Thứ Bảy, 22 tháng 3, 2008

Astronauts check off to-do list on spacewalk

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) -- Endeavour's astronauts embarked on the fifth and final spacewalk of their mission Saturday, this time attaching a 50-foot inspection pole to the international space station for use by the next shuttle visitors.

Michael Foreman and Robert Behnken floated out the hatch late in the afternoon as the linked shuttle and station soared more than 200 miles above the Pacific. They planned to spacewalk the night away.

"Spacewalk No. 5 out of five. It's going to be a great one," said their commander, Dominic Gorie.

The shuttle astronauts used the laser-tipped inspection boom at the beginning of their 16-day mission and again Friday night to check for any damage to their ship. It's become a routine safety procedure ever since the 2003 Columbia incident. Video Watch the astronauts at home on the space station »

Discovery won't have room for a boom when it flies in May; the huge Japanese Kibo lab will take up the entire payload bay. So Endeavour's astronauts left theirs behind.

Foreman and Behnken hooked an extra-long power cord to the inspection pole, to keep its lasers and cameras warm for the next two months, and then secured the boom to the outside of the space station.

With the boom work quickly completed, the spacewalkers turned to less pressing chores. They were to inspect a jammed rotating joint that has restricted the use of a set of solar wings for months and take another crack at hanging some scientific experiments to the European lab, Columbus.

Behnken was unable to hook the experiments to Columbus' hull during spacewalk No. 3 earlier in the week because of some sort of interference. He took out smaller pins and cable ties this time; if the pins didn't work, he planned to lash down the briefcase-size box of experiments.

As for the jammed rotating solar joint, it's filled with metal shavings because of grinding parts.

NASA has been trying since last fall to figure out what is broken and how best to fix the joint. Spacewalking astronauts inspected the joint several times and even collected samples of the steel grit for analysis back on Earth. But five covers had yet to be removed, and that's where Foreman was going to focus his efforts.

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Saturday night's spacewalk was the last major space station job for Endeavour's crew. The shuttle arrived at the orbiting complex March 12, delivering the first section of the Kibo lab and a Canadian robot with 11-foot arms that is designed to assist future spacewalkers.

Endeavour is scheduled to undock from the space station Monday night and land at Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday night. The shuttle will have spent 12 days at the station, the longest shuttle visit ever. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Viral videos win big at second YouTube Awards

NEW YORK (AP) -- And the winner for best music video: "Chocolate Rain."

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Amber Lee Ettinger, known for her video "I got a crush on Obama" was up for an award in the Politics category.

Tay Zonday morphed from an unknown musician to an Internet superstar who got booked on national TV shows after his song "Chocolate Rain" -- an amateur clip of his baritone crooning -- went viral last year.

Now he's among the 12 winners of the second annual YouTube Video Awards, recognizing the top user-created videos of 2007.

YouTube users voted on six nominees for each category: music, sports, comedy, instructional, short film, inspirational, commentary, creative, politics, series, eyewitness and "adorable."

"It's the new Emmys," Zonday, 25, said of the video-sharing site's awards in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "It's the next Oscars. The next People's Choice Awards. It'll be interesting to see what happens five years, 10 years (from now)."

His competition included comely singer-songwriter Mia Rose and "the vegetable orchestra," featuring a jam session with a carrot flute and squash drum.

Neil Cicierega's video featuring "Harry Potter" hand puppets (and Professor Dumbledore without any clothes on) won for best comedy video. Guillaume Reymond's "Human Tetris" won most creative video.

Chris Crocker, who shot to stardom in his video freak-out over Britney Spears' public meltdown, was beat in the commentary category by a clip from Michael Buckley of the popular online show "What the Buck?" slamming fellow YouTube celebrity Lonelygirl15.

The Obama Girl, aka Amber Lee Ettinger, whose "I Got A Crush On Obama" clip has been seen more than 7 million times, didn't wind up winning in the politics category. That honor went to the serious-minded "Stop the Clash of Civilizations" video by the global organization avaaz.org.

"The (political) video that actually won in an election year wasn't one that had anything to do with the election itself," said YouTube spokesman Aaron Ferstman. "(It's a) video that deals with ... serious issues like discrimination, and that video's done in kind of a neat way that speaks to young people."

Best eyewitness video was the epic "Battle at Kruger," which has drawn more than 26 million views to its astonishing footage of a baby water buffalo surviving an attack by lions -- and a crocodile! -- in the African prairie. It was up against the news-making clip of a University of Florida student pleading "Don't tase me, bro!" as police removed him from a John Kerry forum.

Ben Shelton's "My Name is Lisa" -- a drama about a young girl and her mother who has Alzheimer's -- triumphed in the newly added short film category. The winning Web series was "The Guild," a comedy about a group of obsessed online gamers.

The Texas Country Reporter's video about a blind painter won most inspirational video. The "Balloon Bowl" clip of a guy skateboarding in, well, a balloon-filled bowl snagged best sports video. And the incredibly cute, compulsively watchable "Laughing Baby" clip was voted most adorable.

Dan Brown's video "How to Solve a Rubik's Cube (Part One)" scored in the instructional category.

Ferstman said the prizes consist of "notoriety" and a trophy he described as "very heavy with a metal base" supporting a "big glass `play' button."

Ferstman said: "These are the (videos) that really will stand out and over time, you know, you'll say, `Hey, do you remember the Laughing Baby'?"

Zonday, who streams music from his YouTube channel, MySpace page and personal Web site, said he hopes to earn "a living making art and producing music," and is pursuing a voice-over career. He's flattered by the numerous online parodies of "Chocolate Rain," which has garnered nearly 16 million views.

