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只看该作者 40 发表于: 2006-12-06
41、Schools appeal ruling on No Child suit By TERRY KINNEY, Associated Press Writer
Tue Nov 28, 12:39 PM ET



CINCINNATI - School districts in three states and the nation's largest teachers union asked a federal appeals court Tuesday to revive a lawsuit challenging the way government-mandated programs are funded.

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The National Education Association and districts in Michigan, Vermont and Texas had sued to block the No Child Left Behind law,     President Bush's signature education policy. They argued that schools should not have to comply with requirements that aren't paid for by the federal government.

Chief U.S. District Judge Bernard A. Friedman in Detroit dismissed the lawsuit in November 2005.

Attorney Robert Chanin, representing the Pontiac, Mich., school district and the other plaintiffs, told the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday that states submitted compliance plans based on their understanding of the level of government support that would be provided. But Congress appropriated far less than needed, leaving local school districts to make up the difference, he said.

Government attorney Alisa Klein told the panel that the intent of the law was never to fully fund the provisions laid out in No Child Left Behind.

The law requires states to revise academic standards and develop tests to measure students' progress annually. If students fail to make progress, the law requires states to take action against school districts.

The three-judge appeals court panel took the case under advisement and did not say when it will rule. The outcome would apply directly to the districts in the case, but could affect how the law is enforced in schools across the country.
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Triple Baghdad bombing kills at least 51 By KIM GAMEL, Associated Press Writer
Sat Dec 2, 6:56 PM ET



BAGHDAD, Iraq - A triple car bombing struck a food market in a predominantly Shiite area in central Baghdad on Saturday, killing at least 51 people a day after a U.S.-Iraqi raid against Sunni insurgents in a nearby neighborhood.

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Three parked cars blew up nearly simultaneously as shoppers were buying fruit, vegetables, meat and other items in the busy al-Sadriyah district.

The blasts sent clouds of black smoke over concrete high-rises in the area, which has narrow alleys that made it difficult for ambulances and fire trucks to navigate. At least 51 people were killed and 90 wounded, said police Lt. Mohammed Khayoun and hospital officials.

A cheese vendor who was wounded said the market was full of people shopping on their way home from work.

"We heard a big explosion from the western side of the area and the second from the eastern side. After one minute the third explosion took place near us," Ahmed Salman said from a hospital bed.

It was one of the worst incidents since a bombing and mortar attack killed 215 people and wounded more than 200 in the Shiite district of Sadr City in Baghdad on Nov. 23 amid escalating sectarian conflict.

Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but it followed a Friday raid by Iraqi forces backed by U.S. helicopters targeting Sunni insurgents in al-Fadhil, less than a half mile away.

The Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars in     Iraq condemned the al-Fadhil raid in a statement Saturday, alleging six people were killed and 13 detained.

Iraqi police said Friday that one Iraqi soldier and two civilians were killed in the fighting, and the U.S. military said 28 people were detained.

Separately, U.S. and Iraqi forces began an offensive Saturday in Baqouba, capital of Diyala province about 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, where fighting has raged for a week between Sunni insurgents and police, the U.S. command said.

At least 36 suspected militants were detained during one pre-dawn raid in Baqouba, police said. Later in the day, state-run Iraqiya television said one al-Qaida in Iraq insurgent was killed and 43 detained, including two foreigners.

Ahmed Fuad, a senior morgue official in Baqouba, said the morgue had received 102 bodies since Nov. 22, only 20 of which had been retrieved by their families.

"We do believe that there are many bodies in some areas of Diyala province, but neither police nor ambulance could fetch them," he said.

Clashes broke out Saturday between insurgents and U.S. troops in the predominantly Sunni city of Duluiyah 45 miles north of Baghdad, police Capt. Qassim Mohammed said.

Elsewhere, a truck driving at high speed slammed into a bus stop in al-Wahada, 22 miles south of Baghdad, killing about 20 people, wounding 15 and crushing several cars, police said.

Police Lt. Muhammed Al-Shemari said the crash did not appear to be accidental because the truck, an empty fuel tanker, had no obvious mechanical problems.

