Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Soccer player to be punished for kicking owl

Luis Moreno, front, of Panama's Tauro fights for the ball with Randy Diamond of Honduras Marathon during their CONCACAF Champions League soccer match in San Pedro Sula in August 2010. ((Reuters))  

Soccer player to be punished for kicking owl

Panama defender Luis Moreno is facing sanctions after he kicked an injured owl that had landed on the field during a match between his Colombian club Deportivo Pereira and Atletico Junior.

The owl, which serves as a mascot for the Atletico Junior team and lives in the Bogota stadium, was being treated Monday at a local veterinary clinic in Barranquilla. The bird was expected to recover and had only a minor fracture to its right leg.

Fans of the Atletico Junior team shouted "murderer, murderer," after the incident on Sunday.

The owl had landed injured near the corner of the field and was struck by a pass between Deportivo players, causing the referee to halt the game. Moreno then walked over and kicked it a few metres to get the owl off the pitch.

He said he did not know the bird was a good-luck charm for the opposition.

"I want to apologize to the fans," Moreno told reporters after the match. "I was not trying to hurt the owl. I did it [kicked] to see if it would fly."

Pereira club president Francisco Javier Lopez said the player would be punished and he could also face sanctions from Colombian football's governing body.

"It made me very angry that he kicked the little animal," said Atletico Junior player Luia Paez, who scored one of the goals in Atletico's 2-1 victory.

"It was already injured by being struck by the ball. I said a bunch of awful things to him [Moreno]. I was really angry."

Animal welfare officials said no laws in Colombia exist against cruelty to animals.

U.S. basketball stars to visit Britain

LA Lakers star Kobe Bryant, center, was part of the gold medal-winning U.S. men's Olympic basketball team in 2008

U.S. basketball stars to visit Britain

CNN) -- America's bid to spread basketball's popularity will continue in the next two years, with Britain to stage men's NBA and women's WNBA pre-season matches along with Olympic build-up games for the U.S. international teams.

London has hosted NBA teams for the past few years, with this week's double-header between New Jersey Nets and Toronto Raptors the first during a regular season.

However, the focus will soon move north of the UK capital to Manchester.

The WNBA's Atlanta Dream will launch the series of matches later this year, when they face an as-yet-unknown opposition in an exhibition contest on May 29.

It will be only the second match outside of the U.S. in the WNBA's history, coming seven years after the first in Monterrey, Mexico.



Chelsea to select Cole despite shooting incident; Rooney escapes ban

Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti said the club took "proper action" against defender Ashley Cole.

Chelsea to select Cole despite shooting incident; Rooney escapes ban

(CNN) -- England soccer star Ashley Cole received the backing of his club manager on Monday in the wake of reports that the Chelsea player had shot a work-placement student with an air rifle.

British police are investigating a claim by Sunday paper News of the World that Cole wounded 21-year-old Tom Cowan at the English Premier League champions' training ground the previous weekend.

Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti, however, said that the 30-year-old would be selected for Tuesday's home clash with table-topping Manchester United.

"He always had very good behavior here. Now, we have to move on. Who didn't make a mistake in his life?" the Italian said in quotes reported by the UK Press Association.

 "He will play tomorrow, yes. Obviously, we are not happy with what happened. But I have spoken with him. He was very disappointed with this, and said sorry.

"It was an accident. We have taken proper action but tomorrow he will play."

Cowan, a sports sciences student, needed treatment from Chelsea's medical staff after being hit in the side by a pellet, PA reported.

Ancelotti said Cole had since apologized to Cowan, to his teammates and club officials.

Many employers would sack staff who took a weapon to their workplace, and Ancelotti admitted that Cole had made an error.

"The mistake was that the gun was here in Cobham. We didn't know the gun was here," he said.

Meanwhile, Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney has been cleared to play at Stamford Bridge after escaping punishment for his apparent elbow on Wigan's James McCarthy on Saturday.

Television replays showed that the England star clearly lashed out at McCarthy and caught the midfielder in the face as he ran by, but referee Mark Clattenburg awarded only a free-kick.

The English Football Association could have taken further action, but received no request to punish the 25-year-old from the referees' ruling body despite Wigan manager Roberto Martinez insisting Rooney should have been sent off.

"Mark took the correct course of action with this incident," Professional Game Match Officials general manager Mike Riley told PA on Monday.

"In this incident Mark was following play, but caught sight of two players coming together and he awarded a free-kick because he believed one player had impeded the other.

"We should be clear that Mark did nothing wrong in officiating this incident as he acted on what he saw on the pitch."

GAO Details Billions in Federal Waste

GAO Details Billions in Federal Waste 

As members of Congress fight over what to cut in the current federal budget to avert a government shutdown, lawmakers are about to receive a blockbuster report that could provide a roadmap to potentially hundreds of billions of dollars in waste. The nonpartisan General Accounting Office (GAO) is poised to release a report Tuesday that one senator said "will make us all look like jackasses."