"A lot of people see political commentary in (the song)," he said. "A lot of people find humor in it. A lot of people, they say their 2-year-olds can't stop repeating it at bedtime, so lots of people get different things out of the song. And I think the greatest consequence and the greatest mileage it can have is to get people asking questions."

What's the key to YouTube success?

"Just be very authentic and put yourself out there," he said in his mellifluous voice. "You'll never know what will happen." E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Tips and tricks for your mobile device

(CNN) -- You don't always need a fancy cell phone or pricey add-ons to take advantage of today's most useful wireless technology.

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Voice recognition software now allows you to dictate a message into your phone to be sent in text form.

CNN.com asked experts in the mobile field how users can make the most of what the devices have to offer.

Boost your browsing

If your mobile Web browsing experience leaves something to be desired, you're not alone. Unless you own an Apple iPhone, which many experts say offers more user-friendly Internet capability, small screens coupled with tiny keyboards can make Web surfing frustrating.

But if you have a laptop and a phone, you may be able to use them together to the best advantage, says Chris Silva, analyst for Forrester Research, a technology and market research firm.

Tethering -- or plugging in -- your laptop to your mobile device will allow your computer to use the phone's connection for the Internet.

It's a tool that often gets overlooked, Silva says, but it can connect you at speeds comparable to a DSL or cable modem line.

In the absence of a laptop you can enhance the Web experience on the phone itself by disabling style sheets or java script. The operations are processor intensive, Silva says, making them difficult for a cell phone to handle.

Give your thumbs a break

Need to send an e-mail or text message but your hands are tied? Voice recognition technology has made advancements that can take the burden off your text-weary thumbs.

Jott, a free service and a favorite of Rick Broida, author of "How to Do Everything With Your Palm Handheld," transcribes your voice to text and delivers that message via e-mail to anyone in your Jott address book.

For example, Broida says, you can e-mail a co-worker or your entire sales team, all while your hands are on the wheel of your car.

Services such as SimulScribe and the U.K.-based SpinVox will save you the trouble of listening to your voice mail by transcribing the voice messages and sending them to you in text form.

Similarly, voice recognition software on your smart phone lets you speak into the phone and have that message show up on a computer it's synced with, says Sean Ryan, analyst for market research firm IDC.

Put your camera to use

Whether you're tired of taking notes or your pen runs dry during a business meeting, your phone could come to your rescue.

In addition to using its camera for personal photos, you can take snapshots of notes, whiteboards and documents.

Broida recommends services including Qipit or Scanr, which allow you to convert those pictures to a clearer PDF form. You can save the images online or deliver them as e-mails or faxes.

Save cash overseas

Wondering if you need to get a new phone for an overseas trip? It's not necessary if you're an AT&T or T-Mobile subscriber, says Ryan. Those services use the GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) standard, while carriers such as Verizon Wireless and Sprint use the CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) standard.

GSM phones -- but not CDMA phones -- use SIM cards, which carry your user information. Rather than renting an entirely new phone abroad, you can rent a SIM card and stick that into your existing phone, Ryan says. But he warns that you will need a new card for every country you visit because roaming agreements vary. And with each new card, you'll get a different phone number.

Without GSM, you would need a world phone to keep your existing phone and number while you're abroad. The world phone can roam on both the GSM and CDMA networks, allowing CDMA carriers to work around the technology's limitations, Ryan says.

To curb your roaming costs, try to turn off your smart phone's data connection whenever you can, Ryan says.

You're charged by the kilobit when you're roaming, so receiving a slew of e-mails or a stream of information from the Internet can rack up a hefty charge, he says.

Lose your phone? Don't despair

Losing your phone on the road doesn't necessarily mean all the information in it is gone -- or even insecure.

For those with a smart phone that's synced to a corporate e-mail account, an information technology administrator has the ability to remotely wipe the lost phone clean of data and lock it, Ryan says.

He also suggests protecting your smart phone with a password. While you will be able to answer voice calls, your device will be otherwise unusable without a code if it's been idle for a certain amount of time.

To make it easier to retrieve your phone, Broida suggests using a lost-and-found service.

With services such as Stuffbak and TrackItBack, you tag your phone with the company's sticker and then register it. If someone finds it, the sticker will direct that person to the Web site and phone number. The service will do its best to reunite you with your lost phone. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Come play on Captiva

(Southern Living) -- Under the glow of a southwest Florida sun, sleek sailboats dance on turquoise seas. With every gentle lapping of the warm blue water on Captiva, a whispered tinkling sound settles around your bare feet. It's the murmur of the Gulf of Mexico tumbling pink, orange, red, gray and blue shells on the ivory sand.

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Colorful spinnakers dance in the wind as students run their last afternoon with an instructor at Steve and Doris Colgate's Offshore Sailing School.

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My family comes to this island paradise to play far from the crowds. Any place named for a pirate getaway has to be thrilling. This little spit of land includes a tiny village and a gleaming newly rebuilt resort. You'll discover a laid-back atmosphere that lacks the try-too-hard trappings of other destinations. Amid the lush palmettos, sea grapes and sea oats, you'll find no buildings taller than a palm tree, no traffic lights and no fast-food drive-throughs. Even when neighboring Sanibel spills over with visitors, Captiva feels uncrowded, tranquil and private, yet it offers everything we desire in a vacation.

At home at South Seas

Perched at the end of the road on Captiva, the 330-acre South Seas Island Resort lures guests with natural beauty. A nature preserve covers more than half the property that's tucked between 2.5 miles of beach and the fish-rich bay of Pine Island Sound.

