Adjustment Team."

Boosted by a terrific trailer, look for an opening weekend gross in the mid to high teens, followed by a solid hold on the marketplace from expected strong word-of-mouth. Notably, first time director George Nolfi wrote the screenplay for "The Bourne Ultimatum" and "Ocean's 12," both of which starred Damon and were huge hits.

Disney's consistent performer "Gnomeo and Juliet" is anticipating another solid weekend even though its luxury of being the only family film game in town is ending with the release of "Rango." A likely third-place finish of around $10 million in its fourth weekend of release will bring the film's total domestic gross to $85 million.

Vying for fourth place will be last weekend's No. 1 film, the buddy comedy "Hall Pass" from Warner Bros., and the debut of Relativity's R-rated '80's comedy, "Take Me Home Tonight," starring Topher Grace. Expect both films to generate somewhere in the $7 million to $8 million range.

Finally, with the young female demographic clearly in mind, CBS Films will bring a modern-day spin to "Beauty and the Beast" with the debut of "Beastly." The film stars "I Am Number Four's" Alex Pettyfer as the beast and "High School Musical" alum Vanessa Hudgens as the beauty in this update of the classic tale. Opening at around $5 million, the film should wind up being profitable, since it has already covered most of its $17 million budget in foreign pre-sales.

The down-trending domestic box office will continue this weekend, with year-ago comparisons providing a real zinger from "Alice in Wonderland's" massive $116.1 million debut last March.

___

Paul Dergarabedian is president of the Box Office Division of Hollywood.com and a longtime box office analyst for The Associated Press.

___

Online: www.Hollywood.com/boxoffice

LOCAL

BASKETBALL

High school Boys

The Associated Press state boys poll

The Associated Press boys high school basketball poll releasedMonday, with first-place votes in parentheses, records, total pointsand previous ranking:

Class AAA

Team Rec Pts Pvs

1. Martinsburg (6) 13-2 96 1

2. Cabell Midland (3) 14-1 88 2

3. Fairmont Senior (1) 15-0 80 3

4. South Charleston 13-3 73 4

5. Beckley 10-4 51 5

6. Morgantown 12-3 44 7

7. Parkersburg 11-4 34 6

8. Parkersburg South 8-6 31 8

9. Spring Valley 10-6 30 10

10. Robert C. Byrd 13-3 8 -

Others receiving votes: Brooke 6, Riverside 4, Musselman 3,Greenbrier East 1, Princeton 1.

Class AA

Team Rec Pts Pvs

1. Tug Valley (8) 15-0 98 1

2. Wyoming East (2) 14-2 88 2

3. Chapmanville 12-2 73 t3

4. Bridgeport 12-3 60 6

5. Oak Hill 11-3 54 5

6. Poca 11-4 53 t3

7. Richwood 12-3 52 7

8. Ravenswood 11-5 32 8

9. Tolsia 7-7 14 -

10. Tucker County 9-5 9 10

Others receiving votes: Bluefield 4, Magnolia 4, Shady Spring 3,Sissonville 2, Calhoun County 1, PikeView 1.

Class A

Team Rec Pts Pvs

1. Parkersburg Cath. (4) 15-2 89 1

2. Oceana (4) 14-3 86 3

3. Burch (2) 13-2 77 4

4. Wheeling Central 12-5 74 2

5. Linsly 13-3 45 8

6. Valley Fayette 10-4 39 9

7. Williamson 10-6 38 5

8. Madonna 11-4 36 6

9. Gilmer County 12-4 27 7

10. Midland Trail 11-4 24 10

Others receiving votes: Notre Dame 10, Fayetteville 4, MercerChristian 2, Moorefield 1.

