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Monday, March 2, 2009

Soldiers assassinate Guinea-Bissau president

In this May 18, 2006 file photo, Guinea Bissau's President Joao Bernardo
AP – In this May 18, 2006 file photo, Guinea Bissau's President Joao Bernardo 'Nino' Vieira talks to the media …

BISSAU, Guinea-Bissau – Soldiers assassinated the president of Guinea-Bissau in his palace Monday hours after a bomb blast killed his rival, but the military insisted no coup was taking place in the West African nation.

A military statement broadcast on state radio attributed President Joao Bernardo "Nino" Vieira's death to an "isolated" group of unidentified soldiers whom the armed forces said they were now hunting down.

The capital, Bissau, was calm but tense despite the pre-dawn gunfight at the palace, which erupted hours after armed forces chief of staff Gen. Batiste Tagme na Waie — a longtime rival of the president — was killed by a bomb blast at his headquarters.

The former Portuguese colony has suffered multiple coups and attempted coups since 1980, when Vieira himself first took power in one. The United Nations says the impoverished nation on the Atlantic coast of Africa has recently become a key transit point for cocaine smuggled from Latin America to Europe.

Following an emergency Cabinet meeting on Monday, military spokesman Zamora Induta said top military brass told government officials "this was not a coup d'etat."

"We reaffirmed our intention to respect the democratically elected power and the constitution of the republic," Induta said. "The people who killed President Vieira have not been arrested, but we are pursuing them. They are an isolated group. The situation is under control."

The constitution calls for parliament chief Raimundo Pereira to succeed the president in the event of his death.

Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Jr. said the fact that the military did not go through with a coup deserves praise. "The military showed their patriotism by not seizing power," he said, adding that both Vieira and Waie will receive state funerals in the coming days.

Vieira had ruled Guinea-Bissau for 23 of the past 29 years. He came to power in the 1980 coup, but was forced out 19 years later at the onset of the country's civil war. He later returned from exile in Portugal to run in the country's 2005 election and won the vote.

The armed forces' statement dismissed claims that the military killed Vieira in retaliation for Waie's assassination late Sunday. The two men were considered staunch political and ethnic rivals and both had survived recent assassination attempts.

Vieira, from the minority Papel ethnic group, once blamed majority ethnic Balanta officers for attempting a coup against him, condemning several to death and others to long prison sentences.

Among them was Waie, who in the late 1980s was dropped off on a deserted island off the coast of Guinea-Bissau, according to Waie's chief of staff, Lt. Col. Bwam Namtcho. Waie was left there for years before he was allowed to return and officially pardoned by Vieira.

Namtcho said the bomb that killed Waie had been hidden underneath the staircase leading to his office.

Hours later, volleys of automatic gunfire rang out for at least two hours before dawn in Bissau and residents said soldiers had converged on Vieira's palace.

The Portuguese news agency LUSA reported that troops attacked the palace with rockets and rifles. The president's press chief, Barnabe Gomes, escaped but was struck by a bullet in his right shoulder, LUSA said.

It was the second attack on Vieira in recent months. In November, Vieira's residence was attacked by soldiers with automatic weapons who killed at least one of his guards. The president complained later that the army never intervened, leaving his presidential guard to fight off the attackers.

In January, Waie received a call from the presidency asking him to come at once, said Namtcho. But when Waie stepped outside to get into his car, unidentified gunmen opened fire on the car. Waie narrowly escaped and Namtcho says he assumed the attack had been ordered by the president.

Luis Sanca, security adviser to Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Jr., confirmed that the president had died but gave no details.

The African Union condemned the killings, calling them "cowardly and heinous attacks which have come at a time of renewed efforts by the international community to support peace-building efforts in Guinea-Bissau."

In Lisbon, the Portuguese Foreign Ministry lamented Vieira's death and said it was "fundamental that all political and military authorities in the country respect the constitutional order."

Portugal said it would call an emergency meeting of the Community of Portuguese-Speaking Countries, an eight-member organization based in Lisbon.

Dow industrials fall below 7,000; lowest since '97

NEW YORK (AP) -- The Dow Jones industrial average has fallen below 7,000 Monday for the first time in more than 11 years as investors grow even more pessimistic about the health of banks, and in turn the economy.

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A staggering $61.7 billion in quarterly losses at insurer American International Group Inc. is touching off fresh fears about the health of the nation's financial system.

Those worries pushed the blue chips below 7,000 for the first time since Oct. 28, 1997. The credit crisis and recession have now slashed half the average's value since it hit a record high over 14,000 in October 2007.