Arriving here on a Saturday, our car packed with groceries for the week, we knew we'd rely on other transportation -- walking, sailing, motorboating or riding the resort's blue trolleys into the village. We opted to stay in the Marina Villas. These two-bedroom units, with full kitchens, face the harbor and sailing school where we watched the yachts come and go. Other lodging choices include beachfront condos or villas, cottages or even large guest rooms near the pool complex.

If you go ...

South Seas Island Resort: http://www.southseas.com or (888) 222-7848. Rates: High-season accommodations start at $419 for a one-bedroom, $699 for two bedrooms and $1,259 for luxury homes. Summer rates drop more than 50 percent.

Steve and Doris Colgate's Offshore Sailing School: http://www.offshoresailing.com or (800) 221-4326. Rates: Five-day Learn to Sail packages (including hotel room and taxes) start at $1,855 per person, double occupancy. Call for more information, pricing and availability.

Capt. Mike Fuery Shelling Charters: (239) 466-3649. Rates: $225 for a three-hour shelling trip for two people or $250 for four folks.

Although we planned plenty of downtime at the beach and the pools, we filled our days with activity. Options included golfing on the resort's new emerald-hued executive course, parasailing above the Gulf, kayaking, tennis and Steve and Doris Colgate's Offshore Sailing School.

Setting sail

The resort offers plenty to fill a week, but we couldn't resist the sailing school. You see, just a few years ago, I married a man with a sailboat. While I grew up on the water, I generally use a paddle or a motor to get around. This is the best place I've found to learn how to harness the wind. The Offshore Sailing School maintains its headquarters nearby in Fort Myers and runs its largest selection of classes out of Yacht Harbor at South Seas.

I signed up for Learn to Sail and spent five days tackling an entirely new language where port and starboard replace good old left and right. The magic started the first afternoon, when my instructor turned off the motor. I took the tiller and listened as the wind and the waves pushed our swift Colgate 26. The boat responded to my hand like a well-trained horse.

Each day I gained confidence. One day, my instructor made sure I could handle a solo man-overboard drill. Another time, I took the helm and sailed "close to the wind" (tight sails with no luffing) while the craft heeled onto its edge. As the boom splashed deep into the water and the spray hit my face, I found a thrill better than any theme park ride.

My husband's days were much calmer. Enrolled in the Bareboat Cruising Preparation course, he wanted a certification to charter a big sailboat for a future Caribbean vacation. His group set off in a lovely 44-foot Hunter, with a gorgeous mahogany cabin, a kitchen and four staterooms. By the end of the week, he felt he could handle a boat that could actually cross the ocean. If we sail around the world (a big if), I can be a capable first mate now.

Island-hopping

If sailing is not your idea of a vacation, take some off-island side trips. One morning we met Capt. Mike Fuery for a journey aboard his boat. We motored past North Captiva Island beyond the resort, where we could see a new pass cut to the bay by Hurricane Charley. Our destination was a slip of privately owned paradise called Cabbage Key.

There, two generations of the Wells family run the compound featuring the Cabbage Key Inn. The inn's restaurant serves up some of the most famous food on the West Florida Coast. Locals say the burgers here inspired Jimmy Buffett's "Cheeseburger in Paradise." Come for breakfast, lunch or dinner, as well as to drink in the Dollar Bill Bar, wallpapered with autographed dollars. Be sure to add your John Hancock to the likes of John F. Kennedy, Jr. and Jimmy Carter. Click for a Captiva dining guide

We left after lunch to head to the mecca for shellers: the southern tip of Cayo Costa State Park. The shells are so deep on this undeveloped island's beach, you'll want to wear shoes for comfort. Captain Mike backed his boat into knee-deep water where he helped us spy shells. We learned to look on the sand at the high tide line, as well as in the water where a shallow ledge just offshore catches washed-up shells.

I searched for the junonia -- the coveted spotted specimen found on these islands -- to no avail. But in an hour I pocketed 16 lettered olives, a half-dozen angel wings, shark eyes, cockles and true tulips.

An hour passed before I knew it. I was mesmerized by the sound of waves softly rolling shells together -- what I think of as surf chimes. On this wind-tossed beach I found a treasure better than any pirates ever discovered. I found the perfect vacation. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Cheney pledges U.S. commitment to Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) -- Vice President Dick Cheney met with Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai on Thursday to discuss ways the country's fragile government can counter rising threats from al-Qaida and Taliban militants.

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Vice president Dick Cheney arrived in Afghanistan on Thursday to discuss the nation's push for prosperity.

Cheney flew to the Afghan capital from Oman and took a helicopter straight to the presidential palace where he greeted Karzai with a hearty handshake. The two strolled down a red carpet together, reviewing troops before heading inside for their talks.

Reporters were not allowed to disclose Cheney's visit until he had arrived safely.

More than 8,000 people died in Afghanistan last year, making it the most violent year since 2001 when the U.S. invaded Afghanistan to oust the hardline Taliban regime after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Osama bin Laden is believed to be hiding in rugged, mountainous areas along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

"The president asked the vice president to meet with President Karzai in advance of the NATO summit to discuss progress in a democratic Afghanistan as well as the work that lies ahead, especially in the south," said Cheney spokeswoman Lea Ann McBride.

She said Cheney would talk with Karzai about ways the U.S. would continue to help Afghanistan become a more prosperous, stable nation. The vice president also is expected to meet with troops stationed in Afghanistan.

It is Cheney's fourth vice presidential trip to Afghanistan. Cheney, who is on a 10-day trip to the Middle East, visited Iraq earlier this week.

