Thursday, March 15, 2012

Bulls have a deal with Tarlac '95 draft pick coming for visit, could end up starting at center

Dragan Tarlac reportedly has agreed to a one-year, $2.5 millioncontract to play for the Bulls next season.

Reached by phone Friday, Tarlac-who is training with theYugoslavian national team in Switzerland-refused to confirm a reportby the Eleftheros Typos newspaper in Greece that he will sign acontract next week. But the 6-10, 240-pound center did say he willcome to Chicago on Sunday for a three-day visit with the Bulls.

"I want to wait until everything is 100 percent settled, and thenI will talk about anything you want on Tuesday," Tarlac said. "Rightnow, I'm very busy working out with the national team. I feel I'mready to play in the NBA. But I want to take one step …

Rights group: Sri Lanka still uses abusive laws

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Despite removing draconian wartime laws, Sri Lanka's government is using new "abusive" regulations to keep hundreds of people in jails without trial, an international human rights groups said.

In a statement Wednesday, the New York-based Human Rights Watch called on the government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa to abolish such detention laws and free the prisoners.

"The Sri Lankan government announced that the state of emergency is over, but it is holding on to the same draconian powers it had during the war" against the Tamil Tiger rebels, said Brad Adams, the group's Asia director.

Foreign governments critical of Sri Lanka should not be …

Stocks rise on earnings, economic reports

Stocks rose Tuesday after reports showed wholesale prices climbed for the first time since March and a big jump in industrial production.

A slight improvement in the weak housing market and better-than-expected earnings from Home Depot Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. also gave investors a reason to buy.

Economic reports in recent months have almost exclusively pointed to slowing growth. Weakening data have led some investors to worry that the U.S. could fall back into recession. The data Tuesday provided a slice of optimism and some reassurance that the economy continues to expand, albeit slowly.

Prices at the wholesale level rose 0.2 percent last …

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Luxury car bumpers don't pass muster

CRASH TESTS

Bumpers on expensive luxury cars don't resist damage in low-speed impacts, and can cost consumers and insurance companies big bucks to fix. Those are the findings of a recent series of crash tests conducted by the U.S. Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS).

The tests were designed to mimic the impact of the most common types of low-speed crashes, from 3 to 6 mph. Many of the bumpers in the test did not effectively absorb energy in the crashes, which caused additional damage to body panels, grilles and headlights.

What's worse, the cost to repair these vehicles after low-speed crashes was high. Total repair costs ranged from more than $5,000 to …

Brewers Miss Out on 15-Year Opportunity

MILWAUKEE - Given a chance to move 10 games over .500 for the first time in 15 years, the Milwaukee Brewers fell short. Jose Bautista and Ronny Paulino hit consecutive home runs in a four-run seventh inning, and the Pittsburgh Pirates rallied for a 4-2 victory Thursday night that stopped the Brewers' four-game winning streak.

"It's very frustrating," Brewers starter Dave Bush said. "Mostly it's just disappointing. I am one pitch away from maybe getting a win, at least putting us in a position to get a win. I am disappointed that when it came down to it, I couldn't make the pitch when I needed to. I wish I had an answer for it."

Tom Gorzelanny (4-1) won his fourth straight …

US boy, 11, charged with murder was avid hunter

Hunting is a way of life in the rural area where 11-year-old Jordan Brown regularly practiced target shooting with his 20-gauge, youth model shotgun.

Here in west-central Pennsylvania, hunting clubs are plentiful, the first day of deer hunting season means a day off from school and turkey shoots are held year round. A month ago, Brown won a turkey at a local shoot against older, more experienced hunters.

Days later, police believe Brown used the shotgun he planned to take hunting with his dad to fatally shoot his father's pregnant girlfriend. The crime was an anomaly in this small town, where guns are commonplace and children as young as 4 are taught to …

Gunmen kill `Born Free' lion expert Adamson

KORA NATIONAL RESERVE, Kenya Gunmen ambushed and killed Britishconservationist George Adamson of Born Free fame and two of hisemployees near his remote Kenyan homestead, police and a survivorsaid Monday.

The retired Kenyan game warden and hunter was gunned down whenthree men in military-style uniforms fired on his utility vehiclewith automatic rifles, said Mohamed Maru, an employee who survivedthe Sunday attack.

Adamson, 83, and his late ex-wife, Joy, became famous for theirwork in releasing captured lions to the wild, which she described inher book Born Free.

Richard Leakey, Kenya director of wildlife conservation andmanagement, said the killing was …

Woman Indicted in Friend, Fetus Slaying

BELLEVILLE, Ill. - A prosecutor said Friday his office could decide by year's end whether to seek the death penalty against a woman accused of killing her pregnant friend and the fetus she allegedly cut from the friend's womb.

A St. Clair County grand jury on Friday indicted 24-year-old Tiffany Hall on charges of first-degree murder in last month's death of Jimella Tunstall, 23, and of intentional homicide of an unborn child - Tunstall's 7-month-old fetus.

The charges replace identical counts in an earlier criminal complaint. Each charge carries a penalty of 20 to 60 years or life in prison.

Meanwhile, prosecutor Robert Haida said investigators continue to probe …

Djokovic beats Federer in Swiss Indoors final

Novak Djokovic took Roger Federer's hometown title Sunday, winning 6-4, 4-6, 6-2 in the Swiss Indoors final to claim his fourth title of the season.

The second-seeded Serb saved five break points in a game lasting 24 minutes to clinch the first set.

Federer, the three-time …

Hatfield Leaving Senate; 11th Retirement This Year

SILVERTON, Ore. After 50 years of fighting for peace andbattling his own party at times to vote his conscience, Sen. MarkHatfield is ending his political career.

Hatfield, a moderate Republican who has grown increasinglyfrustrated with hard-line conservatives who helped the GOP gainSenate control, announced today he had decided against seeking asixth term. He is the 11th senator to announce his retirement thisyear, creating more Senate openings than in any election cycle for acentury.

"Thirty years of voluntary separation from my state has beenenough," he said.

Hatfield, 73, returned to the Willamette Valley town where helaunched every Senate campaign …

Australian cyclist Locke tests positive for doping

AIGLE, Switzerland (AP) — Australian cyclist Deon Locke has been provisionally suspended after testing positive for a banned stimulant at a race in China.

The International Cycling Union says it has asked the Australian Cycling Federation to open a disciplinary case.

The UCI says the …

Mont. man ties state record by catching tiny fish

Here's a fish tale that could use a little exaggeration.

A Kalispell man ice fishing on Bitterroot Lake in northwestern Montana on Tuesday caught a tiny fish so big that it tied a state record.

