четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

THE BIG DEALS

From upscale to low-cal, the Sun-Times' "Big Deals" column brings readers the dish on food and drink specials that will not break the bank.

The following are some of the area offerings:

Take flight

LOKal, 1904 W. North. Looking for an out-of-the-ordinary drink? Belly up to the European-style restaurant's bar for a round of Polish vodka flights, including the Earthy flight ($9), which pairs vodka with Gorzka bitter herbs, Debowa oak and Zurbowka bison grass. Call (773) 904-8113; lokalchicago.com.

Sunday dinner, your way

Quince at the Homestead, 1625 Hinman, Evanston. Design your own Sunday dinner from selections off chef Andy Motto's three-course …

India.Arie, Mary Mary, Bootsy Collins among headliners at African Fest

IndiaArie and several other popular world class entertainers will show up and show out this Labor Day Weekend, Friday-Monday, in Washington Park for the 21st annual African Festival of the Arts. (Enter at 5 1st Street and Cottage Grove Avenue.) The spacious outdoor site is being transformed into an authentic African village, complete with three stages for non-stop entertainment, an African marketplace showcasing art and culture. African cuisine, cultural pavilions and lots of family fun. Over 250,000 attendees are expected to interact with artists and artisans and participate in community forums and village meetings to discuss social and cultural issues.

Record mogul George …

EU approves sanctions against Iran's biggest bank

European Union nations approved new sanctions against Iran on Monday, including an assets freeze of the country's biggest bank.

The Bank of Melli is suspected of providing services to Iran's nuclear and ballistic missile programs and was blacklisted by the United States last year.

The EU said it will also announce Tuesday additional financial and travel sanctions _ effective immediately _ on several Iranian companies and "senior experts" linked to Tehran's nuclear program.

The 27-nation bloc is also studying sanctions against Iran's oil and gas sector _ but such a step would probably take several months to implement, diplomats say.

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Travelers warned to protect against dengue fever

ATLANTA -- Dengue fever has increased among U.S. travelers, with96 cases reported in 2005, compared to 98 cases in the previous fiveyears combined, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control andPrevention.

The trend was reported in the June 30 issue of Morbidity andMortality Weekly Report, and publicized by the Center for InfectiousDisease Research & Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Of the patients with confirmed cases, 17 were hospitalized,including one who died -- a 28-year-old woman who had spent a week inMexico.

Travel destinations among the patients included Mexico and otherparts of Central America, the Caribbean and Asia. …

Strategies to Help You Win Fair Insurance Deals

When a tall maple crashed through the roof of M. A. and EdAllgeier's home in May, their insurance company did exactly what mostpeople think insurance should do.

It came to the rescue.

"They were great," said M. A. Allgeier, who runs a commercialreal estate appraisal company with her husband. "They were there theday the tree fell to actually look at the situation. They basicallysaid, `Do what you need to do to get rid of the tree,' which we did,and they paid for it."

Company representatives agreed to repairs. And they promised tocover any additional problems discovered after work got under way.

When fire destroyed the $390,000 home of Dr. George …

Crucifix from infamous NM prison riot finds home

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A crucifix that survived one of the most violent prison riots in U.S. history has been permanently relocated.

KOAT-TV reports (http://bit.ly/nfrYPw) the crucifix provided a symbol of survival for hundreds of inmates and prison officials during the violent 1980 riot at New Mexico's maximum-security penitentiary.

The crucifix was relocated Tuesday to …

Good camp, bad camp: The shortfalls of Haiti aid

You name it, Camp Corail has got it. And Camp Obama does not.

The organized relocation camp at Corail-Cesselesse has thousands of spacious, hurricane-resistant tents on groomed, graded mountain soil. The settlement three miles (four kilometers) down the road _ named after the U.S. president in hopes of getting attention from foreigners _ has leaky plastic tarps and wooden sticks pitched on a muddy slope.

Corail has a stocked U.N. World Food Program warehouse for its 3,000-and-counting residents; the more than 8,500 at Camp Obama are desperate for food and water. Corail's entrance is guarded by U.N. peacekeepers and Haitian police. Camp Obama's residents put …

[ NEWS BRIEFS ]

Commission backs Social Security change

A presidential commission unanimously approved recommendationstoday that would allow younger workers to invest a portion of theirSocial Security contributions in the stock market. In some cases,benefits would be cut. Rather than agree on a single option, thecommission decided to send to President Bush three separate proposalsfor private investment accounts. Each would require the government toprovide significant funds for the transition. Estimates range from$1.3 billion to $71 billion with 100 percent participation. Thereport does not offer examples of how much benefits would be cut.

