Thursday, March 15, 2012

Lucic advances to 2nd round at Aegon Classic

BIRMINGHAM, England (AP) — Former Wimbledon semifinalist Mirjana Lucic of Croatia advanced to the second round of the Aegon Classic grass-court tournament on Monday, beating American qualifier Alexandra Stevenson 6-3, 7-6 (7).

The 29-year-old Lucic made the semis at Wimbledon in 1999 as a promising 17-year-old, but was absent from the WTA tour for much of the last decade for personal reasons. After spending several years on the lower-tier ITF circuit, she is now back in the top 100 for the first time since 2000.

Lucic has already earned a direct entry to Wimbledon this year, and is hoping to spring a surprise at the grass-court Grand Slam tournament once again.

"I feel I …

Organizers: Sao Paulo safe as WCup city in 2014

Organizers of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil said Thursday that Sao Paulo will remain a host city even though Morumbi stadium has been dropped because of financial issues.

Organizers and FIFA said they will work with South America's biggest city to find an alternative even though the deadline for stadium projects has passed.

"It's inadmissible to have a World Cup in Brazil without the presence of Sao Paulo," Brazilian football confederation president Ricardo Teixeira told Globo TV. "I have absolute certainty that the city and its authorities will put Sao Paulo back in the context."

FIFA and Brazilian organizers, which includes …

Political Calendar

FEBRUARY

4 Candidate filing deadline, North Carolina

5-7 Federal Election Commission regional conference, San Francisco

12 Candidate filing deadline, New Mexico

15 Incumbent filing deadline, Nebraska

17-19 National Governors Association winter meeting, Washington, D. C.

21 Candidate filing deadline, Ohio

22 Candidate filing …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

US envoy says NKorea possibly holding off on nuclear declaration for fear of scrutiny

North Korea may be dragging its feet on fully declaring its nuclear activities for fear of revealing hidden programs that would invite further scrutiny, the top U.S. nuclear envoy said Thursday.

Despite the passing of a year-end deadline, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill indicated the U.S. was still prepared to wait but expected a declaration to be "complete and correct."

"I think there is concern on (North Korea's) part that to acknowledge certain activities would invite additional questioning on our part and further scrutiny on things," Hill told reporters in Beijing following a meeting with his Chinese counterpart, …

Verizon says Droid smart phone goes on sale Nov. 6

Verizon Wireless' answer to the iPhone _ the Droid _ will go on sale Nov. 6.

The after-rebate cost is $200 with a two-year contract.

Verizon revealed details Wednesday after intensely advertising the device, made by Motorola. Verizon has been pointing out the features Apple's phone lacks, such as a physical keyboard and the ability to run several applications at once.

The Droid …

Parents urged to shun toys of violence as gifts

Religious and secular groups have joined this Christmas seasonin urging parents not to buy toys of violence as gifts for theirchildren.

The United Methodist Board of Church and Society, in its"Parents' Guide to Nonviolent Toy-buying," cites Captain Power andGotcha gun as examples of undesirable items being sold.

That church also suggests gifts to its aid projects, such asfunds for nine bicycles for youth coordinators in Nigeria, waterpumps in Sumatra and scholarships for nurses in Liberia.

SYNOD GOES TO D.C.: Unlike most religious bodies, theconservative Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod generally has avoidedinvolvement in political and governmental …

Norwegian May Do Hard Time for Cake-Toss

OSLO, Norway - A student who last October threw a cake at Norway's new finance minister may face up to 15 years in prison for assaulting a government official, a state prosecutor said Friday.

On her first day in the job, Finance Minister Kristin Halvorsen, from the Socialist Left Party, was hit with the cake by a young man as she arrived at the ministry in Oslo.

The man approached her as a well-wisher who wanted to give her a cake. When she realized what was happening, Halvorsen turned away and the cake hit her in the back of the head. She was unharmed.

The man, whose name was withheld under Norwegian law but who was said to be 24 years old, has been …

Pro-West leader to become Lebanon's prime minister

Western-backed billionaire Saad Hariri pledged Saturday to work for a national unity government that includes his Hezbollah rivals shortly after he was appointed by the president to become the country's next prime minister.

An alliance led by the 39-year-old, son of slain former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, fended off a serious challenge from the Iran-backed Hezbollah and its allies in parliamentary elections earlier this month.

Hariri's nomination _ and his conciliatory statements _ signal more willingness on the majority's part to placate Hezbollah and its allies, who had serious misgivings about the previous prime minister, Fuad Saniora.

Many …

Suburb Jobs Carry High Price

Andre Smith is clearly a study in dedication, if not exhaustion.

Last summer, he took a job as a personnel coordinator for alocal branch of Matsushita, the Japanese electronics giant. But thefactory was in Elgin and Smith, 29, lived with his mom in EastChatham on the city's far South Side.

To get to work, he'd leave the house at 5 a.m. and hop awestbound No. 87 CTA bus to the Dan Ryan L, which he'd take to AdamsStreet. At Adams, he'd transfer to a No. 151 bus to Union Station,where he'd catch Metra's Milwaukee District West Line and ride to thelast stop.

There, he'd grab a No. 552 Pace bus, which would get him toMatsushita's door by about 8 a.m. - …

Philippine police seek witnesses in priest killing

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Philippine police official says a special unit has been created to investigate the killing of an Italian missionary priest in the country's south. Investigators are seeking possible eyewitnesses.

Chief Superintendent Lester Camba heads the special investigation group. He said Tuesday that it will ask permission from Catholic officials to conduct an autopsy on …

Storied NY village Seneca Falls weighs dissolving

A tax squabble is forcing voters to decide next week whether to dissolve the boundaries of a central New York village known as the birthplace of women's rights and the inspiration for a classic Christmas movie.

The March 16 ballot question in Seneca Falls asks whether the 179-year-old village of 6,600 should be absorbed into the surrounding town of the same name.

Even though the name won't change, …

There's No Method To Tornadoes' Madness

The tornado season has jumped off to a devastating start inIllinois, with more twisters reported last week than the statenormally gets in a year.

But that doesn't mean we'll continue getting pounded by twistersduring the peak of the tornado season, which runs from April throughJune. Tornadoes are impossible to predict until almost the momentthey touch down.

"There's no regular pattern that's recognizable," said FredOstby of the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center. "Wetake it as it comes."Illinois averages 25 tornadoes per year, eighth highest amongstates. On Friday, 47 tornadoes were reported, but the actual numbermay be lower because of multiple …

Democrats Court Activists at Steak Fry

INDIANOLA, Iowa - Six Democratic presidential candidates took aim at President Bush as they made their case Sunday to thousands of activists scattered across an Iowa field.

"Everybody is sick and tired of being sick and tired of George Bush," said Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. "All you have to do is take a look at the president pretending that going around in circles was making progress. If that doesn't get you ready to get rid of George Bush I don't know what will."

The six candidates paraded after each other in a carnival-like atmosphere in a field about 20 miles south of Des Moines. An estimated 12,000 activists streamed in for Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin's annual steak fry, shelling out $30 each in a fundraiser for a veteran Democrat senator who doesn't face serious opposition in next year's election.

John Edwards and Hillary Rodham Clinton joined with Harkin to grill some steaks before a giant bank of television cameras. "I've done this before," Edwards said as he flipped a steak.

Clinton, the New York senator, called on Bush to bring the troops home from Iraq, declaring, "The era of cowboy diplomacy is over."

"They deserve to come home because there is no military solution," said Clinton. "Unfortunately, both the Iraqi government and the Bush administration have failed."

Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden, who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said: "George Bush made it clear - he will not end the war in Iraq. If there was ever any doubt, now there is none. One of us on this stage will have to stop the war he started."

Obama said he would not vote for any war-funding measure that doesn't include a timeline for bringing troops home.

Biden said the war must end if common goals are to be achieved. "We must recognize that until we end the divisive politics this war has spawned, we will be unable to build a consensus here at home to accomplish all the goals we share," he said.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said: "I would end the war in Iraq and I would bring all the troops out of Iraq. No residual forces. My position if clear, we bring the troops out within six to eight months. The war cannot end with leaving troops behind."

A few other issues did pop up during the event. Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd pointed to his call for expanded health coverage. "It is shameful that today, 50 million people in America have no health care," he said. That will change and must change if we care about the future of our country."

Clinton is scheduled to announce her plan for universal health care on Monday. Edwards, the former North Carolina senator, took at shot at her refusal to give up campaign money from health interest groups. "If they get a seat at the table, they'll eat all the food and there will be nothing left for the rest of America," he said.

Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich and former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel are also running for the Democratic nomination, but they were not invited to Sunday's event because they have no campaign operation in Iowa.

(This version CORRECTS SUBS graf 9 to CORRECt attribution to Biden, sted Obama.)

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Church began with `vision' in 1820

The official name of the Christian denomination is the Church ofJesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It was founded by Joseph Smith in the early 19th century. In 1820,Smith is said to have had a vision of God and Jesus Christ in upstateNew York. Later, the angel Moroni told him of the location of threegold tablets containing God's revelations. In 1830, Smith publisheda translation of these revelations entitled The Book of Mormon.

Smith's group moved to Ohio, then to Missouri and to Nauvoo, Ill.,where Smith was killed by a mob in 1844. Brigham Young led a factionto Utah. Mormons believe revelation from God did not cease with thecrucifixion of Jesus Christ. Rather, it has continued through livingprophets. The president of the church is considered a prophet. The church's health code forbids the use of tobacco, alcoholicbeverages, tea and coffee, and emphasizes a healthful diet. The basic service is called a sacrament meeting. Lasting about anhour, it includes singing, prayer, a sermon and communion. A bishoppresides over the service. Non-Mormons may attend. Mormon-onlyevents are held in temples. Famous members of the church include Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah),entertainers Donny and Marie Osmond and basketball player ShawnBradley.

Source: How to be a Perfect Stranger: A Guide to Etiquette inOther People's Religious Ceremonies (Jewish Lights Publishing) byArthur J. Magida.

