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Sacramento Kings file trademark names for Anaheim

Post n°24 pubblicato il 03 Aprile 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 
Tag: presto

The Sacramento Kings have taken yet another step toward a potential move to Southern California.

With the Kings exploring relocation to Anaheim, a Sacramento attorney representing the team's owners filed for at least four federal trademark registrations this month.

Among the names filed for according to the United States Patent and Trademark Office's website were: Anaheim Royals, Anaheim Royals of Southern California, Orange County Royals and Los Angeles Royals. The filing was made March 3 by attorney Scott Hervey on behalf of the Crickets Corp., a Nevada-based company.

Hervey has worked for Kings owners Joe and Gavin Maloof in previous sports business dealings, including the Maloof Money Cup skateboarding competition in Orange County. A message left at Hervey's office seeking comment was not immediately returned Wednesday.

Joe Maloof declined to comment about the trademark filing, and a message left with an NBA spokesman also was not immediately returned.

The name change would be a throwback to the franchise's earlier days.

The well-traveled franchise was known as the Rochester Royals during the NBA's first season in 1949, winning the 1951 title before moving to Cincinnati in 1957. When the Cincinnati Royals moved again to Kansas City in 1972, they agreed to change their nickname to avoid conflict with baseball's Kansas City Royals, who joined the AL in 1969.

The Kings kept their nickname when they moved to Sacramento in 1985, but another name change is highly likely if the club relocates 35 miles south of downtown Los Angeles, where the NHL's Los Angeles Kings have played since 1967.

Coincidentally, the Kings have played several home games this season in the throwback uniforms of those 1951 NBA champion Rochester Royals.

The NBA has already granted the Kings an extension until April 18 to file an application for relocation next season. Teams usually have until March 1 to apply for a move for the following season.

The Kings will have the opportunity to discuss their options at the NBA Board of Governors meetings April 14-15. Sacramento's season finale is April 13 at home against the rival Los Angeles Lakers.

Sacramento has refused for years to build a publicly financed facility, which the Maloofs argue is crucial for the franchise's long-term financial viability. Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, a former NBA player, met with the Maloofs last month and said he believed the "likelihood of them leaving is probably greater than them staying, but it's not a done deal."

Johnson also said Sacramento will work to build a new arena for an NBA franchise "with or without the Kings."

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Last Cabrini public housing high-rise coming down

Post n°23 pubblicato il 03 Aprile 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 
Tag: donne

Wrecking balls tore into the last of Chicago's infamous Cabrini-Green public housing high-rises on Wednesday, beginning the final demolition of the once towering reminder of the city's failure to safely house the poorest of the poor.

The complex, which at its peak housed 13,000 people in a cluster of 23 high-rises, was hailed as a salvation for the city's poor when construction began in the 1940s. But the buildings weren't well-maintained, and crime, gangs and drugs soon became rampant.

Tearing down the final 15-story building is part of an ambitious overhaul by the Chicago Housing Authority to move away from the high-rise model of housing low-income families. The last families were moved out of Cabrini's last high-rise in December. They were relocated to nearby public housing townhouses or private subsidized housing, which the agency believes will better serve low-income families.

"Buildings like Cabrini had not only fallen into grave disrepair, but also were isolated from the rest of the city," the Chicago Housing Authority said in a statement. The new plan gives the agency "an historic opportunity to bring that isolated segment of our society into the economic and social mainstream."

While the Cabrini housing model was initially emulated nationwide, the 70-acre development quickly decayed into a national example of the failure of public housing to provide clean, safe shelter.

After a gang war killed 11 residents in three months in 1981, then-Mayor Jane Byrne and her husband moved into a Cabrini apartment for three weeks to publicize her efforts to clean up the area. In 1992, a Cabrini resident hiding in a vacant 10th-floor apartment shot and killed 7-year-old Dantrell Davis as he walked to school holding his mother's hand.

Five years later, a 9-year-old girl known as Girl X was found raped, choked, poisoned and left in a stairwell with gang graffiti scribbled on her body.

The Housing Authority launched its Plan for Transformation in 2000, and it's slated to be complete in 2015, five years behind schedule. Under the plan, former Cabrini residents have been allowed to move into mixed-income apartments in the same area of Chicago to maintain the sense of community. About half who relocated now live in nearby homes, according to the agency. Others are scattered across the Chicago area.

Several former residents watched Wednesday as wrecking crews picked away at the last high-rise, saying the demolition was frustrating given the desperate need for affordable housing in Chicago.

