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October 8, 2010

IU gets Sterling commitment for 2011

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Recruiting is about finding the right fit for both player and school.

It appears that is exactly what happened when the Indiana women’s basketball team secured its first commitment for the class of 2011 earlier this month.

Necole Sterling, a 6-foot wing from Manassas, Va., made a verbal decision to join coach Felisha Legette-Jack’s Hoosiers, who will have some holes to fill on the perimeter next year with the loss of seniors Jori Davis, Hope Elam,pearl money clips, Whitney Lindsay and Andrea McGuirt.

"It’s about feeling, you want to go where it feels good,bangles, feels right," Sterling’s Stonewall Jackson High School coach,buy necklace, Nsonji White,tiffany watches, said. "She came back from that visit (to IU) and told me, ‘It feels good.’"

When the Indiana coaches visited an open gym two weeks ago, Sterling made her commitment that night.

"It was a surprise to me because I thought she would wait," White said.

This will be White’s first year coaching Sterling after she transferred from Heritage High School in Leesburg, Va., where she previously played against his team. The coach is excited about what she can do on a team already loaded with Division I talent — an East Carolina commit, a freshman drawing interest from North Carolina among others and another player with multiple offers in hand.

"We have a well-rounded team," said White, whose team plays a matchup zone similar to that of the Hoosiers. "If she wanted to score 20 a game, she could, but her best attributes are as a natural passer and playmaker.

"We’re excited about taking the wrapper off of this new package we have."

Sterling, a young senior who won’t turn 17 until later this year,watches, has the versatility to play the point as well as post up or even defend the post, according to White, and room to grow.

"Once her strength catches up with her game, she’s going to be tremendous," White said.

October 6, 2010

WIPO ASSIGNS PATENT TO TOYO TANSO

Title of the invention: "CARBON MATERIAL COATED WITH DIAMOND THIN FILM AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING SAME.",Paloma Picasso Loving Heart Pendant

Applicants: TOYO TANSO CO.,Thanksgiving surprise gift, LTD. (JP).

Inventors: Takanori Kawano (JP) and Rie Tao (JP).

According to the abstract posted by the World Intellectual Property Organization: "Provided is a carbon material having a diamond thin film which inhibits a base material etching rate and has excellent adhesion by adhering diamond particles onto a carbonaceous base material in conditions less susceptible to etching by hydrogen radicals,Tiffany 1837 bangle, and also provided is a method for producing the carbon material. The carbon material is obtained by placing diamond particles on the surface of a carbonaceous base material in which the weight loss is observed under diamond synthesis conditions and forming a diamond layer using the diamond particles as nuclei,watches, wherein the weight per unit area of the diamond particles is controlled to 1.0 x 10-4 cm2 or more and less than 3.0 x 10-3 g/cm2."

The patent was filed on March 19, 2010 under Application No. PCT/JP2010/054768.

For further information please visit: http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/ia.jsp?ia=JP2010/054768

For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement,Elsa Peretti Teardrop Earrings, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

September 10, 2010

Hershey’s Bliss Invites Women to Win 16.5-Carat Di

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Hershey’s Bliss Chocolate Continues Hershey’s Support of Young Survival Coalition and Breast Cancer Awareness by Donating Diamond Necklace to YSC Fundraiser

For The Hershey Company

Anna Lingeris

717.534.4874

alingeris@hersheys.com

Jennifer Nau

630.932.7987

jennifern@jsha.com

Logo: http://www.hersheysbliss.com

Hershey’s Bliss(R) chocolate is inviting women nationwide to experience the bliss of a 16.5-carat diamond necklace to benefit Young Survival Coalition (YSC) and raise awareness for breast cancer. In 2009, Hershey’s Bliss chocolate’s Share the Bliss(TM) campaign took a page from The New York Times best-selling book "The Necklace: Thirteen Women and the Experiment That Transformed Their Lives" by Cheryl Jarvis, to connect women nationwide and help others experience the joy of sharing. Now,buy tiffany, Hershey’s Bliss chocolate is honoring the charitable commitment of these women by "blissing" the Hershey’s Bliss diamond necklace for the final time. The 16.5-carat diamond necklace will be raffled off at YSC’s In Living Pink benefit on May 20, 2010 in New York City. Grand prize tickets are $25 per chance or $100 for five chances and can be purchased by visiting www.youngsurvival.org/in-living-pink/diamonds through May 13, 2010. Tickets will also be available to purchase at the event.