Editor's NOTE

Amid rising concerns over global warming and energy security, interest in nuclear power has grown. Promoters of a "nuclear renaissance" argue that, by constructing more nuclear power plants, there will be less carbon in the atmosphere and less dependence on energy from volatile regions. But those claimed benefits are often exaggerated, and advocates often downplay nuclear power's substantial costs and security risks.

As Sharon Squassoni points out in this month's cover story, some of these costs are economic. Even if nuclear energy were capable of meeting the expansive claims of its advocates, the fact would remain that nuclear energy is more expensive than alternative sources of electricity.

Nuclear energy advocates have also skewed the evaluation of its relative environmental benefits and costs, according to Harold A. Feiveson. He writes that an increase substantial enough to have an effect on global climate change does not appear feasible for a quarter century or more. Alternative paths, particularly energy efficiency improvements, offer equal or greater promise.

Moreover, Feiveson notes, increased use of nuclear power means increased spent nuclear fuel, even though countries have yet to find an effective way to deal permanently with the 10,000 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel discharged each year. One approach that the Bush administration favors is reprocessing elements of hazardous spent nuclear fuel to power nuclear energy plants. However, these technologies, he documents, would do little to manage the spent fuel problem while risking increased weapons proliferation.

The proliferation concerns arise because reusing spent fuel depends on taking advantage of plutonium in the fuel as a power source. Plutonium is one of two fissile materials used to make nuclear weapons. The other is highly enriched uranium, and any scenario that led to a substantial expansion in nuclear power would also likely lead to a number of countries involved with the potentially dangerous technology of uranium enrichment. As Lawrence Scheinman's contribution notes, history makes clear that Bush administration efforts simply to restrict reprocessing and enrichment capabilities to the handful of current possessors, generally either nuclear-weapon states or wealthy, industrialized countries, are unlikely to succeed.

Our news section reports on several key developments: the U.S.-Russian standoff over missile defense and how it could affect a plan for a joint center to monitor missile launches, India's possibly illegal efforts to acquire U.S. ballistic missile technology and recent missile tests, and a continuing and troubled effort to complete a key Russian facility for disposing of chemical weapons.

In our book review this month, Brad Roberts critiques The Minimum Means of Reprisal: China's Search for security in the Nuclear Age, which looks at Chinese nuclear forces and how U.S. policy moves might affect them.-Miles A. Pomper

The Army Goes Rolling Along

On June 14 the nation observes the Army's 231st birthday. Soldiers are serving all over the globe, just as they have been on the Army's special day for so many years in the past. When we reflect on the years 1806, 1866, 1906 and 1956, choosing a few milestones when the Army wasn't actually at war, we get a sense of the wide variety of service the Army has always performed, and we can perceive a few themes that provide perspective on the political and military context within which the Army celebrates this birthday.

In 1806 the U.S. Army had 142 officers and 2,511 enlisted men, for a total strength of 2,653. Most of the senior officers were veterans of the Revolutionary War with little interest in training or sustaining capable small units in a period of extremely tight budgets. Even though the Army was tiny, it was split between frontier duties and harbor defense-neither of which could be performed adequately. State militias were neglected, and there had been little political impetus for improvement. But that was changing. Napoleon's rise to power in Europe had been accompanied by increases in the British military establishment. Coming years would see increases in the Regular Army and legislation that began to attempt to increase the military capabilities of the militia. Historians look back to 1806 for the big event that occurred on September 23, when Lewis and Clark returned to St. Louis after their great Voyage of Discovery. Their success set the framework for the Army's role in exploring the continent that would continue for a century.

In 1866 the million-man Army that had prevailed in the War of the Rebellion had shrunk to a total strength of slightly more than 57,000. The frontier had shifted far to the West in 50 years, but a large part of the Army was still engaged there in small detachments. Harbor defense still absorbed a large portion of the Army budget, and the Corps of Engineers took on ever larger projects to improve ports and waterways. But the new mission for the still dwindling Army of 1866 was support for the civil authorities-and in some cases, exercise of martial law-in the territory of the recently defeated Confederacy. In the spring of 1866 Congress passed (over presidential veto) a Civil Rights Act that prohibited racial discrimination by state or local authorities, placed enforcement in the federal courts and explicitly empowered U.S. marshals to call to their aid "such portion of the land or naval forces of the United States, or of the militia, as may be necessary." When Afro-American citizens of Norfolk, Va., attempted to march in celebration of the Act, more than 1OO armed men, many dressed in Confederate grey, contested the march and fired on a battalion commander of the 12th Infantry-the unit that had been called to maintain order. Casualties were light in Norfolk, but in early May a much more violent conflict erupted in Memphis, Tenn. Memphis had been the central depot for U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) during the Civil War, and the only wartime unit still on duty there in the spring of 1866 was the 3rd Heavy Artillery (USCT). Those troops were mustered out of service on April 30, did a little celebrating, and police fired on some troublemakers. Little blood was shed in the first encounter, but whites went on a rampage that night, killing and burning. Four companies of the 16th Infantry were sent to restore order, but the fact that they could muster only about 120 men is a measure of the weakness of the U.S. Army of the time. Violence against persons and property persisted until May 5, when reinforcements arrived from Nashville. In response to this bloody event, the commanding general of the Army issued General Order No. 44 on July 6:

Department, district and post commanders in the states lately in rebellion are hereby directed to arrest all ... persons charged with ... crimes and offenses against officers, agents, citizens and inhabitants of the United States, irrespective of color, in cases where the civil authorities had failed, neglected, or are unable to arrest and bring such parties to trial, and to detain them in military confinement until such time as a proper judicial tribunal is ready and willing to try them. A strict and prompt enforcement of order is required.

When violence broke out in New Orleans on July 30, the local commander had the 1st (white) and 41st (USCT) regiments ready for action, but violence was severe before order was restored. Gen. Philip Sheridan, commanding general, Division of the Gulf, telegraphed to Gen. Grant: "The mayor of the city, during my absence, suppressed the convention and a party of 200 Negroes with firearms, clubs and knives in a mariner so unnecessary and atrocious as to compel me to say that it was murder. ... Everything is now quiet, but I deem it best to maintain military supremacy in the city for a few days until the affair is fully investigated."

The backlash from these riots led Congress to take control of policy in the South, ending "Presidential Reconstruction" and passing the First Reconstruction Act in March 1867.

In 1906 the big, violent event that resulted in massive military aid to civil authorities was the San Francisco earthquake. Gen. Frederick Funston was the senior Army officer on the scene when disaster struck, and he immediately dispatched a runner with orders for the garrison at the Presidio to report to the mayor. More than 6,000 Regulars eventually were involved in disaster relief, supporting a much larger contingent of California Guardsmen and providing rations, transportation, medical supplies and communications equipment, as well as expert leadership to establish aid stations, feeding centers and supply depots. Even though the earthquake struck in April, a large Army contingent was still on duty in San Francisco in June. The Army of 1906 totaled only about 69,000 officers and men-about one-third the size it had been during the Spanish-American War in 1898. More than 10,000 troops were still stationed in the Philippines. Some of these were directly involved in counterinsurgency operations, but the bulk were assisting civil authorities, training the constabulary and developing civil works. Editorials were questioning the need for permanent camps at places such as Fort Stotsenburg (later Clark Air Force Base), but few questioned the need for new Coast Artillery installations to extend homeland defense in Manila Harbor and elsewhere in newly acquired territories such as Puerto Rico and Hawaii. An uprising against the new government in Cuba required an Army deployment (and a supplemental), and a movement of heavily armed Utes from their reservation caused alarm, but Army interventions restored peaceful order in both cases.

During the course of 1906 more than 20,000 regulars and 30,000 militiamen participated in training encampments where they hiked in full combat gear and learned to conduct livefire exercises as skirmishers. These encampments gave additional impetus to new legislation for bringing volunteers into active service and helped build the case for strong National Guard units-a case being made daily by the service of California Guardsmen in the San Francisco relief and recovery effort.

Fifty years later, the National Guard was a veteran participant in the nation's wars as well as its support to civil authorities. In 1956 Congress created Title 10, U.S. Code to contain all laws pertaining to federal military forces (including the modern U.S. Army Reserve as we know it, which had been placed on new footing in 1952) and Title 32, U.S. Code to govern administration of the National Guard in state service. The Army National Guard numbered 405,000 soldiers, making up nine armored cavalry regiments, 6 armored divisions and 21 infantry divisions, and contributing a large number of anti-aircraft artillery battalions to the Army Air Defense Command while Nike-Ajax missiles were being deployed and homeland defense was largely defined in terms of protection from attack by Soviet bombers carrying nuclear weapons. The communist threat seemed so serious that the active Army still numbered nearly 1,026,000-nearly twice the size it had been before the invasion of South Korea in 1955. But that force seemed miniscule when compared to the ground forces available to the communist powers, and progressive U.S. Army leaders set out to transform America's Army to optimize its capabilities on the nuclear battlefield in a version of "fight outnumbered and win" in which friendly forces would use tactical nuclear weapons.

The most obvious element of this transformation was the development and fielding of those tactical nuclear weapons-the Red stone and Corporal surface-to-surface guided missiles, Honest John and Little John Rockets, and the 280 mm "Atomic Cannon,'' all of which had been fielded by 1956, with more to follow. While fielding weapons that soldiers could use against massed infantry and armor targets, the Army also began to reorganize its divisions to improve survivability on the nuclear battlefield. The key was thought to lie in the ability of autonomous combined arms teams to operate while dispersed. This notion resulted in divisions that were organized into battle groups composed of five companies each, having five platoons-more capable of 360-degree defense and sustained operations. Since the division would have five battle groups and the organization was designed for nuclear warfare, the name Pentomic division entered the lexicon. With its missiles, helicopters and modern Army green uniforms, the U.S. Army was clearly on the move into a new era.

