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Technology creates extreme genealogists

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NEW YORK (AP) – Lee Drew had a chat with some cousins the other day.
He was sitting in his home office in Orem, Utah. Four of the cousins were in England. One was in Australia, another in South Africa. A few more joined in from other parts of North America.

Drew is one of a new breed of genealogists who are doing things that would have been impossible in the not-so-distant era of dusty archives and whirring microfilm readers. He has found so many of his relatives that he needs a computer database to keep track of them all — all 1.7 million of them.

Just as modern equipment has made it possible for any reasonably motivated person to climb Mount Everest or dive to the Andrea Doria, new technologies have made it possible to achieve incredible genealogical feats with relatively modest effort.

Now, it takes nothing more than casual curiosity and a few hours of research to discover that civil rights activist Al Sharpton is descended from slaves who were owned by ancestors of the late South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond, a staunch opponent of desegregation.

That feat was accomplished by the commercial genealogy Web site ancestry.com, which boasts of having the largest online family history database in the world, with more than 4 billion records. Among the company’s 725,000 subscribers there are people who have discovered they descend from royalty, or Mayflower passengers, or that Butch Cassidy is their seventh cousin.

‘It’s a great time to be alive,’ Drew said.

It isn’t just the databases. Drew also uses the Internet to communicate with relatives around the globe, sharing information and research tips. And services like Google Books give him free access to formidable university library collections.

At 57 he remembers the old days, when doing genealogy meant driving up to the Mormon church’s Family History Library in Salt Lake City or spending his vacations strolling through English churchyards looking at headstones. Now it can mean nothing more than strolling into his home office and booting up his computer.

Internet genealogy can be extremely productive, agreed Dick Eastman, who writes an online genealogy newsletter. But it depends greatly on where your ancestors came from.

The Internet is great for the United States, especially New England. And it’s pretty good for Britain and Ireland.
But if your ancestors came from Southern Europe, Africa, Asia or even Canada in some cases, the Internet can be pretty useless.

‘If I want to go look up my French-Canadian ancestors there’s almost nothing to help me more than two or three generations back,’ Eastman said. ‘It’s not going to be as rosy an experience as some of the online services would like you to think.’

Herbert Huebscher, a retired electrical engineer from Franklin Square, N.Y., found himself in that kind of situation when he went looking for his ancestors. The most distant ones he could identify were Ukrainian Jews who were living in small village near the Romanian border around 1830.

‘In general, Jewish paper trail genealogy tends to hit a brick wall around 1800, give or take 50 years,’ Huebscher said.

To push farther into the past, he turned to DNA.

DNA testing has made it possible for people to make connections when the paper trail fades into tatters. The technology was used several years ago to show that Thomas Jefferson — or one of his male relatives — fathered a child by his slave Sally Hemings. It has also shown that a significant proportion of men in modern Ireland can trace a direct male descent from Niall of the Nine Hostages, a legendary 5th-century king.

Customers of Relative Genetics, a company based in Salt Lake City, have traced their roots to Scotland, Africa and other distant countries with DNA testing.

Huebscher had his own genetic profile tested by a Houston-based company called Family Tree DNA. He found that he matched one other individual in the company’s database, a South African-born Londoner named Saul Isseroff.

It turned out the two had some very distinctive anomalies in their DNA profiles, which allowed them to identify other matches as new Family Tree DNA customers joined the company’s database. They have now found more than 40 closely matched families. Nearly all of the families were Jewish, and nearly all of them trace their heritage back to Eastern Europe — though oddly enough, one family traces its roots to Puerto Rico.

A statistical analysis of the genetic data showed that whether they were named Huebscher or Isseroff, Wolinsky or Rosa, all of the families must have shared a single common ancestor who probably lived four or five centuries ago, long before most Jews even had surnames, much less written vital records.

Though his research is not yet conclusive, Huebscher believes the common genetic ancestor may have been descended from Sephardic Jews who lived in Spain before the Inquisition.
Just a little patience may be enough to solve the mystery, said Peggy Hayes of Relative Genetics.

