Sexy High Heels

A babydoll is a short, sleeveless, loose fitting nightgown or negligee intended as nightwear for women. It usually consists of formed cups with an attached loose fitting skirt falling in length between the hips and the belly button. The garment is often trimmed with lace, ruffles, appliques, marabou fur, bows and ribbons, optionally with spaghetti straps. Sometimes it is made of sheer or translucent fabric like nylon or chiffon or silk. The garment's hemline is usually about six inches above the knee like a minidress and may have a scoop-neck. Usually panties are worn underneath.

A camisole can be worn over a brassiere or without one. Some camisoles come with a built-in underwire bra or other support which eliminates the need for a bra among those who prefer one. Recently, camisoles have been known to be used as outerwear.

Sexy High Heels

Phoenix Airport Car Service

Another type of vehicle modified for multiple passenger use is the motorized stage, applied to the same tasks as the earlier stagecoach. It is not considered a true limousine but rather in its design and application is between a sedan and a bus. While a bus will have a central interior aisle for access to seating, a stage has multiple doors that allow access to transverse forward facing seats. Examples of the type were constructed not only from sedans (e.g., Chrysler New Yorker, Cadillac DeVille), but also from station wagons; many of the station wagon conversions sported a large rack, running the length of the roof, for carrying the passengers' baggage.

This type of vehicle was once rather common in some locations. An example of its use was in the transport of travelers arriving by railroad at Merced, California to Glacier National Park and Yosemite National Park in the first half of the 20th century. In Glacier National Park, these were referred to as "Jammers" in reference to the nickname of their gear-jamming drivers. In Yosemite, passengers would then stay in rustic platform tent camps or more expensive lodges (both of which are still available) and hike or rent bicycles for movement around the park.

Phoenix Airport Car Service

Fort Worth Fence

Fort Worth Fence

Fences can be the source of bitter arguments between neighbours, and there are often special laws to deal with these problems. Common disagreements include what kind of fence is required, what kind of repairs are needed, and how to share the costs.

Where a fence or hedge has an adjacent ditch, the ditch is normally in the same ownership as the hedge or fence, with the ownership boundary being the edge of the ditch furthest from the fence or hedge. The principle of the rule is that an owner digging a boundary ditch will normally dig it up to the very edge of their land, and must then pile the spoil on their own side of the ditch to avoid trespassing on their neighbour. They may then erect a fence or hedge on the spoil, leaving the ditch on its far side. Exceptions often occur, for example where a plot of land derives from subdivision of a larger one along the centre line of a previously existing ditch or other feature.

EU-Norway fish talks collapse

BRUSSELS (AFP) –
European Union and Norwegian fishing fleets have been booted out of each other's waters, which they normally share, after talks on quotas collapsed, Brussels said on Wednesday.

The European Commission "deeply regrets that, despite all the efforts made to reach agreement with Norway, the respective approaches of the two parties at this stage have proved to be irreconcilable," said a statement.

The waters of the North Sea, a harvest for plaice, whiting, cod, herring and mackerel -- the main bone of contention -- are mainly fished on the EU side by Scottish boats, some of which could be forced out of business amid lingering, deep recession there.

According to the commission, weeks of talks trying to agree on shared quotas for 2010 floundered in Bergen, Norway in a dispute over access to mackerel, an inexpensive fish considered a delicacy when smoked in various North Sea countries.

The commission said Brussels had "offered increased access for Norway to fish mackerel in EU waters, without asking for compensation by Norway."

Now, though, Norwegian boats will be "excluded" from EU waters, just as EU boats will no longer be able to stray into Norwegian waters until a compromise is found.

"EU fishing companies and vessels, which have no link to the mackerel issue, will be impacted upon negatively," it underlined.

Norwegian fisheries minister Lisbeth Berg-Hansen said she was "profoundly disappointed" at the outcome, stressing that Oslo wanted to see a long-term deal with fixed quotas and mutual access across EU and Norwegian zones.

She said the parties were unable to agree on "any of the central questions," also highlighting a dispute over smaller fish thrown back into the sea by European trawlers, a practice outlawed by the Norwegian authorities.

"I am particularly keen to underline the importance we attach to new measures to reduce the number of fish rejected, which represents a great waste of resources," she added.

"This was a missed opportunity to conclude a balanced deal," said Commissioner for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Joe Borg.

However, spokeswoman Nathalie Charbonneau said the commission was "hopeful" that talks that would see Brussels propose "provisional quotas" would resume "early in January."

The commission called for a "solidarity of purpose" among the EU's 27 member states to get negotiations back on track.

Democrats Said to Agree to Drop Full Health-Care Public Option

Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Senate Democrats tentatively agreed
to abandon plans to set up a full government-run insurance
program in a bid to remove one of the biggest obstacles to
health legislation, a person familiar with negotiations said.

The lawmakers instead backed a proposal to establish a
program modeled on the U.S. government employee-insurance system
that would have private companies provide coverage under federal
oversight to millions of uninsured Americans, the person said.
They also want to expand eligibility for the federal Medicare
program for the elderly.

The deal was negotiated by 10 Senate Democrats seeking an
alternative to the government-run program. While most Democrats
support the so-called public option, the idea has drawn fire
from party members in the Senate and all Republicans. It needs
backing by 60 senators to get into the final bill.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said Democrats reached
“a broad agreement” on the issue, yet offered no details.

“We have confronted many hurdles, and tonight I believe we
have overcome yet another one,” Reid, a Nevada Democrat, said
in a statement last night.

Reid is pushing the Senate to pass health-care legislation
before the end of the month, paving the way for a House-Senate
compromise early next year. The 10-year, $848 billion Senate
bill, designed to cover 31 million uninsured Americans and curb
medical expenses, would make the biggest changes to the nation’s
health-care system in four decades.

‘Several’ Alternatives

The dispute over the government-run insurance plan
threatened to derail any agreement, with Republicans and
centrist Democrats saying it would provide unfair competition to
insurers such as Hartford, Connecticut-based Aetna Inc. and
Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc.

Reid, seeking to break an impasse on the bill, encouraged
the group of Senate Democrats to meet behind closed doors and
come up with an alternative to his original plan to set up a
government program that would allow states to opt out.

While he said last night the “consensus” is for a public
option, Jim Manley, his spokesman, said the proposal by the
senators to allow the federal Office of Personnel Management to
administer insurance plans could be construed as a public
option.

Alternative Plans

Reid sent several alternative proposals to the
Congressional Budget Office, which must offer a cost estimate
for the legislation, Manley said.

One was the senators’ plan to allow the federal agency to
oversee the insurers, he said. Another calls for the public
option to be started up only if private insurers failed to keep
costs down. That idea is being pushed by Maine Senator Olympia
Snowe, one of the few Republicans being courted by Democrats to
support the legislation.

The White House applauded what it called “great progress”
by the senators. “We’re pleased that they’re working together
to find common ground toward options that increase choice and
competition,” Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer said in a
statement.

The plan agreed to last night would let private companies
sell insurance to businesses throughout the U.S. It would lower
the eligibility age for the Medicare plan to 55 from 65.

Long Way to Go

Lawmakers have cautioned that there is a long way to go
even if an accord holds.

For one thing, the analysis by the nonpartisan budget
office may set back Reid’s timetable. For another, Senator Joe
Lieberman, a Connecticut independent who caucuses with the
Democrats, has said he is skeptical about creating an
alternative to the public option based on coverage offered to
federal employees.

“There’s a danger that people will try to add more to the
bill than it can reasonably carry,” Lieberman said, citing the
costs involved.

And the steering committee for the Health Care for America
Now coalition, which includes the NAACP, United Auto Workers and
the AFL-CIO, among other groups, yesterday said a public option
has to be part of the insurance exchanges the health legislation
would create.

“Using nonprofits to replace a public option won’t work,”
the steering committee said. “In fact, with half of people in
private insurance currently enrolled in nonprofit plans, they
are part of the problem.”

Expanding Medicaid

Like the $1 trillion measure passed by the House on Nov. 7,
the Senate’s health-care legislation would require Americans to
get health coverage or pay a penalty. It would expand Medicaid,
set up new online purchasing exchanges to get insurance and
provide subsidies for those who need help buying policies.

The agreement follows a vote earlier last night in which
the Senate refused to add stricter limits on abortion funding to
health-care legislation.

