2012年12月29日星期六

on the 40th anniversary of Title IX

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    It was a year of storms, of raging winds and rising waters, but also broader turbulence that strained our moorings. Our atmosphere, our politics, our economy — rarely in memory have they seemed in such constant agitation.

    Our emotions, too. In the year's final weeks, amid a torrent of tears in a heartbroken Connecticut town, a rush of grief seemed to wash over all of us from the shooting deaths of 20 children and six adults in an elementary school, and of the shooter's mother in her home. The senselessness and loss plumbed depths of sorrow and outrage we had not felt, together, for many years.

    But if 2012 battered us with floods and tempests, and seemed especially dark in its final days, it was also perhaps more distinctively a year of mornings after, when clouds parted and dawn's light fell upon altered landscapes.

    Surveying the changes, we were sometimes sanguine, at other times distraught.

    There were, of course, the storms themselves, taking not just ferocious but sometimes freakish forms. Americans saw an unusually warm winter, spring tornadoes, summer drought, and a band of concentrated, hurricane-scale thunderstorms that taught millions the word "derecho."

    Autumn brought Hurricane Sandy and a wintry nor'easter that disrupted millions of lives and killed hundreds, many swept from their homes in communities with safe-sounding names like New York's Breezy Point and the Rockaways that unexpectedly entered the lexicon of global disaster zones.

    When the waters did recede, they revealed a country perhaps one step readier to confront difficult questions: Is our planet changing, and are we responsible? Even more abruptly, the Connecticut killing spree seemed in one terrible day to bring the long-dormant issue of gun control to the political forefront.

    Sandy may also have boosted President Barack Obama in the last days of a close-run re-election campaign that was nothing if not a storm itself — a seemingly endless $6 billion typhoon of negativity that simply exhausted Americans, particularly in a handful of swing states on whose airwaves it made landfall.

    But it ended at last, and if the outcome seemed to affirm the status quo, it also laid bare a political topography reshaped by changing demographics.

    Just over half the country, disproportionately the young and minority, celebrated Obama's re-election, and three states became the first to approve gay marriage at the ballot box. Among those on the losing side, older and whiter as a group, some were genuinely shocked by the result, and expressed sadness in the conviction that an America that felt familiar to them was slipping away.

    After nearly half a decade, rays of sunlight at last shone on the American economy. Unemployment, though still uncomfortably high, fell below 8 percent for the first time in more than three years. Housing began to rebound. Though political gridlock threatened to undermine it, recovery seemed at last at hand.

    Yet the flickering revival also illuminated how much may have changed forever. Factories were hiring again, but often couldn't find workers with the needed qualifications. A college degree was the increasingly unforgiving divider between the haves and have-nots, fueling anxiety over its rising price.

    One 2012 study reached the remarkable conclusion that even during the depths of the worst recession in the lifetimes of most Americans, the number of jobs available to people with a bachelor's degree never stopped increasing. And even when the economy picked up in 2012, the number of available jobs for those with only a high school diploma continued to decline. In other words, for those with a college degree, the Great Recession never happened. For those without one, it may never end.

    Amid great sorrow, there was no shortage of wondrous human achievement in 2012.

    Felix Baumgartner, a 42-year-old former car mechanic from Austria, rode a balloon-tugged capsule to the edge of space. Then, as millions watched breathlessly online, he opened the hatch, paused momentarily, and stepped into the void. He tumbled for nine minutes and 24 miles, breaking the sound barrier, before deploying a parachute and landing safely in the New Mexico desert.

    No less thrillingly to some, scientists in Switzerland tied the final string of a knot that explains the most elementary workings of the universe: the "standard model" of physics. With the words, "I think we have it," they announced with virtual certainty they had found the so-called Higgs boson "God particle." It was an answer to one of the most basic but bedeviling questions imaginable: Where does mass come from?

    At the London Olympics, Jamaican Usain Bolt proved himself the greatest sprinter of all-time, and Baltimore swimmer Michael Phelps became the most decorated Olympian. But for the Americans, victory in the medal table was driven by women —a reward, on the 40th anniversary of Title IX, for a broad-based culture of sports participation. The defining image: 16-year-old gymnast Gabby Douglas, suspended with seemingly impossible fluidity and grace at the apex of her jump from a balance beam, en route to the all-around gold medal.

    British athletes also exceeded expectations, and after years of grumbling over costs and inconvenience, the hosts seemed actually to enjoy themselves. The opening ceremonies touched all the right notes, celebrating a multicultural nation sufficiently confident in its virtues of cleverness, artistry and humor to resist trying to outdo the Beijing extravaganza four years ago. From Mary Poppins to Monty Python, from a sky-diving queen to Mr. Bean, it was a palpable hit.

    There were, as always, those who let us down. Lance Armstrong, the supposedly superhuman cyclist stripped of seven Tour de France titles, humiliated by a meticulous official report that painted him a cheat and a bully. Revered general and CIA director David Petraeus, taken down by an affair with a fawning biographer. Former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky, carted off to prison for 30-to-60 years for child sex abuse.

    Internationally, there was no shortage of storms in 2012, though less in the way of resolution. Old enmities and grievances resurfaced in the Middle East, clouding the legacy of the 2011 Arab spring. The number of dead in the Syrian civil war passed 40,000. Israeli and Palestinian civilians suffered through another escalation of the conflict in Gaza.

    In Libya, four Americans, including much-loved ambassador Chris Stevens, were killed in an attack on the Benghazi consulate that became yet another point of bitter political dispute in Washington.

    The European Union accepted the Nobel Peace Prize, but its grand experiment with a single currency teetered. Greeks rioted against austerity, and anti-immigrant groups harking back to the continent's fascist past drew energy from the despair. Spain, Portugal and Italy struggled to right themselves and offer a way forward to an emerging generation that has never tasted opportunity.

    Beneath the biggest headlines there were stories where one might spot distant clouds on the horizon — clouds with the potential, at least, to gather into storms.

    In February, Congress set in motion planning to open U.S. civilian airspace to unmanned aircraft by 2015. Will domestic drones make possible heretofore unimaginable conveniences, transform our economy and make us safer? Or, as some fear, will they usher in a "surveillance society" where prying eyes above compromise the privacy of every home and back yard?

    In September, China unveiled its first aircraft carrier. Will it herald an arms race and future conflict? Or does it merely highlight the wide military gap between the United States and any rival? And will China's slowing economy prove a manageable correction, or the first rumblings of an economic and political earthquake?

    In November, in the magnificent but seemingly cursed Great Lakes region of East Africa, refugees again streamed past bodies of the dead, fleeing into the mountains. The city of Goma, Congo, fell to a few hundred rebels, allegedly supported by next-door Rwanda, as United Nations peacekeepers stood by. Would this prove merely another flare-up in a beautiful but crowded and long-suffering corner of the world? Or was it the re-ignition of a conflict that — unbeknownst to much of the world — was the deadliest on earth since World War II, claiming more than 5 million lives during the late 1990s and early 2000s?

    Yes, some clouds did part in 2012. But there remained no dearth of the grieving and the suffering, on whom "the sky, it seems, would pour down stinking pitch" — in the words of Shakespeare's famous take on tempests — and who anxiously awaited what the dawning light of 2013 would reveal.

    ___

    Follow Justin Pope at http://www.twitter.com/JustinPopeAP

  • "It sounds a little wimpy if you're like

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    Video: Man Pushed to Death in Front of NYC Subway Train0:49

    NEW YORK (AP) — Police searched for a woman who killed a man by pushing him in front of a subway train and released surveillance video Friday of her running away from the station.

    Commuters, meanwhile, absorbed the news of the second fatal subway shove in the city this month.

    "It's just a really sad commentary on the world and on human beings, period," said Howard Roth, who takes the subway daily. He said the deadly push was food for thought about subway safety, "but I guess the best thing is what they tell you — don't stand near the edge, and keep your eyes open."

    The suspect in Thursday night's killing had been following the man closely on a Queens platform and mumbling to herself, witnesses told police. She got up from a nearby bench and shoved the man, who was standing with his back to her, as the train pulled into the platform. He was pinned under the train as it pulled to a stop, police said.

    It did not appear the man noticed her before he was shoved onto the tracks, police said, adding that the condition of the man's body was making it difficult to identify him. The woman was described as Hispanic, in her 20s, heavyset and about 5-foot-5, wearing a blue, white and gray ski jacket and Nike sneakers with gray on top and red on the bottom.

    It was unclear whether the man and the woman knew each other. And it's also unclear whether anyone tried to help the man up before he was struck — or whether there was enough time for anyone to do anything.

    The surveillance video was taken at a nearby intersection. It shows a woman dashing from a crosswalk and down a sidewalk.

    Asked about the episode at the station on Queens Boulevard in the Sunnyside neighborhood, Mayor Michael Bloomberg pointed Friday to legal and policy changes that led to the release of many mentally ill people from psychiatric institutions from the 1960s through 1990s.

    "The courts or the law have changed and said, no, you can't do that unless they're a danger to society; our laws protect you. That's fair enough," Bloomberg said on "The John Gambling Show with Mayor Mike" on WOR-AM.

    On Dec. 3, 58-year-old Ki-Suck Han was pushed in front of a train in Times Square. Apparently no other passenger tried to help Han.

    A photograph of him on the tracks a split second before he was killed was published on the front of the New York Post the next day, causing an uproar and debate over whether the photographer, who had been waiting for a train, should have tried to help him and whether the newspaper should have run the image.

    A homeless man, 30-year-old Naeem Davis, was charged with murder in Han's death and was ordered held without bail. He has pleaded not guilty and has said that Han was the aggressor and had attacked him first. The two men hadn't met before.

    Being pushed onto the train tracks is a silent fear for many commuters who ride the city's subway a total of more than 5.2 million times on an average weekday, but deaths are rare.

