Thursday, March 15, 2012

India's Best Fund Manager A BT-Mutualfundsindia.com study

They are as similar to each other as chalk and cheese. But the 11fund managers listed (in the alphabetical order of their surnames) inthe pages that follow-India's best, according to a numbers-plusexercise carried out by Business Today and Mutualfundsindia.com, aMumbai-based agency that is now part of ICRA Online-have two thingsin common, ambition and grit. Many are Indian Institute of Management(IIM) grads, others are Chartered Accountants (CAS) and a couplesport more esoteric degrees. They read all kinds of literature: fromPeter Bernstein to Jeffrey Archer to John Grisham. Most lovetravelling and spending time with their families. This is theirstory...

The Long …

Morton Feldman

DUBLIN

Morton Feldman

IRISH MUSEUM OF MODERN ART

Fellow composer Christian Wolff once described Morton Feldman's working method, presumably in the 1950s: "He used to put sheets of graph paper on the wall, and work on them like paintings. Slowly his notation would accumulate, and from time to time he'd stand back to look at the overall design." Feldman, who took profound inspiration from painting, was extremely articulate in explaining how he carried insights derived from art - particularly the works of Mondrian and the American Abstract Expressionists - into his music. It's harder to tell what influence, if any, has gone in the other direction, although Feldman …

Bernanke: Improving health care is critical challenge

Bolstering the performance of the U.S. health care system is one of the biggest challenges facing the country, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Monday.

New medical technologies and treatments are allowing people to live healthier, longer and more productive lives. However, the aging of millions of baby boomers coupled with rapidly rising heath care costs are accounting for an ever-growing share of both personal and government budgets _ strains that will become increasingly burdensome unless changes are made, the Fed chief warned.

Challenges, he said, fall into three major areas: improving access to health care for the 47 million Americans _ or …

Odd creatures turning up in rural Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- Residents in rural Malaysia have found atwo-tailed lizard and a toad with a 16-inch tail, according to mediareports.

Farmer Ahmad Mustafa caught the unusual green lizard with a splittail near his house last month in the northern state of Penang, theNew Straits Times said Thursday in a report accompanied by aphotograph of the strange reptile.

Fed a diet of worms, the lizard is now 5.9 inches long "and …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

HULK; From comic book to television screen -- now to silver screen

Three score and three years ago Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, writer and artist, respectively, originated the super giant fictitious character called "The Hulk" that became popular as a Marvel Comic feature. That mammoth creature made its way into a television series on CBS from 1977-1982. Now it has become a summer feature movie, that will premiere on Friday in Chicago theaters presented by Universal Pictures in association with Marvel Enterprises. Also participating in the mammoth film will be a Valhalla Motion Pictures/Good Machine Production of an Ang Lee Film.

Starring in "The Hulk" are Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliot, Josh Lucas and Nick Nolte. Music is by Danny Elfman; …

Syria not running for UN rights council now

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Kuwait said Wednesday it will replace Syria as a candidate for a seat on the U.N.'s top human rights body, a victory for human rights groups and governments opposed to the ongoing crackdown by President Bashar Assad's security forces.

But Syria said it will run for a seat on the Geneva-based Human Rights Council in 2013, when Kuwait was supposed to be a candidate.

The Kuwaiti and Syrian ambassadors announced the swap after the 53-member Asian Group met behind closed doors and endorsed the deal.

Syria's U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari told reporters his government's decision to delay its candidacy had nothing to do with the current unrest in the …

Quiznos to develop up to 600 stores by end of year

The sandwich chain Quiznos says it plans to develop up to 600 new stores nationwide by the end of the year.

The privately held chain, based in Denver, already has about 4,000 restaurants. It says the planned expansion could create about 7,500 jobs.

Quiznos said Tuesday that the new stores would include company-owned branches as well …

Tank facing some time off; New personal-conduct policy looks like bad news for Johnson

There can't be too many good days for Bears defensive tackle TankJohnson as he serves a 120-day sentence in Cook County Jail forviolating probation on a weapons charge. But Tuesday must have beenparticularly hard.

The NFL announced its new, stricter personal-conduct policy andimmediately suspended Tennessee Titans cornerback Adam "Pacman"Jones and Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Chris Henry, barringJones for the entire 2007 season and Henry for eight games. Bothplayers are repeat offenders, the group targeted by commissionerRoger Goodell when he instituted the new policy.

Johnson, also a repeat offender, likely will have some bad newswaiting after he serves his …

Top Syria cleric threatens attacks on US and EU

BEIRUT (AP) — Syria's top Sunni Muslim cleric has warned Western countries against military intervention in Syria and threatened to retaliate with suicide bombings in the United States and Europe if his country comes under attack.

Western countries have shown no willingness to open a Libyan-style military campaign against the regime of President Bashar Assad, who has launched a bloody crackdown on the seven-month uprising against his rule, and NATO's chief said last week the alliance has "no intention whatsoever" of intervening in Syria.

Still, the prospect of such an intervention seems to have rattled the Assad regime, although publicly, officials say they are confident there …

Stock futures edge higher ahead of Fed meeting

NEW YORK (AP) — Stock futures are inching higher as investors turn their attention to the Federal Reserve's meeting after there were few surprises in Tuesday's U.S. congressional elections.

By the end of Wednesday, investors will likely know exactly how much the Fed plans to spend to stimulate the economy. The central bank has hinted for two months it plans to buy Treasurys to drive …

ALWAYS HUNGRY?

Omega-3 fatty acids may help, according to a new study I published in the Journal of Appetite. Researchers randomly assigned 232 obese volunteers to a balanced, but calorierestricted diet for eight weeks with either low- (260 mg per day) or high-dose (1,300 mg per day) omega-3 supplements. …

Puerto Rico Governor Surrenders to FBI

Gov. Anibal Acevedo Vila surrendered Friday to face corruption charges in an alleged campaign finance scheme as hundreds of flag-waving supporters turned out to cheer him.

Acevedo arrived at the federal courthouse to be fingerprinted and have his mug shot taken before appearing in front of a federal magistrate.

The governor, charged with 19 counts that carry a prison sentence of up to 20 years, is the first Puerto Rican governor to face federal charges since the island became a semiautonomous U.S. commonwealth in 1952.

The indictment accuses Acevedo and a dozen associates of illegally raising money to pay off more than $500,000 in campaign debts from …

U.S. Commander Defends Delay in Move to Baidoa

WASHINGTON Facing growing criticism for the cautious pace withwhich U.S. troops are moving out of the capital of Mogadishu, Lt.Gen. Robert B. Johnston, the American military commander in Somalia,pledged Sunday that his forces would get to the terrorized city ofBaidoa "as soon as we can."

"I can't just run 50 Marines down the road and expect that allwill be well in Baidoa," Johnston said. "It requires the right kindof troops, the right kind of support and logistics, and I will not goto Baidoa until I can, No. 1, protect the forces that go in there andbe able to impose the right kind of security environment on Baidoawhen we get there."

Two aid workers were reported killed over the weekend in Baidoa:a Somali guard for the Irish charity Concern and a guard for the RedCross.

Rick Grant, a spokesman for CARE International, said over theweekend that relief workers in Baidoa - an inland city of about100,000 - are required to stay in a house guarded by more than adozen men with AK-47s.

"It is criminal negligence the Marines aren't there," Grantsaid.

The dispute over Baidoa underscores the tensions between U.S.military leaders, who are trying to accomplish their mission with asfew American casualties as possible, and relief organizations, whichexpected their work in the Somali countryside to change dramaticallyas soon as the troops arrived.

Johnston and Robert Oakley, the U.S. special envoy to Somalia,said that if relief workers feel unsafe in Baidoa or other outlyingtowns, they should depart.

In Bardera, relief workers are concerned that the next stage ofthe operation, taking control of Baidoa, will make matters worse forthem.

They fear that when Marines take Baidoa, a major stronghold ofMohamed Farrah Aidid, many of his heavily armed loyalists will bedriven 100 miles down the road to Bardera, sparking renewed fightingagainst a well-entrenched rival faction.

Meanwhile, thousands of Somali gunmen are spilling across theborder into Kenya, looting and robbing with increased intensity.