Problems in Afghanistan will be a key topic at the NATO summit early next month in Romania. NATO's force is about 43,000-strong, but commanders have asked for more combat troops for areas in southern Afghanistan where the insurgency is the most active.

Troops from Canada, Britain, the Netherlands and the United States have done the majority of the fighting against Taliban militants. France, Spain, Germany and Italy are stationed in more peaceful parts of the country.

Canada, which has 2,500 troops in Kandahar province, recently threatened to end its combat role unless other NATO countries provide an additional 1,000 troops to help the anti-Taliban effort there. Canadian Defense Minister Peter MacKay said he expected a pledge for troops before or during the summit April 2-4 in Bucharest, Romania.

The U.S. contributes one-third of the NATO force, and also has about 12,000 other U.S. troops operating independently from NATO. The Pentagon says that by late summer, there will be about 32,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan -- up from about 28,000 now.

The bulk of the increase is the 3,200 Marines President Bush has agreed to send. About 2,300 troops of the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit from Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, have begun arriving at their new base in Kandahar, the Taliban's former power base.

Cheney's first vice presidential trip to Afghanistan was in December 2004. In December 2005 and February 2007, Cheney visited Afghanistan as well as neighboring Pakistan.

An official who briefed reporters during the trip from Oman to Afghanistan said Cheney wanted to compare notes with Karzai to make the upcoming NATO summit a success. The U.S. wants NATO members to issue a strong statement at the summit pledging a long-term commitment to help Afghanistan become a stable nation and vowing to support the Afghans on the military front as well as in efforts to rebuild the nation.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity as a condition of discussing the private meeting agenda, said Cheney and Karzai would discuss the overall situation in Afghanistan, but particularly the violence plaguing the southern part of the country. The official said the vice president would urge Karzai to continue to work with Pakistan in the wake of the recent elections there and to and stay focused on problems of extremists and terrorists moving back and forth across the mountainous border separating the two countries.

The vice president also planned to discuss steps the U.S. thinks the Afghan government needs to take to extend its governance beyond Kabul and to conduct successful elections next year, the official said, as well as addressing ways the Afghan government can curb corruption and deal with rising production of the poppy crop used to make narcotic drugs that help fund insurgent operations E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Iraqi forces battle rogue Shiite militants

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Iraqi security forces and Shiite fighters battled on Friday in Baghdad and a southeastern provincial capital, an Interior Ministry official said.
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Relatives on Friday visit a Mehdi Army cemetery in Najaf, a Shiite holy city in Iraq.

Two fighters were killed and 15 people were injured in the fighting, which apparently involved militants linked to Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mehdi Army militia, the official said.

Al-Sadr suspended Mehdi Army operations in August, a move that the U.S. military believes contributed to a drop in violence. But some militia members have ignored the cease-fire.

The fighting between Iraqi security forces and Shiite militants erupted in Kut, the capital of Wasit province. At least two militia members were killed; eight militia members and two police officers were wounded.

Iraqi security forces are launching large-scale military operations in some Kut neighborhoods, searching for rogue Mehdi Army members who have developed a stronghold in the predominantly Shiite city.

Rival militia groups have faced off in Shiite heartland cities for months. Many times, the Badr Brigade has participated with security forces to fight Mehdi Army militia members.
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The fighting Friday between Mehdi Army members and police in two southwestern Baghdad neighborhoods left three police and two civilians wounded. Iraqi soldiers, backed by U.S. troops, brought the flare-up under control.

Meanwhile, the U.S. death toll in Iraq grew Friday.

A U.S. soldier died from wounds received from indirect fire south of Baghdad, the Multi-National Corps-Iraq said. Four other soldiers were wounded.

The death brings the number of U.S. service members who have died since the Iraq war began five years ago to 3,985. Eight Defense Department contractors have also been killed. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Juventus beat Inter as Roma close gap

ROME, Italy -- Juventus blew the Serie A title race wide open with a shock 2-1 victory at leaders Inter Milan on Saturday night.

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Trezeguet (left) celebrates with team-mates after scoring the second goal in Juve's shock 2-1 victory at Inter Milan.

The third-placed team produced a remarkable performance at the San Siro to allow Roma, who beat Empoli 2-1 at home earlier in the day, to close to within just four points of the champions.

Midfielder Mauro Camoranesi opened the scoring four minutes after the break from a suspiciously offside-looking position.

And just past the hour mark French forward David Trezeguet doubled the visitors' advantage to give Juve a lead they never looked like relinquishing.

Portugal midfielder Maniche gave Inter late hope with a consolation goal seven minutes from time and he also hit the post in the dying moments but it was not enough.

The defeat was only Inter's second in the league this season and their first at the San Siro since April last year.

Roma overcame the loss of Simone Perrotta to a red card early in the second half to keep their title chase alive. They were locked at 1-1 when Perrotta was dismissed but a goal from veteran defender Cristian Panucci sealed the three points.

Roma coach Luciano Spalletti praised his side for their resilience when down to 10 men. "It was a great reaction on a heavy pitch with a numerical disadvantage," he said.

On loan Juventus teenager Sebastian Giovinco was a constant thorn in Roma's side. He should have put the visitors ahead on 13 minutes when he burst through into the area but he smashed his shot straight at Brazilian goalkeeper Doni, who deflected the ball over the bar.

On 33 minutes, he came even closer to giving Empoli the lead with a long range strike that had Doni rooted to the spot but which cannoned back off the post.

Two minutes later Empoli paid the price for their missed chances as Roma took the lead. Captain Francesco Totti set Max Tonetto running into the box with a clever back-heel and the left-back kept his cool to finish at the near post.

