September 2009

HSBC tags Wal-Mart Stores with 'Outperform' rating (AP)

NEW YORK – Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s expansion in fast-growing emerging markets will fuel earnings and revenue growth, an analyst said on Monday, while giving shares of the world's largest retailer an "Outperform" rating.
HSBC analyst Francisco Chevez said Wal-Mart will continue expanding in emerging markets, such as Brazil, India, China and Russia, eventually, by 2011. Chevez expects that international growth will outpace the U.S. for the future.
He offered Walmex, Wal-Mart's Mexican operations, as an example of the kind of international growth Wal-Mart can record. Walmex benefited from the expansion of credit in Mexico that helped consumers buy big-ticket purchases, for instance. Walmex accounts for nearly 5 percent of Wal-Mart's total revenue, he added.
"Wal-Mart is well-positioned to create value in many developing markets the way it has done in Mexico," Chevez wrote in a client note, calling Walmex one of the most "efficient and profitable" retailers worldwide.
However, Chevez said Wal-Mart's growth opportunities are limited in the U.S. — a mature market — although there are still opportunities to improve operations in its home market.
The U.S. division has also been helped by curtailed store expansion efforts and better management of inventory.
Shares of Wal-Mart rose 61 cents to $50.72.

Fantasy Basketball

There are two types of drafting used to select players – the snake draft and the auction draft. In a snake draft, the first round is drafted in order. In the second round, the draft order is reversed so that the manager who made the last pick in the first round gets the first pick in the second round. The order is reversed at the end of each round so that the manager with the first overall pick does not maintain this advantage in every round. In an auction draft, each manager has a set budget (commonly $260, an amount borrowed from fantasy baseball) that he/she must use to fill out the team's roster. Players are put up for auction by managers, and the manager willing to pay the most for the player "drafts" that player. The advantage of an auction is that all managers have equal access to all players (not the case in a snake draft). The disadvantages are that it typically takes longer than a snake draft, and can be intimidating for newer/inexperienced managers who may be relying on rankings from websites to draft.

Each category is a win — whichever team has the more favorable statistics in a category (most points, fewest turnovers, highest free throw percentage, etc.) is awarded a "win" for that category. The other team is tagged with a "loss". The results of these weekly matchups are accumulated to provide a seasonal win-loss record. Head-to-head leagues often employ a "playoff" system, with seeding based on the seasonal win-loss record. Matchups are determined via a bracket, with the winners of each matchup advancing and the losers being eliminated until a winner is determined.

Fantasy Basketball

Sexy Halloween Costumes

Most dancers go without underwear, but if they are uncomfortable with this then they wear a thong or bikini underwear. Dancers also require a well fitting bra. Their bra should have no metal clips or hooks that could cause damage to the dancer or a partner. If their bra doesn’t provide enough support then the breast tissue can be torn away from the underlying musculature. Sports or dance bras provide enough support and allows the dancer to move with ease (Penrod 13).

Suspenders give a better line and eliminate the bulky belt line. Their tunic, tight-fitting waist- length t-shirt, is either tucked into their tights or worn out. If it is worn out then it should just cover the pelvic area (Penrod 14). This tunic is fitted to allow more freedom for the male dancer’s strong movements. By adding elastics to the side seams, it provides a more fitted look (Harrison 115).

Sexy Halloween Costumes

Obama administration wants more salmon protection (AP)

