четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Texas gov gives killer reprieve from execution

HUNTSVILLE, Texas -- Gov. Rick Perry blocked the execution of awoman two hours before she was to go to her death Wednesday so herlawyers can conduct new tests on evidence in the 17-year-old murdercase.

Frances Newton, 39, was convicted of killing her husband and twoyoung children. She would have been the first black woman and thefourth woman put to death in Texas since the Civil War. She deniedany involvement in the slayings.

The governor granted her a four-month reprieve a day after theTexas parole board, in a rare step, recommended it.

"I see no evidence of …

Ald. Thomas lays out five-year economic plan for ward

Ald. Thomas lays out five-year economic plan for ward

Easily sliding into the shoes of her political mentor, former Ald. Terry Peterson (17th), Ald. Latasha R. Thomas (17th) has vowed to carry that mantle to even greater heights, until her ward gets its fair share of economic development.

An attorney, Thomas, 35, graduated from the DePaul School of Law in 1990 and opened her own Loop law office in 1994 where she practiced commercial litigation in real estate, that is, until she met Peterson who immersed her into Chicago politics.

Thomas, who like Ald. Emma Mitts (37th) is running in the Feb. 27 special aldermanic election, has racked up quite a record since she was …

Jellies maker Smucker closes Folgers coffee deal

Jelly and jams maker J.M. Smucker Co. has completed its $3 billion deal to buy Folgers coffee from Procter & Gamble Co.

The previously announced deal closed on Thursday and nearly doubles the size of Smucker. Smucker expects to add 150 to 200 jobs in the next year to its headquarters staff of 1,300 in Orrville in northeast …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Moving in, with money

For the millions of Americans who move themselves, and their money,to new homes every year, the saying "you can't take it with you" cantake on a whole new meaning. Delays in transferring bank accountscan mean problems cashing checks and a shortage of cash.

Newly-arrived immigrants may get caught in the "float" period -the time between the date their new account is opened and the datemoney can be withdrawn.

Bank float, whether necessary or not, is avoidable, according toCitibank U.S.A., a division of the New York-based Citicorp bank. Itoffers …

It's the curse

Floods in Ohio, floods in Minnesota, forest fires on the WestCoast, Illinois gets hit with one of the worst storms in years.Water, water, …

Libyan rebels close on key Gadhafi stronghold

RAS LANOUF, Libya (AP) — Libya's rebel forces closed in Monday on Moammar Gadhafi's hometown of Sirte, the gateway to the western half of the country after it was targeted for the first time by international air strikes.

Witnesses in Sirte said that bombing was heard Sunday night and then again 6:30 a.m. local time, but there was no fighting in the streets or signs of rebel forces. The night before dozens of fighters loyal to Gadhafi could be seen roaming the streets.

The Libyan state news agency also reported that there had been air strikes against the southern town of Sabha, which remains strongly loyal to Gadhafi and is a major transit point for ethnic Tuareg fighters from …

MacDonald to equal US test caps record in Tokyo

TOKYO (AP) — Loosehead prop Mike MacDonald will equal the United States test caps record when the Eagles play Japan in Tokyo in their last match before the Rugby World Cup on Sunday.

Britain-based MacDonald's 62nd appearance will tie the record of former teammate Luke Gross, who retired after the 2003 World Cup.

James Paterson, the Otago Highlanders winger, will make his U.S. senior debut. The New Zealand-born Paterson played for the U.S. at under-19 level. Uncapped Utah loose …

The Strength of the Nation

Our Nation has been at war for more than six years following the September 11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

Our Army has been a leader in this war and in the liberation of 50 million people from tyranny and oppression. It has also been fully engaged in the difficult process of consolidating success by providing security and assistance in developing local security forces and governance capacity. Over time, these operations have expanded in scope and duration to stretch and, as a result, stress our all-volunteer force.

As we look to the future, national security experts are virtually unanimous in predicting that the next several decades will be ones of …

Probe Into Call Girl Ring Started at IRS

The federal investigation into a high-end prostitution ring linked to Gov. Eliot Spitzer apparently began last year as a financial probe by the Internal Revenue Service.

The investigation into the Emperors Club VIP gathered more than 5,000 telephone calls and text messages, and more than 6,000 e-mails, along with bank records, travel and hotel records and surveillance.

But it was unclear whether Spitzer was a target from the start or whether agents came across his name by accident while amassing evidence.

Conversations were recorded about someone identified as "Client 9," including that a prostitute identified as "Kristen" should …

Bet they'd just love a nice cold shower

Don Scribner, a New Lenox reader, writes:

"Has it occurred to you that the Sept. 11 terrorists, even if theypaced themselves and deflowered only one brown-eyed virgin everyother day, would have gone through the last of their 72 virgins onFeb. 2?"

No. And thanks for the day brightener.

Gotta hang it on somebody

The Not Me Decade, in which everybody else is responsible foreverything, continues:

A murder suspect hanged herself in a Florida jail and left asuicide note asking her lawyer to sue the jail for failing to preventher from hanging herself.

Do-it-yourself

Fourteen days remain until National Volunteer Week.

No one told QT to …

Obispo Asesinado Dejó un Mensaje Contra la Violencia

BOGOTA. -- El asesinado arzobispo de la ciudad colombiana de Cali, monse�or Isa�as Duarte, denunci� la violencia y la injusticia social imperantes en el pa�s en un mensaje pastoral de Viernes Santo que grab� poco antes de morir y en el que explic� las palabras de Jes�s en la cruz: "Dios m�o, Dios m�o, �por qu� me has abandonado?"

"El mejor en la humanidad es el que se sacrifica por los dem�s; los peores en la humanidad son los que sacrifican a los dem�s", clam� el prelado en el documento que el obispo de la andina localidad de Chiquinquir�, monse-�or H�ctor Guti�rrez, y los comentaristas religiosos locales calificaron de prof�tico.

Monse�or Duarte fue atacado el 16 de …

Malaysia's ex-communist leader in coma in Thailand

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Malaysia's most well-known former communist guerrilla, who has lived in exile for five decades after leading a bloody insurgency against British rule, is in a coma at a Thai hospital, a person close to his family said Saturday.

Relatives of 86-year-old Chin Peng have been visiting him in Bangkok since he was hospitalized last month, the person said on condition of anonymity because he was not at liberty to comment on behalf of the family.

They fear "he is on his deathbed," the person told The Associated Press.

Chin Peng, an ethnic Chinese whose real name is Ong Boon Hua, lost a legal struggle in recent years to be allowed back into Malaysia. …

Schembechler's proves he's boor

It was after Michigan's Rose Bowl loss to Southern Cal lastJanuary that I wrote the Bo Schembechler of the last few years wasn'tnearly as much of a bully and a blowhard and a boor as he had beenfor the majority of his coaching career.

I was wrong. Schembechler is as much of a bully and a blowhardand a boor as he's ever been. Probably more so.

My eyes were reopened by a couple of recent events, one of whichinvolved a woman sportswriter from the Detroit Free Press, andanother involving a final chapter Schembechler added to the paperbackversion of "Bo," his 1989 autobiography.

In that last chapter, Schembechler not only implied that the RoseBowl officials were out to get him, but that Big Ten Commissioner JimDelany was pleased that the Wolverines lost 17-10.

Schembechler also discusses a phone call between Delany and GeneCalhoun, the former Big Ten supervisor of football officials.Schembechler claims that was an attempt by Delany to prejudice theofficials before Michigan played Illinois last November.

Never mind how absurd that sounds. In Schembechler's narrowmind, Delany was out to get him. Why? Because Delany reportedlyasked Calhoun to make sure that a couple of Illinois players who'dbeen involved in a fracas the week before at Iowa be watched, andthat Schembechler behave himself on the sideline.

"What did I ever do to Jim Delany?" Schembechler wrote. "Ihonestly believe that he was just as happy that Michigan lost thatRose Bowl. Our own commissioner.

"Go ahead, accuse me of whining. I know the truth. As far asI'm concerned, that phone call to Calhoun prior to the Illinois gamewas an attempt to prejudice the officials in a key game. This Delanyis bad news and people should know it."

Schembechler insisted that the Rose Bowl officials "were out toget something" because of the fourth-quarter holding call againstBobby Abrams made by Pacific 10 official Charles Czubin.

First of all, the zebras didn't have a thing do with the factthat USC marched 75 yards for the winning touchdown while convertingthree clutch third downs.

Second, I'll bet if he thought about it, Schembechler, who wasn'thalf the coach he thought he was, could undoubtedly find an excusefor his seven other Rose Bowl defeats.

Third, if Delany did indeed want Schembechler to stop intimidatingofficials, as he did throughout his years in Ann Arbor, he's to becommended, not chastized.

As for Calhoun, who backs Schembechler 100 percent, anything hesays shouldn't be taken seriously.

Not only was he fired by the Big Ten, he wasn't particularlypopular with conference officials before Delany even arrived.

But Schembechler outdid himself in the incident with JenniferFrey, a Free Press intern.

It began when Frey approached Tigers pitcher Jack Morris, who'dmake most everybody's list as one of the five biggest boneheads insports, to ask for a comment on the latest ruling regarding baseballcollusion.

Morris, who was wearing sliding shorts, said, "I don't talk topeople when I'm naked, especially women, unless they're on top of meor I'm on top of them."

After receiving a letter from Free Press publisher Neal Shinecomplaining about Morris, Schembechler, the Tigers president, wroteback that Morris' behavior was "out of line but predictable" because"your intern watched men from 20 to 65 years of age undress and dressfor more than half an hour without asking any questions."

