friday, 5.18.12 press d 5a facebook’s ipo one of...

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BY MIKE CORDER Associated Press THE HAGUE, Netherlands — An apparent clerical error prompted judges to postpone the long-awaited war crimes trial of former Bosnian Serb military leader Ratko Mladic on Thursday, possibly for months. The delay cast a shadow over one of the court’s biggest cases — and over the reputation of the court itself, whose most promi- nent trials have proceeded at a snail’s pace, frustrating many victims. It also highlighted problems faced by international tribunals in prosecuting sweeping indict- ments covering allegations of atrocities spanning years in countries far from the courts where defendants face justice. “It is fraught with delay be- cause of the volume of documen- tation and scope of alleged crimes,” Richard Dicker, the di- rector of Human Rights Watch’s international justice program, said in a telephone interview Thursday. “Add to that the need to translate and it really takes it to a whole new level of complex- ity that you don’t see in domestic trials.” Presiding judge Alphons Orie said he was delaying the Yu- goslav war crimes tribunal case due to “significant disclosure er- rors” by prosecutors, who are obliged to share all evidence with Mladic’s lawyers. Orie said judges will analyze the “scope and full impact” of the error and aim to establish a new starting date “as soon as possi- ble.” The presentation of evi- dence was supposed to begin later this month. Prosecutors had already ac- knowledged the errors and did not object to the delay. Mladic’s attorney has asked for a six- month delay to study the materials. Mladic is accused of com- manding Bosnian Serb troops who waged a campaign of killings and persecution to drive Muslims and Croats out of territory they considered part of Serbia during Bosnia’s 1992-95 war. His troops rained shells and snipers’ bullets down on civilians in the 44-month siege of the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo. They also executed thousands of Mus- lim men and boys in Srebrenica, the site of Europe’s worst mas- sacre since World War II. The war itself left over 100,000 dead. He has refused to enter pleas to the charges but denies wrong- doing. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. BY DAVID B. CARUSO AND JIM FITZGERALD Associated Press BEDFORD, N.Y. — Every fam- ily has its share of pain and tri- umph. And then there are the Kennedys. America’s great political dy- nasty is grieving again after Mary Richardson Kennedy, the es- tranged wife of Robert Kennedy Jr., hanged herself Wednesday at the family’s 10-acre estate in a New York City suburb. Her death, at age 52, came as a shock to some friends and fam- ily, even though the past two years had been undeniably tough ones. The couple was going through a divorce, and Mary had been charged twice with driving while intoxicated in 2010. But Victoria Michaelis, a friend since Mary’s college days, said she hadn’t seemed suicidal, or crippled by the alcohol prob- lems that briefly landed her in the headlines two springs ago. “She was definitely suffering, but she was very, very spiritual and a resolute Catholic,” Michaelis said. “I’d say she was depressed the last two years since the divorce. But she would put that aside and ask you how you were. I saw her a couple of weeks ago, and she was fine.” Her death resonated, too, with a public that has watched tragedy march through the ranks of the Kennedy clan again and again. “I think every family has its tragedies. But this is too much,” said Kim O’Connell, who dropped off a bouquet of Calla lilies at the family’s home in Bedford on Thursday morning. She had met Robert and Mary only a few times, while working at their health club, but felt a connection anyway. “I just thought she was just a lady. I woke up this morn- ing, and I wanted to do something.” Mary Kennedy had lived much her life at the edge of the spotlight that shines on the Kennedy family. An architectural designer with New Jersey roots, she met her estranged husband’s sister, Kerry, in boarding school when they were still teenagers and had stayed close to the clan through the decades before mar- rying Robert in 1994. Robert is the son of Robert F. Kennedy, the former U.S. attor- ney general who was slain in 1968 while running for the Demo- cratic presidential nomination, and the nephew of assassinated President John F. Kennedy and the late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. 5A PRESS DAKOTAN the world Friday, 5.18.12 ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net NEWS DEPARTMENT: [email protected] Looking for a Great Location? 619 E. 20th Just south of the middle school in a fantastic setting on a large lot you’ll find this spacious charmer. Open concept with awesome brick fireplace, soaring ceiling, balcony and gorgeous kitchen with glass tile backsplash. Five bedroom, 3 1 2 baths, 2 bonus rooms, movie-themed family room. All at a price you’ll love. $230,000 Virginia Larson 661-0418 www.yanktonhomes.com www.yanktonhomes.com Paid for by Stevens For House, Ted Mickelson Treasurer VOTE FOR MIKE ON JUNE 5 Eldon “Swede” & Darlene Pearson of Salem, will celebrate their 40th Anniversary on May 26th, 2012. 