Contributing: Chicago Sun-Times Wires

Recurring lessons in weapon T&E programs

Introduction

Test and evaluation (T&E) in acquisition has long been a subject of research interest among students and faculty at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), Monterey, CA. Over the years, NPS researchers have studied T&E in a number of major system acquisition programs, including the Abrams Main Battle Tank (M1A2), the Javelin Anti-Armor Weapon System, the Enhanced Position Location Reporting System, the Avenger Air Defense System, the Kiowa Warrior armed scout helicopter, the Maneuver Control System, the Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles, the Air Defense/AntiTank System, and the Apache (AH-64) Attack helicopter. These programs represent several different types of systems ranging from electronic and data communications and software to major weapon systems. They also represent different types of developments, including system upgrades, nondevelopmental items (NDIs), and full-scale developments.

These research projects indicate that several developmental and operational T&E issues recurred in system acquisition programs during the past decade. This article provides a summary and brief overview of significant issues identified by the author and several NPS students. More detailed analyses and findings may be found in two NPS Master of Science theses: A Comparative Analysis of Developmental Test and Evaluation in the United States Army by Arthur J. Aragon Jr., USA; and An Analysis of Weapon System Readiness for Operational Testing by James B. Mills, USA.

Sources for these research efforts included program management office (PMO) personnel, program testers, analysis personnel, user representatives, and contractors participating in T&E of the major programs selected. Research included reviews of after action reports from Service T&E agencies, lessons learned reports of major systems, General Accounting Office (GAO) reports, Congressional subcommittee reports, developmental test and evaluation (DT&E) and operational test and evaluation (OT&E) reports, and technical and professional journals.

Recurring T&E Issues

Our research indicates that five significant issues and problem areas exist in conducting ME programs. In order of significance, these ME problem areas are:

T&E schedules,

The acquisition process,

- Test culture,

Resource management, and

Changing requirements.

Additionally, the type of development strategy, such as the use of NDI or system upgrades, may influence which of these problems is most prevalent.

Scheduling Issues

Scheduling difficulties continue to be the most common and significant problems in conducting T&E. These problems are caused by an acquisition process that emphasizes completing the test on schedule rather than conducting the test according to plan. This leads to overoptimism and, thus, unrealistic schedule estimates. The process may cause program managers (PMs) and their staffs to develop unrealistic T&E schedule estimates without considering historical tests or the experience of the tester and analyst. The PM's overoptimism in planning and scheduling also forces other agencies to set unrealistic plans or schedules that are based on meeting aggressive schedules. Furthermore, because of excessive schedule "push," usually by the PMO, many systems are not fully configured or ready for testing.

Acquisition Process Issues

Nearly every agency named the acquisition process itself as a significant stumbling block to conducting robust ME programs, as well as being a cause of other related problems. The reasons for these problems included the funding process and PM overoptimism. The funding process rewards PMs for being on schedule, being under budget, and meeting the criteria of the next milestone. It does not reward PMs for being critical and objective about their systems, nor does it reward them for taking a user perspective. The acquisition process drives PMOs to focus on cost and schedule and to sometimes regard T&E as an opportunity to recoup time and money. Because many systems are competing for limited Defense dollars, PMs are having to understate the actual technological risk in programs to stay competitive; therefore, they cannot include all the needed testing in their acquisition or test plans. This may be a result of decisionmakers placing programs "at risk" of cancellation if they perceive too much development risk in a program.

Test Culture

Research has found that a negative test "culture" exists in many PMOs, and this culture may have been the basis of testing problems. Several PMOs, and sometimes contractors, have displayed a negative attitude toward testing, testers, and analysts. The representative causes noted for this problem included the acquisition process itself, lack of PMO understanding of test and analysis capabilities and constraints, and the assumption that testers and analysts always require more or excessive testing. However, it was also found that some testers and analysts have earned poor reputations among program offices by conducting tests that appeared to add no value to the process or testing for weapon capabilities that were beyond the design requirements.

Resource Management

For many Army, Navy, and Air Force systems, a majority of the problems that occurred during OT&E were directly related to test resource issues. GAO cited 27 cases where important test resources were limited or not available for testing. In spite of this apparent history of problems, resources still do not appear to receive the attention they deserve, and testing usually remains underfunded.

Resource management of critical test assets was also identified as a major problem in DT&E. The primary causes of this problem included short-term funding and limited resources (hardware and software). A system entering DT&E without adequate test funding may not receive the resources in the lead time needed for proper test conduct. Lack of funding could delay test setup, delay instrumentation and equipment checks, and reduce needed test support personnel.

Short-term funding also caused PMs to desire and plan for near-perfect success in their test programs. Part V of the Test and Evaluation Master Plan (TEMP) details the resources required; however, it appears that resource requirements do not get the attention they warrant. Systems under development are often constrained by limited prototypes, test models, and versions of software, and they may be spread across the country. The lack of resources can severely limit effective testing, evaluation, and reporting.

Changes In Requirements

Changes in requirements were identified as a major problem for T&E. The causes for this included lack of coordination and/or communication between agencies and the lack of understanding of DT&E and OT&E processes among some combat developers. Lack of communication and coordination resulted in documents such as the Operational Requirements Document, the TEMP, and the contract not matching in terms of requirements. This dichotomy has caused difficulties in defining test requirements and made test planning and the conduct of tests more difficult and expensive than originally estimated. Combat developers may not be totally familiar with the test process and may not realize the impact that a less than fully coordinated requirement change has on the T&E process.

Other Findings

NDI And System Upgrade Programs. Another finding from our ongoing research is that a system's development strategy may be related to the type of problems a system encounters. It appears that PMs and decisionmakers usually underestimate the actual T&E required for NDI and system upgrade programs. One of the main causes for this underestimation is that these types of acquisition programs tend to promote very high expectations among PMs, senior decisionmakers, and other agencies. It is usually perceived that NDI and system upgrade programs are less risky and, therefore, any T&E problems of these programs should be minimal (although the contrary is more likely). As a result, if T&E program problems arise or failures occur, senior decisionmakers, other agencies, and even Congress may increase scrutiny, reassess the system, or place the program "at risk" for cancellation. Therefore, some PMOs want to significantly reduce testing to limit their exposure to possible failures and increased scrutiny.

Early Involvement Of Test Participants. Early involvement of the tester, analyst, and combat developer is critical to minimizing and/or preventing T&E problems. Having the PMO bring these agencies in early to help estimate, plan, and coordinate the test effort was the most common recommendation made across systems, agencies, and all categories of programs.

Additionally, there is benefit to having test personnel available during requirement writing to ensure that requirements are "testable" or at least capable of being evaluated.

ME Is A Risk-Reduction Tool. It has often been repeated among testers that decisionmakers need to fully understand the role of testing in the systems engineering process. As a risk-reduction tool, the test process should identify and eliminate unfeasible alternatives during hightechnology program development. Therefore, some system failures during development testing should be expected and should not put a program "at risk" for cancellation when they occur. PMs and contractors should also realize the value that DT&E provides to their development effort and should push for more testing rather than less.

Conclusion

Several recurring lessons have surfaced over the years during the evaluation of weapon ME programs, including the following:

The PM should start test planning earlier with all the cognizant players and agencies represented, including the tester, the analyst, the contractor, and the combat developer.

Historical information and data from previous tests should be used to better estimate future test costs, schedules, and resource requirements.

PMs should plan for contingencies and not assume perfect success in the test process, while testers should demonstrate more flexibility in packaging test programs.

PMs, as well as others, should avoid underestimating DT&E requirements for NDI and system upgrade programs.

Decisionmakers should fully understand the risk reduction role of T&E in the systems engineering process. They should expect some failures to occur in DT&E and not place a program "at risk" for cancellation when a failure occurs.

[Author Affiliation]

THOMAS H. HOIVIK (USN, Ret.) is a Professor of Operations Research at the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA, specializing in hightechnology program management, systems engineering, and test and evaluation. A former Experimental Test Pilot, he has been a Navy aircraft Program Manager; Director, U.S. Naval Test Pilot School; and Commander of a major naval air base and squadron. He was a Federal Executive Fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and has taught at NPS for 16 years.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

GE buying 80% stake in Kidder, Peabody

NEW YORK (AP) General Electric Co. will buy an 80 percent stakein Kidder, Peabody & Co. Inc., one of Wall Street's oldest and mostclosely held investment firms, both companies said yesterday.