Schembechler added, "Your sports editor's lack of common sensein sending a female college intern in a men's clubhouse caused theproblem. I really wouldn't doubt that the whole thing was a scamorchestrated by you people to create a story."

Frey said she was waiting for catcher Mike Heath, who had failedto show for a pre-game interview. She decided to talk to Morris.

Not that any of it matters to Bo the Caveman, who in the span ofa few days proved himself utterly paranoid and completelyinsensitive. That's the real book on Schembechler.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Honolulu primary hinges on rail system issue

A fight over whether to build a rail line along Honolulu's traffic-clogged oceanside corridor is the dominant topic in Saturday's mayoral vote, with opposition candidates pledging to stop the project in its tracks.

Mayor Mufi Hannemann was once considered a sure bet for outright re-election, but contenders emerged to give a voice to those who believe a steel-rail commuter train would be an eyesore for these tropical isles that attract 7 million tourists a year _ six times the permanent population.

The first-term mayor wants to build the $5 billion, 20-mile rail line to relieve pressure on the only highway from the suburbs to the city, which would give commuters an alternative to an increasingly crowded island bus system.

"We're at a crossroads. People are tired of being stuck in traffic. They're tired of studies and they want action," Hannemann said. "People in Honolulu for the first time will be able to get up in the morning, and it won't just be a choice between car and bus."

His opponents in the nonpartisan race, Councilwoman Ann Kobayashi and University of Hawaii professor Panos Prevedouros, think a rail system would be too ugly, too expensive and won't reduce traffic.

"I'm for whatever, as long as it's not steel on steel," Kobayashi said. "It just doesn't fit our island. Visually, it's going to ruin our city." One proposal calls for more rubber-tire buses, possibly on a new fixed guideway.

Prevedouros is new to politics, drawing on his civil engineering background to argue for a three-lane, 12-mile elevated toll road with reversible lanes _ combined with six underpasses _ at a cost of less than $2 billion.

"I'm addressing the 90 percent of people who time and again choose a car-based mode of transportation," he said. "We're making so many mistakes. We need somebody who will stop the mistakes and make progress."

The mayor, who governs all of Oahu with a city council, is trying to win the race outright Saturday, which he would do if he receives more than 50 percent of the votes among nine candidates. If no candidate receives a majority, the top two vote-getters would face off in the November general election.

One candidate even changed her name so that "J Stop-Rail-Transit Maly" would appear on the ballot. She's a retired University of Hawaii professor formerly known as Jacquie Maly.

A runoff in the mayor's race could imperil the project. Hannemann himself won a runoff in 2004 after trailing in the primary.

Kobayashi, Prevedouros and organized rail opponents question whether the rail system will do much to reduce commutes of more than an hour or more for many residents who often start their trips before dawn.

But proponents say Oahu motorists need transportation options so they can avoid the island's narrow urban sprawl. Oahu has about 900,000 residents, plus another 100,000 or so tourists each day.

A single accident can tie up island-wide traffic for hours. Similar bottlenecks occur on other islands' urban centers, where smaller populations couldn't support mass transit.

Hannemann boasts a high approval rating and has raised far more money than the other candidates, but the anti-rail movement is driven by a sentiment that his administration is inefficient and catering to unions, which would benefit from a long, costly public works project.

The city's rail experts predict the commuter train would reduce estimated traffic in 2030 by 11 percent compared to what it would be like if the rail isn't built. The idea for the elevated, reversible toll lanes would trim traffic in 2030 by just 0.6 percent, according to the city's analysis.

___

On the Net:

Mufi Hannemann: http://www.votemufi.com/

Ann Kobayashi: http://www.kobayashiformayor.com/

Panos Prevedouros: http://www.panosforprogress.com/

AP Interview: Syrian activist's son urges protest

SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq (AP) — The son of an assassinated Kurdish opposition leader in Syria said Sunday that his father's death would encourage more Kurds to protest against the regime there.

Faris Tammo called on Syrian Kurdish groups to take a more active role in the country's nearly 7-month-old uprising against President Bashar Assad.

"The killing of my father will encourage the Syrian Kurds to demand their freedom and rights," said Tammo. He spoke to The Associated Press in a telephone interview Sunday from the northern Iraqi city of Irbil.

His father, Mashaal Tammo, a charismatic Kurdish opposition figure, was assassinated last week by masked men who burst into his apartment and shot him.

More than 50,000 mourners marched through Qamishili, the capital of Syria's Kurdish heartland, in a funeral procession for the assassinated Kurdish leader. The outpouring marked the largest turnout in the Kurdish northeast since the start of the uprising against Assad's autocratic regime.

Kurds have taken part in peaceful demonstrations, but Tammo's killing could spark a wider, more aggressive uprising by the country's Kurdish minority similar to the rebellion seen in other Syrian cities. Kurds make up 15 percent of Syria's 23 million people and have long complained of discrimination.

Tammo has been living in Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region since fleeing Syria in 2008, when his father was arrested. He said he had expected that his father would die "sooner or later" at the hands of Syrian security forces.

The Syrian government has denied any involvement in the activist's death. On Sunday, Syria's Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem described Tammo as a martyr and blamed terrorists for his death, saying the Kurdish leader stood against any foreign intervention in Syria.

Tammo said his father's death will encourage Kurds to intensify their anti-government activities in the future.

"I hope that the death of my father will encourage the Kurdish parties to join ranks and take more practical steps to support the revolution in Syria. Our message is that the revolution should continue with or without Mashaal. ... The struggle will continue until the dictatorship is removed in Syria," he said.

Tammo said he would not return to Syria unless the leadership changes.

In April, Assad said he would grant citizenship to stateless Kurds in eastern Syria in an attempt to address some of their grievances in the face of the swelling anti-government uprising that began the month before. However, although citizenship has been given to thousands of Kurds, many are still stateless and the promise of citizenship has not quelled all of their complaints.

___

Associated Press writer Sameer N. Yacoub contributed to this report from Baghdad.

Spring Training

Sunday's Exhibition Linescores

At Kissimmee, Fla.

New York (A) 000 302 020 3-10 13 2

Houston 200 030 002 5-12 13 1

Pettitte, Knight (3), Borrell (5), Karsay (6), Lovingier (8),Bradley (10) and Widger, Greene (7). Oswalt, McElroy, Munro, Wagner,Linebrink, Franklin, Puffer, Jacome and Ausmus, Tremie (7). W-Jacome1-0. L-Bradley 0-1. HRs-New York, Vander Wal (1), Widger (1).Houston, Hidalgo (1), Ginter (2), Charles (1).

Keith Ginter hit a grand slam with two outs in the bottom of the10th inning to give Houston the victory. The Yankees led 7-5 goinginto the bottom of the ninth, but Frank Charles' two-run homer sentthe game into extra innings.

At Bradenton, Fla.

Kansas City 200 100 102 -6 11 3

Pittsburgh 200 000 020 -4 9 3

George, Laxton (3), Henry (4), Affeldt (5), Fussell (7), Cogan(8), Suzuki (9) and Hinch, Brito (7); Lowe, Fogg (4), Boehringer (7),Burnside (8), Olson (9) and Kendall, Cota (6), Pachot (9). W-Cogan. L-Olson. Sv-Suzuki.

Donnie Sadler went 2-for-3 with a double and triple and scoredthree runs for Kansas City. Jeremy Affeldt struck out five in twoinnings of relief for the Royals. Kevin Young doubled and drove intwo runs for Pittsburgh.

At Kissimmee, Fla.

Tampa Bay 000 000 020 1-3 10 1

Atlanta 000 001 100 0-2 12 2

Kennedy, Phelps (3), James (4), Zambrano (6), Galvez (7), Seay(8), Chantres (10) and Fasano, Brown; Glavine, Hodges (3), Foster(5), Spoonybargr (7), Remlinger (8), Ligtenberg (9), Sylvester (10)and Lopez, Norris. W-Seay, 1-0. L-Sylvester, 0-1. Sv-Chantres (1). HR-Helms (1).

Aubrey Huff had two hits and two RBI to lead Tampa Bay. JoeKennedy started for the Devil Rays and pitched two innings of hitlessball. Wes Helms homered for the Braves.

At Kissimmee, Fla.

St. Louis 000 000 010 - 1 6 4

Montreal 417 000 00x -12 15 1

Ankiel, Veres (3), Timlin (3), Stechschulte (4), Sheredy (6),Crudale (8) and Matheny, Difelice (5). Vazquez, Cubillan (4), Blank(5), Ferrari (7), Bridges (8), Davenport (9) and Barrett,Andreopoulos (6). W-Vazquez. L-Ankiel. HR-Montreal, Stevens (1).

Lee Stevens homered and drove in six runs to lead Montreal.Starter Javier Vazquez allowed a hit in three scoreless innings forthe Expos. Placido Polanco had two hits for the Cardinals.

At Sarasota, Fla.

Boston 000 000 040 -4 2 1

Cincinnati 002 000 012 -5 6 2

Hermanson, Henry (4), Drumwright (6), Hasselhoff (8) andMirabelli, Mercedes (6); Dessens, Graves (4), White (7), Sullivan(8), Brower (9) and Stinnett, Levis (4). W-Brower. L-Hasselhoff. HR-Rodriguez (1).

Tony Sanders hit a ninth inning double to tie the score and JesseLevis then hit a run-scoring single to drive in Sanders for the win.Luis Rodriguez hit a grand-slam for the Red Sox in the eight inning.

At Lakeland, Fla.