Old-timers reading this article will remember that the U.S. Army of the Eisenhower years saw itself fighting for survival as ever-increasing portions of the Defense budget went to modernizing the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Navy and equipping both forces for strategic nuclear warfare. Since part of the battle was building public support, the Association of the United States Army took an important leadership role. AUSA held its first Annual Meeting in the form of a convention in 1955. The organization's ability to bring together policy makers, active duty military leaders, outstanding soldiers and representatives of the many defense-related industries supporting the Army was recognized as a unique asset. So as the Army celebrated its 181st birthday, the planners at AUSA were putting together a bigger and better Annual Meeting for 1956 that would do an even better job of telling the Army story.

These little vignettes remind us that the Army has been doing many different things to maintain, restore or defend democracy in its 231 years of service. We often focus on the dramatic wartime contributions, and we should never forget them. But the forgotten chapters from periods with less drama are equally important: families were separated, soldiers were uncertain about their futures, leaders were having a tough time gaining support for necessary investments. It all sounds familiar, and we can take both comfort and pride from the knowledge that each generation of leaders-and each generation of citizens-has made the Army a successful participant in building a stronger nation.

[Author Affiliation]

By Brig. Gen. Harold Nelson

U.S. Army retired

[Author Affiliation]

BRiG. GEN. HAROLD W. NELSON, USA Ret., is a former U.S. Army Chief of Military History. He has served on the faculties of the U.S. Military Academy, the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and the U.S. Army War College.

Tri-Nations: New Zealand beats South Africa 40-7

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Flyhalf Dan Carter reclaimed rugby's international pointscoring record from England's Jonny Wilkinson, kicking 10 points as New Zealand thrashed South Africa 40-7 in a Tri-Nations test on Saturday.

Carter came into the match with 1,194 test points — one behind Wilkinson's tally of 1,195 — and seized the world record with his first successful penalty after only two minutes.

He ended the match with 1,204 points, nine points ahead of Wilkinson with whom he will battle for the record at the World Cup later this year. The All Blacks and England flyhalves have exchanged the record in recent northern and southern hemisphere seasons: Carter had it at the end of New Zealand's tour to Britain last November but Wilkinson reclaimed it during this season's Six Nations tournament.

Carter's goalkicking was below par in windy conditions Saturday — he landed four from eight attempts — but he was a perpetual attacking threat, tearing gaping holes in the defense of a depleted and generally inept Springboks lineup.

Winger Cory Jane outshone Carter, making a brilliant international comeback and pressing his case for World Cup selection by scoring two tries.

Jane was omitted from New Zealand's initial Tri-Nations squad after a poor Super 15 season and missed its opening test of the year against Fiji last week with a compound dislocation of a finger. But, named on Saturday to play his 23rd test and his first since October last year, Jane nudged his way into World Cup contention amid crowded competition for outside backs places.

"It's going to be difficult when it comes to that final World Cup selection, particularly out wide," All Blacks coach Graham Henry said. "Cory Jane was outstanding tonight so he's put his hand up, Zac Guildford put his hand up again so that wing and fullback position is really close."

Jane scored a sensational 33rd-minute try to help the All Blacks to an 18-7 lead by halftime and added another five minutes into the second spell to clinch New Zealand's four-try bonus point and its largest winning margin against the Springboks in a home test.

Left winger Zac Guildford also scored two tries on Saturday. He claimed his first in test matches in the 15th minute, two minutes after his Canterbury Crusaders teammate, prop Wyatt Crockett, had also scored his first try in tests. The quick double from Crockett and Guildford lifted New Zealand to a 13-0 lead after 15 minutes and gave it an ascendancy South Africa was unable to overcome.

Jane made a try from nothing in the 33rd minute, receiving the ball almost on halfway then using his acceleration and swerve to beat Springboks captain John Smit, then Steyn on a weaving, solo run to the line. His second try and Guildford's second broadened the All Blacks' lead to 33-7 after 65 minutes, then Guildford provided the last pass in a set move which created a try for replacement Colin Slade in the 70th minute.

South Africa made the bold but ill-fated decision to move 20-year-old Patrick Lambie to flyhalf after he was initially named to start a test for the first time at fullback, and to move seasoned No. 10 Morne Steyn from flyhalf to fullback. The move was a tactical failure in the first half. Lambie wasn't able to ignite the Springboks' attack, which relied on shreds of possession usually garnered under pressure, and Steyn was a brittle last line of defense.

Henry said the All Blacks had improved on their first-up, 60-14 win over Fiji but would have to improve further to test Australia in Auckland last week.

"I thought our kicking game was average at times," Henry said. "We didn't defend very well from the breakdown so we've got some work to do and the Australians will be a very good rugby side. If we don't improve in those areas we'll be in some trouble next week.

"We probably played about seven out of 10, we were about five out of 10 last week so it's getting better and if we can get another improvement next week that will be very satsifying."

The Springboks scored their only try after 29 minutes through their veteran captain Smit, whose 104 test caps outnumbered the combined tests of almost all of his current crop of teammates. South Africa chose to leave 21 frontline players at home during the Australian and New Zealand section of its Tri-Nations schedule and paid heavily, losing 39-20 to Australia last weekend and to the All Blacks by a margin which eclipsed their previous heaviest loss in New Zealand, by 28-0 in 2003.

"The scoreboard looks pretty ugly," Smit said. "It's the age-old rule against these blokes — you turn the ball over and you're going to pay."

Springboks coach Peter de Villiers said the Springboks' performance was not as bad as scoreboard indicated.

"If you look at the scoreboard you'll be very, very disappointed but if you look at how we sometimes controlled the game but couldn't convert our possession into points, that was more disappointing than anything," he said.

"We don't want to become a good losing side. As winning becomes a habit, so does losing and we don't want that kind of habit."

_____

Scorers:

New Zealand 40 (Cory Jane 2, Zac Guildford 2, Wyatt Crockett, Colin Slade tries; Dan Carter 2 conversions, 2 penalties), South Africa 7 (John Smit try; Morne Steyn conversion). HT: 18-7.

BC-US--Copper, US

New York (AP) — Copper futures trading on the NY Merc Mon:

(25,000 lbs., cents per lb.)

Open High Low Settle Chg.
Feb 383.35 384.00 380.30 382.20 Down 6.35
Mar 389.40 389.40 379.70 382.65 Down 6.25
Apr 383.85 384.65 382.05 383.35 Down 6.35
May 389.30 390.35 380.85 383.70 Down 6.30
Jun 384.60 385.40 384.35 384.35 Down 6.30
Jul 390.40 390.45 382.75 384.70 Down 6.25
Aug 385.00 385.15 385.00 385.15 Down 6.25
Sep 389.50 389.50 383.70 385.30 Down 6.25
Oct 385.00 385.60 385.00 385.60 Down 6.20
Nov 385.80 Down 6.15
Dec 384.65 387.00 384.05 385.90 Down 6.15
Jan 386.15 386.15 385.95 385.95 Down 6.15
Feb 386.00 Down 6.15
Mar 386.05 Down 6.15
Apr 386.10 Down 6.15
May 386.10 Down 6.15
Jun 386.00 Down 6.10
Jul 392.70 392.70 385.90 385.90 Down 6.00
Aug 385.65 Down 5.95
Sep 392.20 392.20 385.40 385.40 Down 5.90
Oct 385.15 Down 5.85
Nov 384.85 Down 5.80
Dec 391.20 391.20 383.30 384.55 Down 5.75
Mar 383.55 Down 5.75
May 382.65 Down 5.75
Jul 381.75 Down 5.75
Sep 380.85 Down 5.75
Dec 379.20 Down 5.75
Mar 377.60 Down 5.75
May 376.40 Down 5.75
Jul 375.20 Down 5.75
Sep 374.00 Down 5.75
Dec 373.20 Down 5.75
Mar 372.15 Down 5.75
May 370.90 Down 5.75
Jul 369.65 Down 5.75
Sep 368.40 Down 5.75
Dec 367.15 Down 5.75

Paul wills Hornets to 95-93 win over Nuggets

Chris Paul played as hard and long as needed to give the New Orleans Hornets a desperately needed 95-93 victory over the Denver Nuggets in the NBA playoffs on Saturday.

Paul had 32 points and 12 assists in 46 minutes, helping New Orleans cut Denver's lead in the first-round series to 2-1.

Carmelo Anthony scored 25 points for Denver, but missed a jumper that could have put the Nuggets in the lead with under 5 seconds left. James Posey, playing with a sprained knee, corralled the rebound. Game 4 is on Monday.

New Orleans' David West had 19 points and nine rebounds before fouling out in the final minute. Rasual Butler scored 17 points and Posey had 13 points and nine rebounds, none bigger than his last with 3.2 seconds left.

For Denver, Chauncey Billups scored 16 points, J.R. Smith 14, Linas Kleiza 13 and Kenyon Martin 12.

Bernanke: Mortgage Woes Bear Watching

WASHINGTON - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress on Wednesday that growing troubles in the market for risky mortgages thus far doesn't appear to be spreading to the overall economy but the situation bears close watching.

"At this juncture ... the impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime markets seems likely to be contained," Bernanke said in prepared testimony to Congress' Joint Economic Committee.

It marked Bernanke's most extensive discussion yet of the mounting problems in the risky mortgage market. Those troubles raise "some additional questions about the housing sector," which has been mired in a deep slump for more than a year, Bernanke said.

Fallout in the risky mortgage market is clobbering some lenders and homeowners and has stoked concerns on Wall Street, Capitol Hill and elsewhere.

So-called "subprime" lenders who make home loans to people with blemished credit histories or low incomes have been battered. Weak home prices and rising interest rates have made it increasingly difficult for borrowers to keep up with their payments. Delinquencies and foreclosures in the subprime mortgage market are soaring.

"Although the turmoil in the subprime mortgage market has created financial problems for many individuals and families, the implications of these developments for the housing market as a whole are less clear," Bernanke said.

The crumbling housing market has been a major factor behind the slowdown in the U.S. economy. Bernanke said the "near-term prospects for the housing market remain uncertain."