General Electric Financial Services Inc., a unit of the giantmanufacturing, services and technology company, will pay cash underthe transaction agreement, but the exact price was not disclosed.

The remaining 20 percent stake will be retained by KidderPeabody's present shareholders and the existing partnership structureof the investment firm will remain intact, both companies said in apress announcement.

"We believe that we have created a powerful business combinationthat optimally matches people and capital," said Robert C. Wright,president and chief executive officer of GEFS, and Ralph D. DeNunzio,president and chief executive officer of Kidder Peabody, in theannouncement.

Both companies had declined comment Thursday on press reports ofan impending merger announcement, which said GE would pay about $600million for an 80 percent share of Kidder Peabody.

Founded in 1865, Kidder Peabody is one of the oldest privatelyheld investment houses on Wall Street. While it trails severalrivals in underwriting corporate securities, it is considered one ofthe top advisers on mergers and acquisitions.

The firm's net income has grown at an annual rate of 19 percent,the press announcement said, and at the end of its last fiscal yearending Nov. 30, 1985, its net income totaled $47 million, a 74percent increase over the previous year. It earned $43 million inthe first four months of fiscal 1986.

For GE, the acquisition extends its effort to concentrate moreon services and technology and less on basic manufacturing.

That effort includes GE's pending $6.28 billion acquisition ofRCA Corp., the parent of National Broadcasting Co.

After the RCA deal is closed later this year, GE expectsmanufacturing to account for only 20 percent of its annual earnings,compared with 50 percent in 1980. GE earned $2.34 billion in 1985 onrevenue of $28.3 billion.

Donald watches TV, enjoys birdie bunch

HAVEN, Wis. -- Faced with a late tee time, Luke Donald turned onthe TV set as soon as he got up on Thursday.

I saw that K.J. [Choi] had made five birdies in a row. That wasthe first thing I saw," Donald said. Usually I try not to take noteof what other people are doing when I play in the afternoon, but Iknew birdies could be had."

The former Northwestern star went after them from his opening teeshot, and they came in bunches. Donald opened with three birdies,then made four in a row from holes 8-11. The result was a 5-under 67that, Donald admitted, could have been much lower.

I had eight birdies and could have had at least a couple more," hesaid. I left some out there. I could have shot 64 today."

After making the last of his three bogeys at No. 15, Donald failedto connect on birdie tries from seven feet at the 16th and 15 feet atboth the 17th and 18th.

Still the round put Donald just two shots behind leader DarrenClarke at the PGA Championship and impressed his NU coach and swingmentor, Pat Goss. Donald, coming to Evanston from England, wasn't animmediate hit at NU, but he slowly improved. By the end of hissophomore season, he was the NCAA champion.

Luke's very process-oriented," Goss said. He's alwaysprogressively getting better. It'll be very interesting to see whathappens with Luke. When he finally broke through in college, hebecame very confident, and he followed that with a lot of momentum.I'll be curious to see if the same form holds [in the pros]."

Donald, after playing well in two seasons on the PGA Tour, optedto also join the European PGA Tour midway through this year. Heheaded there after a third-place finish at last month's Western Openand won a tournament in Sweden two weeks ago.

I carried on [today] from my play in Sweden," Donald said. I wontwo weeks ago and brought that form here. My whole round today wasmomentum."

The three birdies to start were relatively routine -- putts fromfour feet at the first, 18 feet at the second and 10 feet at thethird. After making two bogeys in the next four holes, he began hisfour-birdie binge with a 50-foot putt at No. 8. The rest of hisbirdies were set up by dazzling iron shots -- an 8-iron to 20 feet atthe ninth, a pitching wedge to eight feet at the 10th and sand wedgesto two feet at both the 11th and 14th.

Donald's quick start enhanced his chances to become a member ofthe European Ryder Cup team, a major factor in his decision to jointhe foreign circuit in the first place. He heard that Swedish starJesper Parnevik had been promised playing privileges on that toureven though he could play in only 11 tournaments, assuming Parnevikplays for Europe in next month's Ryder Cup.

I asked Ken Schofield [head of the European circuit] if the sameheld for me, and he said he'd make sure it would," Donald said.Donald hasn't made the European team yet and may need to be one ofBernhard Langer's two captain's choices to do it.

We haven't talked about that too much -- just some friendlybanter," Donald said. I'd love to make it, but I'm trying not tothink about it too much."

Breaking the deadlock on space arms control

A cooperative effort

that includes certain

forms of missile de

fense while strength

ening existing treaties

could be the most

sustainable means of

moving forward with

space arms control.

The Bush administration's consideration of space weapons for both missile defense and anti-satellite (ASAT) purposes has reopened a domestic and international debate that was conducted in the late 1950s and early 1960s regarding military uses of space. At the dawn of the space age, controversy over placing weapons in space was settled by a temporary compromise: an international decision to ban some of the most harmful weapons-- related activities (especially nuclear) but to leave the door open for more limited military programs.

Today, the arms control community and advocates of missile defense are renewing this debate in the face of emerging challenges, and the gap between their two positions seems insurmountable. Weapons supporters argue that U.S. vulnerability to ballistic missile attack and dependence on space for various military operations makes defensive measures necessary, particularly in the face of the growing number of states able to launch missiles and payloads (possibly including weapons of mass destruction) through space or into low-Earth orbit (60-- 500 miles above the planet). Meanwhile, members of the U.S. arms control community, supported by much of the rest of the world, argue that weaponizing space will be an unmitigated disaster, raising the chances of war, jeopardizing space commerce, and stimulating a costly and destabilizing arms race in an environment currently without weaponry.

Although the positions of some individuals are more nuanced, it is fair to say that, in general, the two sides in the U.S. debate are not speaking to one another. At the international level, there is a "dialogue of the deaf" between Washington and foreign capitals (even within NATO), combined with a deep freeze in negotiations at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva due to China's opposition to U.S. views on space weapons. In the face of this stalemate, it is important to explore whether there is some workable solution that might bring both sides to the table and allow each to come away satisfied.

This article attempts to identify such a "middle ground" between the administration and the arms control community in the belief that the alternative to compromise is likely to be no agreement whatsoever. The current situation works to the ultimate detriment of both sides' interests, as well as the interests of the much broader spectrum of space users (including the $125-billion-a-- year space industry') currently stuck in between them. Although the Bush administration is not ready for space arms control talks at present, the failure of the arms control community to develop alternative means of addressing military, congressional, and public concerns about possible U.S. vulnerabilities to missile attacks makes it easy for the administration's most conservative members to paint space-arms-- control supporters as out of touch with the national mood and as critics of all missile defenses. In this context, a cooperative effort to address future U.S. space security needs-perhaps including certain forms of missile defense in combination with strengthened treaties to protect safe access to space-could provide a very attractive solution to the U.S. public and a large portion of the U.S. Congress.

Such an approach need not force arms controllers to "give away the store." As one Air Force space expert has pointed out, the weaponization of space "is not an 'all-or-- nothing' affair."2 For the arms control community, therefore, holding out for a "great" treaty banning all weapons in space may be preventing progress toward a "good" treaty banning the most threatening future systems. Given political realities and practical issues regarding existing weapons systems, an approach that includes limited weaponization while simultaneously closing loopholes in existing space treaties could be the most workable and the most politically sustainable means of moving forward with arms control for space.

The Early Debate Over Space

During the late 1950s, it seemed inevitable that the two superpowers would extend their arms race on Earth into outer space in very short order. To counter the expected Soviet threat in space, the U.S. military had initiated research into an ambitious array of weapons programs, ranging from nuclear-tipped ballistic missile defenses for use in low-Earth orbit (Nike Zeus and Nike X) to orbital satellites capable of dispensing 400-foot wire webs to "catch" rising ballistic missiles (part of the Ballistic Missile Boost Intercept system) to manned space bombers (the X-20 or Dyna-Soar project) to military space stations (Gemini Blue).