"Hershey’s Bliss chocolate was developed to help women appreciate the joys of everyday life. We saw the real-life story of ‘The Necklace’ as a perfect way to connect women to celebrate life’s bliss," said Anna Lingeris, spokeswoman for Hershey’s Bliss chocolate and The Hershey Company. "The donation of the necklace to YSC will keep the spirit of the necklace alive by connecting and supporting women that share one common cause."

The final winner of the Hershey’s Bliss chocolate necklace will be drawn at the YSC’s In Living Pink benefit by women of "The Necklace" and a Share the Bliss contest winner. Hershey’s Bliss chocolate’s donation of the diamond necklace continues The Hershey Company’s long-standing support of YSC and raising awareness for breast cancer. YSC is the premier international organization dedicated to the critical issues unique to young women diagnosed with breast cancer. The Hershey Company has donated nearly $1.5 million to YSC over the past five years.

"Hershey’s Bliss chocolate’s support of Young Survival Coalition helps us to continue to offer outreach programs and services for young women facing breast cancer," said Jenna Glazer, YSC Director of Development. "Through the brand’s generous donation, we will be able to raise critical funds for the vital programs we provide to our constituency and their families."

From August through December, 2009, Hershey’s Bliss chocolate’s Share the Bliss contest asked consumers to submit their stories of why they wanted to experience the diamond necklace. Five lucky women were selected to experience the bliss of the 16.5-carat diamond necklace. Each woman was given the opportunity to wear the diamond necklace for two weeks before selecting and passing it on to the next Share the Bliss contest winner. The women also received delicious Hershey’s Bliss chocolate and a signed copy of "The Necklace." Each winner shared their two-week experience with the necklace through a blog on the Hershey’s Bliss chocolate website and helped select the next winner, thus connecting women nationwide.

To purchase a chance to win the Hershey’s Bliss chocolate diamond necklace and support the YSC visit www.youngsurvival.org/in-living-pink/diamonds. For more information on Hershey’s Bliss chocolate visit www.hersheysbliss.com.

About The Hershey Company

The Hershey Company (NYSE: HSY) is the largest producer of quality chocolate in North America and a global leader in chocolate and sugar confectionery. Headquartered in Hershey, Pa.,key rings, The Hershey Company has operations throughout the world and more than 12,000 employees. With revenues of more than $5 billion,tiffany sets, Hershey offers such iconic brands as Hershey’s,watches, Reese’s, Hershey’s Kisses, Kit Kat, Twizzlers and Ice Breakers as well as the smooth, creamy indulgence of Hershey’s Bliss chocolates. Hershey is a leader in the fast-growing dark and premium chocolate segment, with such brands as Hershey’s Special Dark and Hershey’s Extra Dark. In addition, Artisan Confections Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Hershey Company, markets such premium chocolate offerings as Scharffen Berger and Dagoba. For more than 100 years, The Hershey Company has been a leader in making a positive difference in the communities where we live, work and do business. The Milton Hershey School, established by the company’s founder in 1909, provides a nurturing environment, quality education, housing, and medical care at no cost to children in social and financial need. The School is administered by the Hershey Trust Company, Hershey’s largest shareholder, making the students of Milton Hershey School direct beneficiaries of Hershey’s success. Please visit us at www.hersheys.com.

About "The Necklace"

One day in Ventura, California, Jonell McLain saw a beautiful diamond necklace in a jewelry store window and wondered: Why are personal luxuries so plentiful yet accessible to so few? What if we shared what we desired? Several weeks, dozens of phone calls, and one great leap of faith later, Jonell and twelve other women bought the necklace together – to be passed along among them all. The dazzling treasure weaves in and out of each woman’s life, reflecting her past, defining her present, making promises for her future. Lending sparkle in surprising and unexpected ways, the necklace comes to mean something dramatically different to each of the thirteen women. With vastly dissimilar histories and lives,thanksgiving gift ideas, they transcend their individual personalities and politics to join together in an uncommon journey – and what started as a quirky social experiment becomes something far richer and deeper.