The driver fled the overturned truck but was caught by witnesses and turned over to police, al-Shemari said, adding that other witnesses found a body in the vehicle's cabin.

Another police officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the probe, said the driver blamed brake failure.

A U.S. Army soldier was reported killed in fighting in the volatile Anbar province on Friday, the military said, raising to at least 2,887 the number of American military personnel who have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003.

Eight other people were killed in attacks nationwide, including a driver and his assistant who were shot to death as they were delivering soft drinks to stores in Baghdad's volatile Sunni neighborhood of Dora.

Iraqi police also found at least 46 bodies of apparent victims of sectarian death squads in Baghdad and three other towns. Forty-two were handcuffed, blindfolded and marked with signs of torture.

Meanwhile, the last of Italy's troops in Iraq returned to Rome on Saturday, a few weeks earlier than the date promised by Italian Premier Romano Prodi. Italy at one point was Washington's second largest coalition partner in Iraq, after Britain, during reconstruction efforts after     Saddam Hussein was ousted nearly four years ago.
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只看该作者 42 发表于: 2006-12-07
43、Power could be out for days after storm By CARLA K. JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer
Sat Dec 2, 6:53 PM ET



CHICAGO - Utility crews worked overtime Saturday to restore electrical service to thousands of customers still blacked out by the Midwest's first big snowstorm of the season.

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As temperatures plummeted below freezing in the storm's aftermath, officials said some people could be without power for days. Missouri National Guard teams went door-to-door in the St. Louis area to make sure residents were surviving the cold.

The storm was blamed for at least 13 deaths as it spread ice and deep snow from Texas to Michigan and then blew through the Northeast late Friday and early Saturday. Schools and businesses were shuttered and hundreds of airline passengers had been stranded by canceled flights.

Trees were blown onto homes and cars, and a big Christmas tree in front of the New Hampshire Statehouse was toppled.

Truck driver David Huwe just got his 18-wheeler and load of frozen food back on the road Saturday after being stuck for more than 12 hours at a rest stop near Princeton, Ill., on Interstate 80, which was blocked by scores of trucks and cars that slid off the icy highway.

"I was supposed to be (in California) Sunday night," Huwe said by cell phone Saturday morning. He had revised his arrival time and hoped he'd make it by Monday.

Red Cross volunteers at Decatur had helped out some of those stranded I-80 travelers by ordering 100 McDonald's hamburgers, which were then airlifted by the National Guard.

"We had 35 minutes from the time we got the call to the airlift," Deb Helm said. McDonald's "was what was available."

Many areas of Illinois, Wisconsin and Missouri got more than a foot of snow, including 16 inches in parts of central Missouri and 17 at Manistee, Mich. Fifteen inches fell as far south as Bartlesville, Okla.

Airlines were recovering from the widespread cancellations caused by the storm; delays at Lambert Airport in St. Louis were generally 15 minutes or less Saturday, according to the     Federal Aviation Administration. There were no measurable delays Saturday at Chicago's two major airports, said Wendy Abrams, a spokeswoman for the Chicago Department of Aviation.

Highways were mostly clear but still had icy spots. "Nobody really should travel unless you absolutely have to get out," Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt said.

Chicago sent out about 170 snow-removal trucks Saturday morning to clear the city's side streets, after clearing main roads Friday.

More than 464,000 Ameren Corp. customers were without power in Missouri and Illinois on Saturday afternoon, along with about 500 customers of ComEd in the greater Chicago area.

"It could be days before it's fully restored because it's really treacherous out there," Ameren spokeswoman Susan Gallagher said.

Blunt dispatched 150 Missouri National Guardsmen to the St. Louis region, along with 30 Humvees and a number of trucks. "We want to make sure our citizens are safe, warm and well cared-for," said Ed Martin, the governor's chief of staff.

As the storm moved east, gusty wind blacked out more customers from Tennessee to New York. About 19,000 homes and businesses were still without power Saturday across upstate New York. More than 12,000 waited for power in Michigan. In Pennsylvania, more than 19,000 homes, mostly in the western part of the state, had no electricity, state Emergency Management Agency spokesman Justin Fleming said.