Even so, Bernanke stuck with the Federal Reserve's assessment that the economy is likely to grow at a moderate pace over the coming quarters. He also repeated the Fed's belief that inflation also should ease in the months ahead.

To be sure, Bernanke was careful to hedge the Fed's economic bets. The housing slump could turn out to be worse than expected, perhaps exacerbated by problems in the market for risky mortgages, he said. Recent weakness in business investment also could persist, he added. Those forces could further dampen economic growth.

On the other hand, consumers which proved "quite resilient" despite the housing slump and increases in energy prices, could continue to keep spending at a pace that would make the economy grow faster than currently expected, he said.

Heard on Facebook

How excited are you about DADT?!

I served for 1 7 1/2 years in the Air Force prior to recently being medically retired. This wonderfid news brings gladness to my heart where all can serve their country equally - no more closets, no more fake dates, no more "roommates. " No more fighting this system and trying to open the eyes of others without risking one s own career. We are not, however, done until we can freely marry and be acknowledged by the U.S. government. Keep up the good fight!

- Steph Maxson

As the daughter of a career military officer, WWII veteran, & "I Like Ike " Republican, it makes me proud. Damn well time.

- Cindy Clardy

Jodie Foster, Kevin Spacey and now John Travolta: Is it OK to out someone just because they're famous?

Another way to look at that question is: Is it OK to help someone continue to perpetuate the idea that being gay is negative just because they 're famous?

- Craig Anderson

It s never OK to out someone, that is a personal choice, doing so only makes the person who is outing look vindictive.

- Robert Bayn

Should the state offer health benefits to unmarried partners?

Get rid of all tax benefits to any married couple - this will end the discrimination. Why should two people get a legal tax break just for living together? Shoiddn't the single income household that pays out the same in rent and mortgage as a "married" couple with two incomes? I'd say the single people are the ones being discriminated against because we don 't have a spouse. We get no tax breaks and yet we are paying the same amount on housing with only one income.

- Keith Mercier

Gosh, I wonder how your readers are going to answer this. Hmm. How about hell yes they should!

- David Paul Rudzinski

Some grammar mistakes in the responses have been fixed.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

- First Amendment, U.S. Constitution

Monday, March 12, 2012

Serena Williams, Henin and Davenport advance at Australian Open

The first round is about survival, finding that little bit extra when things aren't going great and there's an unseeded player across the net, hungry for an upset.

Serena Williams and Justine Henin handled it, but Rafael Nadal, Jelena Jankovic and Lindsay Davenport struggled to find top form Monday at the Australian Open. All managed to advance _ unlike ninth-seeded Andy Murray of Britain, who became the first high-profile casualty at the season-opening Grand Slam.

"I think I was a wee bit nervous out there," defending champion Williams admitted after beating wild-card entry Jarmila Gajdosova 6-3, 6-3 in the first match on center court. "I think everyone could probably tell I was a little scratchy. But it's the first round. Just moving forward."

Last year, Williams was unseeded and ranked 81st, yet she beat six seeded players en route to her eighth, and least expected, Grand Slam title. This time, she's seeded seventh, looks to be in excellent shape and is one of the clear favorites. The courts also have been resurfaced in bright blue.

"It's obviously a lot different _ I'm not No. 81 any more. And the court's different _ it's a different color," Williams told the crowd after her 62-minute victory.

It didn't help that brisk breezes were swirling around Melbourne Park, and the bright sun played havoc with serve tosses and overheads.

Top-ranked Henin, making her first appearance here since defaulting with an upset stomach in the 2006 final against Amelie Mauresmo and sitting out last year while going through a divorce, ran off the last six games to finish off a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Japan's Aiko Nakamura.

"It was a little bit windy and she had a game that wasn't the easiest for me to start the tournament. I'm glad it's behind me now," said Henin, who ran her winning streak to 29 matches, six short of the longest recent streak, Venus Williams' string of 35 matches in a row in 2000 but still well short of Martina Navratilova's record 74 in 1984.

Second-ranked Nadal, the only player to beat Roger Federer at the last 10 Grand Slams _ at the last two French Opens _ had his hands full in beating Viktor Troicki of Serbia 7-6 (3), 7-5, 6-1 in the late match as temperatures dipped to 16 C. (61 F.).

Nadal saved a set point in the first set when Troicki, constantly going for winners, tried one of several ill-advised drop shots that the speedy Spaniard tracked down. Troicki led 4-2 in the second set before Nadal rallied to win five of the last six games, breaking for the set when the Serbian sent a forehand wide. With Nadal finally in high gear, Troicki ran out of gas in the third set.

"I was struggling sometimes," Nadal said "He played aggressive, served very well."

But, "I played better than him in important points."

Murray lost 7-5, 6-4, 0-6, 7-6 (5) to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga of France, who gave Andy Roddick a tough time in the first round last year. Also falling in four sets were 16th-seeded Carlos Moya of Spain to Stefan Koubek of Austria, and No. 18 Juan Ignacio Chela of Argentina to Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of Spain.

Sixth-ranked Roddick had less trouble this time, advancing 6-3, 6-4, 7-5 over Czech qualifier Lukas Dlouhy, who self-destructed with 12 double-faults in the first two sets.

No. 4 Nikolay Davydenko, still subject to an ATP investigation into illegal gambling, beat Michael Llodra 7-5, 7-5, 6-3.

Women's No. 3 Jankovic wasn't sure how she managed to beat Austria's Tamira Paszek 2-6, 6-2, 12-10, fending off three match points in the third set, which ran nearly two hours and included 15 service breaks.

"I was praying, `Please, God, help me get out of the situation,'" said Jankovic, who appeared to be fit after struggling with a leg injury at the Hopman Cup earlier this month. "I didn't want to go home, and that was what was driving me."

Davenport, the 2000 champion here who has won three of four tournaments since the birth of her first child last June, held off Italy's Sara Errani 6-2, 3-6, 7-5 in what she called the worst outing of her comeback.

"When you can ... kind of scrape through not playing your best, a lot of times you can turn it around," said Davenport, who surpassed Steffi Graf atop the all-time list of money winners on the women's tour at US$21,897,501 with the win. "I'm hoping that happens."

She next plays fifth-seeded Maria Sharapova, who had no easy time downing Jelena Kostanic Tosic of Croatia 6-4, 6-3.

Mauresmo, who has slumped from No. 1 to No. 18 since winning here in 2006, opened with a 6-7 (6), 6-0, 6-0 victory over Tatiana Poutchek of Belarus. Other women's winners included 11th-seeded Elena Dementieva of Russia, No. 12 Nicole Vaidisova of the Czech Republic, No. 13 Tatiana Golovin of France and No. 15 Patty Schnyder of Switzerland.

Three seeded men needed five sets to advance: No. 11 Tommy Robredo rallied from two sets down to oust Mischa Zverev, No. 24 Jarkko Nieminen beat Canada's Frank Dancevic, and No. 28 Gilles Simon downed American Bobby Reynolds.

In a match between two former finalists, 2003 runner-up Rainer Schuettler of Germany beat 2001 runner-up Arnaud Clement of France; while Mardy Fish, who combined with Serena Williams in the United States' Hopman Cup-winning team earlier this month, beat Serbia's Boris Pashanski.

Also advancing were eighth-seeded Richard Gasquet of France and No. 14 Mikhail Youzhny of Russia, who won in Sydney last week.

NIreland publishes abortion rules for first time

Northern Ireland's health department published instructions to doctors Friday that for the first time explain the rare circumstances under which they can perform a legal abortion.

Abortion rights activists in Northern Ireland welcomed the move, even though the document reaffirmed that almost all abortions will remain outlawed in the religiously conservative British territory.

Abortion opponents, however, warned that the rules would give doctors new encouragement to begin performing abortions under false pretenses.

Friday's government document said an abortion is permitted in Northern Ireland under two circumstances _ to "preserve the life of the woman," or if a doctor determines the continuing pregnancy would impose "a risk of real and serious adverse effect on her physical or mental health which is either long-term or permanent."

This means a suicide threat, if deemed credible by one or more doctors, would be grounds for granting an abortion.

Publication of the Department of Health's 24-page "Guidance on the Termination of Pregnancy: The Law and Clinical Practice in Northern Ireland" capped eight years of legal disputes with the British Family Planning Association.

"Before today guidance for clinical practice simply didn't exist, and health care professionals operated in a void. This new document gives much-needed structure and direction to abortion services," said Audrey Simpson, director of the Family Planning Association in Northern Ireland _ the only part of the United Kingdom where the 1967 law legalizing abortion has never come into force.

That anomaly means an estimated 1,400 to 2,000 Northern Ireland women travel annually to England or other European Union nations, chiefly the Netherlands, to end their pregnancies.

Unlike women in Britain, they cannot use their British national health coverage to pay for the cost.

Even in countries that officially ban abortion, however, judges have defined at least one exception: abortions deemed medically necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant woman.

A series of court judgments further defined this right in Northern Ireland, most recently in 2004. But until now, the government's health authorities refused to make any guidelines based on those rulings, reflecting widespread opposition within both the British Protestant majority and Irish Catholic minority. Doctors in turn refused to provide abortions under any circumstances, fearing lawsuits from right-to-life activists if they did.

Northern Ireland's main anti-abortion group, Precious Life, said the new rules offered too much scope for doctors to grant abortions.

"These guidelines grossly exaggerate this exception of `saving the mother's life' _ for example, implying abortion is legal on the grounds of mental health," said the Precious Life group, which regularly pickets the Family Planning Association office in Belfast.

In the neighboring Republic of Ireland, a predominantly Roman Catholic nation where abortion is outlawed in a constitutional amendment, a similar gray area in the law exists.

A 1992 Irish Supreme Court ruling found that abortions should be granted in cases where pregnant women were threatening to kill themselves if denied one. But Ireland's lawmakers have refused to pass a law along those lines. As in Northern Ireland, Irish hospitals refer abortion-seekers across the Irish Sea to England.

