Businesses in depressed Indiana town doubt Washington can help

Elkhart, Indiana, has become the poster child for the nation's economic downturn.
Surviving economically in downtrodden Elkhart, Indiana, may require doing some things you don’t want to do.

“Here in Elkhart, I’ve never seen things as bad as they are,” lifelong resident Yvonne Sell said Tuesday. “When you open the newspaper, unless you want to be a topless dancer, there’s nothing.” Elkhart became the poster child for the nation’s economic downturn when President Obama visited there Monday and then mentioned it several times during his first White House press conference. Unemployment in the Elkhart-Goshen, Indiana, area was 15.3 percent in January, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported, the fourth highest of any U.S. metropolitan area. Elkhart’s unemployment rate has spiked more than 10 percentage points in the past 13 months. But is it really that bad in Elkhart According to Sell and several other business owners and workers, it is. Sell and her four co-owners are in the process of selling Blessing Music Co., which has sold, rented and repaired musical instruments for school bands since 1916.

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“We’re not making money. It’s just too tight,” Sell said. The company has high overhead and a “considerable” high-interest loan, and credit continues to be a problem, she said. Sell said she isn’t hopeful that any government plan will kick-start commerce in Elkhart or elsewhere. The banks, which started the mess, have already been bailed out, she said, but “I’m not seeing them loosening their purse strings.” Small businesses as well as individuals need credit — not government spending — to keep the economy churning, she said. Take, for example, recreational vehicles, one of the town’s knotted lifelines: Sell said she knows plenty of people willing to purchase RVs, but they can’t without a bank loan. “People won’t buy them because they’re too scared,” she said. “I don’t personally see how spending the amount of money [Congress is] talking about spending is going to stimulate the economy.” Robert Dunlop runs a different kind of business, but he agrees with Sell. “Unfortunately, when you drop a ton of money to pay billion-dollar bonuses on the East Coast, it kind of sucks on the Midwest,” said Dunlop, president of J.A. Wagner Construction Co. in Elkhart. “If banks can free up a little bit of credit so that people can buy products and get people back to work, that would be good for this area.” People in Elkhart who were interviewed said they don’t have much confidence in the government’s ability to resolve the crisis, though Dunlop said he thinks tax relief would help some. “Unfortunately, you still have to have a job to have relief from the tax burden, and a lot of these people are behind in house payments and, quite frankly, it’s a vicious cycle: You don’t have a job, you can’t make your house payment, you’re not out buying anything. Even if you reduce the tax burden to those people, they still need to have some sort of income. When that occurs, they start buying things, which creates more jobs, which then starts the cycle back up again.” Elkhart Mayor Dick Moore echoes that view. He said people need jobs so they have money to spend and support industries such as RVs. The Democrat supports the stimulus plan Obama was touting in his town Monday because it will get residents to work quickly. “It’s jobs, jobs, jobs,” Moore told CNN’s “American Morning” on Tuesday. Watch what Elkhart’s mayor says about the president’s visit » “We have 16 shovel-ready projects ready to go … These are not pie-in-the-sky items; they’re not pork. … These are projects we will have to do,” Moore said. But gift shop owner Joanie Smith said she thinks government programs are no solution. “I think that the government and the banks are the biggest problem, because we have checks and balances to make sure what happened didn’t happen, and obviously it didn’t work,” she said. “They’ve already bailed out the banks; I don’t know why the banks aren’t lending money or offering the assistance that most businesses run with.” Smith saw traffic at her gift shop start dropping off at the end of 2007. “I have a store that is full of wonderful things, but nothing anybody needs,” Smith, owner of The Picture Show for 27 years, said with a tense laugh. “We’re just in a real reality-check area right now. It’s hard not being negative.” Smith has survived in retail by being financially conservative — she doesn’t have any loans to repay and has cut hours for her two employees, she said. Several years ago she downsized her shop from more than 4,000 square feet to a cozy 1,200. Smith said she feels protective of Elkhart and its image. “It’s a real entrepreneurial city,” she said. “We still manufacture here. We still create here. And unfortunately we’ve lost so much of our diversity of businesses here to China.”

Despite these lean times, Smith said she is determined to stay in business. “Women love to come in here and shop, and we want to be there for them.”

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France’s Sarkozy in Iraq to rebuild ties

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Iraq's PM Nuri al-Maliki.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy made a surprise visit to Baghdad Tuesday on a trip seen as aimed at raising his country’s stake in Iraqi reconstruction and easing frictions with Washington over the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.