But five minutes after the break Giovinco finally got the goal his performance deserved as he latched onto a cross from Ignazio Abate to slot home.

Things got worse for Roma as Perrotta was shown a straight red card for tripping Felice Piccolo. However, on 63 minutes the 10 men took the lead as Panucci headed home a free-kick from David Pizarro.

AC Milan kept up their chase for fourth place and Champions League football next season as they won 1-0 at Torino with a goal from Brazilian teenager Pato.

The 66th minute strike owed much to the work of Italy international Alberto Gilardino, who moments earlier had seen a shot from seven meters blocked by Torino goalkeeper Alberto Fontana.

But Gilardino got through again and despite falling over, he was up quickly to turn Fontana and beat him with a trickling cross shot that Pato poked over the line from centimeters out.

Torino had a great chance to equalise in the last quarter of an hour but Milan's Australian goalkeeper Zeljko Kalac made a point blank save from Roberto Stellone.

Milan are still fifth, four points behind fourth-placed Fiorentina, who beat Lazio 1-0 in Florence.

Fiorentina came close to scoring when Giampaolo Pazzini headed a pass from Romania forward Adrian Mutu onto the bar midway through the second half.

But on 77 minutes Pazzini finally broke the deadlock as he turned onto a pass from Fabio Liverani and shot low past veteran goalkeeper Marco Ballotta at the near post. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Djokovic crushes Nadal to reach final

INDIAN WELLS, California -- Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic ousted defending champion Rafael Nadal in straight sets to reach the final of the Pacific Life Open.
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Djokovic dropped just five games as he avenged last year's Pacific Life final defeat to Rafael Nadal.

Djokovic, the third seed, defeated second-seeded Nadal 6-3 6-2, turning the tables on the man who beat him in the final of this Masters Series tournament last year.

Djokovic gained the upper hand in the second set with a service break in the fifth game as Nadal knocked a forehand wide.

He broke again in the seventh game and took the match after an hour and 27 minutes when Nadal dumped a service return into the net.

After an early exchange of breaks in the opening set, Djokovic earned the key break in the eighth game -- with a little help from the net cord on break point.

Between sets, Nadal received treatment on court for a troublesome toe.

Djokovic now awaits the winner of the second semifinal between world number one Roger Federer and unseeded American Mardy Fish.

Fish, ranked 98th, landed his place in the final four alongside the top three players in the world with a hard-fought 6-3 6-7 7-6 victory over seventh-seeded Argentinian David Nalbandian.

Federer, who is in search of his first title of 2008, advanced without firing a shot when scheduled opponent Tommy Haas of Germany withdrew with a sinus infection.

Fish has lost all five of his previous meetings with the Swiss world number one. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

China rethinks Tiananmen Olympics broadcasts

BEIJING, China (AP) -- Don't expect to turn on your TV during the Beijing Olympics and see live shots of Tiananmen Square, where Chinese troops crushed pro-democracy protests nearly two decades ago.
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Beijing's vast Tiananmen Square is one of the faces of Beijing to the world.
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Apparently unnerved by recent unrest among Tibetans and fearful of protests in the heart of the capital, China has told broadcast officials it will bar live television shots from the vast square during the games.

A ban on live broadcasts would disrupt the plans of major international networks, who have paid hundreds of millions of dollars to broadcast the August 8-24 games and are counting on eye-pleasing live shots from the iconic square.

The rethinking of Beijing's earlier promise to broadcasters comes as the government has poured troops into Tibetan areas wracked by anti-government protests this month and stepped up security in cities, airports and entertainment venues far from the unrest.

In another sign of the government's unease, 400 American Boy Scouts who had been promised they could go onto the field following a March 15 exhibition game in China between the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres were prevented from doing so by police.

"It was never specifically mentioned to me it was because of Tibet that there were extra controls, but there were all these changes at the last minute," said a person involved in the Major League Baseball event who asked for anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

The communist government's resorting to heavy-handed measures runs the risk of undermining Beijing's pledge to the International Olympic Committee that the games would promote greater openness in what a generation ago was still an isolated China. If still in place by the games, they could alienate the half-million foreigners expected at the games.
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Like the Olympics, live broadcasts from Tiananmen Square were meant to showcase a friendly, confident China -- one that had put behind it the deadly 1989 military assault on democracy demonstrators in the vast plaza that remains a defining image for many foreigners.

"Tiananmen is the face of China, the face of Beijing, so many broadcasters would like to do live or recorded coverage of the square," said Yosuke Fujiwara, the head of broadcast relations for the Beijing Olympic Broadcasting Co., or BOB, a joint-venture between Beijing Olympic organizers and an IOC subsidiary. BOB coordinates and provides technical services for the TV networks with rights to broadcast the Olympics, such as NBC.

Earlier this week, however, officials with the Beijing Olympics Organizing Committee, or BOCOG, told executives at BOB that the live shots were canceled, according to three people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

"We learned that standup positions would be canceled," one of these people said. "No explanation was given for the change."

Sun Weijia, the BOCOG official in charge of dealing with BOB, declined comment, referring the matter to press officers, three of whom also declined to comment. IOC offices were closed Friday for the Easter holiday; two spokeswomen did not immediately return e-mails and phone calls seeking comment.

Hopes for IOC intervention

The decision by BOCOG may not be final. The change was relayed verbally, one person said. All three hoped that IOC President Jacques Rogge and other leading IOC officials, expected in Beijing next month for regularly scheduled meetings, may be able to prevail on BOCOG to change its mind.

Coverage of the marathon, which starts in Tiananmen, is also likely to be unaffected, the people said. An early indicator will be a marathon test-event scheduled for April.