___

On the Net:

Northern Ireland abortion rules, http://www.dhsspsni.gov.uk/hss-md-9-2009-attachment.pdf

Precious Life criticism, http://www.preciouslife.com/?va1&vc497

Family Planning Association, http://www.fpa.org.uk/Locations/fpainNorthernIreland

Kosovo makes historic declaration of independence from Serbia

Revelers fired guns into the air and fireworks lit up the skies over Kosovo on Sunday after parliament proclaimed independence, defying Serbia and Russia with a historic declaration as the world's newest nation.

A decade after a bloody separatist war with Serbian forces that claimed 10,000 lives, lawmakers pronounced the territory the Republic of Kosovo and pledged to make it a "democratic, multiethnic state." Its leaders looked for swift recognition from the U.S. and key European powers _ but also braced for a bitter showdown.

Russia's Foreign Ministry said the declaration violates Serbia's sovereignty and the U.N. Charter and threatens "the escalation of tension and ethnic violence in the region, a new conflict in the Balkans." It warned other nations against "supporting separatism" by recognizing Kosovo.

Serbia also denounced the declaration as illegal, and the U.N. Security Council convened an emergency meeting at Russia's request. The European Union and NATO, mindful of the Balkans' turbulent past, appealed for restraint and warned that the international community would not tolerate violence.

Underscoring fears of renewed unrest, an explosion lightly damaged a U.N. courthouse in Kosovo's tense north, home to most of its minority Serbs. No one was injured. Another unexploded grenade was found near a motel that houses EU officials.

But in the capital, Pristina, the mood was jubilant. Thousands of ethnic Albanians braved subfreezing temperatures to ride on the roofs of their cars, singing patriotic songs and chanting: "KLA! KLA!" _ the acronym for the now-disbanded rebel Kosovo Liberation Army.

Many dressed in traditional costumes and played trumpets and drums, and an ethnic Albanian couple named their newborn daughter Pavarsie _ Albanian for "independence."

"This is the happiest day in my life," said Mehi Shehu, a 68-year-old ethnic Albanian. "Now we're free and we can celebrate without fear."

International officials warned their staff to stay indoors and avoid "happy fire" as some revelers shot handguns into the air.

Sunday's declaration was carefully orchestrated with the U.S. and key European powers, and Kosovo was counting on international recognition that could come as early as Monday, when EU foreign ministers meet in Brussels, Belgium.

But by sidestepping the U.N. and appealing directly to the U.S. and other nations for recognition, Kosovo set up a showdown with Serbia _ outraged at the imminent loss of its territory _ and Russia.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has argued that independence without U.N. approval would set a dangerous precedent for "frozen conflicts" across the former Soviet Union and around the world.

Serbia's government ruled out a military response as part of a secret "action plan" drafted earlier this week, but warned that it would downgrade relations with any foreign government that recognizes Kosovo's independence.

Meanwhile, Serbia's government minister for Kosovo, Slobodan Samardzic, said Serbia would increase its presence in the roughly 15 percent of Kosovo that is Serb-controlled in an apparent attempt to partition the province.

Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu sought to allay Serbs' concerns, telling them: "I understand today is a fearful day for you all, but your rights and your property will be protected today as it will be always."

At an extraordinary session of parliament televised live nationwide, sustained applause erupted after the rest of the chamber unanimously adopted the declaration of independence, which was scripted on parchment. The session was boycotted by 10 minority Serb members.

The lawmakers also unveiled a new national crest and a flag: a bright blue banner featuring a golden map of Kosovo and six stars, one for each of its main ethnic groups.

"We, the democratically elected leaders of our people, hereby declare Kosovo to be an independent and sovereign state," the proclamation read.

"From today onwards, Kosovo is proud, independent and free," said Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, a former KLA leader. "We never lost faith in the dream that one day we would stand among the free nations of the world, and today we do."

"Our hopes have never been higher," he said. "Dreams are infinite, our challenges loom large, but nothing can deter us from moving forward to the greatness that history has reserved for us."

Like Sejdiu, Thaci reached out to ordinary Serbs, but he had stern words for the Serbian government. "Kosovo will never be ruled by Belgrade again," he warned.

Thaci also signed 192 separate letters to nations around the world _ including Serbia _ asking them to recognize Kosovo as a state.

Kosovo had formally remained a part of Serbia even though it has been administered by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when NATO airstrikes ended former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic's crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists that had driven nearly a million people from their homes.

The province is still protected by 16,000 NATO-led peacekeepers, and the alliance boosted its patrols over the weekend in hopes of discouraging violence. International police, meanwhile, deployed to back up local forces in the tense north.

U.S. President George W. Bush said the United States "will continue to work with our allies to the very best we can to make sure there's no violence."

"We are heartened by the fact that the Kosovo government has clearly proclaimed its willingness and its desire to support Serbian rights in Kosovo," Bush said while on a visit to Africa. "We also believe it's in Serbia's interest to be aligned with Europe and the Serbian people can know that they have a friend in America."

Kosovo's leaders signed their names on a giant iron sculpture spelling out "NEWBORN" before heading to a sports hall for a performance of Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" by the Kosovo Philharmonic Orchestra.

Ninety percent of Kosovo's 2 million people are ethnic Albanian _ most of them secular Muslims _ and they see no reason to stay joined to the rest of Christian Orthodox Serbia.

"I feel stronger," said Ymer Govori, 36, carrying his daughter on his shoulders to celebrations downtown.

"I have my own state and my own post code," he said, "and it won't say Serbia any longer."

___

Associated Press Writer Dusan Stojanovic in Kosovska Mitrovica contributed to this report.

GM of Canada to invest $224M in Ontario plant

General Motors of Canada said Tuesday that it will invest $233 million to build a new line of fuel-efficient transmissions in southern Ontario.

GM of Canada president and managing director Kevin Williams said the company's St. Catharines, Ontario, powertrain facility will be expanded to produce fuel-efficient six-speed transmissions beginning in early 2012. The investment will secure about 400 jobs, he said.

"Strong customer demand for our new vehicles is driving improved financial results and the rapid capacity expansion under way," he said. "Retail sales of our Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac vehicles are outpacing industry growth, up over 22 percent so far this year."

GM has managed to bounce back after the fallout from the global recession hit the auto sector particularly hard, forcing automakers to restructure under bankruptcy protection in the U.S. with the help of billions of dollars from governments on both sides of the border.

GM Canada shed about 2,600 jobs with the closure of a truck plant in Oshawa, Ontario, last year. It also announced plans to shut down a transmission plant in the southwestern Ontario city of Windsor this year, affecting more than 1,000 workers.

Since then, the market has picked up. In March, GM said it would add a third shift at its Oshawa assembly plant and increase production at its CAMI plant in Ingersoll, recalling more than 700 laid-off workers to meet hot demand for its Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain crossovers.

Late last year, GM also recalled more than 600 workers to CAMI and in November the company said it would add a second shift in Oshawa in 2011 to support production of the new Buick Regal and Camaro convertible, bringing back 700 workers.

In April, the Canadian subsidiary said it would invest $224 million in the St. Catharines plant to build new V8 engines.

In total, GM has announced $457 million in new spending in the St. Catherines factory, securing about 800 jobs.

The recent investments guarantee the St. Catharines plant will operate for at least another 15 to 20 years, said Wayne Gates, president of the St. Catherines local chapter of the Canadian Auto Workers union.

WHITE HOUSE NOTEBOOK: Obama still regrets Olympics

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) — President Barack Obama came to Brazil carrying a grudge.

Brazil beat out Chicago, Obama's hometown, for the 2016 summer Olympics, a stinging loss that Obama says he still hasn't recovered from.

Talking about business opportunities for U.S. companies in Brazil, Obama said they'd be looking for needs to fill "as Brazil prepares to host the World Cup and the Summer Olympics — which still hurts for me to say."

The comment drew laughter as Obama addressed the press jointly Saturday with Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff on the first day of his three-country Latin America swing.

Obama, who'd gotten personally involved in lobbying on Chicago's behalf, didn't let it go. At a business forum a little bit later, the president remarked to executives: "Brazil is going to be hosting several important sporting events over the next few years. I mentioned that it pains me to say this when it comes to the Olympics — Lula beat me on that one."

Lula is Brazil's ex-president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

___

Rousseff mentioned a couple of times that she felt a special kinship with Obama since both made history with their elections — Rousseff as Brazil's first female president, and Obama as America's first black president.

"The peoples of our two countries built the two largest democracies of the Americas," she said after meeting with Obama at the presidential palace. "They had the courage to elect to the highest office an African-American and a woman, proving that the foundations of democracy allow us to overcome the biggest obstacles that impede the construction of a more generous and harmonic society."

Toasting Obama at a luncheon later, Rousseff again mentioned that they both represent political breakthroughs.

"I would like to raise a toast to you and to the dream of Martin Luther King, the same dream of Brazilians and Americans — the dream of freedom, the dream of hope, and also add another dream, the dream of harmony and peace among all of us."

She said it was especially significant because the U.S. and Brazil are the two countries with the largest black populations outside Africa.

___

For the president, his trip to Latin America was a family affair — and an extended one at that.

Not only were first lady Michelle Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia traveling with him, but so were Mrs. Obama's mother, Marian Robinson, and the girls' godmother, Eleanor Kaye Wilson.

Mrs. Obama remarked upon it as she, her daughters and the other ladies in the group attended a youth cultural event including samba drummers while the president was engaged in official business.

"It is a very rare opportunity that we get to travel together. Usually when the president and I travel, these two are in school where they need to be," Mrs. Obama said, gesturing to Sasha and Malia. "But they're on break now, so they get to come, and they've been very excited."

___

The White House had promised a joint press conference with Obama and Rousseff on Saturday, but to the annoyance of the American press corps, the Brazilians had other plans.