Two tornadoes were reported in Pennsylvania, with one blowing out the windows of Mr. Z's Food Mart in Mountain Top. About a half-dozen people suffered minor injuries, fire officials said.

"The windows were shaking and they just exploded. Everybody was screaming," said Food Mart cashier Breanne Ralston, 17.

Two women were killed in Pennsylvania, one by a falling tree and another by a wind-blown section of roof, and another falling tree landed on a house and killed one person in New York, authorities said. Two men over the age of 60 died after shoveling snow in Wisconsin, and an 87-year-old woman died in the St. Louis areas in a house fire that started when an ice-laden tree limb fell on a power line, fire officials said.

Storm-related traffic deaths included two in Missouri, one in Kansas and one in Oklahoma. Near Paducah, Texas, a vehicle carrying high school girls' basketball players overturned on an icy highway, killing a 14-year-old player and injuring seven other people.

In Illinois, a woman died after being struck by a snow plow that was backing up, and a 67-year-old man collapsed and died after trimming tree limbs with a hand saw.
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只看该作者 43 发表于: 2006-12-07
44、Castro's absence raises more questions By ANITA SNOW, Associated Press Writer
Sat Dec 2, 5:14 PM ET



HAVANA -     Fidel Castro was a no-show Saturday at a major military parade that doubled as his 80th birthday celebration, raising questions about whether the ailing leader will ever return to power as his public absence begins taking on a tone of permanence.

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Many Cubans had hoped for at least a glimpse of Castro before dozens of olive-camouflaged tanks rumbled through the Plaza of the Revolution and jet fighters soared above the capital to mark the 50th anniversary of the formation of Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces.

Castro hasn't been seen in public since July 26, before he underwent secretive intestinal surgery and temporarily ceded power to his younger brother, Raul. He delayed his 80th birthday celebration from Aug. 13 to this week in order to give himself time to recover, and speculation had been rife whether he would appear.

The military event, which lasted about two hours, culminated five days of events to celebrate Castro's birthday ― none of which he attended.

Instead, it was Raul Castro, the island's defense minister, who stood at the mahogany lectern reviewing the troops during Saturday's parade.

The parade's most obvious purpose was to warn the U.S. against taking advantage of Fidel Castro's illness to attack the island. In the last 15 years the Cuban military has taken on a purely defensive role, and is trained to repel invaders.

In a speech that lacked his brother's rhetorical flourishes, Raul Castro reached out to the U.S. government, which has a decades-old trade and travel embargo against the communist-run island. He did not explain the absence of his brother.

"We take this opportunity to once again state that we are willing to resolve at the negotiating table the long-standing dispute between the United States and Cuba," as long as the U.S. respects Cuba's sovereignty, said Raul Castro, who turned 75 in June.

"After almost half a century, we are willing to wait patiently until the moment when common sense prevails in Washington power circles," he added.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Janelle Hironimus said Saturday that "the dialogue that needs to take place is one between the Cuban regime and the Cuban people about the democratic future of the island.

"Any deepening of our engagement with Cuba depends on that dialogue and the Cuban regime's willingness to take concrete steps toward a political opening and a transition to democracy," she added.

Raul Castro used the event to underscore cohesion among the Cuban people, the armed forces and the Communist Party ― a recurring theme among officials in recent days.

"This unity is our main strategic weapon, which has made it possible for this small island to resist and overcome so many aggressions from imperialism and its allies," he said.

Cuban officials insist Fidel Castro is recovering, but U.S. officials say they believe he suffers from some kind of inoperable cancer and will not live through the end of 2007. He has appeared thin and pale in photographs and videos released by the government in recent months.

Some U.S. doctors have speculated he could have diverticulosis, a condition relatively common among older people that is caused when weak spots form along the colon and intersect with an artery.

Fidel Castro purportedly sent a message to those celebrating his birthday earlier this week, telling a crowd of 5,000 supporters at the opening event Tuesday at a Havana theater that he was too sick to meet with them.

"I direct myself to you, intellectuals and prestigious personalities of the world, with a dilemma," said a note read at the event. "I could not meet with you in a small locale, only in the Karl Marx Theater where all the visitors would fit, and I was not yet in condition, according to the doctors, to face such a colossal encounter."