    Among the more high-profile cases was the January 1999 death of aspiring screenwriter Kendra Webdale, who was shoved by a former mental patient. The man, Andrew Goldstein, was convicted of murder after unsuccessfully arguing he was too mentally ill to understand what he was doing.

    The case prompted the state Legislature to pass Kendra's Law, which lets mental health authorities supervise patients who live outside institutions to make sure they are taking their medications and aren't threats to safety.

    Earlier this year, restaurant cook Jose Rojas was convicted of assault for shoving a woman into the side of a moving train in 2010. His lawyers argued he simply stumbled into her in a drunken accident. The victim was seriously hurt but survived.

    Like many subway riders, Micah Siegel follows her own set of safety precautions during her daily commute: stand against a wall or pillar to keep someone from coming up behind you, watch out when navigating a crowded or narrow platform to avoid being knocked — even accidentally — onto the tracks.

    "I do try to be aware of what's around me and who's around me, especially as a young woman," Siegel, a 21-year-old college student, said as she waited at Pennsylvania Station on Friday.

    So does Roth, who's 60.

    "It sounds a little wimpy if you're like, 'Who's going to push me?' But it's better to be safe than sorry," he said.

    ___

    Online:

    Video: http://apne.ws/RWeSyO

  • as the Senate's Republican leader

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama was presenting a limited fiscal proposal to congressional leaders at a White House meeting Friday, a make-or-break moment for negotiations to avoid across-the-board tax increases and deep spending cuts at the first of the year.

    Lawmakers and White House officials held out slim hope for a deal before the new year, but it remained unclear whether congressional passage of legislation palatable to both sides was even possible.

    House Speaker John Boehner, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi arrived at the White House separately, each driven in dark SUVs for the afternoon session. Vice President Joe Biden and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner also were attending.

    The meeting — the first among congressional leaders and the president since Nov. 16 — started at 3:10 p.m. and was likely to center on which income thresholds would face higher tax rates, extending unemployment insurance and preventing a cut in Medicare payments to doctors, among other issues.

    For Obama, the eleventh-hour scramble represented a test of how he would balance strength derived from his re-election against an avowed commitment to compromise in the face of divided government. Despite early talk of a grand bargain between Obama and Boehner that would reduce deficits by more than $2 trillion, the expectations were now far less ambitious.

    Although there were no guarantees of a deal, Republicans and Democrats said privately that any agreement would likely include an extension of middle-class tax cuts with increased rates at upper incomes, an Obama priority that was central to his re-election campaign.

    A key question was whether Obama would agree to abandon his insistence during the campaign on raising taxes on households earning more than $250,000 a year and instead accept a $400,000 threshold like the one he offered in negotiations with Boehner. Another was whether Republicans would seek a higher income threshold.

    The deal would also likely put off the scheduled spending cuts. Such a year-end bill could also include an extension of expiring unemployment benefits, a reprieve for doctors who face a cut in Medicare payments and possibly a short-term measure to prevent dairy prices from soaring, officials said.

    If a deal was not possible, it would become evident at Friday's White House meeting, and Obama and the leaders would leave a resolution for the next Congress to address in January.

    Such a delay could unnerve the stock market, which edged lower for a fifth day Friday amid worries that lawmakers would fail to reach a budget deal. Economists say that if the tax increases are allowed to hit most Americans and if the spending cuts aren't scaled back, the recovering but fragile economy could sustain a traumatizing shock.

    Obama and Reid, D-Nev., would have to propose a package that McConnell, as the Senate's Republican leader, would agree not to block with procedural steps that require 60 votes to overcome. The package would have to be one that Boehner determines could then win substantial Republican support in the GOP-controlled House.

    The No. 2 Senate GOP leader, Jon Kyl of Arizona, said it is "pretty unlikely" that Senate Republicans would agree to legislation averting the fiscal cliff if it wouldn't pass muster in the House.

    "If you know the House isn't going to do something, why go through the charade?" he told reporters. "That becomes political gamesmanship."

    Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York said he still thinks a deal could be struck.

    The Democrat told NBC's "Today" show Friday that he believes the "odds are better than people think."

    Schumer said he based his optimism on indications that McConnell has gotten "actively engaged" in the talks.

    Appearing on the same show, Republican Sen. John Thune noted the meeting scheduled later Friday at the White House, saying "it's encouraging that people are talking."

    But Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., predicted that "the worst-case scenario" could emerge from Friday's talks.

    "We will kick the can down the road," he said on "CBS This Morning."

    "We'll do some small deal and we'll create another fiscal cliff to deal with the fiscal cliff," he said. Corker complained that there has been "a total lack of courage, lack of leadership," in Washington.

    If a deal were to pass the Senate, Boehner would have to agree to take it to the floor in the Republican-controlled House.

    Boehner discussed the fiscal cliff with Republican members in a conference call Thursday and advised them that the House would convene Sunday evening. Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., an ally of the speaker, said Boehner told the lawmakers that "he didn't really intend to put on the floor something that would pass with all the Democratic votes and few of the Republican votes."

    But Cole did not rule out Republican support for some increase in tax rates, noting that Boehner had amassed about 200 Republican votes for a plan last week to raise rates on Americans earning $1 million or more. Boehner ultimately did not put the plan to a House floor vote in the face of opposition from Republican conservatives and a unified Democratic caucus.

    "The ultimate question is whether the Republican leaders in the House and Senate are going to push us over the cliff by blocking plans to extend tax cuts for the middle class," White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer said. "Ironically, in order to protect tax breaks for millionaires, they will be responsible for the largest tax increase in history."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Alan Fram, Charles Babington and David Espo contributed to this report.

    ___

    Follow Jim Kuhnhenn on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jkuhnhenn

  • Jones said.

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    NORTH LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) — Police investigating the disappearance of a 10-year-old Las Vegas girl expect to know Friday if it was her body that was found in an undeveloped housing tract.

    Authorities couldn't immediately confirm that the body belonged to Jade Morris when it was discovered Thursday, Las Vegas police homicide Capt. Chris Jones said.

    But, "I can tell you that the likelihood is that this is our victim," Jones said. He said the body belongs to a black girl, and Jade was black.

    Coroner Michael Murphy said he expected to make a positive identification Friday, the same day that Brenda Stokes, the woman Jade was last seen with, appears in court on charges that she slashed a co-worker with razor blades at the Bellagio resort casino.

    Jade's family last saw her at about 5 p.m. Dec. 21, when Stokes picked her up for a shopping outing, police said. Police said Stokes was a trusted friend of the girl's father, and family members have told reporters that the two dated for several years.

    Stokes, who also uses the name Brenda Wilson, was arrested later that night after she was accused of slashing the co-worker.

    Stokes, 50, is now in jail, and Jones said she has not cooperated in the investigation of the girl's whereabouts.

    A passer-by called 911 about noon Thursday, and North Las Vegas police found a girl's body in brush near palm trees in a small traffic circle near Dorrell Lane and North Fifth Street.

    The location is a short distance from the northern 215 Beltway and about 10 miles from the downtown Las Vegas outlet mall off Interstate 15 where Stokes was to have taken the girl shopping.

    Attempts by The Associated Press to reach family members Thursday were unsuccessful.

    Stokes picked up the girl at about 5 p.m., and two hours later returned to another friend the red 2007 Saab sedan that she borrowed for the shopping trip, Jones said.

    Later, Stokes got a ride with a friend to the Bellagio resort on the Las Vegas Strip, where she was arrested after authorities say she attacked a female co-worker, Joyce Rhone, with a razor in each hand as Rhone dealt blackjack about 9:30 p.m.

    Rhone, 44, was hospitalized with deep cuts on her face, including one from her ear to the edge of her mouth. A police arrest report said Rhone also had several smaller cuts around her right eye.

    Records show that Stokes was being held on $60,000 bail at the Clark County jail on felony battery with a weapon, burglary and mayhem charges that could get her decades in prison.

    She told a judge Wednesday that she had not obtained a lawyer. She was due again in Las Vegas Justice Court on Friday morning.

    The arrest report says casino video shows Stokes attacking Rhone before a casino patron and security officers intervene. Officer Marcus Martin said the video is evidence that may be shown by prosecutors in court but will not be made public by police.

    Police said Stokes later told investigators that she attacked Rhone over harassing phone calls and an unspecified betrayal that ended their seven-year friendship.

    Stokes also told police she visited her doctor last week, seeking to be admitted to a hospital "due to feeling like she wanted to hurt someone."

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    LAS VEGAS (AP) — Blood was found inside a car borrowed by a Las Vegas Strip card dealer last seen with a missing 10-year-old girl and later arrested in the razor blade slashing of a co-worker at the posh Bellagio resort, a prosecutor said Friday.

    Brenda Stokes Wilson was identified in court Friday as the prime suspect in the slaying.

    "It's no secret the defendant is the suspect in the murder of 10-year-old Jade Morris," prosecutor Robert Daskas said as he convinced Senior Clark County District Court Judge Joseph Bonaventure to increase Wilson's bail from $60,000 to $600,000 pending the filing of kidnapping and murder charges.

    Later Friday, Clark County coroner's officials identified the body found Thursday as that of the girl, Jade Morris. Officials say she died of multiple stab wounds.

    The girl was last seen Dec. 21 with Wilson, who'd picked her up to go Christmas shopping. Family members say Jade had a close relationship with Wilson, who used to date her father.

    Wilson, 50, was arrested later that night after she was wrestled to the ground with razors in each hand following a face-slashing attack on a female co-worker, Joyce Rhone, at the Bellagio.

    She appeared in court in that case Friday, when a judge raised her bail to $600,000.

    Wilson has been jailed on felony battery with a weapon, burglary and mayhem charges that could get her decades in prison. Police said she has offered no help in the search for the missing girl. Murder and kidnapping charges could get her life in prison without parole or the death penalty.

    Wilson stood in court flanked by eight police officers as her lawyer, Tony Liker, clutching a Bible and a copy of the charging documents, asked the judge to postpone arraignment until Wednesday to give him time to meet with Wilson.