Today's Games

Charleston Catholic at Harts

Gauley Bridge at Elk Valley Christian

St. Albans at Nitro

Huntington at South Charleston

Buffalo at Duval

Hurricane at Poca

George Washington at Logan

Wayne at Winfield

Ripley at Roane County

Cabell Midland at Riverside

Valley at Midland Trail

Capital at Parkersburg

Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant

Monday's Statewide Scores

Bridgeport 74, Lewis County 28

Doddridge County 63, Tygarts Valley 40

Eastern Mennonite, Va. 55, Pendleton County 32

Fairmont Senior 61, East Fairmont 49

Guyan Valley 58, Hannan 53

North Marion 57, Buckhannon-Upshur 40

Parkersburg South 68, Robert C. Byrd 63

Ravenswood 65, Winfield 52

Scott 78, Chapmanville 77

Sissonville 76, Herbert Hoover 68

Tucker County 68, Frankfort 66

Monday's Games

SCOTT 78, CHAPMANVILLE 77

Chapmanville (13-3) FG FT Points

Justin Dempsey 2 0-0 4

B.J. Picklesimer 6 4-6 19

Tommy Zamow 6 5-5 17

Casey Bowling 7 4-5 19

Brandon Pritchard 5 1-2 15

Seth Amburgey 1 0-0 3

Totals 27 14-18 77

Scott (9-6) FG FT Points

Jordan Bradford 9 1-1 19

Ryan Bell 4 5-10 13

Nick Cabell 1 0-0 2

Shea Hale 6 2-2 15

Jeremy Grant 3 4-4 10

Zach Green 7 4-4 19

Totals 30 16-21 78

Chapmanville 13 18 21 25 - 76

Scott 19 14 28 17 - 77

3-point goals: Chapmanville- Picklesimer 3, Bowling, Pritchard 4,Amburgey. Scott- Hale, Green.

RAVENSWOOD 65, WINFIELD 52

Winfield (6-9) FG FT Points

Evan Ashworth 2 0-0 4

Josh Sowards 4 0-0 8

Tim Gladis 1 0-0 3

T.L. Asbury 6 6-8 18

Virgil Vanover 1 0-0 3

Joel Jones 3 2-2 8

Tyler Kovarik 4 0-0 8

Totals 21 8-10 52

Ravenswood (12-5) FG FT Points

Brett Rector 5 3-4 17

R.J. Balis 2 13-13 18

Ty Pistelli 3 4-8 10

Kyle Ritchie 1 0-0 2

Andy Wise 3 3-4 9

Ed Vasauskas 1 0-0 2

Josh Varney 1 5-6 7

Totals 16 28-35 65

Winfield 10 13 21 8 - 52

Ravenswood 13 21 13 18 - 65

3-point goals: Winfield- Gladis 1, Vanover 1. Ravenswood- Rector4, Balis 1.

Rebounds: Ravenswood- Pistelli 11, Wise 7.

SISSONVILLE 76, HERBERT HOOVER 68

Sissonville (10-7) FG FT Points

Jimmy Cavender 8 6-8 24

Patrick Randolph 4 2-2 10

Jeff Honaker 4 1-3 9

Paul Wakefield 4 3-4 11

Andrew Dawson 3 1-2 7

Cody Jarrett 6 2-2 16

Totals 2-9 15-21 76

Herbert Hoover (1-14) FG FT Points

Jason Petry 3 0-0 6

Adam Myers 5 0-0 10

Andy White 4 1-2 9

Adam Carnefix 1 0-0 2

Josh Persinger 5 0-0 10

Andy Stevens 0 0-0 0

Chris Strickland 6 1-2 15

Steve Hissom 6 2-3 16

Totals 30 4-7 68

Sissonville 22 20 19 15 - 76

Herbert Hoover 19 13 18 18 - 68

3-point goals: Sissonville- Cavender 2, Jarrett 2. Hoover- Hissom2, Strickland 2.

Rebounds: Sissonville- Randolph 10.

Assists: Sissonville- Cavender 8.

HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS

The Associated Press state girls poll

The Associated Press girls high school basketball poll releasedMonday, with first-place votes in parentheses, records, points andprevious ranking:

Class AAA

Team Rec Pts Pvs

1. Capital (10) 17-0 100 1

2. Huntington 15-2 84 2

3. Nitro 12-3 71 5

(tie) North Marion 16-2 71 4

5. Parkersburg South 13-4 63 3

6. John Marshall 13-3 48 6

(tie) Wheeling Park 13-5 48 7

8. Parkersburg 12-6 25 8

9. Morgantown 11-6 19 9

10. Nicholas County 12-3 11 -

Others receiving votes: Jefferson 6, Fairmont Senior 3, SpringValley 1.

Class AA

Team Rec Pts Pvs

1. Williamstown (7) 16-2 96 1

2. Sissonville (2) 14-1 88 2

3. James Monroe (1) 15-3 85 3

4. Wyoming East 16-3 71 4

5. Summers County 13-5 40 7

6. Bridgeport 14-4 39 5

7. Tolsia 14-4 37 6

8. Scott 11-4 20 10

9. Tug Valley 10-7 18 -

10. Oak Glen 12-6 16 9

Others receiving votes: Tucker County 13, Petersburg 9, Winfield5, Braxton County 3, Frankfort 3, Grafton 1.