Magda Avila, a 70-year-old army veteran, said she was not disappointed the elder Castro did not appear at the parade. "It is fine that he didn't come, so that he can recuperate," she said.

In Miami, Alfredo Mesa, executive director of the anti-Castro Cuban-American National Foundation, said the leader's failure to appear was unimportant.

"For us, Fidel Castro is part of the past," Mesa said. "The pressure is on those who did appear, for them to let Cubans in Cuba decide for themselves what kind of future they want."

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said in Caracas that Castro, his good friend and ally, was still "alive and kicking" and that Cuba's communist revolution will live on. Chavez could not attend the parade because he faces re-election Sunday.

Among those at the parade were Bolivian President Evo Morales, Haitian President Rene Preval, Nicaraguan President-elect Daniel Ortega and Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, as well as hundreds of elderly former combatants from Cuba's revolutionary struggle.

In the first major military parade held in Havana in a decade, tens of thousands of Cubans marched behind anti-aircraft missiles, tanks and other armored vehicles while MiG fighter jets and helicopter gunships flew overhead. The crowd of loyalists was more subdued than in other mass events presided over by Fidel Castro.

Thousands of soldiers led the parade, including special forces in red berets, militiamen in blue uniforms and horseback riders wearing the white dress uniform of 19th century Cuban independence fighters.

Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces, which replaced the military that existed before the Cuban Revolution, traces its roots to Dec. 2, 1956, when 82 rebels landed on the island on a yacht ― the Granma ― that sailed from Mexico.

Only 12 survived the landing and initial skirmishes with President Fulgencio Batista's forces in December 1956. Among the survivors were the two Castro brothers and Ernesto "Che" Guevara, who headed for the hills to build a command post for the revolution that drove Batista out of Cuba on Jan. 1, 1959.
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N.D. tribe barring church protesters By JAMES MacPHERSON, Associated Press Writer
Sat Dec 2, 7:47 AM ET



BISMARCK, N.D. - A church group that protests at military funerals around the country will be barred from services for an American Indian soldier on a reservation, tribal officials say.

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Members of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kan., planned to demonstrate at National Guard Cpl. Nathan Goodiron's funeral on Saturday at the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation.

Church members say the deaths of soldiers are punishment from God for the country's tolerance of homosexuals.

Tribal leaders passed a resolution Friday that prohibits the group from protesting on the reservation, said Marcus Wells Jr., chairman of the Three Affiliated Tribes.

"We will not tolerate any harassment that is intended to provoke ill feelings and violence," he said.

Shirley Phelps-Roper, daughter of the Rev. Fred Phelps Sr., pastor of Westboro Baptist, said her group planned to protest outside the reservation "on public rights of way."

"We don't get into anyone's private area," said Phelps-Roper, the church's attorney and its spokeswoman. "We don't go on private land."

Goodiron, 25, of Mandaree, known on the reservation as Young Eagle, was killed Thanksgiving Day in     Afghanistan when a grenade struck his vehicle while he was on patrol. He was a member of the 1st Battalion of the North Dakota National Guard's 188th Air Defense Artillery.

Tribal officials said he was the first member of the Three Affiliated Tribes to be killed in the war on terror.

American and tribal flags are being flown at half staff on the reservation to honor Goodiron.

"We recognize and respect the right to free speech and the public's right to assemble, but we want everyone to know that the Three Affiliated Tribes, as a sovereign tribal government, has the right to regulate any person or persons who harass and show disrespectful conduct towards our members, within our boundaries," Wells said in a statement.

Wells said tribal police would prevent the protesters from coming on the reservation.


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只看该作者 45 发表于: 2006-12-07
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Italian in spy case shows no poisoning By TARIQ PANJA, Associated Press Writer
Sat Dec 2, 6:31 PM ET



LONDON - An Italian security consultant who tested positive for traces of the same radioactive substance that was found in the body of a fatally poisoned ex-KGB spy has not shown any signs of illness, doctors said Saturday.

