Word: warning
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...some disagreement here--make the trip safer. These add-ons are pumping some fuel into the auto industry's depleted tank. New-car sales have sagged in recent months, but many buyers are willing to shell out extra for everything from satellite radios (about $200) to sensors that warn you if the car gets too close to something ($700 and up) to portable hard drives that can hold 5,000 of your favorite MP3s for that big summer road trip ($800). "People want luxury. They want entertainment. They want convenience," says George Barris. He should know: the legendary car customizer...
...which has a stock valuation of €50 billion, trimmed nearly €5 billion from its debt last quarter, but even if it reaches its ambitious targets for the rest of the year, it will still be left with €52 billion to go. From now on, analysts warn, most telecoms may look more like utilities than cutting-edge market leaders. But, hey: utilities, with their slow, steady returns, at least keep the lights on. And for nearly dark telcos, that's a good call. Reverse Discrimination...
...advocates of engagement with Iran - both in Washington and in allied capitals - warn that such a strategy would kill prospects of peaceful internal reform. Political systems under external attack tend to circle the wagons and go more conservative, and that's as likely to be true in Iraq as it has been in Washington since September 11. Iran's conservative mullahs have been in the throes of a domestic political crisis ever since their electorate voted overwhelmingly for the reformist President Mohammed Khatami in 1997. Crackdowns on reformists have periodically ignited street demonstrations, and a major confrontation has been looming...
...which has a stock valuation of €50 billion, trimmed nearly €5 billion from its debt last quarter, but even if it reaches its ambitious targets for the rest of the year, it will still be left with €52 billion to go. From now on, analysts warn, most telecoms may look more like utilities than cutting-edge market leaders. But, hey: utilities, with their slow, steady returns, at least keep the lights on. And for nearly dark telcos, that's a good call...
...currently hold 33 suspected JI members in custody. Other high-profile actions in the country include the start of the trial of JI's alleged spiritual leader Abubakar Ba'asyir, and the capture of Abu Rusdan, the man police believe to be his successor. But police and intelligence sources warn sternly against complacency. "Many thought the arrest of the Bali bombers was the end of terrorism here, but I see the opposite," says Anysaad Mbai, who heads Indonesia's Coordinating Board on Counterterrorism. "Many key figures are still out there, and they are the most dangerous...