Cleveland 500 012 010 -9 12 2

Detroit 0(10)1 110 01x -14 13 1

Traber, Smith (2), Stanford (4), Rincon (5), Herrera (6), Wohlers(7), Shuey (8) and Diaz, Bard (4). Greisinger, Farnsworth (2),Henriquez (4), Miller (5), Acevedo (6), Santana (8), Anderson (9) andCardona, Inge (6). W-Farnsworth. L-Traber. HRs-Cleveland, Burks (1).Detroit, Young (2), Palmer 2 (2).

Designated hitter Dean Palmer belted his first two homers of thespring, while first baseman Dmitri Young added his second for theTigers. Jeff Farnsworth pitched two scoreless innings to earn thewin. Ellis Burks went 2-for-4 with a homer and three RBI for theIndians.

At Port St. Lucie, Fla.

Baltimore 100 130 000 -5 9 2

New York (N) 110 100 04x -7 10 0

Erickson, Maduro (4), Spurgeon (7), Riley (8) and Fordyce, Molina(7). Trachsel, Weathers (3), Frascatore (4), Heilman (5), Cerda (6),Cammack (7), Bacsik (8), PWalker (9) and Wilson, Kay (7), Huber (9).W-Bacsik. L-Riley. Sv-PWalker. HR-Gibbons.

Britt Kay hit a tie-breaking, two-run double and Tony Tarasco hita sacrifice fly in the eighth inning for New York. David Segui went 2-for-3 with two RBI.

At Dunedin, Fla.

Philadelphia 000 112 000 -4 10 1

Toronto 000 030 000 -3 10 1

Wolf, Mesa (4), Politte (5), Schourek (7), Silva (8) and Pratt,Estrada (4), Van Iten (9). Carpenter, Borbon (3), Escobar (4), Plesac(4), Chacin (5), Miller (7), Orloski (9) and Wilson, Huckaby (6). W-Politte (1-0). L-Chacin (0-1). Sv-Silva (1). HR-Toronto, Wells (1).

Centerfielder Reggie Taylor's RBI single in the sixth drove homeRicky Ledee with the eventual game-winner for the Phillies. RandyWolf pitched three scoreless innings in the victory. Vernon Wellsdrilled a three-run homer for the Blue Jays.

At Fort Myers, Fla

Texas 801 020 702 -20 25 3

Minnesota 012 030 011 - 8 15 3

Irabu, Zimmerman (3), Seanez (4), Miceli (5), Van Poppel (6),Powell (7), Telford (8), Cordero (9) and Borders, King (6); Radke,Kinney (1), Hawkins (5), Cressend (7), Balfour (8) and Prince,Valentin (5), Mauer (7). W-Irabu, 1-0. L-Radke, 1-1. HRs-Minnesota,Ortiz 2 (2).

Frank Catalanotto led Texas' 25-hit attack with three hits and twoRBI. Chris Magruder also added three hits for the Rangers. DavidOrtiz homered and had five RBI for Minnesota.

At Maryvale, Ariz.

Colorado 000 300 000 -3 8 0

Milwaukee 400 010 00x -5 6 0

Chacon, Stark (1), Reyes (4), Kibler (5), Belltz (6), Whiteside(7), Young (8) and CHernandez, Bennett. Sheets, Fox (4), Nomura (4),Buddie (6), Martinez (7), Stull (8), Marquez (9) and Casanova, Jenzen(7). W-Sheets. L-Chacon. S-Marquez. HRs-Colorado, Zeile (1), Norton(1). Milwaukee, Ochoa (1).

Alex Ochoa homered and drove in three runs and started Ben Sheetsstruck out four in three scoreless innings for Milwaukee. Greg Nortonand Todd Zeile each homered for the Rockies.

At Vero Beach, Fla.

Florida 010 001 033 -8 14 0

Los Angeles 113 001 03x -9 14 3

Penny, Grilli (3), Olsen (4), Knotts (5), V. Nunez (6), Baez (7),Edmondson (8) and Castro, Treanor (6). Nomo, Bones (4), Roque (6),Spencer (7), J. Williams (8), Mota (8) and LoDuca, Hill (6). W-Nomo(1-0). L-Penny (0-1). Sv-Mota (1). HR-Los Angeles, Bichette (1).

Rightfielder Dante Bichette went 2-for-3 with a homer and two RBIfor the Dodgers. Hideo Nomo pitched three strong innings to earn hisfirst win of the spring. Non-roster invitee Brian Banks went 2-for-3with two RBI for the Marlins.

At Tempe, Ariz.

Oakland 000 502 004 -11 20 0

Anaheim 000 000 010 - 1 7 1

Mulder, Hiljus (3), Koch (5), Venafro (6), Vizcaino (7), McClaskey(8), Miller (9) and Hernandez, Hatteberg (6). Wise, Weber (3), Nina(4), McNichol (4), Lackey (6), Callaway (7), Kelley (9) and B.Molina, J. Molina (6), Abruzzo (9). W-Hiljus (1-0). L-Nina (0-1).

Leftfielder Eric Byrnes went 2-for-5 with a double and four RBI,while pitcher Mark Mulder combined with six Athletic relievers toseven-hit the Angels. Matt Wise pitched two shutout innings for theAngels.

At Tuscon, Ariz.

Arizona 023 000 000 -5 7 3

Chicago (A) 003 210 10x -7 10 0

Morgan, Johnson (3), Knott (3), Sanchez (5), Randolph (6),Valverde (8) and Miller, Cresse (4); Ritchie, Almonte (3), Howry (5),Majewski (7), Guerrier (9) and Paul, Evans (7). W-Howry, 1-0. L-Sanchez, 0-1. Sv-Guerrier (1).

Jose Valentin and Frank Thomas each had two RBI for Chicago. WhiteSox pitcher Edwin Almonte struck out three in 1 1-3 innings of work.Arizona's Mark Grace went 2-for-2.

At Scottsdale, Ariz.

Chicago (N) 103 020 210 -9 9 0

San Francisco 000 001 000 -1 7 1

Wood, Tavarez (3), Prior (5), Cueto (7), Borowski (8), Fassero (9)and Girardi, Jorgensen (5). Jensen, Anderson (3), Nathan (4),Estrella (6), Fultz (7), Rodriguez (8), Riguiero (9) and Servais,Torrealba (5).

Hee Seop Choi doubled and and had three RBI and Roosevelt Brownwent 3-for-3 and scored four runs for Chicago. Edwards Guzman had twohits for the Giants.

At Peoria, Ariz.

San Diego 011 003 016 -12 14 1

Seattle 000 000 000 - 0 2 1

Tollberg, Bartosh (3), Shibilo (5), Hoffman (7), Reed (8), Embree(9) and Lampkin, Walbeck (6); Abbott, Nelson (3), Thornton (4),Cloude (6), Jarvis (7), Taylor (9) and Wilson, Maynard (7). W-Tollberg. L-Abbott. HRs-Morgan 1, Vazquez 1.

Ramon Vazquez and Scott Morgan each homered for the Padres .

hile San Diego's pitching staff limited Seattle to only two hitson the afternoon. Bubba Tramell had three hits including two doubles.Ichiro Suzuki had the Mariners only two hits.

Suburb Man Charged in Huge Tax Scheme

His grandfather and namesake was a Chicago visionary, butprosecutors alleged Tuesday that Charles H. Wacker III is afar-sighted cheat who concocted a network of dummy corporations toevade more than $5 million in taxes.

In what U.S. Attorney Michael J. Shepard called the largestestate and tax fraud case ever filed in northern Illinois, Wacker wascharged in a 16-count indictment accusing him of wire fraud, filingfalse tax returns and trying to impede an Internal Revenue Serviceinvestigation.

The indictment, voted by a grand jury on July 13 but not madepublic until Tuesday, accuses Wacker of setting up dummy corporationsin Panama and Hong Kong and bank accounts in Britain and Switzerland- all managed by a foundation created in Liechtenstein.

They were used to hide assets that included the family's 16-acreLake Bluff compound, other real estate holdings, thoroughbred racehorses, cash and income, according to the indictment.

The charges carry a maximum sentence of 70 years in prison andfines of $2 million, according to the U.S. attorney's office.

Wacker's whereabouts are unknown, and his attorney, WilliamHundley of Washington, D.C., could not be reached for comment.

However, his brother, Frederick G. Wacker Jr., 75, of LakeBluff, said he was at loss to explain the allegation. "It breaks myheart to hear what's happening to the reputation our grandfather andfather worked so hard to earn," he said.

Charles Wacker III is the grandson of turn-of-the-centurybusiness and civic leader Charles H. Wacker, who took the rundownSouth Water Street of the early 1900s and turned it into thedouble-decked esplanade that now bears his name.

Wacker, who chaired the Chicago Plan Commission from 1909 to1927, pushed Daniel Burnham's "Chicago Plan," which laid out theblueprint for much of the system of lakefront parks, railways,highways and museums that honeycomb Chicago today.

The indictments against Wacker paint a picture of a manpossessed by personal gain.

In 1981, according to the charges, Wacker allegedly created acorporation called Imatra Research Limited, in which his motherinvested $400,000. It was supposed to do research in batteries.Instead, Wacker diverted the money to his personal accounts,according to the indictment.

Wacker, who had homes in Lake Bluff, Malibu, Calif., Oregon andLondon, also is charged with listing the residences as horse breedingproperties and illegally deducting them as business expenses.

Between 1981-86, the indictment claims Wacker owed $1.95 millionin income taxes and paid only $48,860.

Low Risk to Humans Seen in Animal Feed

WASHINGTON - Consumers face little risk from eating pork, chicken and eggs from farm animals that ate feed mixed with pet food scraps contaminated by an industrial chemical, government scientists said Monday.