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Mario Scaramella met with former Russian agent and Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko at a London sushi bar Nov. 1. Later that day Litvinenko reported feeling unwell, and the 43-year-old died three weeks later ― his body withered, his hair fallen out and his organs ravaged.

Scaramella, 36, was "well" and preliminary tests showed "no evidence of radiation toxicity," said University College Hospital, where Litvinenko died and Scaramella is having tests.

Tests on Friday confirmed Scaramella was exposed to polonium-210, the rare substance found in Litvinenko's body before he died in London on Nov. 23. But doctors said Scaramella had been exposed to a much lower level of the radioactive material.

Scaramella's Naples-based lawyer, Sergio Rastrelli, told Italy's Sky TG24 TV that the consultant was not in isolation and was meeting with doctors and police.

"It's possible he ingested or inhaled the same substance at the same place as the Russian, although fortunately in exponentially lower doses," Rastrelli said.

Scaramella has said he did not eat anything at the sushi restaurant when he was there with Litvinenko because it was after lunchtime.

Scaramella, who had been working for an Italian parliamentary commission investigating KGB activity in Italy, told Litvinenko about an e-mail that claimed to name those who killed Russian investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya on Oct. 7 in Moscow. The e-mail reportedly also said Scaramella and Litvinenko, a friend of the reporter, were on a hit list.

Early editions of The Sunday Times quoted Andrei Lugovoi, another former spy who met Litvinenko on Nov. 1, as saying he also has been contaminated with polonium-210.

Lugovoi did not say whether he had fallen ill. But he denied that he and two business associates, who met Litvinenko together on Nov. 1, were involved in Litvinenko's death.

"We suspect that someone has been trying to frame us," The Sunday Times quoted Lugovoi as saying. "Someone passed this stuff onto us ... to point the finger at us and distract the police."

Police declined to comment Saturday on the newspaper report.

In other developments, British Airways said Saturday that all three of its jetliners grounded by investigators looking into Litvinenko's death had been cleared to resume service. Small traces of radioactive substances were found on the planes.

The Health Protection Agency, which deals with public health issues in Britain, said only very low levels of polonium-210 were found on two of the planes and there was no risk to passengers.

Another airline, easyJet, said Scaramella flew on its planes to London from Naples on Oct. 31 and returned Nov. 3, two days after his meeting with Litvinenko. The HPA said there was no risk to the public from those flights.

In Ireland, officials said tests on the Dublin hospital where former Russian Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar was taken when he fell ill were negative for radiation poisoning.

Gaidar became violently ill during a conference in Dublin last week ― an incident his aides have described as another poisoning. He is now being treated at a hospital in Moscow, where his condition has been described as improving.
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只看该作者 46 发表于: 2006-12-07
47、Dewey the cat dies in librarian's arms Sat Dec 2, 10:32 AM ET



SPENCER, Iowa - The final chapter is closed on Dewey Readmore Books. The 19-year-old cat, who became a mascot for the city's library after being found in a book drop, died Wednesday in the arms of librarian Vicki Myron.

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The temperature was minus 10 when Myron and another librarian found Dewey under a pile of books in the library's book drop when they came to work one morning in January 1988.

"We didn't know if someone abandoned him or if a Good Samaritan found him on the street and shoved him in the book drop to get him out of the cold," she said. "His paws were frozen. We warmed him up and fed him and he just purred and cuddled. From day one, we felt he'd be the right personality for the public."

Since then, Dewey became famous, with television crews coming from as far away as Japan to do stories about him, Myron said.

The cat's name was chosen in a contest shortly after he was found. He was named after the Dewey Decimal System, which is used in most libraries to catalog books.

Dewey, who Myron said came running for cheeseburgers, boiled ham and chicken garlic TV dinners, had been experiencing health problems recently and was diagnosed with a stomach tumor shortly before Nov. 18, which was officially marked as his 19th birthday.

After his health rallied, he started "acting funny trying to hide" and Myron decided to take him to the vet and have him euthanized.

