Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Recapping the round: memories of golf in 2010

2010-12-29 01:59:18 GMT2010-12-29 09:59:18 (Beijing Time) SINA.com

Framed photographs large and small hang in every room and adorn the walls of every corridor inside the Bay Hill Club & Lodge, memories of Arnold Palmer and more than a half-century he devoted to golf.

He is flinging his visor after winning the Masters. He is posing with one of his best friends, Dow Finsterwald, and his longtime rival, Jack Nicklaus. In one picture, he is wearing a Chinese hat during his first trip to China to design a golf course.

Unmistakable in nearly every photograph is a smile.

In his design company office one day in December, he was asked why he was always seemed happy.

"I loved what I was doing," he said. "I got to play a great game. I have a great life, a great family, all the things you could want. I love the feeling of getting out of bed each morning."

Golf featured its share of unpleasant moments this year — Tiger Woods, leaning back against his locker at Sawgrass with his eyes closed after pulling out of The Players Championship, perhaps the low point on the golf course in a year filled with them; Dustin Johnson, erasing his scorecard to change a 5 to a 7 after being told he was in a bunker on the last hole of the PGA Championship; Paul Casey, facing reporters who wanted answers he didn't have as to why he was left off the Ryder Cup team.

The photos of Palmer are a reminder that it's a great game, and a great life. As always, there were plenty of poignant moments from a year on the PGA Tour that go beyond birdies and bogeys and bunkers:

___

Lee Westwood shot 68 in the final round of the Honda Classic, and when he signed his card, he was in a seven-way tie for 15th.

He retreated to the bar with his agent, Chubby Chandler, and watched the follies unfold as one player after another dropped shots coming in at PGA National. When it was over, Westwood was in a three-way tie for ninth, the difference of about $87,000.

"The best drink we've ever had," Chandler said.

___

Paul Goydos didn't want to wait for officials to stop play, not when he was facing a tough tee shot on the 11th hole at Riviera in a cold rain that was starting to come down sideways.

That's when he declared that the tee box was in casual water and someone would have to call for the maintenance crew. He figured that would take enough time for the tour to decide to suspend play. What he didn't realize was the maintenance shed was right behind him.

In less than a minute, three workers arrived carrying squeegees.

Goydos was startled, finally breaking the silence by saying under his breath, "Well, that didn't work out too well."

Play on.

___

Tiger Woods was in the second-to-last group at the U.S. Open, five shots behind Dustin Johnson. He was playing with Gregory Havret. The final group was Johnson and Graeme McDowell, none having ever contended in a major.

Before leaving the putting green and walking up the steps to the first tee, Woods hit a 50-foot lag putt toward the hole at the far edge of the green. He left it 5 feet short, then settled over that putt.

He missed. Woods reached with his putter to bring the ball back to him, stood over it, and missed it again. He pulled the ball back and missed a third time, then missed a fourth time. With that, he handed the putter to his caddie and headed to the tee.

On the first hole, he three-putted for bogey. Within an hour, his U.S. Open hopes were gone.

___

Phil Mickelson walked off the 10th tee at St. Andrews during a practice round and saw the concession stands. His eyes lit up, not just because he was hungry, but it was an opportunity for one of his favorite treats. Mickelson is known to walk up to a food stand at tournaments and announce he's buying for everyone in line.

He took his wallet from his bag and told his caddie and coach he would be with them in a few minutes. It didn't take long for Mickelson to rejoin them, however, and he wasn't happy.

It was Sunday. The concession stand was closed.

___

For the last several years, Ryder Cup officials have arranged for the U.S. captain to make a tour of the big cities leading to the matches. That stop includes Los Angeles in September, and it was a natural for Corey Pavin. He grew up in Ventura County and starred on the UCLA golf team.

The media turnout was strong, but Pavin seemed an afterthought midway through his news conference. He noticed several reporters stepping outside to answer cell phones. One Ryder Cup official thought it extremely rude.

Only later did they learn Joe Torre had announced he was retiring as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

___

The Ryder Cup charter to Wales was either oversold or there were not enough seats. Whatever the case, two caddies were bumped from the charter — Frank Williams, the caddie for Stewart Cink, and Steve Williams, who works for Tiger Woods.

How fitting.