Mixing in material contaminated at low levels diluted it such that humans who eat the animals won't be harmed, the scientists said.

The government also recommended lifting holds placed on some pigs and chickens after their feed tested negative for the chemical, melamine, and related compounds. Those animals may be slaughtered and enter the food supply, the Agriculture Department and Food and Drug Administration said.

Other animals, including some that ate feed that has tested positive for contamination, are likely to be held for another week pending completion of an assessment of the overall risk of the chemicals to animal health.

Melamine, used to make plastics, and the related compounds contaminated pet food that either sickened or killed an unknown number of dogs and cats. Scraps left over from the manufacture of that dog and cat food was sold for use in animal feed before the pet food was known to be tainted and recalled from store shelves.

Holds were placed on hogs and poultry while officials studied the extent of the problem as well as its potential risk to both human and animal health.

Since the pet food scraps made up only a small amount of the rations fed the farm animals, they appear to have been exposed to smaller amounts of melamine than was the case with cats and dogs, officials said. Even pigs and chickens known to have eaten contaminated feed appear to be healthy, the USDA and FDA said.

For people who ate large amounts of contaminated pork, chicken and eggs, they likely would be exposed to contamination at levels 18,000 to 30,000 times lower than that considered safe.

Even under the most extreme scenario, the potential human exposure to melamine was well below any level of public health concern, the USDA and FDA said. In that worst-case scenario, government scientists assumed all the solid food a person ate in a day was contaminated with melamine at levels seen in animals fed contaminated feed; that potential exposure was still about 2,500 times lower than the dose considered safe.

Since March 16, more than 100 brands of pet food have been recalled because they were contaminated with melamine.

Recession risks up amid slow growth, debt standoff

WASHINGTON (AP) — The economy is at risk of slipping into another recession.

It nearly stalled in the first six months of the year, the government reported Friday. Economic growth was feeble in the second quarter and practically non-existent in the first.

The new picture of an economy far weaker than most analysts had expected suddenly made a second recession a more serious threat — and the threat will rise if Congress can't reach a deal to raise the government's debt limit.

"The only question now is, how much weaker could things get?" says Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight.

In April, May and June, the economy grew at a 1.3 percent annual rate, below expectations. And the government changed its growth figure for January, February and March to 0.4 percent, far below the previous estimate of 1.9 percent.

Combined, the first half of the year amounts to the worst six-month performance since the Great Recession officially ended in June 2009.

Over the past year, the gross domestic product — the total output of goods and services in the United States, and the broadest measure of the economy's health — recorded actual growth of 1.6 percent.

Since 1950, year-to-year growth has dipped below 2 percent 12 times. Ten of those times, the economy was already in recession or soon fell into one, says Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities.

Normal economic growth is closer to 3 percent.

High gasoline prices leave people with less money to spend on other goods and services. And not all spending on gas contributes to the U.S. economy because some of the money goes to oil-producing countries. GDP figures are also inflation-adjusted, so spending $1 more for a gallon doesn't mean $1 of additional help to the economy.

Manufacturing disruptions from the Japan earthquake, cuts in state and local government and tighter household budgets have weighed down the economy, too.

Add to those problems the uncertainty fanned by the political stalemate in Washington, with Republicans refusing to raise the federal government's $14.3 trillion borrowing limit unless Democrats agree to deep federal spending cuts on the GOP's terms.

Without an agreement, the Treasury Department says, the government won't have enough money to pay all its bills after Tuesday. It will have to cut spending by about 40 percent and choose which programs and beneficiaries receive money and which don't.

The dismal second-quarter report led economists to reduce their estimates for growth in the second half of the year. Capital Economics, which had expected the economy to grow 2.5 percent this year, now says 2 percent looks more likely.

Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors says he's waiting until the debt-limit deadline passes to revise his economic forecasts for the rest of 2011. He knows he'll scale back his estimates. He just doesn't know how much.

If a deal isn't reached for another month, Naroff estimates there's an 80 to 90 percent chance that the spending cuts would tip the economy into recession. Even if there is a deal, it would likely trigger significant spending cuts that would slow growth, at least in the short run.

"You kick the federal government, and the economy is going to be doubled over in pain," Naroff says.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and other economists have warned Congress against cutting too much too soon because the economy remains so fragile.

The economy needs to expand so it can create jobs for a growing population. It must grow at a 2.5 percent annual rate to keep the unemployment rate from rising and at a 5 percent rate to bring unemployment down significantly.

In a Twitter message, economist Justin Wolfers of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School said he thinks there's a 40 percent chance the economy has already been in a recession for the past four months.

Normally, when the economy is this weak, the government spends more and the Federal Reserve aggressively tries to stimulate growth. But President Barack Obama's $862 billion stimulus package of spending programs and tax cuts ran out last year — and won't be revived by a Congress focused on cutting government debt.

And the Federal Reserve last month ended a $600 billion bond-buying program designed to jolt the economy by lowering long-term interest rates and lifting stock prices.

The Fed is keeping short-term interest rates near zero, and Bernanke this month said the Fed is prepared to do more if the economy remains weak. But the central bank has been more worried recently about a resurgence of inflation.

The private sector hasn't picked up the slack. The housing industry, which usually drives economic recoveries, is still depressed after home prices started tumbling in 2006 and 2007.

Americans are still carrying heavy debts, and what little gains they've made in wages have been eaten up by higher gas and food prices. Businesses, getting more work out of staffs downsized during the recession, are reluctant to hire until they're sure their sales will pick up.

"What business is going to hire into the unknown?" Naroff says.

Hamels works 7 scoreless as Phils top Brewers 1-0

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Cole Hamels dominated over seven innings and the Philadelphia Phillies capitalized on a Milwaukee miscue to score the only run they would need in a 1-0 victory over the Brewers on Friday night.

Hamels (9-10) continued to receive little run support, but didn't need much as he breezed to his second straight win and ran his consecutive scoreless innings streak to 18. He allowed three hits and struck out seven.

Hamels was coming off another sparkling effort on Aug. 29 in his hometown of San Diego, when he allowed four hits in eight scoreless innings. Before that, the left-hander had gone 0-3 with five no-decisions in his previous eight outings.

A Milwaukee miscommunication led to the game's only run. Center fielder Lorenzo Cain and left fielder Ryan Braun converged on a Shane Victorino fly ball, but it dropped between them for a double, despite Braun's last-minute lunge.

Victorino moved to third on a Raul Ibanez groundout and scored on Carlos Ruiz's grounder to short.

Hamels took it from there, allowing only two runners to reach second base. In his final inning, Hamels walked Braun and surrendered a single to Prince Fielder, but escaped by retiring Casey McGehee, Cain and Alcides Escobar.

Jose Contreras worked the eighth and Ryan Madson worked the ninth for his fifth save in nine chances. Closer Brad Lidge was unavailable after pitching in three straight games.

The Phillies recorded their 17th shutout of the season, while Milwaukee was shut out for the 11th time.

The fast-charging Phillies, who entered play two games behind NL East-leading Atlanta and two games up in the wild card standings, loaded the bases in the fourth off Chris Capuano (2-3), but didn't score when Ibanez struck out and Carlos Ruiz lined into a double play.

Capuano left after allowing a run on four hits in five innings.

Notes: Phillies OF/1B Ross Gload (right groin strain) was reinstated from the disabled list before Friday's game. ... INF Greg Dobbs had his contract picked up from Triple-A Lehigh Valley. ... Brewers OF Corey Hart is 1 for 18 on the first four games of the road trip.

Pincham backs mandatory drug tests for renters'

Pincham backs mandatory drug tests for renters'

Not only is it constitutional, but it makes "good sense" for landlords to impose mandatory drug tests on potential renters as part of their credit checks, former Illinois Appellate Court Justice R. Eugene Pincham said Sunday.

He agreed with two North Side building owners who are mandating drug tests for potential tenants.

"The landlord has the right to set the criteria for renting a building that he chooses and if he opts not to have drugs in his building and there is a vehicle by which he can prevent it, I'd think that's his right," Pincham told the Chicago Defender.

Pincham said those who use drugs are dangerous, "unreliable" and are engaging in illegal activity. "It discourages more desirable tenants who don't use drugs. What's wrong with this" policy? he asked. "Am I crazy" in supporting it?

When told that WVON's Cliff Kelley, who recently discussed the matter on his show said that there are a lot of "nice people" out there who use drugs, Pincham quipped: "You're not concerned about the wealthy, nice drug users. You're concerned about the unwealthy, un-nice drug users.

"If a landlord doesn't want people who use drugs in his building, that's his right," Pincham said. "If he desires people in his building who don't drink liquor, don't gamble, that's his right.

"Yes, it's constitutional for a private landlord to do this. He can't discriminate according to race, creed, or national origin or color, but he can certainly discriminate against people who are violating the law," Pincham argued.

"Would it be all right for him to exclude prostitutes from his building? Would it be permissible for him to prohibit shoplifters from living in his building, murderers, robbers, pimps?"

Asked if he sees this as the wave of the future in securing good tenants, Pincham said: "I wouldn't be a bit surprised. If I owned a building, I wouldn't want tenants who used drugs, shoplifted, pimped, robbed, burglarized and I think any landlord should have that right."

Kelley said he believes this practice could be unconstitutional.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Canada Life Will Focus On Wealth

General insurer Canada Life is to turn itself into a specialist byconcentrating on its strengths - including its new and market-leading Bristolbased group risk business.

The business will also focus on wealth management, both offshoreand onshore, retirement income, and individual protection.