Library employee Kim Peterson said the staff is talking about having Dewey cremated and burying his ashes at the library.
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只看该作者 47 发表于: 2006-12-07
48、J.Lo's ex fights to release tell-all Sat Dec 2, 5:45 AM ET



LOS ANGELES -     Jennifer Lopez's first husband, Ojani Noa, told a judge Friday that he plans to fight her efforts to quash a tell-all memoir.

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Noa, 31, said in a pretrial hearing that he regrets agreeing to a June 30 preliminary injunction that prohibits him from "criticizing, denigrating, casting in a negative light or otherwise disparaging or causing disparagement" to Lopez.

"I want to fight this thing to the end," he said. "My life has not been the same since this lawsuit was filed."

The judge gave Noa until Jan. 17 to hire a lawyer or represent himself.

Lopez filed her lawsuit April 10 and obtained a temporary restraining order barring Noa from publishing intimate details of their sex life.

Noa said Friday that Lopez misunderstood what the book was about.

"This was to be about my life story, coming here from Cuba," he said. "She was only a part of my life, but I was going to talk about my other girlfriends, as well."

Lopez, who has appeared in films such as "Selena" and "Out of Sight," married Noa in February 1997 after meeting him in a Miami restaurant. They divorced 11 months later.
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Barry Bonds not offered arbitration By RONALD BLUM, AP Baseball Writer
Sat Dec 2, 6:08 PM ET



NEW YORK - Tom Glavine is staying with the Mets, and Ray Durham with the Giants. Barry Bonds seems ready to leave San Francisco.

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Twenty-five free agents were offered salary arbitration by their former teams before Friday's midnight deadline, a group that included Oakland's Barry Zito and San Francisco's Jason Schmidt, the top available starting pitchers. The Giants declined arbitration with Bonds, coming off a $90 million, five-year contract.

"San Francisco's decision not to offer Barry arbitration speaks volumes of their true intentions to have him back in a Giants uniform for the 2007 season," said Bonds' agent, Jeff Borris. "It has been well documented that the Giants were trying to sign Alfonso Soriano, Carlos Lee, Gary Matthews and Juan Pierre. And they have been working diligently in trying to trade for Manny Ramirez. The Giants' actions demonstrate that Barry obviously is not a priority to them."

In the past, the deadline was Dec. 7 and players not offered arbitration couldn't re-sign with their former teams until May 1. But under baseball's new labor contract, agreed to during the     World Series, the deadline lost much of its importance.

Now, free agents can return to their former teams at any time. By not offering arbitration, all a club loses is the right to receive amateur draft picks if a highly ranked player signs with another team. Free agents who were offered arbitration have until Dec. 7 to accept.

Houston declined to offer arbitration to all five of its former players who are free agents, a group that includes Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte.

San Diego offered arbitration to six players: pitchers Alan Embree, Chan Ho Park and David Wells; first baseman Ryan Klesko; outfielder Dave Roberts and second baseman Todd Walker.

Other free agents who received arbitration offers were starting pitchers Miguel Batista (Arizona), Ted Lilly (Toronto), Gil Meche (Seattle), Vicente Padilla (Texas), and Mark Mulder and Jeff Suppan (St. Louis); relievers Keith Foulke (Boston), Scott Schoeneweis (Cincinnati), Ron Villone (     New York Yankees) and Guillermo Mota and Roberto Hernandez (     New York Mets); infielders Rich Aurilia (Cincinnati), Tony Graffanino (Milwaukee) and Julio Lugo (     Los Angeles Dodgers); and outfielder Jose Guillen (Washington).

Texas offered arbitration to Lee, an outfielder whose $100 million, six-year contract with Houston hasn't been finalized, and Philadelphia offered arbitration to outfielder David Dellucci, who has an $11.5 million, three-year preliminary agreement with Cleveland.

Also, free-agent utility infielder Geoff Blum and the     San Diego Padres agreed to a $900,000, one-year contract. Left fielder Scott Podsednik agreed to a $2.9 million, one-year contract with the     Chicago White Sox that avoided arbitration. And Hernandez was close to an agreement with Cleveland.

Glavine agreed to a $10.5 million, one-year contract with New York and opted against a possible return to the     Atlanta Braves. Now the Mets can relax as they talk to Zito and discuss possible trades this offseason.