About Young Survival Coalition

Young Survival Coalition (YSC) is the premier global organization dedicated to the critical issues unique to young women diagnosed with breast cancer. The organization was founded in 1998 by three women diagnosed with breast cancer under the age of 35 who were discouraged by the lack of information available to them. YSC works to change the face of breast cancer by advocating for more research focused on young women with breast cancer and providing this underserved population with programs and services specific to their needs. YSC provides vital resources to decrease the sense of isolation often felt by young women affected by breast cancer, with the goal that no young women should face this disease alone.

September 1, 2010

15 years for woman in DUI crash that killed 5 teen

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An Aurora woman was sentenced to 15 years in prison today for crashing her car while drunk and killing five teens.

"As a result of your decision, five people are dead," Kendall County Judge Clint Hull told Sandra Vasquez. "You are not a bad person. You made a bad decision but a conscious decision. You had the keys, you didn’t have to drive."

Prosecutors had asked for 24 years while Vasquez’s attorney wanted probation.

The sentencing hearing began dramatically this morning when Vasquez collapsed in court as her mother took the stand to testify on her behalf.

As her mother told the court how her daughter’s 8-year-old son Isaiah marks down on a calendar every day his mother is gone, Vasquez began sobbing and moaning.

Hull finally ordered a recess. Two deputies held a limp Vasquez by her arms and helped her out of the courtroom. She returned to the courtroom a few minutes later.

Vasquez’s attorney, Kathleen Colton,tiffany, then read a letter written by Isaiah: "Can you please bring my mommy back? I love her and can’t live without her," it said in part.

After the letter was read, Vasquez turned around and mouthed "I love you" to her son, who was sitting behind her in the first row of the gallery, and blew him a kiss, just as she did when she entered the courtroom at the start of the hearing.

Colton also submitted to the judge a scrapbook of grateful letters from families of Alzheimer’s patients whom Sanda had cared for, and a candle Sandra had bought after the accident.

Sandra had taped photos of the crash victims on the candle and the date of the accident, her mother said. Sandra kept the candle in her bedroom, where she prayed in front of it every night, her mother said.

"I felt like I lost a part of my daughter," she said. "There were moments when she didn’t want to go on with life."

Sandra Vasquez’s sister, Erica,Atlas charm bracelet, 28, also spoke during the hearing, saying Sandra had tried to commit suicide several times since the accident.

"She feels it should have been her and not them,bangles," Erica Vasquez said.

Turning to the victims’ families in the gallery, she said: "You may never forgive us and we understand, but just know that my sister meant well. She never meant for this to happen."

Vasquez had to be escorted out of the courtroom a second time when Donna Dwyer, the mother of one of the victims, Matthew Frank, gave an impact statement and talked about seeing his body after the accident.

Vasquez rocked back and forth as Dwyer described how her son’s eyes would not close after he died.

"I can’t, I can’t, I can’t, God, I can’t do this," Vasquez said, putting her hands over her ears. She was then taken out of the courtroom.

Dwyer also told the judge how hard her son’s death has been for her family.

"Imagine, never being able to hear your child’s voice again. Can you imagine never being able to hug or touch your child again?" Dwyer said.

Other victims’ families are also expected to give statements before the judge hands down the sentence.

In his closing statement, Kendall County State’s Attorney Eric Weis asked for a 24-year sentence. The maximum is 28 years.

Defense attorney Kathleen Colton asked for probation.

Said Weis, "Offering a ride home isn’t an excuse for driving drunk. It’s not OK to drive and drink; it’s not OK to speed; it’s not OK to take those lives at such a young age."

Colton said, "Both sides are in pain that can’t be erased. Mistakes were made by other people that caused these confluence of events."

After a mid afternoon break, Vasquez was to be given the chance to make a statement. Judge Clint Hull’s sentencing would follow.

Vasquez, the mother of two young children,rings, was convicted in June of reckless homicide and drunk driving by a Kendall County jury following a two-week trial.

About 30 teens were drinking at a Montgomery home the night of Feb. 11, 2007, until a parent came home and broke up the party, witnesses testified at the emotional trial.

Eight of the teens crammed into Vasquez’s small sedan to bum a ride home from the woman, whom none of them knew.