The pygmy whitefish weighed in at only 3.7 ounces and measured all of 8 1/4 inches _ but that's brawny compared to usual pygmy whitefish, which are about 4 or 5 inches in length and weigh only a few ounces.

"My arm is still hurting," joked Eric Tullett, who reeled in the fish …

Denmark Charges 3 in Terrorism Case

Prosecutors filed terrorism charges Tuesday against two alleged Islamic militants accused of preparing explosives for use in an attack in Denmark or abroad.

A third man was charged with allegedly urging the kidnapping of Danes abroad as a way to force Danish authorities to release the other two.

The charges stem from an anti-terror sweep Sept. 4 in the Copenhagen area during which eight men were arrested.

At the time, Denmark's intelligence service said the suspects were Islamic extremists with links to leading al-Qaida figures. But Director of Public Prosecutions Joergen Steen Soerensen did not mention any al-Qaida links when he filed charges Tuesday.

He said the two main suspects, ages 21 and 22, had acquired bomb-making material and conducted a test explosion using triacetone triperoxide, or TATP. That explosive was used by the four suicide bombers who killed 52 subway and bus passengers in London on July 7, 2005.

Steen Soerensen said the two men planned to build "one or more bombs for use in an act of terror" against an unspecified target, either in Denmark or abroad.

The third suspect was arrested Nov. 11. Authorities charged he was urging others to kidnap Danes abroad and use the hostages as bargaining chips to get the other suspects released. Authorities described him as a 23-year-old Dane of Turkish origin.

None of the three suspects was identified.

The six other men arrested Sept. 4 are still considered suspects in the investigation but have not been charged, said Mikkel Thastum, a spokesman for the prosecutor's office.

In September, the head of the PET intelligence service said the suspects were of Afghan, Pakistani, Somali and Turkish origin. Six were described as Danish citizens and two as foreigners with residence permits.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Oprah school trial set to begin in South Africa

A former dormitory matron is going on trial Tuesday accused of abusing pupils at a school Oprah Winfrey established for disadvantaged girls in South Africa.

Tiny Virginia Makopo, 28, is expected to plead not guilty to charges of indecent assault, assault and criminal injury. Police say six teenage students and a fellow dormitory matron were abused over four months.

Prosecutor Etienne Venter said the six girls will give evidence in a session closed to the public.

He described the girls as "very scared and very, very emotional."

The trial is expected to run through Aug. 1.

Winfrey, who was a victim of child abuse herself, has promised an overhaul of the school and said she has apologized to parents.

Winfrey's US$40 million school opened in January 2007. It is designed to groom girls for future leadership.

Duncan Takes Over As Spurs Hold Off Suns

SAN ANTONIO - Tim Duncan had 33 points - 13 in the fourth quarter - and 19 rebounds to lead the San Antonio Spurs to a 108-101 victory over the Phoenix Suns on Saturday night and a 2-1 lead in the second-round series.

Manu Ginobili also had the kind of night San Antonio needed after poor performances in Games 1 and 2. Despite a bloodied eye, he had 24 points, including 10 in less than 2 minutes in the third quarter.

Phoenix point guard Steve Nash was scoreless in the first half and finished with 16 points. He had 10 points in the fourth, but it wasn't enough as the Suns only got as close as 99-93 with 3:22 left.

Game 4 is Monday night in San Antonio.

Shawn Marion led the Suns with 26 points. Amare Stoudemire finished with 21, but was in foul trouble for most of the second half. Nash also had 11 assists.

Bruce Bowen's 3-pointer with 8 minutes left in the third was the go-ahead basket for San Antonio and put it up 62-60.

India: First-Half Textile Exports Stay Flat

Indian-made textile product exports in the first-half of fiscal 2005/06 (April-September 2005) rose only sparingly to Rs. 585.8 billion, up 0.58% from the year-ago level.

Cotton and apparel except for wool showed growth. By contrast, manmade fiber yarn, woven fabrics and made-ups fell remarkably. The retreat of cotton, woven fabrics and made-ups that constitute the mainstay was noticeable. As a result, textile exports stayed even as a whole.

Imports rose to Rs. 52.2 billion, up 16.78% from the same period of the preceding year. Increased imports of silk yarn and silk woven fabrics from China were remarkable.

U.S. Airstrikes in Iraq Kill 17 Fighters

BAQOUBA, Iraq - American attack helicopters fired on al-Qaida militants trying to slip past an Iraqi checkpoint on Friday, killing 17 of them in the fourth day of an offensive to oust the fighters entrenched in this city an hour's drive north of Baghdad.

More than three-quarters of the city's al-Qaida leadership fled before the Americans moved in to Baqouba this week, U.S. officials said Friday, but not before drone planes spotted fighters planting dozens of roadside bombs on the main highway into the city, capital of volatile and extremely dangerous Diyala province.

Brig. Gen. Mick Bednarek, assistant commander for operations with the 25th Infantry Division, estimated that several hundred low-level al-Qaida fighters remain.

"They're clearly in hiding, no question about it. But they're a hardline group of fighters who have no intention of leaving, and they want to kill as many coalition and Iraqi security forces as they possibly can," Bednarek told The Associated Press and another news agency on Friday.

Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, the top day-to-day commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, said the U.S. may be able to reduce combat forces in Iraq by next spring, if Iraq's own security forces continue to grow and improve.

Odierno did not predict any U.S. reductions but said it may be feasible by spring. There are currently 156,000 U.S. troops in Iraq.

"I think if everything goes the way it's going now, there's a potential that by the spring we will be able to reduce forces, and Iraq security forces could take over," Odierno said. "It could happen sooner than that. I don't know."

Speaking to reporters at the Pentagon from his headquarters outside Baghdad, Odierno gave an update on the series of U.S. offensives that are under way in Diyala and in areas south and west of the capital. He said U.S. and Iraqi troops have made important progress.

On Thursday, operation battalion commanders met at a bombed-out hospital here to plot their next moves.

Soldiers spread maps across rubble and pulled up charred concrete blocks as stools inside the crumbling building. Controlled explosions of roadside bombs boomed in the distance. Soldiers laden down by body armor mopped sweat from their faces.

"It's 24-7 for us here, and it's probably the same for our adversary as well," Bednarek said. "It's house-to-house, block to block, street to street, sewer to sewer - and it's also cars, vans - we're searching every one of them."

The al-Qaida leaders abandoned a field hospital, complete with oxygen tanks, heart defibrillators and other sophisticated medical equipment, said Col. Steve Townsend, commander of the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division. They also left behind at least seven homes booby-trapped with trip wires, said Townsend, 47, from Griffin, Ga.