    Liker declined comment outside court.

    Police went public with the search for Jade Morris on Christmas Day, and the case received increasing attention after the relationship between the girl and Wilson became known. Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson watched the proceedings in court Friday and called the case important for the community.

    Wilson, who had been identified by police and prosecutors as Brenda Stokes, told the judge Friday that her full name was Brenda Stokes Wilson.

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    LOS ANGELES, Calif. - FBI files on Marilyn Monroe that could not be located earlier this year have been found and re-issued, revealing the names of some of the movie star's acquaintances with suspected communists who drew concern from government officials and her own entourage.

    The files had previously been heavily redacted, but more details are now public in a version of the file recently obtained by The Associated Press through the Freedom of Information Act.

    The files show the extent the agency was monitoring the actress for ties to communism in the years before her death in August 1962. They reveal that some in Monroe's inner circle were concerned about her association with Frederick Vanderbilt Field, who was disinherited from his wealthy family over his leftist views.

    A trip to Mexico in 1962 to shop for furniture brought her in contact with Field, who was living in the country with his wife in self-imposed exile. Informants reported to the FBI that a "mutual infatuation" had developed between Field and Monroe, which caused concern among some in her inner circle, including her therapist, the files say.

    "This situation caused considerable dismay among Miss Monroe's entourage and also among the (American Communist Group in Mexico)," the file says.

    Field's autobiography devotes an entire chapter to Monroe's Mexico trip. He mentions that he and his wife accompanied Monroe on shopping trips and meals, and he only mentions politics once in a passage on their dinnertime conversations.

    "She talked mostly about herself and some of the people who had been or still were important to her," Field wrote in "From Right to Left." ''She told us about her strong feelings for civil rights, for black equality, as well as her admiration for what was being done in China, her anger at red-baiting and McCarthyism and her hatred of (FBI director) J. Edgar Hoover."

    Under Hoover's watch, the FBI kept watch on the political and social lives of many celebrities, including Frank Sinatra, Charlie Chaplin and Monroe's ex-husband Arthur Miller. The bureau has also been involved in investigations about crimes against celebrities, including threats against Elizabeth Taylor, an extortion case involving Clark Gable and more recently, trying to determine who killed rapper Notorious B.I.G.

    The AP had sought the removal of redactions from Monroe's FBI files earlier this year as part of a series of stories on the 50th anniversary of Monroe's death. The FBI had said that it had transferred the files to a National Archives facility, but archivists said the documents had not been received. A few months after requesting details on the transfer, the FBI released an updated version of the files that eliminate dozens of redactions.

    For years, the files have intrigued investigators, biographers and those who don't believe Monroe's death at her Los Angeles area home was a suicide.

    A 1982 investigation by the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office found no evidence of foul play after reviewing all available investigative records, but it noted that the FBI files were "heavily censored."

    That characterization intrigued the man who performed Monroe's autopsy, Dr. Thomas Noguchi. While the investigation concluded he conducted a thorough autopsy, Noguchi has conceded that no one will likely ever know all the details of Monroe's death. The FBI files and confidential interviews conducted with the actress' friends that have never been made public might help, he wrote in his 1983 memoir "Coroner."

    "On the basis of my own involvement in the case, beginning with the autopsy, I would call Monroe's suicide 'very probable,'" Noguchi wrote. "But I also believe that until the complete FBI files are made public and the notes and interviews of the suicide panel released, controversy will continue to swirl around her death."

    Monroe's file begins in 1955 and mostly focuses on her travels and associations, searching for signs of leftist views and possible ties to communism. One entry, which previously had been almost completely redacted, concerned intelligence that Monroe and other entertainers sought visas to visit Russia that year.

    The file continues up until the months before her death and includes several news stories and references to Norman Mailer's biography of the actress, which focused on questions about whether Monroe was killed by the government.

    The bureau never found any proof she was a member of the Communist Party.

    "Subject's views are very positively and concisely leftist; however, if she is being actively used by the Communist Party, it is not general knowledge among those working with the movement in Los Angeles," a July 1962 entry in Monroe's file says.

    ___

    Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

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    FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) — Tens of thousands of Iraqi Sunnis angry over perceived second-class treatment by the Shiite-led government massed along a major western highway and elsewhere in the country Friday for the largest protests yet in a week of demonstrations.

    The well-organized rallies, which took place after traditional Friday prayers, underscore the strength of a tenacious protest movement that appears to be gathering support among Sunnis, whose sense of grievance has been increased by arrests and prosecutions that they feel underscore Shiite political dominance.

    The biggest of Friday's demonstrations took place on a main road to Jordan and Syria that runs through the cities of Fallujah and Ramadi in the Sunni-dominated desert province of Anbar, west of Baghdad.

    Several thousand protesters took to the streets in Fallujah, holding aloft placards declaring the day a "Friday of honor." Some carried old Iraqi flags used during the era of former dictator Saddam Hussein, whose Sunni-dominated government was ousted in the U.S.-led invasion nearly a decade ago.

    Others raised the current flag, which was approved in 2008. A few hoisted the banner of the predominantly Sunni rebels across the border who are fighting to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    Massive crowds also blocked the highway in Ramadi, further to the west, to demand "fair treatment" from the government and the release of prisoners, said Dhari Arkan, the deputy governor of Anbar province.

    "The people have demands that must be met by the Baghdad government immediately or these demonstrations will spread nationwide," Arkan said. "The people can bring down the regime, just like what happened in other Arab Spring countries."

    In the northern city of Mosul, abound 3,000 demonstrators took to the streets to denounce what they called the sidelining of Sunnis in Iraq and to demand the release of Sunni prisoners. As in protests earlier in the week, demonstrators there chanted the Arab Spring slogan: "The people want the downfall of the regime."

    Thousands likewise turned out in the northern Sunni towns of Tikrit and Samarra, where they were joined by lawmakers and provincial officials, said Salahuddin provincial spokesman Mohammed al-Asi.

    At a conference in Baghdad, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warned against a return to sectarian conflict and cautioned that the country is close to returning to the "dark days when people were killed because of their names or identities."

    He also used the occasion to take a jab at the protesters in Anbar.

    "Nations that look for peace, love and reconstruction must choose civilized ways to express themselves. It is not acceptable to express opinions by blocking the roads, encouraging sectarianism, threating to launch wars and dividing Iraq," he said. "Instead we need to talk, to listen to each other and to agree ... to end our differences."

    The demonstrations follow the arrest last week of 10 bodyguards assigned to Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi, who comes from Anbar and is one of the central government's most senior Sunni officials.

    While the detentions triggered the latest bout of unrest, the demonstrations also tap into deeper Sunni fears that they are being marginalized by the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Although the government includes some Sunni Arabs and Kurdish officials as part of a power-sharing agreement, it draws the bulk of its support from Iraq's majority Shiites.

    Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, another top-ranking Sunni politician, is now living in exile in Turkey after being handed multiple death sentences earlier this year for allegedly running death squads — a charge he dismisses as politically motivated.

    Sunni-dominated Anbar province has been the scene of several large demonstrations and road blockages since last Saturday. The vast territory was once the heart of the deadly Sunni insurgency that emerged after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

    Al-Qaida is believed to be rebuilding in pockets of Anbar, and militants linked to it are thought to be helping Sunni rebels in Syria.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Sinan Salaheddin and Adam Schreck contributed reporting from Baghdad.

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    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea has repaired flood damage at its nuclear test facility and could conduct a quick atomic explosion if it chose, though water streaming out of a test tunnel may cause problems, analysis of recent satellite photos indicates.

    Washington and others are bracing for the possibility that if punished for a successful long-range rocket launch on Dec. 12 that the U.N. considers a cover for a banned ballistic missile test, North Korea's next step might be its third nuclear test.

    Rocket and nuclear tests unnerve Washington and its allies because each new success puts North Korean scientists another step closer to perfecting a nuclear warhead small enough to put on a missile that could hit the mainland United States.

    Another nuclear test, which North Korea's Foreign Ministry hinted at on the day of the rocket launch, would fit a pattern. Pyongyang conducted its first and second atomic explosions, in 2006 and 2009, weeks after receiving U.N. Security Council condemnation and sanctions for similar long-range rocket launches.

    North Korea is thought to have enough plutonium for a handful of crude atomic bombs, and unveiled a uranium enrichment facility in 2010, but it must continue to conduct tests to master the miniaturization technology crucial for a true nuclear weapons program.

    "With an additional nuclear test, North Korea could advance their ability to eventually deploy a nuclear weapon on a long-range missile," said Daryl Kimball, executive director of the nongovernment Arms Control Association.

    Analysts caution that only so much can be determined from satellite imagery, and it's very difficult to fully discern North Korea's plans. This is especially true for nuclear test preparations, which are often done deep within a mountain. North Korea, for instance, took many by surprise when it launched its rocket this month only several days after announcing technical problems.

    Although there's no sign of an imminent nuclear test, U.S. and South Korean officials worry that Pyongyang could conduct one at any time.

    Analysis of GeoEye and Digital Globe satellite photos from Dec. 13 and earlier, provided to The Associated Press by 38 North, the website for the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, said scientists are "determined to maintain a state of readiness" at the Punggye-ri Nuclear Test Facility after repairing flood damage.

    The nuclear speculation comes as South Korea's conservative president-elect, Park Geun-hye, prepares to take office in February, and as young North Korean leader Kim Jong Un marks his one-year anniversary as supreme commander.

    Kim has consolidated power since taking over after his father, Kim Jong Il, died Dec. 17, 2011, and the rocket launch is seen as a major internal political and popular boost for the 20-something leader.

    Some analysts, however, question whether Kim will risk international, and especially Chinese, wrath and sure sanctions by quickly conducting a nuclear test.