85 executed in U.S. in …

Solo living drops in Manhattan, rises elsewhere

NEW YORK (AP) — Census figures show that Manhattan had a dip in single-person households this past decade, despite being the capital of single living.

At the same time, living alone grew nationwide to an unprecedented level, especially in parts of the West and South.

Single living always has been celebrated in Manhattan, where 46 percent of households are occupied by just …

Ryan throws 4 TDs, Falcons rally past Eagles 35-31

ATLANTA (AP) — Michael Vick and Matt Ryan met at the center of the field for the coin toss, the former Falcons quarterback embracing the guy who took his place.

When it was done, Ryan trotted off the field in triumph, leaving little doubt this is his city now.

Vick wasn't even there to see it. He was back in the locker room, still woozy from a big hit.

Ryan tossed a career-high four touchdown passes, shaking off all the hoopla over Vick coming back to face his old team as Philadelphia's starter, and rallied Atlanta from a 10-point deficit for a 35-31 victory over the Eagles in a Sunday night thriller.

"It was a wild one, for sure, but we hung in there," Ryan said. …

Nuclear Safeguards, Security, and Nonproliferation: Achieving Security With Technology and Policy

Nuclear Safeguards, Security, and Nonproliferation: Achieving Security With Technology and Policy Edited by James E. Doyle, Butterworth-Heiriemann, 2008, 592 pp.

Editor James Doyle, a nonproliferation expert at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, brings together physicists, social scientists, and nonproliferation experts for this reference work addressing the technical, organizational, and political challenges related to restricting nuclear materials. Part I discusses …

Oil down nearly 5 pct. on stronger dollar, Europe

NEW YORK (AP) — The financial crisis in Europe threatens to snuff out the four-month rally in oil that began in Libya.

Here's a breakdown of how energy contracts traded Wednesday:

On the New York Mercantile Exchange:

Crude fell $4.56 to settle at $94.81 per …

Measure Twice, Cut Once

Planning takes precedence when building, renovating a shop

Planning to build a new shop or remodel an existing facility? Before you approach contractors and start comparing bids, there are a host ot important factors to consider, many of which can make or break your business.

1. Decide between building and renovating

Don't decide between building a new shop and renovating an existing facility until you've considered the finished cost per square toot "when it's all said and done." cautions Larry Edwards, president of Edwards and Associates Consulting in Charlotte, N.C. For more than 12 years, Edwards has helped shop owners design or renovate more than 40 collision repair shops around the country. He also developed content for the Automotive Management Institute's "Uody Shop Facility Layout and Design" course.

Before soliciting bids from contractors on a new shop, Edwards recommends that shop owners calculate the value-depressant effect of a single-use facility. In other words, because auto repair shops are limited in use, they often take longer to sell-and fetch lower prices-than otherwise comparable multi-use facilities.

"Once you build that facility, you can't turn it into a retail space very easily," Edwards explains. "The value might be only 50 percent of the market area because it's only a body shop, but in some areas it could be 200 percent. If you're in a market area that restricts how many body shops there are and you have one, that increases the value of your shop."

2. Don't forget to factor in equipment costs.

One mistake shop owners frequently make is tailing to take into account all the factors that affect the cost ot a project. Before breaking ground, determine whether your new equipment is suited tor the new space and, it not, figure out the cost ot acquiring new equipment. Then figure out how you will finance the new equipment and what impact this additional cost will have on your fixed operating expenses.

"One of the problems is that when you buy that equipment, it's cash out, so you have to depreciate over several years," Edwards says. "Another thing is, the equipment you want to purchase - is it going to fit well in the new facility? I can't tell you how many people buy a paint booth or frame rack, and we go out and do a site study and it doesn't fit in the space."

3. Compare existing shop with proposed facility.

Edwards advises shop owners to do a thorough comparison study of the current facility versus the proposed one, factoring in every aspect of the business-including rent per square toot, number ot technicians and number of parking spaces-and assessing the strengths and weaknesses of the current facility. Don't make assumptions about the new facility."! know some people who have built new facilities and have discovered that they don't have any spaces for the employees to park," Edwards says.

4. Assess the potential market size and the potential of the facility to achieve market penetration.

According to Edwards, this is the most critical step in the planning process and one that's commonly overlooked by shop owners eager to expand their business."If we've got a shop that is currently penetrating, say, five percent of their market, and they want a facility that can penetrate twenty-five percent of the market, where are we going to find the twenty percent?" he asks.