U.S. attack helicopters firing missiles killed the 17 al-Qaida fighters Friday as the militants tried to bypass Iraqi police and infiltrate a Shiite enclave northwest of Baqouba, the military said in a statement.

More than three-quarters of the senior al-Qaida leaders holed up escaped as the offensive began Monday, Odierno said Thursday during a one-day trip to the battlefield.

"We believe 80 percent of the upper level (al-Qaida) leaders fled, but we'll find them," Odierno said after meeting with battalion commanders in the bombed-out hospital. "Eighty percent of the lower level leaders are still here."

Days before the offensive, unmanned U.S. drones recorded video of insurgents digging trenches with back-hoes, said Maj. Robbie Parke, spokesman for the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division that is doing most of the fighting in western Baqouba.

About 30 roadside bombs - known as improvised explosive devices or IEDs - were planted on Route Coyote, the U.S. code name for a main Baqouba thoroughfare, said Parke, 36, from Rapid City, S.D. "So they knew we were coming."

Odierno, who was in charge of Baqouba as head of the 4th Infantry Division in 2003 and 2004, said he was shocked at how entrenched al-Qaida had become.

"This is not the Baqouba I knew, and we can't let this happen again," he said. Militant activity spiked in Baqouba in the summer of 2006, Odierno said. A U.S. airstrike killed al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi near Baqouba in June 2006, but by then the city was already a major base for his terror network.

Since last fall, the U.S. has kept a single brigade - 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division - in charge of all of Diyala province. It was enough to conduct sporadic attacks on al-Qaida, but not enough to hold the entire province, Odierno said.

He encouraged battalion commanders to come up with a plan to prevent al-Qaida's return, after the major fighting is over. "It's down the road, but it's what you should be thinking about right now," warning "the heavy fighting still might be ahead of you."

By the time American units moved in to block the militants' escape, many were already gone, Odierno said.

"It's like jelly in a sandwich - it squirts when you squeeze it," Parke said. "We're fooling ourselves if we think we can hold them in."

Separately, the U.S. military reported another American soldier killed, raising to at least 16 the U.S. death toll over the past three days.

In Fallujah, a suicide attacker wearing an explosives vest struck a police patrol, killing two officers.

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AP writer Pauline Jelinek in Washington contributed to this report.

Kazakhstan passes restrictive religion law

ALMATY, Kazakhstan (AP) — Kazakhstan's president on Thursday approved a bill tightening registration rules for religious groups that has been described by critics as a blow to freedom of belief in the ex-Soviet nation.

Supporters of the bill signed into law by Nursultan Nazarbayev say it will help combat religious extremism, an issue that has come to the fore after a series of Islamist-linked attacks in the west of the country over the summer.

The law will require existing religious organizations in the mainly Muslim nation to dissolve and register again through a procedure that is all but guaranteed to exclude smaller groups, including minority Christian communities. It will also impose a ban on prayer in the workplace.

Passage of the bill marks a reversal of Nazarbayev's earlier attempts to cast Kazakhstan as a land of religious tolerance.

To register locally, a faith group must now be able to provide evidence of 50 members. To register at a regional level, requires 500 members. The most complicated procedure will be registering nationwide, which requires a group to have 5,000 members across the country's regions.

"Several minority religious groups do not have the required number of members and would be prohibited from continuing their activities and subject to fines if they disobey," the Washington-based democracy watchdog Freedom House said in a statement last month.

Felix Corley, editor of Forum 18, a Norwegian-based religious freedom advocacy group, said a second separate law also signed Thursday amends legislation on religion to broaden the range of offenses subject to punitive action.

"These two new laws ... undermine everyone's freedom of religion or belief and, as local human rights defenders have pointed out, are part of a wider picture of increasing governmental controls on society," Corley told The Associated Press.

The laws have been passed at a speed that has upset many activists, who say there was insufficient public discussion on the issue.

Backers of the revised law argue that the legislation is necessary to fight extremism and stem the influence of radical cults.

Authorities have been unsettled by an uncharacteristic outburst of Islamist-inspired violence in the oil-rich western regions over the summer in which several police officers were killed.

Republicans may have House within their grasp

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans are positioned to wrest control of the House of Representatives in Tuesday's elections, the wind at their backs as they try to capture the 40 seats they need to claim the majority — and potentially many more.

Democratic candidates face a poisonous cocktail of public disenchantment with the economy, disappointment in President Barack Obama and anger at government fueled by the conservative tea party movement.

Few Democratic incumbents feel safe, least of all the 55 who seized Republican seats during the past two elections, as Republicans seek to catch a historic wave. As many as 100 races were competitive as the balloting approached, fewer than a dozen of them for seats now held by Republicans.

"We'll get to the majority, and if a wave materializes, then this is a hurricane, tornado, tsunami all in one — with a cyclone to top it off," said Rep. Greg Walden of Oregon, the No. 2 Republican in charge of House campaigns. "The winds have never been stronger."

Republicans, he said, are telling candidates in scores of tight contests throughout the country, "Don't let up."

A Republican takeover would end California Democrat Nancy Pelosi's four-year tenure as the first female House speaker in history, with House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio likely to succeed her.

Democrats were in crisis-control mode, struggling to limit what all acknowledged were inevitable losses. They were bracing for grim confirmation of history's traditional midterm election curse: The party in power usually loses congressional seats, and prospects this year were made even worse by the sour economy.

"It's a very challenging environment. We've always known it was going to be a challenging environment, and anytime you have a soft economy it's very difficult," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the Democratic House campaign chief.

Still, Van Hollen said he held out hope that Democrats could hang onto power, if only narrowly. "We will retain the majority," Van Hollen said, citing "promising" early voting results from some states that he argued were evidence that his party's supporters were turning out in larger-than-expected numbers, and polls suggesting that others could still be swayed to vote Democratic.

Democratic candidates were being instructed to make a last pitch to persuade voters not to turn the reins in the House over to Republicans.

"We're telling them to be everywhere in their districts, talking to voters about that very clear choice ... between continuing the progress we're making or returning to the days when the big-moneyed special interests had their way in Washington at the expense of average Americans," Van Hollen said.

Strategists in both parties predicted privately that the Republicans had already essentially won nearly two dozen Democratic seats, while fewer than a handful of Republican jobs appeared to be lost. It was shaping up as a stunning turnabout from 2008, when Obama helped propel Democrats to big gains in their House majority only two years after the 2006 wave that swept them to control. It was the first time in more than 50 years that a party rode waves to bigger congressional margins two elections in a row.