40th Anniversary Greetings may be sent to: 24486 443rd Ave. Salem, SD 57058 BY BARBARA ORTUTAY AP Technology Writer NEW YORK — Facebook’s initial public of- fering of stock is one of the largest ever. The world’s definitive online social network is raising at least $16 billion for the company and its early investors in a transaction that values Facebook at $104 billion. It’s a big windfall for a company that began eight years ago with no way to make money. Facebook priced its IPO at $38 per share on Thursday, at the top of expectations. The company is selling just a portion of its shares as part of the offering. The $38 price means all of its shares will be worth about $104 bil- lion, giving the company a market value higher than Amazon.com and other well- known companies such as Kraft, Disney and McDonald’s. Facebook’s stock is expected to begin trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market some- time Friday morning under the ticker symbol “FB.” That’s when so-called retail investors can try to buy the stock. Facebook’s offering is the culmination of a year’s worth of Internet IPOs that began last May with LinkedIn Corp. Since then, a steady stream of startups focused on the social side of the Web has gone public, with varying de- grees of success. It all led up to Facebook, the company that’s come to define social net- working by getting 900 million people around the world to share everything from photos of their pets to their deepest thoughts. “They could have gone public in 2009 at a much lower price,” said Nick Einhorn, re- search analyst at IPO investment advisory firm Renaissance Capital. “They waited as long as they could to go public, so it makes sense that it’s a very large offering.” Facebook Inc. is the third-highest valued company to go public, according to data from Dealogic, a financial data provider. Only two Chinese banks, Agricultural Bank of China in 2010 and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China in 2006, have been worth more. At $16 billion, the size of the IPO is the third-largest for a U.S. company. The largest U.S. IPO was Visa, which raised $17.9 billion in 2008. No. 2 was Enel, a power company and No. 4 was General Motors, according to Renaissance Capital. For the company that was born in a Har- vard dormitory and went on to reimagine on- line communication, the stock sale means more money to build on the features and services it offers users. It means an infusion of funds to hire the best engineers to work at its sprawling Menlo Park, Calif., headquar- ters, or in New York City, where it opened an engineering office last year. And it means early investors, who took a chance seeding the young social network with start-up funds six, seven and eight years ago, can reap big rewards. Peter Thiel, the venture capitalist who sits on Facebook’s board of directors, invested $500,000 in the company back in 2004. He’s selling nearly 17 million of his shares in the IPO, which means he’ll get some $640 million. The offering values Facebook, whose 2011 revenue was $3.7 billion, at as much as $104 billion. The sky-high valuation has its skep- tics, who worry about signs of a slowdown and Facebook’s ability to grow in the mobile space when it was created with desktop com- puters in mind. Rival Google Inc., whose rev- enue stood at $38 billion last year, has a market capitalization of $207 billion. “There seems to be somewhat of a hype around the stock offering,” says Gartner ana- lyst Brian Blau. BY SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer WASHINGTON — And the heat goes on. Forecasters pre- dict toasty temperatures will stretch through the summer in the U.S. And that’s a bad sign for wildfires in the West. The forecast for June through August calls for warmer-than-normal weather for about three-quarters of the nation, the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration said Thursday. The warmth is expected south of a line stretching from middle New Jersey to south- ern Idaho. Only tiny portions of northwestern U.S. and Alaska are predicted to be cooler than average and that’s only for June, not the rest of the summer. Last May until April was the hottest 12-month period on record for the nation with records going back to 1895. This year so far has seen the hottest March, the third warmest April and the fourth warmest January and Febru- ary in U.S. weather history. And it was one of the least snowy years on record in the Lower 48. Some people called it the year without winter. And the outlook for sum- mer is “more of the same,” said Jon Gottschalck, head of forecast operations at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center in Camp Springs, Md. “There’s definitely a tilt toward being above normal through the summer.” For some areas of the Southwest that could mean temperatures 1 or even 2 de- grees warmer than normal on average, and maybe close to half a degree warmer than nor- mal in the East, he said. One of the reasons is that much of the country’s soil is already unusually dry. So the sun doesn’t use as much en- ergy evaporating water in the soil and instead heats up the air near the ground even more, Gottschalck said. Martin Autopsy Finds Evidence Of Marijuana ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Trayvon Martin’s autopsy shows evi- dence of marijuana in his urine and blood. The autopsy was among a large amount of evidence released by prosecutors on Thursday as part of the second-degree murder case against the neighborhood watch volunteer who shot him in Febru- ary. Other documents include a photograph that shows suspect George Zimmerman with a bloody nose. Zimmerman has claimed self-defense and said he only fired because the unarmed teenager attacked him. He has pleaded not guilty. A police report says Martin had $40.15, Skittles candy, a red lighter, headphones and a photo pin in his pocket. He had been shot once in the chest and was pronounced dead at the scene. Romney Denounces Racially Focused Ads JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Mitt Romney swiftly and firmly dis- tanced himself Thursday from a group exploring plans to target President Barack Obama’s relationship with a controversial former pastor. But the revival of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright as a campaign issue momentarily placed race at the center of the presidential contest and showcased the independent groups playing a new role this year with big-money TV ads. Republican Romney pushed back against a proposal being weighed by a conservative super PAC, Ending Spending Action Fund, to run a $10 million ad campaign drawing attention to racially provocative sermons Wright delivered at a church Obama attended in Chicago. But with super PACS operating under signifi- cantly looser campaign finance restrictions than in past presiden- tial contests, there was no guarantee Romney’s words would be heeded by other groups eager to make Wright — and, by extension, race — a factor in the campaign. “I want to make it very clear: I repudiate that effort,” Romney told reporters after a campaign stop in Florida. “I think it’s the wrong course for a PAC or a campaign. I hope that our campaigns can be respectively about the future and about issues and about vi- sion for America.” Romney indicated he was eager to shift the discussion back to jobs and the economy — bedrock issues on which he contends Obama is vulnerable. Joe Ricketts, the billionaire benefactor of the super PAC, also distanced himself from the plan and announced he, too, would re- ject a racially focused approach. Syrian Opposition Council Appears To Crumble BEIRUT (AP) — Syria’s main opposition council is crumbling under the weight of infighting and divisions over issues that cut to the heart of the revolution, including accusations that the move- ment is becoming as autocratic as the regime it wants to drive out. The slow disintegration of the Syrian National Council, which has become the international face of the uprising, could complicate Western efforts to bolster the opposition, just as President Bashar Assad’s regime gathers momentum in its crackdown on dissent. On Thursday, SNC leader Burhan Ghalioun said he was ready to step down once a replacement is found, amid mounting criticism of his leadership. The decision came just days after he was re-elected for a third, three month term during a council vote held in Rome. The council has said it would rotate the presidency every three months, so Ghalioun’s repeated appointments rankled some who wanted a new face. “I will not accept under any circumstances to be a divisive can- didate, and I am not after any post,” said Ghalioun, an exiled Syrian and professor at the Sorbonne in Paris. “I will resign as soon as a new candidate is picked, either by consensus or new elections.” Commercially Built Rocket Will Fly To Station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — For the first time, a private com- pany will launch a rocket to the International Space Station, send- ing it on a grocery run this weekend that could be the shape of things to come for America’s space program. If this unmanned flight and others like it succeed, commercial spacecraft could be ferrying astronauts to the orbiting outpost within five years. It’s a transition that has been in the works since the middle of the last decade, when President George W. Bush decided to retire the space shuttle and devote more of NASA’s energies to venturing deeper into space. Saturday’s flight by Space Exploration Technologies Corp. is “a thoroughly exciting moment in the history of spaceflight, but is just the beginning of a new way of doing business for NASA,” said Presi- dent Barack Obama’s chief science adviser, John Holdren. By handing off space station launches to private business, “NASA is freeing itself up to focus on exploring beyond low Earth orbit for the first time in 40 years.” Damaged Navy Assault Ship Arrives At Port SAN DIEGO (AP) — Sporting crumpled catwalks and smashed lifeboats, the U.S. Navy vessel USS Essex managed to glide into San Diego Bay on Thursday, 24 hours after colliding with a tanker in the Pacific Ocean when the aging warship’s steering apparently failed. Families of the crew aboard the “Iron Gator” waved homemade flags in celebration as the 21-year-old amphibious assault ship — which officials say is overdue to be dry docked — came into view through the morning’s thick marine layer. Wednesday’s midmorning crash 120 miles off the coast of South- ern California resulted in no injuries or fuel spills. The 844-foot-long Essex was carrying 982 crew members. The tanker, the 677-foot USNS Yukon, was carrying 82. “To me, it felt like a minor earthquake,” said Navy photographer Duke Richardson from Jersey City, N.J., who was in a photo lab on the Essex when it struck the Yukon. He said some of the “newbies” on board were in a “state of shock” and let out some interesting “four-letter words” when the boat jolted and the collision alarms sounded. Boy Bites Into Severed Finger Flesh At Arby’s JACKSON, Mich. (AP) — A Michigan teen finishing off an Arby’s roast beef sandwich chomped down on something tough that tasted like rubber, so he spit it out. Turns out it tasted like finger. The fleshy, severed pad of an un- fortunate employee’s finger, apparently. Ryan Hart, 14, told the Jackson Citizen Patriot on Wednesday that once he got a good look at it, he knew right away what had been in the junior roast beef sandwich he was eating last Friday. “I was like, ‘That (has) to be a finger,”’ Hart said. “I was about to puke. ... It was just nasty.” The employee apparently cut her finger on a meat slicer and left her station without immediately telling anyone, said Steve Hall, the environmental health director for the Jackson County health de- partment. Her co-workers continued filling orders until they found out what had happened, he said. Facebook’s IPO One Of World’s Largest Suicide Adds To Kennedy Misfortunes Forecasters Say Heat Will Stick Around Mladic Trial Delayed By Evidence Errors