Matthew Frank, 17, and Katherine Merkel, 14, shared the front passenger seat. Four other teens jammed into the back seat, and Jessica Nutoni, 15, and Tiffany Urso, 16, climbed on top of them.

A few minutes later, as the car traveled more than 70 mph down Illinois Highway 31 near River Run Boulevard, it swerved, then veered into a light pole, instantly killing Frank, Merkel, Nutoni and Urso.

Backseat passenger James McGee, 16, died eight days later. Vasquez and her other three passengers suffered serious injuries.

Vasquez, who had been out on bond prior to the trial, was taken into custody immediately after the verdict.

Colton had portrayed her young client as a good Samaritan who was not blameless but did not deserve to go to jail.

"I think it would be a travesty if she was sent to prison," Colton said.

Vasquez testified that she went to the home in Montgomery the night of the party to pick up her younger sister. She said she agreed to give one obviously intoxicated teen a ride home, then others asked to join them.

She maintained she was not drunk, and jurors appeared to focus on that point, asking during 12 hours of deliberations for written transcripts of expert testimony on Vasquez’s blood-alcohol level.

Vasquez admitted to drinking as many as four drinks that night but said she was not drunk.

Different types of blood-alcohol readings showed her level as high as 0.124 percent, although an expert said it could have been as low as 0.04 percent.

–Art Barnum,watches, Gerry Smith, Angie Leventis Lourgos

August 30, 2010

Meet Merced’s most wanted running backs

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Defenses in the Central Valley will be on high alert once again this season. Defensive coordinators can expect plenty of sleepless nights as they remain on the lookout for a cast of characters as scary as they are talented.,Charm bracelet

A group of running backs the Sun-Star has dubbed The Getaway Boys.

Merced County has always been fertile ground for star running backs through the years. The list of great backs in the history of Merced High alone reads longer than Eric DeAnda’s hair. The talent in the area hasn’t dried up. Last year 10 players eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark,watches, including three from Buhach Colony.

The names shouldn’t surprise you. Dos Palos’ Kevin Schofield and Los Banos’ Darron Brown have been on the loose for three years, terrorizing defenses from Sacramento to Bakersfield.

However, this group is more than a dynamic duo. This band of game-breakers is growing quickly.

DeAnda broke into the starting lineup midway through the season and quickly became a household name after his record-setting 307-yard, four-touchdown performance in a 33-30 win over Buhach Colony. Dallon Muse made a name for himself as part of BC’s three-headed monster, and Golden Valley’s Tyler Arnsberg is the newest member of the group as he makes the move from quarterback to running back this year.

Together the quintet combined for 6,necklaces,139 yards and 66 touchdowns. You can expect even bigger numbers this year. Opposing tacklers should approach with caution.

Darron Brown

"The Delivery Man"

What can Brown do for you?

The Delivery Man doesn’t need a signature to deliver a load. Brown comes into this season with something to prove after a lower back injury sidelined him for more than a month last year.

"I don’t even know how to explain it," Brown said. "I wanted to play so bad, but I couldn’t. There was nothing I could do.

"It hurt me so bad. It’s made me want to come back this year even stronger."

Brown broke on the scene with 835 yards and 10 touchdowns as a sophomore two years ago.

He was limited to just 685 yards and five touchdowns last season.

Brown missed his frequent trips to the end zone.

"Yeah, I missed it a lot,key rings," he said. "This year I plan to be in the end zone a lot. More than five or 10 times.

"It’s all up to my offensive line."

Kevin Schofield

"The Iron Horse"

One look at Schofield and you can tell he’s no stranger to the weight room.

Pumping iron is a necessity for the workload The Iron Horse is expected to shoulder this season.

Schofield set a school record with 51 carries in a 27-14 win over Yosemite last year.

His 305 carries were 130 more than any other player in the area.

"He’s a tough football player," Los Banos coach Dennis Stubbs said. "The guy can do it all. He’s so determined and has the drive, the right attitude.

"He plays full speed no matter what the situation. I’m just as impressed with him as a person, not only as a football player."

Schofield led the county with 1,926 yards.

It’s almost as if he can find another gear when he senses the defense is getting tired.

"You can kind of see it," Schofield said. "You see their hands on their knees. They’re walking back to the huddle.

"That’s when you try to break one."