If the decision stands, it would be a blow to the TV networks whose money to buy the right to broadcast the games accounts for more than half the IOC's revenues. The biggest spender is the U.S. network NBC. It paid $2.3 billion for the rights for three Olympics from 2004 to 2008 -- Athens, Turin and Beijing.

Officials at NBC refused to comment.

The unrest -- which broke out March 10 in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa and has since spread across western China -- and the government's harsh response underscores the communist leaders' unease as the Olympics approach.

With paramilitary police patrolling Beijing at night and journalists being expelled from Tibetan areas, security measures are on par with those not seen since the government mobilized police to crush the Falun Gong spiritual movement in 1999-2000.

Activist groups have said for months that they planned to use the Olympics to promote their causes. But the challenge faced by China's leadership seems to grow more imminent.

Aside from Tibet protests, the government said it foiled a plot this month by Muslim separatists in western China to blow up a China Southern Boeing 757. Foreign activists angry about China's support for Sudan, which is party to a civil war in Darfur, said this week they would demonstrate in Beijing during the games.

After the Icelandic singer Bjork shouted "Tibet!" at the finale of a Shanghai concert this month, officials ordered tighter scrutiny of all performances.
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The Boy Scouts seemed to get caught in a response to both the sometimes violent Tibet protests and Bjork; police canceled all on-field entertainment for the exhibition baseball games, including the singing of the Chinese and U.S. national anthems.

BOCOG officials began signaling their discomfort with live broadcasts in Tiananmen Square to the IOC a year ago but discussions went back and forth, according to the people involved. The square -- overlooked by a large portrait of communist founder Mao Zedong -- has been a magnet for protests for decades. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Americans confident in 2009 turnaround

A majority believe the economy will be in good shape a year from now, but remain wary about some prospects, according to a survey.

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By David Goldman, CNNMoney.com staff writer

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Though times are tough now, Americans believe the economy will bounce back by next year, according to a survey released Friday.

A national CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll found that 60% of respondents think economic conditions in the United States will be "good" next year, as opposed to the 75% who think the economic situation is "poor" now.

"Most people realize that the economy has cycles of ups and downs," said Wachovia economist Sam Bullard. "Fortunately, the last two recessions were some of the shortest on record, so in 2009 we should be pulling up out of this."

Of the more than 1,000 American adults surveyed in the poll, conducted March 14-16, 83% said they are "confident" that they will be able to maintain their standards of living next year, and 85% are "confident" they will keep their jobs over the next six months.

Americans also showed faith that they would be able to pay off their future debts, with 90% of respondents demonstrating confidence they would be able to meet their monthly mortgage payments for the duration of the mortgage.

Nearly as many Americans - 83% - said they could pay off college loans, car payments, and credit cards in the future. The average amount of credit card debt of those polled was $4,000.

"Consumers, in general, are optimists," said Bullard, who believes that increased consumer spending after the tax rebate checks are delivered in the late spring will help boost the economy in the third and fourth quarters of 2008.

"Even when they're not optimists, they love shopping," he added.

But Americans are less optimistic about their long-term financial situation. Only 23% felt "very confident" about paying for their children to attend their choice of college.

Furthermore, only 29% said they were "very confident" about saving enough money to live comfortably when they retire, and just 44% believe they will be able to retire when they want to. According to the poll, 58% want to retire sometime in their 60s.

Since respondents were uncertain about their long-term prospects, only 34% said they were "very confident" about maintaining their standard of living over the next 10 years, as opposed to 45% who said the same about next year.

"They're worried about inflation," said Bullard. "Medical care and education costs are outpacing other price increases, and they're worried about how they can afford to retire."

As for the more immediate future, however, Bullard thinks consumers are right to be confident.

"The Fed's rate cuts will start to take their toll later this year, and the economy should bounce back by the end of 2008," he said. To top of page

MIAMI, Florida (AP) -- Lawyers for the Beatles sued Friday to prevent the distribution of unreleased recordings purportedly made during Ringo Starr's first performance with the group in 1962.

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The Beatles leave the London airport for the United States in 1964.

The dispute between Apple Corps Ltd., the London company formed by the Beatles that helps guard their legacy, and Fuego Entertainment Inc. of Miami Lakes stems from recordings the Fab Four apparently made during a performance at the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany.

Eight unreleased tracks are said to be among the recordings, including Paul McCartney singing Hank Williams' "Lovesick Blues" and McCartney and John Lennon singing "Ask Me Why."

Apple Corps claims that the songs were taped without the consent of the band and that Fuego and sister companies Echo-Fuego Music Group LLC and Echo-Vista Inc. have no right to distribute them.

"This appears to us to be a garden-variety bootleg recording," said Paul LiCalsi, an attorney for Apple Corps.

But Fuego Entertainment says the recordings were legally made.

"Don't claim that these were just bootlegged," said Fuego president Hugo Cancio. "It's not like today, that you just go in with a phone or a blackberry and you record."

The lawsuit contends that the recordings are of poor quality and that circulating them "dilutes and tarnishes the extraordinarily valuable image associated with the Beatles."

Cancio said that he had not been served with a copy of the lawsuit, but that the filing demanding at least $15 million in damages was not expected.

"I'm surprised because up to a few weeks ago, we were in good-faith conversations with Apple," he said.

Also named in the lawsuit is Jeffrey Collins, a partner of Cancio who obtained the recordings. It's unclear how Collins obtained the recordings.

Cancio intended to release the songs as "Jammin' with The Beatles and Friends, Star Club, Hamburg, 1962."