This year, many operatives and analysts expect Republican gains to rival or exceed the party's 1994 win, when the party captured 52 seats and broke Democrats' four-decade grip on Congress.

All 435 House seats are up for grabs.

The Democratic lawmakers seen as most at risk of losing their seats include Steve Driehaus and Mary Jo Kilroy of Ohio; Alan Grayson and Suzanne Kosmas of Florida; Betsy Markey of Colorado; Kathy Dahlkemper of Pennsylvania; and Debbie Halvorson of Illinois. All are freshmen who were elected with Obama and voted for key elements of his agenda.

House veterans, too, are in serious jeopardy, from Rep. Ike Skelton in Missouri, the House Armed Services Committee chairman, to Rep. Earl Pomeroy in North Dakota and Rep. John Spratt in South Carolina, the House Budget Committee chairman.

Some three-dozen Democratic incumbents were in peril in dead-even races from Arizona to Maryland, including first-term Reps. John Boccieri of Ohio, Patrick Murphy of Pennsylvania, and Tom Perriello of Virginia. Yet another nearly 30 Democrats once considered fairly secure were at risk, including Rep. Mike McIntyre of North Carolina and Connecticut Reps. Jim Himes and Chris Murphy.

Even veteran lawmakers who usually coast to re-election by wide margins, such as 15-term Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the House Financial Services Committee chairman, and the longest-serving Democrat, Rep. John Dingell of Michigan, were feeling the heat in closer-than-anticipated races.

Democratic departures gave the Republicans still more targets, and Republicans appeared likely to pick up open seats in Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, two in Tennessee, and a New York seat left vacant when Rep. Eric Massa resigned in March amid an investigation into whether he sexually harassed male staffers.

There were a couple of bright spots for Democrats. Republicans privately conceded that Democrat Cedric Richmond would likely win his bid to unseat Republican Rep. Joseph Cao in his New Orleans, Louisiana-based district. And Democrat John Carney was expected to claim Delaware's lone House seat left open by Republican Rep. Mike Castle's unsuccessful Senate run.

Democrats also were mounting a solid bid to unseat Hawaii Rep. Charles Djou, and pressing to pick up seats left open by Republican retirements in Miami and the Chicago suburbs.

Amid an economic downturn, both parties and their candidates were spending eye-popping sums to get their messages out to voters. Van Hollen's Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has spent $144 million while the National Republican Congressional Committee has shelled out $121 million. Those sums were dwarfed by the amounts House candidates had spent through mid-October — Democrats, $421.5 million and Republicans, $419 million.

But the seeming equality in spending among the party committees and candidates belied a stark imbalance in spending by outside groups that don't have to disclose donors. Organizations backing Republicans spent $185 million, compared to $88 million in spending by organizations supporting Democrats.

Beijing's 'Buy China' policy alarms trade partners

Beijing says it wants to spur Chinese inventions with a "Buy China" policy that gives preference to domestic technology companies. But the tactic has provoked an outcry from Washington and business groups that say it will choke off access to the massive market for goods from software to clean power equipment.

Foreign companies have been alarmed by the government's announcement it will favor technology developed in China when buying computers and other goods on which it spends billions each year. The plan, part of a decade-old effort to promote "indigenous innovation," would channel money to Chinese companies and add to pressure on foreign technology creators to shift research work to China and know-how to local partners.

The move reflects Beijing's growing assertiveness as it tries to make Chinese industry more autonomous after depending on foreign money, markets and technology for three decades to drive its economic boom.

Trade groups say it violates the spirit of China's World Trade Organization free-trade commitments and its pledges to avoid protectionism that might harm the global recovery. Washington and the European Union have complained, but Beijing retorts that it has yet to sign a treaty that would apply WTO rules to government purchasing.

The impact on companies is unclear because no details of how it will work have been released. But the government is China's biggest software buyer and a key customer for other technology. Losing that market might hurt companies including Microsoft Corp., Intel Corp. and Motorola Inc. Suppliers worry the rules could be extended to purchasing by major state-owned companies in power, telecoms and other fields.

Some companies would consider pulling out of China if they conclude the loss in sales will be too great, U.S. and European trade groups say.

"It's going to have a direct impact on their expansion plans," said Richard Vuyrsteke, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong. "When you have strictures that restrict growth, you can ride it out for a while but then you have to consider, is it worth it? Is it absolutely necessary to stay in this market?"

The anxiety comes amid a string of incidents that have rattled foreign companies _ Google Inc.'s dispute with Beijing over censorship and e-mail hacking, last year's arrest of four Rio Tinto Ltd. employees on commercial spying charges and a government threat in January to punish U.S. companies for Washington's approval of a $10 billion arms sale to Taiwan, the self-ruled island claimed by the mainland as its territory.

U.S. companies are appealing to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to make the procurement plan a priority in their annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue with Beijing, due in June.

Beijing's policy will create "barriers to competition in the Chinese market for our most innovative companies," said a coalition of 19 American groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Business Software Alliance in a letter to Clinton and Geithner.

A separate coalition of 34 groups for technology companies and manufacturers in Europe, Japan, South Korea and Canada also has appealed to Beijing to reconsider.

Beijing has launched "Buy China" campaigns previously to favor local suppliers in construction and other projects. But the tech procurement rules are unusually explicit in rejecting a foreign role on such a large scale.

"It's the first time foreigners were singled out," said Joerg Wuttke, chairman of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

The wave of alarm stems from Beijing's surprise announcement in November that procurement will favor Chinese producers in six technology areas _ computers, clean power, communication, office equipment, software and energy-efficient products.

Companies were given just three weeks to apply to be treated as domestic suppliers, a status trade groups say few are likely to qualify for, even those such as General Electric Co. and Microsoft that have research and development centers in China. There has been no word on whether any were accepted.

A second announcement in December listed a wider array of 18 technologies to receive tax breaks and other support. They covered most Chinese industries, including oil and gas, power construction equipment and aircraft, which sparked concern that companies might come under pressure to favor domestic suppliers.

All of China's major banks, airlines and steel, oil, power and telecoms companies are state-owned and have Communist Party secretaries who have the last word on major decisions and see that they obey official development plans.

The procurement plan may be a desperation move by planners whose efforts to transform China from a low-cost factory into a technology leader by rewarding innovators with tax breaks and grants have failed to produce breakthroughs.

A 15-year government plan issued in 2006 promises help for research in 11 areas from nuclear power to lasers and genetics. But communist leaders fret that China's telecoms, computer and other tech outfits have failed to establish themselves abroad.