Canada Life arrived in Bristol this month when it took over thegroup risk insurance business of Royal & SunAlliance and its 200employees in a GBP60 million deal that gave it the biggest share, at26.6 per cent, of the UK market.

Today's announcement follows a strategic review of Canada Life'sposition in the marketplace, which found it would best grow its UKbusiness by building on its key areas of strength.

The Bristol business will be strengthened - the first stepincludes the addition of 85 staff who worked in Canada Life's PottersBar-based group risk division - and a move to new premises early nextyear.

Ian Gilmour, vice-president and general manager of Canada Life'sUK division, said: "We realised we could no longer be all things toall people and therefore decided to put all our efforts intodeveloping the areas in which we are strongest and expanding into newareas."

Maythe force be w ith us

MORE than 50 Star Wars fanatics queued for hours to be among thefirst to buy merchandise from the latest blockbuster film.

One ardent fan waited for more than 10 hours to be first throughthe door of the Toys R Us store at Cribbs Causeway - one of 10nationwide to open at midnight to launch the merchandise for StarWars Episode II - Attack of the Clones.

Another left his family on holiday to be at the special opening.

The eagerly-awaited Attack of the Clones hits cinema screensworldwide on May 16.

Once again it features Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi and NataliePortman as Queen Amidala. Hayden Christensen stars as AnakinSkywalker.

As a special treat to fans and collectors attending the midnightopening, Toys R Us was giving limited edition silver Darth Vaderfigurines to the first 50 customers through each of the 10 stores'doors.

The figurines were created specially for the 2002 New York ToyFair to commemorate 25 years of Star Wars.

That was enough to persuade 18-year-old A-level student ChrisEastwood to queue for more than 10 hours at the store.

Clutching his prize, Chris, of Portishead, said: "That's the wholereason that I came out here. It was cold and quite boring and I'm abit annoyed I overestimated what time people would be turning up."

Richard Moss, aged 32, had left his wife Lorna and newborn babyKatie on holiday to be at the store.

Richard, of Portishead, said: "I drove down to Center Parcs atWarminster this morning to go on holiday and then drove all the wayback - I wasn't going to miss this!"

A fan since the original movie in 1977, Richard said the specialDarth Vader figure was an attraction but he also wanted to see whatelse was on sale.

"It's just nice to be here.

Once you are grown up you can go out and spend money on thisstuff, which is the advantage of growing up."

And Richard insisted he wouldn't be seeing the dark side of wifeLorna for deserting her while on holiday.

He said: "She sent me! She said it was fine. She's a big fan aswell. That's why I married her!"

Among the other shoppers were Richard Cussen, aged 29, and IainJarvis, 24, who have made their own Star Wars film for the internet.

Richard, of Bristol, was searching out anything connected with theJedi Knights, while Iain, of Birmingham, was buying up anything to dowith Obi-Wan Kenobi.

Iain said; "We're also worried that George Lucas might not haveenough money.

We don't want him having to eat TV dinners of anything."

All 63 Toys R Us stores nationwide are stocking more than 170different Star Wars products from the new movie, including characterfigures, new action fleet vehicles, new light sabres, and new LegoStar Wars items, plus everything imaginable from pyjamas andcostumes to stationery, games, puzzles, computer and mobile phoneaccessories.

In just 30 minutes on Monday night, the Bristol store had soldhundreds of pounds' worth of merchandise.

Among the new favourites being snapped up were new figures ofQueen Amidala and Anakin Skywalker, alongside new characters such asJango Fett, Dexter Jettster, Plo Koon and the Super Battle Droids.

Store manager Robin Payne said the special opening had gone"fantastically".

Countries Sticking to Timetable in Pledges on Eliminating Landmines

COUNTRIES COMMITTED TO eliminating anti-personnel landmines (APLs) are matching their words with deeds, according to a Sept. 15-19 meeting of states-parties to the Ottawa Convention, which bars the use, production, stockpiling, and transfer of APLs.

The treaty, which entered into force March 1999, gives each state-party four years to destroy its APL stockpiles and 10 years to rid its territory of APLs. All states-parties whose four-year deadlines have come due this year have successfully completed the task. Of the 137 states-parties, 110 no longer possess APL stockpiles. All told, states-parties have destroyed more than 30 million mines.

Turkmenistan is the one state-party marring the treaty's otherwise unblemished compliance record. Each government is allowed to retain a "minimum number" of APLs, understood to be hundreds or thousands, for mine detection, clearance, and destruction training. Yet, Turkmenistan plans to keep 69,200 APLs for these purposes.

No states-parties are otherwise known to have violated the accord, though unconfirmed allegations exist that two treaty signatories-Burundi and Sudan-may have used APLs within the past year. The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties holds that countries are to abide by treaties they sign even if they have not completed the ratification process.

All other reported recent APL use occurred among a half-dozen countries-Burma, India, Iraq, Nepal, Pakistan, and Russia-of the 45 that have not joined the treaty. The United States, another non-signatory, reportedly stock-piled APLs for potential use in its invasion of Iraq but did not use them. (See ACT, July/August 2003.)

President Bill Clinton pledged in May 1998 that the United States would accede to the treaty by 2006 if the Pentagon succeeded in developing and fielding alternatives to APLs by that time. The Bush administration initiated a review of U.S. landmine policy, including Clinton's pledge, in the summer of 2001 but has yet to announce any findings.

The review's conclusions are expected to be revealed before the end of this year because Clinton had further declared that the United States would not use APLs outside the Korean Peninsula by 2003. -Wade Boese

Kirov leads audience on wild ride aboard Shostakovich's fiery Fourth

Kirov Orchestra of St. Petersburg

at Symphony Center

Russia may not have toed the U.S. line on Iraq, but the KirovOrchestra of St. Petersburg's Mariinsky Theatre didn't hesitate tohelp when the war intruded on the U.S. classical music scene.

Last month the Rotterdam Philharmonic, headed by Valery Gergiev,who also is the Kirov's music director, canceled a seven-city U.S.tour, citing "a feeling of increased insecurity as a result of thewar in Iraq." Gergiev and the Kirov were finishing a spring tour inToronto and decided to stay on this side of the Atlantic to pick upthe Rotterdam's concert dates.

They brought their unexpectedly lengthened road show to SymphonyCenter Tuesday night, jettisoning the Tchaikov-sky selection on theRotterdam's program but retaining Shostakovich's scorched-earthFourth Symphony. Nikolaj Znai-der, the stellar Danish violinist nowbased in Tel Aviv, was the soloist as originally scheduled, playingBruch's First Violin Concerto rather than a Mozart concerto. Theevening opened with the Overture to Wagner's "Tannhauser."

Hearing the Rotterdam orchestra for the first time in Chicagounder Gergiev's always-hyperenergetic baton was an attractiveprospect. But the Kirov and Gergiev, last heard here in an all-Prokofiev program in December 2001, have a strong Chicago following,and Symphony Center was virtually full. It's inconceivable,especially after the fire and ice of the Kirov's Shostakovich, thatanyone left the hall disappointed.

Much is written about the pressure Shostakovich was under between1936 and Stalin's death in 1953 to rein in his unruly genius andcompose "socialist realist" music that would be accessible andedifying to Russia's recently liberated masses. Rightly fearingcensure, imprisonment or worse, he sometimes did.

The Fourth Symphony, completed in 1936, was pulled shortly beforeits scheduled premiere that year and not heard until 1961. It is anunfettered outpouring in Shostakovich's typically sardonic, wildlyinventive voice. Whether it is a protest against the ruthless Sovietsystem or simply an expression of Shostakovich's unblinking worldview is open to debate. There can be no argument, however, that theFourth Symphony flings listeners into a musical roller-coaster ridethat is both disturbing and utterly compelling.

This symphony requires huge forces, and a handful of ChicagoSymphony Orchestra players filled in Tuesday night for Kirov playersunable to remain for the extended tour. Gergiev's podium styleborders on the manic, but he drew a fine combination of preciserhythmic outline and sprawling, ear-filling eruptions from hisplayers. The orchestra reveled in Shostako-vich's boisterous, oftenrude mood. Individual brass and wind players swaggered through theirbrief solos like schoolyard bullies, gleefully popping up anddisappearing as they taunted their equally impudent classmates.

The orchestra offered ideal accompaniment for Znaider's cleanlyarticulated but passionate playing in Bruch's First Violin Concerto.The young violinist was back in Chicago after incandescentperformances of the Szymanowski Violin Concerto with the CSO andmusic director Daniel Barenboim in early March. The same kind ofhighly charged chemistry that animated those concerts was obvious inZnaider's collaboration with Gergiev and the Kirov.

The concert opened with a majestic, spacious reading of the"Tannhauser" Overture.

Ice dancing to boost primetime gayness

"Dancing With the Stars," the home of a lot of sparkly outfits and flourishes of the hand, just got itself one-upped in the unofficial primetime contest known as What's The Gayest Thing We Can Put On Network Television? Its upstart rival: ice dancing. Thanks to BBC Worldwide Productions (which originated "Dancing With the Stars'" predecessor "Strictly Come Dancing") the six -year-old British program "Strictly Ice Dancing" is coming to America. Ice dancers will be paired with wannabe (and fearless) ice-dancing celebrities who are all sure to experience even more injuries than they do when they're merely wearing shoes and being twirled around a studio. The American cousin has no name yet but it's due to arrive later this year on ABC. Can we get Johnny Weir (not technically an ice dancer, but still) to host?

Google expects regulatory OK in China, for now

Google CEO Eric Schmidt said Thursday he expects Beijing to renew the license the company needs to continue operating a website in China.