"It's unfair to millions of Beatles fans not to allow this recording to be put out. The world deserves to hear these tracks," he said. "The fact is that we have it; they don't, and that is what's bothering them." E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Famed musician, 90, doesn't have time to be old

NEW YORK (AP) -- Marian McPartland celebrated her 90th birthday in a style befitting the "Grande Dame of Piano Jazz" with a little help from friends like Norah Jones and Wynton Marsalis at Jazz at Lincoln Center.

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Marian McPartland celebrated her 90th birthday at New York's Jazz at Lincoln Center Wednesday.

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"Getting up here is really a job," quipped McPartland, who has been slowed by arthritis in her legs and is recovering from a fractured pelvis, after being assisted onstage.

But the years fell away once her hands touched the keyboard.

She started both sets Wednesday night -- on the eve of her actual birthday -- with the traditional jazz tune "Royal Garden Blues," which she used to play in the band led by her late husband, cornetist Jimmy McPartland. The British-born pianist met the Chicago jazzman when they were entertaining troops in Belgium in 1944 and he introduced his war bride to American jazz audiences in the late 1940s.

McPartland also included selections from her latest album "Twilight World," showcasing her stylistic range and encyclopedic approach to the jazz repertoire -- from solo piano versions of Burt Bacharach's "Alfie" and the obscure Alec Wilder ballad "Blackberry Winter" to avant-gardist Ornette Coleman's twisted blues "Turn Around," performed with her trio.

Jones, who returned to her jazz roots by singing "Blame It On My Youth," "The Nearness of You," and "Yesterdays," recalled she was 13 when she first heard the pianist at a Dallas jazz festival and spent many hours during her high school years listening to bootleg tapes of McPartland's "Piano Jazz," the longest-running cultural show on National Public Radio at 29 years and counting.

"Now thinking back (that) seems cool, but at the time ... you killed my social life," Jones joked. "But happy birthday and I'm so happy to be here and I love you madly."

Marsalis let his trumpet do the talking as he swung his way through Jerome Kern's "All the Things You Are" accompanied by McPartland's trio.

Afterward, the pianist remarked: "I first played with him when he was 15. ... He was as good then as he is now, maybe not as cheeky."

Singer Karrin Allyson highlighted McPartland's talents as a composer by performing several of the pianist's original tunes, including "Twilight World" and "There'll Be Other Times."

Other birthday bash guests included violinist Regina Carter, singer Jeanie Bryson, and several generations of jazz pianists -- Jason Moran, Bill Charlap and Kenny Barron -- who filled in when McPartland needed a break.

The audience shared slices of her piano-shaped cake and her NPR colleagues presented her with a "Marian McPuppet" in her image, which McPartland joked had "the wrong shade of lipstick."

"Each week Marian touches our hearts and delights our souls, and the truth is that you assure us that even when wars rage and banks collapse and husbands cheat, there is still music and beauty in the world," said NPR Vice President Margaret Low Smith.

After Allyson and trumpeter Jeremy Pelt teamed with McPartland's trio for a rousing finale on the blues "Centerpiece," the audience serenaded the pianist with a chorus of "Happy Birthday" accompanied by the birthday girl herself. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Nearly two-thirds of Africans have no toilets

(CNN) -- The vast majority of Africans have no access to a toilet, according to preliminary data from a World Health Organization report to be published later this year.
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Chadians live in a crowded refugee camp in Cameroon. Refugees overwhelmingly lack proper sanitation.

The WHO-UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply and Sanitation said the data shows 62 percent of Africans and 2.6 billion people worldwide have no toilet at home "and thus are vulnerable to a range of health risks."

"Sanitation is a cornerstone of public health" said WHO's Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan. "Improved sanitation contributes enormously to human health and well-being, especially for girls and women.

"We know that simple, achievable interventions can reduce the risk of contracting diarrheal disease by a third."

The use of toilets and hand-washing with soap prevents the transfer of bacteria, viruses and parasites that might otherwise contaminate water supplies, soil and food.

"Nearly 40 percent of the world's population lacks access to toilets, and the dignity and safety that they provide," said Ann M. Veneman, UNICEF executive director.

"The absence of adequate sanitation has a serious impact on health and social development, especially for children." E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Annan: 'Hypocrisy' in global response to Darfur

NEW YORK (AP) -- Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan questioned whether all countries on the Security Council have lived up to their responsibility to protect civilians in Darfur from atrocities.

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Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan talks to reporters earlier this month.

Annan said there was "quite a bit of hypocrisy on all sides" in trying to resolve the five-year conflict in Sudan's Darfur region, especially in encouraging the African Union to take on peacekeeping without sufficient resources.

The overwhelmed A.U. force struggled for years to stem the bloodshed in Darfur until it was replaced by a joint A.U.-U.N. force that began deploying in January after months of wrangling with the Sudanese government.

The new force is authorized to have 26,000 troops and police but only a fraction are on the ground. Annan criticized well-equipped countries for refusing to provide essential helicopters for the mission despite repeated appeals from the U.N.

At a dinner in his honor on Thursday, Annan said U.N. member states had placed the duty to protect civilians threatened by genocide or war crimes in the hands of the members of the Security Council.

"It is fair to question whether all of them have yet fully lived up to that responsibility -- notably in Darfur," Annan said.

He did not single out any countries on the council, which unanimously passed a resolution authorizing a joint A.U.-U.N. force last year.

China and Russia, two of the five permanent members of the council, have been reluctant to impose new sanctions on the Sudanese government, which has been accused of atrocities in a conflict that has left more than 200,000 people dead and displaced 2.5 million.