"With Tommy now on board, I think we still will look at ways to improve the starting rotation," general manager Omar Minaya said.

Ten wins shy of 300 after going 15-7 with a 3.82 ERA this year, Glavine helped the Mets win their first division title since 1988. The two-time NL Cy Young Award winner then went 2-1 with a 1.59 ERA in three postseason starts as New York advanced to Game 7 of the NL championship series before losing to St. Louis.

Glavine, a left-hander who will be 41 next season, lives in the Atlanta suburb of Alpharetta, and his family commuted to New York on weekends during the school year to join him. He thought long about whether he wanted to return to the Braves, his team from 1987-2002, or stay with the Mets, who signed him before the 2003 season. He told the Mets he would make his decision before the winter meetings, which begin Monday in Florida.

"I wrestled with it. I think that everybody who knows me knows how important my family is to me and knows how much strain it is on my family for me to be in New York," he said. "After four years, it's grown on me. I like the city. I like the fans. I love the organization. They treated me with the utmost respect and that pull to come back to New York was a very strong pull. In the end, it's where we felt like we needed to be, and where we wanted to be."

Durham agreed to a two-year contract worth between $14 million and $15 million. The 35-year-old second baseman, switch-hitter and two-time All-Star, is coming off his best season in years. He batted .293 with career highs of 26 home runs and 93 RBIs for the Giants with a .538 slugging percentage in 498 at-bats. He signed a three-year deal with the club before the 2003 season but has dealt with several leg injuries since his arrival.

___

AP Baseball Writer Ben Walker and AP Sports Writers Josh Dubow and Janie McCauley contributed to this report.
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50、Ariz. cop had black men rap away ticket By AMANDA LEE MYERS, Associated Press Writer
Sat Dec 2, 7:07 AM ET



TEMPE, Ariz. - City leaders have apologized after a program on Tempe's cable channel showed a white police officer telling two black men they could get out of a littering ticket by performing a rap.

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Tempe Mayor Hugh Hallman and Police Chief Tom Ryff apologized for the show Thursday and suspended its future production after black community leaders voiced outrage and disappointment.

"I accept responsibility for the actions of my staff and apologize to any members of our community who have been offended," Ryff said during a news conference Friday.

The segment appeared on "Tempe StreetBeat," a program produced by police in the Phoenix suburb that followed several officers on patrol. It shows Sgt. Chuck Schoville pulling over two men in August in a mall parking lot.

He first asks for a name and ID from the driver and then asks the two men if they know how much the fine is for littering.

The officer then tells the men that they can avoid getting a littering ticket "if the two of you just do a little rap about ― what do you want to do a rap about? Littering? About the dangers of littering."

The two men agree, and each performs a short rap, laughing afterward. One says, "The dangers of littering, you will get a ticket. If you ain't wit' it, you better be experienced."

The second man raps, "Yo, I just got pulled over 'cause I threw my trash out the window when they rolled over. They got behind me and pulled me over."

Later, Schoville talks football with the men, one of whom agrees with his prediction that the Oakland Raiders will make it to the Super Bowl this year.

Schoville then says, "You know why you say I'm right? Because I got a gun and badge. I'm always right. That's the way it works, right?" The three laugh and the two men get in their car.

Leaders of chapters of the     National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the National Action Network expressed outrage and demanded that the city act.

The Rev. Jarrett Maupin of the National Action Network, who was at Friday's news conference, said he had accepted Hallman's and Ryff's apologies and intends to make sure the police department makes good on a proposal for an African American advisory board and increased diversity training.

"It's important for police officers to realize that black people do not speak hip hop," Maupin said. "We're not all rappers and thugs and gangbangers. We speak the English language and we're entitled to the same amount of respect."

Ryff said the department is investigating how the video got on the air, who watched it and who edited it. He wouldn't discuss whether there would be any punishment for those involved.

The chief said that he hadn't been able to contact Schoville, a 25-year veteran of the Tempe force, because the officer is on vacation. A message was left with the department seeking comment from the sergeant.

Because the men in the video were not cited, Tempe police had no record of their names.

___

Associated Press Writer Terry Tang contributed to this report.
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