Edwards uses the formula on page s5 to calculate market size and potential.

5. Secure funding.

Buy or lease? According to Edwards, there's no clear answer. The decision is highly dependant on the business owners personal financial situation. For a mature, stable business, the best option is to own the property and lease it back to the company. But if the business is still relatively young, then it's better to let the business own the property until it stabilizes. "The reality is that most small business owners can't get funding without personally putting it in their name anyway," he says.

"When it comes to financing," he adds, "what we find is that to get the best rates and to get the best deals, the more work you do up front-if you have market studies done and your comparables [comparison studies] and have your business plan prepared-you have a better chance of securing funding than someone just walking in and asking for a loan."

6. Look into local zoning requirements and site specifications.

The first thing to assess is how far the building is set back from the property line. "Sometimes it is just utterly ridiculous, but there are reasons for that," Edwards says. "The next thing is restroom size and the number of restrooms."

Cither factors to consider include number of handicap parking spaces and handicap accessibility of the building. Also, make sure you have adequate space tor traffic entrances and exits. "Every municipality has different rules about this," Edwards says. A new runoft" Line with a separate entrance and exit, not factored into the original estimate, could easily triple the cost of a property.

Also, check any local laws that apply specifically to auto repair shops."If the municipality doesn't want new places, compliance is going to cost a fortune," Edwards says. However, he adds, "that may not mean you don't want to do a project, but once you get in there, you have much more valuable property because the average person can't come in and build. But yon have to understand the ramifications before you get moving on it."

Local laws can even affect things like lighting, landscaping and exterior details-in some cases, towns may prohibit, or at least severely regulate, extenor signage.

7. Find out if the proposed site is in a flood plain.

That may seem like a minor detail better left to your insurance provider, but it could derail an otherwise well-thought-out project. Edwards tells the following cautionary tale: "We had a client in Alabama that bought a beautiful piece of property. He started building and had an inspector come in and say, 'You need to build a six-foot diameter pipe 180 feet long.'You could drive a truck through the pipe, this thing was so big.There was a little ditch in the property, and they thought a onefoot pipe would do it. But because it was in the flood plain, it had to be able to expand from one foot of water passing through it to six feet of water. It ended up killing the entire project after the owner had invested several thousand dollars of his own money."

8. Calculate the 'true' cost of the project.

There's no hard-and-fast rule for calculating the cost of building or renovating because it varies so much from state to state and shop to shop. "The reality is that there are hundreds, if not thousands of variables," Edwards says. "The problem we run into is getting people to slow down long enough to plan theprocess in the beginning-and then getting them to stick to the budget once the process has begun. It's not unusual for building to begin and [the owners to] realize they went over budget by 50 percent because they didn't plan it in the beginning."

Edwards has worked on projects with costs ranging from less than $20 per square foot-one instance in which the local municipality donated the property to the shop to encourage new business-to more than $200 per square toot in areas of hiuh land costs.

The key is to remember that this is a 20- or 30-year investment, if not more. "You have to spend time up front doing as much planning as possible because you don't want to move in and find yourself uncomfortable for the next 25 years," he notes.

case Study #1 - Building Renovation

Suttle Auto Body

Newport News, Va.

Underwent 20,000-sq.-ft. expansion

An established shop with 21 years of service in the local market expanded from 22,000 square feet to 44,000 square feet, doubling its capacity and increasing its market penetration.The original building was long and rectangular, witli the paint shop at one end and the metal shop at the other. The expansion added a new, state-of-the-art paint shop and transformed the original space into a new, expanded metal shop. The renovation also allowed for the addition of downdraft-heated paint booths with double prep stations.

Part of an established General Motors dealership, Suttle Auto Body was better off expanding its current site than moving to a new location. "The Suttle family that I work for-they've been in the business since 1902-have quite a solid reputation," says Shop Manager (leorge Hawes."They had the property right at the main facility. If you build another body shop down the road, you have to have a whole new staff. It's a whole new business, almost. With this shop, we kind of grew the business over the years."

"In order to take something to my owners, I did the number adds Hawes, who worked closely with Edwards during every stage of the renovation process. "Each stall in our dealership is worth so much money. Here s what we're doing now. Here's what we could do if we had more room."

