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4/9/10

Federer, Djokovic on form at U.S. Open

(CNN) -- World number two Roger Federer continued his perfect start to the U.S. Open, brushing aside Germany's Andreas Beck 6-3 6-4 6-3 on the Arthur Ashe Center Court.
The Swiss, who won the Flushing Meadows tournament five times in a row between 2004 and 2008, is yet to drop a set at the New York event.
Last year's beaten finalist took just one hour and 41 minutes to defeat Beck and will face France's unseeded Paul-Henri Mathieu in the third round, who carded a 7-6 6-4 6-3 victory over compatriot Guillaume Rufin.
Number three seed Novak Djokovic had to contend with crowd trouble on center court to overcome Philipp Petzschner, taking the match 7-5 6-3 7-6.
The incident occurred in the eighth game of the opening set, when there was a disturbance in the stands as Djokovic was set to claim the first service break of the match.
According to the New York Times, a fight broke our between a male fan and two spectators, a woman in her 40's and an elderly man.
The row culminated with both men falling over two rows of seats before the three individuals involved were handcuffed and taken to a local police station.
The 23-year-old Djokovic noticed the incident and told the newspaper: "It was far away from the court; we couldn't really see what was going on. I hope it was no Serbian up there."
Petzschner recovered to hold his serve, but Serbia's Djokovic got his break in the final game of the set to claim a straight-sets victory.
Russia's Nikolay Davydenko was stunned by Richard Gasquet, losing 6-3 6-4 6-2 to the Frenchman, who is ranked 38 in the world.
The fifth seed is the highest placed player to be eliminated so far in New York, and he was joined by fellow seed Marin Cilic, who also tasted defeat on day four.
Number 11 seed Cilic was undone by Kei Nishikori of Japan, eventually losing a five-set epic 5-7 7-6 3-6 7-6 6-1.
In a match lasting just under five hours, Croatia's Cilic took the opening set before Nishikori leveled the match courtesy of a second-set tie break.
It was a similar story for the next two sets, with Cilic claiming a comfortable win in the third, only for world number 147 Nishikori to pick up another tie break success in the fourth before crushing his higher-ranked opponent in the final set.
There were no such problems for Robin Soderling, who swept aside home crowd favorite Taylor Dent in a 6-2 6-2 6-4 win.
The fifth seed was a man in a hurry, defeating the unseeded American in one hour and 32 minutes.
There was reason to cheer for the home crowd, with New York native James Blake advancing to the third round at the expense of Canada's Peter Polansky.
The former world number four took the match in four sets, recovering from one set down to seal a 6-7 6-3 6-2 6-4 triumph.

Klose goal gives Germany narrow victory

(CNN) -- Miroslav Klose scored the only goal of the game as Germany's exciting young side began their Euro 2012 qualifying campaign with a 1-0 Group A win over Belgium in Brussels.

Klose showed his lethal goalscoring instincts in the 51st minute when slotting the ball past goalkeeper Logan Bailly after Thomas Mueller had taken advantage of a mistake in the Belgian defence.

Despite the result, Germany are only second in the group behind Turkey, who cruised to a 3-0 victory in Kazakhstan.

France coach Laurent Blanc's first competitive match in charge ended in bitter disappointment after a surprise 1-0 Group D home defeat by Belarus at the Stade de France.

With a host of influential players not available to Blanc, the visitors snatched the points with four minutes remaining when substitute Sergei Kislyak fired home.

In the other group matches, Edin Dzeko was among the scorers as Bosnia won 3-0 in Luxembourg, while Albania snatched a 1-1 draw in Romania.

World champions Spain began their campaign in style as Fernando Torres scored twice in their 4-0 Group I success in Liechtenstein.

In Spain's first competitive match since lifting the World Cup in South Africa on July 11, Liverpool striker Torres recovered his goal touch, while David Villa and substitute David Silva also found the net.

In the night's other group match, Lithuania and Scotland played out a stalemate 0-0 draw in Vilnius.

RELATED TOPICS

* Euro 2012
* Miroslav Klose
* Jermaine Defoe
* Fernando Torres

Under-fire England coach Fabio Capello was handed a boost as his side began their qualifying campaign with a 4-0 Group G success over Bulgaria at Wembley.

Jermain Defoe scored a hat-trick and Adam Johnson netted his first international goal, although the win was marred by what appeared a serious injury to Tottenham defender Michael Dawson.

There was disappointment for England's neighbors Wales in the other group game, as Mirko Vucinic scored the only goal in Montenegro's 1-0 win.

Group C saw all three matches end in away victories with Italy being forced to recover from going a goal behind to beat Estonia 2-1 in Tallinn, the Azzurri's first success in eight matches.

The home side took a 31st-minute lead when Sergei Zenjov reacted quickest to fire home a rebound.

But two Andrea Pirlo corners early in the second half turned things around in Italy's favor.

Firstly Antonio Cassano was left unmarked to head home from 10 yards and then Leonardo Bonucci fired inom close range.

There was a surprise in Maribor where Slovenia were shocked 1-0 by Northern Ireland, for whom Manchester United midfielder Corry Evans swept home the only goal on his international debut.

And Serbia completed a good evening for the travelling sides with a 3-0 victory in the Faroe Islands with Dejan Stankovic and Nikola Zigic both on target.

In Group F, Greece fought back to earn a hard-fought 1-1 draw with Georgia after the visitors took a third minute lead through Alexander Iashvili.

But defender Nikos Spyropoulos scored his first international goal with a superb long-range strike 18 minutes from time.

In the other group match, Ivica Olic was among the scorers as Croatia cruised to a comfortable 3-0 success in Latvia.

Gas leak caused British Hare Krishna temple blast

London, England (CNN) -- The explosion that flattened part of a Hare Krishna temple in Leicester, England, was caused by a gas leak, the fire service said Saturday.
No one was hurt in the explosion, which happened around 2:30 p.m. (9:30 a.m. ET) Friday, said a spokeswoman for the Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service.
The blast resulted in a fire that quickly engulfed the side extension of the building, located on a residential street in Leicester. Search-and-rescue crews used dogs and thermal imaging devices to make sure no one was trapped beneath the rubble, the fire service said.
A third of the building was destroyed, the fire service said.
A leak in a cylinder containing liquefied petroleum gas was the cause of the explosion, said the fire service spokeswoman, who could not be named in line with policy.
Fire crews were returning to the scene at "regular intervals" Saturday to check that it was safe, she said.
The building belongs to ISKCON Leicester, the local Hare Krishna chapter, which was in the middle of celebrations for Janmastami, a festival commemorating the birth of Lord Krishna.
The cylinder was powering a large cooker that was being used for a festive meal, Britain's Press Association reported.
About 30 people managed to escape moments before the explosion after the festival organizer raised the alarm about the gas leak, the PA reported.
Leicester is east of Birmingham, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of London.