"You would feel that they would leave this building up until they're caught up with building the housing that's needed in this city," said Carol Steele, president of the Cabrini-Green Local Advisory Council, a residents' advocacy group. "It's devastating to see another building come down."

Advocates stressed that the Cabrini community is still vibrant and continues to be a place where low-income residents can raise their families and work toward improving their lives. Low-rise townhouses nearby are still considered part of Cabrini-Green.

"What's important for people to know is that Cabrini is still here, the rowhouses are still here," said filmmaker Ronit Bezalel, whose 1999 documentary "Voices of Cabrini" followed residents during the early days of the redevelopment program.

"Cabrini is not all gone," she said.

Housing advocates and former residents held a ceremony Tuesday night to mark the high-rise's end. The building was illuminated with flickering lights that were part of an art installation created by community residents.

It's unclear what the city plans to do with the land, which is surrounded by a mix of new luxury condominiums and mixed-income developments.

The Housing Authority said Target Corp. has proposed building a store at the site, though Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder said in an email that the Minneapolis-based company doesn't confirm plans for new stores more than one year before a scheduled opening. There are no new Chicago stores planned in 2011, she said.

Resident Deirdre Brewster dismissed word of the Target deal as rumor, and she said no one from the neighborhood has agreed to a store.

"This land needs to have housing on it," she said. "We have a Target in this community, we need housing."

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Vonn still uncertain about racing worlds super-G

Post n°22 pubblicato il 08 Febbraio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany – Lindsey Vonn says she is undecided about defending her super-G title in the opening race of the world championships Tuesday.

Vonn still has trouble keeping her concentration over the entire course after suffering a concussion in a crash in practice five days ago, she said Monday.

"I am optimistic about tomorrow but I still haven't made up my mind whether I am racing," the American said.

"I feel pretty good right now but I think the main problem for me is skiing. I am having a difficult time maintaining concentration from the top of the course to the bottom," she said.

After taking a run down the course early Friday, Vonn blasted its condition.

"In my opinion the hill is WAY too icy and downright unsafe!" Vonn wrote on her Facebook page.

Vonn skipped Friday's World Cup slalom but raced in Sunday's giant slalom in Zwiesel, Germany, where she finished tied for 18th place, before traveling to Garmisch-Partenkirchen.

"I couldn't keep focus about three-quarters down the course, that's the main problem I am struggling with at this point," Vonn said.

Vonn practiced the super-G on a course in the nearby Austrian resort of Seefeld and said she felt better with every run.

"I can tell right away if I'm feeling better or not. It's been getting progressively better every day but I basically just lose track of what I'm saying or don't have as much focus as I usually do," Vonn said. "So I'm going to do my normal warmup in the morning, work out and see how I feel and do the inspection and I think I'm just going to wait until the last moment and then make a decision.

"I feel pretty good right now. I feel like there's definitely a good chance that I'll race but, like I said, I still want to make sure it's a safe decision and my health is the most important thing."

Vonn, the Olympic downhill champion, had said last week that she considered the super-G her best chance of a gold medal at the world championships.

The American crashed during a training run in Austria on Wednesday and hit her head.

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'Finding Neverland,' Directed and Choreographed by Rob Ashford, Will Premiere at La Jolla Playhouse

Post n°21 pubblicato il 08 Febbraio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

Finding Neverland, the musical about the children who inspired J.M. Barrie to create Peter Pan, will get its world premiere at La Jolla Playhouse in the 2011-12 season. Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics), the songwriting team of Grey Gardens, will write the score.

As previously reported, Tony Award winner Rob Ashford (Thoroughly Modern Millie, Cry-Baby, Promises, Promises, How to Succeed…) will direct and choreograph.

The libretto is by Allan Knee, whose play "The Man Who Was Peter Pan" inspired the Academy Award-winning film "Finding Neverland," wrote the musical's libretto. Knee wrote the book to Broadway's Little Women musical.

No production dates, casting or creative team were announced. La Jolla will boast three world premieres in its coming season.

According to the La Jolla, CA, not-for-profit, "In Finding Neverland, the pressure is on for Scottish playwright J.M. Barrie — his last play was an abysmal failure and his career is threatened by crippling writers block. With his deadline fast approaching and an impertinent producer hounding him, a chance meeting in a London park with a woman and her spirited young boys provides just the inspiration he needs. Based on the 2004 Academy Award-nominated film, this world premiere musical tells the enchanting story of the real boys who inspired a literary masterpiece."