The Dow is down 225 at 6,837.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index is down 26 at 708.46, and the Nasdaq composite index is off 38 at 1,338.

Northeast pounded by snowy late-winter storm

An early March snowstorm dumped inches of snow across Alabama, including this
AP – An early March snowstorm dumped inches of snow across Alabama, including this red barn on the campus …

NEW YORK – A massive late winter snowstorm pummeled the Northeast on Monday, grounding hundreds of flights, causing spin-outs, delaying trains and buses and closing school for over a million children from South Carolina to New Hampshire.

A day earlier, the same storm hammered the Southeast as it made its way north, blanketing Civil War statues and canceling hundreds of church services around the region.

By Monday, the storm had moved as far north as New Hampshire, and most areas in the storm's wake expected to see at least 8 to 12 inches of accumulation.

The blizzard-like snow — together with sleet, freezing rain and wind gusts of up to 30 mph — contributed to four deaths on roads in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and on New York's Long Island.

An accident caused a 15-mile-long traffic jam in North Carolina, where as much as a foot of snow fell, and prompted police and rescuers to go car-to-car Monday to check on the stranded motorists.

In New York City, about 7 inches of snow was recorded at Central Park by Monday morning.

New Yorkers expressed characteristic resilience, struggling to get to work and appointments, and patching together child care arrangements.

Diane Lugo, 29, of Yonkers, had to leave her two children with her mother-in-law rather than drive them to day care. She got a ride with her husband to avoid trudging 10 minutes in the slush to her bus stop.

"Getting out of the driveway was pure hell," Lugo said in Manhattan, where she works as a college admissions coordinator. "He got to work late. I'm obviously late."

Outside the Sound Shore Medical Center in New Rochelle, Emilia Rescigna struggled to push a stroller through the snow and slush. In the stroller, asleep under a plastic tent, was her 1-year-old son Adam, who had a 9 a.m. appointment with his pediatrician.

"I called the doctor's office last night and this morning, to see if the appointment was still on, but no one was in," said Rescigna, a Bronx resident. "After all this they better not tell me I have to come back."

More than 900 flights were canceled — a majority of all flights at Kennedy, Newark and LaGuardia airports, according to the Port Authority. Travelers were urged to call their carriers. Most flights in and out of Boston's Logan International Airport were scrubbed on Monday, and the aiport shut down for about 40 minutes to clear a runway. Philadelphia International Airport spokeswoman Phyllis VanIstendahl said about 44 people were stranded there overnight.

Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport remained open Monday, although a number of flights were canceled or delayed. Spokesman Jonathan Dean didn't have numbers on cancellations.

Dean says officials expected more snow, and there was concern about increasing wind speeds.

More than 10 inches of snow was on the ground in New Jersey's Atlantic and Cumberland counties by 7 a.m. Monday, while South Carolina was dealing with 8 inches. Forecasters warned that the snow may temporarily stop for a few hours before starting up again by midmorning.

Greyhound and Peter Pan bus lines canceled trips affecting travelers in and out of New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New Jersey.

Dozens of schools across North Carolina, South Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Maine gave children a snow day. Public schools in Philadelphia and Boston did the same.

In New York City, 1.1 million public school students got a snow day; the last time that happened was Jan. 28, 2004.

In Fairfax, Va., Sarah Conforti, 8, said Monday's day off was just what she'd been hoping for, and planned to "make a snowman or play in the snow with my friends," she said.

Her mother, Noelle Conforti, said Sarah and her 10-year-old sister couldn't be happier about the school-free day.

"The kids are against the window, just looking out the window like a cat," she said. "It's hilarious."

Commuter trains in Boston and New York had some delays during the morning rush. And transportation officials in the Philadelphia area said the rush hour wasn't that bad, considering the slippery condiitons.

Philadelphia declared a Code Blue weather emergency, which gives officials the power to go out onto the streets and bring in homeless people to shelters because the weather conditions pose a threat of serious harm or death.

New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine said the storm could cost the state anywhere from about $2.5 million to $7 million, depending on its severity. So far, New Jersey has spent about $22 million on this winter's "frequent snow events," an amount that's about twice as much as what was budgeted for this year.

Snow was falling at up to an inch per hour across New Hampshire, where about a foot of snow was expected in places.

Transportation spokesman Bill Boynton said the snow was coming down so fast, plow crews were having trouble keeping up.