Not only are they close friends, but Frank Williams doesn't like traveling to Britain and Steve Williams doesn't like the Ryder Cup.

"You know why Stevie hates the Ryder Cup so much don't you?" Frank Williams said. "Because up until this year, he wasn't used to working for a check that small."

___

One of the most entertaining nights of the year is when European Tour caddies are feted — and roasted — at the HSBC Champions. Fanny Sunesson won an award for "misclub of the year."

Turns out her boss, Henrik Stenson, hit a 3-wood on the 18th hole at Dubai that not only failed to clear the large pond fronting the green, it barely made it to the water.

For her honor, Sunesson won two bottles of fine wine. Stenson, with mock anger, marched onto the stage and took one of the bottles before returning to his seat. He came back on stage as Sunesson explained what happened.

It dates to the previous year at the Masters, when Stenson wanted to hit 3-wood for his second shot on the 15th. Knowing that the Swede tends to hit his 3-wood low and hard, she reminded him he would have to hit a high, soft cut. Stenson instead drilled it over the green, almost into the water behind the green.

"So we get to Dubai and he wants to hit 3-wood to the green," Sunesson explains. "Now this was the right shot for his 3-wood. And tell them what you did, Henrik."

Stenson, slowly bowed his head and leaned toward the microphone.

"Soft cut," he said.

___

After the third round of the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, some 200 fans stood behind the railing outside the clubhouse after Woods walked by to sign his card. One man in the middle of the pack led a chant in Chinese that, based on the cadence, most likely was, "We want Tiger! We want Tiger!" This went on for a few minutes until a lone voice in broken English called out, "Tiger, where are you?"

The chant started again, but he had left through a back door to meet with sponsors.

A month later during the pro-am at the Chevron World Challenge, Woods had to walk along a cart path toward the 13th fairway. Three times, he stopped and posed for pictures with fans, something he has never done.

Something old, something new.

(Agencies)

Sports in 2010: Anything but trivial

2010-12-29 01:58:47 GMT2010-12-29 09:58:47 (Beijing Time) SINA.com

FILE - In this Feb. 25, 2010 file photo, Canada's Joannie Rochette reacts after receiving her bronze medal at the women's figure skating competition at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia.(Photo/AP)

PARIS – In the greater scheme of things, sports shouldn't really matter. Not like famine, war, natural disasters or the multitude of other agonies people suffer every day around the world.

In the same vein, no athlete, no matter how lionized, will or should ever be as important as a caring parent, an aid worker, a maternity nurse, a firefighter or the countless others who sustain life amid the chaos of life itself. No athlete can claim that their sporting achievements do that, no matter how much they're paid.

And yet, in 2010, one of the few times I wept was at a sports event. Watching Canadian skater Joannie Rochette glide on Olympic ice days after the death of her mother was a truly humbling and uplifting lesson in courage. For the entirety of her bronze medal-winning free skate, I willed her to hold her emotions together, trying telepathically to say: "You can do it. You can do it."

This wasn't just out of sympathy for her, but for my own good, too. I needed Rochette to prove that there is a future after the death of a beloved parent, that life can go on. In the greater scheme things, those exquisitely anxious minutes of fretting about whether Rochette would crumble under the weight of her personal tragedy or, as she did, soar inspiringly above it should not have moved me as much as the birth, later in 2010, of my daughter. Yet, on both occasions, the tears tasted salty and curiously sweet. Sports shouldn't really matter. But they do.

In 2010, rarely was I angrier than at a sports event. When England midfielder Frank Lampard's disallowed World Cup goal against Germany slammed against the crossbar and bounced a good foot over the line, I was furious that Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda failed to spot the blindingly obvious. I also was incensed at the technophobes at football's world governing body FIFA for resisting the electronic goal-line aids that could have spared Larrionda from looking like such a fool and ensured sporting justice.

"It's like 1966 all over again!" I yelled to my Associated Press colleague and press box neighbor Robert Millward. Veteran sports sage that he was, Robert was already marshaling his thoughts for a story on how the injustice revived memories of the 1966 World Cup final, when Geoff Hurst's shot for England struck the underside of the German crossbar, bounced down and spun back into play. "That time," Robert penned from his encyclopedic football memory, "the referee consulted his linesman and awarded the goal."