Class A

Team Rec Pts Pvs

1. Mount de Chantal (7) 16-0 92 3

2. Gilmer County (1) 15-3 82 2

3. Mercer Christian (2) 13-4 75 1

4. Madonna 15-2 68 5

5. East Hardy 15-1 62 4

6. Valley Wetzel 15-1 46 7

7. Parkersburg Catholic 12-5 38 6

8. Charleston Catholic 10-5 21 9

9. Buffalo 13-5 15 8

(tie) Midland Trail 11-6 15 10

Others receiving votes: Hamlin 9, Oceana 8, Gilbert 5, Linsly 5,Moorefield 3, Wheeling Central 3, Burch 2, Elk Valley Christian 1.

Today's Games

Charleston Catholic at Scott

Buffalo at Duval

Winfield at Capital

Gauley Bridge at Mt. View Christian

Clay County at Gilmer County

Roane County at Herbert Hoover

Point Pleasant at Ravenswood

Riverside at St. Albans (McKinley Junior)

Webster County at Braxton County

Marsh Fork at Sherman

Huntington at Hurricane

Monday's Statewide Scores

Bellaire, Ohio 90, John Marshall 78

Cameron 55, Paden City 45

Clay Battelle 56, Hundred 27

Cross Lanes Christian 57, St. Joseph 47

Fayetteville 63, Liberty-Raleigh 56

Fort Hill, Md. 56, Frankfort 38

Grafton 76, Liberty-Harrison 39

Huntington 42, South Charleston 35

Jefferson 101, Clear Spring, Md. 28

Lincoln 46, Notre Dame 34

Man 73, Williamson 22

Marsh Fork 33, Greater Beckley Christian 26

Mount de Chantal 64, Valley-Wetzel 52

Nitro 105, George Washington 45

Paw Paw 99, Hindman, Pa. 42

Philip Barbour 65, Elkins 48

PikeView 73, Montcalm 19

River, Ohio 41, Tyler Consolidated 39

Scott 51, Poca 24

Sissonville 55, Wayne 19

Trinity 85, Wood County Christian 52

Tug Valley 95, Matewan 44

Wahama 66, Ohio Valley Christian 33

Weir 61, Madonna 46

Monday's games

SISSONVILLE 55, WAYNE 19

Wayne (0-18) FG FT Points

Strohsanna Robertson 0 3-4 3

Ashley Clay 3 2-2 9

Carrie Bentley 1 0-0 2

Tosha Adkins 1 1-4 3

Janessa Maynard 1 0-0 2

Totals 6 6-10 19

Sissonville (15-1) FG FT Points

Andrea Lewis 5 1-2 11

Rebekah Kendall 4 0-0 8

Kim Wagner 2 0-0 4

Rachel Kendall 3 0-1 7

Jennifer Povick 1 0-0 2

Ashley Radcliff 1 0-0 2

Nikki Rogers 1 0-0 2

Eva Padre Bares 0 6-10 6

Emily Facemyer 3 1-2 7

Christina Kessell 2 2-2 6

Totals 23 10-17 55

Wayne 5 6 2 6 - 19

Sissonville 18 14 12 11 - 55

Rebounds: Sissonville- Bares 9, Ra. Kendall 7.

SCOTT 51, POCA 24

Scott FG FT Points

Maggie Bradshaw 1 0-0 2

Tina Rhodes 1 1-4 3

Amelia Jarrell 1 0-0 2

Kristin Byus 2 0-2 4

Ceairea Mabry 3 0-0 6

Staci Kinder 8 1-2 17

Stevi Pauley 4 1-2 9

Cassie Green 2 1-2 5

Kate Piccirillo 2 1-2 5

Totals 23 5-14 51

Poca FG FT Points

Heather Miller 1 0-0 2

Ashley Anderson 2 5-8 9

Megan Rueckert 0 3-6 3

Susan Compton 4 0-0 8

Sheena Meadows 0 2-2 2

Totals 7 10-16 24

Scott 14 8 21 8 - 51

Poca 8 3 3 10 - 24

CROSS LANES CHRISTIAN 57,

HUNTINGTON ST. JOE 47

Cross Lanes Christian FG FT Points

Kiera Collier 1 3-7 5

Ally Turley 10 1-6 21

Lindsey Adkins 7 0-0 14

Haley Curry 4 2-6 11

Laura Williams 1 0-0 2

Sarah Meadows 0 0-0 0

Cassie Hager 0 0-0 0

De Fallin 0 0-0 0

Danielle Duff 1 0-0 2

Carrie Kelly 0 2-2 2

Totals 24 8-21 57

Huntington St. Joe (5-11) FG FT Points

Katie Riech 0 0-0 0

Carrie Posey 1 0-0 2

BreAna Damon 1 0-1 2

Katie Blair 2 4-11 8

Jessica Thomas 4 0-0 8

Trine Papper 0 0-0 0

Nasha Hamra 1 0-0 2

Maggie Arrington 0 0-0 0

Susan Zappin 7 8-12 24

Totals 7 13-24 47

Cross Lanes 13 12 15 17 - 57

St. Joseph 4 13 3 27 - 47

3-point goals: Cross Lanes Christian- Curry 1. St. Joe- Zappin 2.