3/9/10

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Settlements in West Bank Are Clouding Peace Talks

WASHINGTON — Israeli and Palestinian negotiators cleared the first hurdle on Thursday in their elusive quest for Middle East peace: they agreed to keep talking, two weeks from now in Egypt.
President Obama with President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, King Abdullah II of Jordan and President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt at the White House. More Photos »
But on a richly choreographed day of diplomacy, filled with solemn promises to tackle the tough issues dividing them, the Israeli and Palestinian leaders did not confront the one issue that could sink these talks in three weeks: whether Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will extend a moratorium on the construction of Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
The Palestinian Authority president, Mahmoud Abbas, has threatened to walk out of the negotiations if Israel does not extend the moratorium beyond September. But officials said the two leaders barely broached the topic during three hours of talks, which covered the gamut of issues that have divided Israel and the Palestinians for decades.
Instead, Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Abbas focused on mechanics, agreeing to aim for a “framework agreement” that resolves the core issues in carving out a Palestinian state from the Israeli-occupied territory on the West Bank. The fine points of a treaty would be worked out after that.
In a sign that the Obama administration will continue to play a visible role in the process, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and the administration’s special envoy for Arab-Israeli affairs, George J. Mitchell, will take part in the next meeting, likely to be in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el Sheik.
Mrs. Clinton, in formally reopening the negotiations at the State Department on Thursday morning, acknowledged, “We’ve been here before, and we know how difficult the road ahead will be.” But she expressed confidence that the core disputes separating the two sides could be resolved within a year.
Analysts said they were encouraged by the goal of a “framework agreement,” which could be a practical vehicle for both sides to resolve vexing “final status” issues: borders, security, the political status of Jerusalem, settlements and the rights of Palestinian refugees.
“They’ve set for themselves an achievable objective in a one-year time frame,” said Martin S. Indyk, a former American ambassador to Israel and Middle East peace negotiator. “A comprehensive agreement would have been unrealistic with that kind of timetable.”
Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Abbas met alone for 90 minutes in Mrs. Clinton’s office and emerged smiling, officials said. After two years without a face-to-face meeting, the two spent some time breaking the ice.
Mr. Abbas brought Mr. Netanyahu up to date on how far he had gotten in his talks with former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert of Israel. Palestinian negotiators are hoping to use the concessions Mr. Olmert made — which have never been publicly acknowledged by Israel — as a basis from which to start these negotiations. But Mr. Netanyahu has so far balked at that.
“The climate, and atmosphere, was positive and serious and down to business,” said Nabil Shaath, foreign relations commissioner of Mr. Abbas’s Fatah Party, who is negotiating for the Palestinians.
“But the cloud is still there,” he added. “The Israelis gave absolutely no hopeful signs that they will continue the moratorium. And in our point of view, that is the litmus test for the Israelis.”
On Wednesday, officials said, President Obama spoke bluntly to Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Abbas at the White House, urging them not to allow the impasse to scotch the talks. But Mr. Netanyahu has not offered any hint of a compromise, and analysts say he is hemmed in by his right-leaning coalition, which could splinter if he simply extended the moratorium.
The more likely outcome, officials said, is a compromise in which Israel would agree to limit settlements, but exempt West Bank areas that are certain to remain part of Israel under a peace deal. It could also offer a limited extension, based on agreeing on the borders of a Palestinian state.
Israeli officials declined to discuss the issue of settlements but said the overall tenor of the talks was “good and constructive.” Citing the killings of four Israeli settlers in the West Bank this week, Mr. Netanyahu said security would have to be a critical theme of the talks. He said that the rise of Iran, and its support of militant groups, had radically altered the landscape for peace talks.
“There is a commitment on our part to address all issues,” said Jonathan Peled, the spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Washington. “A lot will depend on addressing Israel’s security concerns, and whether the Palestinian leadership is willing to make historic compromises.”
It was a day of self-conscious history-making at the State Department. Just before 10 a.m., the Palestinian delegation entered the ornate Benjamin Franklin Room. Twenty minutes later, the Israelis entered, taking their seats and gazing at the Palestinians across a rose-colored carpet.
“I fervently believe that the two men sitting on either side of me, that you are the leaders who can make this long-cherished dream a reality,” Mrs. Clinton said, gesturing to Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Abbas.
Mrs. Clinton paid tribute to the diplomats in the room, several of whom she noted were veterans of the process. Watching from behind was Dennis B. Ross, a senior White House adviser on the Middle East who helped run the Camp David negotiation for Mrs. Clinton’s husband, President Bill Clinton, in 2000. Also at the table were seasoned negotiators like Mr. Netanyahu’s key adviser on the process, Yitzhak Molcho, and Mr. Abbas’s chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat.
“The people sitting here have worked very hard for many years,” she said. “Now it’s time to get to work.”
But Mrs. Clinton also repeated the oblique criticism of Arab states voiced by Mr. Obama on Wednesday. “We hear often from those voices in the region who insist this is a top priority and yet do very little to support the work that would actually bring about a Palestinian state,” she said.
Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states have been slow to deliver promised financial aid to the Palestinian Authority, officials close to Mr. Abbas said, and the authority faces an increasingly dire shortfall.
Mrs. Clinton also addressed the people of the Middle East directly. “Your leaders may be sitting at the negotiating table,” she said, “but you are ultimately the ones who will ultimately decide the future.” Mrs. Clinton asked Israelis and Palestinians for their “support and patience” in the process.
On Friday morning, she is to give an unusual joint interview to Israeli and Palestinian television channels, part of what will be an aggressive strategy to sell the peace process at home and abroad.

Stephen Hawking: God didn't create universe

LONDON, England (CNN) -- God did not create the universe, world-famous physicist Stephen Hawking argues in a new book that aims to banish a divine creator from physics.
Hawking says in his book "The Grand Design" that, given the existence of gravity, "the universe can and will create itself from nothing," according to an excerpt published Thursday in The Times of London.
"Spontaneous creation is the reason why there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist," he writes in the excerpt.
"It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper [fuse] and set the universe going," he writes.
His book -- as the title suggests -- is an attempt to answer "the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything," he writes, quoting Douglas Adams' cult science fiction romp, "The Hitch-hiker's Guide to the Galaxy."
His answer is "M-theory," which, he says, posits 11 space-time dimensions, "vibrating strings, ... point particles, two-dimensional membranes, three-dimensional blobs and other objects that are more difficult to picture and occupy even more dimensions of space." He doesn't explain much of that in the excerpt, which is the introduction to the book.
But he says he understands the feeling of the great English scientist Isaac Newton that God did "create" and "conserve" order in the universe.
It was the discovery of other solar systems outside our own, in 1992, that undercut a key idea of Newton's -- that our world was so uniquely designed to be comfortable for human life that some divine creator must have been responsible.
But, Hawking argues, if there are untold numbers of planets in the galaxy, it's less remarkable that there's one with conditions for human life.
And, indeed, he argues, any form of intelligent life that evolves anywhere will automatically find that it lives somewhere suitable for it.
From there he introduces the idea of multiple universes, saying that if there are many universes, one will have laws of physics like ours -- and in such a universe, something not only can, but must, arise from nothing.
Therefore, he concludes, there's no need for God to explain it.
But some of Hawking's Cambridge colleagues said the physicist has missed the point.
"The 'god' that Stephen Hawking is trying to debunk is not the creator God of the Abrahamic faiths who really is the ultimate explanation for why there is something rather than nothing," said Denis Alexander.
"Hawking's god is a god-of-the-gaps used to plug present gaps in our scientific knowledge.
"Science provides us with a wonderful narrative as to how [existence] may happen, but theology addresses the meaning of the narrative," said Alexander, director of The Faraday Institute for Science and Religion.
And Fraser Watts, an Anglican priest and Cambridge expert in the history of science, said that it's not the existence of the universe that proves the existence of God.
But, he said, "a creator God provides a reasonable and credible explanation of why there is a universe, and ... it is somewhat more likely that there is a God than that there is not. That view is not undermined by what Hawking has said."
Hawking's book will be published on September 7 in the United States and September 9 in the United Kingdom.