    The election of Park in South Korea and Barack Obama's re-election to a second term as U.S. president could "prompt North Korea to try more diplomacy than military options," said Chang Yong-seok, an analyst at the Institute for Peace Affairs, a private think tank in Seoul. "I think we'll see North Korea more focused on economic revival than on nuclear testing next year."

    The 38 North analysis said the North "may be able to trigger a detonation in as little as two weeks, once a political decision is made to move forward." But the report by Jack Liu, Nick Hansen and Jeffrey Lewis also said it was unclear whether water seepage from a tunnel entrance at the site was under control. Water could hurt a nuclear device and the sensors needed to monitor a test.

    The analysis also identified what it called a previously unidentified structure that could be meant to protect sensitive equipment from bad weather.

    "We don't have a crystal ball that will tell us when the North will conduct its third nuclear test," said Joel Wit, a former U.S. State Department official and now editor of 38 North. "But events over the next few months, such as the U.N. reaction to Pyongyang's missile test and the North's unfolding policy toward the new South Korean government, may at least provide us with some clues."

    Another unknown is how China, the North's only major ally, would respond to calls for tighter sanctions. Washington views more pressure from Beijing as pivotal if diplomatic pressure is going to force change in Pyongyang.

    Even if Beijing signs on to U.N. punishment if the North conducts a test, there may be less hurt for Pyongyang than Washington wants.

    The impact of tougher sanctions would be "a drop in the bucket compared with the tidal wave of China-North Korean trade" that has risen sharply since 2008, even as inter-Korean trade has remained flat, said John Park, a Korea expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    Trade figures show North Korea's deepening dependence on China. Pyongyang's trade with Beijing surged more than 60 percent last year, reaching $5.63 billion, according to South Korea's Statistics Korea. China accounted for 70 percent of North Korea's annual trade in 2011, up from 57 percent in 2010.

    North Korea's 2006 nuclear test had an estimated explosive yield of 1 kiloton. The Los Alamos National Laboratory estimated in 2011 that the North's test on May 25, 2009, which followed U.N. condemnation of an April long-range rocket launch, had a minimum yield of 5.7 kilotons. The atomic bomb that hit Nagasaki at the end of World War II was about 21 kilotons.

    Both North Korean tests used plutonium for fissile material. Without at least one more successful plutonium test, it's unlikely that Pyongyang could have confidence in a miniaturized plutonium design, according to an August paper by Frank Pabian of Los Alamos and Siegfried Hecker of Stanford University.

    North Korea's small plutonium stockpile is sufficient for four to eight bombs, they wrote, but it may be willing to sacrifice some if it can augment information from the previous tests. Pabian and Hecker predicted that Pyongyang may simultaneously test both plutonium and highly enriched uranium devices.

    A uranium test would worry the international community even more, as it would confirm that North Korea, which would need months to restart its shuttered plutonium reactor, has an alternative source of fissile material based on uranium enrichment. North Korea unveiled a previously secret uranium enrichment plant in November 2010.

    "Whether and when North Korea conducts another nuclear test will depend on how high a political cost Pyongyang is willing to bear," Pabian and Hecker wrote.

    Another test would also undermine Pyongyang's assertion that its long-range rocket launches are for a peaceful space program and not what outsiders see as the development of ballistic missiles that could eventually deliver nuclear weapons.

    On the same day as this month's rocket launch, an unidentified North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman told state media that a hostile U.S. response to a failed launch in April of this year had forced Pyongyang "to re-examine the nuclear issue as a whole."

    The statement was a clear threat to detonate a nuclear device ahead of any U.N. Security Council action, said Baek Seung-joo, an analyst at the state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul.

    ___

    Pennington reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Sam Kim contributed from Seoul.

  • 93

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    JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party is set to win a parliamentary election on January 22 although the popularity of a far-right party opposed to Palestinian statehood is growing, polls showed on Friday.

    Two out of three surveys showed the right-wing Likud losing voters to political newcomer Naftali Bennett's religious party Bayit Yehudi (Jewish Home)and to a fractured center-left bloc.

    All still predicted a strong right-wing coalition emerging in the 120-seat parliament, which would assure Netanyahu another term.

    The daily Yedioth Ahronoth published a poll with Likud winning 33 seats, four less than a month ago. A poll in the Jerusalem Post showed Likud fell to 34, down from 39 just two weeks ago. A survey by Maariv said Likud held ground at 37.

    Without a majority in parliament, Likud would have to join forces with other parties to form a government. Netanyahu could choose Bennett and ultra-Orthodox religious parties or team up with members of the center-left bloc.

    The left-leaning Labor party remained in second place in all the polls, winning 17 or 18 seats.

    Bennett's party platform rejects a two-state solution with the Palestinians and is staunchly in favor of settlement building in the occupied West Bank - an issue which has stalled peace talks.

    All the polls show him on an upward trend, winning between 12 and 14 seats.

    (Reporting by Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

    2012年12月26日星期三

    Lawmakers look to restrict gun magazine capacity

    Lawmakers look to restrict gun magazine capacity

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Lawmakers from both parties voiced their willingness Sunday to pursue some changes to the nation's gun laws, but adamant opposition from the National Rifle Association has made clear than any such effort will face significant obstacles.

    NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre dismissed efforts to revive a ban on assault weapons as a "phony piece of legislation" that's built on lies.

    Democratic lawmakers in Congress have become more adamant about the need for stricter gun laws since the shooting of 20 children and six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California is promising to push for a renewal of expired legislation that banned certain weapons and limited the number of bullets a gun magazine could hold to 10.

    "I think we ought to be looking at where the real danger is, like those large clips," said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas.

    "I think we need a comprehensive approach," said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., a longtime gun rights supporter. "I'll look at all the proposals. . I think it looks at mental health, I think it looks at protecting our schools but I also think it looks at these high-volume magazines, you know, that can fire off so many rounds."

    Both lawmakers appeared on CBS' "Face the Nation," where NRA President David Keene said lawmakers were asking the wrong question when discussing how many rounds a gun magazine should have.

    The right question, he said: "Can we keep guns out of the hands of people who are potential killers?"

    LaPierre made clear it was highly unlikely that the NRA could support any new gun regulations.

    "You want one more law on top of 20,000 laws, when most of the federal gun laws we don't even enforce?" he said.

    Instead, LaPierre reiterated the group's support for putting police officers in every school.

    "If it's crazy to call for putting police and armed security in our schools to protect our children, then call me crazy," LaPierre said on NBC's "Meet the Press." ''I think the American people think it's crazy not to do it. It's the one thing that would keep people safe."

    Sen. Joe Lieberman, a Connecticut independent, said he found the NRA's statements in recent days to be "really disheartening." Still, he said he agrees with some of the points the group has made about the causes behind violence in America.

    "But it's obviously also true that the easy availability of guns, including military-style assault weapons, is a contributing factor, and you can't keep that off the table. I had hoped they'd come to the table and say, everything is on the table," Lieberman said.

    Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said LaPierre was "so extreme and so tone deaf" that he was making it easier to pass gun legislation.

    "Look, he blames everything but guns: movies, the media, President Obama, gun-free school zones, you name it. And the video games, he blames them," Schumer said.

    Lieberman said the NRA's stand on new gun rules means passing legislation next year won't happen easily.

    "It's going to be a battle. But the president, I think, and vice president, are really ready to lead the fight," he said.

    米医療機器メーカー日本法人が68歳定年制導入

    米医療機器メーカー日本法人が68歳定年制導入
    2013年4月の法改正で企業に65歳までの雇用が義務付けられるのを前に、定年の年齢を一気に68歳へ引き上げる動きが出てきた。

    【詳細画像または表】

     米医療機器メーカー、クックメディカルの日本法人であるクックジャパンが13年から定年年齢を見直し、従来の63歳に代わって「68歳定年制」を導入することがわかった。現在200名を超えるすべての役職員が対象。見直しの理由についてクックジャパンの矢込和彦社長は「従業員が安心して仕事のできる環境を作りたい」などと話している。

     多くの会社が採用している再雇用制度とは異なり、68歳の定年まで同一の賃金体系が適用される。このため、定年年齢の引き上げに伴う人件費増が見込まれるが、賃金の推移などに関するシミュレーションは一切行わなかったという。「非上場会社だからできることであり、損得勘定は考慮しない」(矢込社長)。

     日本法人の設立は2004年と歴史が浅く、これまでの採用は経験者が中心だ。日本での事業が軌道に乗ってきたことで、「14年には新卒者も採用したい」(同)意向だ。

     「米国本社では親子3代に渡って働いているケースもある」(同)。21日に開かれた年末の納会では、有給休暇の取得日数が最も多かった品質管理担当の女性社員が表彰される場面もあった。

     同社員の有休付与日数に対する取得日数の割合を示す有休消化率は65%に達する。「従業員にやさしい企業」というイメージを訴求することで、優秀な人材の確保などにもつなげたい考えだ。松崎 泰弘【関連記事】 糖尿病の足切断防ぐ新ステントを国内初投入--米医療機器大手副社長に聞く 東洋経済CSRデータの詳細分析で判明!「女性が活躍する企業」はここが違う《第3回》 女性従業員が活躍する企業と支援制度の関連性は低い? 有給休暇取得率ランキング・トップ100--首位のダイハツ、ホンダほか自動車勢が上位、業種では電気・ガスがトップ《CSR企業総覧2012年版・注目ランキング》 韓国・中堅企業の人材獲得作戦、好待遇と動機づけがカギ CSR高成長ランキング・トップ29--環境・社会・ガバナンスと財務から見た成長率1位は協和エクシオ、2位リンナイ

    Syrian government gets badly needed diesel cargoes from Russia

    Syrian government gets badly needed diesel cargoes from Russia

    LONDON (Reuters) - Two cargoes of Russian diesel have reached war-ravaged Syria this month, providing the first significant volumes in months of the fuel it desperately needs to power industry and the military, generate electricity and heat homes.