WAHAMA 66, OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 33

Wahama (12-4) FG FT Points

Kendra Gallagher 1 0-4 2

Whitney Knight 1 1-2 3

Katie Hendrickson 4 0-3 8

Ashley Roush 0 1-2 1

Kara Sayre 3 3-6 9

Nancy Brinker 0 1-4 1

Jennifer Flowers 1 2-2 4

C.J. Blessing 11 3-7 25

Jessica Young 4 0-0 8

Kathy Shiltz 2 0-0 4

Totals 28 10-30 66

Ohio Valley (3-13) FG FT Points

Kelsey Salsbury 1 0-0 2

Hannah Burleson 2 2-8 6

Crystal Taylor 1 1-2 3

Sara Burleson 1 0-0 2

Sara Jenkins 2 4-8 8

Jessi Hamilton 1 0-0 2

Kristi Davis 3 4-6 10

Totals 11 11-24 33

Wahama 16 21 15 14 - 66

Ohio Valley Christian 4 11 6 12 - 33

Middle school Boys

Monday's games

South Charleston 8 10 7 21 - 46

Dunbar 13 13 8 18 - 53

South Charleston: Woodrum 4, J. Daniels 20, Hartman 3, Twyman 6,White 5, Greene 8.

Dunbar: C. Russell 4, Spurlock 18, X. Russell 13, Flannagan 3,Henson 3, Booker 11.

Record: Dunbar 10-3.

McKinley 7 7 15 8 - 37

Hayes 14 13 15 8 - 50

McKinley: Matt Mundy 4, Marcus Reynolds 5, Adam Morgan 14, RobbieLane 14.

Hayes: Marshall Chaney 4, Billy Ross 2, Zach Viglianco 2, BrannenLahoda 4, Chris Fulmer 9, Andrew Eggleton 11, Michael Spurlock 18.

Record: Hayes 6-7.

Elk Valley Christian 18 15 10 10 - 53

Gtr. Beckley Christian 7 9 11 6 - 33

Elk Valley: David Babbitt 17, Seth Brown 1, Jay Bird 2, Zach Lucas14, Cheyenne Smith 19.

Greater Beckley: Robert Rogers 11, Wesley Roberts 9, Matt Smith 2,Jed Lawson 11.

Charleston Catholic 51, Elkview 27

Catholic: Brand 17, Johns 12, Amos 10, Cassis 3, Wendling 3,Crigger 2, Butcher 2, Prudnick 2.

Elkview: H. Hamrick 10, Buckner 6, White 2, Wheeler 2, Poler 2,Mullins 2, J. Hamrick 2, Wolfe 1.

Hurricane 2 13 13 12 - 40

Logan 9 6 11 9 - 35

Hurricane: J.J. Jones 3 4-6 10, Joe Lamanca 4 2-4 10, GrantGrishaber 2 2-3 6, Richard Snyder 3 0-0 6, John Gdula 2 0-1 4, AlexO'Neal 1 2-2 4. Totals 40.

Logan: Scott Hanna 3 2-4 8, Wyatt Ables 2 4-4 8, Ryan Haught 1 0-1 2, Brett Campbell 3 1-1 10, Chris Robertson 1 0-0 3, Justin Taylor1 0-0 2, Anthony Perrin 1 0-0 2. Totals 35.

Records: Hurricane 15-0.

George Washington 16 7 16 11 - 50

Logan 6 7 10 14 - 37

GW: Lee 20, Supcoe 7, Simpkins 7, Turnbull 6, Payne 4, Pearcy 2,Bass 2, Dreyer 2.

Logan: Lane 9, Kraus 7, Rodighero 6, Farmer 5, Goff 5.

Records: GW 9-5, Logan 8-7.

Middle school girls

Monday's games

South Charleston 8 12 9 8 - 37

Dunbar 2 2 4 6 - 14

SC: Butcher 6, Long 6, Bone 4, Love 4, Taylor 4, Myers 3,Canterbury 2, Messinger 2, Crosier 2, McCormick 2.

Dunbar: Dudley 12, Payne 2, Medley 0, Ellis 0, Pitts 0.

Record: SC 10-5.