The lawmakers voted 54-45 to reject an amendment by
Nebraska Democrat Ben Nelson, jeopardizing his support for the
overall legislation. Nelson said his proposal would preserve the
ban on federal funding of abortion; opponents argued it would
discourage insurance companies from covering the procedure.

The loss means Reid may have to find a compromise to gain
Nelson’s backing for the broader measure.

“This is not the right place for this debate,” Reid said
before lawmakers voted to take the amendment from consideration
on the Senate floor. “We have to get on with the larger issue
at hand,” the health-care plan, he said.

To contact the reporters on this story:
Laura Litvan in Washington at
llitvan@bloomberg.net ;
Nicole Gaouette in Washington at
ngaouette@bloomberg.net

Congress lower than car salesmen (Politico)

Being a member of Congress rates as the least ethical and honest professions – faring worse than car salesmen by 4 percent – according to a new Gallup poll out Wednesday.
In a poll ranking how Americans view the honesty and ethical standards of 21 professions, Congressmen were rated as having a “low/very low” ethical standards by 55 percent of 1,017 adults across the nation. Only 9 percent said members of Congress have “high/very high” standards, while 35 percent gave the lawmakers an “average” rating.
Car salesmen were the only other profession to get a “low/very low” rating by at least 50 percent of respondents, receiving 51 percent.
Senators ranked third lowest in the poll, earning a 49 percent “low/very low” ethical rating, beating out stockbrokers, 46 percent, and HMO managers at 43 percent.
Only 11 percent of respondents gave senators a “high/very high” ethical rating.
Nurses ranked as the most respected profession with an 83 percent positive rating. Following nurses were pharmacists at 66 percent, doctors at 65 percent, police officers at 63 percent and engineers, who received a 62 percent “high/very high” rating.
Governors were the only other political job polled, and ranked much higher than lawmakers in Washington. Only 15 percent said they had a “high/very high” opinion of governors, but 48 percent gave governors an “average” rating while 35 percent rated them as “low/very low."
Read More Stories from POLITICODoes world expect too much of Obama?Reid: Dems reach 'broad agreement'Exclusive: George gets 'GMA'Gay marriage's 'inevitability' in doubtObama to urge banks to lend more

Stem Cells May Hold Hope for Eye Disease (HealthDay)

TUESDAY, Dec. 8 (HealthDay News) -- New research has found that a
certain kind of stem cell from human umbilical cords helped restore
transparency to the cloudy corneas of laboratory mice, raising the
prospect that they could do the same for people.

Currently, a limited supply of donated human corneas is available to
help people with severe corneal and eye diseases.

The new research examined human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells.
When transplanted into the corneal stroma of the mouse eyes, they survived
for more than three months without much sign of graft rejection,
researcher Winston Kao of the University of Cincinnati School of Medicine,
said in a news release from the American Society for Cell Biology.

Transplantation of human organs involves a certain degree of risk
because the body tries to reject things it considers foreign. In the
study, that happened to another kind of stem cell -- human umbilical
hematopoietic stem cells -- that was transplanted into the mouse eyes.

However, according to Kao, stem-cell transplants hold promise as a
treatment for some eye diseases. He said it's easy to isolate the cells
and let them reproduce before storage, and the supply of stem cells is
virtually unlimited.

The findings were to be presented Dec. 8 at the American Society for
Cell Biology's annual meeting in San Diego.

More information

The U.S. National Eye Institute has more on corneal
disease.

Diabetic Supplies

Diabetes develops due to a diminished production of insulin (in type 1) or resistance to its effects (in type 2 and gestational). Both lead to hyperglycaemia, which largely causes the acute signs of diabetes: excessive urine production, resulting compensatory thirst and increased fluid intake, blurred vision, unexplained weight loss, lethargy, and changes in energy metabolism. Monogenic forms, e.g. MODY, constitute 1-5 % of all cases.

Insulin production is initially only moderately impaired in type 2 diabetes, so oral medication (often used in various combinations) can be used to improve insulin production (e.g., sulfonylureas), to regulate inappropriate release of glucose by the liver and attenuate insulin resistance to some extent (e.g., metformin), and to substantially attenuate insulin resistance (e.g., thiazolidinediones). According to one study, overweight patients treated with metformin compared with diet alone, had relative risk reductions of 32% for any diabetes endpoint, 42% for diabetes related death and 36% for all cause mortality and stroke. Oral medication may eventually fail due to further impairment of beta cell insulin secretion. At this point, insulin therapy is necessary to maintain normal or near normal glucose levels.

Diabetic Supplies

USB Turntable

The Stanton T.90 turntable is impressive looking, with sleek lines, well-placed features, and a build quality that inspires confidence. The T.90 measures 17-inches wide, 14.5-inches deep, and 5.5-inches tall (including tone arm). Much of the T.90's exterior is made from high-grade plastic, which compared with venerable turntable staples such as the Technics SL-1200, feels a bit less professional. Sacrificing an all-metal body has an advantage, however, because the T.90 feels much lighter than many professional turntables.

The sound quality was as good as can be expected from old, scratchy records. The built-in audio card records 16-bit at 44.1khz (which you can upscale to 48khz). Because the Stanton T.90 doubles as both a recording and a playback interface for your computer's audio, you can instantly play back the results of your digitally recorded vinyl through the T.90's RCA outputs--but there's more. The T.90 will even allow you to simultaneously mix your computer's audio and your turntable's audio into the same output--bridging both the analog and digital worlds. What DJs do with this feature is up to their imaginations.

USB Turntable

Girls Christening Gowns

Girls Christening Gowns

These garments are placed on the newly-baptized immediately after coming up out of he waters of baptism (the Orthodox baptize by immersion, even in the case of infant baptism). As the robe is being placed on the new Christian, the priest says the prayer: "The servant of God, N., is clothed with the robe of righteousness; in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen." and the choir sings: "Vouchsafe unto me the robe of light, O Thou who clothest Thyself with light as with a garment, Christ our God, plenteous in mercy."

A wide variety of practices are found in the spectrum of Protestantism. Some main-stream Protestant churches practice infant baptism, and thus make use of the christening gown; while others encourage or practice exclusive adult baptism. In some of the latter churches, special white clothing may be worn by both the person being baptized and the person performing the baptism.

Thai diplomats visit alleged spy in Cambodia

BANGKOK (AFP) –
Cambodian officials allowed Thai diplomats Tuesday to make their first visit to a Thai national held on charges of spying on fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, the Thai premier said.

Siwarak Chothipong, 31, an employee at the Cambodia Air Traffic Service, was arrested Thursday on charges of supplying details of Thaksin's flight schedule to his country's embassy when the Thai tycoon visited Phnom Penh last week.

His arrest deepened a diplomatic crisis between the neighbouring countries over Cambodia's appointment of Thaksin as an economic adviser and its refusal to extradite the ousted prime minister to Bangkok.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva welcomed the Cambodian move but said the government was still mulling further measures after withdrawing its ambassador earlier this month, a move that Phnom Penh reciprocated.

"I think it's good that Cambodia has allowed the visit, we think that's the right attitude. But the foreign ministry is still compiling measures," Abhisit told reporters in Bangkok.

Chavanond Intarakomalyasut, secretary to the Thai foreign minister, said the charge d'affaires at the Thai embassy and four embassy officials had visited Siwarak earlier Tuesday.

"He told diplomats that he was well treated. We are asking him about the case details, the charges, how we can defend him and who should be appointed as a lawyer," Chavanond said.

Siwarak was also allowed to talk to his mother in Thailand on the telephone for the first time since he was arrested, he added.

Cambodia expelled the first secretary of Thailand's embassy in Phnom Penh last Thursday after alleging that Siwarak had passed information to the diplomat. Thailand reciprocated hours later.

Thaksin was toppled in a coup in 2006 and is living abroad to avoid a two-year jail term for corruption, but he has been stirring up protests in his homeland against the current Thai government for the past year.

Angered by his presence in Cambodia, Thailand last week put all talks and cooperation programmes with Cambodia on hold and tore up an oil and gas exploration deal signed during Thaksin's time in power.

Tensions were already high between the two countries following a series of deadly military clashes over disputed territory near the 11th century Preah Vihear temple on their shared border.