Official: Miami airport scare caused by metal canister in luggage




Miami, Florida (CNN) -- The scare that closed the Miami International Airport for more than seven hours Friday morning was caused by a 70-year-old scientist who had a metal canister in his luggage that "greatly resembled a pipe bomb," a U.S. government official told CNN.
The item was rendered safe and no traces of explosives were found, the official said.
"So far there is nothing nefarious," the official said.
The man was detained but was not arrested and may be let go, the official said.
FBI Agent Michael Leverock said the man was cooperating with authorities and the item was being tested at a lab.
Most of the airport was closed for hours as a bomb squad team dealt with the suspicious item, which inspectors found when screening a checked bag.
A source close to the investigation told CNN that the passenger was an American and has a history that includes incarcerations. It was the man's history along with the suspicious item that ramped up concern, the source said
All concourses at the airport except for Concourse J were closed before the situation was resolved, police said.
Concourses E and F were evacuated at 9:30 p.m. ET Thursday after the item was found, said Greg Chin, a Miami-Dade Aviation Department spokesman. Authorities rerouted arriving flights to other parts of the airport.
The passenger who was in custody came into Miami on a flight from Brazil, Chin said.
Investigators from Miami-Dade Police, the Transportation Security Administration and the Department of Homeland Security responded to the incident, the Transportation Security Administration said in a statement. Airport roads were also closed "to ensure public safety," the statement said.
The incident brought the usually bustling Miami airport to a halt for hours.
Debbie Casanova was one of many people caught in the traffic jam outside airport terminals during the incident.
Casanova said she waited for her husband to come out of the airport for more than an hour and the wait continued even after she picked him up.
"We have been siting here for two hours," said Casanova, as she sat in her car with her husband, Roberto. "It is frustrating, but it is better to know everybody is safe."
CNN's Mike Ahlers, Kimberly Segal, Carol Cratty, Cristy Lenz, David Alsup, Scott Thompson and journalist Rafio Storace contributed to this report.

Volcano spews in Indonesia, sends villagers fleeing

Jakarta, Indonesia (CNN) -- A volcano erupted again in Indonesia early Friday in northern Sumatra, sending hundreds of villagers fleeing as it unleashed tremors and spewed powerful bursts of hot ash and debris.
"Constant tremors were felt since yesterday and, between 4:38 and 4:51 a.m. this morning, the volcano erupted, shooting thick, hot ash 3,000 meters (1.9 miles) to the sky," said Surono, the head of the Indonesian Center for Volcanology and Geological Disaster Mitigation. "This is the biggest one, compared to the last two."
Surono goes by one name, as many Indonesians do.
The villagers in Karo province had ignored warnings and returned to their homes after the volcano showed no activity since Monday. The fresh eruption forced them back into temporary shelters.
The Sinabung mountain erupted for the first time in four centuries last Sunday, forcing the evacuation of about 30,000 villagers who live within 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) of the volcano's crater.

World's 'oldest beer' found in shipwreck

(CNN) -- First there was the discovery of dozens of bottles of 200-year-old champagne, but now salvage divers have recovered what they believe to be the world's oldest beer, taking advertisers' notion of 'drinkability' to another level.
Though the effort to lift the reserve of champagne had just ended, researchers uncovered a small collection of bottled beer on Wednesday from the same shipwreck south of the autonomous Aland Islands in the Baltic Sea.
"At the moment, we believe that these are by far the world's oldest bottles of beer," Rainer Juslin, permanent secretary of the island's ministry of education, science and culture, told CNN on Friday via telephone from Mariehamn, the capital of the Aland Islands.
"It seems that we have not only salvaged the oldest champagne in the world, but also the oldest still drinkable beer. The culture in the beer is still living."
Juslin said officials had talked to a local brewer about whether the new-found beer might be able to yield its recipe after experts decipher the brew's ingredients.
The newest find came as divers unearthed bottles separate from the earlier champagne find. While lifting a few to the surface, one exploded from pressure. A dark fluid seeped from the broken bottle, which they realized was beer.
All the cargo on the ship -- including the beer and champagne -- is believed to have been transported sometime between 1800 and 1830, according to Juslin. He said the wreck was about 50 meters deep (roughly 164 feet) in between the Aland island chain and Finland.
The cargo was aboard a ship believed to be heading from Copenhagen, Denmark, to St Petersburg, Russia. It could have possibly been sent by France's King Louis XVI to the Russian Imperial Court.
"Champagne of this kind was popular in high levels [of society] and was exclusive to rich groups -- it was not a drink for common people then," Juslin said.
Experts estimated the exclusive bubbly to be worth tens of thousands of euros per bottle. The value of the beer has not been determined. It is also unknown whether the beer went flat while sitting at the bottom of the Baltic for such a long time.
Some of the bottles of champagne were originally produced by Juglar, a premium champagne house no longer in existence, according to Juslin.
He said the cold sea water was a perfect way to store the spirits, with the temperature remaining a near-constant 4-5 degrees Celsius (around freezing temperature in Fahrenheit, or 32 degrees) and no light to expedite the spoiling process.
Investigators and historians have not yet unraveled the mystery surrounding the exact origin of the ship or the date when the ship went down.
Juslin said other artifacts were still lying in the shipwreck, but it would take several months to lift them out of the wreck.
The islands are at the entrance of the Gulf of Bothnia, in the Baltic Sea. They have Swedish-speaking people, though the island itself falls under Finnish protection. The Aland chain forms a Nordic archipelago of more than 6,000 skerries and islands

4 dead as fires ravage central Russia

Moscow, Russia (CNN) -- Fires left at least four people dead and hundreds homeless in two regions of central Russia, government officials said Friday.
At least 18 people were injured and 957 people were moved to temporary homes, according to authorities.
The blaze started after severe wind storms, coupled with hot weather, disrupted electricity transmission lines, causing short circuits that led to the fires, the Russian Emergency Situations Ministry said.
More than 2,500 firefighters and rescuers are battling the blazes. The ministry said it is increasing its efforts to localize and put out the fires.
It affected 20 villages in Volgograd region and six in Saratov, the ministry said on its website.
However, Anatoly Brovko, the governor of Volgograd, told Russian state media that five people had died and five more were missing in his region.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin signed a decree Friday allocating 1 billion rubles (almost $33 million) in financial aid to the two regions.
The funds will be used to replace houses lost in the fires and compensate for the loss of property.
Families of those who died will receive a lump sum of 1 million rubles (almost $33,000 ), according to the decree.
Interfax news agency said almost 50 houses burned in Penza, a third region of central Russia. No fatalities were reported.