Elk Valley Christian 12 6 13 7 - 38

Gtr. Beckley Christian 2 8 0 6 - 16

Elk Valley: Amber Miller 6 1-4 13, Kristi Schwender 5 0-0 12,Debbie Armentrout 2 1-1 5, Heather Miller 2 0-0 4, Kim Collins 1 0-02, Jocelyn Ferrell 1 0-0 2.

Greater Beckley: Leslie Dickens 4 0-0 9, Megan Persinger 2 1-4 5,Jessica Kelly 1 0-0 2.

COLLEGE MEN

NABC/NCAA Division II rankings

1. Kentucky Wesleyan (20-1); 2. Northeastern State (19-1); 3.Northwest Missouri (19-0); 4. Cal State San Bernardino (18-1); 5.Tampa (18-1); 6. Adelphi (19-1); 7. Humboldt State (19-1); 8. SeattlePacific (18-2); 9. Salem International (17-2); 10. Michigan Tech (18-2); 11. Henderson State (16-3); 12. South Dakota State (18-3); 13.Gannon (19-2); 14. Shaw (17-3); 15. Missouri Southern (15-4); 16.California, Pa. (17-3); 17. Indiana, Pa. (17-2); 18. Nebraska Kearney(16-3); 19. Washburn (15-4); 20. St. Cloud State (16-4); 21.Assumption (17-3); 22. U. of Charleston (16-4); 23. Cal StateBakersfield (16-3); 24. Rockhurst (17-3); 25. J.C. Smith (16-4).

Others receiving consideration: Belmont Abbey (16-3); Carson-Newman (16-4); West Virginia Wesleyan (14-5); Montana St. Billings(18-3); Missouri Western (14-5); Augusta State (15-4).

Fans Take Sides On WLS, WGN

Cards and letters across the television-radio desk:

V. Miller, Chicago: Thanks to WLS-AM/FM (890/94.7) for keepingtalk. My favorite is Tom Snyder, who helps pass some long nights.

Dorothy McMurray, Chicago: As a newly retired, 65-year-old womanliving alone, I have found "WLS Talkradio" to be one of my mostimportant outlets, filling many lonely hours. Don Wade and Roma aremy impetus to get up and go.

Gene Majewski, Bellwood: The real broadcast types are departingWLS faster than a 747 on ice. Why does the present Chicago trendallow anybody to become a radio personality?

G.P. Lucchetti, Oak Park: If WLS wants to boost ratings, theyshould move Rush Limbaugh to nights or replay his midday show in thattime slot.

J. Kenny, Elmwood Park: WLS presents a near non-stop barrage ofRepublican propaganda that is so brazen it sometimes approachescaricature. Are all of the "equal time" regulations now rescinded?

Nina D. Gaspich, Chicago: I couldn't understand why "WLSTalkradio" did not join in the bidding war for "Chicago Eddie"Schwartz earlier this year.

Paul St. Leger, Crestwood: "Chicago Eddie" Schwartz working atWLUP-AM (1000) is like Beaver Cleaver's mother working in a massageparlor!

Jean S. Johnson, Willowbrook: In response to your recent columnoffering free advice to WGN-AM (720), I would like to suggest onemore item: Stop giggling and snorting on the air.

LaVonne Miller, New Lenox: I feel you have done (farm reporter)Orion Samuelson a great disservice. Did you know his name wasbandied about for secretary of agriculture a few years ago? I'mdisappointed with the trash you wrote about WGN.

Marianne Phifer, Chicago: When I hear Orion and Max (Armstrong)come on WGN, off goes the radio. I don't give a darn about thefarmers.

Jim Malone, Oak Park: Wally Phillips was the Bing Crosby of WGN.It was he who made WGN No. 1. He paved the way for all the others tofollow. Since he left mornings, WGN had been slowly going down.

Blanche H. Foster, Chicago: I have been listening to WGN forover 30 years, and I have had it. Their programming is one 24-hourcommercial. If I hear Linc (Hampton) and Spike (O'Dell) give onemore suburbanite directions to Wrigley Field, I'll scream.

Anthony Zanetello, Chicago: Now that Mike Ditka has shifted hisweekly radio show from WGN-AM (720) to WSCR-AM (820), WGN managementneedn't fret. They can always fill the time by running nothing butcommercials. At that the station excels.

Mae Hunter, Lombard: Why pick on WGN? I have a sneaky suspicionthe only reason you wrote that was to find out how many people readyour column and how much mail it would create.

Tony Carey, Brookfield: My dream is to put a 15-minute show onradio that kids can listen to not only to enhance their imaginationsbut to involve them in reading. The show would consist of reading astory in a serial format, such as The Hardy Boys and Nancy Drewmysteries. Each chapter would end as a cliffhanger with greatanticipation for the following one.