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Page 1: Friday, 5.18.12 PRESS D 5A Facebook’s IPO One Of …tearsheets.yankton.net/may12/051812/ypd_051812_SecA_005.pdfand Facebook’s ability to grow in the mobile space when it was created

BY MIKE CORDERAssociated Press

THE HAGUE, Netherlands —An apparent clerical errorprompted judges to postpone thelong-awaited war crimes trial offormer Bosnian Serb militaryleader Ratko Mladic on Thursday,possibly for months.

The delay cast a shadow overone of the court’s biggest cases— and over the reputation of thecourt itself, whose most promi-nent trials have proceeded at asnail’s pace, frustrating manyvictims.

It also highlighted problemsfaced by international tribunalsin prosecuting sweeping indict-ments covering allegations ofatrocities spanning years incountries far from the courtswhere defendants face justice.

“It is fraught with delay be-cause of the volume of documen-tation and scope of allegedcrimes,” Richard Dicker, the di-rector of Human Rights Watch’sinternational justice program,

said in a telephone interviewThursday. “Add to that the needto translate and it really takes itto a whole new level of complex-ity that you don’t see in domestictrials.”

Presiding judge Alphons Oriesaid he was delaying the Yu-goslav war crimes tribunal casedue to “significant disclosure er-rors” by prosecutors, who areobliged to share all evidence withMladic’s lawyers.

Orie said judges will analyzethe “scope and full impact” of theerror and aim to establish a newstarting date “as soon as possi-ble.” The presentation of evi-dence was supposed to beginlater this month.

Prosecutors had already ac-knowledged the errors and didnot object to the delay. Mladic’sattorney has asked for a six-month delay to study thematerials.

Mladic is accused of com-manding Bosnian Serb troopswho waged a campaign of killingsand persecution to drive Muslims

and Croats out of territory theyconsidered part of Serbia duringBosnia’s 1992-95 war.

His troops rained shells andsnipers’ bullets down on civiliansin the 44-month siege of theBosnian capital, Sarajevo. Theyalso executed thousands of Mus-lim men and boys in Srebrenica,the site of Europe’s worst mas-sacre since World War II. The waritself left over 100,000 dead.

He has refused to enter pleasto the charges but denies wrong-doing. If convicted, he faces amaximum sentence of lifeimprisonment.

BY DAVID B. CARUSOAND JIM FITZGERALDAssociated Press

BEDFORD, N.Y. — Every fam-ily has its share of pain and tri-umph. And then there are theKennedys.

America’s great political dy-nasty is grieving again after MaryRichardson Kennedy, the es-tranged wife of Robert KennedyJr., hanged herself Wednesday atthe family’s 10-acre estate in aNew York City suburb.