Instead of taking questions, Obama and Rousseff simply delivered statements. The White House said this was Rousseff's preference, but a Brazilian press officer at the presidential palace called it "a decision taken by both sides during the preparations for the trip." The officer, who declined to be identified in line with internal regulations, said he did not know why no questions would be taken.

Rousseff, unlike her charismatic predecessor Lula, who spoke with the press nearly every day, has rarely given press conferences in her three months in power and almost never gives interviews. During her campaign for the presidency last year, she often seemed uncomfortable in public and was criticized for a mechanical speaking style.

___(equals)

Associated Press writers Stan Lehmen in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and Bradley Brooks in Brasilia, Brazil, contributed to this report.

Today In History

Today is Tuesday, May 24, the 144th day of 2011. There are 221 days left in the year.

Highlights in history on this date:

1612 - Denmark takes the Swedish port of Elfsborg in the Kalmar War, and keeps it for five years while waiting for tribute from Sweden.

1822 - South American rebels commanded by Antonio Jose de Sucre defeat Spanish royalists on the slopes of volcano Cerro Pichincha in Ecuador. The rebels occupy nearby Quito the following day.

1830 - The first passenger railroad in the United States begins service between Baltimore and Elliott's Mills, Maryland.

1844 - Samuel F.B. Morse transmits the message, "What hath God wrought!" from Washington to Baltimore as he formally opens America's first telegraph line.

1881 - Some 200 people die when the Canadian ferry Princess Victoria sinks near London, Ontario.

1890 - Italy reorganizes her Red Sea territories as colony of Eritrea.

1900 - Britain annexes Orange Free State in Africa.

1949 - The Federal Republic of Germany comes into being in the parts of Germany occupied by the Western allies with the proclamation of its constitution.

1958 - United Press International is formed through a merger of the United Press and the International News Service.

1962 - London conference of Barbados, Windward and Leeward Islands ends with proposals of "Little Eight" to form new West Indies federation.

1964 - Riot erupts at football match in Lima, Peru, and 300 spectators are killed.

1972 - United States and Soviet Union agree to put U.S. and Soviet spacemen in orbit together by 1975.

1975 - U.S. President Gerald Ford approves two bills providing more than $400 million for resettlement of refugees from South Vietnam and Cambodia.

1976 - Britain and France open trans-Atlantic Concorde service to Washington.

1981 - Ecuador's President Jaime Roldos Aguilera is killed in plane crash in Andes Mountains near Peru border.

1984 - Israel and the United States reject a United Nations proposal for an international peace conference on the Middle East.

1989 - Ethnic Turks demanding more rights clash with security forces in Bulgaria.

1990 - U.S. President George Bush unconditionally renews China's most-favored-nation trade status with the United States for one year.

1991 - Armored personnel carrier rolls over and kills an anti-army demonstrator in Slovenia.

1992 - U.S. President George Bush orders the Coast Guard to intercept Haitian refugees at sea and return them to Haiti; Al Unser Jr. becomes the first second-generation winner of the Indianapolis 500; his father, four-time winner Al Unser, finished third.

1993 - Kurdish rebels kill 33 Turkish soldiers in bus ambush.

1994 - Stampede kills 270 pilgrims at shrine in Mecca, Saudi Arabia; four men convicted of bombing New York's World Trade Center in 1993 are each sentenced to 240 years in prison.

1998 - First multiparty vote in a region ruled by China's Communists is held in Hong Kong. Pro-democracy parties win most of the legislature seats that were up for vote.

1999 - Sonia Gandhi agrees to take back the presidency of India's main opposition Congress Party, ending a leadership crisis.

2000 - The Santiago Court of Appeals strips Gen. Augusto Pinochet of immunity from prosecution, clearing the way for the ailing former dictator's prosecution on human rights violations

2002 - U.S. President George W. Bush and Russian President Vladimir V. Putin sign a nuclear arms reduction treaty that calls for both nations to slash their nuclear stockpiles by two-thirds over the next decade.

2005 - Making his first trip abroad since a bloody crackdown on protesters, Uzbek President Islam Karimov leaves on a visit to China, which has provided a rare note of support for the authoritarian Central Asian leader.

2006 - Thousands of Hindus rallied in the southern Nepalese town of Birgunja to protest Parliament's move to declare Nepal a secular state when it scaled back the king's powers.

2007 - The U.S. government stops all imports of Chinese toothpaste to test for diethylene glycol, a deadly chemical reportedly found in tubes sold elsewhere in the world.

2008 - Myanmar's ruling junta says it will let foreign aid workers and commercial ships help survivors in the cyclone-ravaged Irrawaddy Delta, but refuses to accept aid from U.S., French and British military ships, which have been waiting off the coast for more than a week.

2009 - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel willl continue to build homes in existing West Bank settlements, defying US calls to halt settlement growth.

2010 - The doctor whose research linking autism and the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella influenced millions of parents to refuse the shot for their children is banned from practicing medicine in his native Britain.

Today's Birthdays:

Jean-Paul Marat, French revolutionary (1743-1793); England's Queen Victoria (1819-1901); Jan Smuts, South African prime minister and general (1870-1950); U Ne Win, military dictator of Burma (1911-2002); Joseph Brodsky, Russian-American poet and Nobel laureate (1940-1996); Bob Dylan, U.S. singer (1941--); Tommy Chong, U.S. comedian (1938--); Patti LaBelle, U.S. singer (1944--); Jim Broadbent, British actor (1949--); Rosanne Cash, country singer (1955--); Kristin Scott Thomas, actress (1960--).

Thought For Today:

Man is what he believes — Anton Chekhov, Russian author-dramatist (1860-1904).

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Cubs 9, Mets 6, 10 innings

28Cubs 9, Mets 6, 10 innings
CHICAGO @ NEW YORK @
ab r h bi @ab r h bi
ASrano lf 5 0 2 1 JReyes ss 5 1 1 0
Pie cf 0 0 0 0 Murphy lf 4 1 1 0
Theriot ss 6 2 3 0 DWrght 3b 4 1 1 1
DLee 1b 3 2 1 1 Dlgado 1b 4 2 2 4
ArRmz 3b 3 2 2 2 Beltran cf 3 0 1 0
DeRosa rf 3 1 2 3 Church rf 5 0 0 0
Fkdme rf 3 1 0 0 Schndr c 2 0 0 0
ReJnsn cf 5 0 2 1 NEvns ph 1 0 0 0
Cedeno 2b 5 1 0 0 RCstro c 2 0 0 0
HBlnco c 3 0 2 0 ArReys 2b 3 0 1 0
Hffpuir ph 1 0 1 0 Stokes p 0 0 0 0
Hart p 0 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0
Smrdzj p 0 0 0 0 EnChvz ph 0 0 0 0
Edmnd ph 1 0 0 0 Ayala p 0 0 0 0
Howry p 0 0 0 0 LCstillo ph 1 0 0 0
KWood p 0 0 0 0 OlPrez p 1 1 0 0
Zmbrno p 3 0 0 0 DSnchz p 0 0 0 0
Cotts p 0 0 0 0 MAnsn ph 0 0 0 0
Ward ph 1 0 0 0 JoSmth p 0 0 0 0
KHill c 1 0 0 0 RRncn p 0 0 0 0
RMrtnz 2b 2 0 1 1
Totals @ 43 9 15 8 Totals @37 6 8 6
Chicago 010 040 100 3_9
New York 005 000 010 0_6
E_Murphy (1). DP_Chicago 1, New York 2. LOB_Chicago 11, New York 10. 2B_ASoriano (27), DLee (41), DeRosa (30), Delgado (32), RMartinez (1). 3B_Murphy (3). HR_ArRamirez (27), DeRosa (21), Delgado (38). SB_Theriot (22), Beltran 3 (24).
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago @
Zambrano 4 2-3 3 5 5 4 2
Cotts 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 3
Hart 1 2 0 0 0 0
Samardzija 1 2 1 1 2 1
Howry W,7-4 1 1 0 0 2 2
KWood S,34 1 0 0 0 0 1
New York @
OlPerez 4 1-3 6 5 5 5 6
DSanchez 2-3 2 0 0 0 0
JoSmith 2-3 1 0 0 1 0
RRincon 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Stokes 1 3 1 1 0 0
Parnell 1 0 0 0 1 0
Ayala L,2-10 2 3 3 3 0 2
Umpires_Home, Jim WolfFirst, Jerry LayneSecond, Randy MarshThird, Phil Cuzzi.
T_4:04. A_54,416 (57,365).

Beyond Bones.(use of trace fossils in archaeology)

Trace fossils yield important clues to ancient life

When detectives investigate a murder, they don't just look at the dead body. They also examine the wealth of clues nearby: tooth marks on partially eaten food in the kitchen, fingerprints that don't belong to the victim, bloody footprints from a size 12 Bruno Magli shoe. Each of these could be a critical piece of evidence in the search for the killer.

Similarly, when paleontologists unearth a dinosaur's bones, they can pick up extra tips if they expand the scope of their analysis. While bones and other fossilized body parts may indicate the animal's size and shape, different types of fossil can reveal an animal's interactions with its environment (SN: 12/19 & 24/98, p. 398).

For instance, the pattern and spacing of tooth marks on a bone can help identify the species and size of the chewer. Furthermore, if the bite marks show signs of healing, it's almost certain that the attacked animal escaped and lived for an extended period afterward. The animal whose bite matches the marks, therefore, was probably a predator, not merely a scavenger.

Bite marks are a type of evidence known as trace fossils. Others include footprints, nests, burrows, boreholes, and gastroliths--the gizzard stones that plant-eating dinosaurs swallowed that helped them grind tough vegetation into a more digestible pulp. Another type of trace fossil is coprolite, or fossilized feces. Ichnology, the analysis of such trace fossils, can reveal subtle details of an animal's environment, behavior, and relationships with other species. When added to information gained from body fossils, these clues to lifestyles help scientists conjure a much richer picture of prehistoric life.