Dallon Muse

"The Fuse"

This Fly Boy can definitely ignite an offense.

With Corey Chapman (1,546 yards and 19 touchdowns) out indefinitely for a school-related disciplinary issue,rings, Muse and teammate Jarrell Davis will be an even bigger part of the offense early on.

"When we evaluated him last year we felt because of all his contributions to their team he was their best player," Merced coach Rob Scheidt said. "Not only because of him running the ball, but also his play on defense and the intangibles he brings to their team.

"He’s a great football player."

Muse has that combination of power and speed that makes him tough to bring down.

"I used to be more of a scat back," Muse said. "Now I’m more of a mix.

I learned that speed isn’t always enough."

Eric DeAnda

"D-Train"

The nickname says it all.

DeAnda is built like a locomotive and isn’t afraid of contact.

"I like it," DeAnda said. "It’s kind of like a challenge. Is he going to bring me down or am I going to overpower him?"

If you look at the numbers you’ll see DeAnda rose up to the challenges.

He’s the ideal combination of power and speed. One play he’s powering his way through the line picking up tough yardage. The next he may be streaking around the end, outrunning linebackers and defensive backs.

Despite not starting until midseason, he still racked up 1,152 yards with 14 touchdowns on 135 carries.

BC coach Kevin Swartwood got a good look at DeAnda during his record-setting performance.

"I immediately thought he was outstanding," Swartwood said. "He ran hard. He hit the hole fast. He didn’t tire out. He’s a very good back."

Tyler Arnsberg

"Kid Zoom"

One look at Arnsberg’s cleats and you’ll understand why the Sun-Star has dubbed him Kid Zoom.

The GV junior had the word "zoom" embroidered on his cleats.

New Golden Valley coach Jake Messina is building his offense around Arnsberg.

Messina quickly identified Kid Zoom as the player he wants to carry the ball 15 to 20 times a game.

Arnsberg tallied 1,140 yards and 16 touchdowns on the ground as a quarterback in Golden Valley’s option attack last year.

This year he moves to tailback in a Pro Style offense.

"We want to hand him the ball, let him run downhill and give him a chance to make a cut," Messina said.

Arnsberg welcomed the change.

"I was basically another running back in the Veer anyway," Arnsberg said. "I threw the ball a little. Now running the ball is all I do. I’m real excited about the change."

COURT FINES MORAY FARMING PARTNERSHIP AS 13-YEAR-O

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The Health and Safety Executive issued the following press release:,cuff Links

A Moray farming partnership was yesterday (25 August 2010) fined £13,500 at Elgin Sheriff Court following an incident where a 13-year-old boy fell through the roof of a farm building and sustained serious injuries from which he later died.

The incident happened on 21 August 2006. Austin Irvine,watches, who was the stepson of the farm’s junior partner, was watching the gutter in the valley between the cattle shed and feed passage roofs being cleared.

He was raised up to roof level in the bucket of a tractor by his stepfather and the boy walked onto the roof. As he walked across the roof he stepped onto a skylight which collapsed. He fell through the skylight, around four-four and a half metres (approximately 13 feet) to the ground and suffered serious injuries from which he later died.

A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) investigation into the incident revealed that there was no proper edge protection on the roof and no measures in place to prevent falls through the corrugated asbestos cement sheeting which made up the roof.

John Irvine and Son, of Inverlochy Farm, Tomintoul, Ballindalloch, pleaded guilty to breaching Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.

Following the case,Atlas charm bracelet, HSE Inspector Ann Poyner said:

"This tragedy should never have happened and could have been prevented if John Irvine and Son had properly assessed the risks of working on a fragile roof and taken steps to prevent falls through the roof.

"Farmers and those working in agriculture frequently carry out roof work,Bead bracelet, yet fail to appreciate the risks involved are always substantial. If possible, avoid going on fragile roofs and always keep children clear of high risk activities. If you are planning this type of work should always make sure you have the right equipment to ensure that the work area is strong enough to work from and that guard rails are in place at open edges and suitable access is provided." For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Katherine Brown, 0131 244 9060; Karen Bell, 0191 283 4003,Beads necklace, 0151 922 1221

August 26, 2010

Gloucester’s Emir, Handsome This Time

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Even standing still, Richard, Emir Gloucester, seems to exist in a blur of perpetual motion. Played by Fayez Kazak in "Richard III: An Arab Tragedy," at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, this rising political star in a 21st-century Persian Gulf state is a compact, handsome figure who wears his crisp officer’s uniform with no visible trace of the physical deformity he is said to have.