GOP senators talk of boycotting climate bill

WASHINGTON – A threatened Republican boycott of a Senate committee's consideration of climate legislation is exposing the sharp partisan divide over a Democratic proposal to combat global warming.
Republicans for the most part plan to stay away from a meeting of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on Tuesday as the panel begins deliberations over legislation that would cap greenhouse gases from power and industrial plants and curb the use of fossil fuels.
Democrats have a 12-7 majority in the committee and enough votes to advance the measure to the full Senate. But GOP members are demanding additional studies on the cost and job impact of the bill, arguing that an analysis by the Environmental Protection Agency was inadequate. The EPA study projected it would cost average households no more than $111 a year.
On Monday, the ranking Republicans on five other committees that will have some say in climate legislation also called the EPA analysis unsatisfactory and said senators should not be expected to vote on a bill "without a full and complete analysis of the likely effects."
The Republicans warned in a letter to Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., the environment committee chairman, that failure to accommodate GOP senators seeking further studies "would severely damage rather than help" the chances of getting the bipartisan support needed to get a bill through the Senate.
Boxer called the EPA cost study "unprecedented in scope" and said it didn't matter that it was largely based on an analysis of the House-passed climate bill because "our bill is 90 percent the same."
Boxer told reporters late Monday she wants to try to accommodate the Republicans, but insisted she will push ahead with plans to begin voting on amendments to the bill. But when those votes will start was unclear. Boxer said Tuesday would be limited to senators' remarks, and said she will make officials from the EPA available so Republicans can quiz them about their cost study.
"We think this is going the extra mile for our friends on the other side," Boxer told reporters. "We want to move the process forward."
The Democratic bill calls for cutting greenhouse gas emissions from power plants and industrial facilities 20 percent by 2020 and 83 percent by mid-century. Polluters would be given pollution permits that they could trade among themselves to ease the economic effect of the transition from fossil fuels.
Republicans have argued the bill amounts to a huge energy tax because energy, including electricity, from fossil fuels will become more expensive.
Democrats privately called the GOP tactic largely an attempt to delay consideration of climate legislation and said all seven of the committee's Republicans already had made clear that they have no intention of voting for the bill.
While Boxer said she hoped the Republicans would change their minds and participate, Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., another committee member, wasn't as kind at a news conference.
"It's almost like schoolchildren over there," said Lautenberg, referring to the GOP boycott.

GOP victory Tuesday won't erase party's problems

WASHINGTON – For Republicans, an election win of any size Tuesday would be a blessing. But victories in Virginia, New Jersey or elsewhere won't erase enormous obstacles the party faces heading into a 2010 midterm election year when control of Congress and statehouses from coast to coast will be up for grabs.
It's been a tough few years for the GOP. The party lost control of Congress in 2006 and then lost the White House in 2008 with three traditional Republican states — Indiana, North Carolina and Virginia — abandoning the party.
So even if political winds start blowing harder behind them and even if they can capitalize on Democratic missteps, Republicans still will have a long way to go over the next year because of their party's own fundamental problems — divisions over the path forward, the lack of a national leader and a shrinking base in a changing nation.
The GOP would overcome none of those hurdles should Republican Bob McDonnell win the Virginia governor's race, Chris Christie emerge victorious in the New Jersey governor's contest, or conservative Doug Hoffman triumph in a hotly contested special congressional election in upstate New York.
In fact, 2009 seems to have underscored what may be the biggest impediment for Republicans — the war within their base.
Not that the GOP would casually brush off even a small stack of victories on Tuesday.
One or more wins would give the Republicans a jolt, and a reason to rally in the coming months. Victories certainly would help with grass-roots fundraising and candidate recruiting. And they might just be enough to reinvigorate a party that controlled the White House and Congress through much of this decade, only to lose power in back-to-back national elections.
Viewed from the other side, a GOP sweep would be a setback for Democrats. It could be seen as a negative measure of President Barack Obama's standing and could signal trouble ahead as he seeks to get moderate Democratic lawmakers behind his legislative agenda and protect Democratic majorities in Congress next fall.
Still, with Democrats in control, the onus is on the GOP to get its act together. George W. Bush, the president many Republicans came to see as an election-day albatross, is gone, but the party troubles born under him linger.
Republican leaders in Washington certainly are mindful of the challenges.
"It's going to be a difficult road to walk, to work with relatively new entrants into the political system and to work with them to show them that, by and large, we are the party who represents their interests," House Republican leader John Boehner told CNN on Sunday, arguing that there's "a political rebellion" taking place in the country.
Others are more blunt.
"Right now there's no central Republican leader to turn to, and there's no central Republican message," conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh told Fox News on Sunday. "The Republican message is sort of muddied. What do they stand for? Right now it's opposition to Obama."
A debate is waging over whether that's enough — or whether the party has to be for something, anything really, to be able to claw its way back to the top. Similar hand-wringing happened in the GOP ahead of the 1994 midterms. Just weeks before those elections, Republicans came up with the Contract with America — and ended up taking control of Congress.
Heading into the 2010 elections, the GOP also faces a very real split between conservatives who want to focus on social issues — which tend to work best during peaceful, prosperous times — and the rest of the party, which generally wants a broader vision, particularly given recession.
Proof of a divide is in the special election in New York's 23rd Congressional District. Potential 2012 presidential hopefuls trying to solidify their conservative credentials, Sarah Palin and Tim Pawlenty, endorsed Hoffman, a conservative third-party upstart, over the GOP-chosen candidate, moderate Dierdre Scozzafava. Badly trailing in polls, she ended up dropping out and — in a slap at the GOP — endorsing Democrat Bill Owens.
The White House is suggesting that those developments show that hard-liners are taking over the GOP and the trend will affect the 2010 elections. Predicted presidential spokesman Robert Gibbs on Monday: "This is a model for what you'll see throughout the country."
Indeed, there are similar tensions in Senate primaries in Florida, California and elsewhere, where conservatives are challenging establishment-backed candidates.

Adding to the party's woes: No one — or rather everyone — is speaking for the GOP.

Fiery talk show hosts like Limbaugh and Glenn Beck have become the angry white face of the party, filling a vacuum created by Bush's departure as the its standard-bearer and the lack of one single person to emerge as its next generation leader.

The 2008 presidential nominee, John McCain, has all but disappeared from the Republican power structure. His running mate, Palin, refuses to disappear — much to the delight of tabloids and to the chagrin of elder party statesmen. And one of the most unpopular politicians in recent times, former Vice President Dick Cheney, keeps popping up to attack Obama — a reminder of the country's and the party's problems under Bush.

What's more, the GOP's ranks are thinning: Only 32 percent of respondents called themselves Republicans in a recent AP-GfK survey compared with 43 percent who called themselves Democrats.

Also, the party's power center is mostly limited to the South, the one region McCain dominated last fall; Obama won almost everywhere else — including making inroads in emerging powerhouse regions like the West, although Republicans still solidly control several lightly populated states in the area.

And demographic, cultural and, perhaps, economic changes in America tilt in the Democrats' favor. Consider that Hispanics, a part of the Democratic base, are the nation's fastest growing minority group. Consider that more states than ever are permitting same-sex unions; Maine will vote Tuesday on whether to allow gay marriage. Consider that the emerging new industry — so-called "green jobs" — is focused on the environment, a core Democratic issue.

Still, Republicans sense opportunity — at least in the short term.

The bloom is off the Obama rose, and the public is giving the Democratic-controlled Congress low ratings.

Economists say the recession is over but jobs aren't reappearing and unemployment is still expected to hit 10 percent. The war in Afghanistan continues, and the public is deeply divided over it. Obama's expansion of government and budget-busting spending isn't sitting well with most Americans. And independents are tilting away from Democrats.

All that raises this question: Can the GOP take advantage of such conditions — or are the problems the party faces too great? Stay tuned to 2010 for the answer.

Musical Greeting Cards

For the MSX several sound upgrades, such as the Konami SCC, the Yamaha YM2413 (MSX-MUSIC) and Yamaha Y8950 (MSX-AUDIO, predecessor of the OPL3) and the OPL4-based Moonsound were released as well, each having its own characteristic chiptune sound.

Common file formats used to compose and play chiptunes are the SID, YM, SNDH, MOD, XM, several Adlib based file formats and numerous exotic Amiga file formats.