It was one of the last stories that Robert wrote. He died unexpectedly three days before Spain beat the Netherlands in the World Cup final. I like to remember the frustration that he and I shared, his look of utter shock and sputtered guffaws of disbelief, over Lampard's goal that wasn't. Such passion and emotion. All for a mere game. Sports shouldn't really matter. But they do.

And perhaps never, in 2010 or any year, has the blink-and-its-gone frailty of human life been rammed home so starkly to me than at a sports event. One moment, Georgian Olympic luger Nodar Kumaritashvili was hurtling down the quartz-white ice of the Whistler Sliding Center, traveling at 144 kph or 89 mph as he funneled with a rattling, metallic roar into the last of its 16 corners, a giant curved bank named "Thunderbird." Then, disaster. Just past a blue banner emblazoned with the Olympic rings and the motto "Des plus brilliant exploits" — "Ever more brilliant exploits" — Kumaritashvili flipped out of the ice walls and slammed backward into a trackside metal girder. Blood. Death.

Over the following days, trying to piece together the chain of events for a story, I asked other lugers what drives them to take such risks. I cannot say that I really understood their responses because there is no logic to hurling oneself down a chute of ice. I walked the length of the cold, hard track but it offered nothing more than stony silence. The ice felt no guilt about having helped a 21-year-old kill himself. It couldn't care. It was just there. Like Mount Everest, a challenge for humans to pit their will against.

Ultimately, the only meaningful answer I came away with was that Kumaritashvili died doing something that thrilled him. Not many of us will be able to say that. In trying to make sense from the senselessness of Kumaritashvili's crash, that epitaph offers a crumb of comfort. So, yes, sports shouldn't really matter. But they do.

Sporting feats can be less difficult to wrap one's mind around than complex and pressing tragedies, like human conflict and why we seem intent on ruining the only planet we have. Like trying to contemplate the infinite enormity of our universe, such problems can be mind-boggling if thought about too hard, for too long.

Sports, on the other hand, deliver emotions and thoughts in neat and manageable chunks, which doesn't make them less meaningful but simply easier to comprehend. Disallowing Lampard's goal: unjust. Rochette's bronze: deserved. The longest match in tennis history, an 11-hour, 5-minute slog over three days at Wimbledon for John Isner and Nicolas Mahut: proof that humans always have untapped reserves of strength and will.

The list of things that sports taught us in 2010 is rich and varied and too long to do it justice here. Not, perhaps, as important as life itself, but life-affirming nonetheless.

And that is why sports matter.

(Agencies)

Jacky Chan, Fan Bingbing promote new movie "Shaolin"

2010-12-29 07:45:11 GMT2010-12-29 15:45:11 (Beijing Time) Xinhua English

Director Chen Musheng, actress Fan Bingbing and actor Jacky Chan (from left to right) attend a promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

Fan Bingbing, one of the main actresses speaks at promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

Actress Fan Bingbing (L) and actor Jacky Chan (R) attend a promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

The main actress Fan Bingbing and the main actor Jacky Chan (from right to left) attend a promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

Director Chen Musheng (2nd L), the main actor Jacky Chan (2nd R) and the main actress Fan Bingbing (1st R) attend a promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

Jacky Chan, one of the main actors speaks at promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011. (Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai)

Director Chen Musheng, actress Fan Bingbing and actor Jacky Chan attend a promotion campaign for the movie Shaolin in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 28, 2010. The movie Shaolin, named after a famous Buddhist monastery in central China's Henan Province, will make its national debut on Jan. 19, 2011.

Top 10 cover stars of 2010


2010-12-29 07:25:49 GMT2010-12-29 15:25:49 (Beijing Time) China Daily

Zhou Xun

Zhao Wei

Li Bingbing

Zhang Ziyi

Fan Bingbing

Faye Wong

Hsu Chi

In addition to films, awards and advertisements, magazine covers are also an important yardstick to measure an actresses’ ranking and popularity. In a chinadaily.com.cn special, we have compiled the shiniest cover stars of 2010 according to their cover appearances on the Chinese editions of Vogue, Elle, Cosmopolitan, Marie Claire and Harper's Bazaar.

