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Friday, March 23, 2007

Elizabeth Edwards’ cancer diagnosis puts husband’s campaign in uncharted territory

WASHINGTON — Democrat John Edwards said Thursday that his presidential campaign “goes on strongly” in the face of a repeat cancer diagnosis for his wife, Elizabeth, a somber development that thrust his White House bid into uncharted territory.

Ensnared on the wireless Web

As communities like Napa push to turn themselves into massive wireless hotspots, unsuspecting Internet users are stumbling directly onto hacker turf, giving computer thieves nearly effortless access to their laptops and private information, authorities and high-tech security experts say.

Wolfgang Puck bans foie gras, caged chickens from new animal-friendly menu

LOS ANGELES — Celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck is cooking up kinder, gentler menus.

Japanese billionaire hands over a few mansions to Hawaii’s native homeless

HONOLULU — Dorie-Ann Kahale and her five daughters moved from a homeless shelter to a mansion Thursday, courtesy of a Japanese real estate mogul who is handing over eight of his multimillion-dollar homes to low-income Native Hawaiian families.

Judge says no to class action against State Farm over Katrina damage

A federal judge on Thursday refused to allow a class action against State Farm Insurance Cos. over the insurer’s denial of claims on Mississippi’s Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina.

Yosemite can continue park repairs during appeal over river suit

FRESNO — Yosemite National Park can proceed with $60 million in construction projects while an appeals court hears a lawsuit claiming commercial development threatens the park’s fragile ecosystem, a federal judge said Thursday.

Light brown apple moth may pose threat to Bay Area agriculture

WALNUT CREEK — The light brown apple moth has landed in the Bay Area, which could mean trouble for regional crops, including grapes in Livermore’s wine country.

Craigslist ads trigger Sacramento photo studio raid

SACRAMENTO — Racy photographs of teenage girls posted on a popular Internet advertising service prompted an FBI raid at a Sacramento home and photo studio, according to court documents unsealed this week.

Another member of Ohio county’s election board resigns

CLEVELAND — A second elections board member in Ohio’s most populous county quit Thursday, and a state official filed a complaint to remove the two remaining members because of persistent voting problems.

SF takes a step closer to plastic bag ban

The By Associated Press

Around the globe: March 23

Beijing

Rocket nearly hits U.N. chief in Iraq

BAGHDAD — A rocket exploded 50 yards from the U.N. secretary-general during a news conference Thursday in Baghdad’s Green Zone, causing him to cringe and duck just minutes after Iraq’s prime minister said the visit showed the city was “on the road to stability.”

Dems prepare for vote on troop withdrawal

WASHINGTON — On the eve of a critical vote, House Democrats labored Thursday to lock down a majority behind a Sept. 1, 2008, deadline for the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq, the sternest test yet for a determined new majority eager to challenge President Bush.

Worldwide rate of tuberculosis levels off

LONDON — The global rate of tuberculosis infections has leveled off, public health officials said Thursday, offering a glimmer of hope for the first time since the disease’s spread was declared a global emergency more than a decade ago.

Prodi under fire after hostage swap with Taliban

ROME — Italy’s negotiation for the release of Taliban militants in exchange for the freedom of an Italian hostage in Afghanistan has placed Premier Romano Prodi in the firing line days before a crucial parliamentary vote on keeping the country’s troops in Afghanistan.

Is nastiness the price we pay for Internet anonymity?

When a California woman recently gave birth to a healthy baby just two days after learning she was pregnant, the sudden change to her life was challenging enough. What April Branum definitely didn’t need was a deluge of nasty Internet comments.

Rodent poison found in now-recalled pet food blamed for animal deaths

11 a.m. ALBANY, N.Y. -- Tests turned up rat poison in the pet food suspected of causing kidney failure in dogs and cats across the country and killing at least 16, state officials and scientists announced Friday.

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