What’s freakish about him is his supercharged metabolism, that sense of synapses popping like an endless string of firecrackers. When he smiles, which he does often and intensely, he seems to be savoring his own inexhaustible energy and its potential as a weapon of mass destruction. The poor guy hasn’t calculated that when the bomb that is Richard of Gloucester finally fully detonates, it will blow him, as well as his victims, to smithereens.

The man who murders his way to the crown may be the most conspicuous human explosive device on view in Sulayman Al Bassam’s lively and often savagely funny Arabic-language variation on Shakespeare’s "Richard III," which runs through Friday at the Harvey Theater as part of the academy’s Muslim Voices: Arts and Ideas festival. But he is by no means the only one of his kind. The Kuwait-born Mr. Bassam, who also directed, has created a Richard who is less the scourge of his time than the essence of it, a combustible ruler for a combustible society.

The full title of this production is, after all, "Richard III: An Arab Tragedy," suggesting that the central tragedy here is cultural instead of individual. Classically Shakespeare’s blood-spattered history play is rendered as a portrait of a singular sociopath, with actors like Laurence Olivier and Ian McKellen digging deep for psyche-warping motives.

None of that for Mr. Bassam (who appeared in several supporting roles in the show’s opening night, after one of his actors was unable to travel at the last moment). The withered limb and hunched back are nowhere to be seen on Mr. Kazak’s Richard, who looks like a dapper blend of Alan Ladd and Omar Sharif. And the character of Richard’s contemptuous, son-spurning mother, long an essential key in Freudian readings of the play, has been eliminated. Most tellingly, Richard is not allowed to begin the evening with his famous, self-reflective monologue.

That honored place goes to Queen Margaret (Amal Omram), the ousted monarch who is mad as hell at having been pushed from power. She arrives solo to deliver a prologue of wrath and dispossession, clutching a suitcase and brandishing a large flag portraying the head of the new king, Edward IV (Monadhil Daood). That she drops the flag and clutches the suitcase says everything about the world she inhabits. Power is fleeting, and everyone, if allowed to live, is destined to become a transient.

From then on the action more or less follows that of Shakespeare’s text. But that introductory image of Margaret, who keeps showing up to curse and gloat and cackle as things go wrong for everybody else, means that Richard can’t highjack our complicity as he traditionally does. He has been placed firmly in a diminishing historical context. We have already been alerted that he can do his Machiavellian worst,Charm pendant, but that his time on the world stage will be short.

Not that there’s comfort in this. For Mr. Bassam makes it clear that Richard is just the latest, and not necessarily the most awful, in a succession of tyrants who rule by deception and fear. And the worst, it seems, is yet to come. As Richard woos, finesses, stabs and strangles his way to the top, it appears that there are other, even more powerful forces lurking behind him, waiting to step into the breach. It should surprise no one that these forces speak with an American accent.

Shifting the center of "Richard III" from its title character to the world he inhabits (and that ultimately controls him) means that this production is not one of fine-grained portraiture. Instead it’s a big-picture, energetic satire that, like its chief villain, never stops moving. As designed by Sam Collins, the world that’s summoned here is a runaway hybrid of ancient Arab tradition and 21st-century technology.

Video simulcasts of historic events, narrated by a hard-grinning, uneasy news reporter; projected texts of BlackBerry-sent messages to unseen allies; cellphones used to take pictures documenting temporary (and hypocritical) alliances: all these thoroughly contemporary elements have their role here, and are sometimes deployed to hilarious effect (as in the case of a fixed television text-in poll on Richard’s popularity).

But the Arab music (by Lewis Gibson, performed by an onstage band), which forms a subliminal aural backdrop to the modern power games, has the timeless, propulsive sound of centuries passing to a steady, ominous beat. God is invoked with duplicitous piety, along with apposite quotes from the Koran, by Richard and his allies, but so is the demonizing language of the West, with Richard’s adversaries denounced as terrorists and even members of "an axis of evil." (The technology-savvy, business-suited Buckingham, played by Raymond el-Hosni, is Richard’s architect in this particular image campaign.)