"Go study that (report). It will show why we're $14 trillion in debt," said Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. "Anybody that says we don't look like fools up here hasn't read the report."

The report, a summary of which was obtained by Fox News, was mandated by Congress the last time it raised the debt limit in January 2010. In its analysis of federal agencies, the GAO found 33 areas with "overlap and fragmentation."

"Reducing or eliminating duplication, overlap, or fragmentation could potentially save billions of taxpayer dollars annually and help agencies provide more efficient and effective services," the report says. In one example, the report found that if the Defense Department were to make "broader restructuring" of its "military health care system" it "could result in annual savings of up to $460 million."

Even more scathing is the duplication investigators found in the nation's biodefense efforts, with the report essentially saying that the billions of dollars spent annually is the responsibility of no one individual and that there is no plan for post-attack coordination, this on the heels of a 2010 federal commission finding that gave the U.S. a "failing grade" in its prevention measures.

"There are now more than two dozen presidentially appointed individuals with some responsibility for biodefense. In addition, numerous federal agencies, encompassing much of the federal government, have some mission responsibilities for supporting biodefense activities. However, there is no individual or entity with responsibility, authority, and accountability for overseeing the entire biodefense enterprise," the report finds.

"There is no national plan to coordinate federal, state, and local efforts following a bioterror attack, and the United States lacks the technical and operational capabilities required for an adequate response," the report goes on. "Neither the Office of Management and Budget nor the federal agencies account for biodefense spending across the entire federal government." As a result, the federal government does not know how much is being spent on this critical national security priority."

The report touches agencies and programs across the federal government, from the Transportation Security Agency to homeless programs and domestic food assistance, and what emerges is a kind of bureaucratic morass where sometimes enough is not even known about federal programs to provide an accurate evaluation.

"We don't know what we're doing," Coburn chastised.

The Defense Department takes a number of hits in the report. The GAO found many instances of duplication in the sprawling agency. The use of "urgent need" funds have been expanded, GAO found, with "multiple places for a warfighter to submit" such requests. GAO found that the Pentagon has "no tracking mechanism" for these funds, resulting in an estimated $77 billion in overlap since 2005.

An analysis of 18 different programs across three federal agencies that deal with domestic food assistance found that though multiple programs can ensure the needy have access to food, "administrative costs increase significantly," with GAO estimating a $62.5 billion expense to the government from overlap and duplication. Better coordination of hazardous material assessments between TSA and the Department of Transportation could save the government more than $1 million.

"Congress is often to blame," the report reads in bold type for emphasis, as the report details $2.9 billion in overlap in 20 homeless programs spread throughout seven different agencies. "Fragmentation and overlap in some of these programs may be due in part to their legislative creation as separate programs under the jurisdiction of several agencies," the report finds.

"Little is known about the effectiveness of most (federal job training and employment) programs," GAO says, resulting in a possible $18 billion in savings. The report says there are 47 programs offered currently, but 44 of those "overlap with at least one other program."

Congress asked GAO to look specifically at "federal programs, agencies, offices, and initiatives with duplicative goals and activities, to estimate the cost of such duplication, and to make recommendations to Congress for consolidation and elimination of such duplication."

There are many other examples of potential waste found across the yawning federal bureaucracy, with GAO concluding, "Considering the amount of program dollars involved in the issues we have identified, even limited adjustments could result in significant savings."

Perhaps members looking to find billions in savings will not have as tough a job finding the money as they thought.



Pato's magic puts Milan five points clear

AC Milan goalscorers Alexandre Pato and Kevin-Prince Boateng celebrate the latter's strike against Napoli.

Pato's magic puts Milan five points clear

(CNN) -- AC Milan moved five points clear in Italy's Serie A after a 3-0 win at home to title rivals Napoli on Monday.

Massimiliano Allegri's team restored their advantage over defending champions Inter Milan, who won 2-0 at Sampdoria on Sunday with goals by Samuel Eto'o and Wesley Sneijder.

Napoli remained in third place, six points off the pace, after conceding a controversial penalty four minutes after halftime to go behind in front of 77,000 supporters at the San Siro.

Salvatore Aronica was ruled to have deliberately handled after the ball hit his raised arm in a decision that infuriated the visiting team.

Sweden striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic stepped up and buried a low shot into the corner for his 14th league goal this season, and Milan took the initiative.

Brazil striker Alexandre Pato laid on the second goal for substitute Kevin-Prince Boateng with 13 minutes to play.

The Ghana midfielder, who replaced Robinho just after an hour, arrived at the near post to flick Pato's well-judged low cross into the net.

And the 21-year-old sealed victory two minutes later on another counter-attack with a superb curling right-footed effort after Ibrahimovic's run created space for him to shoot.

Meanwhile, Palermo appointed Serse Cosmi as coach on Monday after sacking Delio Rossi following the previous day's home 7-0 thrashing by Udinese.

Former Brescia, Udinese and Genoa coach Cosmi has been out of work since being sacked by Livorno at the end of last season.