A leading paint manufacturer also helped with the cost of the expansion. "In essence they agreed to give us guarantees on profitability ... that no matter what would happen, if there was a shortfall, that we were guaranteed so much profit per job even it they had to give us some money back," Hawes says. "And they also gave us some money for rent."

So far the expansion has had a significant impact on business.The $1.2-million investment has increased annual revenue from less than S3 million per year to more than $8 million. Suttle Auto Body now takes in more than $700,000 per month, and Hawes expects business to increase another 20 percent to 25 percent before the facility reaches capacity. "It was quite a large investment, but if you do it right, it pays off," Hawes says.

Case Study #2 - New Construction

Mackins Auto Body

Vancouver, Wash.

Built new 17,000-sq.-ft. facility

When Larry and Suzanne Mackin purchased property adjoining an office development for their new Mackins Auto Body facility, the development's owner worried about how the body shop would affect his business. He expressed his concerns to his builder, Ron Frederiksen. president of Vancouver, Wash.,

-based RSV Construction Services, Inc, who also happened to be signed on to design the new body shop. "He told me,'We have a huge investment here, and I want to make sure this is compatible.'"

Frederiksens solution was to use a range of construction methods to complement the ? nice environment while providing a durable, cost-effective solution for the Mackins.This meant selecting pre-engineered steel for the shop portion of the facility-with structural brick for the side walls and glass from the eaves down-and wood frame foi .1, wo-story office portion of the development. "We had the challenge of integrating structures," says Frederiksen,"and this was the most cost-effective way to do it."

Another cost-saving measure involved installing a Simple Saver Insulation System-a reflective white vinyl barrier that fastens to light-gauge steel roof mounts.The barrier helps keep the shop cool in summer and warm in winter and also cuts down on lighting costs.The best part, says Frederiksen, is that it also prevents shop dust and debris from accumulating on the roof joints-and then falling onto the shop floor when a plane flies overhead.

The new building was a resounding success. Completed in 2003, Mackins Auto Body of won the Building Association of Southwest Washington Award for "The Best Commercial Building Under $3 Million."

Frederiksen also managed to allay the tenants' tears. With a boardroom overlooking the Mackins site, employees at RS Medical were worried about exhaust fans and roof-mounted equipment ruining their view. "We actually went and figured out the height of the building as it was designed, and we went into the conference room and said the wall would screen the roof-mounted equipment," says Frederiksen. "The office building client said, 'I'm satisfied,' and the Mackins said, 'I like it, too.'"

When construction \v.is complete, Frederiksen went back to the boardroom tor a peek. Sure enough, the root-mounted equipment wasn't visible-but the tape still was.The RS Medical tenants had left the tape on the wall to test Frederiksen's promise.

[Sidebar]

STEP 1

Find the number of registered vehicles in the market area. (V)

Estimate that 8 percent of vehicles are involved in accidents each year.

Take the number of units (V) and multiply that by 8 percent.

Then multiply that by the average national cost of repair per accident ($1,950).

That gives you the market potential (MP).

(V � 8% � $1,950 = MP)

STEP 2

Do a survey of the shops in the area to determine the total number of technicians in the area. (T)

Take the number of techs (T) and multiply that by the average amount of revenue they produce each year from parts and labor ($200,000).

The resulting number is the Actual Market Performance (AMP)

(T � $200,000 = AMP)

STEP 3

Compare MP and AMP to see how close the area is to achieving market potential.

Divide your annual revenue by MP and AMP to determine your potential share of trie market and your actual market penetration.

If the expanded facility has the capacity to bring on 10 new technicians, you could increase your shop's revenue by $2 million per year, but only if that amount in untapped in the market.

[Sidebar]

Don't forget to take equipment costs into account prior to expansion or new construction.

[Sidebar]

(Top) Suttle Collision in Virginia expanding from 22,000 sq. ft. to 44,000 sq. ft., doubling its capacity and increasing its market penetration. (Middle) The move included a major front office change and more room in the bays (Bottom) to keep production flowing.

SET GOALS

Consultant Larry Edwards recommends that business owners set the following goals tor their new shop before embarking on a project to build or renovate a facility:

* A low rent factor (as low as possible for the area)

* A highly proficient facility

* An economically sound business plan

* A site that is appealing to the eye (factoring in layout, building configuration, etc.)

* A site plan that allows room for future growth

The $1.2-million renovation of Suttle Auto Body increased annual revenue from less than $3 million per year to more than $8 million. Suttle now takes in more than $700,000 per month and expects business to increase another 20 percent to 25 percent before reaching capacity.