Zhou Xun

After acting and promoting four films in 2009, Zhou Xun, China's top-class actress, slowed her pace and shifted her focus of work this year. Zhou spends much of her time promoting ‘tips for green living’ through Our Part, a campaign she runs jointly with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). Zhou’s enduring efforts in promoting a green life style and environmental sustainability has earned her the title of the 2010 Champion of the Earth, the United Nations’ highest award for environmental leadership. Her superb mastery of acting has gained numerous Best Actress awards and won wide appreciation from famous directors. In 2011, Zhou will continuously stay active in various environmental causes and make perfect performances on the screen.

Zhao Wei

2010 was a rewarding year for Zhao Wei, one of the most popular actresses in China. Not only did Zhao welcome the birth of her lovely daughter, but also won the Best Actress Award of Hundred Flowers Film Festival. Though having shifted focus from work to family, the 34-year-old actress refuses to be a full-time housewife and resumed her performing career after confinement. The 10-year ups and downs in show business have maturated this once-flamboyant sensation to a rather composed celebrity. Impressing the public with her radiant maternity and femininity, Zhao will smartly balance her roles as mother and actress.

Li Bingbing

Late-blooming Li Bingbing, one of the A-list actresses in China, adds brilliance to her achieved splendor in 2010 after she was crowned the Best Actress Award in 2009’s Golden Horse Film Festival. Thanks to her healthy and refined public image, Li became a favorite of magazine covers and brand advertisements. Li’s well-recognized efforts in environmental protection and green campaigning have earned her the title of UNDP China National Goodwill Ambassador. Li’s performance on the screen is also worthy of expectation; her consummate acting in Snow Flower and the Secret Fan and The Revolution Of 1911 will give impetus to the box office success.

Zhang Ziyi

Early this year “Donation Gate” had entangled famous actress Zhang Ziyi into an unprecedented credit crisis, stagnating her performing career and ceasing her brand advertisement contract. To regain her position in public favor, Zhang made great changes in her conduct with a much lower profile and down-to-earth attitude. Zhang hoped her fully-devoted acting and resolution to philanthropic undertaking will efface the dirt of her reputation. Next year Zhang’s two films, The Grand Master and Life Is a Miracle, are due to hit the cinemas; we will see whether this controversy-stricken actress will radiate her stardom again.

Fan Bingbing

An overwhelmingly beautiful face eclipses Fan Bingbing’s conscientious acting; while the 29-year-old actress aspires to reverse the public’s cynical impression with the Best Actress Award of the Tokyo Film Festival. At the center of controversy for a long time, Fan has reconciled herself to the fabricated “charges” and hopes to silence the critics with her professional dedication and low-profile conduct. Apart from her performing career, Fan is also actively engaged in philanthropic undertakings. In 2010, Fan’s loving compassion for children who suffer from congenital heart defects rekindled their hope with a 500,000 yuan donation. Just like the plum flower going through hazards and hardships, Fan just bursts into full bloom.

Faye Wong

Six years is long enough for a singer receded from the public’s memory; while Faye Wong is absolutely an exception. As the most famous singer on China's contemporary pop scene, Faye’s comeback in 2010 generated constant buzz among her fans and hit the headlines of various media. The prosperous concert box office and out-of-demand tickets revealed her stable iconic status and momentous popularity. Wong’s frequent updates to her micro-blog bridges the gap with the public, showing her approachable self. In 2011 Wong’s concert tour will continue in Hong Kong and Taipei, injecting exuberant vitality to the mild performing market.

Tang Wei

The naked scenes in Ang Lee’s Lust Caution catapulted actress Tang Wei to sensational fame as well as engulfed her into overwhelming controversy. The immense strains wretchedly put this uprising star in a miserable dilemma with her performing career stagnated. With the lapse of two-year self-discovery, Tang returned to the public’s attention this year with her two films screened--Crossing Hennessy and Late Autumn; the former one earned her the nomination for Best Actress of Golden Horse Awards. To further propel her career, Tang is already featured in three blockbusters which will hit the cinema in 2011.

Hsu Chi

Either on the screen or the red carpet, Hsu Chi always impresses the public with her graceful looks and magnetic smile. The 34-year-old actress is still dynamic in her performing career, playing the leading role in three films and replacing Zhang Ziyi as the new brand ambassador of Emporio Armani. From the original controversy about her nudity in film scenes to the wide recognition of her meticulous devotion, Hsu has made 10-year endeavors to reverse the cynical prejudice and pave the way toward the Best Actress Award. Those twists and turns she experienced evolve into fortitudinous charm with the passage of time.