English-speaking audiences should know that the text as indicated by the supertitles projected during the dialogue bears a loose relationship to Shakespeare’s original. There are metaphors about date palms, and a description of something being "as merciful as rain on mud huts." Mr. Bassam makes witty use of the Arab context to bring an original theatricality to certain scenes, especially the wooing by Richard of the recently widowed Lady Anne (Nadine Jomaa), when he dons a woman’s mourning veils to slip into her company.

Beneath the gallows-humor jocularity of the show’s surface, though, there occasionally registers a haunting sense of a world truly out of joint, and of people acting against their natures. Catesby (Mr. Daood), who initially registers as a dim, fatuous hatchet man, is stricken by conscience after committing the play’s most heinous murder and asks himself, in genuine agony, what he has in fact become.

Originally commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company and since performed in locations as far afield as Washington and Damascus, Syria, "Richard III: An Arab Tragedy" is not a subtle work, and those searching for new insights into Shakespeare are advised to look elsewhere. But Mr. Bassam effectively pulls you into a dark whirligig of history that spins so fast, you’re surprised when the show ends after an intermissionless 1 hour 50 minutes.

"It is your right to ignore me," mad Margaret announces in the play’s prologue. This production makes that impossible.

RICHARD III

An Arab Tragedy

By William Shakespeare; adapted and directed by Sulayman al-Bassam; production design by Sam Collins; original music and sound by Lewis Gibson; lighting by Richard Williamson; costumes by Abdullah al-Awadhi; production manager,rings, Aude Albiges; company stage manager,watches, Faisal al-Obaid. A Sabab/Sulayman Al-Bassam Theater production presented by the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Asia Society and the New York University Center for Dialogues. At the BAM Harvey Theater, 651 Fulton Street, Fort Greene, Brooklyn; (718) 636-4100. In Arabic, with English supertitles; translated by Mehdi al-Sayegh. Through Friday. Running time: 1 hour 50 minutes.

WITH: Carole Abboud (Queen Elizabeth), Bashar Abdullah (Emir Grey/Ratcliffe), Faisal al-Ameeri (Emir Rivers/Newscaster),key rings, Nigel Barrett (Mr. Richmond), Nicolas Daniel (Minister of State Hastings/Lord Mayor), Monadhil Daood (King Edward IV/Catesby), Raymond el-Hosni (Palace Adviser Buckingham), Nadine Jomaa (Lady Anne/Mistress Shore), Fayez Kazak (Emir Gloucester/King Richard III), Jassim al-Nabhan (Emir Clarence/Stanley) and Amal Omran (Queen Margaret/Crown Prince Edward).

August 20, 2010

Neighbors say man suspected in killing is son of v

Filed under: Cocktail Dresses — Tags: , , — admin @ 2:03 am

The man accused of a fatal shooting in southeast Bakersfield is the son of the victim’s girlfriend, according to neighbors.

Santino Caesar Trevino, 36, has been arrested in the death of Gregorio Ramon Franco on Saturday,watches, Bakersfield police have said. He is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday.

Franco,Atlas charm bracelet, 51, was described by neighbors Ismael and Alicia Montejano as a friendly man who they would often see walking hand in hand with his girlfriend. The girlfriend is the mother of Trevino, they said.

Franco sometimes asked to borrow money, and the Montejanos never hesitated because he always paid them back.

"He was a man of his word," Alicia Montejano said.

Ismael Montejano said he was saddened by Franco’s death.

"I considered him a good friend," Ismael Montejano said.

Officers found Franco in a front yard in the 1000 block of Bradshaw Street, northwest of Watts Drive and Cottonwood Road. He later died at Kern Medical Center.

Trevino was arrested on suspicion of murder, possession of a controlled substance, possession of a gun by a felon, vandalism of $400 or more,bracelets, exhibiting a deadly weapon other than a gun and resisting a peace officer, according to the Kern County Sheriff’s Department’s website.

Trevino has pleaded no contest in separate cases over the years to DUI, driving without a license, second-degree burglary and disorderly conduct,Charm bracelet, according to the Kern County Superior Court website.