Patricia Cavanaugh, Calumet City: The question of (WMAQ-Channel5 weather personality) Roberta Gonzales' hair style came up in aletter to your column. I also question why she wears all that heavymakeup, especially the dark lipstick. She would be so much moreattractive with a softer look.

Karen Medina, Chicago: Roberta Gonzales' hairdo is not bizarre.If you compare her with any other television reporters or anchors,she is keeping up with the fashion and styles of the '90s.

Jane Jacobsen, Riverside: I do find Roberta Gonzales'mannerisms, speech and mode of dress so irritating that I switch heroff when she does the weather. Why must she wear so much jewelry?

Anne C. Stone, Wheaton: Strident voice? Not Roberta. Herdiction is perfect. Her appearance is always lovely. In our home,we enjoy her reporting.

Monday, 12 March 2012

Kentucky Churches Packed After Jet Crash

NICHOLASVILLE, Ky. - Shaken by tragedy, people packed Kentucky churches on Sunday, a week after the crash of Comair Flight 5191 killed 49 people in Lexington.

Despite the Labor Day holiday weekend, nearly 6,000 people attended services at Southland Christian Church outside Nicholasville, just south of Lexington. Volunteers had to direct traffic.

"It's been a very painful experience for everybody," said the Rev. Jon Weece, senior pastor of Southland. "I think the emotions range from everything from anger, confusion, obviously pain. I think people have a ton of questions that go well beyond the whys of the crash, beyond the details of whose fault it was."

The commuter jet turned onto runway that was too short, struggled to get airborne and crashed in a field on Aug. 27. The sole survivor, first officer James Polehinke, remained hospitalized Sunday in serious condition.

Southland was especially hard hit because parishioners knew seven of the victims as relatives or close friends, Weece said.

At the tiny Liberty Baptist Church outside the eastern Kentucky town of Paintsville, 30 people gathered to pray for the victims' families.

Liberty Baptist member June Rice, a retired teacher, said the husband of one of her former students died in the crash.

"This just emphasizes the fact that everybody needs to be ready to go at any time," she said.

The victims included two parishioners of the Cathedral of Christ the King Catholic Church in Lexington, where the Rev. Paul Prabell said people had turned to God to deal with their emotions.

"How profound grief is. How overwhelming the sense of loss is. It just permeates throughout our community," Prabell said.

The priest said people have been left with a realization that "the flaws of life and the randomness with which the flaws of life catch up with us are beyond our control and beyond our comprehension."

As part of the service at Southland, tearful parishioners wrote notes to relatives of the crash victims on tables set up throughout the sanctuary. Weece said the notes would be presented to the families.

"I am so sorry," wrote Hannah Nee, one of hundreds of names on the letters. "There are no words."

Weece agreed, saying: "I think this tragedy shook up the whole community. We talk about life and death all the time, but a situation like this really focuses our attention."

---

Associated Press writer Jeffrey McMurray in Lexington contributed to this report.

Customer's tolerance stretched to the limit

Dear Zazz: A reader complained to you about visiting fast-foodrestaurants and finding "illegal immigrant" employees who don't speakEnglish and can't make correct change.

You asked this writer to be more tolerant, and went on to preachin a politically correct tone about diversity.

In general, you're correct. But the writer had a valid point.

Recently, I went to McDonald's to buy a yogurt parfait. It isbeing touted as very healthy, but a lot of "healthy" foods containNutrasweet. I'm very allergic to Nutrasweet.

I asked if the parfait had Nutrasweet, and all eight employeesthere were unable to understand my question. They didn't evenunderstand my request for the pamphlets McDonald's offers withnutritional information.

Someone in that restaurant should have been proficient enough inEnglish to answer my question, don't you think?

L.R.

Dear L.R.: You're absolutely right. It's ludicrous to staff anentire restaurant with people who don't know enough English tounderstand your simple question. That's more the fault of themanagers and owners than the employees. By the way, if you checkout the ingredients in the yogurt parfait on www.mcdonalds.com,you'll see that it uses real sugar, not Nutrasweet.

Dear Zazz: You advised people to gently correct non-English-speaking workers when they give you the wrong change. You said they'dappreciate the help. If you think they'd be grateful when some gringocorrects them, you're wrong. They're just thankful to have a job.They don't give a hoot about the language barrier, as long as thepaycheck comes in.

D.D.

Dear D.D.: Sure, some people would resent being corrected. Butmany would appreciate the help. People know that to keep their jobs,they can't make too many mistakes. Most of us had immigrantancestors, and most of them were eager to learn. The same is truetoday.