Skate champions set for dream wedding on ice


Beijing, China (CNN) -- It is a fairy tale romance of Olympic-sized proportions: China's 2010 gold medal pair skaters Zhao Hongbo and Shen Xue are getting married Saturday in front of thousands of fans -- on ice.
The wedding, scheduled to take place at Beijing's Capital Gymnasium, has been an affair three years in the making. Zhao proposed to Shen after a gold medal-winning performance at the 2007 World Figure Skating Championships.
Zhao and Shen have been skating together since 1992, and fell in love between practices and competitions around the world. After a short retirement, the pair returned to the ice to win gold in Vancouver in February, breaking nearly half a century of dominance by Russian and Soviet pairs.
Zhao and Shen, both born and raised in China's northeast city of Harbin, were legally married in China in 2007, but most Chinese do not consider a couple formally married until after a festive celebration with family and friends.
"We have been waiting a long time for this," Zhao said. "After the Olympics, we had some time to choose a place and we are so happy the time has finally come."
It won't be just any ordinary friends in attendance on Saturday evening. Taking part in the couple's wedding will be some of the world's best skating stars who have flown into Beijing to perform as their gift to the couple. 2006 Olympic champion Evgeni Plushenko of Russia will skate to "Sex Bomb" while Japan's 2010 Olympic silver medalist Mao Asada will perform a tango-inspired program.
The men's 2002 Olympic champion Alexei Yagudin of Russia and two-time World Champion Stephane Lambiel of Canada will also hit the ice with Zhao and Shen.
The newlyweds will conclude their wedding festivities with the classic "Turandot."
Perhaps the only program that might outshine Zhao and Shen will be American Johnny Weir's performance to Lady Gaga's "Poker Face," which is slated to immediately follow the wedding vows.
"So many of my fans want me to perform 'Poker Face' in China," Weir told CNN. "Yes, I am a little nervous that I am going right after because Poker Face is a little bit dirty... but I am excited by the challenge."
As for gifts, Zhao and Shen have skipped the bridal registries, saying they already have their hands full with their massive wedding. Beijing's Capital Gymnasium was decked out in sweeping red ribbons and spotlights as skaters rehearsed on Friday. Young figure skaters dressed in white lace costumes and roses waited in the wings during the rehearsal.
"We are pretty tired, very busy but excited," Shen told CNN on Friday. "It is our first time doing this type of skating so we hope it goes smoothly. We are very thankful to our friends, family and fans who will be with us tomorrow night."
The bride and groom's Olympic friends are tight-lipped about what they will give Zhao and Shen. "We have all been discussing what we will do but I can't tell you what the gift it. It's still a secret," said 2010 Olympic bronze medalist Joannie Rochette of Canada.
"I have prepared a traditional Japanese gift for them," Asada said.
Many Chinese skating fans are overflowing with excitement on the web. User Xiaoxiao on a Sina.com blog said, "Bless you two, you're always the most beautiful couple on the ice! I'm looking forward to your wedding on ice!"
But not all Chinese fans are as enthusiastic.
Others disagree with the public wedding, arguing Zhao and Shen are "using their wedding to make money" and "the wedding itself wastes a lot of money."
But overall, the skating community in China is awaiting Saturday night with baited breath.
"Back when I got married, all my wife and I had was a big family meal," the pair's long-time coach Yao Bin said. "We are very happy for them to have this opportunity to live the dream on ice."

'Shocking' toys a teen rage in HCMC

A popular toy.
Prank toys are becoming increasingly popular among city youth, and one of the popular ones these days is an "electrocuting" ballpoint pen.

Thanh Binh, a ninth grader, is proud of his pen. It looks like a normal ball-point pen but it gives the unsuspecting user a mild electric shock when the head of the pen is pressed to write.

The pen contains a 1.5 Volt battery which generates the electric current.

Binh said other "electrocuting" gadgets available include USBs, boxes of candy, flashlights and lighters.

“These days, this shocking stuff is the mode. All my friends like them and bring them to play with each other for fun,” he said.

Binh said he ordered the pen on the Internet after seeing an ad. “You can go to websites and they’re full of stuff like this. You can buy whatever you want.”

An ad on holytoy.net says: “This is a ball-point pen that functions like other ball-point pens, plus a special use. Just give the pen to your friends. When they press the head of the pen to write, they will immediately get an electric shock. It will stun them, make them shout and even jump up!”

The online advertisements sell the items at VND50,000-70,000 (US$2.62-3.66) apiece and give out phone numbers that people can call to place orders, Binh said.

Holytoy.net recommends keeping the pen on the desk, in the bag or in the shirt pocket because, “the electric current has small intensity, so you can be sure it is absolutely harmless.”

Hieu Thanh, owner of a "freak" toy shop in the city, said: “I think there would be no effect as the electric current is only 30 milliamps, not enough to harm users.”

But doctors say such toys can be dangerous.

The electric shock would stop the heart for several seconds and playing with it frequently can cause mental trauma and complications to the brain, they warned.

Thanh said the pen and other similar toys came from China.

“Recently, they have become a trend among young people. They’ve called to order many of them and sometimes I run out of stock,” he said.

2/9/10

Business for a cause

US President Barack Obama (L) and David Duong (R), whom Obama appointed to the Vietnamese Education Fund last February
Business for a cause
Vietnamese-American David Duong has spun gold from American trash.
The slight, mustachioed entrepreneur made his fortune managing a recycling firm in California. Now, he’s hoping to afford opportunities in education to eager students in Vietnam who may lack the means to make it to American universities.
Last February, President Barack Obama appointed David Duong to serve on the Vietnam Education Foundation (VEF)—a scholarship organization run through the US State Department.
In a way, the move signifies the final achievement of a lifetime of educational philanthropy.
David Duong made his fortune as CEO of California Waste Solutions, a top US recycling firm. He returned to Vietnam to create Vietnam Waste Solutions, which collects and processes solid waste in Ho Chi Minh City.
“I am not interested in business only,” David Duong said. “I also care about education. That I invest in Vietnam, care about the country and the Vietnamese community is no secret. That’s why US Congresswoman Barbara Lee and others nominated me for the position [at VEF].”
American dreamer
David Duong was born in 1958 in Saigon. He and his family emigrated to America in 1976. When he landed in America, the young man worked as a waste collector and went on to establish Cogido Recycling Company in 1979 with the help of every member in his family.
Following his rise to prominence, David Duong opened Vietnamese summer classes for young people, raised funds for American schools and created scholarships and awards for the best Vietnamese students in California.
In Vietnam, David Duong’s company has furnished schools with computers and established scholarship funds for promising, underprivileged students. He has also created entities to help families overcome poverty which is often cited as one of the main reasons that young students cease attending school.
“I don’t want to just hand out fish,” said the businessman. “We’re teaching people to fish here.”
According to David Duong, VEF spends US$4-6 million annually to fund higher-level education for Vietnamese students who wish to study in America. Under the VEF scholarship program, after finishing their two- to four-year course, the students return to Vietnam to serve their homeland.
David Duong said that interested applicants can request recommendations from their schools, or contact VEF’s office in Hanoi to apply for the scholarships. They must pass interviews with professors from the US in order to obtain the honorarium.
This month, the panel of professors will come to Vietnam to select 40 students from more than 80 candidates for the 2010-2011 school year.
“Starting in 2011, we plan to increase the number of scholarships for locals to study in the US. We will also increase the budget for these grants. At the moment, we can only afford to accept about a third to one half of the increasing number of candidates we get every year. To execute this plan, we will seek donations from big companies who have set aside money for education,” David Duong said.
Bringing it all back home

THE VEF EXPLAINED
Founded in 2007 through an initiative by former President Bill Clinton, VEF is an independent organization, funded by the US government. VEF aims to promote a closer relationship between the US and Vietnam and also improve the quality of education in Vietnam. VEF is governed by a board of directors which includes three US senators and several individuals appointed by the President. VEF grants scholarships to young Vietnamese scientists and students to study in the US.
At the moment, David Duong’s latest project aims to bring American University campuses to Vietnam.
He said that instead of sending the students to America, the idea of bringing US universities to Vietnam could help more students enjoy high quality education at a more affordable cost.
Currently, David Duong and his co-workers are putting together a committee to the idea to VEF. David Duong says the notion will prove “beneficial for both Vietnam and America,” he said. David Duong added that students from all over the world can come to study abroad at such campuses.
“All of the things I do for the benefit of the two countries, I think, will surely bear fruit,” David Duong said. “I believe I will have the full support of the Vietnamese government since both the Minister of Education and Training and the Prime Minister are determined to improve the quality of local education,” David Duong said.

