Sunday, February 17, 2008

Officials Order Largest Beef Recall in US History

U.S. officials have ordered a recall of 143 million pounds of beef produced by a California processor accused of violating food safety regulations, in the largest recall in U. S. history.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Sunday the recall of frozen beef produced during the past two years by the Westland/Hallmark Meat Company.

Federal officials suspended operations at the plant last week after undercover video showed crippled and sick animals being shoved into the slaughterhouse by a worker on a forklift.

Regulations call for the removal from the food supply of cattle that are unable to walk because they carry higher risk for a number of diseases, including Mad Cow disease.

The USDA said it is extremely unlikely any of the sick animals at the plant had Mad Cow disease.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-02-17-voa28.cfm

You Know It's A Big Race When Chubby Checker Shows Up

Good morning from Daytona International Speedway on race day.

FrontstretchThe wakeup call came early this morning but traffic coming in here a little bit before 8 a.m. was almost nonexistent. That was just a little bit surprising. I wouldn’t dare try and drive toward New Hampshire Motor Speedway at 8 a.m. on race day and here we are the biggest event on the NASCAR schedule and it’s a breeze getting in at that hour.

As I sit in the press box right now I’m looking down on the frontstretch and it’s just kind of surreal right now. I’m looking down at fans flooded on the frontstretch while Chubby Checker’s pre-race press conference is being played over the PA in the press box. Just kind of strange.

Chubby, or Mr. Checker I guess, is part of the pre-race show. At the moment he’s explaining to reporters how to do The Twist. This is just all too strange for me.

We went from hearing the Air Force Thunderbird pilots talking about thrust and years of timing practice at 400 mph to Chubby explaining in detail how to do The Pony. Just a little weird for me.

But yes, it’s race day. Only a few hours from the start of the 2008 Sprint Cup Season.

Oh wait, gotta go Kool And The Gang has just arrived for their press conferece.

By the way, someone from Kool And The Gang said the group's favorite driver is Jeff Gordon because's he's flamboyant. Nice.

Hey, aren't you Rob Spiller?

http://blogs.courant.com/autoracing/2008/02/good-morning-fr.html

Dwight Howard wins dunk contest

Look, up in the sky, it's a bird, it's a plane. No, it's Dwight Howard winning the super slam dunk contest.

With a red cape trailing behind him, Orlando's forward made like Superman in winning the slam dunk contest on All-Star Saturday.

Earlier, Toronto's Jason Kapono won the long distance shooting contest for the second straight year.

In the Skills Challenge, Utah's Deron Williams was flawless and fast and beat New Orleans point guard Chris Paul in the final round.

In the night's first event, San Antonio's Becky Hammon, David Robinson and Tim Duncan won the Shooting Stars competition. It featured three-person teams consisting of an NBA player, a WNBA player and a former NBA great from the same city. Contestants had to make six shots with the final one a heave from mid-court.

http://www.kold.com/global/story.asp?s=7884334

Howard, the Next Big Thing, Still Has Room to Improve

Eight hours before tipoff last Monday, the coach was calmly detailing how he pushes and prods his budding star, a coltish player with infinite potential, toward becoming the standard by which contemporary N.B.A. big men are measured.

“He tells me, ‘I play better relaxed and smiling,’ ” Magic Coach Stan Van Gundy said of Dwight Howard, his affable center. “We point out to him, factually, that that’s not true. He doesn’t have to play angry, just serious and focused all the time.”

That night, after an unusually lackadaisical outing by Howard, punctuated by a rare it’s-all-about-me utterance in a team huddle, Van Gundy sounded off.

“He was walking up and down the court, not making a great effort,” Van Gundy said in the post-mortem of a loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers. “The numbers show he needs to be focused on defense and rebounding. But that’s not what he wants to do, so we have a little bit of a conflict.”

Such is life in the N.B.A. for Howard, a just-turned-22 prodigy generating stratospheric expectations.

A seven-day stretch that began with the first calling-out by his coach in three and a half professional seasons will end Sunday with his first start in the N.B.A. All-Star Game.

Van Gundy wants to make the most of the talents of Howard, a 6-foot-11 former No. 1 overall draft pick who is ambidextrous and has trampoline hops, a body by Wilt the Stilt, charisma by Cedric the Entertainer and a work ethic that has allowed him to play 304 games, including playoffs, without an absence.

“I’ve just got to play harder,” Howard said. “I can’t worry about getting touches.”

He added, “I have to be the person who steps up every night on both ends of the floor.”

Van Gundy said: “His basic nature is, coming to practice and the game, he wants to have fun. Come out and laugh and joke. What your off-the-court personality is doesn’t have to be your on-the-court personality.”