    Both shipments were transported from Russia on Italian tankers to a port controlled by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, but it was unclear who was behind the shipments. Nor was there any evidence they violated sanctions against Syria.

    "(Our vessels) loaded two cargoes of gasoil in Russia at the beginning of December for delivery to the East Mediterranean. The charterer then asked us to deliver the volumes to Banias," said Paolo Cagnoni, who heads Mediterranea di Navigazione S.p.A., the family-run Italian tanker firm.

    He declined to disclose the names of the vessel charterers and the recipient of the deliveries, which amount to around 42,000 metric tons of gasoil worth close to $40 million at current market prices.

    The first cargo was loaded at the Russian port of Novorossiiysk on December 2 aboard the Ottomana, which sailed full steam to Syria and arrived in Banias five days later.

    "It was doing 12 knots after the Bosphorus strait ... they went fast," said an oil products trader who monitors shipments from the Black Sea.

    The latest shipment arrived at the Syrian port of Banias over the weekend aboard the Barbarica, and the vessel was still docked there on Monday morning, satellite tracking showed.

    Shortages of diesel and other fuels in Syria have grown severe since the European Union introduced tighter sanctions in March.

    The sanctions do not expressly ban all shipments of fuel but are aimed at a list of companies connected to the Assad government.

    Trading firms that previously did business with Syria have dropped out of the market for fear of falling foul of the rules or becoming associated with Assad's bloody crackdown on civil unrest.

    Cagnoni said the name and details of his contract were confidential.

    "Before accepting their request, we complied with due diligence standards, which led us to conclude that none of the firms involved ... are banned by the European Union."

    Syria announced in August that it had reached an agreement with Russia to exchange oil for refined products [ID:nL6E8JLG1C], and Russia has been an Assad ally, blocking three U.N. Security Council resolutions designed to pressure him.

    But traders said there were no indications whether the deliveries were backed by the Kremlin or were the actions of a trading firm acting on its own.

    Russian government officials could not be reached for comment.

    "PEOPLE ARE SUFFERING"

    Syria's fuel shortage has become critical, the retired president of the state oil firm Sytrol said in his first interview since the war began.

    "It's (the fuel inventory) depleted very sharply ... I hope that they will sort out these matters, because people are suffering very much now," said Jaber Ghzayel, who retired in the summer, speaking by telephone from Damascus last week.

    Sytrol has been desperately seeking deals to import diesel from as far away as Malaysia, but fear of being associated with an increasingly bloody civil war has deterred most firms from doing business with Assad's state.

    The sanctions also have created logistical and financial complications by making it difficult for Syrian banks to process payments abroad and for traders to get insurance on cargoes.

    Since the summer, Syria has received only one similarly sized cargo at government-controlled ports. In October an Iranian vessel arrived with a shipment of gasoil and returned with Syrian gasoline.

    Diesel has since trickled into Syria aboard smaller vessels arriving from Georgia and Lebanon, but these shipments have averaged only around 7,000 metric tons each, about a quarter of the first 26,000 metric ton Russian delivery.

    "We found some new players ... it was persons rather than companies, some of them Syrians living abroad," Ghzayel said, adding that the deliveries covered less than 2 percent of the country's needs.

    (editing by Jane Baird)

    4 firefighters shot at scene of blaze near Rochester in US; 2 dead, police say

    4 firefighters shot at scene of blaze near Rochester in US; 2 dead, police say

    WEBSTER, N.Y. - The police chief in a New York State town says that four firefighters were shot while responding to a blaze in the town and that two are dead.

    Chief Gerald Pickering says "one or more shooters" fired at the firefighters Monday morning. Officials say they had arrived at the scene of the blaze near the Lake Ontario shore around 6 a.m.

    Officials say a fire started in one home and spread to two others and a car. Officials say there is no active shooter at the scene.

    なぜ、ザックはメンバーを固定する? 2013年も「耐える力」が鍵になる!

    なぜ、ザックはメンバーを固定する? 2013年も「耐える力」が鍵になる!
    2012年のザックジャパンを振り返ってみると、順調な1年だったと言えるだろう。

     最重要項目であるブラジルW杯最終予選ではスタートダッシュに成功してここまで4勝1分けの勝ち点13。ライバルのオーストラリアが1試合少ないとはいえ、2位以下に勝ち点8差以上をつけているわけだから上出来だ。アジアとの戦いの一方で10月には欧州遠征に出向き、真っ向勝負を挑むことによって世界との距離もある程度測ることができた。チームにとって実のある一年だったように思う。

     続いて選手個々にフォーカスしてみると、ある一字がキーワードとしてパッと頭に浮かんでくる。

     それは「耐」――。辞書を引いてみれば「もちこたえる。たえる」とある。

    ■離脱期間をあくまで進化を遂げるための時間と捉えた本田圭佑。

     例をあげれば、本田圭佑。

     6月の最終予選3連戦に合わせて合流してきたが、昨年9月に右ひざ半月板の手術を受けたこともあって実に約10カ月ぶりの代表だった。左太腿を打撲した影響もあり、実戦感覚にも乏しかった。

     アルベルト・ザッケローニも不安だったようで、4月の段階では「初戦(対オマーン)に間に合わなくても次に間に合えば呼ぶ」としている。つまり、3連戦で使えるか使えないか、非常に微妙な線だったというわけだ。だが、5月に合流してからは代表フィジカルコーチのアルバレッラを中心に代表スタッフが用意したメニューに必死に取り組み、その効果もあって本田は3連戦で4ゴールを挙げる活躍を見せたのである。

    「復活という考えはない。手術したときから新しい本田になる挑戦を始めている」

     本田はこの言葉どおり、裏への飛び出しなど新しい武器を身につけて代表に戻ってきた。復活ではなく、離脱期間をあくまで進化を遂げるための時間と捉えていた。

     彼に言わせれば「耐」の感覚などないのかもしれない。だが、所属するCSKAでは手術から復帰して戻ってみるとまた離脱という、負のスパイラルが彼を襲っていたのは間違いなく、ひざの状態も完璧に戻ったわけでもない。回復過程にあるなかでのこの活躍に「奇跡」という声も挙がったほどだった。

    ■這い上がるのは当たり前。問題はその先に――。

     ザックジャパンの練習は概ね非公開が多いが、冒頭の15分間は毎度公開される。練習前、個々でアップするなかで彼は一人離れて、ひざを中心に黙々とストレッチをするのが常だ。表情に色はなく、ただただ全神経を注いで心のなかでひざと会話を交わしていたように見える。

     苦境から這い上がってみせるという覚悟、いや、這い上がるのは当たり前でその先に何を自分にもたらせるかという感覚だろうか。「耐」を超越してはいるが、彼が今年、苦境のなかでさらなる成長を遂げてきたことは事実である。

    ■苦境にもめげず練習に取り組み、歓喜の“復活”を遂げた長谷部誠。

     例をあげれば、長谷部誠。

     彼は今夏、移籍に動いた経緯もあって、フェリックス・マガトから構想外にされて完全に干された。8試合連続のベンチ外という屈辱。しかしそれでも彼はグチひとつこぼすことなくトレーニングに明け暮れたという。

     代表でも試合勘のなさが影響して、らしくないパスミスが多かった。10月の欧州遠征、フランス戦の低調なパフォーマンスに、先発落ちの気配すら漂い始めていた。しかしここで彼は踏ん張った。続くブラジル戦では動きにキレが戻り、ミドルシュートもあれば、守備ではカカからボールを奪い取る場面もあった。本来の長谷部からすればまだまだ物足りないとはいえ、下を向くことなくコンディションをつくってきたからこそ、試合勘が戻ってくればやれるということを証明することができた。

     希望を見出したブラジル戦の後、そのマガトが解任された。ギュンター・ケストナー体制になってから長谷部は先発に復帰。試合に出る喜びに満ち溢れているように見える。それもこれも彼が苦境にめげることなく、前向きに取り組んできた成果だと言える。

    ■細貝萌が、サブながらザッケローニから厚い信頼を受ける理由。

     例をあげれば、細貝萌。

     彼は本田、長谷部と立場が違って、代表ではサブに置かれている。ザックジャパン立ち上げから参加しながらも、先発で起用されたのは3度しかない。今年に限ると5月23日のアゼルバイジャン戦のみだ。

     サブという「苦境」。しかし細貝という男は、交代して出場すると100%のファイトをする。フランス戦でも流れを変えることに一役買い、ブラジル戦でも相手ボールを奪う役割を果たした(ボールを持ってからの展開に課題はあったが……)。8月のベネズエラ戦から先のオマーン戦まで6試合連続で途中出場中。サブではあるものの、細貝に対するザッケローニの信頼は相当に厚い。

     代表での苦境ばかりでなく、彼はアウクスブルクでの安泰を捨てて今季レンタル元のレバークーゼンに復帰。シーズン序盤こそ出場機会に恵まれなかったものの、今ではサイドバック、ボランチとユーティリティーを発揮して先発の座を勝ち取っている。彼もまた苦境をバネにしてきた一人である。

    ■森本貴幸は、「もちこたえる」ことができず……。

     ケガ、構想外、サブ……。「耐」は決して簡単なことではない。

    「ケガ」一つとってもそうだ。森本貴幸は、アゼルバイジャン戦で先発しながらも腰を痛めて途中交代。幸い軽症だったにもかかわらず、オマーン、ヨルダンの両試合でベンチにも入れなかった。万全とは見なされなかったからだ。森本自身、意気に感じて練習に取り組んでいたのだが、追い込まれたメンタルが逆に腰痛を悪化させた要因になったのかもしれない。

     結局、チームから離脱してオーストラリア遠征に帯同しなかった。それ以降、森本は欧州遠征を含めて一度も代表に招集されていない。あそこでもし焦りに耐えて「もちこたえる」ことが出来ていれば、今なおザックジャパンの常連として名を連ねているはずである。森本の今後の巻き返しに期待したいと思う。