Xu Jinglei

Multi-talented actress-director Xu Jinglei demonstrates her great versatility in various professions and aspires to explore her potential profoundly. Xu had been too busy working on Go Lala Go! - her fourth directorial feature which grossed more than 100 million yuan ($15 million) at the box office. She has just finished filming Cherish Our Love Forever, the film version of the hit TV series of the same name that launched her to fame in 1997. Though recognized as a fine actress and a proven director, Xu wants her name associated with a new line of jewelry. Her venture into the competitive fashion industry with a jewelry collection makes a hit in market performance. Moreover, Xu’s highly rated e-magazine and popular personal blog also epitomize her wisdom and talents.

Zhang Jingchu

Zhang Jingchu’s amazing acting in the literary film “Peacock” catapulted her to fame and her strong malleability generated opportunities to cooperate with diverse directors. Zhang is one of the few actresses who are merely active in films; long-standing conscientiousness landed her on China’s A-list of actresses. In 2010, four films featuring Zhang hit the cinema and the film “Aftershock” earned her the nomination for Best Supporting Actress of Golden Horse Awards. With her refined acting recognized, Zhang is persistent in the pursuit of the “Best Actress” crown.

Annual box office down a bit from 2009 record

2010-12-29 02:26:53 GMT2010-12-29 10:26:53 (Beijing Time) SINA.com

In this film publicity image released by Disney, from left, Jessie, voiced by Joan Cusack, Buzz Lightyear, voiced by Tim Allen and Woody, voiced by Tom Hanks are shown in a scene from 'Toy Story 3.' Domestic box-office revenues for 2010 won't quite hit last year's record-setting haul, but they'll be awfully close. Total movie-ticket sales will reach $10.556 billion, the tracking agency Hollywood.com said Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2010. 'Toy Story 3' was the highest-grossing film released in 2010, earning nearly $415 million. (AP Photo/Disney Pixar)

Domestic box-office revenues for 2010 won't quite hit last year's record-setting haul, but they'll be awfully close.

Total movie-ticket sales will reach $10.556 billion, the tracking agency Hollywood.com said Tuesday. That's a slight decrease from the $10.6 billion total from 2009, but it's also only the second time that the annual box office has crossed the $10 billion mark.

At the same time, total attendance was down 5.36 percent from last year. That's the biggest percentage drop year over year since 2005. This will also be the second-lowest attended year of the decade.

It looked as if 2010 might have set a new record at the beginning of the year, when 2009's "Avatar" was still going strong well into February and March, said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian. James Cameron's 3-D sci-fi epic boasts the biggest box-office take in history, collecting $2.7 billion worldwide, nearly $750 million of which came domestically.

"I started figuring the wheels might come off this thing when the summer season was faltering, and by the end of the summer it was the lowest-attended summer in over a decade," Dergarabedian said. "Then I thought, maybe we can make it up in the holiday season, with 'Tron,' 'Harry Potter,' 'Tangled' and some other big movies on the way, but I didn't know if there would be enough juice in the box office to make up for the loss of the summer, and it just didn't happen."

"Toy Story 3" was the highest-grossing film released in 2010, earning nearly $415 million. It's one of many movies that were offered in 3-D or IMAX 3-D, which come with higher average ticket prices — which is partly what helped boost the annual total as far as it got, even as attendance sagged.

"Without that, we'd be looking at revenues that may not even have surpassed $10 billion," Dergarabedian said.

But he has hope for another record in 2011, when sequels to the hit comedy "The Hangover" and the "Pirates of the Caribbean" franchise are due, along with the highly-anticipated comic book-inspired "Thor" and "Captain America: The First Avenger."

"My biggest lesson learned from this year," Dergarabedian said, "is it's always about the product."

(Agencies)

Rare earth export quota to be axed

2010-12-29 07:54:43 GMT2010-12-29 15:54:43 (Beijing Time) SINA.com

A front loader shifts soil containing rare earth minerals at a port in Lianyungang, east China's Jiangsu province, for export to Japan. (AFP Photo)

The nation's cut its first batch of rare earth export quotas for next year by more than one-tenth, in the face of a threat by the US to complain to the World Trade Organization (WTO) over the export limits.