The innovation strategy coincides with an effort to reserve large segments of the economy for state companies the government hopes will grow into national champions in fields from banking and energy to telecoms and aerospace.

"What these guys are doing is trying to wall off the Chinese economy and keep out the foreigners," said Duncan Clark, chairman of BDA China Ltd., a technology market research firm in Beijing. "There is a very vociferous camp here that says, We'll never beat the multinationals unless we get economies of scale at home."

A key sticking point is that Beijing has yet to sign onto the Government Procurement Agreement, a treaty that extends WTO free-trade rules to official purchases and would require it to treat foreign and Chinese suppliers equally.

Beijing promised at last year's dialogue with Washington to treat products made in China by foreign companies the same as those made by Chinese enterprises.

The procurement rules "would exclude the possibility for such equal treatment," said a U.S. Embassy spokeswoman, Susan Stevenson.

A stumbling block for companies that want to be treated as domestic suppliers is Beijing's insistence that they obtain patents and register trademarks in China before any other country.

Many global companies are reluctant to apply for patents in China first because its system is slow to respond and they fear technology might be leaked to local rivals.

They also worry about restrictions that China imposes on its patent holders. Chinese law allows the government to force them to license technology to rivals and requires companies to seek Beijing's permission to patent the same technology abroad.

Trade groups hope Beijing decides its development depends on exposing Chinese companies to foreign technology and competition, not shutting them out.

"I want to think that the more vigorous the discussion becomes, that there will be some reconsideration by the government," said Vuyrsteke. "They have to, or they will be shooting themselves in the foot."

Senate passes futures-abuse curbs

The U.S. Senate passed sweeping legislation Thursday to curbabuses in the nation's futures trading pits and toughen theregulatory powers of the federal agency that oversees them.

The 90-8 vote climaxed two years of political wrangling over theSenate bill, which seeks to end a jurisdictional dispute betweenrival regulators.

The bill, which would reauthorize the Commodity Futures TradingCommission, gained approval after extensive debate about whether theCFTC or the Securities and Exchange Commission should regulate newfinancial products with aspects of both futures and securities.

Chicago exchange officials applauded the bill's approval, as didthe CFTC.

Under the legislation passed by the Senate, a new hybridfinancial product would be regulated by the SEC if it is more like astock and by the CFTC if it is more like a futures contract. Presentlaw says an instrument with any futures contract aspects falls underCFTC jurisdiction.

The compromise, reached last month, was largely proposed by CFTCChairman Wendy Gramm. SEC Chairman Richard Breeden and FederalReserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan opposed it.

The Senate bill also would give the Fed authority to set marginsfor stock-index futures. Margins are upfront money required totrade.

A House-Senate conference committee will consider the Senatebill along with a House bill that includes similar market reforms butdoes not change stock-index futures margin authority or address thefight over other hybrid products. Chicago Mercantile ExchangeChairman Jack Sandner said he expects House-Senate conferees to meetwithin the next couple of weeks.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Independent groups aim at McCain, Obama in new ads

Their messages run the gamut, but an explosion of outside advertising targeting the presidential candidates has the same goal: to provoke voters on issues from abortion and judges to killing wolves and John McCain's age.

One group plans to spend up to $1 million on ads attacking Democrat Barack Obama's economic policies and blaming the financial crisis on Democrats' lack of oversight. A nonprofit that advocates the appointment of conservative judges is spending about $500,000 on ads in Michigan, Ohio and on Fox News Channel questioning Obama's past associations, including with his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

Planned Parenthood began airing an ad in three battleground media markets claiming Republican McCain and running mate Sarah Palin are insensitive to rape victims. The country's largest nurses' union has a hard-hitting spot that takes issue with McCain's age _ he's 72 _ that is appearing for three days in markets in six states. And Defenders of Wildlife expanded into new markets with an ad denouncing, in graphic form, the aerial hunting of wolves in Alaska, a practice Palin has supported as the state's governor.

These groups are the guerrilla troops of the campaign season. Their ads tend to be quick hits that run in smaller media markets and aim to make a splash with the media, donors and voters.

Their efforts so far have been relatively small, a fraction of what the presidential candidates are spending.

Evan Tracey, who tracks political advertising, said Democratic-leaning groups have spent more than $6 million on ads since June and that Republican groups have spent a bit less.

By contrast, Obama is spending about $13 million this week alone, and McCain and the Republican National Committee together are spending about $11 million.

Still, the most effective timing for independent ads is closer to the election. Swift Boat Veterans and POWs for Truth, who created a sensation during the 2004 presidential campaign with ads that called into question Democrat John Kerry's Vietnam war record, ramped up their advertising that October.

___

On the Net:

RightChange.com: http://www.RightChange.com

Judicial Confirmation Network: http://www.judicialnetwork.com/

Planned Parenthood Action Fund: http://www.plannedparenthoodaction.org/

California Nurses Association: http://www.calnurse.org/

Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund: http://www.defendersactionfund.org/

Biorem purchases Biocube

Guelph - Biorem Inc. has completed the acquisition of the assets of Biocube LLC of Victor, NY through a new, wholly owned, U.S. subsidiary, which will continue their operations under the name Biorem Environmental Inc.

Biocube manufactures a line of modular biofilters for odour control in the small to intermediate airflow range and has more than 300 systems installed worldwide. Biocube's sales in fiscal 2004 were $3.0 million (US$2.4 million) and the purchase price was approximately one times annual sales, settled in cash. All seven full time Biocube employees have been offered positions at Biorem Environmental Inc. The transaction is expected to be accretive to Biorem fiscal 2005 earnings.

A private placement to Mr. Herbert Ego, former President and CEO of Biocube, of approximately 110,000 common shares of Biorem Inc. at an aggregate subscription price of $346,000 ($3.15 per share) was completed in accordance with regulatory approval simultaneously with the closing of the transaction.

"This acquisition marks another significant step in our goal of consolidating the biofilter market, bringing together biological odour control companies that are the best in their respective segments," commented Brian Herner, President and CEO of Biorem. "Combined with new product developments and improved application technology, we are committed to providing our customers the best product selection and performance capability available."

Biocube's specialized product line includes a patented modular resin tray biofilter that is ideal for treating odours from sewage pumping stations and small sewage treatment plants. There are hundreds of thousands of these stations in North America and many have serious odour emission problems. Biocube offers the most competitive price point for the low airflow market. The size and price make it an excellent product for entry into foreign markets. Successful installations have already been completed in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, South Africa and Peru."