The renewal had been in doubt due to the tense relations between Google and Chinese authorities over censorship of Google search results.

Google closed its China search engine in March but wants to keep a website that offers music and other services. Users had been automatically redirected to Google's uncensored Hong Kong site but the company stopped that last week after Chinese officials warned that the move could mean losing its license.

Talking with reporters at the annual media conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, hosted by investment bank Allen & Co., Schmidt said, "We now expect a renewal."

Google's relations with Beijing have been rocky since the U.S. search giant said it no longer wanted to cooperate with government Internet censorship. The announcement was prompted by cyber attacks the company traced to China.

The conflict poses a balancing act for Google. The company wants to uphold the principle of free access to information. It also wants to keep a foothold in a market that has nearly 400 million Web users, the world's biggest.

Google, based in Mountain View, Calif., does not hold the kind of dominant position in the Chinese search market that it does in the U.S. The search engine operated by Chinese competitor Baidu has about 60 percent of the market to Google's 30 percent.

Schmidt did not say when he expects Beijing to give it the OK. Google's license runs though 2012 but needs a renewal each year. And he stressed that Google's operations in China are still at the mercy of the Chinese government.

"They have the absolute ability to stop our operations if they should choose to," he said.

In fact, China has routinely blocked parts of Google's service such as YouTube.

Google said last week that users in mainland China were unable to use the "suggest" feature of its search engine, which offers possible results as they start to type a query.

(This version CORRECTS that Google wants to retain a website in China but has closed its China search engine)

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

AIRMEN PROVIDE CONFIDENCE, COMBAT POWER FOR GROUND FORCES

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 22 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Poised on the helipad of an isolated forward operating base, they wait. Hoping for the best, they are prepared for the worst. Their mantra, "a slow day for the Pedros is a good day for coalition forces."

The 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron's dual-role mission of conducting personnel recovery and casualty evacuation operations for Regional Command East is a source of pride for the unit, as are the "Pedro" patches they wear on their shoulders.

"Pedro was just a call sign," said Lt. Col. Steve Gregg, the 83rd ERQS commander. "It started in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, flying the old HH-43s (Huskies). Because the aircrews were so quick to rescue the guys in southern Vietnam, the Pedro call sign became synonymous with being saved."

When the rescue squadrons were activated in Afghanistan to perform the casualty evacuation mission with the HH-60G Pave Hawks, the units elected to once again use the Pedro call sign. Like the Pedros of the Mekong, they quickly became known for the fastest rescues and recoveries of wounded troops in the area, said Colonel Gregg, who is based at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

The call sign generally reserved for rescue squadrons is Jolly, which is still used in personnel recovery operations in Iraq; however, the unique role of the operations in Afghanistan prompted the name change.

"Personnel recovery is the broader umbrella that covers all of the functions we do from the noncombatant evacuation operations, humanitarian relief operations and defense support to civil authorities, to the most difficult operations which would be combat search and rescue," Colonel Gregg said. "Here, we do dual role (personnel recovery) and casevac. We still maintain an Afghanistan-wide personnel recovery mission, but since those are unusual, they gave us to the regional commands to do casevac missions."

The colonel said their day-to-day mission is casevac, broken into two basic areas - point of injury and patient transfer.

"Point of injury is where we go right to the incident site, whether it was an (improvised explosive device) blast, a (troops in contact incident) or something along those lines," he said. "Fortunately, there hasn't been a lot of business in that area, and we'd like to keep it that way. Patient transfers are when we'll go out to the (forward operating bases) and pick up people who need to come in to Craig Joint Theater Hospital at (Bagram Airfield)."

The Pedro mission also extends to providing casevac support to planned ground operations. In these cases, the unit may reposition, or repo, personnel and aircraft to FOBs to cut the evacuation time.

"Repo operations are exclusively a POI mission," Colonel Gregg said. "It's a temporary use of strategic Air Force assets at the most tactical level to reduce evacuation times."

The presence alone of the rescue squadron at one of these FOBs prior to a ground operation is generally enough to raise the morale and hope of the Soldiers involved, according to the colonel.

"We don't have to fly a single flight to accomplish our mission," he added. "It's just our arrival on a FOB. I can't quantify it, but you can see the sense of relief on the Soldiers faces. When you hear the Pedro call sign, when you see a casevac helicopter that's dedicated to you, you know your chain of command is going all in behind you to help minimize that risk to you and your life. That's supremely important."

Prior to their departure for the repo mission, Brig. Gen. Jack L. Briggs, the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing commander, spoke to the Pedros.

"You will do great things when called upon," he said. "What you provide is combat power. You provide confidence to the guy on the ground. No matter how bad it gets, he knows you're going to get there. That is how they have the confidence to lace up their boots and accomplish the mission."

The Pedros are a close-knit community including a cross section of career fields including aircrews, pararescuemen, maintenance and other support functions. Colonel Gregg thinks of the squadron as a family.

"We rely on each other, and we trust each other," said the colonel. "Rescue is not a job, it's a lifestyle. If it's just a job to you, then you'll just be going through the motions. Everybody on this battlefield deserves something more. You have to be committed to this."

During his 20-year flying career, including eight deployments, Colonel Gregg has amassed countless stories about his interactions with ground forces, but he said one of his favorites is from a repo operation during his current rotation to Afghanistan.

"I just like to go out and walk the line with all of the infantrymen before the operation," said the colonel who served as an Army aviator prior to joining the Air Force. "I'll go around thanking them, telling them that it's an honor to be with them. During one of these walks, I came across this one sergeant. I told him how honored I was to meet him, and he said 'I'm honored to meet you, sir.' After I passed him, I looked back and said, 'Well, here's to not meeting you again in the next four to five days.' He looked at me, got this real serious look on his face and said 'Sir, would you shake my hand and guarantee you won't meet me again during the next couple of days?' I told him 'Of course, here's to not meeting you again.' It was amazing; the electricity in the air in that moment, and I think it really calmed him down."

Fortunately, that Soldier never had to meet Colonel Gregg and the Pedros on the battlefield. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

AIRMEN PROVIDE CONFIDENCE, COMBAT POWER FOR GROUND FORCES

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 22 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Poised on the helipad of an isolated forward operating base, they wait. Hoping for the best, they are prepared for the worst. Their mantra, "a slow day for the Pedros is a good day for coalition forces."

The 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron's dual-role mission of conducting personnel recovery and casualty evacuation operations for Regional Command East is a source of pride for the unit, as are the "Pedro" patches they wear on their shoulders.

"Pedro was just a call sign," said Lt. Col. Steve Gregg, the 83rd ERQS commander. "It started in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, flying the old HH-43s (Huskies). Because the aircrews were so quick to rescue the guys in southern Vietnam, the Pedro call sign became synonymous with being saved."

When the rescue squadrons were activated in Afghanistan to perform the casualty evacuation mission with the HH-60G Pave Hawks, the units elected to once again use the Pedro call sign. Like the Pedros of the Mekong, they quickly became known for the fastest rescues and recoveries of wounded troops in the area, said Colonel Gregg, who is based at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

The call sign generally reserved for rescue squadrons is Jolly, which is still used in personnel recovery operations in Iraq; however, the unique role of the operations in Afghanistan prompted the name change.

"Personnel recovery is the broader umbrella that covers all of the functions we do from the noncombatant evacuation operations, humanitarian relief operations and defense support to civil authorities, to the most difficult operations which would be combat search and rescue," Colonel Gregg said. "Here, we do dual role (personnel recovery) and casevac. We still maintain an Afghanistan-wide personnel recovery mission, but since those are unusual, they gave us to the regional commands to do casevac missions."

The colonel said their day-to-day mission is casevac, broken into two basic areas - point of injury and patient transfer.

"Point of injury is where we go right to the incident site, whether it was an (improvised explosive device) blast, a (troops in contact incident) or something along those lines," he said. "Fortunately, there hasn't been a lot of business in that area, and we'd like to keep it that way. Patient transfers are when we'll go out to the (forward operating bases) and pick up people who need to come in to Craig Joint Theater Hospital at (Bagram Airfield)."

The Pedro mission also extends to providing casevac support to planned ground operations. In these cases, the unit may reposition, or repo, personnel and aircraft to FOBs to cut the evacuation time.

"Repo operations are exclusively a POI mission," Colonel Gregg said. "It's a temporary use of strategic Air Force assets at the most tactical level to reduce evacuation times."

The presence alone of the rescue squadron at one of these FOBs prior to a ground operation is generally enough to raise the morale and hope of the Soldiers involved, according to the colonel.

"We don't have to fly a single flight to accomplish our mission," he added. "It's just our arrival on a FOB. I can't quantify it, but you can see the sense of relief on the Soldiers faces. When you hear the Pedro call sign, when you see a casevac helicopter that's dedicated to you, you know your chain of command is going all in behind you to help minimize that risk to you and your life. That's supremely important."

Prior to their departure for the repo mission, Brig. Gen. Jack L. Briggs, the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing commander, spoke to the Pedros.

"You will do great things when called upon," he said. "What you provide is combat power. You provide confidence to the guy on the ground. No matter how bad it gets, he knows you're going to get there. That is how they have the confidence to lace up their boots and accomplish the mission."

The Pedros are a close-knit community including a cross section of career fields including aircrews, pararescuemen, maintenance and other support functions. Colonel Gregg thinks of the squadron as a family.

"We rely on each other, and we trust each other," said the colonel. "Rescue is not a job, it's a lifestyle. If it's just a job to you, then you'll just be going through the motions. Everybody on this battlefield deserves something more. You have to be committed to this."