Musical Greeting Cards

Biofuels could increase greenhouse gases: US studies

WASHINGTON (AFP) –
US experts warn that rules governing biofuel production encourage deforestation and mean the technology is therefore a "false" method of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

In a study to be published Friday in the US journal Science, a group of 13 scientists called for the rules, which contain a loophole exempting carbon dioxide emitted by bioenergy regardless of its source, to be overturned.

"The error is serious, but readily fixable," said lead researcher Timothy Searchinger of Princeton University.

The study called for the issue to be addressed in the climate treaty that nations around the world are hoping to sign at the Copenhagen summit in December to supercede the Kyoto Treaty.

Researchers said numerous analyses -- including one released by the US Department of Energy -- have found that this loophole "could lead to the loss of most of the world's natural forests as carbon caps tighten."

The rules were found in the Kyoto Protocol, which was framed in 1997 and put into force in 2005, legally binding 37 industrialized countries to cut their greenhouse gas output, noted researcher Daniel Kammen.

The European Union's Emissions Trading System and this year's climate bill passed by US House members also enable the same loophole, said Kammen, from the University of California in Berkeley.

The study said it meant that "bioenergy from any source, even that generated by clearing the world's forests, a potentially cheap, yet false, way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions."

Research released by the World Wildlife Fund on Thursday found that 13 million hectares (32.1 million acres) of forests are destroyed around the world each year -- equivalent to 36 football fields per minute.

Deforestation generates almost 20 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, said the environmental group.

"Halting forest loss has been identified as one of the most cost-effective ways to keep the world out of the danger zone of runaway climate change," the group said.

Those that benefit most from the loophole are oil companies, power plants and other energy industry firms producing biofuels who engage in deforestation in response to tighter limits on pollution.

Kammen said nations approaching climate treaty negotiations needed to recognize the "vital" importance of properly evaluating technologies proposed as solutions to global warming.

In another study on the subject published in Science Express on Thursday, researchers noted how no major countries involved in climate negotiations take into account carbon emissions arising from land-use changes for harvesting biofuels.

Not only is there little oversight to how biofuel is developed, said the study, led by Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) scientist Jerry Melillo, the economic incentives for biofuels to be developed on land reclaimed from forests "add to the climate-change problem rather than helping to solve it."

The study, Melillo added, "shows that direct and indirect land-use changes associated with an aggressive global biofuels program have the potential to release large quantities of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere."

Burning bioenergy and fossil energy release comparable quantities of carbon dioxide.

But in a key difference, bioenergy has been seen as preferable for combating climate change because overall emissions are -- in theory -- reduced, because biomass results from additional plant growth.

"This is because plants grown specifically for bioenergy absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and this offsets the emissions from the eventual burning of the biomass for energy," said the study, adding that in contrast, burning forests releases stored carbon in the same way as burning oil.

However, both the studies note, the positive effect of biofuels on carbon emissions would necessarily be negated if land used to produce them had been cleared of forests to do so.

Melillo's study also predicts the increased use of fertilizer in biofuels production will cause nitrous oxide emissions to become even more important than carbon losses in terms of potential for warming by the end of the century.

Romer: Impact of stimulus will level off next year

WASHINGTON – The government's economic stimulus spending has already had its biggest impact and probably won't contribute to significant growth next year, a top White House adviser said Thursday.
Christina Romer, the chair of President Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, said the initial jolt of the $787 billion stimulus expanded the economy in the second and third quarters of this year. But she said the remaining spending will simply keep the economy from slipping.
"By mid-2010," she said, "fiscal stimulus will likely be contributing little to further growth."
That assessment underscored the fragility of an economic recovery marked by stubbornly high unemployment.
Romer said the government has already spent $194 billion of the total stimulus package, most of it in tax cuts, aid to states and unemployment and food stamps. In addition, she said, $146 billion of spending had been already obligated.
Romer, testifying before Congress' Joint Economic Committee, said that as of August the stimulus had created or saved 600,000 to 1.5 million jobs. She said a premature end to the stimulus would be "misguided."
"This is not a normal recovery," she said. "Coming out of this, we've got lots of things working against us," she said.
Unemployment will remain high, at or above 9.6 percent, through the end of 2010, Romer predicted.
"While job losses will likely end early next year, robust job gains may still be several quarters away," she said.
The pace of the recovery and the unyielding jobless numbers pose significant political and policy problems for the president and for congressional Democrats who face midterm elections next year.
The administration and Congress are confronting competing demands to spend more money to create additional jobs and a desire to confront rising deficits and a burgeoning national debt.
Republicans were skeptical of Romer's claims of stimulus success.
"The impacts of the stimulus are wildly exaggerated," said Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas.
Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., said the administration's push for health care and climate change legislation have also created uncertainty among employers who worry about tax increases and are thus unwilling to take risks that could create jobs.
Romer said the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department are keeping a wary eye on commercial real estate lending, an area that economists and financial experts predict could be the next crisis to befall banks, particularly smaller community institutions.
Romer said that unlike the housing market crash that brought Wall Street to the edge of collapse last year, the troubles facing commercial real estate are "a slower evolving problem; one that we will have the time and ability to deal with."
In testimony to separate panels, Romer and Assistant Treasury Secretary Herbert Allison also credited the government's $700 billion banking rescue fund for pulling the financial sector back from a free fall. The program, known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, injected billions of dollars into large financial institutions and into the auto industry and has become increasingly unpopular with Congress and with the public.
At the same time, the president has been under pressure from Democrats to use the rescue money to help homeowners facing foreclosure and to assist small businesses. Republicans have called on the administration to simply end the program upon its scheduled expiration Dec. 31.

Without saying that the program will be extended, Allison told the Congressional Oversight Panel that acts a a watchdog over TARP: "It is time to set a new direction for the TARP, to account for the recent improvements in capital markets and to address lingering weaknesses in housing markets and small business lending."

Indians interview Valentine for manager job

CLEVELAND – Bobby Valentine would manage on Mars. He'd settle for Cleveland.
Back after six years in Japan, the former New York Mets manager had his second interview with the Indians on Thursday. The 59-year-old admitted he has a lot of catching up to do after being away from the major leagues, but would embrace the opportunity to take over in Cleveland.
"I'm a baseball manager and they're looking to hire one of those guys," he said. "There are only 30 of these jobs and I'm fortunate to be considered for one of them."
Valentine took the Mets to the World Series in 2000. He has a 1,117-1,072 record as a manager for Texas and New York.
Valentine is the second candidate to have a sit-down interview with the Indians.
On Tuesday, former Washington manager Manny Acta met with Cleveland's owners and front-office members. Torey Lovullo, the club's Triple-A manager in Columbus, is up Friday and the club is trying to schedule a meeting with Los Angeles Dodgers hitting coach Don Mattingly.
Valentine managed the Chiba Lotte Marines from 2004-09. He inherited one of Japanese baseball's worst teams and took them to a league championship in 2005. Valentine was adored by the team's fans, who held nightly vigils at the stadium and signed petitions when Chiba management refused to renew his contract.
"I had a six-year love affair with a country that plays baseball," he said. "Their baseball society is something that should be kept forever. Women play it. Kids play it and still have baseball gloves on their handle bars. It was a six-year magic carpet ride."
Valentine recently returned from Japan and has been working as an analyst for ESPN. He candidly admitted he hasn't followed U.S. teams as closely as he should have and didn't know as much "as someone who is interviewing for their manager's job probably should."
"I could have crammed for the last six days," he said. "But I didn't do it. I don't know about the American League. I don't know about the Central (division), and I don't know about the Indians. But I sure in hell am willing to learn and spend 28 hours a day, if necessary, to know everything I could possibly know."
Indians general manager Mark Shapiro has said he would like to have Eric Wedge's successor in place by the end of the World Series, but is willing to wait to make the right hire.
Cleveland crumbled under high expectations this season and finished 65-97, tied with Kansas City for last place in the AL Central, the Indians' worst finish since 1991.