So he conducts math class with Howard: you score more points in losses than victories; your team is 33-21 over all, but 22-3 in games when you block at least three shots.

“I’m cognizant how young he is,” said Van Gundy, who made Howard a co-captain. “We’re not down on him. I just want to see him being the dominant player of his generation. He’s still got a long way to go in his development, which is scary — if you’re another team.

“I wouldn’t have any problem if, whenever I leave Orlando, he hated me. What I don’t want is to hear him say is, ‘Coach didn’t push me enough.’ ”

Howard said he aspired to become the premier back-to-the-basket player in N.B.A. annals.

“I’m playing not just against my opponent but against the ones who played before me — Chamberlain, Russell, Willis Reed,” he said. “I want to be where those guys are at the end of my career.”

In his fourth season, he stands first in rebounds, double-doubles and dunks, fourth in field-goal percentage and fifth in blocked shots. He has twice been the player of the month.

“He’s having a fantastic year,” said Patrick Ewing, a Magic assistant.

Although Ewing said Howard needed to improve his free-throw shooting and his passing out of a double-team, he added: “Dwight amazes me at what he can do. He can be as good as he’d like to be.”

Ewing said that Howard could be “one of the best ever to play the game.”

Howard pledged upon entering the league to polish the perception of the play-for-millions player by sharing his Christian beliefs, even persuading Commissioner David Stern to add a cross to the league’s logo.

He has scaled back somewhat by confining religious sales pitches only to willing players one on one, although he does lead locker room prayers. Graded on the N.B.A. behavioral curve, Howard has been angelic.

His winning smile and strait-laced ways have attracted a growing fan following. In All-Star balloting, he received the third-most votes in the East despite playing in the relatively obscure outpost of Orlando and having limited appeal among an electorate that seems drawn to tattooed rapper wannabes. His jersey ranks 14th in the league in sales. The value of his Adidas shoe contract, another gauge of acceptance, is among the most lucrative at $36 million over six years.

Howard is a community pillar, eager to address youth and church groups or lend a charitable hand.

More than the face of the franchise, he is its embodiment — larger than life on billboards, and on the sides of buses that display his wingspan, each hand cupping a wheel.

Rather than holing up in his 17,000-square-foot home, he goes to the movies and strolls through malls. His autograph, accompanied by the phrase “God bless,” is always available upon request.

Howard’s modest number of endorsements is attributable to the area where he plays and the Magic’s absence from the postseason, said Doug Shabelman, the president of Burns Entertainment and Sports Marketing in Chicago.

“It’s really tough to find a better class of guy to expose your product,” Shabelman said. “Another impediment for him is big men tend to have a tougher time with marketing.”

He added, “A lot of companies would love to have a guy like Dwight on their team.”

With a five-year, $85 million contract, Howard is not immune to excess. His garage holds eight vehicles, his favorite being a Rolls-Royce. Forbidden to shoot a gun during childhood by his father, Dwight Sr., a Georgia state trooper, Howard now owns “a collection of artillery,” as he phrased it.

At the same time, when he finds himself straying from his spiritual core, Howard often forgoes simple pleasures “to get me closer to God.” His current sacrifices are pop music and candy. “Skittles, Snickers — that’s hard for me to give up,” he said.

Yet a year ago, Howard conceived an unplanned child with a former Magic dancer. Their son, Braylon Joshua Robert Howard, was born Nov. 18.

“It’s a great feeling,” Howard said of fatherhood, although he does not live with Braylon’s mother.

“I’m not Jesus,” he added. “You make a mistake, it’s about how you deal with it.”

Although is it common enough for N.B.A. players to have children out of wedlock, Magic management is skittish about Howard’s case.

Pat Williams, a senior vice president and the author of books about character, said, “Dwight seems to be handling it the right way, and that’s all I can say about that.”

The impact on Howard’s image is uncertain. A magazine about Christian athletes canceled a scheduled article about him. Yet random interviews with fans at Amway Arena indicated that no harm has been done.

“Everybody in Orlando loves him,” said Tracy Williams, whose 8-year-old son, Tyron, was wearing Howard’s No. 12 jersey at his first game. “You don’t see him out in the streets, hanging at clubs.”

Reared in a strict, loving household, Howard and his two siblings did not observe Christmas in the gift-swapping, tree-decorating sense because his parents said such rituals distorted the holiday’s true meaning. Nor did they partake of Halloween, citing its pagan overtones.

So Howard, mature in many ways, is catching up on his childhood. He tucks presents under tinseled, brightly lighted trees and dons scary masks to greet trick-or-treaters. As a rookie, he pulled on an Afro wig — as the 1970s Dwight Howard — and knocked on doors for the first time in search of Skittles and Snickers.