[Sidebar]

In 2003 Mackins Auto Body won the Building Association of Southwest Washington Award for "The Best Commercial Building Under $3 Million."

[Sidebar]

CHECKLIST - BUILD OR RENOVATE?

Before investing in an expensive -and potentially unsuccessful -project, it's important to develop a clear plan that takes into account your specific business needs as well as your growth projections. Before breaking ground or even hiring a contractor, ask yourself the following questions:

Preliminary questions-

* How much space do I really need?

* How much land? How large of a footprint (square footage) for the building?

* How can I better utilize the property or facility I have?

* Do I need to invest in a new facility?

* If so, where should I locate?

Building plan-

* Which workstations should be located next to each other?

* Which technicians need to share equipment or workspace?

* How much space does each person need io perform his job effectively?

* What's the optimal workflow for the site?

* What special requirements, if any, does my business have?

Zoning and construction-

* How much of my property can I build on?

* Where will the new building be located on my property?

* How many driveways can I build? How many am I required (by local zoning laws) to build?

* Are there any specific materials I have to usesuch as brick, stone or glass?

* How long will construction take?

* Will the construction process have a negative impact on my business?

* Can I operate my business during construction? To what level of activity?

Funding-

* How will I pay for the project?

* Is operating capital sufficient to cover the cost of construction?

* If not, can I obtain a bank loan?

* Can I obtain a loan from a small business administration or local government agency?

* Are there any other untapped funding sources I've overlooked?

Final considerations-

* Have I taken into account the projected growth of my business?

* Will the new building be adequate five years from now? Twenty years from now?

* When will I see a return on my initial investment?

* If my business fails to meet my new goals, can I still afford the new property?

[Author Affiliation]

BY HEIDI MOORE, Contributing Editor

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Congress to Voice Support for Israel

WASHINGTON - Little of the political divisiveness in Congress over Iraq war policy is evident as lawmakers rush to embrace the Bush administration's staunch support of Israel in the latest flare-up of violence in the Middle East.

House Republican leader John Boehner cited Israel's "unique relationship" with the United States as a reason for his colleagues to swiftly go on record supporting Israel in its confrontation with Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon.

So strong was the momentum that it was steamrolling efforts by a small group of House members who argued that Congress's pro-Israel stance goes too far.

The nonbinding resolution, expected to pass the House by a large margin Thursday, is similar to one the Senate passed Tuesday. It harshly condemns Israel's enemies and says Syria and Iran should be held accountable for providing Hezbollah with money and missile technology used to attack Israel.

"I certainly sympathize with the Lebanese people and the Lebanese government," Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told CBS' "The Early Show" on Thursday. But, he said, if Hezbollah is "going to launch attacks from the Lebanese territory, then tragically the Lebanese government and people pay a price for that."

Yet as Republican and Democratic leaders rally behind the measure in rare bipartisan fashion, a handful of lawmakers have quietly expressed reservations that the resolution was too much the result of a powerful lobbying force and attempts to court Jewish voters.

"I'm just sick in the stomach, to put it mildly," said Rep. Nick J. Rahall II, D-W.Va., who is of Lebanese descent.

Rahall joined other Arab-American lawmakers in drafting an alternative resolution that would have omitted language holding Lebanon responsible for Hezbollah's actions and called for restraint from all sides. Rahall said that proposal was "politely swept under the rug," a political reality he and others say reflects the influence Israel has in Congress.

"There's a lot (of lawmakers) that don't feel it's right ... but vote yes, and get it the heck out of here," Rahall said.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who co-sponsored the alternative resolution and also is of Lebanese descent, agreed. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee lobby "throws in language that AIPAC wants. That isn't always the best thing for this body to endorse," Issa said.

Nevertheless, Rahall and Issa said they were considering voting in favor of the resolution. "I want to show support for Israel's right to defend itself," Issa said.

Another lawmaker with Lebanese roots, Rep. Charles Boustany Jr., R-La., said he too planned to vote in favor of the resolution despite holding deep reservations on its language regarding Lebanon. "I think it's a good resolution. But I think it's incomplete," he said.

The lack of momentum for alternative proposals frustrated pro-Arab groups.

"This is the usual problem with any resolution that talks about Israel - there are a lot of closet naysayers up there (in Congress), but they don't want to be a target of the lobby" of Israel, said Eugene H. Bird, president of the Council for the National Interest, a group that harshly condemns Israel's military campaign.