But it was the conduct of nuclear tests in space that proved most destabilizing. From 1958 to 1962, the United States carried out seven nuclear weapons tests in space, while the Soviet Union tested four weapons in space and one in the upper atmosphere. The second U.S. test series-- Operation Fishbowl in the summer and fall of 1962-exploded nuclear weapons with yields up to 1.5 megatons to determine their ability to destroy ballistic missiles passing through space. Soviet tests mirrored these experiments. As U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk commented at the time, "There is an increasing danger that outer space will become man's newest battlefield."3

But the effects of these experiments gave pause even to space weapons enthusiasts. The explosions caused considerable damage to the Earth's electromagnetic fields. In the United States, tests launched from Johnston Island in the South Pacific blacked out civilian radio and television communications throughout the West Coast and Pacific region for several hours following each test. One test unexpectedly shorted out the power grid on Hawaii. But even more sobering for the military was the disabling of several recently launched military reconnaissance and communications satellites. The Pentagon had, in effect, "blinded itself" and had to scramble to replace the precious assets it had destroyed.

Nevertheless, both countries tested nuclear weapons in space during the tense days of the Cuban missile crisis to show their mettle and to prepare for possible anti-ballistic missile warfare, flirting dangerously with the possibility that one of these experiments could have been misinterpreted as a nuclear attack.

Fortunately, following the Cuban missile crisis, the two sides took the opportunity to step back and take stock of their emerging competition in space. They faced a number of unsavory trade-offs if unrestricted military competition in space continued, as many officials felt was inevitable. The radiation from further testing in low-- Earth orbit would cripple ambitious manned space programs on both sides, likely dooming President John F. Kennedy's plan to go to the moon. Electromagnetic pulse radiation would put at risk further development of satellite-based communications for military and civilian purposes. Finally, the virtual treasuretrove of intelligence data on each side's nuclear arsenal just beginning to come in from photoreconnaissance satellites would be taken away. Instead, space would likely become a surrogate battlefield, involving direct attacks of rival spacecraft and possible efforts by each side to claim the moon. With their emerging nuclear weapons programs, Britain, France, and China would likely follow the superpowers into space, exacerbating radiation and debris threats in low-Earth orbit.

Overcoming opposition and mistrust in both countries, President Kennedy and Soviet First Secretary Nikita Khrushchev opted instead to restrict military competition in space by including space in the Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963 and reaching agreement that fall at the United Nations on a resolution on legal principles governing space, including national liability for damage caused by spacecraft and stipulations that the moon and other celestial bodies should not be subject to national claims.

The two sides soon began negotiations via the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space on a formal treaty for space. The adoption of the Outer Space Treaty in 1967 codified in a legally binding agreement some of the earlier UN resolutions, while adding new protections against the use or deployment of any weapons of mass destruction in orbit and the development of military bases on the moon or celestial bodies. These restrictions halted harmful space activities before they could be engaged in by competing states, thus making subsequent arms control in these areas unnecessary.

Other bilateral agreements, including the SALT I Interim Agreement and the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, contained passages that prohibited interference with national technical means of verification (i.e., satellites) and banned development, testing, and deployment of space-- based missile defenses.

This strategy allowed both sides to concentrate on civilian and commercial space achievements. Such an emphasis facilitated the moon landing, Skylab, and a tremendous revolution in space communications (greatly benefiting the U.S. military), while serving broader U.S. political interests. At the same time, this compromise strategy allowed the development of a reliable space-- tracking and early-warning network, while creating protected conditions in which the U.S. intelligence community could quietly achieve dominance in electronic, signals, and photographic reconnaissance from space.

Despite some challenges in the late 1970s from Soviet ASAT weapons testing and in the 1980s from similar U.S. tests and laboratory research on a wide range of technologies associated with the Strategic Defense Initiative, this fledgling space regime remained intact through the 1990s.

The Debate Re-Emerges

With the increasing importance of space to the U.S. military and the U.S. economy, however, as well as the growing number of states that are capable of launching weapons into space, Pentagon planners have again begun to look at space as a possible environment of confrontation. This renewed interest in space coincides with the current push for missiles defenses, which may require certain space components.

Recent policy is being driven in part by policies enacted by hard-line conservatives in the Congress during the late 1990s (the Defend America Act of 1996 and the National Missile Defense Act of 1999), as well as the issuance of three major reports (two of them by Republican-controlled congressional committees). The first, the Rumsfeld Commission report in July 1998 on missile proliferation, supported conservative congressional claims about the severity of the rogue state missile threat and was bolstered by North Korea's test of the Taepo-Dong 1 one month later. The second, the Air Force's "Vision 2020" report, outlined Air Force expectations about the opening of a new theater of military operations and discussed an assumed future challenge to U.S. military space security. The third, the Rumsfeld Commission report of January 2001 on the management of U.S. space assets, spoke of serious vulnerabilities to U.S. military and commercial space systems and the likely need to deploy space weapons to counter this presumed threat.

Despite criticism of these reports from the arms control community for their exaggeration of foreign capabilities and their assumption of hostile intentions among other states, there are two undeniable truths in these documents: one, there is currently no means of stopping a ballistic missile traveling through space; and two, the United States lacks effective military means of protecting itself against a number of feasible threats to U.S. space-based assets, including co-orbital weapons and direct-ascent ASAT weapons. Current treaties (after the June 2002 expiration of the ABM Treaty) allow unlimited testing of conventional weapons and lasers in space, the stationing of such systems in space, and the use of space for the interception of ballistic missiles or satellites by a variety of ground-, sea-, air-, and space-based systems.

Thus, as capabilities to deploy these systems increase, either weapons will be needed or treaties will need to be expanded and strengthened. To date, the Bush administration has been effective in pushing the weapons option as the best means of overcoming these threats, even to the point of withdrawing from the ABM Treaty. Meanwhile, arms control supporters have failed to communicate an effective alternative strategy to the Congress and the American people. Most importantly, they have failed to open a dialogue with moderate Republicans to consider possible "mixed" strategies that might involve some weapons options but also strengthened treaties.

Fortunately, time is still on the side of a deal. Current funding requests from the administration show continued interest in two weapons for national missile defense that would be space based: the Space-Based Laser and a kinetic kill interceptor similar to the original Brilliant Pebbles concept. Both systems would be deployed in low-- Earth orbit. Pentagon officials at the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) indicate that deployment of these technologies is at least a decade off. However, testing of the Army's Kinetic Energy Anti-Satellite (KEASAT) interceptor may begin much sooner. In addition, a considerable number of other missile defense technologies-the ground-- based interceptor, the Theater High Altitude Area Defense system, and some of the sea-- based interceptors-attack their targets and destroy them in low-Earth orbital space. These systems play a central role in the theater missile defense programs that have gained considerable bipartisan support in Congress. Some of these systems have been extensively tested and have developed some limited missile interception capabilities. Work on them will be accelerated and ramped up to faster missiles and more complex tests after June 2002.

Moderate Voices Within the Pentagon

Yet, support for space weapons is not the only view of what is best for U.S. security, even within the administration. Indeed, supporters of space weapons may actually represent a minority perspective within the Pentagon, where there are serious concerns about the long-run implications of weaponizing space. U.S. testing and deployment of orbital weapons could make using space for other military and commercial purposes more difficult, promote a false sense of security in expensive and hard-to-- maintain space assets, and stimulate military responses by adversaries not currently interested in placing weapons in space. In fact, some senior officials within the MDA bristle at the aggressiveness of the new political appointees' interest in space weapons, seeing this as distracting attention from near-term national missile defense technologies. One senior official derisively refers to the administration's space weapons hard-liners as "ideologues" and implies that they have not done their homework in asserting that such systems would work.4

Representatives of such skeptical views within the military can also be found in the pages of the hardly dovish Aerospace Power Journal. A recent article by Major Howard D. Belote, for example, argues that "[pro-- weapons-] zealots tend to miss the big contextual picture" of U.S. space interests. He reminds readers of the sagacity of Eisenhower's decision in the 1950s to emphasize civilian and commercial aspects of space and concludes that "the nonweaponization of space may be even more in the national interest [now] than in Eisenhower's day."5 Another article by Lieutenant Colonel Bruce M. DeBlois describes a range of technical reasons why space weapons are not likely to work as intended, including lack of "survivability" due to possible damage and the near impossibility of in-service repairs. Yet, DeBlois ultimately turns to core political factors such as international "reputation" in arguing against U.S. space-based weapons, stating, "The idea of putting weapons in space to dominate the globe is simply not compatible with who we are and what we represent as Americans."6

Debris issues are another concern within the military. Although today's tests of the ground-based interceptor against strategic ballistic missiles passing through space create debris fields that fall from orbit in a matter of minutes, testing of ASAT weapons against space-based targets would create orbital debris that would persist in space for months, creating serious navigational hazards for U.S. spacecraft and satellites.