‘The databases are growing very rapidly,’ she said. ‘As the genetic genealogy databases grow, the success rate is going to grow as well.’

For some lucky people, the techniques of extreme genealogy make it possible to trace their origins back not just centuries, but a millennium or more. All they have to do is link themselves to a royal line, Drew explained, and ride it back as far as it goes.

‘We are all related to royalty,’ Drew said.

The trick is to prove it. But thanks to the power of extreme genealogy, it can be a lot easier than you might think.

Every French monarch since the 10th century was a descendant of Charlemagne. So was William the Conqueror, which means every British monarch since 1066 also descends from the King of the Franks.

And that means at least 18 U.S. presidents, 14 first ladies, Walt Disney, Colin Powell, Brooke Shields — a good number of the people whose family history has ever been seriously researched by genealogists — can trace their ancestry to Charlemagne.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Randstad, Mittal to join AEX index from tomorrow, Getronics relegated to midcap

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AMSTERDAM (AFX) – Randstad Holding NV and Mittal Steel Co NV/Arcelor Mittal will join the benchmark AEX index from tomorrow, Euronext said.

Getronics NV will drop from the AEX to the midcap AMX index, with BinckBank NV, SNS Reaal Groep NV and Tele Atlas NV also joining the AMX.

Hunter Douglas NV, Pharming Group NV and VastNed Retail NV will be relegated from the midcap index to the smallcap ASCx index.

Beter Bed Holding NV, Endemol NV, Macintosh Retail Group NV and Wavin NV will also be included in the ASCx index.

The annual reshuffle will also lead to a change in weightings for the blue chip indices, Euronext said.

amsterdam@afxnews.com

ls/an

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China to impose fuel tax before 2010 – official

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BEIJING (XFN-ASIA) – The Chinese government will impose a long-speculated fuel tax before 2010, said Yang Fuqiang, chief representative of the Beijing office of the China Sustainable Energy Program.

The implementation of the tax will come quickly after it is announced, Yang added, speaking on the sidelines of an event in Beijing.

China’s central government has said previously that it plans to move ahead with the measure this year, but industry sources have expressed doubt that the country will implement the tax.

Analysts have said that the tax is a crucial element in efforts to curb China’s environmental pollution and increase economic efficiency.

Yang said that he believes China will be able to reach its goal under the 11th Five-Year plan to reduce energy intensity by 20 pct by 2010, despite falling short of the four pct taget last year.

‘China will meet these standards,’ Yang, adding that 2007 and 2008 are key years.

But he added he believes the failure next year to meet the targeted reduction in energy consumed per unit of GDP will indicate the failure of the attempt to meet the five-year plan goal.

sean.mangieri@xinhuafinance.com

VW CEO Winterkorn wants to head Scania’s supervisory board – report

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FRANKFURT (AFX) – Volkswagen AG chief executive Martin Winterkorn will seek to become the head of Scania AB’s supervisory board at the next annual general meeting of the Swedish truck manufacturer, Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported citing industry sources.
VW currently holds a 34 pct stake in Scania, and the German car maker’s former chief executive Bernd Pischetsrieder still serves as the chairman of its supervisory board.
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amk/amb
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Sony announces cheaper Blu-ray player

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NEW YORK (AP) – Sony Corp. said Monday it is bringing out a cheaper player for Blu-ray discs early this summer, a crucial step in its battle to make the high-definition format the replacement for DVDs.

The BDP-S300 will cost $599, yet will have the same capabilities as the $999 BDP-S1 Sony is currently selling, said Randy Waynick, senior vice president of the home products division of Sony Electronics.

Sony and Samsung Corp., which also makes a Blu-ray player, have been undersold by Toshiba Corp.’s players for the rival HD DVD format. Toshiba has a model on the market for $499.

However, sales of players for either format have been tepid, as consumers have stood back, waiting for the market to settle on one of the discs.

Most people buying high-definition discs are apparently doing so to play them on PlayStation 3 game consoles. There are two versions of the console, for $499 and $599, and Sony sold 1.8 million units last year.