Drug raids targeting Mexican cartel nab 300-plus

WASHINGTON – In the largest single strike at Mexican drug operations in the U.S., federal officials on Thursday announced the arrests of more than 300 people in raids across the country aimed at the newest and most violent cartel.
La Familia has earned a reputation for dominating the methamphetamine trade and displaying graphic violence, including beheadings. U.S. officials said the cartel, based in the state of Michoacan, in southwestern Mexico, has a vast network pumping drugs throughout the United States, specializing in methamphetamine.
The arrests took place in 38 cities, from Boston to Seattle and Tampa, Fla., to St. Paul, Minn., in 19 states.
Attorney General Eric Holder pledged to keep hitting La Familia and the cartels responsible for a wave of bloodshed in Mexico. He said the U.S. would attack them at all levels, from the leadership to their supply chains reaching far into the United States.
"To the extent that they do grow back, we have to work with our Mexican counterparts to cut off the heads of these snakes, to get at the heads of the cartels, indict them, try them, if they're in Mexico, extradite them to the United States," Holder said at a news conference.
Michele Leonhart, who heads the Drug Enforcement Administration, said La Familia's power has grown quickly, in part due to its quasi-religious background. DEA officials say the cartel professes a "Robin Hood mentality" of aiding the poor by stealing from the rich. Some drug proceeds are used to give bibles and money to the poor, according to investigators.
The Obama administration has directed more agents, resources and money to fight the cartel's presence along the Mexico-U.S. border. But the arrests over the past two days occurred far beyond that region.
"The problem is not just along the southwest border, it is all over our country now," said Kenneth Melson, head of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.
In Dallas alone, 77 people were charged by a number of different federal and local law enforcement agencies.
On Wednesday and Thursday, more than 3,000 federal agents and police officers carried out arrests in more than a dozen states, as part of a long-running effort that has netted nearly 1,200 arrests over almost four years.
The suspects face a combination of federal and state charges.
In the latest legal assault on La Familia, a New York grand jury has indicted an alleged cartel leader, Servando Gomez-Martinez. He is linked to one of the more brazen acts of cartel violence.
In July, after a dozen Mexican police officers were found murdered, officials say Gomez-Martinez publicly proclaimed his membership in La Familia and said the cartel was locked in a battle with Mexican police.
Many of the new charges are centered on the cartel's methamphetamine distribution, but other charges involve cocaine and marijuana, the officials said.
The officials said states where arrests were made or charges filed include Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington state.
___
On the Net:
Justice Department: http://www.justice.gov/

Drug Enforcement Administration: http://www.dea.gov

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives: http://www.atf.gov/

Baby OK after train hits stroller in Australia

MELBOURNE, Australia – Police in Australia say a 6-month-old baby has miraculously survived a train hitting his stroller that had rolled onto the tracks.
The train pushed the stroller about 130 feet (40 meters) along the tracks before it stopped.
Security video footage released Friday shows the mother looking away for a moment when the stroller suddenly rolls off the edge of a station platform and onto the tracks. The mother panics as she looks back and sees the oncoming train hit the stroller, but the baby boy survived with only minor injuries.
Victoria state Police Sergeant Michael Ferwerda called Thursday's incident a "lucky escape" and said people should be cautious in train stations.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Police in Australia say a 6-month-old baby has miraculously survived a train hitting his stroller that had rolled onto the tracks.
The train pushed the stroller about 130 feet (40 meters) along the tracks before it stopped.
Security video footage released Friday shows the mother looking away for a moment when the stroller suddenly rolls off the edge of a station platform and onto the tracks. The mother panics as she looks back and sees the oncoming train hit the stroller, but the baby boy survived with only minor injuries.
Victoria state Police Sergeant Michael Ferwerda called Thursday's incident a "lucky escape" and said people should be cautious in train stations.

Ten killed as explosion hits Pakistan's Peshawar

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) –
Pakistani forces attacked a Taliban stronghold with aircraft and artillery on Friday, as a suspected suicide bomber killed 10 people in the city of Peshawar in the latest in a wave of militant attacks.

The government says a ground offensive against the Pakistani Taliban in their South Waziristan lair is imminent and the army has been stepping up its air and artillery attacks in recent days to soften up the militants' defenses.

The militants have launched a string of brazen attacks in the past 11 days, striking at the United Nations, the army headquarters, police and the general public, killing about 150 people, apparently trying to stave off the army assault.

Friday's blast was outside an office of the police's Central Investigation Agency in the capital of North West Frontier Province, a staging post for U.S. supplies into neighboring Afghanistan.

"I was on the spot within minutes and helped remove bodies. They were really in bad shape," said resident Mohammad Rizwan.

Police suspected the blast was caused by a suicide bomber.

A top city official said 10 people had been killed, among them a woman and a child. A nearby mosque was damaged and about a dozen people were wounded.

Television showed anxious policemen wheeling bloodied colleagues into hospital.

The government says the militant attacks have only reinforced its determination to defeat its enemies.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan is under U.S. pressure to crack down on Islamist militancy as President Barack Obama considers a boost in troop numbers fighting in neighboring Afghanistan.

Aircraft and artillery struck militant positions in their strongholds of Ladha, Makeen and in the mountainous Shahoor region of South Waziristan overnight, hours after killing 27 militants in the region in various strikes.

"We could see thick smoke and flames leaping into the sky from caves in the mountains after the bombing by jet fighters," said a resident near Shahoor who declined to be identified.

Security officials said they had no information about casualties in the latest attacks.

"SOME FLEEING"

An army official in the region said some Taliban were trying to leave the area in disguise ahead of the offensive.

"They are now trying to run but we have tightened controls around their areas and are checking every person leaving," said the military official in Wana, the main town in South Waziristan, where the army has a base.

About 28,000 troops are in place to take on an estimated 10,000 hard-core Taliban, army officials have said.

Pakistan's stock market slipped as the violence escalated at the beginning of the week, but the main index was 1.1 percent higher at 0800 GMT.

Investors would be reassured by an offensive on South Waziristan as a sign the government was getting to grips with the militants, dealers say.

Pakistani Taliban fighters made advances toward Islamabad early this year, raising fears about the stability of the U.S. ally.

But significant military gains in the Swat valley, from where militants have largely been driven out in recent months, have reassured the U.S. and Western allies about Pakistan's commitment to the fight.

In a sign of U.S. continuing support, President Barack Obama signed Wednesday a $7.5 billion aid bill for Pakistan over the next five years.

But Pakistan's military has complained about the bill because the legislation ties some funds to fighting militants and is seen by critics as violating sovereignty.

(Additional reporting by Augustine Anthony and Hafiz Wazir; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Pilot sought after 2 F-16s collide off S.C. coast

CHARLESTON, S.C. – Crews were searching the Atlantic Ocean early Friday for an F-16 fighter pilot off the coast of South Carolina after two jets collided during night training exercises.
The two planes collided Thursday around 8:30 p.m. about 40 miles off Folly Beach, near Charleston, Senior Master Sgt. Brad Fallin at Shaw Air Force Base said. Each plane was carrying one person.
One jet, piloted by Capt. Lee Bryant, landed safely at Charleston Air Force Base, Fallin said. But the location of the other plane and its pilot, Capt. Nicholas Giglio, was unknown, Fallin said.
The pilots' hometowns were not immediately available. It was also not immediately known how much damage the plane that landed had sustained.
The Coast Guard was searching the area with two helicopters and two surface vessels.
Earlier this week, Shaw Air Force Base announced that pilots would be conducting nighttime exercises to allow pilots to fly with night vision equipment and practice tactics critical to surviving in combat.

Big in Japan, but could America love Moomin?

HELSINKI (Reuters) –
In one of the quirkiest book cults America has never heard of, a round-snouted troll is hauling consumers' wallets from their pockets despite the worst recession in decades.

The license-holders for Moomin, who say license sales increased 35 percent this year, are contemplating expansion.

"We want to grow and be as profitable as we have been so far," said Sophia Jansson. "But in a way that increases the awareness of Moomin, starting from countries where books already are sold."

The artistic head and chairman of Moomin Characters, she is the niece of Finnish author and illustrator Tove Jansson, whose creation, the Moomintrolls, soon turn 65.

Moomins -- whose naive hero Moomintroll was the "nastiest creature" teenage Tove could imagine after a quarrel with her brother -- are a lucrative publishing and licensing niche mostly in Nordic countries, Japan and Britain.

Since the 1945 publication of "The Moomins and the Great Flood," adventures with Moomin and parents Moominmamma and Moominpappa have featured in 13 novels and picturebooks translated into 40 languages, and thousands of cartoon strips.

The characters have also been used to brand a wide range of products including kitchenware, diapers, DVDs and tinned candy.