Although his cinematic tastes are eclectic, Howard’s longtime favorite has been “Finding Nemo.” His impressions of cartoon characters and N.B.A. personalities are impressive.

The entire package is endearing, even to Van Gundy. After chastising Howard on Monday, Van Gundy told reporters: “We’ll get him there. He’s a high-character guy.”

Two nights later, Howard amassed 24 rebounds in a victory over the Denver Nuggets and helped limit Marcus Camby to 6 points.

So the coach will continue to push and prod while dangling the carrot. And the player will continue to reach for it, no questions asked.

“I am happy with what I’ve done so far,” Howard said. “Where I want to be is nowhere near where I am now.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/17/sports/basketball/17howard.html?ref=sports

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Queens Man Is Arrested in Killing of Psychologist

A 39-year-old man who blamed a Manhattan psychiatrist for having him institutionalized 17 years ago was charged on Saturday with killing a female psychologist in a furious knife attack and then slashing the psychiatrist when he tried to come to the woman’s aid, law enforcement officials said.

The man, David Tarloff, was picked up at his home in Queens at 7:20 a.m. and later made statements implicating himself in the killing of Dr. Kathryn Faughey, 56, and the assault of Dr. Kent D. Shinbach, who is in his 70s, on Tuesday night inside the East 79th Street offices they shared, the police said.

Mr. Tarloff told investigators he went to the doctor’s offices with plans to rob Dr. Shinbach. Mr. Tarloff then planned to take his ailing mother, Beatrice, either out of the country or to Hawaii, the police said. It was unclear why Dr. Faughey was attacked.

Mr. Tarloff told investigators that he did not know she would be in the offices and did not intend to attack her. Dr. Shinbach was slashed when he ran to help Dr. Faughey after hearing her screams, the police said.

Detectives found the scene awash in blood, and they discovered two suitcases that the assailant had left behind in the building’s basement. He had been in the basement in the hours before the killing, possibly to scout out an escape route, the police said. And that is where he ultimately did flee through a side door to the street.

A palm print found on the handle of one of the suitcases matched a palm print from Mr. Tarloff’s left hand that was taken after he was arrested on Feb. 1. at a Queens hospital when he tried to visit his mother and got into a violent confrontation with a security guard, law enforcement officials said.

Two more palm prints from Mr. Tarloff’s right hand were found on the packaging for adult disposable diapers that were inside one of the suitcases, officials said.

In addition, Mr. Tarloff was picked out in police lineups by three people who saw him on the night of the attack: Dr. Shinbach, a female patient who saw the attacker in the office’s waiting room and another patient who was just leaving when he showed up, about 8 p.m., the police said.

“These officers knocked on doors, they followed leads and they examined evidence around the clock to make this arrest possible,” Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said on Saturday.

News of the developments came as Dr. Faughey’s family and friends gathered for her funeral Mass at a church on the Upper East Side, just steps away from where she was killed.

Dr. Faughey, who practiced in a building across the street from her apartment, was remembered as a woman with a winning smile, wisdom and a talent for adding brightness to people’s lives during dark times.

About 350 people attended the hourlong service, including many of her patients, at St. Monica’s Catholic Church.

“It’s just such a tragedy,” said Emily Fragos, 57, a neighbor who attended the funeral. “We’re all very disturbed at the level of violence, that someone could strike down someone in our midst.”

In statements to investigators, Mr. Tarloff expressed anger at Dr. Shinbach, whom he blamed for having him committed to a mental health institution. Officials said it was unclear, however, if Mr. Tarloff had ever been a patient of Dr. Shinbach’s.

Mr. Tarloff was captured on surveillance videos from the lobby and the basement.

On them, the middle-aged suspect entered the lobby shortly after 8 p.m. wearing a black cap, a dark coat and sneakers, toting two pieces of black luggage.

He told the doorman who held a glass door open for him that he was there to see Dr. Shinbach. But Dr. Shinbach had another patient, a woman, waiting for him, so the man sat on the couch next to her for roughly a half-hour and waited. After the female patient went into Dr. Shinbach’s office, the killer went into Dr. Faughey’s office, where she was working alone.

Hearing her screams, Dr. Shinbach rushed into her office and saw her lying still on the blood-soaked carpet.