Through its wholly owned subsidiary, Biorem Technologies Inc., manufactures Biosorbens a highefficiency permanent biofilter media and is a leading supplier of biofilters for air pollution control in municipal and industrial applications including the Basys modular and Biofiltair field erected systems.

Jobless benefit claims jump

WASHINGTON Nearly half a million laid-off workers filed newjobless claims three weeks before Christmas, the government saidtoday, suggesting at best a stagnant economy and at worst a reneweddecline.

Among the states, Illinois racked up the third-highest total ofnew claims with 19,300.

But in a rare bright spot in an otherwise gloomy picture, theCommerce Department said record exports shrank the nation'smerchandise trade deficit by 2.9 percent to a seasonally adjusted$6.73 billion in October.

For the week ended Dec. 7, Americans filed a seasonally adjusted493,000 new claims for unemployment insurance, 79,000 more than theweek before, the Labor Department said.

"It's consistent with this evidence that the economy is justsort of hanging in there somewhere between stagnation and slightslippage," said economist Robert Dederick of Northern Trust Co. inChicago. "The expansion has stalled and the risks are all on thedown side."

An even more pessimistic Bruce Steinberg of Merrill Lynch said,"I think the economy is declining right now. I don't think we'rejust stalled out."

Economists were cheered by the better-than-expected trade reportbut warned that economic sluggishness abroad will restrain U.S.export sales through much of next year.

In a move likely to further dampen European growth, Germany'scentral bank today raised two key interest rates by half a percentagepoint. The Bundesbank is trying to head off inflationary pressuresas Germany borrows heavily to finance its unification.

Despite the over-all trade improvement, the deficit with Japanjumped 11 percent to $4.64 billion, the biggest imbalance sinceFebruary, 1989.

President Bush today met with business leaders accompanying himon a trip to Asia later this month. Bush hopes to prod Japan intoopening its markets to American goods.

"That means the same three words: jobs, jobs and jobs," Bushsaid.

Among the executives meeting with the president was GeneralMotors Corp. Chairman Robert Stempel, who announced Wednesday that GMwould shut 21 factories and eliminate 74,000 jobs over the next fouryears.

The number of new unemployment claims during the first week ofDecember matched the 493,000 filed during the first week of Novemberand approached the levels last seen during the depths of therecession earlier this year. It brought the total number of peopledrawing benefits to 3.48 million.

The initial-claims level hit an eight-year high in March of540,000 and then shrank to around 400,000 in July before starting toclimb again.

Analysts had expected an increase in the latest report, becausethe occurrence of Thanksgiving the previous week had left workerswith one less day than usual in which to file claims. But the 79,000rise was about double what they were predicting in advance.

Economists caution against reading too much into week-to-weekfluctuations in the highly volatile claims numbers. But they havewatched with concern as the four-week running average has creptsteadily higher since midsummer.

The average during the latest four-week period was 449,000, upfrom 443,500 the previous four weeks. The five states with thelargest increases in initial unemployment insurance claims for theweek ending Dec. 7 were California, 30,900; North Carolina, 19,700;Illinois, 19,300; Pennsylvania, 16,000, and Ohio, 10,400.

The early December jump could be a harbinger of bad news whenthe unemployment figures for the entire month are released Jan. 10.The level was 6.8 percent in November and analysts fear that it couldreturn to the 7 percent it hit earlier in the recession.

Meantime, the Veterans Affairs Department said it was cutting ahalf percentage point from the maximum rate on VA-guaranteedmortgages, lowering it to 8 percent effective tomorrow. That is thelowest since May, 1977.

"The drop in the rate will have the practical effect ofstimulating the economy and boosting the housing industry by allowingmore veterans to qualify for loans," said VA Secretary Edward J.Derwinski.

Delete transaction.

Delete transaction.

Seniors finish close together

DERLLYS Court Golf Club seniors took part in a very competitiveTexas Scramble last week, with the trio of Dave Newman, IanRobertson and Clive Jones shooting a twounder-par gross score of 69to take first place.

Just two shots behind, Roy Gallop, Reg Powell and Winston Johnsuffered from a disappointing back nine and had to settle for secondspot.

The battle for third place saw old rivals Chris Palmer and LesBurgoyne lead their teams to a tied gross score of 72, and withidentical handicap allowances, countback favoured Palmer and hispartners Frank Wride and Barry Woodford.

Five more teams recorded gross scores with a further three shots,illustrating how competitive the seniors competitions have been thisyear. The seniors play a pairs betterball competition this weekbefore the final competition of 2011, the Christmas lunchcompetition on Monday, December 19.

Italy borrowing rates drop again in bond auction

ROME (AP) — Italy saw its borrowing costs drop for a second day in a row Friday as it easily raised €4.75 in a bond auction that indicated improving investor confidence in the country's financial future.

Investors demanded an interest rate of 4.83 percent to lend Italy three-year money, down from an average rate of 5.62 percent in the previous auction and far lower than the 7.89 percent in November, when the country's financial crisis was most acute.

Italy paid lower rates for bonds with other maturities, as far out as 2018, that it also sold in Friday's auctions. Demand was between 1.2 percent and 2.2 percent higher than what was on offer.

Although investor interest was good and the interest rates fell, the results were not as strong as those of bond auctions the previous day, when Italy raised €12 billion ($15 million) and Spain saw huge demand for its own debt sale.

Marc Ostwald, strategist at Monument Securities, said market reaction will likely be disappointing compared with the successful bond auctions on Thursday.

"Overall it underscores that while all the auctions in the eurozone have been battle victories, the war is a long way from being resolved (either way)," he said in a note. "These euro area auctions will continue to present themselves as market risk events for a very protracted period."

Italy's €1.9 trillion ($2.42 trillion) in government debt and heavy borrowing needs this year have made it a focal point of the European debt crisis. Fitch Ratings Agency, which has said it will consider whether to downgrade Italy's credit rating by the end of the month, estimates the country needs to borrow €360 billion ($458 billion) this year.

Italy has passed austerity measures and is on a structural reform course that Premier Mario Monti claims should bring down Italy's high bond yields, which he says are no longer warranted.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Rice, U.N. Chief Seek New Mideast Talks

RAMALLAH, West Bank - International heavyweights added their heft Sunday to efforts to prod Israel and the Palestinians to start talking peace again, but pointedly planned to shun members of the new Palestinian coalition government affiliated with the Islamic militant group Hamas.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, arriving for a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said his trip, including a tour of a Palestinian refugee camp earlier Sunday, strengthened his resolve to work for Mideast peace. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was to meet later Sunday with Abbas, a moderate who heads the Fatah Party.