During his 20-year flying career, including eight deployments, Colonel Gregg has amassed countless stories about his interactions with ground forces, but he said one of his favorites is from a repo operation during his current rotation to Afghanistan.

"I just like to go out and walk the line with all of the infantrymen before the operation," said the colonel who served as an Army aviator prior to joining the Air Force. "I'll go around thanking them, telling them that it's an honor to be with them. During one of these walks, I came across this one sergeant. I told him how honored I was to meet him, and he said 'I'm honored to meet you, sir.' After I passed him, I looked back and said, 'Well, here's to not meeting you again in the next four to five days.' He looked at me, got this real serious look on his face and said 'Sir, would you shake my hand and guarantee you won't meet me again during the next couple of days?' I told him 'Of course, here's to not meeting you again.' It was amazing; the electricity in the air in that moment, and I think it really calmed him down."

Fortunately, that Soldier never had to meet Colonel Gregg and the Pedros on the battlefield. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

AIRMEN PROVIDE CONFIDENCE, COMBAT POWER FOR GROUND FORCES

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 22 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Poised on the helipad of an isolated forward operating base, they wait. Hoping for the best, they are prepared for the worst. Their mantra, "a slow day for the Pedros is a good day for coalition forces."

The 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron's dual-role mission of conducting personnel recovery and casualty evacuation operations for Regional Command East is a source of pride for the unit, as are the "Pedro" patches they wear on their shoulders.

"Pedro was just a call sign," said Lt. Col. Steve Gregg, the 83rd ERQS commander. "It started in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, flying the old HH-43s (Huskies). Because the aircrews were so quick to rescue the guys in southern Vietnam, the Pedro call sign became synonymous with being saved."

When the rescue squadrons were activated in Afghanistan to perform the casualty evacuation mission with the HH-60G Pave Hawks, the units elected to once again use the Pedro call sign. Like the Pedros of the Mekong, they quickly became known for the fastest rescues and recoveries of wounded troops in the area, said Colonel Gregg, who is based at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

The call sign generally reserved for rescue squadrons is Jolly, which is still used in personnel recovery operations in Iraq; however, the unique role of the operations in Afghanistan prompted the name change.

"Personnel recovery is the broader umbrella that covers all of the functions we do from the noncombatant evacuation operations, humanitarian relief operations and defense support to civil authorities, to the most difficult operations which would be combat search and rescue," Colonel Gregg said. "Here, we do dual role (personnel recovery) and casevac. We still maintain an Afghanistan-wide personnel recovery mission, but since those are unusual, they gave us to the regional commands to do casevac missions."

The colonel said their day-to-day mission is casevac, broken into two basic areas - point of injury and patient transfer.

"Point of injury is where we go right to the incident site, whether it was an (improvised explosive device) blast, a (troops in contact incident) or something along those lines," he said. "Fortunately, there hasn't been a lot of business in that area, and we'd like to keep it that way. Patient transfers are when we'll go out to the (forward operating bases) and pick up people who need to come in to Craig Joint Theater Hospital at (Bagram Airfield)."

The Pedro mission also extends to providing casevac support to planned ground operations. In these cases, the unit may reposition, or repo, personnel and aircraft to FOBs to cut the evacuation time.

"Repo operations are exclusively a POI mission," Colonel Gregg said. "It's a temporary use of strategic Air Force assets at the most tactical level to reduce evacuation times."

The presence alone of the rescue squadron at one of these FOBs prior to a ground operation is generally enough to raise the morale and hope of the Soldiers involved, according to the colonel.

"We don't have to fly a single flight to accomplish our mission," he added. "It's just our arrival on a FOB. I can't quantify it, but you can see the sense of relief on the Soldiers faces. When you hear the Pedro call sign, when you see a casevac helicopter that's dedicated to you, you know your chain of command is going all in behind you to help minimize that risk to you and your life. That's supremely important."

Prior to their departure for the repo mission, Brig. Gen. Jack L. Briggs, the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing commander, spoke to the Pedros.

"You will do great things when called upon," he said. "What you provide is combat power. You provide confidence to the guy on the ground. No matter how bad it gets, he knows you're going to get there. That is how they have the confidence to lace up their boots and accomplish the mission."

The Pedros are a close-knit community including a cross section of career fields including aircrews, pararescuemen, maintenance and other support functions. Colonel Gregg thinks of the squadron as a family.

"We rely on each other, and we trust each other," said the colonel. "Rescue is not a job, it's a lifestyle. If it's just a job to you, then you'll just be going through the motions. Everybody on this battlefield deserves something more. You have to be committed to this."

During his 20-year flying career, including eight deployments, Colonel Gregg has amassed countless stories about his interactions with ground forces, but he said one of his favorites is from a repo operation during his current rotation to Afghanistan.

"I just like to go out and walk the line with all of the infantrymen before the operation," said the colonel who served as an Army aviator prior to joining the Air Force. "I'll go around thanking them, telling them that it's an honor to be with them. During one of these walks, I came across this one sergeant. I told him how honored I was to meet him, and he said 'I'm honored to meet you, sir.' After I passed him, I looked back and said, 'Well, here's to not meeting you again in the next four to five days.' He looked at me, got this real serious look on his face and said 'Sir, would you shake my hand and guarantee you won't meet me again during the next couple of days?' I told him 'Of course, here's to not meeting you again.' It was amazing; the electricity in the air in that moment, and I think it really calmed him down."

Fortunately, that Soldier never had to meet Colonel Gregg and the Pedros on the battlefield. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

AIRMEN PROVIDE CONFIDENCE, COMBAT POWER FOR GROUND FORCES

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 22 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Poised on the helipad of an isolated forward operating base, they wait. Hoping for the best, they are prepared for the worst. Their mantra, "a slow day for the Pedros is a good day for coalition forces."

The 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron's dual-role mission of conducting personnel recovery and casualty evacuation operations for Regional Command East is a source of pride for the unit, as are the "Pedro" patches they wear on their shoulders.

"Pedro was just a call sign," said Lt. Col. Steve Gregg, the 83rd ERQS commander. "It started in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, flying the old HH-43s (Huskies). Because the aircrews were so quick to rescue the guys in southern Vietnam, the Pedro call sign became synonymous with being saved."

When the rescue squadrons were activated in Afghanistan to perform the casualty evacuation mission with the HH-60G Pave Hawks, the units elected to once again use the Pedro call sign. Like the Pedros of the Mekong, they quickly became known for the fastest rescues and recoveries of wounded troops in the area, said Colonel Gregg, who is based at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

The call sign generally reserved for rescue squadrons is Jolly, which is still used in personnel recovery operations in Iraq; however, the unique role of the operations in Afghanistan prompted the name change.

"Personnel recovery is the broader umbrella that covers all of the functions we do from the noncombatant evacuation operations, humanitarian relief operations and defense support to civil authorities, to the most difficult operations which would be combat search and rescue," Colonel Gregg said. "Here, we do dual role (personnel recovery) and casevac. We still maintain an Afghanistan-wide personnel recovery mission, but since those are unusual, they gave us to the regional commands to do casevac missions."

The colonel said their day-to-day mission is casevac, broken into two basic areas - point of injury and patient transfer.

"Point of injury is where we go right to the incident site, whether it was an (improvised explosive device) blast, a (troops in contact incident) or something along those lines," he said. "Fortunately, there hasn't been a lot of business in that area, and we'd like to keep it that way. Patient transfers are when we'll go out to the (forward operating bases) and pick up people who need to come in to Craig Joint Theater Hospital at (Bagram Airfield)."

The Pedro mission also extends to providing casevac support to planned ground operations. In these cases, the unit may reposition, or repo, personnel and aircraft to FOBs to cut the evacuation time.

"Repo operations are exclusively a POI mission," Colonel Gregg said. "It's a temporary use of strategic Air Force assets at the most tactical level to reduce evacuation times."

The presence alone of the rescue squadron at one of these FOBs prior to a ground operation is generally enough to raise the morale and hope of the Soldiers involved, according to the colonel.

"We don't have to fly a single flight to accomplish our mission," he added. "It's just our arrival on a FOB. I can't quantify it, but you can see the sense of relief on the Soldiers faces. When you hear the Pedro call sign, when you see a casevac helicopter that's dedicated to you, you know your chain of command is going all in behind you to help minimize that risk to you and your life. That's supremely important."

Prior to their departure for the repo mission, Brig. Gen. Jack L. Briggs, the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing commander, spoke to the Pedros.

"You will do great things when called upon," he said. "What you provide is combat power. You provide confidence to the guy on the ground. No matter how bad it gets, he knows you're going to get there. That is how they have the confidence to lace up their boots and accomplish the mission."

The Pedros are a close-knit community including a cross section of career fields including aircrews, pararescuemen, maintenance and other support functions. Colonel Gregg thinks of the squadron as a family.

"We rely on each other, and we trust each other," said the colonel. "Rescue is not a job, it's a lifestyle. If it's just a job to you, then you'll just be going through the motions. Everybody on this battlefield deserves something more. You have to be committed to this."

During his 20-year flying career, including eight deployments, Colonel Gregg has amassed countless stories about his interactions with ground forces, but he said one of his favorites is from a repo operation during his current rotation to Afghanistan.