Her death, at age 52, came asa shock to some friends and fam-ily, even though the past twoyears had been undeniably toughones. The couple was goingthrough a divorce, and Mary hadbeen charged twice with drivingwhile intoxicated in 2010.

But Victoria Michaelis, afriend since Mary’s college days,said she hadn’t seemed suicidal,or crippled by the alcohol prob-lems that briefly landed her inthe headlines two springs ago.

“She was definitely suffering,but she was very, very spiritualand a resolute Catholic,”Michaelis said. “I’d say she wasdepressed the last two yearssince the divorce. But she wouldput that aside and ask you howyou were. I saw her a couple ofweeks ago, and she was fine.”

Her death resonated, too, witha public that has watchedtragedy march through the ranksof the Kennedy clan again andagain.

“I think every family has itstragedies. But this is too much,”said Kim O’Connell, who droppedoff a bouquet of Calla lilies at thefamily’s home in Bedford onThursday morning. She had metRobert and Mary only a few

times, while working at theirhealth club, but felt a connectionanyway. “I just thought she wasjust a lady. I woke up this morn-ing, and I wanted to dosomething.”

Mary Kennedy had livedmuch her life at the edge of thespotlight that shines on theKennedy family. An architecturaldesigner with New Jersey roots,she met her estranged husband’ssister, Kerry, in boarding school

when they were still teenagersand had stayed close to the clanthrough the decades before mar-rying Robert in 1994.

Robert is the son of Robert F.Kennedy, the former U.S. attor-ney general who was slain in1968 while running for the Demo-cratic presidential nomination,and the nephew of assassinatedPresident John F. Kennedy andthe late U.S. Sen. EdwardKennedy of Massachusetts.

5APRESS DAKOTANthe worldFriday, 5.18.12

ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net

NEWS DEPARTMENT: [email protected]

Looking

for a Great Location?

619 E. 20th Just south of the middle school in a fantastic setting on a large lot you’ll find this spacious charmer. Open concept

with awesome brick fireplace, soaring ceiling, balcony and gorgeous kitchen with glass tile backsplash. Five bedroom,

3 1 ⁄ 2 baths, 2 bonus rooms, movie-themed family room. All at a price you’ll love. $230,000

Virginia Larson 661-0418

www.yanktonhomes.com www.yanktonhomes.com Paid for by Stevens For House, Ted Mickelson Treasurer

VOTE FOR MIKE ON JUNE 5

Eldon “Swede” & Darlene Pearson of Salem, will celebrate their 40th Anniversary

on May 26th, 2012.

40th Anniversary

Greetings may be sent to: 24486 443rd Ave. Salem, SD 57058

BY BARBARA ORTUTAYAP Technology Writer

NEW YORK — Facebook’s initial public of-fering of stock is one of the largest ever. Theworld’s definitive online social network israising at least $16 billion for the companyand its early investors in a transaction thatvalues Facebook at $104 billion.

It’s a big windfall for a company thatbegan eight years ago with no way to makemoney.

Facebook priced its IPO at $38 per shareon Thursday, at the top of expectations. Thecompany is selling just a portion of its sharesas part of the offering. The $38 price meansall of its shares will be worth about $104 bil-lion, giving the company a market valuehigher than Amazon.com and other well-known companies such as Kraft, Disney andMcDonald’s.

Facebook’s stock is expected to begintrading on the Nasdaq Stock Market some-time Friday morning under the ticker symbol“FB.” That’s when so-called retail investorscan try to buy the stock.

Facebook’s offering is the culmination of ayear’s worth of Internet IPOs that began last

May with LinkedIn Corp. Since then, a steadystream of startups focused on the social sideof the Web has gone public, with varying de-grees of success. It all led up to Facebook, thecompany that’s come to define social net-working by getting 900 million people aroundthe world to share everything from photos oftheir pets to their deepest thoughts.

“They could have gone public in 2009 at amuch lower price,” said Nick Einhorn, re-search analyst at IPO investment advisoryfirm Renaissance Capital. “They waited aslong as they could to go public, so it makessense that it’s a very large offering.”

Facebook Inc. is the third-highest valuedcompany to go public, according to data fromDealogic, a financial data provider. Only twoChinese banks, Agricultural Bank of China in2010 and Industrial and Commercial Bank ofChina in 2006, have been worth more. At $16billion, the size of the IPO is the third-largestfor a U.S. company. The largest U.S. IPO wasVisa, which raised $17.9 billion in 2008. No. 2was Enel, a power company and No. 4 wasGeneral Motors, according to RenaissanceCapital.