Ban, on his first trip to the Palestinian territories, …

DWI MANSLAUGHTER TRIAL DELAYED BECAUSE OF ILLNESS.(Local)

Donald Beaudry's DWI manslaughter trial was postponed Monday because prosecutor Brian Lauri is ill. State Supreme Court Justice John Brunetti rescheduled the trial for June 15.

Beaudry, 38, of Salina, is charged with driving drunk and killing visiting California psychiatrist Harry S. Newman in a crash on Old Liverpool Road May 4, 2003. A March trial date was postponed because Newman's widow was ill and unable to travel here to testify as a prosecution witness.

DWI MANSLAUGHTER TRIAL DELAYED BECAUSE OF ILLNESS.(Local)

Donald Beaudry's DWI manslaughter trial was postponed Monday because prosecutor Brian Lauri is ill. State Supreme Court Justice John Brunetti rescheduled the trial for June 15.

Beaudry, 38, of Salina, is charged with driving drunk and killing visiting California psychiatrist Harry S. Newman in a crash on Old Liverpool Road May 4, 2003. A March trial date was postponed because Newman's widow was ill and unable to travel here to testify as a prosecution witness.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Genes, Neurons, and the Internet Found to Have Some Identical Organizing Principles.

Byline: American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science

REHOVOT, Israel, Nov. 6 (AScribe Newswire) -- How do 30,000 genes in our DNA work together to form a large part of who we are? How do one hundred billion neurons operate in our brain? The huge number of factors involved makes such complex networks hard to crack. Now, a study published in the October 25 issue of Science uncovers a strategy for finding the organizing principles of virtually any network - from neural networks to ecological food webs or the Internet.

A team headed by Dr. Uri Alon, of the Weizmann Institute of Science's Molecular Cell Biology Department has found several such organizational patterns - which they call "network motifs" - underlying genetic, neural, technological, and food networks. The mathematical technique was first proposed by Alon earlier this year …

Man arrested after shot heard near playground.(Perspective)

KINDERHOOK - State Police arrested Michael Jornov, 49, of Valatie after he allegedly shot a woodchuck with a rifle Friday morning as children played 500 feet away on a playground at Martin H. Glynn Elementary School, Investigator Gary Mazzacano said.

Trooper John Gallo, the school resource officer, heard the shot and found Jornov walking back into his home carrying a rifle. No one was hurt but children were …

LILLIAN ANDRES.(CAPITAL REGION)

ALBANY -- Lillian Andres, 93, died on Wednesday at University Heights Nursing Home after an extended illness. Born in Albany, Mrs. Andres lived here all her life and was a communicant of Blessed Sacrament Church. She is survived by a brother, Edward Andres, and was the …

ABC News: Gibson retiring, Sawyer will be anchor

ABC News says Charles Gibson is retiring and Diane Sawyer will replace him as the anchor of "World News."

Sawyer's elevation means that, with Katie Couric, two of the three leading anchors for the broadcast networks will be women.

Gibson said he had been planning to retire at the end of 2007 but events compelled him to stay. He was named …

ANARCHY AND ART: FROM THE PARIS COMMUNE TO THE FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL

ANARCHY AND ART: FROM THE PARIS COMMUNE TO THE FALL OF THE BERLIN WALL BY ALLAN ANTLIFF VANCOUVER: ARSENAL PULP PRESS. 224 PAGES. $24.

"When I am dead let this be said of me: 'He belonged to no school, to no church, to no institution, to no academy, least of all to any r�gime except the r�gime of liberty.'" By capturing the anarchist spirit in this June 1870 letter, written the year before the Paris Commune, freedom-loving realist painter Gustave Courbet makes an appropriate opening subject for Allan Antliff 's exploration of the relationship between European and American art and anarchist activism. Antliff considers "anarchism as a catalyst for social liberation" and points to the …

Design options in metal roofing.

Design Options in Metal Roofing

When someone mentions roofing systems, what first comes to mind -- single-ply, mod-bit, BUR? Although metal roofing is not the most talked about style, in many cases it can prove to be the most beneficial to the building owner.

Metal roofing can provide a variety of advantages, the first of which being freedom of design. "Particularly in terms of copper, it allows for a wide range of roof shapes, from flat to very steeply pitched roofs," says Paul Anderson, vice president, Building Construction Markets, Copper Development Association. "With good mechanics, it can be formed to almost any existing condition."

A second advantage is energy and material efficiency. Due to the lessened amount of fasteners in a standing seam roof, the risk of potential roof leakage is relatively small. By using automatic field seaming machines, a weathertight connection is made between the roof panels. "These systems allow the contractor to put a lot of insulation beneath the roof," says Mark Asmus, program manager, Bethlehem Steel. "They …

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Who's Who.(Industry News)

Card manufacturer Arthur Blank & Co has named Justin D'Angelo chairman and CEO. D'Angelo also retains his previous role as chief operating officer of Arthur Blank's parent, American Banknote. Arthur Blank also promoted Keith Goldstein to president and chief operating officer. He previously was senior vice president of operations. Goldstein replaces longtime executives Stuart Blank and Eric Blank, former president and executive vice president, respectively. Both are assuming roles in corporate strategy development. The company also promoted Jake Jacobs to executive vice president of sales and marketing from senior vice president of sales and business development. Also, Paul …

CSEA APPROVES FOUR-YEAR CONTRACT AGREEMENT.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: JAMES M. ODATO Capitol bureau

State government's biggest employee union approved a new contract providing 11.4 percent in wage increases over four years and setting in motion an expected series of similar pacts to cover almost all state workers.

An exact count was not expected until today, but a Civil Service Employees Association spokesman said early returns were overwhelmingly in favor of the deal.

CSEA President Danny Donohue credited the Pataki administration and the CSEA negotiators for coming up with a fair pact.

``The strength of the ratification vote is a true measure of support,'' he said.

The deal affects about …

BOARD MEMBER-ELECT EYES BUDGET PANEL.(Local)

Byline: Marc Carey Staff writer

Incoming South Colonie Board of Education member John Monteiro will make the establishment of a district citizens budgetary advisory committee a priority when he takes office in July, he said Monday night.

The board member said he was unsure whether he would support the concept of a contingency budget in the wake of last week's defeat by voters of the district's proposed $40.94 million budget.

Superintendent Thomas Brown and board President Dagmar Murphy have already endorsed a contingency plan rather than a budget revote.

Monteiro, 35, who has two children attending school in the district, defeated incumbent …

US lawmaker, ethics panel lawyers talking deal

A veteran House lawmaker made a last-minute effort Tuesday to settle his ethics case and prevent a House trial that could embarrass him and damage the Democratic Party in advance of November elections.