Sarkozy, the first French president to visit the country, met with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki during the brief trip ahead of a tour of Gulf states. The French leader described his visit as a vanguard of French economic involvement in rebuilding Iraq and an attempt to strengthen European ties. But it is also likely to be seen as a conciliatory gesture, emphasizing France’s willingness to work with the new Barack Obama administration after opposition to the Iraq invasion led to a breakdown U.S.-French relations. Sarkozy’s predecessor Jacques Chirac was a fierce critic of the 2003 military offensive that toppled Saddam Hussein. France’s refusal to join the invading coalition led to U.S. boycotts of French wine and cheese. Under Obama, the United States is seeking to significantly reduce its presence in Iraq, drawing down troop numbers, in a move seen as an attempt to distance itself from the policies of former President George W. Bush. At a press conference Tuesday, Sarkozy stressed the importance of France’s role in improving relations between Iraq and the West, particularly Europe. “It is now that we must help Iraq, it’s now that we must commit,” he said, according to Agence France-Presse. “I came to show France’s willingness to take part in the economic development of Iraq, in the rehabilitation of its infrastructure,” he said. “Our collaboration has no limits.” Al-Maliki hailed Sarkozy’s visit as “historic” because it was the first by a French president and first official visit by a European head of state who had not been a member of the U.S.-led coalition.

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Exit polls suggest Israel taking center line

iReporter Daniel Dreifuss captured the scene as Israelis headed to the polls in Jerusalem.
Early exit polls showed a surprise narrow lead for the centrist Kadima party as voting ended in Israel’s elections Tuesday, Israeli television networks reported.

Kadima, led by Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, appeared to have an edge over the conservative Likud bloc led by former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But CNN correspondent Ben Wedeman and Israeli political analysts warned that exit polls had been wrong in past elections. Pre-election opinion polls had suggested that right-wing parties may benefit from Israel’s recent military campaign in Gaza. It was Livni’s inability to form a ruling coalition last year that prompted Tuesday’s vote. Kadima’s partner in the current coalition, the Labor Party, appeared to be running fourth in Tuesday’s elections, with the exit polls indicating that the right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu party is in third place. No single party is expected to win an overall majority in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, so whoever wins the most seats still faces the challenge of building a governing coalition. Livni took control of Kadima in September, when Prime Minister Ehud Olmert stepped down as the party leader amid several corruption investigations. Livni has given herself a tough war image. Her television advertising focuses on the military assault and statements about not allowing the Palestinian fundamentalist group Hamas to decide Israel’s fate. Kadima member Machman Shai told CNN: “(Livni) was attacked from the right and the left. They said she was not capable for the job — very chauvinistic. And I think it was all wrong. She is a leader and up to leading Israel in the years to come.” According to opinion polls held in the final days of campaigning, Kadima was closing the gap on Netanyahu’s Likud.

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“The majority of the people want a windfall,” Netanyahu said Tuesday while casting his ballot. “They want a change of direction to security, honor and hope, and I think they will vote for this today.” Livni hoped the weather would not dampen turnout. “Rain or no rain, cold or heat, you must come to the polling booth, stand behind the screen and consider whom to vote for,” she said. “This isn’t a storm. Rain just makes you wet.” About 5.2 million people were eligible to vote, choosing from 33 parties, with polls closing at 10 p.m. (3 p.m. ET). According to the Central Election Committee, 62.5 percent of eligible voters cast ballots — about 2 percentage points higher than the country’s last elections, in 2006. Will a new leader make any difference » This year, the election was expected to largely determine which Israeli parties should take the credit for the recent war in Gaza. iReport.com: See photos of the scene as voters head to the polls Despite international condemnation over the high number of Palestinian civilian casualties, it was a popular war in Israel. Domestic support was strong throughout, especially among residents within Palestinian militant rocket range, and it was perceived in Israel as a success. Polls showed that could bode well for Israel’s right-wing parties. A government needs a controlling majority of 61 in the 120-seat Knesset. Neither Likud nor Kadima is expected to reach even half of that figure. The next prime minister will have six weeks to form a coalition government. Defense Minister Ehud Barak, head of the Labor Party, also hoped for a sizable boost from the three-week Gaza war. But it probably will not be enough to lead the government. Before the operation, Labor was tipped to win just eight seats. That doubled in some polls, albeit briefly. A small number of rockets are still falling in southern Israel, and that could play into the hands of Netanyahu. He was not in a position of power during the war, but he has sought to capitalize on his opposition to Israel’s 2005 withdrawal from Gaza, telling voters that he warned the move would result in Palestinian militant rockets hitting major cities. At the time he was ridiculed by his political rivals; his supporters say he has been proven right. A party even further right-wing than Likud is Avigdor Lieberman’s Yisrael Beiteinu, which recent polls show was gaining strength. Lieberman’s party could gain six seats if it performs as well as recent polls suggest, taking it to 17 seats. That would take it past Labor as the third largest faction in the legislature.

If Lieberman’s party surpasses Labor, the founding party of the Jewish state, it would be unprecedented. Lieberman, 50, is a polarizing figure whose party has been accused of racism against Palestinians and Arab citizens of Israel.

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The price of saying ‘no’ at work

Microsoft and CEO Steve Ballmer will launch an online store for smartphone applications, a report says.
Last year my 26-year-old assistant asked me to write her a recommendation for business school. I was happy to help. For two years, Megan had worked around the clock, or so it surely felt to her, bringing insight to my work and order to my life.