HIV-positive kids run into negative adults

 
Prejudiced parents teach disadvantaged children a bitter lesson in bigotry

HIV-positive children sit on a bed at the paediatric hospital in Hanoi in July. The government estimates that of 254,000 people living with HIV in 2010, 5,100 are children.

The children at the Mai Hoa orphanage do not bother to ask the dreaded question anymore.
And Sister Nguyen Thi Bao does not know whether to be happy or sad about their silence.
The HIV-positive orphans have all but abandoned hopes they will one day laugh, play and study with “normal” children.
When classes opened across Vietnam on August 16 this year, the kids knew that their new school-year would begin inside the orphanage, an AIDS hospice in Ho Chi Minh City’s Cu Chi District.
Last year, they were allowed to attend the An Nhon Dong Primary School.
But a backlash from parents who refused to allow their children to attend classes with HIV infected children, forced the Mai Hoa orphans out.
Thanh Nien Weekly reported the story last September.
Amid almost empty classes and pressure from school officials, Sister Nguyen Thi Bao, who manages the Mai Hoa center, thought it best to take the children back to the orphanage, just a short walk down a country road, with a promise that they would be able to come back school this year.
But since then she has not heard anything from local authorities about enrolling the children in the new school-year.
“I was told that [parent] awareness is still low. So the kids should continue to study inside the orphanage until ‘the right time,’” Sister Bao said.
“I don’t think this is the right time. I’m not sure when it will be,” said Nguyen Van Chan, the principal of the An Nhon Dong Primary School.
“Some parents have kept asking us that if we let the infected orphans in, who would give a complete guarantee for their kids? I myself cannot do so,” Chan said.
“The parents would allow the orphans to join their kids in flag-saluting ceremonies every Monday or occasional sightseeing tours. But that’s the limit of their tolerance.”
Chan said the only thing that local authorities and the school can do at this moment is to carry out both public and door-to-door education campaigns in the community so the stigma attached to the children can be removed.
In their ignorance and fear of HIV/AIDS, many parents believe their children could contract the virus by brushing shoulders, or if their kids were scratched or bitten by infected orphans.
There is no truth to these fears, said Dr. Chu Quoc An, deputy director of the HIV-AIDS Prevention and Controls Department at the Health Ministry.
“There is no scientific evidence that kids can contract the HIV virus by such actions,” An said.
But parents have remained adamant.
Le Thi Nga, the mother of a fifth-grader and a third-grader at the An Nhon Dong school, said no matter how well-educated she is, she would never let her kids study with the Mai Hoa children.
“I know that there is little likelihood that my kids would get infected. But who knows?” Nga said.
“My kids are not equipped to protect themselves, and I cannot be with them all the time they are at school [if the infected orphans study there]. I also don’t have time to take them for blood tests every three months.”
Most of the parents in Cu Chi District’s An Nhon Tay Commune, where the An Nhon Dong School is based, are farmers with little education. But the fear and stigma relating to HIV/AIDS is far more widespread.
Nguyen Thi Quy Hien, a 31- year-old teacher at an inner-city district in HCMC, said she would also pull her daughter, who is attending the first-grade next year, out of any school which accommodates HIV-infected children.
“No one wants to sacrifice their kids for the sake of integrating HIV-infected orphans. I don’t think I say this just for myself.”
The Health Ministry estimates that there are around 254,000 people living with HIV in 2010, including 5,100 children.
Silence is prudent
A 14-year-old girl at another HIV/AIDS orphanage in HCMC said she felt sorry for her peers at Mai Hoa.
The girl, whose name the center’s management insisted on keeping anonymous, said she has been able to attend a public school and interact with her friends quite happily.
“Because my friends have hidden my [HIV] status from their parents,” she said.
A representative from the center, who also declined to be named, said her center had learned a lesson from Mai Hoa’s case.
“The more the public knows about the status of the infected kids, the more difficult it will be for them to integrate into the community,” she said.
The representative insisted that even the name of the district where her center is based is not made public.
“You will never be able to imagine the public pressure if they are informed [of our kids attending public schools].”
‘Give them a break’
Around 50 kilometers away from downtown HCMC, the Mai Hoa AIDS Center features a green, quiet campus. Founded in 2003 as a hospice for patients, the facility also houses an orphanage to care for children of people who died there.
The children, who receive antiretroviral medication, are taught with textbooks and teachers provided by the An Nhon Dong Primary School.
Under Vietnam’s HIV/AIDS laws, children cannot be denied access to school if they or any members of their family are living with HIV/AIDS. The law also bars employers from firing employees, or doctors from refusing to treat anyone, because of their HIV status.
“Children with HIV should go to school to be able to have a chance to develop like any other children. It is their right to go to school,” said Jean Dupraz, deputy country representative of UNICEF Vietnam.
Eamonn Murphy, Vietnam Country Director of UNAIDS – the UN’s AIDS-fighting body, said that regarding the Mai Hoa case, local authorities should have done more over the last twelve months to educate the community.
“If the knowledge is low, we have to educate the parents. If they are fully informed and understand the situation and still choose to be ignorant, that’s their responsibility,” Murphy said on the sidelines of a conference held to promote a booklet disseminating HIV/AIDS facts and information in HCMC this week.
“The children should not suffer for the rest of their lives because of a lack of education. They will live full lives and they will be adults some day."
Sister Bao said among 16 students denied access to the An Nhon Dong School last year, four have been sponsored to further their studies at a secondary school in HCMC.
“I just hope they will not be ostracized as they were here,” she said.
The Catholic nun was also firm that the rest of the students at the orphanage cannot be approached for interviews.
“Give them a break. They have endured enough hurt.”

F.C.C. Seeks More Input on Wireless Internet Rules

WASHINGTON — On the Internet, data moves at the speed of light. The Federal Communications Commission, not so fast.
Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg News
“As we've seen, the issues are complex, and the details matter,” Julius Genachowski, the F.C.C. chairman, said in a statement.
After months spent gathering comments about preserving an open and competitive Internet, the F.C.C. requested more feedback on Wednesday about whether regulations should apply to wireless Internet service.
The agency is also asking for comments about one of the most hotly debated Internet regulatory issues: special services that offer to prioritize certain digital traffic for a fee.
Those two issues were at the center of a recent proposal by Verizon and Google that generated widespread debate in the telecommunications and Internet communities.
Last month, Google and Verizon proposed a framework that would offer some consumer protections for an open Internet but would allow broadband service providers the freedom to speed the delivery of some digital content for a fee.
The proposal also would exclude wireless broadband from nearly all regulation.
The F.C.C.’s decision to seek further comment during the next 55 days effectively precluded any commission actions until after the Congressional elections in November.
Lawmakers of both parties have accused the F.C.C. of trying to “regulate the Internet” with recent proposals that would give it authority over the companies that provide consumers with Internet connections.
Several public advocacy groups expressed anger at the F.C.C.’s move, accusing it of trying to duck a politically difficult decision.
Those groups have been pushing for the commission to re-establish its authority over Internet service providers and to guarantee the open-access practice known as net neutrality.
“I think it has the appearance of the F.C.C. kicking the can down the road,” said Derek Turner, research director for Free Press. “The job of the F.C.C. is to protect the public interest. That includes making the really hard decisions that may anger some powerful industry incumbents.”
F.C.C. officials said the request for additional comments was tied in part to the Google-Verizon proposal. But the agency was also trying to guard against generating unintended negative consequences, and to ensure that any rules it did adopt would not be thrown out on a technical claim that the commission had not followed federal rule-making procedures.
“As we’ve seen, the issues are complex, and the details matter,” Julius Genachowski, the F.C.C. chairman, said in a statement. “Even a proposal for enforceable rules can be flawed in its specifics and risk undermining the fundamental goal of preserving an open Internet.”
The F.C.C.’s proposed rules on preserving an open Internet were also blocked by an appeals court decision in April that struck down the commission’s legal basis for enforcing net neutrality — the concept that no legal content or application should receive priority on the Internet or be blocked by an Internet service provider.
The commission has floated a separate proposal that would reclassify broadband Internet service under a portion of the Communications Act that regulates telephone and other telecommunications services.
Currently, Internet access is defined as an information service, a category that is lightly regulated under the act. The F.C.C.’s reclassification proposal is intended in part to allow the commission to enforce net neutrality.
Thomas J. Tauke, an executive vice president at Verizon, said the company was encouraged by the commission’s decision to further study net neutrality as it applied to wireless broadband and specialized services.
“At the same time, it remains clear that whatever action the F.C.C. takes will be clouded by legal uncertainty until the Congress enacts legislation that spells out the authority of the F.C.C. and establishes a broadband policy,” Mr. Tauke said.
Portions of the commission’s notice cited examples that could give hints of the F.C.C.’s leanings on the wireless issue. It said that AT&T’s Mobility wireless broadband service and the Leap Wireless broadband service had recently introduced pricing plans that charged different prices based on the amount of data a customer used.
“The emergence of these new business models may reduce mobile broadband providers’ incentives to employ more restrictive network management practices that run afoul of open Internet principles,” the commission said.
The F.C.C.’s notice also raised issues concerning specialized services, including its desire for a clear definition of what they were and whether they would supplant the open Internet by reducing investment on expanded Internet network capacity.