Also, immigrants are often doing jobs that the American-bornconsider beneath them. Several letter-writers pointed out thatAmerica would come to a standstill without immigrant workers.

Dear Zazz: My grandparents came here from other countries. Theyalso struggled with the currency and language. However, they didn'tshow themselves in front of cash registers until they had enoughcommand of the language and currency to do a decent job. Nowadays,employers will use "he doesn't know English" as an excuse for badservice.

During my wedding, a young worker turned on an extremely loud ice-crushing machine. My father-in-law had to miss part of the ceremonyto complain about this. The manager told him: "Sorry, he doesn't knowEnglish."

He didn't have to speak English to know what a young woman walkingdown the aisle in a white dress meant.

COULDN'T BELIEVE IT

Dear Couldn't: Sounds like that ice-crushing employee wasclueless. You'll find plenty of clueless American-born people, too.As you wrote, his language skills had nothing to do with this.

Dear Zazz: Yes, our ancestors came from other countries. Butunlike today's immigrants, they learned English!

Today, people come here with no desire to learn the language. Theylive in communities where their language is spoken, even in theschools. I've been asked, "Why don't you speak Spanish?"

U.S. CITIZEN

Dear Zazz: When I read your response in support of foreignworkers, I was full of hope. It's nice to know there are still peopleprogressive enough to accept and tolerate people from other parts ofthe world.

Some foreign workers contribute immensely to the growth of thisgreat nation. They've formed corporations that employ millions ofU.S. citizens. They've been involved in research and development thatour nation relies on to remain competitive in the world. Thanks foreducating your narrow-minded reader, and many more who think the sameway.

K.S.

Write Zazz at Box 3455, Chicago 60654; call Zazz's hotline (312-321-2003) or e-mail (zazz @suntimes.com).

Oswalt's Philly debut a dud; Berkman headed to NYY

Roy Oswalt's debut with the Philadelphia Phillies was a dud. Maybe ex-teammate Lance Berkman will make a better first impression for the New York Yankees.

On another busy day of wheeling and dealing leading up to baseball's trade deadline, the Chicago White Sox added pitcher Edwin Jackson, and the Yankees landed outfielder Austin Kearns. New York also closed in Friday on acquiring Berkman, the switch-hitting slugger who played with Oswalt for 10 seasons in Houston.

The Yankees planned to complete a deal for the five-time All-Star on Saturday, a day after the World Series champions obtained Kearns from the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named or cash.

New York will send a couple of prospects to the Astros, likely to be reliever Mark Melancon and infielder Jimmy Paredes, and Houston will pay part of the salary Berkman is owed, a baseball executive familiar with the discussions said Friday night. The executive spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal had not been announced.

Berkman sat out Friday night against Milwaukee, and his Astros teammates said their goodbyes.

"Nothing's been completed," he said before the game.

Berkman, who is from Texas, had full no-trade rights. His approval was necessary for a deal, accounting for the delay in its completion.

"This city is like the womb. I feel very comfortable here. To think about the possibility of going anywhere else is kind of scary," Berkman said.

More trades were expected before Saturday's 4 p.m. EDT non-waiver deadline. The Los Angeles Dodgers were exploring a deal Friday night with the Chicago Cubs to acquire left-hander Ted Lilly, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.

Oswalt, a two-time 20-game winner and three-time All-Star, was dealt Thursday from Houston to the Phillies in a four-player swap. But the right-hander was roughed up in his first start for the NL champions Friday night, allowing five runs _ four earned _ and seven hits in six innings of an 8-1 loss at Washington.

The defeat ended Philadelphia's eight-game winning streak and left Oswalt (6-13) leading the majors in losses.

"I came out amped up, held the ball a little tight," Oswalt said. "Didn't really start feeling better until the last two innings. Didn't really go my way."

J.A. Happ, one of the players shipped from Philadelphia to Houston for Oswalt, pitched his new team past the Brewers 5-0 in a stellar Astros debut.

Happ yielded two hits over six innings and struck out six in his fourth big league start this season. The left-hander, who went 12-4 with a 2.93 ERA as a rookie last year, had been sidelined because of a left forearm strain.

"It's a strange thing to fly out this morning, meet the new teammates and then go out there and pitch. But it was good," Happ said. "It was very emotional yesterday saying goodbye to the guys I've played with a few years and then coming in here and meeting new guys."

Elsewhere, third baseman Jhonny Peralta hit two homers for Detroit in his first game since being acquired from Cleveland. Matt Capps worked a scoreless ninth inning for a save in his first appearance with the Minnesota Twins after he was traded by the Washington Nationals the previous night.