For the company that was born in a Har-vard dormitory and went on to reimagine on-

line communication, the stock sale meansmore money to build on the features andservices it offers users. It means an infusionof funds to hire the best engineers to work atits sprawling Menlo Park, Calif., headquar-ters, or in New York City, where it opened anengineering office last year.

And it means early investors, who took achance seeding the young social networkwith start-up funds six, seven and eight yearsago, can reap big rewards. Peter Thiel, theventure capitalist who sits on Facebook’sboard of directors, invested $500,000 in thecompany back in 2004. He’s selling nearly 17million of his shares in the IPO, which meanshe’ll get some $640 million.

The offering values Facebook, whose 2011revenue was $3.7 billion, at as much as $104billion. The sky-high valuation has its skep-tics, who worry about signs of a slowdownand Facebook’s ability to grow in the mobilespace when it was created with desktop com-puters in mind. Rival Google Inc., whose rev-enue stood at $38 billion last year, has amarket capitalization of $207 billion.

“There seems to be somewhat of a hypearound the stock offering,” says Gartner ana-lyst Brian Blau.

BY SETH BORENSTEINAP Science Writer

WASHINGTON — And theheat goes on. Forecasters pre-dict toasty temperatures willstretch through the summer inthe U.S. And that’s a bad signfor wildfires in the West.

The forecast for Junethrough August calls forwarmer-than-normal weatherfor about three-quarters of thenation, the National OceanicAtmospheric Administrationsaid Thursday.

The warmth is expectedsouth of a line stretching frommiddle New Jersey to south-ern Idaho. Only tiny portionsof northwestern U.S. andAlaska are predicted to becooler than average and that’sonly for June, not the rest ofthe summer.

Last May until April wasthe hottest 12-month periodon record for the nation withrecords going back to 1895.This year so far has seen thehottest March, the thirdwarmest April and the fourthwarmest January and Febru-ary in U.S. weather history.And it was one of the leastsnowy years on record in theLower 48.

Some people called it theyear without winter.

And the outlook for sum-mer is “more of the same,”said Jon Gottschalck, head offorecast operations at NOAA’sClimate Prediction Center inCamp Springs, Md. “There’sdefinitely a tilt toward beingabove normal through thesummer.”

For some areas of theSouthwest that could meantemperatures 1 or even 2 de-grees warmer than normal onaverage, and maybe close tohalf a degree warmer than nor-mal in the East, he said.

One of the reasons is thatmuch of the country’s soil isalready unusually dry. So thesun doesn’t use as much en-ergy evaporating water in thesoil and instead heats up theair near the ground evenmore, Gottschalck said.

Martin Autopsy Finds Evidence Of MarijuanaORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Trayvon Martin’s autopsy shows evi-

dence of marijuana in his urine and blood.The autopsy was among a large amount of evidence released by

prosecutors on Thursday as part of the second-degree murder caseagainst the neighborhood watch volunteer who shot him in Febru-ary.

Other documents include a photograph that shows suspectGeorge Zimmerman with a bloody nose. Zimmerman has claimedself-defense and said he only fired because the unarmed teenagerattacked him. He has pleaded not guilty.

A police report says Martin had $40.15, Skittles candy, a redlighter, headphones and a photo pin in his pocket. He had beenshot once in the chest and was pronounced dead at the scene.

Romney Denounces Racially Focused Ads JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Mitt Romney swiftly and firmly dis-

tanced himself Thursday from a group exploring plans to targetPresident Barack Obama’s relationship with a controversial formerpastor. But the revival of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright as a campaignissue momentarily placed race at the center of the presidentialcontest and showcased the independent groups playing a new rolethis year with big-money TV ads.

Republican Romney pushed back against a proposal beingweighed by a conservative super PAC, Ending Spending ActionFund, to run a $10 million ad campaign drawing attention toracially provocative sermons Wright delivered at a church Obamaattended in Chicago. But with super PACS operating under signifi-cantly looser campaign finance restrictions than in past presiden-tial contests, there was no guarantee Romney’s words would beheeded by other groups eager to make Wright — and, by extension,race — a factor in the campaign.