Of Two Minds About Books

SAN FRANCISCO — Auriane and Sebastien de Halleux are at sharp odds over “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” but not about the plot. The problem is that she prefers the book version, while he reads it on his iPad. And in this literary dispute, the couple says, it’s ne’er the twain shall meet.
Leah Nash for The New York Times
In Portland, Ore., a shopper, Baker Poulshock, at Powell’s City of Books, known for its large selection.
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press
In Hackensack, N.J., Kate Natoli and Ryan, 2, with the Nook e-book reader at Barnes & Noble.
“She talks about the smell of the paper and the feeling of holding it in your hands,” said Mr. de Halleux, 32, who says he thinks the substance is the same regardless of medium. He added, sounding mildly piqued, “She uses the word ‘real.’ ”
By the end of this year, 10.3 million people are expected to own e-readers in the United States, buying about 100 million e-books, the market research company Forrester predicts. This is up from 3.7 million e-readers and 30 million e-books sold last year.
The trend is wreaking havoc inside the publishing industry, but inside homes, the plot takes a personal twist as couples find themselves torn over the “right way” to read. At bedtime, a couple might sit side-by-side, one turning pages by lamplight and the other reading Caecilia font in E Ink on a Kindle or backlighted by the illuminated LCD screen of an iPad, each quietly judgmental.
Although there are no statistics on how widespread the battles are, the publishing industry is paying close attention, trying to figure out how to market books to households that read in different ways.
A few publishers and bookstores are testing the bundling of print books with e-books at a discount. Barnes & Noble started offering bundles in June at about 50 stores and plans to expand the program in the fall, said Mary Ellen Keating, a Barnes & Noble spokeswoman.
Thomas Nelson, a publisher of religious books, offers free e-books with a print book for some titles. It is particularly good for readers who want to share books with family or friends who read in different formats, said Tod Shuttleworth, senior vice president and group publisher at Thomas Nelson. The bundles have sold well, and Thomas Nelson is considering adding more for the holiday shopping season.
Meanwhile, Amazon.com is doing its best to convince print lovers that “reading on Kindle is nothing like reading on a computer screen.” Its Web site promises a display on which “text ‘pops’ from the page, creating a reading experience most similar to reading on printed paper” because it produces neither glare in a well-lighted spot nor a glow in the dark.
Sony, which introduced a new line of e-readers Wednesday, said they were smaller and lighter than before, with clearer text and touch screens, all to make them feel more like printed books. “Consistently the No. 1 thing we heard was it needs to feel like a book, so you just forget that you have a device in your hand,” said Steve Haber, president of Sony’s digital reading division.
This straddle-the-line marketing underscores a deeper tension: the desire to keep the print business alive so as not to alienate a core market, while establishing a base for a future that publishers see as increasingly digital, said James L. McQuivey, an e-reader industry analyst with Forrester.
“There is much more emotional attachment to the paper book than there is to the CD or the DVD,” said Mike Shatzkin, founder and chief executive of the Idea Logical Company, which advises book publishers on digital change. “It is not logical — it’s visceral.”
A print book bundled with an e-book would have been useful for Liz Aybar, 35, and Betsy Conti, 31, a Denver couple who like reading together so much that when they read “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” in paperback, Ms. Conti ripped out sections of the book as she finished them so Ms. Aybar could read them.
But since Ms. Conti, a director of technology, bought an iPad, she has gone to the other side. They are both reading Ken Robinson’s “The Element,” but bought two separate copies — a print book for $15 and a $13 Kindle version for the iPad.
“I feel more connected to a book than I do through the iPad,” said Ms. Aybar, who works at an education nonprofit group.
Alexandra Ringe, an editor, and her husband, Jim Hanas, a fiction writer, both 41, fell in love over books, with one of their early dates at a used-book festival in Manhattan. They married in a SoHo bookstore and live in an apartment in the Park Slope neighborhood with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves.
She collects vintage yearbooks and self-help books. But he likes to read on his iPhone.
“For me, real reading is for e-books, and books have become this kind of collectors’ object,” said Mr. Hanas, who has published short stories in literary journals like McSweeney’s and is publishing his next book, “Why They Cried,” only in digital format. “It’s kind of amazing to see people still going through the stages of acceptance that books are going away, saying they like the way books feel and smell. I was there, but I’m past that now.”
For Erin and Daniel Muskat, a couple in Brooklyn, the ink-stained quarrel has disrupted the togetherness of their reading habits.
Ms. Muskat, 29, bought an iPad for her husband, 33, who works at his family’s shoe business, before their honeymoon in June, but quickly discovered that his electronic reading impinged on her old-fashioned reading.
“I brought a book with me and I barely read it,” said Ms. Muskat, a media consultant. “We used to go to the beach and we’d both take out books, but he had an iPad, and it was almost distracting because it didn’t feel like he was reading with me.”
For Mr. de Halleux, a video game executive, the battle over reading tastes has skipped to a new generation. He and his wife both read to their 3-year-old son, Tristan. He reads Winnie the Pooh to the child on a screen. She reads it in old-fashioned paperback form.
Mr. de Halleux said he was confident the boy would eventually favor the digitized version. “He really likes it because you can zoom in on things,” he said.
And he said the discussion in his household had brought in his parents, too. His own father favors paperbacks, arguing they can be more easily shared, while his mother goes for the e-reader, which she says is easier on faltering eyesight as people get older.
“The argument is more heated by the day,” Mr. de Halleux said. “It’s a topic of intense scrutiny at the moment.”

Your Own Hot Spot, and Cheap

Someday, they’ll build wireless Internet into every building, just the way they build in running water, heat and electricity today. Someday, we won’t have to drive around town looking for a coffee shop when we need to check our e-mail.
Stuart Goldenberg

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The latest in technology from the Times’s David Pogue, with a new look.
The Virgin Mobile Novatel MiFi gets its Internet signal from a 3G cellphone network and converts it into a Wi-Fi signal that up to five people can share.

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If you want ubiquitous Internet today, though, you have several choices. They’re all compromised and all expensive.
You could get online using only a smartphone, but you’ll pay at least $80 a month and you’ll have to view the Internet through a shrunken keyhole of a screen. You could equip your laptop with one of those cellular air cards or U.S.B. sticks, which cost $60 a month, but you’d be limited to 5 gigabytes of data transfer a month (and how are you supposed to gauge that?). You could use tethering, in which your laptop uses your cellphone as a glorified Internet antenna — but that adds $20 or $30 to your phone bill, has a fixed data limit and eats through your phone’s battery charge in an hour.
Last year, you could hear minds blowing coast to coast when Novatel introduced a new option: the MiFi. It creates a personal Wi-Fi bubble, a portable, powerful, password-protected wireless hot spot that, because it’s the size of a porky credit card, can go with you everywhere. The MiFi gets its Internet signal from a 3G cellphone network and converts it into a Wi-Fi signal that up to five people can share.
You can just leave the thing in your pocket, your laptop bag or your purse to pump out a fresh Internet signal to everyone within 30 feet, for four hours on a charge of the removable battery. You’re instantly online whenever you fire up your laptop, netbook, Wi-Fi camera, game gadget, iPhone or iPod Touch.
The MiFi released by Virgin Mobile this week ($150) is almost exactly the same thing as the one offered by Verizon and, until recently, Sprint — but there’s a twist that makes it revolutionary all over again.
The Virgin MiFi, like its rivals, is still an amazing gizmo to have on long car rides for the family, on woodsy corporate offsite meetings, at disaster sites, at trade show booths or anywhere you can’t get Wi-Fi. If you live alone, the MiFi could even be your regular home Internet service, too — one that you can take with you when you head out the door. And it’s still insanely useful when you’re stuck on a plane on a runway.
But three things about the Virgin MiFi are very, very different. First, Virgin’s plan is unlimited. You don’t have to sweat through the month, hoping you don’t exceed the standard 5-gigabyte data limit, as you do with the cellular-modem products from Verizon, Sprint, AT&T and T-Mobile. (If you exceed 5 gigabytes, you pay steep per-megabyte overage charges, or in T-Mobile’s case, you get your Internet speed slowed down for the rest of the month.)
If you hadn’t noticed, unlimited-data plans are fast disappearing — but here’s Virgin, offering up an unlimited Internet plan as if it never got the memo.
Second, Virgin requires no contract. You can sign up for service only when you need it. In other words, it’s totally O.K. with Virgin if you leave the thing in your drawer all year, and activate it only for, say, the two summer months when you’ll be away. That’s a huge, huge deal in this era when every flavor of Internet service, portable or not, requires a two-year commitment.
Third, the service price for this no-commitment, unlimited, portable hot spot is — are you sitting down? — $40 a month.
That’s no typo. It’s $40 a month. Compare that with the cheapest cellular modems from AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint: $60 a month. T-Mobile also charges $40 a month for its cellular modems. But all four of those big companies require a two-year contract, and come with those scary 5-gigabyte monthly data limits.
(There’s actually another Virgin plan available, too: you can pay $10 for a 100-megabyte chunk of Internet use that expires in 10 days. It’s intended for people who are heading out for the weekend and just want to keep in touch with e-mail without having to fork over a whole month’s worth of money — and without paying $15 or $25 for each night of overpriced hotel Wi-Fi. And speaking of options, Virgin also offers a standard U.S.B. plug-in cellular modem with exactly the same pricing details.)
I’ve pounded my head against the fine print, grilled the product managers and researched the heck out of this, and I simply cannot find the catch.
Is it the speed? No. You’re getting exactly the same 3G speed you’d get on rival cellular modems and MiFi’s. That is, about as fast as a DSL modem. A cell modem doesn’t give you cable-modem speed, but you’ll have no problem watching online videos and, where you have a decent Sprint signal, even doing video chats.
Is it the coverage? Not really; Virgin uses Sprint’s 3G cellular Internet network, which is excellent. You’re getting exactly the same battery life and convenience of Verizon’s MiFi — for two-thirds the monthly price.

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The latest in technology from the Times’s David Pogue, with a new look.
(Why would Sprint allow Virgin to use its data network but undercut its own pricing in such a brazen way? Because Sprint is focused on promoting its 4G phones and portable hot spots — even faster Internet, available so far only in a few cities. For example, its Overdrive portable hot spot is $100 after rebate, with a two-year commitment. The service is $60 a month for 5 gigabytes of 3G data and unlimited 4G data.)
That’s not to say that there’s no fine print whatsoever.
First, the Virgin plan doesn’t include roaming off Sprint’s network; the old Sprint MiFi plans did. According to Virgin, that’s not a big deal — the regular Sprint network covers 262 million people, whereas roaming would cover 12 million more — but it means that you might be out of luck in smaller towns.
Second, the Virgin MiFi can’t plug directly into your computer’s U.S.B. port to act as a wired cellular modem, like other carriers’ MiFi units. You can connect to it only wirelessly, if you care. (You can still charge it from your computer’s U.S.B. jack, but very slowly. A wall outlet or car adapter is a much better bet.)
Finally, remember that the Virgin MiFi is still a MiFi, so it’s a bit uncommunicative. It has only a single, illuminated button that serves as the on-off switch and an indicator light that blinks cryptically in different colors. You have to press that button and wait about 20 seconds before you can get online.
But come on: $40 a month? With no commitment or contract?
I did a little survey of broadband Internet prices among my Twitter followers. Turns out $40 a month is not only a great price for cellular (portable) Internet service — it’s among the lowest broadband prices in America, period. In some areas you can pay $35 a month for DSL service. But most people pay $50 to $60 for high-speed Internet, which makes the Virgin deal seem even more incredible.
And unlike those plans, Virgin lets you turn on service only when you want it. You can buy service — as with a prepaid phone —either by calling an 800 number or visiting a Web site. Handily enough, you can get onto the Virgin Web site to re-activate your MiFi, even if you’d previously stopped paying for service.
The MiFi’s portability has always made it an exceptionally flexible and useful little gadget — and Virgin’s prepaid model, unlimited data plan and dirt-cheap pricing just multiply that flexibility. And if Virgin can make money with a plan like this, the mind boggles at just how overpriced the similar offerings from its rivals must really be.

Toyota Feels Exchange-Rate Pinch as Rivals Gain

TOKYO — For all the turmoil over Toyota’s wave of recalls, the company, the world’s largest automaker, may face a bigger problem: the surging yen.
With the yen at 15-year highs against the dollar, a 9-year peak versus the euro and still near recent heights against the won, Toyota is finding that its cars have become too expensive to compete in the increasingly cutthroat global auto market. That has created inroads around the world for its non-Japanese rivals, like Volkswagen of Germany, Hyundai of South Korea and the Detroit automakers, all of which are benefiting from relatively weaker currencies.
Hyundai is rapidly increasing its share in major markets, including the United States and China, using record profit to offer aggressive sales incentives that Toyota is struggling to match.
Volkswagen continues to dominate in Europe and across much of the Asia-Pacific region. Its chief executive, Martin Winterkorn, has said the automaker aims to be the world’s largest in sales by 2018, up from its current third place.
Analysts say the yen, which started soaring as a refuge currency in late 2008 in response to the global financial crisis, has highlighted a flaw in Toyota’s global production setup. The problem, they say, is that the company depends too heavily on factories and suppliers in its high-cost homeland. Although Toyota is taking steps to improve the ratio, about half of its cars are still assembled in Japan, many of them then shipped overseas.
“Before the yen’s surge, Toyota got by with exporting lots of cars, even though it was aware that posed a big currency risk,” said Takashi Akiyama, vice president at SC-Abeam Automotive Consulting, based in Tokyo.
“They held out for as long as they could, but now they’re seeing the consequences of stalling,” Mr. Akiyama said.
Other big Japanese exporters, like Honda, Nissan, Sony and Canon, feel the yen’s burden, too. The country’s export growth slowed for the fifth consecutive month in July, weighed down by the strong yen. But because they have moved more of their production overseas in recent years, those companies suffer much less from currency imbalances.
The difference is laid bare in a startling statistic: For every yen that the Japanese currency gains in value against its assumed dollar rate of ¥90, Toyota says, it loses ¥30 billion, or $357 million, in operating profit. If the exchange rate stays at the current ¥84 to a dollar, Toyota’s operating profit for its financial year ending next March, which the company forecasts will reach ¥330 billion, could fall by half.
By that same measure, Nissan says it loses only half as much for each yen’s gain against the dollar — about ¥15 billion yen. Sony loses but ¥2 billion.
The unfavorable foreign exchange has probably damaged Toyota more than its series of safety recalls has, by bringing margins to razor-thin levels, and a further rise in the yen raises the specter of operating losses, said Christopher Richter, a senior analyst for the automotive industry at the brokerage firm CLSA.
“Fixing the problem takes a lot of time,” Mr. Richter said. “But given how fast the yen has strengthened, time is not Toyota’s friend.”
Over the years, of course, Toyota has set up manufacturing operations outside Japan, including the United States, where it makes cars at four assembly plants, helping to buffer the effects of swings in the dollar-yen exchange rate.
Still, many of the cars Toyota sells in the U.S. market are made in Japan, especially after the automaker shuttered a plant in Fremont, California, earlier this year that had made its popular Corolla compact sedan. A total of 35 percent of the cars Toyota sells in North America are imported, compared with 10 percent for Honda.
Toyota is well aware of the need to move production closer to the consumer. Next year, Toyota plans to open a plant in Blue Springs, Mississippi, to build Corollas.
“Our goal is to produce cars where they’re sold,” said Paul Nolasco, a spokesman for Toyota in Tokyo. “Who knows when, and 100 percent might not be possible, but the idea is to try to make as many cars locally to increase local content,” he said. “That just makes business sense.”
Perhaps nowhere does Toyota need to localize production and cut costs more than in emerging markets, where its vehicles are easily undersold by competitors. Take China, now the world’s biggest auto market, where sales of the Yaris compact have fallen far short of expectations since its introduction in 2008. Although Toyota assembles the Yaris in China to take advantage of that country’s much cheaper labor, many of the parts still come from Toyota suppliers like Denso and Aisin.
That helps push the Yaris’s price tag to more than 100,000 renminbi, or almost $15,000, making it hard to compete with the likes of the new Verna subcompact sedan from Hyundai, priced as low as 73,900 renminbi, or the popular Buick Excelle from General Motors, which carries a slightly higher price tag than a Yaris but has a larger, sleeker body — delivering more bang for a buck, analysts say.
Toyota had only 5.2 percent of China’s auto market last year, trailing Hyundai, General Motors and the Chinese market leader, Volkswagen, whose Jetta family car starts at about 75,000 renminbi and is pervasive in the big cities.
In another big emerging market, India, Toyota plans to introduce the Etios compact car later this year, which analysts expect will be priced about 500,000 rupees, or $11,000 — significantly higher than the most popular models in India like the Alto from Maruti Suzuki, which starts at 323,000 rupees, or the Hyundai i10, which sells for 350,000 rupees.
Much of that pricing is deliberate: analysts say Toyota wants to build an upmarket image in India. Still, Toyota has much to learn from the market leader Maruti, a subsidiary of the Japanese automaker Suzuki that builds cars in India and procures almost all of its parts locally. Though Toyota also builds cars in India, many of its parts are from outside the country, adding to production costs. Toyota currently commands only 2.5 percent of the Indian car market, far behind Maruti Suzuki’s 40 percent.
Toyota’s slim market shares in India and China are worrisome to the company because emerging markets are expected to make up for most of the growth in the global auto industry. According to the Englewood, Colo.-based research firm, IHS Automotive, car sales in emerging economies like China and India will surge 81 percent - from about 25.8 million units in 2009 to almost 47 million units in 2016. During that time, sales in industrialized economies will grow at half that rate, from 31.7 million to 45.3 million, or an increase of 43 percent, according to IHS Automotive.
To capture a bigger part of those burgeoning markets, Toyota says it is seeking to increase local production and its use of locally supplied parts in both India and China. But it takes time and sizable investment to set up local production networks, analysts say.
“Toyota already knows that it must shift more production overseas, and it must make a push into emerging markets,” said Masatoshi Nishimoto, senior manager at IHS Automotive. “But it isn’t an easy task to build supplier networks overseas,” he said. “Then there’s the question of what to do with the excess capacity in Japan.”
The challenge demonstrates how Toyota is paying for not moving more production to lower-cost countries during a manufacturing boom in the mid-2000s, when Toyota enjoyed record profits. The yen stayed weak during that time, helping to make Toyota competitive and fueling the company’s global expansion.
Toyota held back from shifting production away from Japan and procuring components from overseas parts makers, analysts say, partly because of its traditionally strong relationship with many Japanese suppliers.
Toyota’s smaller compatriot, Nissan, has been more aggressive in shifting production overseas. This year, it transplanted the entire production line for its popular March minicar to Thailand, for example, and now imports cars even for the Japanese market from its Thai factory — an unprecedented move for a Japanese automaker. But the shift makes sense: Personnel costs at its main factory in Oppama, Japan were 10 times those in Thailand.
It is non-Japanese global automakers like General Motors, Volkswagen and a new rising star, Hyundai, that are poised to benefit most from Toyota’s troubles.
Volkswagen, of Germany, was an early entrant into the Chinese market and enjoys an almost 20 percent market share there — the highest among foreign automakers. And Volkswagen continues to dominate in Europe, where Japanese automakers have recently been shut out by a prohibitively high exchange rate.
Meanwhile, Hyundai, of South Korea, is reaping the rewards of a weak won, which has bolstered its competitiveness alongside its Japanese rivals. In China, it leads Japanese automakers with a 6.2 percent share in 2009, and has also garnered 14 percent of Indian market, where it plans to bring out a car that costs as little as $5,000 by 2012.
In the United States, the weak won has allowed Hyundai to offer much more aggressive sales incentives than Toyota, allowing it to chip away at Toyota’s market share, which fell to 15.2 percent in August from 16.6 percent at the start of the year.
Ford, Nissan and Volkswagen, by contrast, have added market share in the United States.
Still, Toyota is in a tough spot. Moving production overseas would inevitably mean cutting capacity — and jobs — in Japan, something the automaker has hitherto avoided. Exporters are under immense pressure to keep jobs in Japan; however, government hesitation against taking steps to weaken the yen through intervention or monetary policy is adding to exporters’ frustrations.
In a Japanese government survey of 102 exporters, released last week, 39 percent of companies said that they would transfer their factories overseas if the yen stayed at current levels.
Some analysts say that it is a good chance for Japan to get over its obsession with manufacturing, move production overseas, and make a long-awaited move into services.
“It would be a tough transition,” said Kazuki Ohara, a senior management consultant at the Tokyo-based Nomura Research Institute. “But instead of trying to curb the strong yen or ride it out,” he said, “it would be better for Japan to build an economy that thrives on a strong currency.”