"These guys aren't legislating. They're politicking," said James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute.

An AIPAC spokeswoman said Congress's overwhelming support for Israel reflects the support of U.S. voters and not any pressure applied by lobbyists. "The American people overwhelming support Israel's war on terrorism and understand that we must stand by our closest ally in this time of crisis," said Jennifer Cannata.

Meanwhile, Israel is predicting its offensive could last for weeks, although international pressure is building for a quick cease-fire. Israel and the United States oppose that move, preferring a more comprehensive agreement. Lebanon's prime minister estimated Wednesday that Israel's military week-old campaign had killed some 300 people and wounded 1,000 more, most of whom were civilians.

The Bush administration said Wednesday it saw no point in leaning directly on Syria to help stop the cross-border warfare between Israel and the Hezbollah guerrillas that Syria supports.

"The track record stinks," White House press secretary Tony Snow said.

Snow described previous diplomatic sessions with Syria as meetings where U.S. officials drank tea and sat for "five, six, 10 hours listening to polite, but long discourses on greater Syria and at the end of that having gotten nothing."

The administration has no diplomatic ties to Iran, and no contact with Hezbollah, which it considers a terrorist group.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice planned to discuss diplomatic efforts to end the violence, and the possibility of international troops to police a peace, over dinner Thursday in New York with United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

Approximately 2,600 U.S. citizens have been evacuated from Lebanon by the United States since Sunday. Many of the evacuees have been transported to Cyprus, with the State Department arranging chartered flights to the United States. Rice said the State Department will waive requirements that U.S. citizens reimburse the government for evacuation costs.

Hmong to Seek Bail in Laos Plot Case

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - A federal judge on Monday consolidated the cases of 11 people accused of plotting to overthrow the government of Laos and set a date for their attorneys to again try to have their clients released on bail.

U.S. District Judge Frank C. Damrell Jr. ordered the defendants to appear before another judge on July 12. Their attorneys are expected to argue that their clients do not pose a threat to the community and should be allowed to wait out the legal process with their families.

Prosecutors accuse the defendants of trying to raise millions of dollars to buy machine guns, anti-aircraft missiles, rocket-propelled grenades, mines and other weapons in a plot to overthrow the communist government of Laos.

Judges have refused to set bail during previous hearings, saying the defendants could be a flight risk or pose a danger to society.

John Keker, an attorney for Vang Pao, a former Laotian military leader who many Hmong-Americans consider a spiritual leader, said he will request that an undercover agent from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms testify at the hearing. Evidence the agent acquired while posing as an arms broker is expected to be at the heart of the case.

Keker said he wants to question the agent about "what we believe was his role in making much larger what we believe is essentially a fantasy."

Pao, 77, was hospitalized late last week after suffering chest pains. He was pushed into the courtroom in a wheelchair.

Keker asked the judge to schedule the bail hearing as quickly as possible.

"We are frankly worried about the health of General Vang Pao and not getting to trial," he said.

Several Hmong observers bowed toward Pao or cupped their hands together in prayer as they entered the courtroom. Others cried and held up small children, while some of the defendants used the sleeves of their jumpsuits to wipe tears from their eyes.

Prosecutors said they would release about 2,300 pages of evidence to defense attorneys.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Bob Twiss said he would file a motion seeking to have the case declared complex, allowing some of the provisions requiring a speedy trial to be waived.

As with previous court appearances involving the case, hundreds of Hmong supporters rallied outside the courthouse Monday, listening to speeches, chanting and carrying placards.

In addition to Vang Pao, the other defendants are Hue Vang, 39, Dang Vang, 48, Chong Yang Thao, 53, and Seng Vue, 68, all of Fresno; Lo Thao, 53, of Sacramento; Lo Cha Thao, 34, of Clovis; Youa True Vang, 60, of Sanger; Chue Lo, 59, of Stockton; Nhia Kao Vang, 48, of Rancho Cordova; and Harrison Jack of Woodland, north of Sacramento.

A 60-year-old former Army Ranger, Jack led covert operations and worked with Hmong fighters during the Vietnam War. The federal indictment describes him as the middle man between the Hmong defendants and the presumed arms dealer.

The defendants are charged with conspiring to violate the Neutrality Act against a nation with which the United States is at peace; conspiracy to kill, kidnap and maim; conspiracy to possess firearms and destructive devices; and conspiracy to export munitions without a license from the U.S. State Department.