PORTLAND, Ore. – Calling it an "insurance policy" for Pacific Northwest salmon, the Obama administration on Tuesday offered up a tougher conservation plan for the fish that includes climate-change monitoring and the "last-resort" possibility of removing dams.
The plan submitted to a federal judge for approval was a revised version of a Bush administration plan that had been in the works for years, but which was rejected.
Reaction to the new plan was sharply divided, echoing a debate that stretches back decades over balancing Columbia River Basin fish survival and hydroelectric dams: It either goes too far or not far enough.
Environmentalists say it does little to enhance the Bush administration plan the judge has already called inadequate, while business groups worry it could lead to drastic measures such as dam removal on the lower Snake River in southeastern Washington state.
"We appreciate that President Obama took the time to look at this, but we see little more than a veiled attempt to pass off the old Bush plan as a new one," said Greg Stahl, assistant policy director for Idaho Rivers United.
Another environmentalist was even more critical, calling the new plan "illegal and scientifically unsound."
Nicole Cordan, legal and policy director of the Save Our Wild Salmon coalition, said the Obama administration acknowledged the analysis in the Bush plan was uncertain and potentially overly optimistic but stuck with much of it.
"Again, we've had eight years of these same actions and same kind of work, and what we're seeing is a whole lot of money spent and not a whole lot of impact happening on the ground," Cordan said.
Most of the $750 million spent each year on salmon conservation comes from Bonneville Power Administration ratepayers. The Portland-based BPA is the federal power marketing agency that shares salmon recovery management with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
The plan submitted by NOAA to U.S. District Judge James Redden on Tuesday is called a "biological opinion" that sets the requirements for ensuring salmon survival under the Endangered Species Act.
The chief of NOAA, former Oregon State University professor Jane Lubchenco, said the additional measures recommended by the Obama administration take into account the uncertainties mentioned by critics and tries to adjust for them.
She noted the new plan would immediately expand research and monitoring, and set specific biological "triggers" for strong conservation measures if numbers of endangered or threatened fish fail to reach certain benchmarks.
"It's definitely not business as usual," Lubchenco told The Associated Press in an interview.
Lubchenco, widely considered a top expert in marine ecology, defended the scientific models used to draft the plan but said more research would be required to make sure it works and to adapt it to variable conditions, including climate change.
She called for an end to litigation over the plan in order to move forward with conservation measures that may not enjoy unanimous support but resulted from a regional consensus, including many American Indian tribes.
"We believe the time has come to get out of the courtroom," Lubchenco said.
The biological opinion has been a work in progress since 2000, and has twice been rejected by Redden who, at one point, threatened to take over management of Columbia River Basin hydroelectric dams.
But some elements of the plan, including a recommendation that the Corps of Engineers study the possible removal of the four lower Snake River dams, raised serious concerns with U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings, the top Republican on the House Natural Resources Committee.

"The Obama administration has put dam removal back on the table and delivered just what dam removal extremists have been demanding," said Hastings, whose committee has jurisdiction over fish recovery and federal hydropower dams.

Lubchenco, however, emphasized the possibility of breaching any dams was considered only "an option of last resort."

Steve Wright, Bonneville Power Administration chief, repeated Lubchenco's cautionary note, adding that hydroelectricity produced by the dams is not only relatively cheap, it does not cause any carbon dioxide pollution, considered the main cause of global warming.

"Climate change is always lurking in the background" of any environmental policy decisions, Wright said.

Reaction among other members of the Northwest congressional delegation was mixed.

Sen. Jeff Merkley, an Oregon Democrat, said the Obama administration made a number of improvements over the previous proposal but he worries about more litigation stalling salmon recovery efforts.

His spokeswoman, Julie Edwards, said Merkley agrees with Republican Sens. Mike Crapo and Jim Risch of Idaho "that a regional dialogue among all the stakeholders will be necessary to forge a lasting solution."

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Eds: A copy of the biological opinion is available at http://www.salmonrecovery.gov

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Associated Press Writer Matthew Daly contributed to this story from Washington, D.C.

Return-to-moon plan gets boost on Capitol Hill (AP)

WASHINGTON – NASA's weakened return-to-the-moon program has gotten a lift on Capitol Hill. The head of a special expert panel conceded to Congress on Tuesday that the moon program could work if given enough money. That would mean another $3 billion a year for the program proposed by President George W. Bush.
The plan has been under question because of that panel's dim look at NASA's future and concerns about support from the new administration.
But congressmen from both parties came to the plan's defense. They even attacked the special panel for referring to the moon plan in the past tense at one point.
House Space Subcommittee chair Gabrielle Giffords says there needs to be a compelling reason to scrap a plan that has already cost $7 billion.