Cost is an equally serious issue in Pentagon debates. Although September 11 boosted funding for anti-terrorism, missile defense supporters may soon have to choose among technologies that may be more or less effective in protecting troops engaged in the field. Putting too much of an investment on costly space defenses may sap other missions. Despite the best-laid plans of Pentagon planners, hostile countries could disable sophisticated defenses remotely by using electronic means to jam their signals or avoid space altogether by using alternate delivery systems. Alternatively, states could launch countermeasures, such as satellites that disperse sand into low-Earth orbit, destroying U.S. missile defense support satellites by high-speed collisions in space.7 In this context, treaties to prevent testing and use of such ASAT systems may be more effective deterrents than costly investments in ineffectual weapons. Even during the Reagan administration, the deputy head of NORAD's Space Command, Vice Admiral William E. Ramsey, observed, "If we could outlaw weapons in space, it would be a damn worthy goal."8 Such sentiments ring true among many military officers today.

Where Does Congress Stand?

The same Congress that boosted funding for missile defenses by 57 percent to $8.3 billion last year also cut significant chunks out of Bush proposals for space-based elements of national missile defense. Indeed, the final House-Senate conference committee eliminated $120 million from the president's proposed $170 million appropriation for the Space-Based Laser. It also eliminated funds entirely for the Space Based Infrared System-low (SBIRS-low), a satellite-based early-warning system. These actions suggest that space weapons are vulnerable to congressional challenges.

Also, the full impact of the change in the Senate's leadership has not yet been felt. Key Democrats have come out in strong opposition to space weapons, including Senators Tom Daschle (SD), Joseph Biden (DE), and Carl Levin (MI). Except for the unprecedented budget unity brought on by the September 11 events, cuts would likely have been made in the missile defense budget for fiscal year 2002,9 forcing even harder choices regarding space defenses. Such debates are beginning for fiscal year 2003. Conservative Democrat Robert Byrd (WV) warned on the Senate floor against "a headlong and fiscally spendthrift rush" to deploy space weapons, concluding, "That heavy foot on the accelerator is merely the stamp and roar of rhetoric."

In addition, a strong contingent within Congress still supports NASA and the International Space Station, which, despite problems, continues to resonate as a worthwhile endeavor with the American public. Introducing weapons into space is abhorrent to many Americans, raised to view space as the realm of the Apollo astronauts, the moon landing, and the shuttle missions. Even conservatives such as Representative Curt Weldon (R-PA) have emphasized the continued importance of manned space research to the nation's economy and the development of spin-offs for furthering our technological base. Despite Weldon's support for missile defense, he and other NASA supporters may modify their stances when they recognize that aggressive deployment of space weapons could jeopardize other U.S. space priorities. Tests of ASAT weapons, for example, could create debris that might threaten astronauts on the International Space Station. They might also cause costly litigation in which commercial providers seek restitution from the U.S. military for damage caused to their satellites. Foreign claims could create international incidents harmful to U.S. foreign and defense policies, as well as commercial interests. Ten to 20 years down the line, multiple states responding to U.S. weapons in orbit could create an unlimited test range in low-Earth orbit, to the great harm of U.S. space interests, including for military assets.

It is not surprising, therefore, that risks associated with weaponizing low-Earth orbit do not sit well with many members of Congress, who want to see U.S. military, scientific, and commercial leadership in space protected. According to defense analyst Theresa Hitchens, U.S. satellite providers are already nervous about possible future U.S. government decisions to try to shut off foreign access to U.S. communications satellites in times of crisis and to shoot down U.S. and foreign satellites providing such access.10 They fear that this may lead foreign customers to develop their own satellite industries to ensure the availability of spares, thus stimulating competition and cutting into existing U.S. market share.

A liberal House Democrat introduced H.R. 2977 in fall 2001 and a revised bill (H.R. 3616) in January entitled the "Space Preservation Act of 2002." This legislation would prohibit U.S. funds from being spent on space-based weapons, terminate all research associated with such systems, and instruct the president to participate in international negotiations toward completion of a treaty banning such weapons worldwide. Although the bill is unlikely to pass in the Republican-controlled House, it does set down a marker of opposition to current administration policies.

More indicative of chances for creating a bipartisan consensus on limiting space weapons was a speech in late September 2001 by Senator Richard Lugar (R-- IN), a highly respected Republican foreign policy beacon. In an address to the National Press Club, Lugar rejected the idea of moving forward with a multitiered national missile defense and instead called upon the Bush administration to reorient missile defense programs to focus on the existing, short-range missile threat and to redouble efforts to fight terrorism and provide for homeland security. He argued that longer-- range missile defenses and space systems should be put off indefinitely, suggesting a significant difference of opinion with the Bush administration. Other concerned Republicans are echoing such thoughts in this spring's congressional budget debates, particularly as politically risky deficit spending looms.

Thus, although arms controllers may despair about current plans, there are good reasons to think that cooler heads can still prevail in the space weapons debate. Although missile defense of some sort may be inevitable, those who doubt the utility of space weapons represent a majority in Congress. This middle constituency is the one with whom the arms control community must open a dialogue. The problem today in trying to identify a defensible middle ground for space arms control is the lack of a formula to draw in these moderates, who do not want to be painted as "anti-- missile defense." Thus, a search to create new alternatives to the existing options and arguments must be undertaken.

Crafting a Compromise Proposal

The way to an agreement clearly lies in some sort of compromise, but what kind? Writing in the 1980s, nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty negotiator and arms control analyst George Bunn came up with the innovative idea of a possible split regime for space in which weapons might be allowed in lower regions of space (up to 2,500 miles above the Earth) but be banned from higher orbits in order to protect critical early-warning and communications satellites in geostationary orbit." Although today's politics have changed, such a "mixed" approach may be worth exploring, although (for various reasons) with somewhat different parameters. Today, the importance of low-Earth orbital space has grown, due to the development of cellular networks, which use this region, and increasing U.S. military dependence on reconnaissance, tracking, queuing, weather, and communications satellites in the same area of space. Thus, any proposal for securing space would need to include protections for various activities in low-Earth orbit as well.

For good reasons, there are very few calls today for weapons above orbits of about 500 miles, even within the Pentagon. Indeed, there would likely be widespread U.S. and international support for a ban on all weapons above low-Earth orbit because higher-orbit satellites are harder to attack and also tend to serve less controversial civilian communications and military early-warning missions. Moreover, this region, especially out toward geostationary orbit (22,300 miles above the Earth), is poorly suited for the stationing of missile defenses because of its great distance from the flight paths of ballistic missiles. Thus, ruling out weapons entirely from higher orbits would be a useful starting point. But because low-Earth orbit is where most of the action is, it is the crucial area in which negotiation is needed.