The analysis of trace fossils is vital to understanding prehistoric life because many ancient animals are known only from a single fossil of their body, says Anthony J. Martin, an ichnologist at Emory University in Atlanta. In fact, scientists know some life forms only from trace fossils. The problem is especially keen among invertebrates, such as worms, which have very few, if any, hard parts that become fossilized.

Sometimes, even vertebrates can be elusive. Last year, scientists described the fossil tracks of an otherwise unknown web-footed bird that lived in eastern Asia more than 110 million years ago (SN: 8/12/00, p.111).

Dinosaur footprints are some of the most common trace fossils. There are millions of them worldwide, and detailed analysis of a well-preserved set of tracks can reveal much more than the size and shape of the feet that made them, says Martin.

Paleontologists can measure the length of a dinosaur's stride from a series of footprints and then estimate the animal's speed. The shape and depth of individual footprints hint at a dinosaur's posture, and changes in the impressions from one footprint to the next can indicate grazing behaviors or stalking techniques.

The methods used to make these detailed inferences aren't much different from those developed by skilled trackers in groups such as the Apache Indians of North America or the Kalahari bushmen of Africa, says Martin. Their techniques of reading animal behavior from footprints may seem intuitive, but they're actually based on good science, he adds.

The information gained from trace fossils complements that garnered from body fossils, says Martin. Two fossil burrows recently excavated in South Africa yielded an array of clues about a hamster-size reptile called Trirachodon. The finds suggest that 240 million years ago, the animals lived communally in a surprisingly social style. Researchers had previously thought this type of behavior had appeared only in mammals millions of years later.

South African paleontologists found one well-preserved burrow in a layer of fine-grained yellow sandstone on a hillside about 300 kilometers south of Johannesburg. James A. MacEachern, a sedimentologist at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, helped interpret the fossils. MacEachern and his South African colleagues describe the tunnel systems in the April/May PALAIOS.

Trirachodon reptiles apparently dug the complex system of sandy tunnels on a floodplain along a river. At least three different surges of sediment-laden floodwaters inundated the burrow, says MacEachern. The sediment filled the tunnels and preserved them.

That burrow didn't include any remains of animals, possibly because the floodwaters rose slowly and gave the occupants time to escape. However, the same researchers found a similar, but less well-preserved, system of tunnels about 2.5 km away that contained about 20 Trirachodon skeletons. This burrow complex, which workers uncovered while building a road, seems to have filled with a single surge of floodwater and sediments. So, at least some of its inhabitants drowned inside it.

Each of the burrows had an entrance tunnel about 15 centimeters wide and 6 cm high that gently sloped downward toward the interior, says MacEachern. The center of the tunnel floor had a slightly raised, flat-topped ridge marked by scratches and flanked by two smooth grooves, each a few centimeters wide. At deeper levels in each burrow, the tunnel became more curved and progressively smaller in diameter. In some places, it branched at right angles. Many of these small tunnels ended in smooth-floored chambers.

The animals trapped in the second tunnel system were of several different ages. Two adults and one juvenile died together in one chamber, which suggests that some portions of the burrows were places for rearing young. A few chambers contained fecal pellets, indicating that these dead ends were latrines. Other larger chambers could have been for food storage, MacEachern notes.

The ridge in the center of the entrance tunnel was too wide for most of these reptiles to straddle when walking, but the groove on each side was approximately the width of the animal. This two-lane traffic pattern and the smooth grooves are evidence of frequent travel to and from the surface, say the researchers.

Why did the animals leave the burrows? Probably to collect food. The animal's body type and the structure of its teeth and jaw, as determined from the fossilized remains, suggest that it fed on plants above ground.

Digging such a complex system of tunnels required a big investment. Therefore, these animals probably didn't create burrows for one season's hibernation or for infrequent use, says MacEachern. As herbivores, the reptiles were unlikely to temporarily abandon their home and then regain it from fiercer squatters. Instead, Trirachodon probably lived in colonies in these burrows over extended periods, possibly for generations.

The Trirachodon could have inhabited burrows for several reasons, including protection from predators while it was rearing its young. Living underground also would have helped the animal escape seasonal and daily temperature extremes. MacEachern notes that the climate in South Africa at the time was similar to that in the southwestern United States today, with generally arid conditions and big swings in temperature between day and night. The dry soils and low water tables might have encouraged the animals to dig their burrows in riverbanks or other areas that flooded only occasionally.

Trace fossils indicating one animal's behavior can show up on another animal's fossil. Many fossils of marine mollusks carry boreholes that reveal that predators or parasites attacked them. Modern-day drilling snails, for example, attach themselves to a variety of mollusks. The snails secrete a chemical that they repeatedly dab on the shell of their prey. A rasp on the snail's tongue removes material from the shell as it dissolves. The completed hole enables the snail to get at the fleshy part of its prey.

Some species of snails make small, cylindrical holes, while others create cavities that are beveled around the edges. The size and shape of the hole correspond to the dimensions of the snail's chemical-secreting gland and can indicate the type of snail that made a particular hole.

To learn about the drilling techniques of ancient snails, paleontologists study boreholes in fossilized seashells. They can't study the snails' rasps directly because, even though it's rough, the rasp is soft tissue and doesn't readily fossilize.

Although some marine fossils more than 500 million years old sport holes, many paleontologists have been hesitant to say these are signs of predators, says Audrey Aronowsky, a paleoecologist at University of California, Berkeley. That's because the modern-day snails that drill similar holes didn't evolve until about 110 million years ago.

"It's tough to tell who's doing the drilling [more than 150 million years ago] because the organisms were so very different," says Aronowsky.

By studying the holes in prey shells over the past 500 million years or so, Aronowsky says, scientists might be able to pinpoint when chemical-secreting glands first evolved among ancient predators. Changes in drilling techniques through the eons may have stimulated a biological arms race between predator and prey, she adds.

Some of the holes drilled in fossils of the marine echinoderms called blastoids and crinoids seem to have been made by parasites, not predators, says Tomasz K. Baumiller, a paleontologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He points to the trace-fossil evidence.

Blastoids and crinoids are related to modern starfish and sea urchins. These animals attached themselves to the sea floor on stalks, and their feathery arms gathered food by filtering the currents through an open, tubelike gut. All blastoids died off at the end of the Permian period about 245 million years ago, and only a few species of crinoids survive today.

When Baumiller looked at more than 4,000 fossils of the blastoid Heteroschisma, he found that 139 had conical or cylindrical holes. Of those specimens, 5 percent had multiple drill holes--a proportion high enough to suggest that the drilling wasn't fatal, Baumiller says. Other researchers have found multiple holes, as well as some incomplete and healed holes, in specimens of other blastoids.

Many fossilized blastoids and crinoids have platyceratid-snail fossils attached near their anus, a location that matches most of the drill holes. Baumiller points out that the chances of fossilization catching large numbers of predators in the act of killing their prey are very slim, so the snails were probably parasites.

Modern crinoids continue to feed even when their gut is full, and their ancient relatives probably fed the same way. The waste would have been a rich source of food for parasites. For example, snails attached near the anus could consume this waste or reach directly into the gut to snatch undigested food.

A new analysis by Baumiller backs up his conjecture that snails of more than 150 million years ago were parasites. He's compared the nutritional value of the typical modern crinoid with the calorie content of the excess food that the animal collects. He concludes that if the ancient echinoderms had similar characteristics, snails would have been better off to treat blastoid and crinoids as long-term hosts rather than as prey.

Sometimes, scientists have no idea what kind of animal left an intriguing trace fossil. To make scientific discussion easier, paleontologists give even the remnant a name of its own.

Some of the commonest, best preserved, and most mysterious remnants of marine organisms are the trace fossils known as Zoophycos. First described in the 19th century, some of these ribbed, spiral, or fan-shaped structures measure up to 1.5 meters across. Although scientists recognize that Zoophycos are the remains of burrows, researchers have a hard time imagining the animal behaviors that generated these fossils.

The animals that produced Zoophycos fossils inhabited the deep-ocean floor, says William Miller III, a paleontologist at Humboldt State University in Arcata, Calif. Many examples of Zoophycos suggest that the animals making them lived beneath the surface of the ocean floor's ooze, constructed layers of the burrow along food-rich zones, and stored fecal pellets. Other Zoophycos seem to have been dug by animals that fed atop the surface of the ooze. Still other specimens have tunnels through areas of stored fecal pellets.

The complex set of behaviors recorded in these fossils makes sense if the animal that produced Zoophycos was long-lived and engineered its environment, says Miller. The radial tunnels suggest that the organism either stored fecal pellets for reconsumption or used them as fertilizer for a garden of microbes. Either way, Miller contends, the Zoophycos fossils record animal behavior that suggests the organism was modifying its ecosystem in an attempt to deal with a sporadic food supply.

"Most scientists think that organisms, in response to adverse environmental conditions, either have to migrate, evolve, or die," says Miller. Zoophycos fossils suggest that the simple animals that produced them explored another option. In an ancient forerunner of technology, they took control of their surroundings.

Information about fossil burrows, boreholes, and footprints is beginning to transform long-dead creatures, some of which left no other traces, into animate members of ancient ecosystems.

"Fossils of animals aren't always the most interesting thing in the world," says Aronowsky. "Trace fossils are a much more interesting way of looking at life through time."

Beyond Bones.(use of trace fossils in archaeology)

Trace fossils yield important clues to ancient life

When detectives investigate a murder, they don't just look at the dead body. They also examine the wealth of clues nearby: tooth marks on partially eaten food in the kitchen, fingerprints that don't belong to the victim, bloody footprints from a size 12 Bruno Magli shoe. Each of these could be a critical piece of evidence in the search for the killer.

Similarly, when paleontologists unearth a dinosaur's bones, they can pick up extra tips if they expand the scope of their analysis. While bones and other fossilized body parts may indicate the animal's size and shape, different types of fossil can reveal an animal's interactions with its environment (SN: 12/19 & 24/98, p. 398).