Watchful Waiting Works for Older Men With Prostate Cancer (HealthDay)

TUESDAY, Sept. 15 (HealthDay News) -- Older men diagnosed with
prostate cancer who choose watchful waiting are doing better these days
than in the era before screening with a test for prostate-specific antigen
(PSA) became common, a new study finds.

"The most important message is that the long-term outcome for patients
who don't have surgery or radiation is pretty good," said study author Dr.
Grace L. Lu-Yao, an associate professor of medicine at the University of
Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Her report appears in the Sept. 16
issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

That message applies only to men over 65 when prostate cancer is
diagnosed. Lu-Yao and her colleagues analyzed data on 14,516 such men
whose diagnoses were made between 1992 and 2002, at an average age of 78,
and who did not have surgery or radiation in the next six months. The
researchers followed them for an average of 8.3 years.

The study separated men by their Gleason score, which measures the
degree to which the prostate gland has lost its orderly structure. Greater
disorder indicates greater danger from the cancer.

The 10-year death rate from prostate cancer was 8.3 percent for men
with the least disordered tumors. Their death rate from all other causes
was 59.8 percent. For men with moderately disordered tumors, the 10-year
prostate cancer-specific death rate was 9.1 percent, compared to a 57.2
percent death rate from all other causes. The prostate cancer death rate
for men with the most disordered tumors was 25.6 percent, compared to 56.5
percent for all other causes.

The cancer survival numbers are much better than for the pre-PSA
screening era, possibly because "patients now are diagnosed at a much
earlier stage compared to patients 10 and 20 years ago," Lu-Yao said.
Earlier detection translates to apparent longer survival simply because
the cancer has a longer time to grow.

But the information in the study shouldn't be applied to younger men,
Lu-Yao stressed. The best available data indicate better survival with
treatment for men under 65, she said.

So, the study might send the wrong message about PSA testing to those
men, said Dr. Richard Greenberg, chief of urologic surgery at the Fox
Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.

"My concern is that 50-year-old men with family histories of prostate
cancer will be listening to these statements that there is too much
screening, so they won't have screening because they think it isn't
necessary," Greenberg said.

He is skeptical about watchful waiting, except in carefully selected
cases. "I don't think anyone under 60 is a great candidate for watchful
waiting unless they have another condition that is going to do them in
within 10 years," Greenberg said.

Every man diagnosed with prostate cancer should understand that
watchful waiting is one possible option, he said. "But you have to
individualize the decision for every patient," Greenberg said. "If they
have an aggressive cancer, they should be treated aggressively. You need
to be very selective when you say when a conservative approach is
appropriate."

Treatment or watchful waiting for cancer in men 70 and older "is an
important question, but probably not the most important question," said
Dr. Martin Sanda, director of the prostate cancer center at Beth Israel
Deaconess Hospital in Boston.

Sanda recently reported a study of younger men whose average age when
they were diagnosed with prostate cancer was about 60. That study
indicated that "lower-risk tumors probably can be managed with watchful
waiting in men anywhere from the 40s to the 70s," Sanda said, but the key
issue is the nature of the tumor.

"For patients with poorly differentiated tumors, there is a fair amount
of cancer deaths unless they are treated aggressively," he said.

More definitive information about watchful waiting versus treatment of
prostate cancers is expected from a study recently started in Canada and
now being done in medical centers there and in the United States,
Greenberg said. But results of that study are not expected for at least 10
years, he noted, and meanwhile men and their doctors need to make
treatment decisions based on each man's characteristics.

"We need to individualize these decisions, even in the elderly," Sanda
said.

More information

Learn about prostate cancer from the U.S.
National Cancer Institute.