The attacker then turned on him, slashing him in the face, head and hands. “She’s dead,” the killer said, as he continued his attack on him, police said. When he finished, he pinned Dr. Shinbach against the wall with a chair, took $90 from his wallet and fled out the building’s basement exit, 56 minutes after he had arrived.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/17/nyregion/17murder.html?hp

Care.com Launches Family Pet Guide

New Online Guide Provides Resources for Families, Pet Sitters and More

With nearly two-thirds of all households in the United States owning at least one pet, families face a big decision when deciding which type of pet to welcome into their home. To help families better prepare for finding their next pet or answer questions about the pets they already own, Care.com (www.care.com), the premier source of trustworthy family care options, has launched the Family Pet Guide -- a comprehensive online resource that makes the process of searching for a pet less stressful.

Confused about which dog breed is best for a household with young kids? Curious about which cats are better indoors versus outdoors? Care.com's Family Pet Guide provides a comprehensive breed-by-breed listing of dogs, cats and small mammals to answer the basic questions that many families have when deciding which animal is right for their home. The guide is also an ideal resource for current pet owners or animal sitters to provide answers to the inevitable questions that often arise regarding medical or behavioral issues.

Care.com surveyed many of its members, ranging from experienced dog sitters and cat sitters to everyday owners, to get their frank and honest insights to the breeds included in the Family Pet Guide. Coupled with information from breed-specific resources, the guide addresses the reality of ownership and pet care needs for each breed.

"We are excited to add the Family Pet Guide to our collection of pet care resources," said Sheila Marcelo, Founder and CEO of Care.com. "For first-time pet owners or families looking to bring an additional pet into the household, this is a great resource to answer all of those lingering questions and ultimately find the right match. Caring for a pet can be a daunting task, so in designing the Family Pet Guide we wanted to provide a practical resource that will provide guidance to pet owners and pet sitters alike."

Whether looking for a playful pup for the kids or a companion pet for an elderly relative, Care.com's Family Pet Guide provides a great starting point to browse various animal breeds and species. With detailed information on training and exercise needs, grooming requirements and compatibility ratings, the Family Pet Guide takes the guesswork out of buying your next pet. From essential information such as "Which cats are actually hypoallergenic" to fun facts such as "What famous individuals have owned cocker spaniels," Care.com developed the Family Pet Guide to bring information previously spread across multiple resources all in one place. The guide also provides links to additional resources on each breed or species for families looking to do further research.

In addition to the Family Pet Guide, Care.com provides pet care listings for pet sitters, groomers, dog walkers and more in neighborhoods across the country. Added enhancements including pre-screened provider information, free background checks and recorded reference interviews have made Care.com the premier solution for addressing the pet care needs of families. These critical measures offer users an added layer of confidence and security when making important decisions regarding the care of your family's loved ones.

Launched in May 2007, Care.com connects people seeking qualified caregivers with a national network of trusted providers. With local search options currently available in more than 30 major cities across the United States, Care.com's online marketplace provides a network of care providers in areas including child care, pet care, tutoring and senior care.

About Care.com:

Care.com (www.care.com) is the premier source of trustworthy care options for children, pets and elderly parents. The company provides a simple and safe way for families and individuals to manage their care needs. Care.com offers a full breadth of subscription-based services -- child care, pet care, senior care and tutoring -- to address the lifecycle of specific care needs, while providing free background checks and a suite of tools and resources for selecting the best care possible. The company was founded in 2006 with a mission to help people achieve a more balanced life through smart care connections.

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2008/02/prweb683233.htm

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Norway: The West coast wants winter tourists

The ski resorts in Røldal, Myrkdalen near Voss and Starandafjellet in the Sunnmøre topped the European snow statistics last year. As a result, Norway's fjord region wants to attract tourists to the West coast also during the winter season.

The nature in the western parts of Norway is just as spectacular in winter with snow-covered mountains, as in summer. As the region offers skiing adventures almost all year round, the tourism industry joins forces to profile the region on the international market as a winter destination.

It’s about time we show the world that the fjord region is more than spectacular fjords and a summer destination. Few other regions in Europe can offer winter adventures that could match ours, says managing director of Fjord Norge AS, Terje Devold.

The first step of the winter effort is a new portal with information on skiing resorts for downhill skiing, cross-country skiing and mountaineering. The joint venture between, Fjord Norge AS Innovasjon Norge, Fjord Tours AS, the ferry liner DFDS and the ski resorts at Voss, Sauda and Røldal will launch a marketing campaign targeting the British market in particular.

- To the British, the fjord region of Norway is the nearest skiing destination. Good ferry and airline connections make it easy to come here, and the transfer time to the nearest skiing resort is short, says Anders Waage Nilsen who heads the project.

- Skiing tourists are an interesting and vast market, and our long-term strategy is to position the Norwegian fjord region as a destination for skiing tourists who wish to combine a skiing vacation with wonderful nature and cultural experiences, he continues.

http://www.aftenbladet.no/english/englishnews/article595936.ece