    ■「若い選手たちは高いクオリティを有効活用できていない」

     ザッケローニのメンバー固定化には、賛否両論というよりもむしろ「否」の声が多いかもしれない。

     だがどうだろうか? 本田にせよ長谷部にせよ、苦境に追い込まれてもここ一番で踏ん張って、その座を明け渡さないのである。他のレギュラーにも同じことが言える。そして控えには、細貝のように高いモチベーションを保ち、耐えてレギュラー獲りを狙っている連中がいるわけである。「チャンスは与えられるものではなく、つかみ取るもの」という観点に立つなら、代表でレギュラーの座を狙いたければ本田、長谷部、細貝たちよりも当然、タフになっていかないと奪えるわけがない。

     11月のオマーン戦に向けたメンバー発表会見でザッケローニはこう言った。

    「若い選手たちは皆、高いクオリティーを持っていていい選手がそろっているのだが、(そのクオリティーを)有効活用できていない」

     公の場で選手たちに苦言を呈するタイプではないだけに、ちょっと意外な気がした。ここでは宇佐美貴史らの名前が挙がったが、すべての若手に向けられた言葉であったように感じる。

     君たち相当な気概を持ってやらないと、今の中心メンバーに置いていかれてしまうよ――。

     筆者には、奮起を促す指揮官のそんな声が聞こえた。

    ■「いったん沈み込まないと、高くジャンプできない」

     ホッフェンハイムの宇佐美やウィガンの宮市などに対する指揮官の期待は、言うまでもなく高い。現在、彼らは出場機会をあまり得られていないが、ここで腐ることなく、何をやるか、何を得るかである。それを本田や長谷部、そして細貝たちが身をもって教えてくれている。壁を乗り越えたことで彼らはまた一歩、成長の階段をのぼったのだから。

     先日、元日本サッカー協会の技術委員長で現在、岡田武史監督のもとで中国・杭州緑城のヘッドコーチを務める小野剛に会った。そのときに教えてもらった岡田の口癖が頭に浮かんだ。

    「いったん沈み込まないと、高くジャンプできない」――。

     つまり、高く飛ぼうと思ったら、力を溜めなければならない。ケガ、控え、不調といった負の状況に耐え前に進もうともがくことで、それを高く飛ぶためのエネルギーにするのだ、と。

     ザックジャパンの「耐」というキーワードはきっと2013年も続く。若手に向けられたキーワードとして。

    (「日本代表、2014年ブラジルへ」二宮寿朗 = 文)【関連記事】 「ポスト遠藤」と日本サッカーの未来。“最後の黄金世代”を越えて行け!(12/12/17) 【言わせろ!ナンバー】ザックジャパンの2012年を採点する! 【言わせろ!ナンバー】ザックジャパン、この1年で最も“進化”した選手は? ザックの辛辣なコメントに何を思う? 宇佐美貴史20歳が抱く野心と課題。(12/11/10) 「こんなに楽しい試合は久しぶり」惨敗のブラジル戦で本田が見た風景。(12/10/17)

    Obama to fly to home early as 'fiscal cliff' looms

    Obama to fly to home early as 'fiscal cliff' looms
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    HONOLULU (AP) — President Barack Obama will cut short his traditional Christmas holiday in Hawaii, planning to leave for Washington on Wednesday evening as he and lawmakers consider how to prevent the economy from going over the so-called fiscal cliff.

    Obama was expected to arrive in Washington early Thursday, the White House said Tuesday night. First lady Michelle Obama and the couple's two daughters will remain in Hawaii.

    In the past, the president's end-of-the-year holiday in his native state had stretched into the new year. The first family had left Washington last Friday night.

    Congress was expected to return to Washington on Thursday. Before he departed for Hawaii, Obama told reporters he expected to be back in the capital the following week.

    Automatic budget cuts and tax increases are set to begin in January, which many economists say could send the country back into recession. So far, the president and congressional Republicans have been unable to reach agreement on any alternatives.

    Lawmakers have expressed little but pessimism for the prospect of an agreement coming before Jan. 1. On Sunday, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, said she expects any action in the waning days of the year to be "a patch because in four days we can't solve everything."

    The Obamas were spending the holiday at a rented home near Honolulu. On Christmas Day, the president and first lady visited with members of the military to express thanks for their service.

    "One of my favorite things is always coming to base on Christmas Day just to meet you and say thank you," the president said at Marine Corps Base Hawaii's Anderson Hall. He said that being commander in chief was his greatest honor as president.

    Obama took photos with individual service members and their families.

    On Christmas Eve, Obama called members of the military to thank them for serving the nation, then joined his family for dinner, the White House said. The Obamas opened gifts Christmas morning, ate breakfast and sang carols.

    Friends were joining the Obamas for Christmas dinner Tuesday night, the White House said.

  • NY firemen's killer mapped out plan for slayings

    NY firemen's killer mapped out plan for slayings
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    WEBSTER, N.Y. (AP) — The ex-con turned sniper who killed two firefighters wanted to make sure his goodbye note was legible, typing out his desire to "do what I like doing best, killing people" before setting the house where he lived with his sister ablaze, police said.

    Police Chief Gerald Pickering said Tuesday that the 62-year-old loner, William Spengler, brought plenty of ammunition with him for three weapons including a military-style assault rifle as he set out on a quest to burn down his neighborhood just before sunrise on Christmas Eve.

    And when firefighters arrived to stop him, he unleashed a torrent of bullets, shattering the windshield of the fire truck that volunteer firefighter and police Lt. Michael Chiapperini, 43, drove to the scene. Fellow firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka, 19, who worked as a 911 dispatcher, was killed as well.

    Two other firefighters were struck by bullets, one in the pelvis and the other in the chest and knee. They remained hospitalized in stable condition and were expected to survive.

    On Tuesday, investigators found a body in the Spengler home, presumably that of the sister a neighbor said Spengler hated: 67-year-old Cheryl Spengler. Spengler's penchant for death had surfaced before. He served 17 years in prison for manslaughter in the 1980 hammer slaying of his grandmother.

    But his intent was unmistakable when he left his flaming home carrying a pump-action shotgun, a .38-caliber revolver and a .223-caliber semiautomatic Bushmaster rifle with flash suppression, the same make and caliber weapon used in the elementary school massacre in Newtown, Conn., that killed 26.

    "He was equipped to go to war, kill innocent people," the chief said of a felon who wasn't allowed to possess weapons because of his criminal past. It was not clear how he got them.

    The assault rifle was believed to be the weapon that struck down the firefighters. He then killed himself as seven houses burned on a sliver of land along Lake Ontario. His body was not found on a nearby beach until hours afterwards.

    The motive was left unclear as well, Pickering said, even as authorities began analyzing a two- to three-page typewritten rambling note Spengler left behind.

    He declined to reveal the note's full content or say where it was found. He read only one chilling line: "I still have to get ready to see how much of the neighborhood I can burn down, and do what I like doing best, killing people."

    Pickering added: "There was some rambling in there and some intelligence we need to follow up on."

    It remained unknown what set Spengler off but a next-door neighbor, Roger Vercruysse, noted that he loved his mother, Arline, who died in October after living in the house in a neighborhood of seasonal and year-round homes across the road from a lakeshore popular with recreational boaters.

    Pickering said it was unclear whether the person believed to be Spengler's sister died before or during the fire.

    "It was a raging inferno in there," Pickering said.

    As Pickering described it and as emergency radio communications on the scene showed, the heavily armed Spengler took a position behind a small hill by the house as four firefighters arrived after 5:30 a.m. to extinguish the fire: two on a fire truck; two in their own vehicles.

    Several firefighters went beneath the truck to shield themselves as an off-duty police officer who came to the scene pulled his vehicle alongside the truck to try to shield them, authorities said.

    The first police officer who arrived chased and exchanged shots with Spengler, recounting it later over his police radio.

    "I could see the muzzle blasts comin' at me. ... I fired four shots at him. I thought he went down," the officer said.

    At another point, he said: "I don't know if I hit him or not. He's by a tree. ... He was movin' eastbound on the berm when I was firing shots." Pickering portrayed the officer as a hero who saved many lives.

    The audio posted on the website RadioReference.com also has someone reporting "firefighters are down" and saying "got to be rifle or shotgun — high-powered ... semi or fully auto."

    Spengler had been charged with murder in his grandmother's death but pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter, apparently to spare his family a trial. After he was freed from prison, Spengler had lived a quiet life on Lake Road on a narrow peninsula where Irondequoit Bay meets Lake Ontario.

    That ended when he left his burning home Monday morning, armed with his weapons, a lot of ammunition and a measure of hate.

    "I'm not sure we'll ever know what was going through his mind," Pickering said.

    ___

    Esch reported from Albany. Associated Press writer Larry Neumeister in New York City also contributed to this report.

  • Jessica Simpson's Christmas gift: She's pregnant

    Jessica Simpson's Christmas gift: She's pregnant

    NEW YORK (AP) — Jessica Simpson's daughter has the news all spelled out: "Big Sis."

    Simpson on Tuesday tweeted a photo of her baby daughter Maxwell playing in the sand, the words "Big Sis" spelled out.

    The 32-year-old old singer and personality has been rumored to be expecting again. The tweet appears to confirm the rumors.

    "Merry Christmas from my family to yours" is the picture's caption. Simpson used a tweet on Halloween in 2011 to announce she was pregnant with Maxwell. She is engaged to Eric Johnson and gave birth to Maxwell in May.

    One possible complication regarding her pregnancy: She is a spokeswoman for Weight Watchers.

    With storms and 'fiscal cliff' worry, US holiday shopping up just 0.7 pct, weakest since 2008

    With storms and 'fiscal cliff' worry, US holiday shopping up just 0.7 pct, weakest since 2008

    WASHINGTON - U.S. holiday retail sales this year grew at the weakest pace since 2008, when the nation was in a deep recession. In 2012, the shopping season was disrupted by bad weather and consumers' rising uncertainty about the economy.