‘Eighty percent of people who buy a PS3 also buy Blu-ray movies to go with it,’ Waynick told reporters at a meeting here.

‘The consumers have determined that that’s the format they are choosing to go with,’ he said, citing retail data from Nielsen VideoScan that showed Blu-ray discs outselling HD DVDs by three to one this year.

The BDP-S300 is a smaller unit than the BDP-S1, and is about the same size as a DVD player. Like the current model, it will be able to output a signal in the highest high-definition format, known as 1080p. It will also be able to play CDs, which the BDP-S1 does not.

Stan Glasgow, president of Sony Electronics, told reporters at a meeting here that by Christmas, prices for Blu-ray players should be down below $500.

Sony has previously complained that DVD players became a commodity product too soon, and that it was hard to make a profit in a market dominated by $50 units. Glasgow predicted that Blu-ray players would take the same route.

‘Over time, I think it will be just like DVD,’ he said.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Paris court rejects Clear Channel suit vs JCDecaux over Paris ad/bike contract

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PARIS (AFX) – A Paris court has rejected a lawsuit filed by Clear Channel against JCDecaux SA over the recent attribution of an outdoor advertising and bike hire system contract by the city of Paris, which Clear Channel claims was unfairly granted to JCDecaux.

The mayor’s office, which announced the court’s ruling, said it will now proceed with the signing of the 10-year contract with JCDecaux.

The contract was awarded in January, but Clear Channel argued that not only were there ‘irregularities’ in the tender process, but also that JCDecaux’s offer was not feasible for either company.

JCDecaux has promised to pay the city 3.5 mln eur each year for the rights to manage the advertising on bus shelters and other outdoor supports, while supplying 20,600 bikes and 1,451 rental stations by the end of 2007.

paris@afxnews.com

afp/js/jsa

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BG says fully cooperating with Italian authorities on bribe probe

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LONDON (AFX) – BG Group PLC said it is fully cooperating with the Italian authorities on the ongoing corruption investigation that involves key former and current officials in charge of the company’s 500 mln eur Brindisi gas project.

‘The investigation is still going on and no official charges have been brought (against anyone),’ a BG spokesman said.

‘We are fully cooperating with the authorities. We don’t tolerate corruption in any shape or form within the group,’ he stressed.

BG is working on the release of Franco Fazio, chairman of BG Italia and former chief executive of BG’s Brindisi LNG unit, who was arrested last week as part of the probe.

Two former managers of BG Italia, including Fabio Fontana and Yvonne Barton, were put under house arrest. Fontana left the company in 1999 and Barton in 2002.

The investigation stems from an alleged bribe of 360 mln lire paid in 1999 to allow the construction of a 8-bln-cubic-metre liquefied natural gas terminal in the Italian port of Brindisi to proceed.

BG is still keeping the target 2010 start-up timetable for the project, which faced fierce opposition from environmentalists.

It has so far invested around 200 mln eur in the project and reclaimed 80 pct of the land it needs for the terminal.

monicca.egoy@thomson.com

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Linktone says ready to make formal offer for MonsterMob ‘within hours’ of EGM

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LONDON (AFX) – Linktone Ltd said it is ready to make a formal offer for MonsterMob ‘within hours’ of MonsterMob’s EGM on Friday, provided MonsterMob shareholders vote down the LaNatro Zed SA proposal.

It added that its offer, which values each MonsterMob share at 1.31 usd, is ‘clearly superior’ to the LaNatro offer, and expects completion of the transaction (if agreed) in early May.

Linktone also said that it has agreed a mechanism to provide the ailing UK ringtone company with funding to meet its financial obligations in the period from an offer until closing.

Linktone chairman Elaine LaRoche said: ‘The Zed proposals are not an offer to shareholders but in fact will result in Zed controlling both MonsterMob and its board of directors and provide no cash or liquidity to shareholders.’

newsdesk@afxnews.com

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Industry leaders fight greenhouse gases

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NEW YORK (AP) – The leaders of several worldwide corporations — including General Electric Co., AB Volvo and Air France-KLM SA — called Tuesday for prompt, decisive action on climate change created by the emission of greenhouse gases and carbon dioxide.