"They made me feel peaceful," said Tokyo-based Hideyuki Masumoto, 40, describing the characters he called his childhood friends while eyeing gifts in the tiny Moomin shop in Helsinki.

"They remind us of how we used to live in Japan; in a small community where everyone knows each other."

In Japan, children in the 1960s grew up with an animated television series of the trolls and loved Moomin, Masumoto said: his personal hero was Moomin's friend the wayfarer Snufkin, the "wise guy, who plays music and doesn't belong anywhere."

Inhabiting a land called Moominvalley, Moomins play into a similar vein of comfort to Disney's "Winnie-the-Pooh," revived by publishers Egmont in an October 5 sequel. But the deeply Finnish characters tap much darker mysteries than Pooh.

Bjorn Lindergaard, 30, a Dane in Helsinki on U.N. training, said he liked that the tales were inventive and realistic, and none of the characters were perfect: for example Little My, a tin-sized, fierce girl, with a positively aggressive temper.

"The Moominvalley looked very friendly, but there was also a darker side to it. life was not just plain idyllic," he said.

Peaceful and realistic is how people see Moomins, but they are not human, says Jansson, whose firm manages the Moomintroll legacy and copyrights including up to 300 licensees.

"The Moomins are not people. You can't send them up the Eiffel Tower, they don't speak on cellphones, drive cars, or carry guns," she said.

ONE EYE ON AMERICA

Moomin Characters' chief executive Roleff Krakstrom said he is eyeing the U.S. market. Moomin books were sold there half a century ago but the firm has no licensees and animations have aired only on Hawaii. But he is cautious.

"It is possible, but not obligatory," Krakstrom said. "We are reluctant to start a big project that could fail and label Moomin for a long time."

Last year Moomin Characters, which was founded by Tove and her brother and co-illustrator Lars Jansson, collected $6.69 million in license income and sales from its three brand shops in Helsinki, with operating profit at $2.18 million.

"Some think Moomin is only for the smallest family members, but for instance in Japan our main target group is 20-35-year old women," said Jansson: products for adults make half the firm's sales.

Technologies such as digital media are helping characters cross borders, said Marty Brochstein, senior vice president of the international Licensing Industry Merchandisers' Association (LIMA), but warned cultural characteristics are important.

In Japan, Moomin plays into a long-running craze for cute things, said Roger Berman, managing director of the Japanese branch of LIMA: it was a similar story to many characters seen in the west as targeting children, such as Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter or The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle.

"If it looks cute, Japanese adults will buy as much as a child will. They will happily display character hangstraps from their mobile phones without self-consciousness," he said.

But Martin Olausson, digital media director at Strategy Analytics, pointed out that with Disney recently agreeing to buy Marvel's superheroes, the consolidating industry is tending to focus on established characters to minimize risk rather than introduce new ones.

"Profitability depends on how strong the brand is," he said. "There is a very wide spectrum, but firms like Marvel, with a library of globally big characters, can charge a lot."

In North America, character royalties slid 3.9 percent to $2.6 billion last year. Giants like Disney and Marvel have suffered as consumers reined in purchases.

EDGY

The Moomintrolls -- curious, bohemian, generous -- may be a bit more edgy and eccentric than the American mainstream.

Moomintroll is friendly, wide-eyed; he picks flowers and likes to fish. Besides Little My, who plays pranks, his friends are oddball. Snufkin smokes a pipe.

Where Pooh's Hundred Acre Wood has Eeyore the grumpy donkey, Moominvalley has a melancholy scientist, the Hemulen. A hill-shaped, lethal spook called the Groke invokes all winter's pain. Even the comedy Hattifatteners -- finger-shaped electric creatures which move in a flock -- are unsettling.

Tove Jansson, who died in 2001, said her own experiences were the basis for her work, and the experience of war may be one distinguishing factor making Europeans and Japanese susceptible to her sense of shyness and feelings of disaster.

Some experts, like Chris Anderson, author of "The Long Tail," have said technology now allows firms to cater to increasingly fragmented audiences, boosting niche products.

But Strategy Analytics' Olausson, while not ruling out that Moomins could catch on, said there was little evidence to show a niche product can thrive in the profit-driven U.S. market without the backup of a big player.

Lana Castleman, managing editor of Canadian trade magazine KidScreen, was also cautious about the chances of success for Moomins in a market that has traditionally favored princesses and spidermen above new characters.

"It's a completely different mindset," she said. "They (Moomins) are very different from current and historical American characters, such as Mickey and Winnie, both in the way they look and content of the stories."

(Editing by Sara Ledwith)

Chilean officers get prison in arms deal cover up

SANTIAGO, Chile – Four former top army officials were sentenced to prison Monday in the murder of a colonel shortly after he testified about an illegal deal to smuggle weapons to Croatia.
The deal was exposed during the Balkan wars, when the United Nations outlawed weapons sales to Croatia. In December 1991, police in Hungary discovered 11 tons of weapons in a shipment labeled "humanitarian aid" that was allegedly approved by Gen. Augusto Pinochet, who continued to head the army after his dictatorship ended in 1990.
Col. Gerardo Huber — who directed purchases at the army's weapons manufacturer — turned up dead shortly after testifying in a military investigation. His head had been blown apart by a blast from a machine gun. It was ruled a suicide for 13 years before the case was reopened in civilian court.
Two top military intelligence officials — retired Gen. Victor Lizarraga and retired Col. Manuel Provis — got 10 and eight years, respectively, for conspiracy and homicide. Gen. Carlos Krum and Col. Julio Munoz, also both retired, got nearly 2 years for conspiracy and murder, respectively.
Eleven other people were sentenced by a military court in June for their roles in the deal, but the identity of the gunman in Huber's murder remains unknown.
"There were many efforts to prevent Huber from testifying," Judge Claudio Pavez said. "And when one attempt after another failed, they reached the final decision — Huber had to die."

WH says Obama won't pull US out of Afghanistan

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama won't walk away from the flagging war in Afghanistan, the White House declared Monday as Obama faced tough decisions — and intense administration debate — over choices that could help define his presidency in his first year as commander in chief.
The fierce Taliban attack that killed eight American soldiers over the weekend added to the pressure. The assault overwhelmed a remote U.S. outpost where American forces have been stretched thin in battling insurgents, underscoring an appeal from Obama's top Afghanistan commander for as many as 40,000 additional forces — and at the same time reminding the nation of the costs of war.
Obama's defense secretary, Robert Gates, appealed Monday for calm — and for time and privacy for the president to come to a decision.
Last week the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, called publicly for the administration to add more resources, which prompted a mild rebuke from Obama's national security adviser, James Jones, for lobbying in public.
Obama may take weeks to decide whether to add more troops, but the idea of pulling out isn't on the table as a way to deal with a war nearing its ninth year, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said.
"I don't think we have the option to leave. That's quite clear," Gibbs said.
The question of whether to further escalate the conflict after adding 21,000 U.S. troops earlier this year is a major decision facing Obama and senior administration policy advisers this week.
Obama also invited a bipartisan group of congressional leaders to the White House on Tuesday to confer about the war. And Obama will meet twice this week with his top national security advisers.
Divided on Afghanistan, Congress takes up a massive defense spending bill this week even before the president settles on a direction for the war.
Gates said Monday that Obama needs elbow room to make strategy decisions about the war — as the internal White House debate goes increasingly public.
"It is important that we take our time to do all we can to get this right," Gates said at an Army conference. "In this process, it is imperative that all of us taking part in these deliberations — civilians and military alike — provide our best advice to the president candidly but privately."
Gates has not said whether he supports McChrystal's recommendation to expand the number of U.S. forces by as much as nearly 60 percent. He is holding that request in his desk drawer while Obama sorts through competing recommendations and theories from some of his most trusted advisers.
"I believe that the decisions that the president will make for the next stage of the Afghanistan campaign will be among the most important of his presidency," Gates said.
In trying to blunt the impression that the White House and military are at odds, Gates did not name names. But his remarks came days after McChrystal bluntly warned in London that Afghan insurgents are gathering strength. Any plan that falls short of stabilizing Afghanistan "is probably a shortsighted strategy," the general said.
For his part, Jones, a retired four-star Marine general, said of McChrystal's comments that is "better for military advice to come up through the chain of command," said Jones.
At issue is whether U.S. forces should continue to focus on fighting the Taliban and securing the Afghan population, or shift to more narrowly targeting al-Qaida terrorists believed to be hiding in Pakistan with unmanned spy drones and covert operations.
Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday the goal for the war remains to disrupt al-Qaida and prevent it from again threatening the United States, but they added that a reassessment of the means to do that is appropriate. Speaking to CNN during a rare joint interview with Gates, Clinton said a "snap decision" about the next step would be counterproductive. The interview will air Tuesday.
Gates and some other advisers appear to favor a middle path. A hybrid strategy could preserve the essential outline of an Afghan counterinsurgency campaign that McChrystal rebuilt this summer from the disarray of nearly eight years of undermanned combat, while expanding the hunt for al-Qaida next door.