The White Sox, trying to hold off the Twins in the AL Central, obtained Jackson from the struggling Arizona Diamondbacks for rookie pitcher Daniel Hudson and prospect David Holmberg.

An All-Star in 2009 with Detroit, Jackson tossed the second no-hitter in Diamondbacks history June 25 against Tampa Bay. His arrival gives Chicago a talented, though sometimes wild, addition to a solid rotation that is missing injured ace Jake Peavy.

White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said Jackson is scheduled to start Wednesday at Detroit.

Kearns left Cleveland's game at Toronto in the seventh inning and will join the Yankees on Saturday. He is hitting .272 with eight homers and 42 RBIs.

"A corner outfielder that gives us depth and experience," New York manager Joe Girardi said. "A right-handed bat that has power. We can use him a lot of different ways. It will give me a chance to rest our left-handed guys."

Berkman, however, appeared to be the more significant move for New York, which has the best record in baseball (65-37) but only a one-game lead in the AL East over Tampa Bay.

The 34-year-old Berkman would fill the designated hitter slot originally intended for Nick Johnson, who has been on the disabled list since May 8 because of a right wrist injury that required surgery.

Berkman is hitting .245 with 13 homers and 49 RBIs. He has 60 walks and 70 strikeouts in 298 at-bats.

"I think it would be good for him," Oswalt said. "Sometimes you get a change of scenery, turns you all the way around. Sometimes you get in a rut of doing the same thing over and over again."

Berkman is making $14.5 million this year. His contract includes a team option for 2011 at $15 million with a $2 million buyout.

___

AP Sports Writer Ronald Blum and AP Baseball Writer Janie McCauley contributed to this report.

Up, up and away

TEXAS DE BRAZIL

- 51 E. Ohio

- Mondays-Thursdays 5-10 p.m., Fridays 5-10:30 p.m., Saturdays 4-10:30 p.m., Sundays 4-10 p.m.

- Smart casual dress code

- (312) 670-1006; www.texasdebrazil.com

At most Brazilian steakhouses, costumed gauchos (South American cowboys) bring skews of slow-roasted meats tableside and carve them, adding a certain theatricality to the dining experience.

Texas de Brazil (51 E. Ohio) is taking the theatrics to new heights. Literally.

The restaurant features a two-story wine room that is glass-fronted, ensuring unobstructed views of the steakhouse's signature aerial wine artists. Wine stewards are suspended by theatrical rigging over a two-story bank of wine.

"We wanted the Chicago location to be sort of a flagship for us," says Texas de Brazil general manager Vincent Feola. "The Chicago location offered us high enough ceilings to do something like this."

The rigging was built and installed by the Chicago Flyhouse, a local group. The group also provided flight training.

Andrea Hiller, a student at Columbia College, originally had applied for a hostess job.

"They asked me if I wanted to be an aerial wine artist and I told them, 'No, just a hostess,' " she says. "They talked me into it and once I was strapped in and gliding I was hooked."

Though the concept of combining wine service with Cirque du Soleil-like aerial theatrics is not new (Aureole in Las Vegas was the first, although Feola says the restaurant's attraction is unique.)

"The one in Vegas can only go up and down, but our aerialists have full motion up, down and side to side," he says.

"You're strapped in and fairly secure. I feel totally comfortable with it," says 19-year-old Hiller, one of the steakhouse's five aerial wine artists.

Hiller uses a small, white controller to move the rigging. She gracefully glided through the air, retrieved a bottle of a Spanish red from high and flew back to me (upside down, no less).

"We each only work about an hour and a half because the wine room is a chilly 58 degrees," she says.

The two-story wall of wine contains 1,400 bottles. Once a server has entered an order into the computer, the aerialist gets a printout of the order and is soon flipping, gliding and soaring to retrieve it.

Depending on how many times a night someone orders a bottle of wine, an aerial wine artist might fetch upward of five to seven bottles.

"We haven't dropped a bottle yet," Hiller adds.

The restaurant is currently only open for dinner, but Feola plans to offer lunch service soon.

Wines are stocked on an as-needed basis during the dinner hours by the wine artists themselves. During the off hours, Feola and others will restock.

"I wish I was as graceful in the harness," he says with a chuckle as Hiller continues her aerial ballet.

The current aerialist uniform is all black and almost blends in with the black shelving, but that probably will change.

"We are in talks right now to maybe put them in red so the girls really stand out," Feola says.

Color Photo: Rich Hein, Sun-Times / Columbia College student Andrea Hiller, an aerial wine artist, originally came to Texas de Brazil in search of a job as a hostess. But once she tried out the aerial gear and was airborne, "I was hooked." ;