Careful study of the various positions in the debate over national missile defense and space weapons suggests that there is room for a compromise on low-Earth orbit, at least among key constituencies such as the U.S. Congress, industry, and the Russian government, as well as the U.S. electorate, which, in the end, is going to pay for any of the near-term space systems being proposed. In practical terms, the core elements of Bush's national and theater missile defense programs remain the direct-- ascent systems, which use low-Earth orbital space as a point of interception but which do not require space-basing. Granting states the right to attack missiles traveling through space (as well as to deploy boost-- phase missiles defenses that do not require space-based elements) but forbidding them from shooting from space or attacking permanent objects in space could provide a meaningful compromise approach. The core elements of such a compromise proposal on space weapons might look like this:

* No use, testing, or deployment of weapons or interceptors of any sort in regions of space above 500 miles;

* Permitted testing of ground-based, sea-- based, and air-based interceptors in low-- Earth orbit (60-500 miles) against ballistic missiles passing through space (although with frequency limitations per year/per state and possible restrictions on altitude and debris generation, which do not exist today);

* No stationing of weapons of any sort in low-Earth orbit, including kinetic-- kill vehicles, lasers, or any other weapons for use against space-, ground-, sea-, or air-based targets (to prevent destabilizing aspects of short warning times in space and to alleviate public fears of use of weapons from space against cities);

* No testing or use of lasers from ground-, sea-, or air-based platforms against any space-based, orbital objects; and

* No testing or use of other ground-, sea-, or air-based weapons against satellites or other space-based objects (chiefly a confidence-building and debris-reduction measure, because direct-ascent missile defenses would have some residual ASAT capabilities).

Although each of these provisions could be subject to further negotiation, the core elements could provide meaningful protections for parties desiring to preserve safe access to space while also allowing missile defenses to move forward.

Would such a treaty be perfect? It would not be when viewed from the perspective of both extremes in the debate. But, for the larger group of moderates-both domestically and internationally-this option could be very attractive. It would offer significant protections from weapons systems that are allowed under the current loophole-filled treaty regime, while also grandfathering a variety of missile defense technologies that are already fairly far advanced and whose development would be difficult to stop.

For the Pentagon, such a regime would entail some limitations in terms of ASAT weapons, but it would also create an environment in which other states would find development of hostile systems extremely difficult without detection. For Congress, space would be protected for high-profile, civilian manned missions and lucrative commercial applications. For the arms control community, this regime would set the world a short distance down the "slope" of weaponizing space by allowing the use of low-Earth orbit for missile defense purposes from the Earth, sea, and air. However, the slope would no longer be "slippery," as it is today, but would instead be marked with clear barriers against further descent. Detailed negotiations would be needed on how many tests to allow each state per year in low-Earth orbit and what debris mitigation techniques to require. Although this would affect mainly the United States in the short run, it would create a powerful set of restrictions for future space-faring states as well, thus protecting U.S. commercial and passive military interests in debris-free low-- Earth orbit. In sum, a number of key players would come away from the table with tangible benefits.

How to Get There From Here

Overall, the need for some settlement on the space weapons issue is clear. The decisions taken today will affect the future of international space activities not only in the military realm, but also in the scientific and commercial sectors, which are having a growing impact on the economies of leading developed and developing countries. The issue is particularly important when one considers the possible impact of multiple states conducting unlimited space-- based weapons testing and deployments in the increasingly crowded realm of low-- Earth orbit, where debris and the relative proximity of spacecraft and weapons suggest the need for at least some rules of the road. Given these factors, the issue of future space security is too important to be bottled up any longer within the stalemate at the Conference on Disarmament, where no action is likely under current conditions.

The background to today's impasse at the international level can be traced to the fall of 1999, when the UN General Assembly passed a resolution unanimously calling for the prevention of an arms race in outer space. Only the United States and Israel abstained, seeing the resolution as an effort to limit missile defenses.

Subsequently, China sought to insert space arms control into the debate at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva as a condition for further disarmament talks. In June 2001, it offered a draft treaty on preventing the weaponization of outer space. The treaty would ban the testing and deployment of weapons based in space, as well as any weapon that could be used from the Earth, sea, or air for "war-fighting in outer space." The United States opposed this effort, and talks have ground to a halt.

Could the proposal outlined in this article offer a face-saving way out for both sides? It could if the Chinese proposal's definition of "war-fighting" does not include destroying ballistic missiles passing through space-a possible interpretation of the current wording. Moreover, Chinese officials might welcome the opportunity to begin some forward movement to stop the most threatening aspects of ballistic missile defenses: the look-down, shoot-down Space-Based Laser and the space-based, kinetic-kill interceptor. Thus, the new proposal might provide at least a starting point for discussions.

Russia is another critical player, given its extensive space program and military space capabilities. In a speech outlining his government's priorities in space at the United Nations in September 2001, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov noted several key provisions central to his government for any new treaty on space security: (1) no placement by states of weapons in orbit; (2) no use or threat of use of weapons against space-based targets; and (3) establishment of a verification mechanism adequate to implement the new agreement. Notably, the speech did not specifically call for a ban on missile defenses or the use of low-Earth orbit for missile interception. Thus, there are firm grounds for believing that Moscow would be receptive to this initiative.

But a new forum is needed to allow the issues to be presented openly and discussed in the presence of all international parties interested in space. Such a process should begin whether or not all governments choose to participate at the present time. This forum could craft possible compromise proposals for later discussion at the intergovernmental level, when conditions are more favorable.

One analyst, Rebecca Johnson, suggests an "Ottawa process" approach for space, referring to the successful negotiation of the Land Mines Convention by a group of organizations and concerned states working outside typical intergovernmental channels.12 Such an avenue might be fruitful, but it must include key U.S. constituencies-such as commercial space users and representatives from both parties in Congress. It must also not be held hostage to "purist" approaches that rule out all forms of missile defense. Media representatives should be included in order to communicate the importance of these questions to the U.S. and international publics, which are currently virtually unaware of the security debates going on behind the scenes that will affect their futures. An alternative approach might be to let the commercial space community lead the negotiations,13 which could have the advantage of placing greater credibility and clout behind any eventual agreement in the eyes of national legislatures.

In conclusion, the arms control community would benefit from embracing such a process, which would put less emphasis on critiquing Bush policies and more on building a credible alternative. This effort could begin by reaching out to moderate members of Congress, Pentagon personnel, and commercial representatives. Planning with other actors for a secure future in space would require some compromises but need not involve damaging giveaways. Fortunately, the view of congressional moderates on space-based defense is closer to that of the arms control community than is realized. Providing a workable framework to address the key interests of this middle group (and its supporters in parts of the administration and among the broader public) may be the most effective way of uncovering the limited support behind most space weapons scenarios. With such an agenda in hand, the weight of public opinion on the U.S. Congress-supported by influential commercial actors-could eventually lead to changes in Bush administration policy or provide a ready-made space framework for his successor.

[Sidebar]

U.S. testing and deployment of orbital weapons could make using space for other military and commercial purposes more difficult, promote a false sense of security in hard-to-maintain systems, and stimulate military responses by adversaries.

[Sidebar]

Although arms controllers may despair, there are good reasons to think that cooler heads can still prevail. While missile defense of some sort may be inevitable, those who doubt the utility of space weapons represent a majority in Congress.

[Author Affiliation]

James Clay Moltz is research professor and associate director of the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies.

Sen. Reid spends money as fast as he banks it

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's campaign ended 2009 with less money in the bank than it had in September after financing an advertising blitz intended to buff his bruised image in his home state of Nevada, records released Friday showed.

After spending an average of $22,000 a day from October through December, Reid still holds a commanding fundraising edge over any of his potential Republican opponents in November.

The Democratic leader collected nearly $2 million in donations in the final three months of the year _ his weakest fundraising quarter of 2009 by a narrow margin. That's about the same amount of money his campaign burned through in the three-month period on ads and other expenditures.

Reid's campaign ended the year with $8.69 million in his campaign account, down slightly from $8.73 million at the end of September.

The Senate leader, considered among the most vulnerable incumbents in the nation, has said he will raise $25 million for his campaign to win a fifth term in the Senate. He's raised $15 million so far and will need to raise nearly $1 million a month to hit that target.

In a statement, his campaign said the fundraising tally "is a clear indication that the campaign will have the resources to win in November."

Reid's wide money margin could be misleading. National Republicans, eager to defeat the Senate's most powerful Democrat, are expected to flood the state with money once a GOP nominee is selected in the June primary.

Reid's image in politically moderate Nevada has suffered with his high-profile role pushing President Barack Obama's agenda through Congress. Republican Scott Brown's upset Senate win in the Democratic stronghold of Massachusetts last week highlighted Reid's troubles in his home state, where about a dozen Republicans have lined up to challenge him.