Knowledge about breast cancer isn't protection

Guest Editorial

What most women know about breast cancer is not enough to protect them from a growing silent killer.

The common wisdom is: Have regular mammograms; conduct self-examinations for lumps.

While that information is good advice for most forms of breast cancer, it does little to detect inflammatory breast cancer , a rare, but lethal disease, more common among African American women than white women.

With IBC, only 40 percent of patients survive more than five years, according to scientific experts, such as Dr. Massimo Critofanilli, a director at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer center in Houston.

A major problem is that IBC is often misdiagnosed. While the medical establishment has been trained to look for lumps, IBC appears in sheets of cancer, or what doctors call cancer nests.

As part of October's Cancer Awareness Month, clinics and hospitals are sending "mammovans" into under-served neighborhoods. In my own research among those involved in this cancer prevention programs, I found none who had heard of IBC.

Typical symptoms include: swelling, sometimes a cup size in a few days; darkened color; ridges and thickened areas of the skin; a bruise that doesn't disappear; nipple retraction or discharge, breast warm to the touch or aching or stabbing breast pain.

Personal statements on the IBC Research Foundation Web site attest to how off-base diagnoses can be. Doctors confused IBC symptoms with spider bites. Patients were told their discomfort came from wearing wire bras, that "the good news is that cancer doesn't hurt," and patients were wrongly informed they were too young to have cancer.

Misdiagnoses can often prove tragic. Personal testimonies on the website tell heartbreaking stories about how when some doctors had finally performed biopsies and found the disease, it was in Stage 4. There is no stage five.

What bothers me are the news reports that give the impression that IBC is insignificant because it only represents 2-5 percent of breast cancers in the United States. That may be true but according to the IBC Foundation the rate among African Americans who have this form of cancer is as high as 10 percent.

Ten percent, with such a low survival rate, is significant and much more should be done by cancer organizations to get the word out to the medical profession, as well as potential patients.

Far too often, threats or high risks to the health of African Americans are buried in the fine print. For example, the rate of AIDS diagnoses for Black women is 23 times that of white women. And HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death for Black women aged 25-34, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

The American Cancer Society estimated more than 19,000 Black women would be diagnosed with breast cancer this year - the second-most common cancer among Black women, surpassed only by lung cancer. And while the incidence of ordinary breast cancer is about 12 percent lower in Black women than in white women, with Black women, it often strikes at an earlier age, and the mortality rate is higher.

Early detection is still the best medicine. Regular mammograms and self-exams are still lifesavers in most situations. Something more, however, has to be done about IBC. The wall of ignorance and silence must come down.

[Author Affiliation]

Rev. Dr. Barbara A. Reynolds is an author, an adjunct professor at the Howard University School of Divinity and the religion columnist for the National Newspaper Publishing Association.

Xmas lunch spiced-up for charity

The festive season gets under way with an exotic twist for anAberdeen charity next week.

Archway is holding a special Christmas lunch, courtesy of multi-award winning Nazma Tandoori restaurant in Bridge Street on Monday.

All proceeds made at the lunch, which starts at 12.30pm and isopen to the public, will go to Archway.

The charity offers respite, shared and permanent care to childrenand adults with learning disabilities.

Shahina Ullah from Nazma said: "Archway does so much for peoplewith special needs.

"We wanted to show them our support."

US braces for blowback over Afghan war disclosures

Operatives inside Afghanistan and Pakistan who have worked for the U.S. against the Taliban or al-Qaida may be at risk following the disclosure of thousands of once-secret U.S. military documents, former and current officials said.

As the Obama administration scrambles to repair any political damage to the war effort in Congress and among the American public by the WikiLeaks revelations, there are also growing concerns that some U.S. allies abroad may ask whether they can trust America to keep secrets, officials said.

The WikiLeaks material, which ranges from files documenting Afghan civilian deaths to evidence of U.S.-Pakistani distrust, could reinforce war opponents in Congress who aim to rein in the war effort. But the leaks are not expected to dim the passage of a looming $60 billion war funding bill.

Congress has backed the war so far, and an early test of that continued support came when the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, led by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., opened a hearing on the Afghan war.

At the hearing, few members mentioned the leak of documents but several expressed frustration at the lack of progress in improving Afghan governance and in drawing more ordinary Afghans away from the Taliban. In a tone of exasperation, Kerry questioned why the Taliban, with fewer resources, is able to field fighters who are more committed than Afghan soldiers.

"What's going on here?" Kerry asked.