    A report that tracks spending on popular holiday goods, the MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse, said Tuesday that sales in the two months before Christmas increased 0.7 per cent, compared with last year. Many analysts had expected holiday sales to grow 3 to 4 per cent.

    In 2008, sales declined by between 2 per cent and 4 per cent as the financial crisis that crested that fall dragged the economy into recession. Last year, by contrast, retail sales in November and December rose between 4 per cent and 5 per cent, according to ShopperTrak, a separate market research firm. A 4 per cent increase is considered a healthy season.

    Shoppers were buffeted this year by a string of events that made them less likely to spend: Superstorm Sandy and other bad weather, the distraction of the presidential election and grief about the massacre of schoolchildren in Newtown, Conn. The numbers also show how Washington's current budget impasse is trickling down to Main Street and unsettling consumers. If Americans remain reluctant to spend, analysts say, economic growth could falter next year.

    In the end, even steep last-minute discounts weren't enough to get people into stores, said Marshal Cohen, chief research analyst at the market research firm NPD Inc.

    "A lot of the Christmas spirit was left behind way back in Black Friday weekend," Cohen said, referring to the traditional retail rush the day after Thanksgiving. "We had one reason after another for consumers to say, 'I'm going to stick to my list and not go beyond it.'"

    Holiday sales are a crucial indicator of the economy's strength. November and December account for up to 40 per cent of annual sales for many retailers. If those sales don't materialize, stores are forced to offer steeper discounts. That's a boon for shoppers, but it cuts into stores' profits.

    Last-minute shoppers like Kris Betzold, of Carmel, Ind., embraced discounts that were available before Christmas.

    "We went out yesterday, and I noticed that the sales were even better now than they were at Thanksgiving," said Betzold Monday while shopping at an upscale mall in Indianapolis. Betzold, who said the sluggish economy prompted her and her husband to be more frugal this year, noted that she saved about $25 on a Kindle Fire she found at Best Buy.

    Spending by consumers accounts for 70 per cent of overall economic activity, so the eight-week period encompassed by the SpendingPulse data is seen as a critical time not just for retailers but for manufacturers, wholesalers and companies at every other point along the supply chain.

    The SpendingPulse data include sales by retailers in key holiday spending categories such as electronics, clothing, jewelry, luxury goods, furniture and other home goods between Oct. 28 and Dec. 24. They include sales across all payment methods, including cards, cash and checks.

    It's the first major snapshot of retail sales during the holiday season through Christmas Eve. A clearer picture will emerge next week as retailers like Macy's and Target report revenue from stores open for at least a year. That sales measure is widely watched in the retail industry because it excludes revenue from stores that recently opened or closed, which can be volatile.

    Despite the weak numbers out Tuesday, retailers still have some time to make up lost ground. The final week of December accounts for about 15 per cent of the month's sales, said Michael McNamara, vice-president for research and analysis at MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse. As stores offer steeper discounts to clear some of their unsold inventory, they may be able to soften some of the grim results reflected in Tuesday's data.

    Still, this season's weak sales could have repercussions for 2013, he said. Retailers will make fewer orders to restock their shelves, and discounts will hurt their profitability. Wholesalers, in turn, will buy fewer goods, and orders to factories for consumer goods will likely drop in the coming months.

    In the run-up to Christmas, analysts blamed the weather and worries about the "fiscal cliff" for putting a damper on shopping. Superstorm Sandy battered the Northeast and mid-Atlantic states in late October. Many in the New York region were left without power, and people farther inland were buried under feet of snow. According to McNamara, the Northeast and mid-Atlantic account for 24 per cent of U.S. retail sales.

    Buying picked up in the second half of November as retailers offered more discounts and shoppers waylaid by the storm finally made it into malls, he said.

    But as the weather calmed, the threat of the "fiscal cliff" picked up. In December, lawmakers remained unable to reach a deal that would prevent tax increases and government spending cuts set to take effect at the beginning of 2013. If the cuts and tax hikes kick in and stay in place for months, many economists expect the nation could fall back into recession.

    The news media discussed this possibility more intensely as December wore on, making Americans increasingly aware of the economic troubles they might face if Washington is unable to resolve the impasse. Sales never fully recovered, Cohen said.

    The results were weakest in areas affected by Sandy and a more recent winter storm in the Midwest. Sales declined by 3.9 per cent in the mid-Atlantic and 1.4 per cent in the Northeast compared with last year. They rose 0.9 per cent in the north central part of the country.

    The West and South posted gains of between 2 per cent and 3 per cent, still weaker than the 3 per cent to 4 per cent increases expected by many retail analysts.

    Online sales, typically a bright spot, grew only 8.4 per cent from Oct. 28 through Saturday, according to SpendingPulse. That's a dramatic slowdown from the online sales growth of 15 to 17 per cent seen in the prior 18-month period, according to the data service.

    Online sales did enjoy a modest boost after the recent snowstorm that hit the Midwest, McNamara said. Online sales make up about 10 per cent of total holiday business.

    ___

    Daniel Wagner can be reached at www.twitter.com/wagnerreports.

    Three Afghans dead in new blast at U.S. base in Afghan east

    Three Afghans dead in new blast at U.S. base in Afghan east

    KHOST, Afghanistan (Reuters) - A suicide bomber killed three people in an attack on a U.S. base in Afghanistan on Wednesday, the same base that is believed to be used by the CIA and which a suicide bomber attacked three years ago killing seven CIA employees.

    The Afghan Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in the eastern town of Khost, saying they had sent a suicide bomber driving a van packed with explosives to the base.

    "The target was those who serve Americans at that base," said Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid.

    Afghanistan's NATO-led force said the bomber did not get into the base nor breach its perimeter. Police said the three dead were Afghans who were outside the base, which is beside a military airport.

    The al Qaeda-linked Haqqani network, widely regarded as the most dangerous U.S. foe in Afghanistan, is active in Khost province, which is on the Pakistani border.

    After more than a decade of war, Taliban insurgents are still able to strike strategic military targets, and launch high-profile attacks in the capital, Kabul, and elsewhere.

    Three years ago, an al Qaeda-linked Jordanian double-agent killed seven CIA employees and a Jordanian intelligence officer in a suicide bombing at the same base in Khost, known as Forward Operating Base Chapman.

    It was the second deadliest attack in CIA history.

    Afghan police official General Abdul Qasim Baqizoy, the Khost police chief, said no CIA agents were hurt on Wednesday.

    Afghan authorities are scrambling to improve security across the country before the U.S. combat mission ends in 2014.

    Besides pressure from the Taliban, U.S.-led NATO forces also face a rising number of so-called insider attacks, in which Afghan forces turn their weapons on Western troops they are supposed to be working with.

    On Monday, an Afghan policewoman killed a U.S. police adviser at the Kabul police headquarters, raising troubling questions about the direction of the war.

    It appeared to be the first time that a woman member of Afghanistan's security forces carried out such an attack.

    On Tuesday, Afghan officials said the woman has an Iranian passport and moved to Afghanistan 10 years ago. There was no suggestion that Iran was involved in the attack on the American.

    Officials suspect she may have been recruited by al Qaeda or the Taliban, and had intended to also kill Afghan police officials.

    (Reporting by Elyas Wahdat; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Robert Birsel)

    2012年12月25日星期二

    Nasty weather threatens Gulf Coast for Christmas

    Nasty weather threatens Gulf Coast for Christmas
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    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Nasty weather, including a chance of strong tornadoes and howling thunderstorms, could be on the way for Christmas Day along the Gulf Coast from east Texas to north Florida.

    The storms held off long enough, though, to let Christmas Eve bonfires light the way for Pere Noel along the Mississippi River, officials said.

    Farther north, much of Oklahoma and Arkansas were under a winter storm warning, with freezing rain, sleet and snow expected on Christmas. A blizzard watch is out for western Kentucky. And no matter what form the bad weather takes, travel on Tuesday could be dangerous, meteorologists said.

    The storms could bring strong tornadoes or winds of more than 75 mph, heavy rain, quarter-sized hail and dangerous lightning in Louisiana and Mississippi, the National Weather Service said. The worst storms are likely from Winnsboro, La., to Jackson and DeKalb, Miss., according to the weather service's Jackson office.

    "Please plan now for how you will receive a severe weather warning, and know where you will go when it is issued. It only takes a few minutes, and it will help everyone have a safe Christmas," said Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant.

    In Alabama, the director of the Emergency Management Agency, Art Faulkner, said he was briefing both local officials and Gov. Robert Bentley on plans for dealing with a possible outbreak.

    Forecasters said storms would begin near the coast and spread north through the day, bringing with them the chances of storms, particularly in central and southwest Alabama. No day is good for severe weather, but Faulkner said Christmas adds extra challenges because people are visiting unfamiliar areas. Also, people are more tuned in to holiday festivities than their weather radio on a day when thoughts typically turn more toward the possibility of snow than twisters, he said.

    "We are trying to get the word out through our media partners and through social media that people need to be prepared," Faulkner said

    Meteorologists also recommended getting yards ready Monday, bringing indoors or securing Christmas decorations, lawn furniture and anything else that high winds might rip away or slam into a building or car.

    "Make sure they're all stable and secure — that there's not going to be any loose wires blowing around and stuff like that," or bring them inside, said Joe Rua, with the National Weather Service in Lake Charles, where storms were expected to roar in from Texas after midnight.

    In the New Orleans suburb of Metairie, Timothy J. Babin said the 10 or so wire Christmas sculptures in his yard and more than 180 plastic figures in his mother's yard are staked down.

    Dozens of toy soldiers, a nativity scene, Santa and nine reindeer (don't forget Rudolph), angels, snowmen and Santa Clauses fill the yard of his mother, Joy Babin.

    "From a wind standpoint, we should be fine unless we're talking 70, 80, 90 miles an hour," Timothy Babin said.