For instance, the pattern and spacing of tooth marks on a bone can help identify the species and size of the chewer. Furthermore, if the bite marks show signs of healing, it's almost certain that the attacked animal escaped and lived for an extended period afterward. The animal whose bite matches the marks, therefore, was probably a predator, not merely a scavenger.

Bite marks are a type of evidence known as trace fossils. Others include footprints, nests, burrows, boreholes, and gastroliths--the gizzard stones that plant-eating dinosaurs swallowed that helped them grind tough vegetation into a more digestible pulp. Another type of trace fossil is coprolite, or fossilized feces. Ichnology, the analysis of such trace fossils, can reveal subtle details of an animal's environment, behavior, and relationships with other species. When added to information gained from body fossils, these clues to lifestyles help scientists conjure a much richer picture of prehistoric life.

The analysis of trace fossils is vital to understanding prehistoric life because many ancient animals are known only from a single fossil of their body, says Anthony J. Martin, an ichnologist at Emory University in Atlanta. In fact, scientists know some life forms only from trace fossils. The problem is especially keen among invertebrates, such as worms, which have very few, if any, hard parts that become fossilized.

Sometimes, even vertebrates can be elusive. Last year, scientists described the fossil tracks of an otherwise unknown web-footed bird that lived in eastern Asia more than 110 million years ago (SN: 8/12/00, p.111).

Dinosaur footprints are some of the most common trace fossils. There are millions of them worldwide, and detailed analysis of a well-preserved set of tracks can reveal much more than the size and shape of the feet that made them, says Martin.

Paleontologists can measure the length of a dinosaur's stride from a series of footprints and then estimate the animal's speed. The shape and depth of individual footprints hint at a dinosaur's posture, and changes in the impressions from one footprint to the next can indicate grazing behaviors or stalking techniques.

The methods used to make these detailed inferences aren't much different from those developed by skilled trackers in groups such as the Apache Indians of North America or the Kalahari bushmen of Africa, says Martin. Their techniques of reading animal behavior from footprints may seem intuitive, but they're actually based on good science, he adds.

The information gained from trace fossils complements that garnered from body fossils, says Martin. Two fossil burrows recently excavated in South Africa yielded an array of clues about a hamster-size reptile called Trirachodon. The finds suggest that 240 million years ago, the animals lived communally in a surprisingly social style. Researchers had previously thought this type of behavior had appeared only in mammals millions of years later.

South African paleontologists found one well-preserved burrow in a layer of fine-grained yellow sandstone on a hillside about 300 kilometers south of Johannesburg. James A. MacEachern, a sedimentologist at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, helped interpret the fossils. MacEachern and his South African colleagues describe the tunnel systems in the April/May PALAIOS.

Trirachodon reptiles apparently dug the complex system of sandy tunnels on a floodplain along a river. At least three different surges of sediment-laden floodwaters inundated the burrow, says MacEachern. The sediment filled the tunnels and preserved them.

That burrow didn't include any remains of animals, possibly because the floodwaters rose slowly and gave the occupants time to escape. However, the same researchers found a similar, but less well-preserved, system of tunnels about 2.5 km away that contained about 20 Trirachodon skeletons. This burrow complex, which workers uncovered while building a road, seems to have filled with a single surge of floodwater and sediments. So, at least some of its inhabitants drowned inside it.

Each of the burrows had an entrance tunnel about 15 centimeters wide and 6 cm high that gently sloped downward toward the interior, says MacEachern. The center of the tunnel floor had a slightly raised, flat-topped ridge marked by scratches and flanked by two smooth grooves, each a few centimeters wide. At deeper levels in each burrow, the tunnel became more curved and progressively smaller in diameter. In some places, it branched at right angles. Many of these small tunnels ended in smooth-floored chambers.

The animals trapped in the second tunnel system were of several different ages. Two adults and one juvenile died together in one chamber, which suggests that some portions of the burrows were places for rearing young. A few chambers contained fecal pellets, indicating that these dead ends were latrines. Other larger chambers could have been for food storage, MacEachern notes.

The ridge in the center of the entrance tunnel was too wide for most of these reptiles to straddle when walking, but the groove on each side was approximately the width of the animal. This two-lane traffic pattern and the smooth grooves are evidence of frequent travel to and from the surface, say the researchers.

Why did the animals leave the burrows? Probably to collect food. The animal's body type and the structure of its teeth and jaw, as determined from the fossilized remains, suggest that it fed on plants above ground.

Digging such a complex system of tunnels required a big investment. Therefore, these animals probably didn't create burrows for one season's hibernation or for infrequent use, says MacEachern. As herbivores, the reptiles were unlikely to temporarily abandon their home and then regain it from fiercer squatters. Instead, Trirachodon probably lived in colonies in these burrows over extended periods, possibly for generations.

The Trirachodon could have inhabited burrows for several reasons, including protection from predators while it was rearing its young. Living underground also would have helped the animal escape seasonal and daily temperature extremes. MacEachern notes that the climate in South Africa at the time was similar to that in the southwestern United States today, with generally arid conditions and big swings in temperature between day and night. The dry soils and low water tables might have encouraged the animals to dig their burrows in riverbanks or other areas that flooded only occasionally.

Trace fossils indicating one animal's behavior can show up on another animal's fossil. Many fossils of marine mollusks carry boreholes that reveal that predators or parasites attacked them. Modern-day drilling snails, for example, attach themselves to a variety of mollusks. The snails secrete a chemical that they repeatedly dab on the shell of their prey. A rasp on the snail's tongue removes material from the shell as it dissolves. The completed hole enables the snail to get at the fleshy part of its prey.

Some species of snails make small, cylindrical holes, while others create cavities that are beveled around the edges. The size and shape of the hole correspond to the dimensions of the snail's chemical-secreting gland and can indicate the type of snail that made a particular hole.

To learn about the drilling techniques of ancient snails, paleontologists study boreholes in fossilized seashells. They can't study the snails' rasps directly because, even though it's rough, the rasp is soft tissue and doesn't readily fossilize.

Although some marine fossils more than 500 million years old sport holes, many paleontologists have been hesitant to say these are signs of predators, says Audrey Aronowsky, a paleoecologist at University of California, Berkeley. That's because the modern-day snails that drill similar holes didn't evolve until about 110 million years ago.

"It's tough to tell who's doing the drilling [more than 150 million years ago] because the organisms were so very different," says Aronowsky.

By studying the holes in prey shells over the past 500 million years or so, Aronowsky says, scientists might be able to pinpoint when chemical-secreting glands first evolved among ancient predators. Changes in drilling techniques through the eons may have stimulated a biological arms race between predator and prey, she adds.

Some of the holes drilled in fossils of the marine echinoderms called blastoids and crinoids seem to have been made by parasites, not predators, says Tomasz K. Baumiller, a paleontologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He points to the trace-fossil evidence.

Blastoids and crinoids are related to modern starfish and sea urchins. These animals attached themselves to the sea floor on stalks, and their feathery arms gathered food by filtering the currents through an open, tubelike gut. All blastoids died off at the end of the Permian period about 245 million years ago, and only a few species of crinoids survive today.

When Baumiller looked at more than 4,000 fossils of the blastoid Heteroschisma, he found that 139 had conical or cylindrical holes. Of those specimens, 5 percent had multiple drill holes--a proportion high enough to suggest that the drilling wasn't fatal, Baumiller says. Other researchers have found multiple holes, as well as some incomplete and healed holes, in specimens of other blastoids.

Many fossilized blastoids and crinoids have platyceratid-snail fossils attached near their anus, a location that matches most of the drill holes. Baumiller points out that the chances of fossilization catching large numbers of predators in the act of killing their prey are very slim, so the snails were probably parasites.

Modern crinoids continue to feed even when their gut is full, and their ancient relatives probably fed the same way. The waste would have been a rich source of food for parasites. For example, snails attached near the anus could consume this waste or reach directly into the gut to snatch undigested food.

A new analysis by Baumiller backs up his conjecture that snails of more than 150 million years ago were parasites. He's compared the nutritional value of the typical modern crinoid with the calorie content of the excess food that the animal collects. He concludes that if the ancient echinoderms had similar characteristics, snails would have been better off to treat blastoid and crinoids as long-term hosts rather than as prey.

Sometimes, scientists have no idea what kind of animal left an intriguing trace fossil. To make scientific discussion easier, paleontologists give even the remnant a name of its own.

Some of the commonest, best preserved, and most mysterious remnants of marine organisms are the trace fossils known as Zoophycos. First described in the 19th century, some of these ribbed, spiral, or fan-shaped structures measure up to 1.5 meters across. Although scientists recognize that Zoophycos are the remains of burrows, researchers have a hard time imagining the animal behaviors that generated these fossils.

The animals that produced Zoophycos fossils inhabited the deep-ocean floor, says William Miller III, a paleontologist at Humboldt State University in Arcata, Calif. Many examples of Zoophycos suggest that the animals making them lived beneath the surface of the ocean floor's ooze, constructed layers of the burrow along food-rich zones, and stored fecal pellets. Other Zoophycos seem to have been dug by animals that fed atop the surface of the ooze. Still other specimens have tunnels through areas of stored fecal pellets.

The complex set of behaviors recorded in these fossils makes sense if the animal that produced Zoophycos was long-lived and engineered its environment, says Miller. The radial tunnels suggest that the organism either stored fecal pellets for reconsumption or used them as fertilizer for a garden of microbes. Either way, Miller contends, the Zoophycos fossils record animal behavior that suggests the organism was modifying its ecosystem in an attempt to deal with a sporadic food supply.

"Most scientists think that organisms, in response to adverse environmental conditions, either have to migrate, evolve, or die," says Miller. Zoophycos fossils suggest that the simple animals that produced them explored another option. In an ancient forerunner of technology, they took control of their surroundings.

Information about fossil burrows, boreholes, and footprints is beginning to transform long-dead creatures, some of which left no other traces, into animate members of ancient ecosystems.

"Fossils of animals aren't always the most interesting thing in the world," says Aronowsky. "Trace fossils are a much more interesting way of looking at life through time."