A poll last month commissioned by the Las Vegas Review-Journal suggested that Reid's advertising wasn't helping his standing with voters. Even after Reid had run six weeks of ads, the survey found a lackluster 38 percent of voters had a favorable opinion of the senator. A poll conducted in October had the same result.

Republicans seeking the party's nomination include Sue Lowden, a former state senator, and Danny Tarkanian, a lawyer and son of former UNLV basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian. Nevada Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki is considering entering the race.

Lowden's campaign Friday said she raised about $800,000 toward the race in the last quarter of the year. She plans to dip into her personal fortune to match donations she receives in the first three months of 2010; Lowden earlier disclosed in government records that she and her husband have stock holdings valued at more than $50 million.

Tarkanian's campaign raised about $650,000 last year, including $377,000 in the final quarter.

Jump For Joy: Jazz at Lincoln Center Celebrates the Ellington Centennial, 1899-1999

Jazz at Lincoln Center, February 1999,160 pp., $24.95, ISBN 03770-0.

Join Jazz at Lincoln Center in celebrating the 100-year anniversary of the birth of revolutionary jazz musician Duke Ellington. This collection of essays, interviews, paintings and drawings of the internationally acclaimed musician provides an in-depth look into his career and the far-reaching effects of his unique talents. Publicity photographs and album and magazine covers offer additional visual references for discussions, contributed by Stanley Crouch, Wynton Marsalis and Albert Murray. This is an ideal book for those interested in the Big Band era, jazz, and the life of this amazing musician.

-Reviewed by Jonell Jaime

UN climate chief calls on world leaders to step in

BONN, Germany (AP) — The U.N.'s top climate official says the world's political leaders must step into climate negotiations in the next few months to sort out disputes over reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Christiana Figueres says climate negotiators are working toward a global framework for emissions reductions.

Part of that framework requires nearly 40 industrial countries to extend commitments under the Kyoto Protocol that expire in 2012.

But that is linked to actions by big emitters like the United States, China and India.

Figueres said Friday that heads of state will meet on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in September to discuss global warming.

She said they will have to take political decisions before the next major conference in November.

Amy Winehouse grabs 5 Grammys; Herbie Hancock wins album of the year in a shocker

Trapped half a world away by the place she promised to never "go, go, go," a vibrant, exuberant Amy Winehouse dominated the Grammys, winning five awards and delivering a defiant performance of her autobiographical hit "Rehab" via satellite from London.

Wearing a sly smile as she performed for a small cabaret audience, Winehouse gave a sultry, soulful rendition of the hit that has defined her recent fall from grace. The British singer looked just as coy as she sang the song "You Know I'm No Good" _ almost reveling in the irony of her words.

But she seemed dumbfounded when she was announced as the record of the year winner. She was immediately enveloped by her band, then her mother and father, who have publicly worried whether their daughter _ who recently entered a drug rehabilitation center after months of erratic behavior and canceled performances _ would survive her demons.

"To my mom and dad, for my Blake, my Blake incarcerated, and for London!" shouted Winehouse, referring to her incarcerated husband _ another tabloid aspect of her troubled life.

In a major shocker, Winehouse lost the final award of the night, album of the year, to Herbie Hancock's "River: The Joni Letters."

"You know it's been 43 years since the first and only time that a jazz artist got the album of the year award," Hancock said.

"I'd like to thank the Academy for courageously breaking the mold this time. In doing so, honoring the giants upon whose shoulders I stand, some of whom like Miles Davis, John Coltrane ... unquestionably, deserved the award in the past. But this is a new day, that proves that the impossible can be made possible."

Winehouse's performance was not the only dramatic moment of the ceremony Sunday night. Kanye West, who had a leading eight nominations and won four trophies, delivered an electric, glow-in-the-dark rendition of "Stronger," then segued into a stirring tribute to his mother, Donda West, who died unexpectedly last year at age 58.

"Last night I saw you in my dreams, and now I can't wait to go to sleep," sang West, dressed in all black and with MAMA etched into his haircut, as he launched into "Hey Mama," a celebratory tune from his second album that has now turned into a somber ode.

He won awards for best rap album for "Graduation," best solo performance for "Stronger," best rap song for "Good Life" and best rap performance by a duo or group for his collaboration with Common on "Southside."

When West accepted the best rap album trophy, the orchestra was trying to play him off the stage when he began speaking about his mother.

"It would be in good taste to stop the music," West said _ and the music stopped.

"I know you're really proud of me right now and I know you want me to be the No. 1 artist in the world and Mama," West continued, "all I'm going to do is keep making you proud. We run this."

The Grammys, celebrating its 50th year, emphasized its history from the first performance. Alicia Keys, glammed-up with a '50s style, sat at the piano and sang "Learnin' the Blues" along with a black-and-white video performance from the late Frank Sinatra.

"Frank Sinatra looked good for 150, didn't he," Prince joked moments later before introducing Keys as the best female R&B vocal winner for her smash "No One."

Later, the casts from Cirque Du Soleil's "Love" Beatles' show and the Beatles-inspired movie "Across the Universe" paid tribute to the Fab Four as Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono and George Harrison's widow Olivia Harrison watched from the audience.

It was a hot-legs competition when Tina Turner teamed up with Beyonce on "Proud Mary." The senior citizen kept up with her younger counterpart, showcasing her famous dance moves while wearing a tight-fitting silver bustier and pantsuit.

Carrie Underwood earned two Grammys, including for best female country vocal performance. Bruce Springsteen took three awards, including best rock song for "Radio Nowhere." Other winners included the White Stripes, Justin Timberlake and Mary J. Blige with two each, the Foo Fighters, Herbie Hancock and even Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama for best spoken-word album.

In any other year, West would have been the main storyline thanks to his history of awards-show tirades, his huge album "Graduation" and the shocking death of his mother. But the absent Winehouse, up for six trophies, upstage West and everyone else.

The 24-year-old singer-songwriter's personal life has fallen apart over the past year as her career blossomed. As the ceremony approached, suspense built over whether she would appear. She was rejected Thursday for a U.S. work visa, and Grammy producers arranged for her to perform via telecast. On Friday, the U.S. government reversed itself and approved Winehouse, but it was too late for her to make the cross-continental trek.

____

On the Net:

http://www.grammy.com

Monday, March 12, 2012

AUDIBLE PEDESTRIAN CROSSINGS

Canadian guerilla street artist Roadsworth, or Peter Gibson, is known for manipulating the sturdy white lines of pedestrian crosswalks and double-yellow stripes of road medians into zippers, shoelaces, double-pronged electrical cords and footprints. According to Gibson's artist's statement, he's drawing attention to the negative aspects of car culture:

"I am not so intent on car-bashing as in the culture that has grown around the automobile, one of the defining symbols of our age."

Though the Ada County Highway District and Roadsworth have little in common, one thing that unites them is a desire to re-imagine or improve the functionality of traditional pedestrian crosswalks. Recently, ACHD partnered with Valley Regional Transit to install new vision- and hearing-impaired friendly pedestrian crossing devices at two intersections on the Boise State campus - one at University Drive and Joyce Street and the other at University Drive and Lincoln Avenue.

The devices, purchased with a $10,000 federal stimulus grant, emit a continuous low beep to help visually impaired peds locate the vibrating push button, which includes a raised arrow indicating the direction of the crosswalk. A voice command then tells the pedestrian that the "walk" sign is on.

ACHD is working with an Americans With Disabilities Act advisory committee to determine the effectiveness of these devices, as well as other possible future locations for them.

- Tara Morgan

MIND GAMES

During the past two months, a group of residents at Country Meadows Retirement Communities' campus in Lancaster Township have spent a lot of time in the gym. But their workouts have nothing to do with lifting weights or running on treadmills.

Instead, they are exercising their minds. The seniors sit at computers, don headphones and do a series of audio-driven exercises. The goal is to sharpen memory and other cognitive abilities dulled by aging.

The brain-fitness program comes at a time when longtermcare providers are becoming more sophisticated in their efforts to ward off residents' mental decline. Many providers are going beyond word games and crossword puzzles and embracing programs developed by teams of scientists and doctors.