Nearly 100 companies followed a meeting at Columbia University by endorsing a formal statement to fight for clean energy and against climate change caused by people and businesses. The companies are members of the Global Roundtable on Climate Change, formed in 2004 to explore issues critical to shaping public and industry policy on climate change.

‘This is an issue that requires action now but will not be solved immediately,’ said Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, which created the Global Roundtable.

The statement by the international business community seeks to lay out a framework for global action to mitigate the impact of human-made climate change without adversely affecting energy and economic growth, according to Sachs, who also spoke at the United Nations on Friday. The business leaders hoped that a permanent plan could be in place by 2012.

‘Climate change is an urgent problem that requires global action … in a time frame that minimizes the risk of serious human impact on the Earth’s natural systems,’ the joint statement said.

The modern age is powered largely by fossil fuels coal, oil and gas. The fossil fuel era has been a period of unprecedented economic advances, the statement noted.

‘Yet we now understand that fossil fuels — as they are currently used — increase the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which along with the release of other greenhouse gases warms the planet and leads to other impacts on global climate change,’ it stated.

The document calls on governments to set scientifically informed targets for reduced global emissions and concentrations of carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases and to take immediate action in pursuit of those targets.

The business community wants a framework because it provides predictability. It said that generally politicians lag behind the business sector in addressing the need to reduce human-made climate change.

Alain Belda, chairman and chief executive of Alcoa, the world’s leading producer of aluminum, said addressing climate change involves ‘risks and costs.’

‘But much greater is the risk of failing to act,’ he said.

The potential recommendations must be mandatory, and the costs of de-carbonization or change over to low carbon are smaller than people fear, said Sachs. He said it cannot be successful without the participation of countries such as China, India, Australia and the United States.

China will soon replace the United States as the largest emitter of greenhouse gases and carbon dioxide, he said.
Tomas Ericson, president of Volvo Group, North America, said that the environment has become one of the priorities of the vehicle manufacturer, along with safety and quality.

‘We feel we are part of the problem, and we feel we need to be part of the solution,’ Ericson said at the meeting.

Robert Edgar, of the National Council of Churches, a member of the Roundtable group, said everyone has the responsibility to be a steward of earth by limiting future impacts on global warming and preserving nature’s resources.

‘We feel this is a moral issue,’ Edgar said.

On Jan. 22 in Washington, D.C., chief executives of 10 major corporations urged Congress to require limits on greenhouse gases this year, contending voluntary efforts to combat climate change are inadequate.
In his State of the Union address, President Bush said that climate change needs to be addressed, but he has opposed any mandatory emission caps, arguing that industry through development of new technologies can deal with the issue.

In a January letter to Bush, the executives and leaders of four major environmental organizations said mandatory emissions caps are needed to reduce the flow of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere.

China announced this month it will spend more money to research global warming, but it said it lacks the money and technology to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions. On Monday, the country’s environmental watchdog said it had failed to reach any of its pollution control goals for 2006.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Endesa signs offshore wind generation deal with Elecnor

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MADRID (AFX) – Endesa SA said its co-generation and renewables division has signed an agreement with Grupo Elecnor’s Enerfin Enervento unit to jointly develop offshore wind farms in Spain.

In a statement, Endesa said the partners will have equal stakes in the new consortium, Consorcio Eolico Marino Cabo de Trafalgar, which initially will pursue offshore wind generation along Spain’s southern coast.

Endesa estimates a total potential capacity from offshore wind farms of 3000 megawatts, a quarter of the wind power currently generated on land.

Separately, Endesa said its Denise electricity distribution research project has been approved to receive support by the Industry Ministry’s Centre for Industrial Technological Development.

Denise, a four year project with a 30 mln eur budget to research development of a new generation of electricity distribution networks, has 12 participating firms and 7 research institution members led by Endesa.
afxmadrid@afxnews.com

cve/ped/tw

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