Frankel and Korie were nominated for the Tony and Drama Desk Awards for their score to the musical Grey Gardens. They also wrote the musical Happiness, produced by Lincoln Center Theater. They are also working on a musical version of the film "Far From Heaven."

Playhouse artistic director Christopher Ashley said in a statement, "We're delighted to bring back to the Playhouse Rob Ashford, one of the most sought-after directors on Broadway, as well as welcome this new, award-winning creative team to the Playhouse family. It gives us great pride to serve as a home for these acclaimed artists, offering the resources, support and freedom to go wherever their passion leads them, as part of our steadfast commitment to the development of new work."

Subscriptions to La Jolla Playhouse's 2011-12 season are available at www.lajollaplayhouse.org.

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Cancer Awareness Day Focuses Attention on Preventable Cancers, NYC Lawyer Says

Post n°20 pubblicato il 06 Febbraio 2011 da qimeaucnzfrp
 

New York City personal injury attorney Joseph W. Belluck says World Cancer Day is a time to focus on preventing mesothelioma through the elimination of asbestos use.

New York, NY (PRWEB) February 5, 2011

New York attorney Joseph W. Belluck said World Cancer Day is a fitting time to reflect on deaths caused by preventable cancers, such as mesothelioma, and renew efforts to eliminate recognized cancer causes.

“Each year, thousands of families lose loved ones to cancers that could have been prevented through early detection, treatment or safer workplaces,” said Belluck, a partner in Belluck & Fox, a New York law firm that represents . “It’s appropriate to have a day to consider how to eliminate known carcinogens such as asbestos.”

World Cancer Day, which occurred this week, is organized by the Union for International Cancer Control, the world’s largest cancer organization headquartered in Switzerland. The UICC’s mission is to eliminate cancer, which annually takes the lives of 7.6 million people. Each year, 12.7 million people discover that they have cancer.

Millions of cancer deaths could be avoided through prevention, early detection and proper treatment, including , which is linked to inhalingand which impacts the lining of the lungs or abdomen.

Today, about 125 million people worldwide are exposed to asbestos, primarily in the workplace or by living near factories that handle asbestos. Microscopic asbestos fibers can accumulate in the lung and cause mesothelioma, including pleural mesothelioma and peritoneal mesothelioma, lung cancer and asbestosis, a chronic scarring of the lung.

Symptoms of mesothelioma typically appear 20 years to 50 years after exposure. Mesothelioma claims about 3,000 lives each year in the United States.

Workers exposed to asbestos are at a higher risk of developing mesothelioma and other respiratory diseases.

For example, first responders such as New York firefighters, NY police, paramedics and volunteers involved in the rescue and cleanup after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center site, have a higher risk of developing mesothelioma and asbestos-related diseases, according to the National Cancer Institute.

Belluck said that many residents of New York and elsewhere are surprised to learn that asbestos, despite its toxicity, is still used in manufacturing in the United States and in many other countries. The use of asbestos in the U.S. was limited in the late 1970s, but some asbestos-containing products are still imported.

“Many health groups have appropriately called for a ban on asbestos mining and use,” said Belluck, a nationally recognized New York mesothelioma lawyer. “As long as asbestos is put in building materials and automotive products, people will die of mesothelioma.”

About Belluck & Fox, LLP

Belluck & Fox, LLP, is a nationally recognized law firm that represents individuals with asbestos and mesothelioma claims, as well as victims of crime, medical malpractice, motorcycle crashes, lead paint and other serious injuries. The firm provides personalized and professional representation and has won nearly $350 million in compensation for clients and their families.

Partneris AV-rated by Martindale-Hubbell and is listed in New York Magazine’s “Best Lawyers in the New York Area” and in Super Lawyers. Mr. Belluck has won numerous cases involving injuries from asbestos, defective medical products, tobacco and lead paint, including a recent asbestos case that settled for more than $12 million.

Partneris a well-known asbestos and mesothelioma attorney who has been named to the Best Lawyers in America, New York Magazine’s “Best Lawyers in the New York Area” and to Super Lawyers. On two separate occasions his verdicts were featured as the National Law Journal’s Largest Verdict of the Year.

In September, Belluck & Fox, LLP, won a coveted spot on a list of America's best law firms, which was published jointly by U.S. News & World Report and Best Lawyers magazine. The listing showcased 8,782 different law firms ranked in one or more of 81 major practice areas.

For more information, contact the firm at (877) 695-2909 or through the .

###

Joseph W. BelluckBelluck & Fox, LLP(877) 695-2909Email Information

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