"Speaking for the Department of Defense, once the commander in chief makes his decisions, we will salute and execute those decisions faithfully and to the best of our ability," Gates told the annual meeting of the Association of the U.S. Army.

The top three U.S. military officials overseeing the war in Afghanistan favor continuing the current fight against the Taliban, and have concluded they need tens of thousands more U.S. troops beyond the 68,000 already there.

Officials across the Obama administration have acknowledged that the Taliban is far stronger now than in recent years, as underscored by the U.S. deaths in Nuristan province.

The fighting Saturday marked the biggest loss of U.S. life in a single Afghan battle in more than a year. It also raised questions about why U.S. troops remained in the remote outposts after McChrystal said he planned to close down isolated strongholds and focus on more heavily populated areas as part of his new strategy to focus on protecting Afghan civilians.

Also being considered as part of a potential force increase is the impact on troops who are already stretched thin from fighting in two wars. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey told reporters that he cannot rule out extending the length soldiers are sent to fight — from 12 months to 15 — although "I would hope we don't get there."

Casey also signaled that the year that soldiers are currently guaranteed at home between deployments could be at risk.

"Simple math: The more troops you have deployed, the less time they'll spend at home," Casey said Monday.

___

Associated Press writers Ben Feller and Jennifer Loven contributed to this report.

Newborn kidnapping investigation changes direction

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – A kidnapped newborn is safe in foster care and an Alabama woman suspected of taking him is in custody, but investigators say the case of 4-day-old Yair Anthony Carillo is far from closed.
Among the questions still unanswered are whether a woman who posed as an immigration agent and stabbed the baby's mother was working alone and why state child welfare workers took the baby and three siblings into custody shortly after the family was reunited.
Child welfare officials would say only that Maria Gurrolla's children were placed in foster care for "safety" reasons. The department said in a statement Monday that a juvenile court hearing is expected in Nashville Tuesday.
"Like everyone in Tennessee and beyond, we want this episode to have the happy ending it deserves," Commisioner Viola P. Miller said. "We, as much as anyone, want to see these children reunited with their family and out of state custody."
Meanwhile, investigators who had been focused on finding Yair are working to piece together exactly what happened and who was involved, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman Kristin Helm said.
Tammy Renee Silas, 39, of Ardmore, Ala., was charged with kidnapping and remained in federal custody Monday, two days after police said they found Yair at her home about 80 miles south of Nashville near the Tennessee line. A car that police said she rented was seen on a surveillance video following Gurrolla before the attack, and the car rental information led police to her home.
There was no indication Gurrolla knew her attacker, and officials have said she and her baby were targeted when she visited a state office about receiving assistance under the Women, Infants and Children food program.
Silas has not been charged in the brutal attack on Gurrolla, who was choked and stabbed several times, including in the neck and chest. Her cell phone was taken, forcing her to run to a neighbor for help. When she returned, the baby was gone. Law enforcement would not say whether more charges would be filed, citing the ongoing investigation.
Gurrolla, 30, told investigators she had never seen the woman who stabbed her. She said she heard the attacker use her phone to call someone and say in Spanish, "The job is done" and that the mother "was dying."
Helm declined to talk about whether authorities suspect someone else was involved.
Police have not released a motive, but Silas' live-in boyfriend, Martin Rodriguez, told The Associated Press that she said she could not have children and wanted to adopt a child from a relative who was going to jail.
She told him she was going to El Paso, Texas, to get the child, and he said she had a newborn with her when he picked her up from the Huntsville, Ala., airport Tuesday.
Federal court records do not list an attorney and a court appearance has not been scheduled for Silas.
Department of Children's Services spokesman Rob Johnson declined to talk specifically about the Gurrolla case but said taking children into custody after a kidnapping is not necessarily standard procedure.
He said the caseworkers saw something in this situation that made them concerned enough that they felt the safest thing to do was find a foster home for the children. He declined to say what caseworkers were concerned about or whether complaints had been filed against the family.
He said most of the time when DCS takes children, they are eventually returned and the agency always explains to the family what they can do to regain custody.
"DCS is acting with an abundance of caution," he said.

Conn. bishop says abuse is in church's past

NEW HAVEN, Conn. – A Connecticut bishop says allegations of abuse by six Roman Catholic priests detailed in thousands of pages of court files are part of the church's past, and today's church has created a safe environment for children.
Bishop William Lori of the Bridgeport diocese told The Associated Press on Monday that people care more about what the church is doing today to protect children than about "a repeat of reports about what happened in the past, tragic and reprehensible as that was."
The Supreme Court refused on Monday to block the release of more than 12,000 pages of documents from 23 lawsuits filed against the diocese. The church settled the lawsuits in 2001.
Several newspapers sued to get copies of the documents.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) — The Supreme Court refused on Monday to block the release of documents generated by lawsuits against priests in Connecticut for alleged sexual abuse.
The justices turned down a request by the Roman Catholic diocese in Bridgeport, Conn.
Several newspapers are seeking the release of more than 12,000 pages from 23 lawsuits against six priests.
The records have been under seal since the diocese settled the cases in 2001. Courts in Connecticut have ruled that the papers should be made public.
The decision ends a legal battle that dragged on for years and could shed light on how recently retired New York Cardinal Edward Egan handled the allegations when he was Bridgeport bishop.
It's unclear when the documents will be released.
Waterbury Superior Court clerk Philip Groth said he needs to consult a judge to determine whether a hearing is necessary before the records are released. He said Monday morning it was unlikely the documents would be released Monday.
The Bridgeport diocese, which had argued unsuccessfully that the documents were subject to religious privileges under the First Amendment, said it was disappointed in the decision.
"The content of the sealed documents soon to be released has already been extensively reported on," the diocese said in a statement. "For more than a decade, the Catholic Church in Bridgeport has addressed the issue of clergy sexual abuse compassionately and comprehensively. For now, however, the serious threat to the First Amendment rights of all churches and the rightful privacy of all litigants remain in jeopardy because of the decision of the Connecticut Supreme Court. This, indeed, is regrettable."
A telephone message was left Monday for an attorney for the newspapers.
A Waterbury Superior Court said in 2006 that the documents were subject to a presumption of public access. The Connecticut Supreme Court upheld the lower court decision.
Barbara Blaine, founder of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, welcomed the decision.
"This decision sends a clear message to those who would endanger kids: eventually, you'll have to face the music and reveal your callousness, recklessness and deceit," Blaine said in a statement. "We hope that this ruling will deter every pedophile's supervisor and co-workers from protecting a predator."

She urged Bridgeport Bishop William E. Lori to disclose how much the diocese spent in church donations on the case.

Diocese officials said no contributions from the bishop's annual appeal were used to pay for the case. Legal costs were paid with unrestricted funds and anonymous gifts donated for the case as well as discounted and free legal services, officials said.

J. Michael Reck, an attorney for one of the victims, called the decision "a huge victory for everyone who demands justice, truth, transparency and accountability."

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a statement supporting Lori's appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The bishops said they have taken steps to protect children and help victims of sexual abuse.

"However, when a claim of sexual abuse results in litigation, we must remain vigilant against the risk that court-enforced avenues for the legitimate disclosure of documents are not abused in particular cases, resulting in the excessive entanglement of the state in the affairs of the Church," the bishops' statement said.

Five dead as suicide bomber strikes UN Islamabad office

ISLAMABAD (AFP) –
A suicide bomber dressed in military uniform struck inside a heavily fortified UN office in the Pakistani capital Islamabad on Monday, killing four Pakistanis and an Iraqi working for the food agency.

Police said they were investigating how the bomber managed to breach strict security measures and walk into the offices of the World Food Programme (WFP) and detonate about eight kilograms (17 pounds) of explosives.