Mullen says more forces needed for Afghan war (AP)

WASHINGTON – More American troops are likely to be needed to win the war in Afghanistan, the top U.S. military officer told skeptical Democrats on Tuesday, citing a need to demonstrate U.S. resolve in an increasingly unpopular war.
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that a proper effort to counter the Taliban insurgency "probably means more forces."
Mullen spoke during a hearing on his nomination for a second term as the president's senior military adviser. The chairman of the Senate panel, Carl Levin, D-Mich., used the session to underscore his opposition to additional forces, at least until the United States takes bolder action to expand Afghanistan's own military.
"Providing the resources needed for the Afghan Army and Afghan police to become self-sufficient would demonstrate our commitment to the success of a mission that is in our national security interest, while avoiding the risks associated with a further increase in U.S. ground combat troops," Levin said.
Levin is one of several leading Democrats who have expressed skepticism in recent days about adding more American troops. Levin first wants to make sure larger numbers of Afghan security forces are trained and deployed on the battlefield and in Afghan communities.
Mullen told the senators that "it's very clear to me that we will need more resources," to carry out the revamped counterinsurgency strategy that President Barack Obama laid out earlier this year.
Mullen said he did not know how many more troops would be requested by the commanding general in Afghanistan, Stanley McChrystal. A debate over the right mix of forces and other resources will be held in the coming weeks, Mullen told the panel.
At the State Department, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told reporters that the administration would be deliberating on next steps in Afghanistan "for some time," suggesting no decision was imminent.
"Everyone is providing their best ideas and making their contributions about the way forward in Afghanistan," Clinton said.
Levin's Republican counterpart, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, said committing too few forces to the war would invite a rerun of mistakes the U.S. made in Iraq. "I've seen that movie before," said McCain, the committee's ranking Republican.
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., said Afghans will get the wrong message if the U.S. is willing to commit only additional training specialists instead of combat troops.
"They're essentially going to decide we're on our way out," Lieberman said.
Mullen agreed that Afghans and Pakistanis are "waiting on the sidelines to see how committed we are."
However, "it's not as simple as trainers. It's not as simple as combat troops," Mullen said.
Mullen said he has made no recommendations to the White House about how many more forces might be needed. He said McChrystal will submit his request very soon.
"But I do believe that having heard his views and having great confidence in his leadership, a properly resourced counterinsurgency probably means more forces, and without question, more time and more commitment to the protection of the Afghanistan people and to the development of good governance."
Mullen has been sounding increasingly glum about the prospects for the war, which will enter its ninth year this fall. On Tuesday he said the war would continue to deteriorate without a renewed U.S. commitment, and he said McChrystal found conditions worse than he had expected when he took the job this summer.
The United States has about 65,000 troops in Afghanistan now, with a few thousand additional trainers due by the end of this year.

Suns buy out contract of Sasha Pavlovic (AP)

PHOENIX – The Phoenix Suns reached an agreement on a contract buyout with swingman Sasha Pavlovic, who was acquired from Cleveland as part of the trade that sent Shaquille O'Neal to the Cavaliers.
Terms of the buyout were not disclosed Tuesday.
Pavlovic's contract was acquired along with that of center Ben Wallace, a future conditional second-round selection and cash considerations from Cleveland in exchange for O'Neal on June 25.
The Suns and Wallace agreed to a contract buyout on July 13.
The 25-year-old Pavlovic originally was a first-round pick of the Utah Jazz in the 2003 draft. He spent the last five seasons with the Cavaliers.
In Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals, Pavlovic scored nine points in 21 minutes in the 96-95 win over the Orlando Magic.

A look at Atlantic City's casino labor situation (AP)

WHAT: Two unions — Local 54 of UNITE-HERE, representing 15,000 room cleaners, beverage servers and other workers at all 11 Atlantic City casinos, and the United Auto Workers, which represents about 3,000 dealers, technicians and other workers at four casinos — are bargaining with the gambling houses.
WHAT'S AT STAKE: Local 54 is seeking a new two- or three-year contract and is farther along in talks than the UAW, which is seeking first-ever dealer contracts with the Tropicana Casino and Resort, Bally's Atlantic City, Caesars Atlantic City and Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino.
WHERE THINGS STAND: Local 54 is bargaining with the owners of eight casinos: Trump Plaza, the Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort, Trump Marina Hotel Casino, Bally's, Caesars, Harrah's Resort Atlantic City, the Showboat Casino Hotel and the Tropicana. The casinos want a three-year wage freeze and don't want to guarantee benefit and pension payments in the second and third years. Talks have not yet begun with Resorts Atlantic City, and the Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort. The Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa signed a five-year deal last year.
The UAW is running a multimillion-dollar ad campaign blasting Bally's and Caesars for the lack of a contract. It has authorized strikes at those casinos and the Tropicana, but no dates are set.
PAST HISTORY: Local 54 launched a 34-day strike in 2004 that resulted in substantial gains for the union, including protections against nonunion subcontracting, and a requirement that new owners of any casino honor existing labor contracts.