“I want to make it very clear: I repudiate that effort,” Romneytold reporters after a campaign stop in Florida. “I think it’s thewrong course for a PAC or a campaign. I hope that our campaignscan be respectively about the future and about issues and about vi-sion for America.”

Romney indicated he was eager to shift the discussion back tojobs and the economy — bedrock issues on which he contendsObama is vulnerable.

Joe Ricketts, the billionaire benefactor of the super PAC, alsodistanced himself from the plan and announced he, too, would re-ject a racially focused approach.

Syrian Opposition Council Appears To CrumbleBEIRUT (AP) — Syria’s main opposition council is crumbling

under the weight of infighting and divisions over issues that cut tothe heart of the revolution, including accusations that the move-ment is becoming as autocratic as the regime it wants to drive out.

The slow disintegration of the Syrian National Council, whichhas become the international face of the uprising, could complicateWestern efforts to bolster the opposition, just as President BasharAssad’s regime gathers momentum in its crackdown on dissent.

On Thursday, SNC leader Burhan Ghalioun said he was ready tostep down once a replacement is found, amid mounting criticism ofhis leadership.

The decision came just days after he was re-elected for a third,three month term during a council vote held in Rome. The councilhas said it would rotate the presidency every three months, soGhalioun’s repeated appointments rankled some who wanted anew face.

“I will not accept under any circumstances to be a divisive can-didate, and I am not after any post,” said Ghalioun, an exiled Syrianand professor at the Sorbonne in Paris. “I will resign as soon as anew candidate is picked, either by consensus or new elections.”

Commercially Built Rocket Will Fly To StationCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — For the first time, a private com-

pany will launch a rocket to the International Space Station, send-ing it on a grocery run this weekend that could be the shape ofthings to come for America’s space program.

If this unmanned flight and others like it succeed, commercialspacecraft could be ferrying astronauts to the orbiting outpostwithin five years.

It’s a transition that has been in the works since the middle ofthe last decade, when President George W. Bush decided to retirethe space shuttle and devote more of NASA’s energies to venturingdeeper into space.

Saturday’s flight by Space Exploration Technologies Corp. is “athoroughly exciting moment in the history of spaceflight, but is justthe beginning of a new way of doing business for NASA,” said Presi-dent Barack Obama’s chief science adviser, John Holdren.

By handing off space station launches to private business,“NASA is freeing itself up to focus on exploring beyond low Earthorbit for the first time in 40 years.”

Damaged Navy Assault Ship Arrives At PortSAN DIEGO (AP) — Sporting crumpled catwalks and smashed

lifeboats, the U.S. Navy vessel USS Essex managed to glide into SanDiego Bay on Thursday, 24 hours after colliding with a tanker in thePacific Ocean when the aging warship’s steering apparently failed.

Families of the crew aboard the “Iron Gator” waved homemadeflags in celebration as the 21-year-old amphibious assault ship —which officials say is overdue to be dry docked — came into viewthrough the morning’s thick marine layer.

Wednesday’s midmorning crash 120 miles off the coast of South-ern California resulted in no injuries or fuel spills. The 844-foot-longEssex was carrying 982 crew members. The tanker, the 677-footUSNS Yukon, was carrying 82.

“To me, it felt like a minor earthquake,” said Navy photographerDuke Richardson from Jersey City, N.J., who was in a photo lab onthe Essex when it struck the Yukon.

He said some of the “newbies” on board were in a “state ofshock” and let out some interesting “four-letter words” when theboat jolted and the collision alarms sounded.

Boy Bites Into Severed Finger Flesh At Arby’sJACKSON, Mich. (AP) — A Michigan teen finishing off an Arby’s

roast beef sandwich chomped down on something tough thattasted like rubber, so he spit it out.

Turns out it tasted like finger. The fleshy, severed pad of an un-fortunate employee’s finger, apparently.

Ryan Hart, 14, told the Jackson Citizen Patriot on Wednesdaythat once he got a good look at it, he knew right away what hadbeen in the junior roast beef sandwich he was eating last Friday.

“I was like, ‘That (has) to be a finger,”’ Hart said. “I was about topuke. ... It was just nasty.”

The employee apparently cut her finger on a meat slicer and lefther station without immediately telling anyone, said Steve Hall, theenvironmental health director for the Jackson County health de-partment. Her co-workers continued filling orders until they foundout what had happened, he said.

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