Rossi guided Palermo to fifth place last season after taking over in November 2009, but Sunday's defeat left the club in eighth -- seven points behind fifth-placed Udinese and 18 off top spot.

In England, West Bromwich Albion moved out of the Premier League's relegation zone on Monday after snatching a 1-1 draw at mid-table Stoke as substitute Carlos Vela scored for the second match in a row.

Stoke led when Rory Delap headed home Jermaine Pennant's corner eight minutes after halftime, but on-loan Mexico forward Vela found space to collect Steven Reid cross and fire past keeper Amir Begovic despite cries of offside from the home players.

The result left Stoke in 10th place, while West Brom moved a point above local rivals Wolves.

In Spain, Malaga moved off the bottom of the La Liga table with a 3-1 victory over nine-man Almeria that saw the Andalusian teams swap positions.

Sofiane Feghouli put Almeria ahead in the eighth minute, but substitute Enzo Maresca eight minutes after halftime and then Jose Ulloa received a second yellow card on 77.

Two minutes later Malaga went ahead through a header by Jose Rondon, and Antonio Luna was also booked a second time with a minute to play before Juanmi Jimenez scored in time added on.

Colder-than-normal spring in the forecast for Canada

George Carvalho clears snow in Toronto's financial district Wednesday, February 2, 2011. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese)


Colder-than-normal spring in the forecast for Canada

TORONTO — What do the groundhogs know anyway?

Ontario's Wiarton Willie, Nova Scotia's Shubenacadie Sam and Pennsylvania's Punxsutawney Phil all predicted an early spring.

But Environment Canada's spring forecast suggests the rascally rodents got it all wrong.

The agency is out with its spring forecast for March, April and May.

Last year, Canada had one of the earliest springs ever, noted senior climatologist David Phillips, but this year, the season will be "reluctant to arrive."

Canada has had a "fickle and fitful" winter with temperature swings that are typical in a La Nina year, he said, and there will likely be more of the same in the spring.

About three quarters of the country will be colder than normal for the next three months, according to Phillips.

"March is going to roar in like a lion in parts of the Maritimes where they're talking about heavy snowfall and blizzard kind of conditions," said Phillips.

"On the Prairies it's more like frozen mutton because they're going to see one of the coldest beginnings to March they've ever seen across that region," he said.

Temperatures will be 18 to 20 degrees colder than normal Tuesday and Wednesday on the Prairies, he said.

British Columbia, the Yukon, the Prairies, the Northwest Territories, most of Ontario, and a good chunk of Nunavut will see colder temperatures during spring.

"We've done a lot of plowing and shovelling and pushing in some areas of Canada and it looks like they're going to continue that," said Phillips.

Eastern Nunavut, most of Newfoundland and eastern Nova Scotia will enjoy a warmer than normal spring.

Western Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Labrador, southern Quebec and eastern Ontario will have near normal temperatures, he said.

Southern B.C., most of Ontario, Quebec, Atlantic Canada and Nunavut will see a wetter than normal spring while precipitation will be near normal in northern Ontario and most of the Prairies.

But at least Canadians have something to put themselves in a sunny mood.

Residents in the southern half of the country are gaining about four minutes a day more daylight driving to work or heading to school, he said.

"This is the time of the year where the day length just gallops from one day to the next," said Phillips.

"That really lifts our spirit. Even though nature doesn't want to give us the spring that we think that we deserve, we see it in the daylight and that can be uplifting," he said.

German defence minister Guttenberg resigns

Mr Guttenberg said he had reached the limits of his strength

German defence minister Guttenberg resigns

German Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg has stepped down after he was found to have copied large parts of his university doctorate.

Mr Guttenberg, considered until recently a possible candidate for chancellor, has already been stripped of his PhD.

He told a news conference that it was "the most painful step of my life".

More than 20,000 German academics wrote to Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday complaining he was still in his job.

But Ms Merkel had continued to stand by him, with her party facing three state elections later this month.

Mr Guttenberg told reporters in Berlin that he was relinquishing all his political offices and he thanked the chancellor for her support, trust and understanding.


"I must agree with my enemies who say that I was not appointed minister for self-defence, but defence minister," he said.

"I was always ready to fight, but have to admit I have reached the limit of my strength."

A 39-year-old aristocrat popular with the electorate, Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg is a member of the Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party of the chancellor's Christian Democrats.

He came under pressure after a Bremen University law professor began reviewing his 2006 thesis with the aid of the internet.

Reports emerged of a passage from a newspaper article that featured word for word, and then of a paragraph from the US embassy website being used without attribution.

Analysts then estimated that more than half the 475-page thesis had long sections lifted from other people's work.

Eventually the University of Bayreuth that had awarded him a doctorate decided that Mr Guttenberg had "violated scientific duties to a considerable extent".

He had already prompted opposition criticism in December for taking his TV presenter wife on a visit to German troops in Afghanistan complete with a large corps of press photographers.

The plagiarism scandal led to him being nicknamed Baron Cut-and-Paste, Zu Copyberg and Zu Googleberg by the German media.