Freemasons await Dan Brown novel `The Lost Symbol' (AP)

WASHINGTON – The lodge room of the Naval Masonic Hall is a colorful and somewhat inscrutable sight for the nonmember, with its blue walls, Egyptian symbols, checkered floor in the center and high ceiling painted with gold stars.
Countless secrets supposedly have been shared in this and thousands of similar rooms of the Masons around the world. Facts of life have been debated, honors bestowed, rituals enacted. You would need to belong to a lodge to learn what really goes on.
Or you could simply ask.
"The emphasis on secrecy is something that disturbs people," says Joseph Crociata, a burly, deep-voiced man who is a trial attorney by profession but otherwise a Junior Grand Warden at the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the District of Columbia.
"But it's not a problem getting Masons to talk about Masonry. Sometimes, it's a problem getting them to stop."
Despite all the books and Web sites dedicated to Freemasons, the Masonic Order has been defined by mystery, alluring enough to claim Mozart and George Washington as members, dark enough to be feared by the Vatican, Islamic officials, Nazis and Communists. In the United States, candidates in the 19th-century ran for office on anti-Mason platforms and John Quincy Adams declared that "Masonry ought forever to be abolished."
And now arrives Dan Brown.
Six years after Brown intrigued millions of readers, and infuriated scholars and religious officials, with "The Da Vinci Code," he has set his new novel, "The Lost Symbol," in Washington and probed the fraternal order that well suits his passion for secrets, signs and puzzles.
Brown's book, released Tuesday, has an announced first printing of 5 million copies and topped the best-seller lists of Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble online. At Kramerbooks in Washington, about two dozen copies were purchased the morning it went on sale and the store expects to easily sell out its order of 150 books.
In "The Lost Symbol," symbolist Robert Langdon is on a mission to find a Masonic pyramid containing a code that unlocks an ancient secret to "unfathomable power." It's a story of hidden history in the nation's capitol, with Masons the greatest puzzle of all.
Brown's research for "The Da Vinci Code" was highly criticized by some Catholics for suggesting that Jesus and Mary Magdalene conceived a child and for portraying Opus Dei — the conservative religious order — as a murderous, power-hungry sect.
The Mason response could well be milder. Brown goes out of his way in "The Lost Symbol" to present the lodge as essentially benign and misunderstood. Masons are praised for their religious tolerance and their elaborate rituals are seen as no more unusual than those of formal religions. The plot centers in part on an "unfair" anti-Masonic video that "conspiracy theorists would feed on ... like sharks," Langdon says.
"I have enormous respect for the Masons," Brown told The Associated Press during a recent interview. "In the most fundamental terms, with different cultures killing each other over whose version of God is correct, here is a worldwide organization that essentially says, `We don't care what you call God, or what you think about God, only that you believe in a god and let's all stand together as brothers and look in the same direction.'
"I think there will be an enormous number of people who will be interested in the Masons after this book (comes out)," Brown said.
Crociata and other Washington Masons expressed amusement, concern, resignation and excitement about Brown's novel. Crociata anticipates a "page-turner," like "The Da Vinci Code," and assumes, for the sake of a "good read," that Brown will make the Masons seem more interesting than they actually are.
Fellow Mason Kirk McNulty can't wait to read the novel: "Dan Brown is a writer of fiction; he's not writing an article for the Encyclopedia Britannica. Whatever he says is OK. But it would be better if he says something nice about Freemasonry."
Mason Michael Seay says some members are "not pleased about all the hoopla," but sees the attention as a chance to "get our story across." Lodge member Darryl Carter says he expects some "artistic license" and senses from conversations with other Masons that they expect to benefit from the attention.
"We welcome Dan Brown doing his work because Masonry has not had the kind of popularity that it once did and that a work by somebody of Dan Brown's caliber could really attract people to Masonry," Carter says.