"This has taken us to the next level," said Sandy Strathmeyer, who oversees the brain-fitness program for Derry Townshipbased Country Meadows. "You have to keep stepping it up a notch."

The program was developed by San Francisco-based Posit Science Corp., which has a research team led by neuroscientist Michael Merzenich of the University of California. Country Meadows has completed rollouts of the program at its campuses in Derry and Hampden townships and near Allentown and Bethlehem. The program is being introduced at campuses in Lancaster and Berks counties.

Brain fitness features six activities, each with a different purpose. An activity called Tell Us Apart gives the brain practice distinguishing among similar sounds. Another exercise, called Story Teller, strengthens memory by requiring participants to listen to a story and answer detailed questions about it.

One of the most important features of the program is that it calibrates itself to a user's skill level, Strathmeyer said. That allows brain fitness to continually challenge seniors and make them stretch and strengthen their mental capabilities.

Most of the seniors who have participated are not suffering from any serious cognitive problems such as Alzheimer's disease. They are independent- or assisted-living residents who are having more "senior moments" than they would like, Strathmeyer said.

Marian Engle was a bit uncertain when staff at Country Meadows encouraged her to try brain fitness. But the 92-yearold soon found that she enjoyed the mental challenge. She comes in each day hoping to improve.

"I tried it, and I kept on going because it was going pretty good," she said. "You might say I was hooked on it."

Engle believes her mental exercises have improved her quality of life. She recently went to her audiologist for her annual hearing check. The audiologist told her that her diction had improved, a change Engle credits to the brain fitness program.

Country Meadows is not the only company that has seen results from mental-exercise initiatives. Fort Smith, Ark.based Golden Ventures, which operates longterm care facilities in the midstate, has introduced several programs to its residents. One of them, Memory Magic, has greatly improved the attention spans of some patients with Alzheimer's disease, said Janice Mullen, a director of quality of life for Golden Ventures. The program uses word pairs to encourage conversations and interaction among residents.

"We're continuously looking for creative, new and innovative products, Mullen said.

Sharpened minds and improved understanding are not the only benefits of mental-fitness programs, Strathmeyer and Mullen said. Both executives have seen such programs improve some residents' social skills and lift others out of loneliness or depression.

"It's given them confidence to try new things," Strathmeyer said.

Country Meadows expects to bring its brain-fitness program to its campuses in York County early next year. Eventually, the program will come to facilities near Pittsburgh and Frederick, Md.

Big Country Challenge for UCLA

SEATTLE What is little-heralded Oklahoma State doing in the FinalFour facing top-ranked UCLA today?

Bryant "Big Country" Reeves let doubters know Friday in thefree-to-the-public practice at the Kingdome.

The 7-foot, 292-pound center brought a halt to the rigid NCAAprotocol schedule by breaking a backboard on "a routine littlepractice dunk."

"I don't know what happened," the amiable giant said aftercausing a delay in the day's dictated lineup. "It's just a littledrill we do every day in practice where the coach passes the ballinside. I guess it was just the way I grabbed the rim. The rest ishistory."

Reeves' mini-drama made NCAA history - the first-ever shatteringin a Final Four practice.

The Cowboys (27-9) have defied history so far in the NCAATournament, but coach Eddie Sutton knows today's first game is adifferent chapter.

"We beat two very good teams in Wake Forest and Massachusetts (topseeds in the East Regional), but I think we'll have to play evenbetter against UCLA because I think they're the No. 1 team in thecountry," Sutton said.

"They have outstanding athletes and we'll be severely tested."

The test will come not as much under the basket, where behemothsReeves and UCLA's 7-foot, 250-pound Czech George Zidek will collide,but on the open floor where UCLA excels - and accelerates.

Tempo will be the key, Sutton and UCLA coach Jim Harrick agree.

"We can't get in a Ping-Pong, horse race type of game with them,"Sutton said. "They're the best transition team I've seen all year."

The style, ignited by UCLA's speedy 5-10 point guard TyusEdney and flamed by All-America forward Ed O'Bannon, has fueled theBruins' (29-2) 17-game winning streak and favored status in today'smeeting.

"I think we can do it defensively by pressing them and trying toget the game moving as much as possible," Edney said of dictating thegame's pace. "We have to tempo up as much as possible."

Cowboys junior point guard Andre Owens, with the unenviabledefensive assignment against Edney, will look for help in brakingUCLA's fast break.

"He pushes the ball well in transition and that's the firstthing we're going to do - try not to allow him to push the ball,"Owens said. "And then we'll have to get back on transition defense.The rest will have to fall into place."

For Harrick, who has survived years of criticism for his teams'so-called underachievements, Reeves and Rutherford pose as big aproblem as the pressure of being the last surviving and favored No. 1seed.

"Big Country is probably the best center in the country,"Harrick said. "This guy is a man and a great talent. And between heand (6-3 Cowboys three-point specialist) Randy Rutherford, peopledon't understand they have a very athletic team.

"They don't play real slow, they play medium," Harrick said ofSutton's team. "I think the team that gets ahead controls tempo moreanyway."

Getting an early edge in the post - and the tone of playdictated by the officials - could be as critical for the Bruins, whowill try to do what others have failed to do in stopping Reeves.

"I think I'm just going to try to push him out and get into ashoving match with him and then try to run the floor a little bit totry to get him tired," Zidek said.

"For sure I'm going to need to put my body on him and keep himas far from the basket as I can."

The battle could decide which team comes closest to a nationalchampionship try on Monday.

Murray Shocks Federer in Dubai Opener

Roger Federer is on a losing streak for the second time in four months. The top-ranked Federer, who won three Grand Slam titles last year but has struggled since the U.S. Open, lost to Andy Murray 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-4 on Monday in the first round of the Dubai Tennis Championships.

"My expectations are not sky-high at this point," said Federer, who was playing for the first time since losing to Novak Djokovic in the Australian Open semifinals Jan. 25. "Obviously, I haven't played much so you don't go in with any expectations, actually. You hope to get past the first round, no matter if it's a guy with no ranking or a guy ranked basically in the top 10."

After winning his 12th Grand Slam title at last year's U.S. Open, Federer lost to David Nalbandian in the Madrid Masters final. The Swiss star then won the Swiss Indoors, but lost to Nalbandian in the third round of the Paris Masters and followed that with a round robin loss to Fernando Gonzalez in his opening match at the ATP Masters Cup, which Federer eventually won.

On Monday, Federer said he felt rusty.

"Missing forehands by two or three meters _ it's just not possible," Federer said. "I gave him the mistakes today."

Playing Murray, who is ranked 11th in the world and beat Federer at the Cincinnati Masters two years ago, in the first round didn't make things any easier on Federer.

"It was always going to be a tough draw. I knew that from the start," Federer said. "He's played many matches already this season whereas obviously I come in a little bit cold.

"Of course, I wish I would have maybe had a little bit easier draw, but under the circumstances I felt I played OK. It wasn't a bad match, which is the only positive thing out of tonight."

Murray has already won two ATP titles this season, and he now leads Federer 2-1 in his career.

"Anytime you get to play someone like Roger, it is an honor to be on the same court as him," Murray said. "Each time I play him I step my game up and play pretty well, and I played really well today and served great."

Federer, who won the Dubai tournament four times in the last five years, had not lost in the first round of a tournament since his defeat to Dominik Hrbaty in the 2004 Cincinnati Masters. Last year, Federer lost his opening match at the Pacific Life Open to Guillermo Canas after getting a bye into the second round.

"He's the best player in the world, there's no question," Murray said. "The most important thing is to believe that you can win the match."

Murray held serve throughout the match and broke Federer in the sixth game of the second set. He broke Federer's serve again to take a 3-2 lead in the third. The British player served out the match at love.

Fabrice Santoro of France also advanced, beating last year's finalist, Mikhail Youzhny, 6-3, 6-4. Fourth-seeded David Ferrer of Spain advanced by beating Tommy Haas of Germany 6-3, 6-0, and seventh-seeded Richard Gasquet of France defeated Dmitry Tursunov of Russia 6-4, 6-4.