August 18, 2010

State Regulators for Crackdown on Fraudulent Medic

Filed under: Graduation Dresses — Tags: , , — admin @ 3:15 am

Betty Heiman, Founder and President of Transparent Health Network (THN), praised the announcement made today that the FTC and State enforcement officials will crackdown on scammers who target uninsured, unemployed and uninsurable individuals by peddling fraudulent medical discount plans. These plans, according to government officials, are marketed as health insurance but possess few or none of the features either of insurance or of actual plans.

Transparent Health Network is based on the concept that health care fees should be fully transparent — so patients know how much needed services will cost before incurring the expense. Today, Ms. Heiman called for greater examination of medical discount plans that use confusing language and tactics to market their products, unfairly victimizing the uninsured and underinsured at a time when they are often struggling to cope simultaneously with their own health problems or those of a loved one, as well as paying the bills.

"It’s gratifying to see regulators clamp down on unscrupulous companies that are taking unfair advantage of the growing number of uninsured by providing discount cards whose promises are hollow," Ms. Heiman, said. "At Transparent Health Network, we’re moving in precisely the opposite direction, and we’re pleased that the FTC and state officials have recognized the need to distinguish the fraudsters from the real,pendants, legitimate providers of quality service."

From its inception,Beads necklace, THN has clearly stated on its website (www.transparenthealthnetwork.com), marketing and membership materials that it is not insurance. It is a health care access plan that advocates for the uninsured, by negotiating reduced rates on their behalf,Charm pendant, and offering them a simple means of accessing affordable health care. Members pay a low monthly fee for access to the provider network and contracted fee schedules which are posted on the website, where anyone can access them. Members can clearly see what they’re getting when they sign up and can get a cost estimate for common services before seeking care.

About Transparent Health Network

Recently recognized by BusinessWeek Online as one of "America’s Most Promising Startups," THN is not insurance. For a low monthly fee, the plan offers a network of 3000+ provider locations in the NY Metro area, including primary care and 70+ specialties. On behalf of members, THN has negotiated access to significantly reduced fees for health care services in much the same way as insurance companies negotiate their allowable fees. Depending on the service and provider location, the fees are 40-80% less than the "usual and customary" fees typically charged to uninsured patients for medical services, and 20-40% less than "usual and customary" for dental services. Membership also includes generous discounts on prescription and store-brand items at Rite-Aid pharmacies as well as lab services from Enzo Clinical Labs. In exchange for these pre-negotiated, contracted rates, members are obligated to pay providers directly, when they receive care.

Transparent Health Network is currently available in the New York metropolitan region, including the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island and Orange County and in parts of New Jersey, including Essex, Bergen, Hudson, Passaic,watches, Unions and Middlesex counties. The Company has plans to expand to the Atlanta metro area shortly.

August 15, 2010

Chinese clothing makers ‘evaded Euro300 mln in tax

Filed under: Graduation Dresses — Tags: , , — admin @ 4:53 am

Italy’s finance police on Wednesday announced that they uncovered an alleged fraud that had permitted Chinese clothing manufactures to evade 300 million euros in taxes. The suspected operation was perpetrated with the help of Chinese accountants holding who learned their trade in Italian universities.

Ten Chinese companies assembling clothes in 1,200 locations throughout Italy were aided by accountant offices owned by the children of Chinese immigrants, according to police.

Thousands of legal and illegal Chinese labourers earn their living in workshops sewing clothing and accessories. The centre of the textile industry is in Prato, around 16 kilometres northwest of Florence in Tuscany. According to an 2008 article by the Los Angeles Times, Chinese who are legal residents make up about 12 percent of the population (and probably close to 25 percent when illegal Chinese are counted,Charm bracelet, police say).

A report released last year by Catholic charity Caritas said that there are 170,000 legal Chinese immigrants in Italy.

"We’re talking about outright fraud,key rings," said Lt. Fulvio Bernabei,watches, of the finance police in Ferrara, in the northern region of Emilia Romagna,tiffany, referring to his police force’s Wednesday announcement.

Involved in the scheme were some "very important fashion companies," Bernabei told Adnkronos in an interview.

Two businessmen were arrested.

Bernabei said the evasion was uncovered thanks to the filing of false receipts.

In the operation, police say they also discovered a number of illegal immigrant workers.

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