    On Christmas Eve, more than 100 log teepees for annual bonfires are set up along the Mississippi River in St. James Parish, which is a bit more than halfway from New Orleans to Baton Rouge, and about 20 in St. John the Baptist Parish, its downriver neighbor, parish officials said. Most are 20 feet tall, the legal limit.

    Fire chiefs and other officials in both parishes decided to go ahead with the bonfires after an afternoon conference call with the National Weather Service.

    The bad weather was expected from a storm front moving from the West Coast crashing into a cold front, said weather service meteorologist Bob Wagner of Slidell.

    "There's going to be a lot of turning in the atmosphere," he said.

    In California, after a brief reprieve across the northern half of the state on Monday, wet weather was expected to make another appearance on Christmas. Flooding and snarled holiday traffic were also expected in Southern California.

    Ten storm systems in the last 50 years have spawned at least one Christmastime tornado with winds of 113 mph or more (F-2) in the South, Chris Vaccaro, a National Weather Service spokesman in Washington, said in an email. The most lethal were the storms of Dec. 24-26, 1982, when 29 tornadoes in Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee and Mississippi killed three people and injured 32; and those of Dec. 24-25, 1964, when two people were killed and about 30 people injured by 14 tornadoes in seven states.

    Farther north, some mountainous areas of Arkansas' Ozark Mountains could see up to 10 inches of snow, the weather service said Monday. Precipitation is expected to begin as a mix of rain and sleet early Tuesday in western Oklahoma before changing to snow as the storm pushes eastward during the day. The weather service warned that travel could be "very hazardous or impossible" in northern Arkansas, where 4 to 6 inches of snow was predicted.

    Out shopping with her family at a Target store in Montgomery, Ala., on Christmas Eve, veterinary assistant Johnina Black said she wasn't worried about the possibility of storms on the holiday.

    "If the good Lord wants to take you, he's going to take you," she said.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Bob Johnson in Montgomery, Ala., and Ken Miller in Oklahoma City, Okla., contributed to this report.

  • Former Israeli chief rabbi indicted for fraud

    Former Israeli chief rabbi indicted for fraud
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    JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli authorities have indicted a former chief rabbi of the country on charges of fraud and breach of trust.

    Eliahu Bakshi-Doron was charged Monday as part of what has become known as the "rabbis' file" affair. Bakshi-Doron and others are accused of falsifying rabbinical certificates for more than 1,000 soldiers and police officers so they could be eligible for salary increases.

    The indictment says that as a result, hundreds of millions of shekels were fraudulently awarded from the state without any justification.

    The 71-year-old Bakshi-Doron served as one of Israel's two chief rabbis between 1998-2003.

    The chief rabbinate oversees many elements of Jewish religious life in Israel.

    The religious equality group Hiddush called the indictment "further proof that the institution of the chief rabbinate is unnecessary."

  • Roman Catholic cleric celebrates Palestinian state

    Roman Catholic cleric celebrates Palestinian state
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    A Christian worshipper from Nigeria…

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    People walk inside the Church of…

    BETHLEHEM, West Bank (AP) — The top Roman Catholic cleric in the Holy Land celebrated the United Nations' recent recognition of a Palestinian state in his annual pre-Christmas homily on Monday, saying that while the road to actual freedom from Israeli occupation remains long, the Palestinian homeland has been born.

    Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal told followers at the patriarchate's headquarters in Jerusalem's Old City that this year's festivities were doubly joyful, celebrating "the birth of Christ our Lord and the birth of the state of Palestine."

    "The path (to statehood) remains long, and will require a united effort," added Twal, a Palestinian citizen of Jordan.

    From Jerusalem, he set off in a procession for the West Bank city of Bethlehem, Jesus' traditional birthplace. There, he was reminded that life on the ground for Palestinians has not really changed since the U.N. recognized their state last month in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem and the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

    Twal had to enter the biblical city through a massive metal gate in the barrier of towering concrete slabs Israel built between Jerusalem and Bethlehem during a wave of Palestinian suicide bombings in the last decade.

    Israel, backed by the United States, opposed the statehood bid, saying it was a Palestinian ploy to bypass negotiations. Talks stalled four years ago, primarily over Israel's construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territories Israel occupied in the 1967 Mideast war.

    Israel has rejected the Palestinians' demand that it freeze all construction before they will renew talks, and launched a major settlement building push in retaliation for the successful statehood bid.

    Hundreds of people were on hand to greet Twal in Manger Square, outside the Church of Nativity. The mood was festive under sunny skies, with children dressed in holiday finery or in Santa costumes, and marching bands playing in the streets.

    A lavishly decorated 55-foot (25-meter) fir tree with a nativity scene at its foot dominated the plaza. Festivities were to culminate with Midnight Mass at the Church of the Nativity, built over the grotto where tradition says Jesus was born.

    Devout Christians said it was a moving experience to be so close to the origins of their faith.

    "It's a special feeling to be here, it's an encounter with my soul and God," said Joanne Kurczewska, a professor at Warsaw University in Poland, who was visiting Bethlehem for a second time at Christmas.

    Christmas is the high point of the year in Bethlehem, which, like the rest of the West Bank, is struggling to recover from the economic hard times that followed the violent Palestinian uprising against Israel that broke out in late 2000.

    Tourists and pilgrims who had been scared away by the fighting have been returning in larger numbers. Last year's Christmas Eve celebration produced the highest turnout in more than a decade, with some 100,000 visitors, including foreign workers and Arab Christians from Israel.

    The Israeli Tourism Ministry predicts a 25 percent drop from that level this year, following last month's clash between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza, which put a chill on tourist arrivals. Foreign tourists heading to Bethlehem must pass through Israel or the Israel-controlled border crossing into the West Bank from Jordan.

  • NY gunman had served time for grandmother's death

    NY gunman had served time for grandmother's death
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    WEBSTER, N.Y. (AP) — Police in New York state say a man who ambushed firefighters had served 17 years for manslaughter in the death of his grandmother.

    Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering says 62-year-old William Spengler was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot to the head.

    Police say he set fire to a car and house to lure firefighters to his house on the shore of Lake Ontario early Monday.

    When firefighters arrived, he opened fire, probably with a rifle. Two firefighters died at the scene and two others were hospitalized. A fifth first responder was injured.

    Police don't know a motive yet.

  • Kuwait to host Syria crisis meeting, envoy meets Assad

    Kuwait to host Syria crisis meeting, envoy meets Assad

    Pope lights Christmas candle in his Vatican window

    Pope lights Christmas candle in his Vatican window
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    VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI has lit a Christmas peace candle set on the windowsill of his private studio.

    Pilgrims, tourists and Romans gathered below in St. Peter's Square for the inauguration Monday evening of a Nativity scene and cheered when the flame was lit.

    Later, he will appear in St. Peter's Basilica to lead Christmas Eve Mass. The ceremony begins at 10 p.m. (2100 GMT) instead of the midnight start time, which was changed at the Vatican years ago to let the pontiff rest before a Christmas Day speech to be delivered from the basilica's central balcony.

  • Ambushed NY firemen shot dead; 2 police killed elsewhere

    Ambushed NY firemen shot dead; 2 police killed elsewhere
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    NEW YORK (Reuters) - A gunman who spent 17 years in prison for murder ambushed and killed two volunteer firefighters and wounded two others on Monday near Rochester, New York, as they responded to a house fire he deliberately set, police said.

    William Spangler, 62, shot and killed himself after a gunfight with a police officer in Webster, a Rochester suburb, Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering said.

    "It was a trap set by Mr. Spangler, who laid in wait and shot first responders," Pickering told a news conference.

    Separately, a police officer in Wisconsin and another in Texas were shot and killed on Monday, according to police and media reports.

    The attacks on first responders came 10 days after one of the worst mass shootings in U.S. history that left 20 students and six adults dead at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut and intensified the debate about gun control in the United States.

    Spangler was convicted of manslaughter in 1981 for beating his 92-year-old grandmother to death with a hammer, according to New York State Department of Corrections records, and after prison he spent eight years on parole.

    "We don't have an easy reason" for the attack on the firefighters, Pickering said, "but just looking at the history ... obviously this was an individual with a lot of problems."

    Spangler opened fire around 5:45 a.m. after two of the firefighters arrived at the house in a fire truck and two others responded in their own cars, Pickering said.

    Pickering appeared to wipe tears from his eyes at a news conference earlier on Monday when he identified the dead firefighters as Lieutenant Michael Chiapperini and Tomasz Kaczowka. Chiapperini was also a police lieutenant.

    The injured firefighters, one of whom was in critical condition, were identified as Joseph Hofsetter and Theodore Scardino. Off-duty Police Officer John Ritter was hit by gunfire as he drove past the scene.

    Pickering said police had found several types of weapons, including a rifle used to shoot the firefighters. As a convicted felon it was illegal for Spangler to own guns.

    Police had not had any contact with Spangler in the "recent past," Pickering said.

    Four houses were destroyed by the fire and four were damaged, Pickering said.

    COPS TARGETED

    Police Officer Jennifer Sebena, 30, was found dead on Monday in the Milwaukee, Wisconsin, suburb of Wauwatosa, police said.

    Sebena was on patrol between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. and wearing body armor when she was shot several times, police said. She was found by another officer after she did not respond to calls from the police dispatcher.

    In Houston, Texas, an officer with the Bellaire Police Department died after a shootout at around 9 a.m. and a bystander was also killed, according to local media reports.

    A spokesperson for the Houston Police Department was not immediately available for comment. A police officer answering the telephone confirmed media reports but declined further comment. A suspect was in the hospital, according to reports.

    Before Monday's killings, the Washington-based National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund reported that 125 federal, state and local officers had died in the line of duty this year.

    Forty-seven deaths were firearms-related, 50 were from traffic-related incidents, and 28 were from other causes, it said.

    (Reporting by Chris Francescani; Editing by David Brunnstrom and M.D. Golan)