Ministry of Commerce allotted 14,446 tons of quotas to 31 companies, which was 11.4 percent less than the 16,304 tons it allocated to 22 companies in the first batch of 2010 quotas a year ago.

The ministry said in a short statement on its website that it had added more producer companies to the quota list, but has cut volumes allocated to trading companies for the metals used in high-tech goods.

The export quotas were based on export volumes from the beginning of 2008 to October 2010, it added, without giving details.

China produces about 97 percent of rare earth elements, which are used worldwide in high-technology, clean energy and other products that exploit their special properties for magnetism, luminescence and strength.

The decision to cut export quotas and raise tariffs has inflamed trade ties with the US, European Union and Japan in particular.

Last week, the US Trade Representative office said China had refused US requests to end export restraints on rare earths that have alarmed trade partners.

China says its curbs are for environmental reasons and to guarantee supplies to domestic industrial consumers, but it has also insisted its dominance, as a producer should give it more control over global prices.

Beijing is expected to establish a rare earth industry association by May next year, said Wang Caifeng, an official with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, speaking at a conference Tuesday.

(Agencies)

Hawaii's governor wants to reveal Obama birth info

2010-12-29 03:02:00 GMT2010-12-29 11:02:00 (Beijing Time) SINA.com

President Barack Obama smiles with a shave Ice at Island Snow at Kailua Beach Center while on vacation with the first family in Kailua, Hawaii, Monday,Dec. 27, 2010. AP photo

HONOLULU – Democratic Gov. Neil Abercrombie wants to find a way to release more information about President Barack Obama's Hawaii birth and dispel conspiracy theories that he was born elsewhere.

Abercrombie was a friend of Obama's parents and knew him as a child, and is deeply troubled by the effort to cast doubt on the president's citizenship.

The newly elected governor will ask the state attorney general's office about what can be done to put an end to questions about Obama's birth documentation from Aug. 4, 1961, spokeswoman Donalyn Dela Cruz said Tuesday.

"He had a friendship with Mr. Obama's parents, and so there is a personal issue at hand," Dela Cruz said. "Is it going to be done immediately? No, the first thing on our list is the economy."

It's unclear what Abercrombie could do because Hawaii's privacy laws have long barred the release of a certified birth certificate to anyone who doesn't have a tangible interest.

Hawaii's health director said last year and in 2008 that she had seen and verified Obama's original vital records, and birth notices in two Honolulu newspapers were published within days of Obama's birth at Kapiolani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital in Honolulu.

So-called "birthers" claim Obama is ineligible to be president because they say there's no proof he was born in the United States, with many of the skeptics questioning whether he was actually born in Kenya, his father's home country.

"What bothers me is that some people who should know better are trying to use this for political reasons," Abercrombie told the Los Angeles Times last week. "Maybe I'm the only one in the country that could look you right in the eye right now and tell you, 'I was here when that baby was born.'"

Abercrombie was unavailable for additional comment Tuesday because he was vacationing on Maui, Dela Cruz said.

The Obama campaign issued a certificate of live birth in 2008, an official document from the state showing the president's birth date, city and name, along with his parents' names and races. The certificate doesn't list the name of the hospital where he was born or the physician who delivered him, information collected by the state as part of its vital records.

Abercrombie, originally from New York, befriended Obama's parents at the University of Hawaii after he moved here in 1959, the same year the islands became a state.

Abercrombie, 72, has said he remembers seeing Obama as a child with his parents at social events, although he acknowledged that he didn't see his parents with their newborn son at the hospital.

The number of requests for Obama's birth information increased this month as the Obama family prepared to vacation in Hawaii.

The Department of Health had received 27 requests for the president's birth information this month as of last Thursday, up from 16 in November, said spokeswoman Janice Okubo.

Information requests rose despite a new state law allowing officials to ignore persistent and repetitive inquiries, a law that has been used about six times by the department, Okubo said.

"It's just a few people, and some of their requests are the same," she said. "The requests fluctuate from month to month."

Nearly all birth certificate information seekers are from the mainland United States, with requests rarely coming from Hawaii residents, said Cathy Takase, acting director for the state Office of Information Practices.

Takase usually responds to appeals for Obama's birth records by telling requesters that the information they're seeking is contained in records protected by statute.

(Agencies)