In his only reference to the leak, Kerry called the new material "overhyped," said that it was released in violation of the law and that it largely involves raw intelligence reports from the field. He said he thought the document release could jeopardize the U.S. mission there.

Despite strong opposition among liberals who see Afghanistan as an unwinnable quagmire, House Democrats must either approve the funding bill before leaving at the end of this week for a six-week vacation, or commit political suicide by leaving troops in the lurch in war zones overseas.

Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., the ranking Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Tuesday he worries that the leaks won't stop "until we see someone in an orange jump suit."

Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said the military doesn't know who was behind the leaks, although it has launched "a very robust investigation."

Morrell complained that too much was being made of the documents. Referring to files that detailed American suspicions that some Pakistani intelligence officials were aiding insurgents, Morrell insisted those concerns have abated in recent years and the relationship has improved.

The disclosures, he said, are "clearly out of step with where this relationship is now, and has been heading for some time."

Morrell was interviewed on CBS's "The Early Show" and Bond appeared on NBC's "Today" show.

Even as the administration dismissed the WikiLeaks material as outdated, U.S. military and intelligence analysts were caught up in a speed-reading battle to limit the damage contained in the once-secret files now scattered across the Internet.

The officials are concerned about the impact on the military's human intelligence network built up over the past eight years inside Afghanistan and Pakistan. Such figures range from Afghan village elders who have worked behind the scenes with U.S. troops to militants working as double agents.

Col. Dave Lapan, a Defense Department spokesman, said the military may need weeks to review all the records to determine "the potential damage to the lives of our service members and coalition partners."

WikiLeaks said it has behaved responsibly, even withholding some 15,000 records that are believed to include names of specific Afghans or Pakistanis who helped U.S. troops on the ground.

But former CIA director Michael Hayden denounced the leak Monday as a gift to America's enemies.

"If I had gotten this trove on the Taliban or al-Qaida, I would have called it priceless," he said. "I would love to know what al-Qaida or the Taliban was thinking about a specific subject in 2007, for instance, because I could say they got that right and they got that wrong."

Hayden predicted the Taliban would take anything that described a U.S. strike and the intelligence behind it "and figure out who was in the room when that particular operation, say in 2008, was planned, and in whose home." Then the militants would probably punish the traitor who'd worked with the Americans, he said.

Another casualty of the disclosures may be American efforts to forge cooperation with Pakistan's secretive intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence.

Multiple U.S. military cables posted by WikiLeaks complain about ISI complicity with the Taliban. And they also tell the Pakistanis "how much we know about them," said Robert Riegle, a former senior intelligence officer who now runs Mission Concepts Inc., a private intelligence firm.

"You're not going to see any cooperation," he said. "People are going to freeze."

The raw data released Sunday may also prove useful in a wider way to America's "frenemies" _ the intelligence services of countries like China and Russia, who have the resources to process and make sense of such vast vaults of data, said Ellen McCarthy, former intelligence officer and president of the Intelligence and National Security Alliance.

Former CIA chief Hayden added: "If I'm head of the Russian intelligence, I'm getting my best English speakers and saying: 'Read every document, and I want you to tell me, how good are these guys? What are their approaches, their strengths, their weaknesses and their blind spots?'"

Last holdouts agree to Alitalia plan

The last unions holding out against a deal to salvage Alitalia signed a plan on Monday to sell the bankrupt airline's good assets to a group of Italian investors.

The breakthrough with the AVIA and SDL unions, which represent mostly flight attendants, came after a meeting with the investors and government officials, the premier's office said.

All nine Alitalia unions are now on board.

Pilots, who had been resisting the deal, agreed to the plan last week after the investors made concessions, including on the number of layoffs.

The investors _ led by Roberto Colaninno, chairman of the scooter maker Piaggio _ have pledged to inject euro1 billion (US$1.4 billion) into the loss-making carrier, strip away unprofitable assets and merge it with Italy's second-largest carrier, the much smaller Air One.

They also are looking for an international carrier, possibly Air France-KLM or Lufthansa, to take a minority share.

When unions first balked at the plan, which includes route eliminations and at least 3,000 layoffs, the investors withdrew their offer and Italy's civil aviation authority threatened to yank Alitalia's license.

But after negotiations resumed last week, Alitalia's bankruptcy administrator, Augusto Fantozzi, said the airline should be able to keep flying until it is absorbed by the new company, possibly by mid-October.

In spring, a bid by Air France-KLM to acquire Alitalia was defeated by union objections.