Recently Russia proposed sanctioning the ethnic African rebels fighting the Arab-dominated government. But the other three permanent council members -- the United States, Britain and France -- have stressed that Sudan's leaders must also be targeted.

The Security Council adopted a resolution in March 2005 authorizing an asset freeze and travel ban on individuals who defy peace efforts, violate international human rights law, or are responsible for military overflights in Darfur. The council has also imposed an arms embargo against the government and rebels.

As secretary-general, Annan promoted the concept of an international "responsibility to protect" those caught in conflict that was adopted by world leaders at a 2005 summit. He also played a key role in the establishment of the International Criminal Court, the world's first permanent war crimes tribunal.

Annan spoke at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, where he received the first MacArthur Award for International Justice from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation at a dinner attended by 1,200 people.

Earlier in the day at wide-ranging round-table with journalists, Annan warned that military action against Iran would be "a real disaster" and the whole region could explode if the world community does not handle the many conflicts there carefully.

He said he did not have enough information to determine whether Iran's nuclear program is peaceful -- as Tehran maintains.

But he said he had told the Iranians that if they had nothing to hide they should allow U.N. inspectors to go anywhere and reassure the world "that you have no intention of producing nuclear weapons."

The Iranian nuclear issue should be resolved through dialogue, he said.

"We cannot, I'm sure, take on another military action in Iran, and I hope no one is contemplating it. It would be a real disaster," Annan stressed. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Dengue fever outbreak kills dozens in Brazil

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) -- Health officials say an outbreak of dengue fever has infected more than 32,000 people in Rio de Janeiro state and claimed at least 47 lives.

While city officials have denied the outbreak is an epidemic, the number of deaths this year already has outstripped the number of fatalities in all of 2002, the last year there was an officially recognized epidemic.

Federal Health Minister Jose Gomes Temporao says he already is treating the situation in Rio, where about 51 new cases of the disease are reported every hour, as an epidemic.

Temporao says the government will open a crisis center in Rio state on Monday to coordinate efforts between the federal and state government and the armed force to fight the disease, which is borne by the Aegis aegypti mosquito. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Coast Guard hunts drug-running semi-subs

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sophisticated submarine-like boats are the latest tool drug runners are using to bring cocaine north from Colombia, U.S. officials say.

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Semi-submersible boats used to smuggle drugs are gaining in quality, the Coast Guard says.

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Although the vessels were once viewed as a quirky sideshow in the drug war, they are becoming faster, more seaworthy, and capable of carrying bigger loads of drugs than earlier models, according to those charged with catching them.

"They tend to be one of a kind," U.S. Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen said. "They cost up to a million dollars to produce. Sometimes they are put together in pieces and then reassembled in other locations. They're very difficult to locate."

The boats are built in the Colombian jungle. They sail largely beneath the surface of the water but cannot submerge completely like a true submarine.

But they are the latest escalation of a tactical race between smugglers and the U.S. Coast Guard.

In the past three months the Coast Guard has learned of more semi-submersible vessels smuggling drugs than it did in the previous six years, when there were 23 cases, officials said. Video Watch the Coast Guard chase down a semi-sub »

U.S. Coast Guard intelligence officers predict 85 cases this year and 120 next year.

In some instances, the semi-subs are towed behind other vessels and are scuttled if they are detected, Allen said. Authorities are investigating reports that some semi-subs are unmanned and are operated remotely, he said.

Diplomatic agreements give the U.S. Coast Guard drug-interdiction jurisdiction in partner countries' waters.

Encounters have become so frequent -- and the dangers of boarding the vessels so pronounced -- that the Coast Guard is pushing for legislation that would make the use of "unflagged" semi-submersibles in international waters a crime punishable by up to 20 years in prison, even if authorities can't recover drug evidence because the smugglers scuttle the transports.

"There's really no legitimate use for a vessel like this," Allen said.

An unflagged vessel is one not registered with a government.

Allen believes the semi-subs are a response to the Coast Guard's tactic of using snipers in helicopters to shoot out engines on smugglers' speedboats. The submersibles' engines are beneath water level.

"We're seeing an evolution in the construction," he said. "Early on we saw fiberglass and now we're seeing steel."

Early semi-subs were capable of carrying 4 or 5 metric tons of cargo; newer ones can carry 12 metric tons, Allen said. Their speed has increased to 12 knots, which is "a pretty good speed on the ocean."

Despite the increase in the use of the semi-subs, Drug Enforcement Administration officials say most drugs still are transported by traditional methods -- fishing boats, speedboats and airplanes.

But Frankie Shroyer, deputy chief of the DEA's Office of Enforcement Operations, called the use of semi-subs "an emerging threat and we are attacking it through our investigations and working with the interagency community."

The DEA's main focus, however, "is to dismantle entire organizations," he said. "So we are looking at the organizations that are building these things. ... These are the same organizations that are using containers, the same organizations that are using airplanes, same organizations using go-fast boats."

Allen said the Coast Guard, the Department of Defense and others are working on how to board the vessels. "In many cases, they don't stop. And it's difficult to slow them down," he said.

The Coast Guard says drug runners also are resorting to putting refueling vessels far offshore so drug-carrying boats can avoid coastal areas, and even liquefying cocaine and concealing it in fuel.

The semi-subs are "another adaptation ... that we're going to have to adapt to ourselves," Allen said.

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Last year, the Coast Guard seized a record 355,000 pounds of cocaine worth an estimated $4.7 billion -- a 2 percent increase over 2006.

The Coast Guard's largest cocaine bust ever came in 2007 -- 42,845 pounds stacked in large bundles on the deck of a freighter off the coast of Panama. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend