четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Siemens AG returns to profit in Q4

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — German industrial equipment maker Siemens AG swung back to profit in its fiscal fourth quarter as sales increased in Asia.

The company said Thursday it made a net profit of €1.23 billion ($1.66 billion) in the three months to end-September in contrast to the loss of €396 million loss in the same quarter a year ago, when the company had a large one-time charge at its health care division.

The company increased its dividend but gave an outlook for only moderate sales growth and indicated it didn't expect profits to rise next year.

Revenues rose 5 percent to €20.35 billion, boosted by a 12 percent increase in Asia. The company said Thursday sales …

Suspected US missile strike kills 2 in Pakistan

Two intelligence officials say a suspected U.S. missile strike has killed two people in Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region.

The Saturday strike was the sixth in about a week in the area. Two missiles fired by a suspected unmanned drone hit a house in Data Khel, an area that is a stronghold of the Haqqani militant …

Morris feels his old game coming back

Bam Morris is getting there.

Signed 10 days ago as a free agent to replace holdout rookieCurtis Enis, he started slowly but looked like the old Bam Morris inthe second half, scoring two touchdowns in the Bears' preseason lossto Arizona.

Morris said he had butterflies in the first half for the firsttime since he was a rookie. He was stopped for losses of three yardsand one yard in two first-half carries. But in the second half hehad seven carries for 27 yards, including touchdown runs of two andfive yards.

"Overall, the question is, do I still have what I had? Yes,"Morris said. "In fact, I may (be) even better. When I lose sevenpounds in a couple of …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

Freeskier dies from injuries after fall at event

KIRKWOOD, Calif. (AP) — A California ski resort spokesman says a professional big-mountain skier who was seriously hurt in a bad landing after doing a back flip off a cliff during a weekend competition has died.

Kirkwood Ski Resort spokesman Michael Dalzell says Ryan Hawks died at a local hospital on Tuesday. The 25-year-old member of the Green Mountain Freeride team from Vermont was competing in the North …

Phew! Asteroid's passing was a cosmic near-miss

An asteroid about the size of one that blasted Siberia a century ago just buzzed by Earth.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory reported that the asteroid zoomed past Monday morning.

The asteroid named 2009 DD45 was about 48,800 miles (78,500 kilometers) from Earth. That is just twice the height of some telecommunications satellites and about a fifth of the distance to the …

Bath rugby: A failure of management?

It is almost accepted that the person who purports to be incharge of any organisation should take the ultimate responsibilityfor any unacceptable actions taken by members of his organisation;the current scandals relating to MPs' expenses and the fallout atCabinet level for example.

However, I do not read of the same conclusions with regards toBath Rugby Club.

The recent publicised outgoings of high-profile players(including two former club captains) following the banning ofanother high profile player and the unexplained, unsatisfactoryexodus of an overseas player appear to have left the managementintact without, what appears to me, any share of …

Melo Drops 34 As Nuggets Beat Raptors

DENVER - Carmelo Anthony scored 34 points - his sixth straight game of 30 or more points - and Denver won at home for the first time this season with a 117-109 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Saturday night.

T.J. Ford finished with 26 points and a career-high 18 assists for Toronto. Chris Bosh had 31 points and nine rebounds.

Anthony, Bosh and Ford were all part of the 2003 NBA draft class.

J.R. Smith finished with 16 points, including four 3-pointers, for Denver, which had seven players score in double figures. Reggie Evans had a double-double with 10 points and 12 boards. Joe Smith finished with 11 rebounds.

Anthony, who was 11-for-11 from the …

National Basketball Association

W L Pct GB
Boston 41 9 .820 _
Philadelphia 23 24 .489 16 1/2
New Jersey 23 27 .460 18
New York 21 27 .438 19
Toronto 19 32 .373 22 1/2
Southeast Division
W L Pct GB
Orlando 37 11 .771 _
Atlanta 28 20 .583 9
Miami 26 22 .542 11

Socialist Borja sworn in as president of Ecuador

QUITO (AP) Rodrigo Borja, a socialist who has promised anonaligned foreign policy and an end to Ecuador's free-marketeconomy, was sworn in Wednesday as president.

Foreign leaders in attendance included President Fidel Castro ofCuba and U.S. Secretary of State George P. Shultz. They did not meetwith each other.

Shultz did meet for 45 minutes with Borja and said that themeeting was cordial.

Borja, a 53-year-old law professor, is a vice president of theSocialist International and …

President Bush Says Turning 60 Not So Bad

WASHINGTON - After months of griping about getting old, President Bush turned 60 Thursday and decided it wasn't so bad after all.

"Let me just say this: It's a lot younger than you think," the birthday boy said with a rueful smile.

There were surprises, a spilled secret, a song and congratulatory calls from afar.

Chinese President Hu Jintao and Russian President Vladimir Putin both wished Bush happy birthday in separate telephone conversations that focused on a less-cheerful subject: North Korea's missile tests this week.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, visiting the White House, also brought birthday greetings and a surprise gift. But Bush found …

England Lions reach 64 without loss at lunch

Stephen Moore scored his first century of the season to help England Lions reach 185 for two against Australia, which had fast bowler Brett Lee to thank for bringing the tourists back into the game at Worcester on Thursday.

Lee claimed two wickets just before the interval to help Australia rebound from an opening stand of 172 on the second day of the final practice game before the Ashes.

ooe egstre hs enur (n 47deivris)inth oer bfore thebreak when he cover drove Lee for a boundary and received a congratulatory pat on the back from the bowler. Moore was on 103 at tea with Vikram Solanki on six.

Moore's opening partner Joe Denly was bowled by fast …

CUBS BITS

It didn't take manager Don Zimmer long to make up his mind aboutSteve Wilson's immediate future: "He's in the bullpen and (Paul)Kilgus will pitch Sunday. I gave it a lot of thought. But thereason we are where we are today is because of the bullpen. I don'twant to break up the bullpen. The bullpen is where I want it to beright now. (Wilson's) got so many important outs for us. He may helpus win four games (out of the pen) in a week instead of just one as astarter." Wilson is 2-0 as a starter after Tuesday's five-inning stint in a4-1 victory over the Phillies, but, in Zimmer's words, "If Kilgusdoesn't get the job done, I can always start (Jeff) Pico or (Calvin)Schiraldi, but I …

AUTOS ONLINE

Microsoft's CarPoint Web site also provides information about pricesand availability of cars. Site addresses:www.carpoint.comwww.chevrolet.comwww.ford.comwww.chrysler.comwww.nissan-usa.comwww.bmw.comwww.saturncars.com

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

S. Africans protest schools

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Police fired tear gas Tuesday todisperse a march by black children who were protesting conditions intownship schools.

The incident took place outside a high school in the blacktownship of Soweto on the eve of a planned takeover of three vacantwhite schools.

The National Education Coordinating Committee said it hadplanned today's occupations "as a last-ditch attempt . . . to find aninterim solution" to South Africa's education crisis.

Despite the repeal of apartheid laws, the country's educationalsystem remains segregated.

Several white public schools have been closed because ofdeclining enrollment, while schools in black townships often areseverely crowded and dilapidated.

Amon Msane of the Education Coordinating Committee saidthousands of students from black schools would be bused to the vacantwhite schools to call attention to the problem.

"The campaign is planned for one day only, and thereafter wewill wait and see how the government responds to our demand to openthese schools to children of all races," Msane told a news conferenceTuesday.

About 150 children took part in the protest outside Orlando WestHigh School in Soweto.

Also Tuesday, a police report said officers shot to death oneyouth and wounded five when black students tried to take over a newlyopened black high school. The motive for the attempted takeover wasnot clear.

FOMC increases target rate by 25 basis points

The target for the federal funds rate was increased by 25 basis points to 2 percent at last month's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee. In its statement, the FOMC said it "believes that, even after this action, the stance of monetary policy remains accommodative and, coupled with robust underlying growth in productivity, is providing ongoing support to economic activity. Output appears to be growing at a moderate pace despite the rise in energy prices, and labor market conditions have improved. Inflation and longer-term inflation expectations remain well contained."

In its statement, the FOMC said it perceives the upside and downside risks to the attainment of both sustainable growth and price stability for the next few quarters to be roughly equal. With underlying inflation expected to be relatively low, the FOMC said it believes that policy accommodation can be removed at a pace that is likely to be measured. Nonetheless, the FOMG said it will respond to changes in economic prospects as needed to fulfill its obligation to maintain price stability.

In a related action, the Board of Governors unanimously approved a 25 basis point increase in the discount rate to 3 percent.

Following the FOMC and Fed actions, money center banks announced increases in their prime rates from 4.75 percent to 5 percent.

US food companies fight dairy farmers over import fees

A fight in Congress over whether to assess fees on dairy imports to help pay for promoting dairy products in this country pitting dairy farmers against big-name U.S. food companies, cheese importers, foreign countries _ and even the outlying U.S. areas of Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.

The Bush administration never implemented a dairy import assessment approved by Congress in 2002 because the Agriculture Department concluded the fees could create the appearance of favorable treatment. The fees on domestic producers are levied only on dairy farmers in the 48 contiguous United States, which excludes the states of Hawaii and Alaska as well as U.S. territories.

This year, the chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, Democratic Rep. Collin Peterson, inserted a measure into the 2007 farm bill that would extend the mandatory fee to dairy farmers in Hawaii and Alaska (ranked 48th and 50th in dairy production, respectively) and Puerto Rico, a Caribbean U.S. territory. That would remove the trade hurdle and pave the way for fees on imports, he argued.

The House passed the farm bill in July, but it awaits action in the Senate.

U.S. dairy farmers pay 15 cents per 100 pounds of milk sold for the promotions. Cheese importers would pay around 1.5 cents a pound because it takes about 10 pounds of milk to make a pound of cheese. The promotions pay for things like the "3-A-Day" marketing campaign, which encourages people to consume three servings of milk, cheese or yogurt a day.

The Senate version of the farm bill does not include the dairy imports language and eight senators _ including the four from Alaska and Hawaii _ sent a letter to Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Tom Harkin, a Democrat, urging rejection of the House language.

They said dairy production was declining in the two states and "any further reduction in these farmers' incomes could have a devastating effect." They also argued it was unfair to extend the fees to dairy imports, saying the program does not promote imported cheeses or dairy ingredients, such as milk proteins. Separately, the governor of Puerto Rico, Anibal Acevedo Vila, thanked Harkin for leaving the language out of the Senate bill.

But senators from large dairy-producing states such as Wisconsin and California are pushing for the House provision. Thirteen senators, led by Russ Feingold, a Wisconsin Democrat, called on the Senate to end the "freeloading of imported dairy products."

"America's dairy farmers feel that it's a fundamental issue of fairness and only want everyone _ including domestic production and imported production _ to be treated equally," said Chris Galen, a spokesman for the National Milk Producers Federation, which has been lobbying Congress to expand the dairy assessments to imports.

Cheese importers and U.S. food companies that use imported dairy products as ingredients have formed the Alliance for Fair Dairy Promotion to lobby against the assessment. The coalition includes companies such as ConAgra Foods, General Mills, Kraft Foods and Nestle, as well as groups such as the Cheese Importers Association of America, the National Taxpayers Union and the International Dairy Foods Association.

"It's a big priority for the companies who are importing products," said Connie Tipton, president and CEO of the International Dairy Foods Association, which represents processors of dairy products.

Opponents also include New Zealand and the European Union.

Rick Walker, vice president for government relations and trade at Fonterra USA, a subsidiary of New Zealand dairy exporter Fonterra Cooperative Group, said that his company makes ingredients, such as milk proteins, that are used in products like power bars that wouldn't benefit from promoting dairy consumption.

It is estimated that assessing imports would bring in an additional $8 million to $12 million (euro5 million to euro8 million) a year, said Becky Unkenholz, a spokeswoman for the USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service, which oversees the program. The fees on domestic producers currently brings in around $280 million (euro190 million), according to the agency.

Voter Trump a no-show: NYC board

NEW YORK — Donald Trump has not voted in primary elections for more than two decades, according to the New York City Board of Elections.

The possible GOP presidential candidate voted in a primary election in the 1989 New York City mayor's race — when Rudy Giuliani beat businessman Ronald Lauder — then didn't vote in a primary for 21 years, board spokeswoman Valerie Vazquez said Saturday.

Records also show Trump skipped the 2002 general election, when Republican incumbent Gov. George Pataki defeated Democrat H. Carl McCall, Vazquez said. But Trump told station NY1, which first reported his voting record, that he has voted in every general election.

"You're going to pay a big price because you're wrong," he told the station. "I have records that I voted and so does the Board of Elections . . . I signed in at every election."

AP

Donald TrumpTIMOTHY A. CLARY

Euromart leaders to send Soviets $1 billion more aid

ROME Leaders of the 12 European Community countries, alarmed bythe growing political threat to President Mikhail S. Gorbachev,decided Friday to send $1 billion in fresh emergency aid to theSoviet Union to help alleviate consumer discontent with foodshortages.

The 12 European heads of government, who gathered here for atwo-day meeting to launch ambitious new efforts to accelerate thedrive toward political and economic union in this decade, also agreedto stand firm with the United States in warning Iraqi PresidentSaddam Hussein to withdraw from Kuwait by Jan. 15 or face a possibleWestern military assault to evict his forces from the occupiedsheikdom.

While heeding a plea contained in an open letter from PresidentBush to avoid linking Kuwait "with other issues," the Europeanleaders were nonetheless expected to issue a declaration when theirmeeting concludes today reaffirming their desire to move quicklytoward an international peace conference on the Middle East soonafter the Persian Gulf crisis is resolved.

The gulf crisis was discussed at length over dinner after the 12government leaders spent much of their first day assessing the direplight facing the Soviet Union and its former allies in EasternEurope. In offering a new infusion of emergency aid, the EuropeanCommunity leaders said they would attempt to minimize any additionaldebt load for the beleaguered Soviet economy by extending much of theassistance, especially food, as an outright gift.

Fearing that a tardy rescue effort could trigger economic chaosand a stampede of desperate immigrants toward their affluentcountries, the West European leaders also agreed to send nearly $2billion in assistance to East European states to help their fragileeconomies adjust to free markets and survive the coming winter.

Much of the new aid to Eastern Europe will be used to tightenWestern links with Hungary and Czechoslovakia by hastening theconvertibility of their currencies. In countries where moredesperate conditions prevail, such as Bulgaria and Romania, nearly$300 million in urgent food and oil supplies will be delivered soon.

German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, whose country has agreed tofunnel more than $6 billion in bilateral aid to the Soviet Union,appealed to his European peers to expedite all assistance, especiallyfood and medicine, to thwart a potential political challenge thatcould topple Gorbachev and terminate his reforms.

Kohl's plea was backed by French President Francois Mitterrand,who was quoted by his spokesman as saying, "We can't wait any longeror we may regret any failure to move more quickly" to help the Sovietleader surmount his domestic critics.

The new British prime minister , John Major , making hisdiplomatic debut on the European leadership stage, concurred with theneed to speed up aid to the Soviets but expressed some caution aboutthe risk of squandering supplies and overburdening the dilapidatedSoviet transport network.

Search continues for border officials' plane

Searchers scoured rugged desert Tuesday for a small plane that disappeared while carrying the Mexican and U.S. heads of the International Water and Boundary Commission.

The chartered Cessna 421 carrying U.S. commissioner Carlos Marin and his Mexican counterpart, Arturo Herrera, was reported missing Monday after it didn't land as scheduled in Presidio, Texas, about 250 miles southeast of El Paso. Jake Brisbin Jr., executive director of the Rio Grande Council of Governments, was also on the plane along with a pilot, according to Presidio County Judge Jerry Agen.

Sally Spener, a spokeswoman for the IBWC in El Paso, said searchers were concentrating on a desert area west of Ojinaga, Mexico, a border city across the Rio Grande from Presidio.

Spener said the plane left El Paso just after 10 a.m. Monday and was scheduled to pass over the Luis Leon Reservoir in northern Mexico so the men could view floodwaters that continue to threaten levees on both sides of the border near Presidio.

Marin has worked with the IBWC's U.S. section since 1997. He was appointed interim commissioner in 2005 and President Bush appointed him commissioner the next year. Herrera has led the Mexican section of the IBWC since 1989.

The agency is responsible for maintaining the border between the U.S. and Mexico. In areas divided by the Rio Grande, that includes building and maintaining levees.

Marin, Herrera, and Brisbin were headed to the area Monday to discuss ongoing flooding that has prompted hundreds of residents to evacuate on both sides of the swollen river.

Spener said Tuesday that a levee along the Rio Conchos, a river that feeds into the Rio Grande, failed Monday night. Flood waters were reported in low-lying areas on the western side of Ojinaga. Monday afternoon, houses and businesses near the Rio Grande levee in the Mexican border city were lined with sandbags and appeared empty.

Electronic Arts posts higher 4Q earnings, revenue

NEW YORK (AP) — Electronic Arts says its quarterly earnings rose fivefold on strong revenue from online games and titles including "Crysis 2" and "Dragon Age 2." But its outlook disappointed investors, sending shares lower after-hours.

Electronic Arts Inc. said Wednesday that it earned $151 million, or 45 cents per share, in the January-March period. That's up from $30 million, or 9 cents per share, in the same period a year earlier.

EA's adjusted profit of 25 cents per share handily surpassed Wall Street's expectations. Revenue grew 11 percent to $1.09 billion from $979 million in the fiscal fourth quarter.

For the current fiscal year, Redwood City, California-based EA is forecasting adjusted earnings of 70 cents to 90 cents per share, compared with analysts' average estimate of 85 cents. Shares fell 2 percent in aftermarket trading.

After-school program to double enrollment $8 mil. expansion will provide more training, paid apprenticeships

After School Matters--the year-round arts, sports and technologyprogram for Chicago teenagers that sprung out of Gallery 37--willreach into 11 more neighborhoods this school year and double itsenrollment, thanks to an $8 million expansion unveiled Thursday.

Mayor Daley said Chicago is bucking a nationwide trend by findingways to positively engage 14,000 teens--up from 7,000 currently--during after-school hours when high school students are most at riskof delving into sex, drugs and crime.

"Around the country, many schools are dropping after-schoolprograms because they say teenagers don't find them interesting, butAfter School Matters has shown that teens want to be engaged," themayor told a news conference at Garfield Park, 100 N. Central Park.

"The arts, cultural institutions and after-school programs have ahuge effect on educational issues. Those kids--once they get engaged--they can speak. They can write. They can count. They can doeverything."

Gallery 37 is the award-winning arts apprenticeship programconceived by the mayor's wife, Maggie, in 1991 to use Block 37, theembarrassing hole in the Loop.

In 2000, at the behest of Maggie Daley, the program was expandedto sports and technology, under an after-school initiative that nowprovides training and paid apprenticeships in areas ranging fromcoaching, Web site design and newsletter writing to broadcasting,video production, robotics, dance and poetry.

The goal was to reach 50 percent of Chicago public high schoolstudents by the end of 2005. Thursday's expansion puts Chicago ontarget to more than meet that goal--at a time when there are threetimes as many applicants as there are vacancies, said Nancy Neir-Wachs, executive director of After School Matters.

Donations from corporations, individuals and foundations will fundpart of the expansion, and the Park District and Chicago Board ofEducation will finance the rest.

By increasing the annual budget of After School Matters to $17million--up from $9 million currently--teen programs will reach intounserved neighborhoods such as Chatham, Douglas, Mount Greenwood andWest Town. Programs at Schurz, Collins and Robeson High Schools,where demand is particularly high, will double. Six other unservedhigh schools--Kelly, Calumet, Kelvyn Park, Roosevelt, Foeman andProsser--will join the list.

Daley publicly thanked his wife for prodding him to broaden theGallery 37 umbrella to cover as many teens as possible.

The mayor said Maggie constantly reminds him "how important it isthat we, as a community, really provide more programs for teenagers."

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Bobby Brown agrees to community service after being found with cocaine in Massachusetts

Singer Bobby Brown will not face criminal charges after police said they found a small amount of cocaine in his possession.

Brown's attorney said Tuesday a Brockton District Court clerk magistrate found no probable cause to issue a criminal complaint, but recommended that Brown volunteer to mentor young people, which Brown wanted to do anyway.

Brown agreed to a year's community service and his attorney said if no other issues arise over the next year, the matter will be struck from the docket.

The case began when police responding to a disturbance at a Brockton hotel on Dec. 1. They said they found the 39-year-old Brown sitting in a sports utility vehicle in the parking lot, with cocaine in his possession.

The Boston native is the former husband of singer Whitney Houston and stars in the Country Music Television Network show "Gone Country."

Arizona's Wells will probably play Sunday

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Arizona running back Beanie Wells went through much more of practice on Thursday, increasing the probability that he will play Sunday in the Cardinals' home opener against the Oakland Raiders.

Wells, who led the team in rushing as a rookie last season, sat out the first two games of the season because of a bruised right knee.

Coach Ken Whisenhunt said Wells looked "really good" in practice. The coach said he is "very optimistic" Wells will play.

Wells said he is tremendously improved from last week and is practicing full speed, not even thinking about the injury.

Brazil Results

Weekend results in the 5th round of the Brazilian championship:

Sunday

Internacional 4, Atletico Parana 1

Guarani 0, Sao Paulo 0

Corinthians 4, Santos 2

Atletico Mineiro 1, Fluminense 3

Botafogo 1, Vasco da Gama 1

Ceara 1, Cruzeiro 2

Atletico Goiania 1, Goias 3

Saturday

Flamengo 1, Gremio 1

Avai 0, Vitoria 0

Palmeiras 0, Prudente 0

Taipei gays protest homophobic memo

More than 100 gay people protested at Taipei City Hall on March 2 after the Ministry of Education sent a memo to high schools advising them to ban "homosexual activities," the China Post reported.

The federal agency issued the memo after a Taipei City Council committee discussed, but did not pass, a resolution suggesting that the city government investigate how to "prevent high school student groups from leading students into homosexual activities."

The demonstrators demanded that the national government explain itself and apologize. More than 110 organizations signed a petition to the same effect.

Ministry of Education Secretary General Tsang Tsan-chin responded with an official apology.

Protest organizer Gay & Lesbian Awakening Days said banning gay groups in schools interferes with students' natural development, according to the Post.

"We do not become homosexual because our friends are homosexual," GLAD said. "Through homosexual groups and with the support of peers with similar experiences, we can overcome the feelings of inferiority and fear pressed on us by the society and understand and accept ourselves."

Rice Takes Mideast Mission to Israel

JERUSALEM - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday the time has come for a new Middle East and an urgent end to the violence hanging over the region.

"I have no doubt there are those who wish to strangle a democratic and sovereign Lebanon in its crib," Rice said. "We, of course, also urgently want to end the violence."

Standing beside Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert as they prepared to meet in his office, Rice reiterated the United States position that a cessation of hostilities in Lebanon must come with conditions that make an enduring peace.

"It is time for a new Middle East," she said. "It is time to say to those that don't want a different kind of Middle East that we will prevail. They will not."

Olmert welcomed Rice warmly and vowed that "Israel is determined to carry on this fight against Hezbollah." He said his government will not hesitate to take the "most severe measures" to neutralize the threat coming from the Labanese territory controlled by Hezbollah.

Earlier in Beiruit, Rice disappointed her Lebanese hosts by saying in a face-to-face visit that the U.S. would not press Israel for a quick cease-fire without addressing the longer-term threat from Hezbollah.

With little diplomatic progress to show for her lightning trip to Beirut early Monday, the Bush administration instead focused on the announcement of $30 million in humanitarian aid for Lebanon, which has borne the brunt of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.

Rice's visit marked the first high-level U.S. diplomatic mission to the area since fighting erupted on July 12, violence that has complicated hopes for peace and democracy in the region.

Lebanese leaders had hoped her trip would hasten a cease-fire in the fighting between Israel and the Hezbollah militants in Lebanon that has claimed hundreds of lives, mostly Lebanese civilians.

"Thank you for your courage and steadfastness," she told Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, who has repeatedly asked for international help in bringing a halt to cross-border Israeli-Hezbollah shelling. Rice flew next to Jerusalem but made clear that she would not pressure Israeli leaders for an immediate cease-fire during meetings Monday and Tuesday.

"We're talking about the humanitarian situation, and we're also talking about a durable way to end the violence," Rice said before leaving Lebanon.

In a meeting that appeared tense, Saniora told the U.S. diplomat that Israel's bombardment had taken his country "backwards 50 years," the prime minister's office said. And Nabih Berri, a veteran Lebanese politician who is Lebanon's parliament speaker and Hezbollah's de facto negotiator, rejected proposals brought by Rice almost as soon as she left.

Berri told Rice that a cease-fire must precede any talks about resolving Hezbollah's presence in Lebanon, an official close to the speaker said. Rice, reflecting the U.S. view that a quick cease-fire would not be sustainable, had proposed that the fighting stop at the same time that an international force deployed in southern Lebanon, the official said. Rice also proposed that Hezbollah weapons be removed from a buffer zone extending about 18 miles from the Israeli border, said the official. He spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks were private.

Berri proposed instead a two-phased plan. First would come a cease-fire and negotiations for a prisoner swap. Then an inter-Lebanese dialogue would work out a solution to the situation in south Lebanon.

The Bush administration has said that a cease-fire would be premature unless it addresses the threat Hezbollah fighters pose to Israel.

Asked whether Rice's meeting with Berri went poorly, Assistant Secretary of State David Welch replied, "That's unfair." Welch added, however, that Berri approached the session with the position that a prisoner exchange would resolve other problems.

"That is not what we think," Welch said.

Underscoring the fragile security situation, Rice's car convoy whisked past armed Lebanese security guards as it shuttled across the battered capital. Though south Beirut has been heavily targeted by Israeli warplanes because of Hezbollah's presence there, no explosions were heard during her stay.

Rice said Bush wanted her to make Lebanon the first stop on her trip to the region. Her aides also sought to put a distinctly U.S. mark on diplomatic efforts. Yet she's offered no solutions publicly to end the violence and reach the long-term solution the U.S. is seeking.

"With this stop now, we - the United States - are firmly in the picture in leading the diplomacy, with the secretary of state doing that job," Welch said.

Rice's nearly two-hour meeting with Saniora went on longer than planned. She also met for about 45 minutes with Berri, who is considered friendly to Syria, which held political and military sway in Lebanon for decades before pulling out troops last year.

Going into the session at Berri's lavish office and residence, Rice said, "I am deeply concerned about the Lebanese people and what they are enduring. I am obviously concerned about the humanitarian situation."

Berri is an influential figure in Lebanon's complicated and factionalized political structure. Although the United States considers Hezbollah a terrorist group and has no direct dealings with it, Rice has met with Berri before. Rice could use her discussions with him to send an indirect message to Hezbollah, and to try applying pressure on Syria.

Rice also met with members of the Lebanese parliament who have been staunch opponents of Syria's influence in Lebanon. After visiting Israel, she was to fly to Rome, where she expects to meet with officials of European and moderate Arab governments.

Rice's five-hour visit to Beirut was not announced in advance because of concerns for her safety. She rode in a phalanx of SUVs through largely deserted streets patrolled by Lebanese Army troops.

Beirut, shattered during Lebanon's horrific civil war, has again become a war zone as Israel tries to extinguish what it calls the terrorist threat from Hezbollah militants.

American and other refugees have been streaming out of Beirut for more than a week. Israeli bombing has displaced an estimated half million people in Lebanon, and destroyed infrastructure worth an estimated $1 billion.

President Bush has ordered helicopters and ships to Lebanon to provide humanitarian aide, the White House announced.

Welch, the assistant secretary of state, said the U.S. was offering $30 million largely in goods, part of what was hoped would be a $100 million to $150 million U.N. aid package. He said the U.S. assistance would include medical kits for 100,000 people as well as 20,000 blankets.

"We are working with Israel and Lebanon to open up humanitarian corridors," Bush spokesman Tony Snow said at the White House.

Nearly 12,000 Americans have been evacuated over the past week, including more than 2,000 in the past 24 hours, said Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman.

A marketing department consortium draws faculty statewide

Forty-five professors from Texas universities attended the Texas Marketing Faculty Consortium at Baylor's Hankamer School of Business, April 11-12.

"We were very pleased to have representatives from other schools on the Baylor campus to discuss issues of relevance in the field of marketing education," says Jerry Johnson, chair of the marketing department. "We feel there are mutual benefits in having colleagues visit our facilities and interact with our faculty and students."

Drayton McLane, Jr., chairman of the Houston Astros, McLane Group L.P., and McLane Company, Inc., was the keynote speaker for the opening dinner.

Presentations of marketing research and publishing were made by professors from Texas Christian University, Texas A&M University, University of Houston-Clear Lake, University of Texas-Dallas, Southern Methodist University, the Monterrey Institute of Technology of Mexico, and Baylor.

The consortium was organized and coordinated by Johnson and Larry Chonko, the Holloway Professor of Marketing.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

BA flights canceled at Heathrow; airline seeks help with misplaced luggage

British Airways canceled more flights at its new terminal at Heathrow Airport on Wednesday and sought help from Milan, Italy, in returning misplaced luggage to its customers.

"We want to get bags quicker to customers and if it's quicker to send them to Milan or by Fed Ex we will use it," a British Airways spokeswoman said on condition of anonymity in keeping with company policy.

She said 10 percent of the mountains of misplaced bags destined for European cities was being sent to a processing center in Milan to be sorted and returned to their owners, while some for domestic destinations were sent to other airports across Britain.

Others were being handled at Heathrow.

The spokeswoman said 50 flights were canceled on Wednesday and 34 would be on Thursday.

She was unable to say when passengers would be reunited with their luggage, predicting only that it would be "over the next few weeks."

Aviation Minister Jim Fitzpatrick had told lawmakers on Monday that it could take up to a week for that to happen.

Problems emerged immediately when BA opened its gleaming new Terminal 5 last week.

Crowds of angry passengers saw flights canceled or severely delayed, leaving many to camp at the airport overnight. When flights did take off, passengers often were forced to leave their baggage behind because of problems with check-in equipment.

___

On the Net: http://www.ba.com

Fits & startups: investment capital for early-stage biotech companies rarely comes in one big dose. Executives like Randy Scott typically have to go back to the funding well several times to keep a company viable.(FUNDING)

In 2003, Randy Scott, president of US-Biomaterials, decided to take the firm's tooth remineralization formula and spin it off into a company called NovaMin Technology. NovaMin's ingredients had proven effective at strengthening teeth, eliminating tooth sensitivity and fighting cavities, and Scott and the company's other founders thought they had a winner.

Scott, starting with just $350,000, began combing through a list of potential investors, calling as many as he could every day. "I was constantly pinging on people," he says.

Scott got a nibble from a venture capital firm, Durham, N.C.-based Intersouth Investors. The firm had the kind of resources Scott was looking for, but it told him it would consider writing a check only after Scott met a list of objectives.

To keep the company going in the meantime, Scott turned to a group of friends, acquaintances and previous investors in USBiomaterials and raised $600,000. He lumped those creditors into a limited liability company, which held a convertible note that would later turn into equity in the company.

That structure enabled his investors, as shareholders of the LLC, to elect a managing member who would speak for the group--a move that proved beneficial for both sides. "From our perspective, we got a single point of contact, and from the individual investors' perspective, they now had a little bit of leverage and clout."

As NovaMin began to ramp up production and generate sales, Scott needed another round of short-term funding. This time, he turned to his board of directors, company employees and other insiders and pulled together $760,000.

Scott structured the debt differently this time around, turning the debt into bridge notes--intended to take NovaMin to the point of profitability--that came with an interest rate and a repayment plan structured as a percentage of revenue.

Tying the payback plan to the company's revenue stream was important, Scott says. With revenue still unpredictable, he needed to avoid running out of operating funds. "If revenues are low, the payments will be low and the company will be OK, but if revenues are high, then the payment will be higher and we'll be able to afford it."

By 2005, NovaMin had accomplished the goals that InterSouth had laid out. The VC firm stepped up with the first round of what was ultimately $10 million in financing. In 2008, Harbert Venture Partners of Birmingham, Ala., kicked in another $2.5 million.

The happy ending? A year later, drug giant GlaxoSmithKline bought NovaMin for $135 million.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Funding Tips

Randy Scott, an entrepreneur with a background in brand management at Procter & Gamble and marketing for LensCrafters and Nine West, offers five tips for biotech entrepreneurs looking for startup financing.

(1) Pick the right investors

Entrepreneurs often make the mistake of taking the first money that becomes available or of choosing investors who agree to take the least amount of equity in the business. Since very few biotechs survive on one round of financing, Scott advises entrepreneurs to look for patient investors with enough resources to provide funds at more than one stage. It will be hard to raise money from new investors "if the original investor isn't continuing to be committed to the deal."

(2) Consider venture debt

Square 1 Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Comerica Bank are among the few banks in the country that provide financial services to entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. "They can put together financing packages that will reduce your need to raise as much equity capital, which means you don't have to give away as much of the company," says Scott, who saved NovaMin shareholders about $1.5 million by securing debt financing from Square 1 Bank.

(3) Communicate bad news and good news

Investors "are trying to do a job too, which is to invest their investors' money. They have to make decisions all the time about how bullish or bearish to be about the individual companies in their portfolio, and it's important that they know what the status is in a real candid way. I never got punished, if you will, for delivering bad news."

(4) Anticipate future funding

Scott originally thought he could get by with around $2 million to $4 million but ultimately needed well over $10 million. "Start raising money or planning and acting based almost on a worst-case scenario as opposed to a best-case scenario." It's much easier to postpone an investment round than it is to pull one out of thin air.

(5) Eyes wide open

Plan for negative events--slower-than-expected sales, for example--and be honest about how they may play out. "Taking a slightly negative view is much less likely to hurt you than taking a slightly overly optimistic view of things."

Fits & startups: investment capital for early-stage biotech companies rarely comes in one big dose. Executives like Randy Scott typically have to go back to the funding well several times to keep a company viable.(FUNDING)

In 2003, Randy Scott, president of US-Biomaterials, decided to take the firm's tooth remineralization formula and spin it off into a company called NovaMin Technology. NovaMin's ingredients had proven effective at strengthening teeth, eliminating tooth sensitivity and fighting cavities, and Scott and the company's other founders thought they had a winner.

Scott, starting with just $350,000, began combing through a list of potential investors, calling as many as he could every day. "I was constantly pinging on people," he says.

Scott got a nibble from a venture capital firm, Durham, N.C.-based Intersouth Investors. The firm had the kind of resources Scott was looking for, but it told him it would consider writing a check only after Scott met a list of objectives.

To keep the company going in the meantime, Scott turned to a group of friends, acquaintances and previous investors in USBiomaterials and raised $600,000. He lumped those creditors into a limited liability company, which held a convertible note that would later turn into equity in the company.

That structure enabled his investors, as shareholders of the LLC, to elect a managing member who would speak for the group--a move that proved beneficial for both sides. "From our perspective, we got a single point of contact, and from the individual investors' perspective, they now had a little bit of leverage and clout."

As NovaMin began to ramp up production and generate sales, Scott needed another round of short-term funding. This time, he turned to his board of directors, company employees and other insiders and pulled together $760,000.

Scott structured the debt differently this time around, turning the debt into bridge notes--intended to take NovaMin to the point of profitability--that came with an interest rate and a repayment plan structured as a percentage of revenue.

Tying the payback plan to the company's revenue stream was important, Scott says. With revenue still unpredictable, he needed to avoid running out of operating funds. "If revenues are low, the payments will be low and the company will be OK, but if revenues are high, then the payment will be higher and we'll be able to afford it."

By 2005, NovaMin had accomplished the goals that InterSouth had laid out. The VC firm stepped up with the first round of what was ultimately $10 million in financing. In 2008, Harbert Venture Partners of Birmingham, Ala., kicked in another $2.5 million.

The happy ending? A year later, drug giant GlaxoSmithKline bought NovaMin for $135 million.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Funding Tips

Randy Scott, an entrepreneur with a background in brand management at Procter & Gamble and marketing for LensCrafters and Nine West, offers five tips for biotech entrepreneurs looking for startup financing.

(1) Pick the right investors

Entrepreneurs often make the mistake of taking the first money that becomes available or of choosing investors who agree to take the least amount of equity in the business. Since very few biotechs survive on one round of financing, Scott advises entrepreneurs to look for patient investors with enough resources to provide funds at more than one stage. It will be hard to raise money from new investors "if the original investor isn't continuing to be committed to the deal."

(2) Consider venture debt

Square 1 Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Comerica Bank are among the few banks in the country that provide financial services to entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. "They can put together financing packages that will reduce your need to raise as much equity capital, which means you don't have to give away as much of the company," says Scott, who saved NovaMin shareholders about $1.5 million by securing debt financing from Square 1 Bank.

(3) Communicate bad news and good news

Investors "are trying to do a job too, which is to invest their investors' money. They have to make decisions all the time about how bullish or bearish to be about the individual companies in their portfolio, and it's important that they know what the status is in a real candid way. I never got punished, if you will, for delivering bad news."

(4) Anticipate future funding

Scott originally thought he could get by with around $2 million to $4 million but ultimately needed well over $10 million. "Start raising money or planning and acting based almost on a worst-case scenario as opposed to a best-case scenario." It's much easier to postpone an investment round than it is to pull one out of thin air.

(5) Eyes wide open

Plan for negative events--slower-than-expected sales, for example--and be honest about how they may play out. "Taking a slightly negative view is much less likely to hurt you than taking a slightly overly optimistic view of things."

Fits & startups: investment capital for early-stage biotech companies rarely comes in one big dose. Executives like Randy Scott typically have to go back to the funding well several times to keep a company viable.(FUNDING)

In 2003, Randy Scott, president of US-Biomaterials, decided to take the firm's tooth remineralization formula and spin it off into a company called NovaMin Technology. NovaMin's ingredients had proven effective at strengthening teeth, eliminating tooth sensitivity and fighting cavities, and Scott and the company's other founders thought they had a winner.

Scott, starting with just $350,000, began combing through a list of potential investors, calling as many as he could every day. "I was constantly pinging on people," he says.

Scott got a nibble from a venture capital firm, Durham, N.C.-based Intersouth Investors. The firm had the kind of resources Scott was looking for, but it told him it would consider writing a check only after Scott met a list of objectives.

To keep the company going in the meantime, Scott turned to a group of friends, acquaintances and previous investors in USBiomaterials and raised $600,000. He lumped those creditors into a limited liability company, which held a convertible note that would later turn into equity in the company.

That structure enabled his investors, as shareholders of the LLC, to elect a managing member who would speak for the group--a move that proved beneficial for both sides. "From our perspective, we got a single point of contact, and from the individual investors' perspective, they now had a little bit of leverage and clout."

As NovaMin began to ramp up production and generate sales, Scott needed another round of short-term funding. This time, he turned to his board of directors, company employees and other insiders and pulled together $760,000.

Scott structured the debt differently this time around, turning the debt into bridge notes--intended to take NovaMin to the point of profitability--that came with an interest rate and a repayment plan structured as a percentage of revenue.

Tying the payback plan to the company's revenue stream was important, Scott says. With revenue still unpredictable, he needed to avoid running out of operating funds. "If revenues are low, the payments will be low and the company will be OK, but if revenues are high, then the payment will be higher and we'll be able to afford it."

By 2005, NovaMin had accomplished the goals that InterSouth had laid out. The VC firm stepped up with the first round of what was ultimately $10 million in financing. In 2008, Harbert Venture Partners of Birmingham, Ala., kicked in another $2.5 million.

The happy ending? A year later, drug giant GlaxoSmithKline bought NovaMin for $135 million.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Funding Tips

Randy Scott, an entrepreneur with a background in brand management at Procter & Gamble and marketing for LensCrafters and Nine West, offers five tips for biotech entrepreneurs looking for startup financing.

(1) Pick the right investors

Entrepreneurs often make the mistake of taking the first money that becomes available or of choosing investors who agree to take the least amount of equity in the business. Since very few biotechs survive on one round of financing, Scott advises entrepreneurs to look for patient investors with enough resources to provide funds at more than one stage. It will be hard to raise money from new investors "if the original investor isn't continuing to be committed to the deal."

(2) Consider venture debt

Square 1 Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Comerica Bank are among the few banks in the country that provide financial services to entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. "They can put together financing packages that will reduce your need to raise as much equity capital, which means you don't have to give away as much of the company," says Scott, who saved NovaMin shareholders about $1.5 million by securing debt financing from Square 1 Bank.

(3) Communicate bad news and good news

Investors "are trying to do a job too, which is to invest their investors' money. They have to make decisions all the time about how bullish or bearish to be about the individual companies in their portfolio, and it's important that they know what the status is in a real candid way. I never got punished, if you will, for delivering bad news."

(4) Anticipate future funding

Scott originally thought he could get by with around $2 million to $4 million but ultimately needed well over $10 million. "Start raising money or planning and acting based almost on a worst-case scenario as opposed to a best-case scenario." It's much easier to postpone an investment round than it is to pull one out of thin air.

(5) Eyes wide open

Plan for negative events--slower-than-expected sales, for example--and be honest about how they may play out. "Taking a slightly negative view is much less likely to hurt you than taking a slightly overly optimistic view of things."

Fits & startups: investment capital for early-stage biotech companies rarely comes in one big dose. Executives like Randy Scott typically have to go back to the funding well several times to keep a company viable.(FUNDING)

In 2003, Randy Scott, president of US-Biomaterials, decided to take the firm's tooth remineralization formula and spin it off into a company called NovaMin Technology. NovaMin's ingredients had proven effective at strengthening teeth, eliminating tooth sensitivity and fighting cavities, and Scott and the company's other founders thought they had a winner.

Scott, starting with just $350,000, began combing through a list of potential investors, calling as many as he could every day. "I was constantly pinging on people," he says.

Scott got a nibble from a venture capital firm, Durham, N.C.-based Intersouth Investors. The firm had the kind of resources Scott was looking for, but it told him it would consider writing a check only after Scott met a list of objectives.

To keep the company going in the meantime, Scott turned to a group of friends, acquaintances and previous investors in USBiomaterials and raised $600,000. He lumped those creditors into a limited liability company, which held a convertible note that would later turn into equity in the company.

That structure enabled his investors, as shareholders of the LLC, to elect a managing member who would speak for the group--a move that proved beneficial for both sides. "From our perspective, we got a single point of contact, and from the individual investors' perspective, they now had a little bit of leverage and clout."

As NovaMin began to ramp up production and generate sales, Scott needed another round of short-term funding. This time, he turned to his board of directors, company employees and other insiders and pulled together $760,000.

Scott structured the debt differently this time around, turning the debt into bridge notes--intended to take NovaMin to the point of profitability--that came with an interest rate and a repayment plan structured as a percentage of revenue.

Tying the payback plan to the company's revenue stream was important, Scott says. With revenue still unpredictable, he needed to avoid running out of operating funds. "If revenues are low, the payments will be low and the company will be OK, but if revenues are high, then the payment will be higher and we'll be able to afford it."

By 2005, NovaMin had accomplished the goals that InterSouth had laid out. The VC firm stepped up with the first round of what was ultimately $10 million in financing. In 2008, Harbert Venture Partners of Birmingham, Ala., kicked in another $2.5 million.

The happy ending? A year later, drug giant GlaxoSmithKline bought NovaMin for $135 million.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Funding Tips

Randy Scott, an entrepreneur with a background in brand management at Procter & Gamble and marketing for LensCrafters and Nine West, offers five tips for biotech entrepreneurs looking for startup financing.

(1) Pick the right investors

Entrepreneurs often make the mistake of taking the first money that becomes available or of choosing investors who agree to take the least amount of equity in the business. Since very few biotechs survive on one round of financing, Scott advises entrepreneurs to look for patient investors with enough resources to provide funds at more than one stage. It will be hard to raise money from new investors "if the original investor isn't continuing to be committed to the deal."

(2) Consider venture debt

Square 1 Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Comerica Bank are among the few banks in the country that provide financial services to entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. "They can put together financing packages that will reduce your need to raise as much equity capital, which means you don't have to give away as much of the company," says Scott, who saved NovaMin shareholders about $1.5 million by securing debt financing from Square 1 Bank.

(3) Communicate bad news and good news

Investors "are trying to do a job too, which is to invest their investors' money. They have to make decisions all the time about how bullish or bearish to be about the individual companies in their portfolio, and it's important that they know what the status is in a real candid way. I never got punished, if you will, for delivering bad news."

(4) Anticipate future funding

Scott originally thought he could get by with around $2 million to $4 million but ultimately needed well over $10 million. "Start raising money or planning and acting based almost on a worst-case scenario as opposed to a best-case scenario." It's much easier to postpone an investment round than it is to pull one out of thin air.

(5) Eyes wide open

Plan for negative events--slower-than-expected sales, for example--and be honest about how they may play out. "Taking a slightly negative view is much less likely to hurt you than taking a slightly overly optimistic view of things."

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

Only gun advocates speaking out

Last time I wrote about the growing complacency around what hasbeen called our "culture of violence." I called on political leadersto get serious about instituting truly effective gun controlmeasures. Last year, people wielding firearms killed more than 11,000people in the United States.

More than 100 passionate, angry readers from around the nationtold me I was wrong. I have heard from exactly four gun controladvocates. Here is a sampling, edited for space.

There are 250 million guns in private hands in America today ...trying to eliminate guns, which is seemingly the direction of yourpiece, is like trying to put toothpaste back in the tube. Case inpoint, Chicago …

Single E.U. currency, multiple risks?

LONDON - Employers and insurers should start to assess what the risks might be if and when a single currency is implemented in the European Union, a report says.

There are less than 500 working days to go until the expected start Jan. 1, 1999, in Europe of the Economic and Monetary Union, which could give rise to the single currency, known as the "euro," on Jan. 1, 2002.

"Effective risk management means that businesses must identify the wide and diverse changes that need to be made to accommodate the euro," warned the Assn. of British Insurers late last month in its Quarterly Statistics and Research Review. "Many of these changes will have to be made within the three year transition period when the euro and national currencies are in operation simultaneously."

The ABI admits it is difficult to plan ahead for such an event, given there are still uncertainties over whether a move to a single currency will happen in the United Kingdom. However, the ABI has estimated the switchover could cost the British insurance industry as much as [pounds]1 billion ($1.62 billion), and "delays in planning can only increase this cost."

Policyholders …

FUR PROTEST SHORT ON SYMPATHIZERS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: MIKE HUREWITZ Staff writer

GUILDERLAND -- ``Hey, hey, ho, ho, Beck Furs has got to go,'' chanted animals rights activists Sunday afternoon as they blocked the entrance to the fur store in Stuyvesant Plaza for more than an hour.

But, in the end, it was two protesters who had to go -- in handcuffs -- to the Guilderland police station on charges of trespassing and disorderly conduct.

After repeated warnings, authorities arrested Robert Fusco, 20, of Mechanicville and Dan Lanphear, 20, of Chatham. The men, members of the Animal Defense League, which co-sponsored the rally of 16 protesters, were given appearance tickets and released on $100 bail. …

'AMW' ending run on Fox, but John Walsh isn't done

NEW YORK (AP) — This week marks the final weekly airing of "America's Most Wanted" on the Fox network after 23 years and 1,153 fugitives nabbed.

"I don't think it's hit me yet," said John Walsh, the host and driving force of what he turned into a nationwide crime watch. "Saturday when I see the last show — that's gonna be painful."

But that broadcast is billed as the season finale — not the series conclusion — on the "AMW" website.

Not surprisingly, this is the same attitude voiced by Walsh.

"I'm fighting hard to keep this franchise going," he said. "It's a television show that gets ratings AND saves lives, and we'll find somewhere to keep going. We're not …

Restaurants serving up the Web

While many restaurants have turned to using their Web sites as a way to post menus and create an image that will impress potential visitors, some are beginning to use the Web more creatively to hook customers and hold their interest.

For them, the Web is not only an information portal, it's also a place where visitors can interact with the restaurants and where restaurants can glean information from their customers that will help them better understand their clientele.

These days, people tend to look at a restaurant's Web site before they have ever seen the restaurant, said Mark Surotchak, business manager at The Tuesday Club and Parev Restaurant, a dual-purpose venue that …

Celanese mulls acetyls options. (News Briefs).(Brief Article)

Celanese will decide by the end of 2003 among three options for expanding acetyls capacity co supply the Asia/Pacific market, says COO David Weidman. It will either expand an acetic acid and acetate esters plant in Singapore; go ahead with previously announced plans for a joint venture in China; or build a plant in Europe to supply the Asian market, Weidman says. The company earlier said it was considering an acetic …