The talks between Rep. Charles Rangel's lawyer and the House ethics committee's nonpartisan attorneys were confirmed by ethics Chairman Zoe Lofgren, a Democrat. Lofgren said she is not involved in the talks, and added that the committee's lawmakers have always accepted the professional staff's recommendations in previous plea bargains.

Rangel, a 40-year House veteran who is 80 years old, would have to admit to multiple, substantial ethics violations for any …

Saudi student gets prison for killing NY professor

BINGHAMTON, New York (AP) — A graduate student from Saudi Arabia has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for stabbing a university professor to death in upstate New York.

Abdulsalam al-Zahrani had pleaded guilty in May to first-degree manslaughter for killing Binghamton University professor Richard Antoun. Prosecutors said the 48-year-old al-Zahrani had come to believe Antoun was part of a plot against him and attacked the professor in his …

Legume symbiosis. (Product News).(Applied Biosystems Ltd., API Qstar Pulsar Hybrid LC/MS/MS system used in chemistry department, University of York)(Brief Article)

The Applied Biosystems API Qstar Pulsar Hybrid LC/MS/MS system, a MicrolonSpray, a NanoSpray source and an oMALDI source have been used in the department of chemistry at the University of York, UK, to study the symbiosis between leguminous plants and nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteria.

The group uses the Qstar instrument with both the electrospray and …

The Productive Programmer.(Brief article)(Book review)

The Productive Programmer

Neal Ford

O'Reilly

1005 Gravenstein Highway North, Sebastapol, CA 95472

9780596519780, $39.99 www.oreilly.com

Here's another 'foundation pick' for serious programming collections: a guide that …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

HYPERTENSION'S LINK TO BRAIN AT ISSUE.(MAIN)

Byline: Associated Press

CHICAGO -- Contrary to previous research, a new study found no direct link between high blood pressure and a decline in thinking ability as people age.

The leader of the study, Dr. Robert J. Glynn of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, emphasized that controlling blood pressure is still vital to prevent heart disease and strokes, and that hypertension is often undertreated in the elderly.

The study is reported in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association. It involved more than 2,000 people over age 65 who had undergone tests of blood pressure and thinking …

What is the role of change management in the military financial management community?(Essay Contest Winner-1st Place)

What hasn't changed in the Military financial management community in the last 10 years? Who is giving guarantees that our environment won't change even more in the next 3, 5, 7, or 10 years, or perhaps even more than once? More importantly, how have we survived past changes? What will it take to survive future changes?

The seemingly ageless stability of the military financial management community has been significantly shaken during the last decade; today, many community members approach the future with apprehension. Flags signaling change still fly. At the most basic, do we call our community the "DoD Comptroller" (as in American Society of Military Comptrollers), "DoD Financial Management," or "DoD Financial Management and Comptroller" community? Have we even settled on what that change implies?

Even though the Defense Finance and Accounting Service has been in existence for over 10 years, many members of our financial management community have yet to totally accept this change. Financial management work in what was viewed by most to be an organized, stable environment---with predictable annually cyclical workload fluctuations--has been turned topsyturvy. World events and ever-increasing pressures on DoD budgets have created more and more what-if drills, short-turnaround "numbers please submissions," and a frenzied drive for more and more detailed financial and …

Lawmakers Warn FBI Over Spy Power Abuse

WASHINGTON - Republicans and Democrats alike sternly warned the FBI on Tuesday that it risks losing its broad power to collect telephone, e-mail and financial records to hunt terrorists because of rampant abuses of the authority.

The threats were the latest blow to the embattled Justice Department and Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who is already on the defensive and fighting to keep his job over the firings of federal prosecutors.

The warnings came as the department's chief watchdog, inspector general Glenn A. Fine, told the House Judiciary Committee that the FBI engaged in widespread and serious misuse of its authority to issue national security letters, which …

JetBlue to Liberia.(COSTA RICA)

JETBLUE TO LIBERIA. JetBlue Airways on July 6 announced plans to add four weekly nonstop flights between New York's John F. Kennedy Intl Airport (JFK) and Liberia, Costa Rica's Daniel Oduber Quiros Intl Airport (LIR) effective Nov. 17, 2011, subject to government approval. Liberia, on the Pacific coast, will be JetBlue's second …

DARE TO GO FAR BEYOND THE EXPECTED.(BUSINESS)

Byline: HARVEY MACKAY

I've always believed that our life is simply a reflection of our actions.

If you want more love in the world, create more love in your heart. If you want more competence in your team, improve your competence. This relationship applies to everything. Life will give you back everything you've given it. Your life is not a coincidence; it's a reflection of you.

Take, for instance, the story about the mother and daughter who are hiking up a mountain. Suddenly, the daughter falls, hurts herself and screams, ``AAAhhhhhh!'' To her surprise, she hears a voice repeating from somewhere in the mountain, ``AAAhhhhhh!'' Curious, she yells, …

CLL and MM may have different mechanisms of cell survival.

2003 AUG 25 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- CLL and MM may have different mechanisms of cell survival.

"We compared gene expression in purified tumor cells from untreated patients with chronic lymphocytic (CLL) (n=24) and newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (MM) (n=29) using the Affymetrix HuGeneFL microarray with probes for approximately 6800 genes," scientists in the United States report.

"Hierarchical clustering analysis showed that CLL and MM have distinct expression profiles (class prediction). Gene and protein expression (measured by flow cytometry) correlated well for CD19, CD20, CD23, and CD138 in CLL and MM, but not for immunoglobulin light chain, CD38 …

MARRIOTT TO OPEN.(Royal St. Kitts Marriott Resort and Casino)(Brief Article)

The Feb. 22 date for the opening of the 900-room Royal St. Kitts Marriott Resort and Casino is still on target, said Prime Minister Denzil L. Douglas. He told the press that top officials of the Royal Plastics Group of Canada -- the developers of the hotel and the Vice President of the Marriott International, which will operate the US$400 million resort, were to visit St. Kitts on Dec. 17 to make final checks on the fire and safety aspects of the tourism …

TERRORISM SUSPECT TAKEN TO HOSPITAL.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: Associated Press

NEW YORK Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, accused of plotting a terrorism spree that could have killed tens of thousands of New Yorkers, was taken to a hospital Thursday for treatment of pneumonia.

Lawyers and friends of Abdel-Rahman said his condition had deteriorated for several days, but a statement from the U.S. Marshals Service said his illness was ``not life threatening.'' …