In parts of southern Maryland, strong winds were complicating cleanup efforts there, as gusts were blowing just-plowed snow right back onto roads, said Lora Rakowski, a spokeswoman with the State Highway Administration. More than 6 inches had fallen in parts of southern Maryland.

Forecasters said up to 10 inches could fall in parts of New York's Dutchess County, where eastern areas near the Connecticut border already had 8 inches by 7 a.m. Monday.

About 9 to 13 are expected inches in southern Connecticut on Monday.

Duke Energy reported about 100,000 customers without electric service early Monday in North Carolina and another 78,000 in South Carolina. Progress Energy reported more than 5,300 customers lost service in North Carolina.

In Virginia, Dominion Virginia Power said nearly 114,000 customers were without power, with more than half in the Richmond metropolitan area. Appalachian Power, which serves southwest Virginia, reported about 5,600 outages.

About 1,000 customers were without power in central Jersey.

"I thought it was over," New Yorker Clarissa Arroyo said of the winter weather. "But it's not."

___

Associated Press writers Frank Eltman on Long Island, N.Y.; Jim Fitzgerald in Westchester County; Ula Ilnytzky, Tom McElroy and Amy Westfeldt in New York City; Daniel Yee and Christina Almeida in Atlanta; Rodrique Ngowi in Boston; Ben Nuckols in Baltimore; and Bruce Shipkowski and Samantha Henry in Trenton, N.J., contributed to this report.

NHL goalie gives up embarassing score

The Washington Capitals and Boston Bruins played a game befitting of the top two teams in the Eastern Conference this afternoon: Gritty, exciting and unpredictable to the tune of three different Bruins' rallies to tie the game. But Alexander Semin's game-winner at 22 seconds of overtime was pure anti-climax: an 80-foot goal from beyond the blue line that trickled past Boston goalie Tim Thomas, who quickly bolted his crease in embarrassment:

The Capitals won the game, 4-3; and as you can see at the end of this clip, that allowed Donald Brashear the chance to taunt the Boston fans behind the Caps' bench.

From Bruins Blog, on the Semin goal:

What Tim Thomas saw on Alexander Semin's game-winning overtime goal: a long-distance shot that was about three feet off the ice before it ascended in mid-air. "From that far away, I should have it anyways," Thomas said. "But you don't expect that kind of stuff to happen."

Claude Julien's interpretation: a shot that should have been stopped.

"That last goal was a bad goal," Julien said. "He can say all the things that happened with the puck. But the bottom line is you should tell yourself, 'I should have had it. I didn't have it. Turn the page and let's move on.' He's given us too much to be worried about the negatives. He's been far better the other way. Simple as that."

Julien's absolutely right: There's no sugarcoating what was an awful goal surrendered by Thomas, but there's also no need to linger on it for a goalie that entered the game leading the NHL in goals against average (2.01) and save percentage (.934).

That said: Might a terrible goal like this, in a key late-season game, weigh on the minds of Vezina Trophy voters when it comes to Thomas? Or is a fluke sometimes just a fluke?

Griner named nation's no. 1 player

A video clip showcasing the dunks of Nimitz (Texas) High's 6-foot-8 basketball star Brittney Griner has drawn more than 2 million hits on the Internet.

But none of the viewers was bigger – literally or figuratively – than 7-1 Phoenix Suns center Shaquille O'Neal. "The Diesel" agreed to meet Griner last year while in Houston to face the Rockets, and it resulted in a new experience for her.

One of Griner's biggest fans - literally and figuaratively - is the larger than life Shaquille O'Neal.
"I really felt small for the first time," Griner said.

The 18-year-old with an 86-inch wingspan and size-17 shoes has towered over her peers since kindergarten. To put her height in perspective, only one WNBA player, 7-2 Los Angeles Sparks center Margo Dydek, is taller.

But the reasons for her basketball success extend beyond her mammoth frame. Griner possesses great agility, athleticism and speed. She finished first during the team's mile run with a time of 6 minutes, 40 seconds.

The senior's size and skills account for her jaw-dropping statistics. She has averaged 27.2 points, 12.5 rebounds, 8.4 blocks, 2.6 assists, and 2.6 steals for the No. 24 team in the RivalsHigh Top 25, Houston school. During those 32 games, she has 17 triple-doubles and has shot 70 percent from the floor. Her numbers reflect a once-in-a-generation talent, and make her the RivalsHigh.com no. 1 player in the class of 2009.