"I just like to go out and walk the line with all of the infantrymen before the operation," said the colonel who served as an Army aviator prior to joining the Air Force. "I'll go around thanking them, telling them that it's an honor to be with them. During one of these walks, I came across this one sergeant. I told him how honored I was to meet him, and he said 'I'm honored to meet you, sir.' After I passed him, I looked back and said, 'Well, here's to not meeting you again in the next four to five days.' He looked at me, got this real serious look on his face and said 'Sir, would you shake my hand and guarantee you won't meet me again during the next couple of days?' I told him 'Of course, here's to not meeting you again.' It was amazing; the electricity in the air in that moment, and I think it really calmed him down."

Fortunately, that Soldier never had to meet Colonel Gregg and the Pedros on the battlefield. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

AIRMEN PROVIDE CONFIDENCE, COMBAT POWER FOR GROUND FORCES

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 22 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Poised on the helipad of an isolated forward operating base, they wait. Hoping for the best, they are prepared for the worst. Their mantra, "a slow day for the Pedros is a good day for coalition forces."

The 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron's dual-role mission of conducting personnel recovery and casualty evacuation operations for Regional Command East is a source of pride for the unit, as are the "Pedro" patches they wear on their shoulders.

"Pedro was just a call sign," said Lt. Col. Steve Gregg, the 83rd ERQS commander. "It started in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, flying the old HH-43s (Huskies). Because the aircrews were so quick to rescue the guys in southern Vietnam, the Pedro call sign became synonymous with being saved."

When the rescue squadrons were activated in Afghanistan to perform the casualty evacuation mission with the HH-60G Pave Hawks, the units elected to once again use the Pedro call sign. Like the Pedros of the Mekong, they quickly became known for the fastest rescues and recoveries of wounded troops in the area, said Colonel Gregg, who is based at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

The call sign generally reserved for rescue squadrons is Jolly, which is still used in personnel recovery operations in Iraq; however, the unique role of the operations in Afghanistan prompted the name change.

"Personnel recovery is the broader umbrella that covers all of the functions we do from the noncombatant evacuation operations, humanitarian relief operations and defense support to civil authorities, to the most difficult operations which would be combat search and rescue," Colonel Gregg said. "Here, we do dual role (personnel recovery) and casevac. We still maintain an Afghanistan-wide personnel recovery mission, but since those are unusual, they gave us to the regional commands to do casevac missions."

The colonel said their day-to-day mission is casevac, broken into two basic areas - point of injury and patient transfer.

"Point of injury is where we go right to the incident site, whether it was an (improvised explosive device) blast, a (troops in contact incident) or something along those lines," he said. "Fortunately, there hasn't been a lot of business in that area, and we'd like to keep it that way. Patient transfers are when we'll go out to the (forward operating bases) and pick up people who need to come in to Craig Joint Theater Hospital at (Bagram Airfield)."

The Pedro mission also extends to providing casevac support to planned ground operations. In these cases, the unit may reposition, or repo, personnel and aircraft to FOBs to cut the evacuation time.

"Repo operations are exclusively a POI mission," Colonel Gregg said. "It's a temporary use of strategic Air Force assets at the most tactical level to reduce evacuation times."

The presence alone of the rescue squadron at one of these FOBs prior to a ground operation is generally enough to raise the morale and hope of the Soldiers involved, according to the colonel.

"We don't have to fly a single flight to accomplish our mission," he added. "It's just our arrival on a FOB. I can't quantify it, but you can see the sense of relief on the Soldiers faces. When you hear the Pedro call sign, when you see a casevac helicopter that's dedicated to you, you know your chain of command is going all in behind you to help minimize that risk to you and your life. That's supremely important."

Prior to their departure for the repo mission, Brig. Gen. Jack L. Briggs, the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing commander, spoke to the Pedros.

"You will do great things when called upon," he said. "What you provide is combat power. You provide confidence to the guy on the ground. No matter how bad it gets, he knows you're going to get there. That is how they have the confidence to lace up their boots and accomplish the mission."

The Pedros are a close-knit community including a cross section of career fields including aircrews, pararescuemen, maintenance and other support functions. Colonel Gregg thinks of the squadron as a family.

"We rely on each other, and we trust each other," said the colonel. "Rescue is not a job, it's a lifestyle. If it's just a job to you, then you'll just be going through the motions. Everybody on this battlefield deserves something more. You have to be committed to this."

During his 20-year flying career, including eight deployments, Colonel Gregg has amassed countless stories about his interactions with ground forces, but he said one of his favorites is from a repo operation during his current rotation to Afghanistan.

"I just like to go out and walk the line with all of the infantrymen before the operation," said the colonel who served as an Army aviator prior to joining the Air Force. "I'll go around thanking them, telling them that it's an honor to be with them. During one of these walks, I came across this one sergeant. I told him how honored I was to meet him, and he said 'I'm honored to meet you, sir.' After I passed him, I looked back and said, 'Well, here's to not meeting you again in the next four to five days.' He looked at me, got this real serious look on his face and said 'Sir, would you shake my hand and guarantee you won't meet me again during the next couple of days?' I told him 'Of course, here's to not meeting you again.' It was amazing; the electricity in the air in that moment, and I think it really calmed him down."

Fortunately, that Soldier never had to meet Colonel Gregg and the Pedros on the battlefield. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

AIRMEN PROVIDE CONFIDENCE, COMBAT POWER FOR GROUND FORCES

KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan, Feb. 22 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Poised on the helipad of an isolated forward operating base, they wait. Hoping for the best, they are prepared for the worst. Their mantra, "a slow day for the Pedros is a good day for coalition forces."

The 83rd Expeditionary Rescue Squadron's dual-role mission of conducting personnel recovery and casualty evacuation operations for Regional Command East is a source of pride for the unit, as are the "Pedro" patches they wear on their shoulders.

"Pedro was just a call sign," said Lt. Col. Steve Gregg, the 83rd ERQS commander. "It started in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, flying the old HH-43s (Huskies). Because the aircrews were so quick to rescue the guys in southern Vietnam, the Pedro call sign became synonymous with being saved."

When the rescue squadrons were activated in Afghanistan to perform the casualty evacuation mission with the HH-60G Pave Hawks, the units elected to once again use the Pedro call sign. Like the Pedros of the Mekong, they quickly became known for the fastest rescues and recoveries of wounded troops in the area, said Colonel Gregg, who is based at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.

The call sign generally reserved for rescue squadrons is Jolly, which is still used in personnel recovery operations in Iraq; however, the unique role of the operations in Afghanistan prompted the name change.

"Personnel recovery is the broader umbrella that covers all of the functions we do from the noncombatant evacuation operations, humanitarian relief operations and defense support to civil authorities, to the most difficult operations which would be combat search and rescue," Colonel Gregg said. "Here, we do dual role (personnel recovery) and casevac. We still maintain an Afghanistan-wide personnel recovery mission, but since those are unusual, they gave us to the regional commands to do casevac missions."

The colonel said their day-to-day mission is casevac, broken into two basic areas - point of injury and patient transfer.

"Point of injury is where we go right to the incident site, whether it was an (improvised explosive device) blast, a (troops in contact incident) or something along those lines," he said. "Fortunately, there hasn't been a lot of business in that area, and we'd like to keep it that way. Patient transfers are when we'll go out to the (forward operating bases) and pick up people who need to come in to Craig Joint Theater Hospital at (Bagram Airfield)."

The Pedro mission also extends to providing casevac support to planned ground operations. In these cases, the unit may reposition, or repo, personnel and aircraft to FOBs to cut the evacuation time.

"Repo operations are exclusively a POI mission," Colonel Gregg said. "It's a temporary use of strategic Air Force assets at the most tactical level to reduce evacuation times."

The presence alone of the rescue squadron at one of these FOBs prior to a ground operation is generally enough to raise the morale and hope of the Soldiers involved, according to the colonel.

"We don't have to fly a single flight to accomplish our mission," he added. "It's just our arrival on a FOB. I can't quantify it, but you can see the sense of relief on the Soldiers faces. When you hear the Pedro call sign, when you see a casevac helicopter that's dedicated to you, you know your chain of command is going all in behind you to help minimize that risk to you and your life. That's supremely important."

Prior to their departure for the repo mission, Brig. Gen. Jack L. Briggs, the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing commander, spoke to the Pedros.

"You will do great things when called upon," he said. "What you provide is combat power. You provide confidence to the guy on the ground. No matter how bad it gets, he knows you're going to get there. That is how they have the confidence to lace up their boots and accomplish the mission."

The Pedros are a close-knit community including a cross section of career fields including aircrews, pararescuemen, maintenance and other support functions. Colonel Gregg thinks of the squadron as a family.

"We rely on each other, and we trust each other," said the colonel. "Rescue is not a job, it's a lifestyle. If it's just a job to you, then you'll just be going through the motions. Everybody on this battlefield deserves something more. You have to be committed to this."

During his 20-year flying career, including eight deployments, Colonel Gregg has amassed countless stories about his interactions with ground forces, but he said one of his favorites is from a repo operation during his current rotation to Afghanistan.

"I just like to go out and walk the line with all of the infantrymen before the operation," said the colonel who served as an Army aviator prior to joining the Air Force. "I'll go around thanking them, telling them that it's an honor to be with them. During one of these walks, I came across this one sergeant. I told him how honored I was to meet him, and he said 'I'm honored to meet you, sir.' After I passed him, I looked back and said, 'Well, here's to not meeting you again in the next four to five days.' He looked at me, got this real serious look on his face and said 'Sir, would you shake my hand and guarantee you won't meet me again during the next couple of days?' I told him 'Of course, here's to not meeting you again.' It was amazing; the electricity in the air in that moment, and I think it really calmed him down."

Fortunately, that Soldier never had to meet Colonel Gregg and the Pedros on the battlefield. For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com