The Freemasons date back to the Middle Ages, to associations of workmen who built cathedrals in Britain, though some also believe in a connection to ancient times with the mines where King Solomon took material for his Temple. Freemasonry has endured, and transformed. The British began to accept members who were not stonemasons and by the 1700s, lodges were being called "speculative," philosophical societies rather than worker guilds.

The Masons, Crociata and others emphasize, are not a political or religious organization. No theology beyond the belief in a divine being is required and no causes are advocated beyond millions of dollars in annual contributions to children's hospitals, cancer wards and other charities.

"This is the world's oldest fraternity and it has an old and distinguished history," Crociata says. "There's much beauty to be found in its ritual. On the other hand, it's a fraternity, not a religion. It's a place to get together with guys that you know, that you trust, that you are willing to trust. A place where you can speak from the heart, if you want."

No official gathering is taking place at the hall on this recent afternoon, so it's all right for a reporter to have a look around. The Naval Masonic room has features common to other lodges, such as the Mason emblem, a set square and compass and letter "G" (for both God and Geometry), and some decorative images, such as the Egyptian-styled eyes and snakes painted throughout.

Brown's book moves quickly among such Washington landmarks as the Library of Congress and the Washington Monument and draws upon the Masons' very public presence in Washington, dating back more than 200 years.

George Washington used a Masonic gavel and trowel in 1793 as he lay the cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol. The same trowel would be included 55 years later when President James K. Polk, a Mason, presided over the laying of the cornerstone of the Washington Monument, and again in 1907 when President Theodore Roosevelt, also a Mason, laid a cornerstone for a Masonic temple.

According to "Freemasons for Dummies" author Christopher Hodapp (his book is so well regarded at the Naval lodge in Washington that it's kept in a glass cabinet outside the meeting room), membership peaked in the United States just after World War II, when there were close to 5 million Masons.

The number dropped in the 1960s, when the Masons seemed hopelessly antiquated to a rebellious generation, and dropped again in the late 1980s as older members died. Hodapp, himself a Mason based in Indianapolis, says there are now around 1.5 million in the U.S. and 3 million worldwide.

"But it's picking up again, in part because of people like Brown and (novelist) Brad Meltzer ('Book of Lies,' 'Book of Fate'). Younger men are seeing popular references to it. We're also seeing people from single-parent households who don't have that kind of brotherhood feeling you get in the lodge," Hodapp says.

Meetings at the Naval Masonic room are presided over by a Master who sits in a high-backed chair on the East side of the room, in honor of where the sun rises. On the South and West are chairs for the top aides, the senior warden and the junior warden. Only the North, "a place of Masonic darkness" (a belief related to the lighting of Solomon's Temple) is not represented.

Every lodge has an altar on which is placed a holy book, or books. A Bible is usually there, but because only a belief in a higher being is required, a Quran or other religious text might be found, depending on the religious faith of the members present. The black and white squares of the checkered floor below the altar represent "good" and "evil," terms the Masons resist defining too closely.

"As far as what is good and bad for any individual ... the idea is to inspire thought on some of the important questions of life on the minds of our members so that they can go home and think about them and draw their own conclusions," Crociata says.

Would-be members pass through three degrees of acceptance: Entered Apprentice, Fellow Craft and Master Mason. In "The Lost Symbol," Brown describes an initiation ceremony that Hodapp says is essentially accurate. A man is blindfolded, has a dagger pressed against his chest and is instructed to vow that, "uninfluenced by mercenary or any other unworthy motive," he will offer himself as "a candidate for the mysteries and privileges of this brotherhood."

Brown is not a Mason, but said that working on the novel helped him imagine a time when religious prejudice would disappear and added that he found the Masonic philosophy a "beautiful blueprint for human spirituality."

He was tempted to join, but, "If you join the Masons you take a vow of secrecy. I could not have written this book if I were a Mason," he says.

And now?

"They've let me know the door is always open."