"She will change the face of women's basketball." Nimitz coach Debbie Jackson said. "There really is not a high school player that has played like Brittney Griner has. There's no doubt in my mind that she will be one of the top notch collegiate players, and it won't take long for her to do that."

She demonstrated those transcendent abilities during Nimitz's season-opening game against Hastings High. Griner set a national record with 25 blocks. It was a woman-among-girls performance with her frequent rejections helping limit Hastings to 18 points.

"She's just tenacious on defense," Jackson said. "She takes a lot of pride in it."

Defense and rebounding serve as Griner's forte, but her dunking has become an Internet sensation. Before the Sparks' Lisa Leslie recorded the first dunk during WNBA play in 2002, women had dunked only seven times during college and professional action between 1984 and 2002. Griner, however, averages about two a game.

Her first in-game dunk occurred two years ago against Northbrook High. Nimitz's Samone Ballard stole the ball and lobbed a pass to Griner, whose explosive first step allowed her to beat everyone down the court. She capped the fast break with a slam, sending the crowd and team into an absolute frenzy. Ballard celebrated by jumping on Griner's back.

"I actually took a timeout just to get everybody settled down," Jackson said.

Griner owns an extensive dunking repertoire. She can dunk running or standing and with one hand or two. Those jams have not only become a YouTube staple but also were featured on SportsCenter's top 10 plays. She is working on nailing both a 360 dunk and one where she jumps over a teammate. For her, dunking has become a mundane practice ritual.

"It's just like a person taking a free throw shot," said her father, Raymond. "I see it every day."

She will take her dunking skills to Baylor next season. Griner selected that school over Tennessee, North Carolina, Texas, Texas A&M, Connecticut, Rutgers and LSU because of its close proximity to home, strong program and passionate coach, Kim Mulkey.


Wow. Shaq watched me on YouTube.
— Brittney Griner.

"She's really intense when it comes to basketball," Griner said. "But she'll love you to death, which I like."

Griner will continue to round out her game at Baylor. Her current focus involves improving her shooting range, ball-handling and hook shot. Most important, Griner aims to improve her free throw shooting, which stands at 51 percent.

Mulkey, though, will mold a player with limitless potential. Griner only has played organized basketball since the ninth grade. But the 6-3 freshman took quickly to the game, earning all-district honors during that season.

"She's like a sponge that just keeps absorbing," Jackson said.

Griner did not play team basketball until high school so she could concentrate on her studies and other sports like soccer and volleyball. Jackson found Griner after a fall volleyball practice during her freshman year and suggested she hoop it up when the volleyball season concluded. But Griner did not need much encouragement. Several of her friends joined the basketball team, and she enjoyed the game.

Growing up she had played recreationally. Raymond had taught her some fundamentals, including a few moves and shooting mechanics. Father and daughter also competed in one-on-one games, but she became a little too much to handle around her sophomore year.

"She blocked most of my shots," Raymond said.

Raymond, a former Marine and a retired deputy sheriff, is 6-2, and Brittney's mother, Sandra, a cosmetologist at Lone Star College, is 5-8. Griner has several male and female cousins who also stand well above 6 feet.

Watch Britney Griner Dunks On YouTube

A recent doctor's visit confirmed that her height was not caused by a pituitary gland condition. According to a physician's estimate, Griner likely will continue growing and could end up 6-9 or 6-10 — something she would welcome.

Lacking self-consciousness and displaying a comfort with her size, Griner calls her height an asset. She said she never considered herself an outcast because of her stature or remembers being the source of derision. If anything, she calls herself out in a self-deprecating manner.

"I'll be the first one to make a joke about me being taller," Griner said. "I don't let it get to me or anything. I love being tall."

A B-student, who frequently answered a reporter's questions with a "yes, sir," she remains grounded and a consummate teammate despite the burgeoning national attention.

"She's a real humble kid," Raymond said.

She described her nervousness upon meeting O'Neal during their 20-minute visit at the Toyota Center, which a journalist arranged. He chided her dunking ability and told her he had seen some of her footage on YouTube, and that floored Griner.

"[It's] kind of backwards," Griner said. "Wow. Shaq watched me on YouTube."

O'Neal advised her to prioritize family life, work out vigorously and remain healthy. Along with those objectives, Griner would like to play basketball in the Olympics and overseas.

She also wants to become a SWAT unit officer. Inherited from her father, the affinity for law enforcement is something she shares with O'Neal, who has said he will become a sheriff or chief of police upon retiring from the NBA.

Griner's career arc on the basketball court may mirror the dominant big man's as well.