There was no claim of responsibility, but blame fell on the Taliban, whose new leader Hakimullah Mehsud appeared on local television on Monday vowing "severe" new attacks to avenge the death of rebel chief Baitullah Mehsud.

His comments were apparently made on Sunday before the WFP office bombing, but he issued a chilling warning that "thousands of human lives" could be sacrificed in their insurgency to install harsh Islamic law in Pakistan.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said the attack was carried out by Taliban extremists in revenge for a military offensive against them.

"They (Taliban militants) have prepared a strategy and there is the possibility of more such incidents in the near future," he told reporters.

There were scenes of confusion around the WFP compound in central Islamabad, with sirens blaring and smoke billowing from behind the blast walls. Wounded survivors walked amid shattered glass and blood-slicked floors.

"We were on the upper storey when the blast took place. It shook the building and shattered the windows," said one WFP employee at the scene. "We saw smoke coming out of the building, we rushed out."

UN offices across Pakistan have been closed until further notice over security concerns, United Nations spokeswoman Susan Manuel told AFP.

Bani Amin, deputy inspector general of police operations, said the explosion was caused by a suicide bomber who entered the building on foot.

"We have recovered legs and the skull of the suicide bomber. We are investigating how he managed to enter the building. There are scanners, there are cameras and strict security arrangements," Amin said.

Police and hospital officials said four Pakistanis were killed and one Iraqi, and the WFP headquarters in Rome confirmed the casualties.

"All of the victims were humanitarian heroes working on the frontlines of hunger," said WFP executive director Josette Sheeran. "This is a tragedy not just for WFP but for the whole humanitarian community and for the hungry."

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called the bombing a "heinous crime" and the United States also condemned the attack.

"Senseless acts of violence against people who help feed the poor and hungry are an attack on -- on civilization itself," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters.

Interior minister Malik said that the bomber was dressed in the uniform of the paramilitary Frontier Corps -- who guard the WFP offices -- and asked to use the toilet before detonating his explosives.

Malik blamed the Taliban and said they were avenging an offensive against them which the military launched in April in northwest Swat valley, with the army now poised to begin a similar assault in the lawless tribal belt.

Taliban militants holed up in the northwest tribal belt have been blamed for a string of attacks and suicide blasts that have killed more than 2,140 people in the last two years, with 12 blasts hitting Islamabad alone.

On Monday, Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud appeared on local television channels and vowed revenge for the death of his predecessor Baitullah Mehsud in a US drone missile strike in the tribal belt in early August.

"We will take severe revenge for Baitullah Mehsud's killing and the continued drone strikes... both America and Pakistan will have to face the consequences," said the warlord, in comments seen by an AFP reporter.

"Our basic aim is enforcement of Islamic sharia law and if thousands of human lives need to be sacrificed, we will not hesitate," he added.

He also denied rumours of his death, which have been circulating for weeks.

The Islamabad blast was the second tragedy for the UN community here this year, with an employee from refugee agency UNHCR and another from children's agency UNICEF killed in a June suicide blast at a luxury hotel in the northwest city of Peshawar.

Men's-only knitting night a hit at Ohio shop

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Call them the Knights of Knitting. One evening each month the Wonder Knit shop in Columbus, Ohio, holds a men's only knitting night. Shop owner Libby Bruce said she has as many as 15 guys attending her knitting circles. She adds they range in age from college students to older men, both gay and straight.
Bruce told the Columbus Dispatch the guys appreciate the chance to socialize and practice their hobby. But Bruce said that men knitting are a like women knitting, except for a lot of swearing.

Obama: Afghan war not just a US battle

WASHINGTON (AFP) –
US President Barack Obama Tuesday warned America could not fight the battle in Afghanistan alone, as he met NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen and began deliberations on whether to escalate the war.

"This is not a American battle, this is a NATO mission as well," Obama said as he welcomed the alliance's secretary general to the Oval Office, at a time of mounting political pressure over future war strategy.

"We both agree that it is absolutely critical that we are successful in dismantling, disrupting, destroying the Al-Qaeda network," he said, also citing the need to work with the Afghan government to provide security.

"We are working actively and diligently to consult with NATO at every step of the way."

Obama is facing fateful decisions on Afghan strategy as he digests a report by US commander General Stanley McChrystal which warned the war could be lost within a year without more troops.

McChrystal has reportedly requested up to 40,000 more US soldiers to fight the strengthening Taliban insurgency, but Obama is considering whether current tactics are the best way to defeat Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

A US official said that McChrystal and General David Petraeus, head of US central command, had both been invited to attend a meeting on Afghanistan at the White House Tuesday among top officials, in person or by video link.

Obama was not at those talks, but was scheduled to take part in another top-level meeting -- to which both generals were also invited, on Wednesday, another official said.

The high-powered meeting was also to include Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

Some Republican critics have accused Obama of undue delay on framing a new Afghan strategy and called for him to approve any request for more troops submitted by the Pentagon.

Rasmussen said Obama was right to establish a new plan before making far-reaching decisions about the possible dispatch of tens of thousands of extra US troops to Afghanistan.

"Don't make any mistake: the normal discussion on the right approach should not be misinterpreted as lack of resolve," Rasmussen said.

"This alliance will stand united and we will stay in Afghanistan as long as it takes to finish our job."

European officials signaled before Rasmussen's arrival at the White House that they would await the result of the Afghan elections and Obama's decision before mulling their own troop reinforcements.

And in a speech in Washington on Monday, Rasmussen acknowledged that US leaders sometimes were frustrated by restrictions NATO partners put on where their forces could fight and how long it takes to make decisions.

But he pointed out that there are 35,000 non-US troops in Afghanistan, or about 40 percent of the total, and denied US allies were running from the fight.

"I will not accept from anyone the argument that the Europeans and the Canadians are not paying the price for success in Afghanistan. They are."

The White House has cautioned it will be "weeks" before the president makes up his mind on a new Afghan strategy.

"This isn't going to be finished in one meeting, it's not going to be finished in several meetings," said Gibbs.

Obama's task in building political support for any troop increase is being complicated by the fraud-tainted Afghan presidential election and widespread mistrust in Washington over the government of President Hamid Karzai.

His critical decisions on Afghanistan coincide with an increasingly strong Taliban, mounting US and allied casualties, and American public opinion that is souring on the war.

A CNN Opinion Research poll this month showed record levels of opposition to the eight-year-old conflict, with 58 percent of respondents saying they opposed it, while 39 percent were in favor.

Other recent polls have shown public opinion more evenly split on the war.

The US military has declined to reveal the details of McChrystal's troop request but Republican Senator John McCain said in a weekend television interview that the commander had appealed for 30,000-40,000 forces.

Gates has said he will only formally convey McChrystal's troop request to Obama once the policy review is complete -- and denied any rifts between the Pentagon and some skeptics of troop increases in the White House.

States that bet on gambling money: a roll of the vice (The Christian Science Monitor)

Here's a thought experiment worth pondering as the US recovers from recession.
What if all the states with legalized gambling had outlawed it last year and asked gamblers to instead put their money into savings, job retraining, paying off debts, or buying goods from local merchants?
Alas, states didn't even consider that productive route for disposable personal income, which would have helped revive the economy faster.
In fact, as state coffers have shrunk – in part because of less tax revenue from gambling – many states have tried to increase the opportunities and enticements for gambling.
In Ohio, for instance, voters are being asked to change the constitution to allow casinos. Illinois wants to give free drinks to riverboat gamblers. New Jersey has lifted a ban on smoking in bars with gambling machines.
Like the gambling addicts they help enable, many states are in denial about this perverse dependence on a fickle revenue source that, as studies show, costs more in social problems than the money it brings in.
And they do so despite estimates that the "market" for gambling is saturated in many areas with more states competing against one another for a limited number of gambling dollars.
Legalized gambling, especially a state lottery, is a zero-sum sport. It simply transfers wealth largely from the poor to the statehouse. It doesn't "create" wealth.
By further tapping the poor in this way when nearly 1 in 10 workers is jobless, states with gambling only highlight that they run a "reverse welfare" program. And Congress doesn't help by giving tax breaks for gambling technologies.
To balance budgets, states must not unbalance society with games of chance. They can do it the old-­fashioned way by trimming spending or hiking taxes.
Leave luck out of it.