The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Microsoft is getting ready to launch an online marketplace akin to Apple’s App Store. Microsoft is also readying a more sophisticated version of its mobile operating system called Windows Mobile 6.5, the Journal reported. Smartphones are sophisticated mobile phones that offer users access to the Web and e-mail, as well as, provide phone calling and all kinds of other messaging options. This category of device is the hottest thing going in the mobile market and is seen as the biggest growth engine for mobile devices over the next few years. Microsoft, which only makes the operating software for these devices, holds third place in terms of worldwide market share, according to research firm IDC. Symbian, which powers Nokia’s smartphones, is by far the leader, followed by Research In Motion with its BlackBerry devices. Even though Apple seems to be the most talked about smartphone on the market these days, it’s only in fifth place in terms of overall market share for 2008, IDC said. But Apple is quickly gobbling up market share and has become a serious threat to Microsoft and every other company competing in the smartphone market. With the release of the iPhone 3G last summer, Apple has tripled its market share from 3 percent in 2007 to 9 percent in 2008, according to IDC.

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Meanwhile, Microsoft only grew from 11 percent market share in 2007 to 12.3 percent in 2008. Microsoft is facing several challenges as it tries to catch Apple’s growth rate. For one, the company’s business model is based primarily on licensing software to hardware vendors. While this business model worked fine just a couple of years ago, it’s difficult to justify now given that device makers can get free software from Symbian, Google Android, and Linux. The second problem that Microsoft faces is that the company has been almost exclusively focused on business customers. Over the past year, smartphone users have gravitated toward more consumer applications. In addition, to their work e-mail, they want multimedia functionality and social-networking applications on their phones. “Microsoft is in a really tough spot,” said Ryan Reith, an analyst with IDC. “It has to change its value proposition. And a big part of that is refreshing its user interface and making the device more consumer-friendly.” Reith believes this is why it’s critical for Microsoft to develop an application marketplace that can compete with Apple’s App Store. The App Store went live last summer and offers thousands of applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch music player. The store has been very successful with users downloading thousands of free and fee-based applications. Microsoft already has a developer community creating applications for Windows Mobile devices. But the problem is that many of these applications have been geared toward business users. And there is not a single destination that makes it easy for users to discover and download different applications. “Clearly smartphones are not just for business users anymore,” Reith said. “Microsoft needs to work with the developer community to get more consumer applications out there.” Microsoft’s executives have gotten the message that consumer functionality is hot. And Andy Lees, head of Microsoft’s mobile business unit, told the Journal that the company is about to put more emphasis on multimedia and other consumer functions like music and photos. Microsoft is expected to unveil its new offerings next week at the Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona, Spain. Chief Executive Steve Ballmer will be delivering a keynote speech there on February 16. I will be there next week covering the news from the show, as will my CNET Reviews colleagues Bonnie Cha and Kent German. But even with these enhancements, Microsoft has a tough road ahead of it. Competition in the smartphone market is increasing. And several competitors, including Android and RIM, are launching their own version of an application store. On the handset and operating system side, new devices are coming to market that could provide stiff competition for Windows Mobile devices. For example, smartphone pioneer Palm is coming out with new mobile software and a device called Pre later this year. And even though critics have been writing the company’s obituary for the last year, the new device, which was unveiled last month at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, has been getting a lot of buzz. But Microsoft thinks it has the right enhancements lined up to take on these competitors, especially Apple. The Journal also reported that Microsoft is talking about a new synchronized data storage service called My Phone. This new service is supposed to make it easier for people to back up their mobile contacts, calendar appointments, photos and text messages, to a Web site. The service is similar to a service that Apple calls MobileMe. The biggest difference will be that Microsoft will offer My Phone for free whereas Apple charges $99 a year for MobileMe. It’s too soon to know how Microsoft’s new software and application store will stack up against Apple’s offering. But one thing is certain, Apple isn’t sitting still either. And if Microsoft or any other competitors want to hasten Apple’s rise in this market, they’ll have to leap-frog Apple with something truly revolutionary.

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Chris Brown case going to the DA

Chris Brown attends a party saluting music producer Clive Davis in Beverly Hills, California, on Saturday.
The chief investigator in the domestic violence case against singer Chris Brown will deliver his findings to the Los Angeles district attorney Tuesday afternoon for consideration of further charges, the investigator told CNN.

Los Angeles Police Detective Deshon Andrews said he has kept the case file closely guarded and no copies have been made of the original photos and documents in order to keep them from leaking to the media. Police have refused media requests to hear the 911 call that led to their investigation early Sunday, but Andrews said it mostly recorded the sound of “a screaming woman.” Brown, 19, turned himself in Sunday night after police said they were looking for him. Watch the latest about the case » He was arrested on a felony charge, released on a $50,000 bond and given a March 5 court date. Police said Brown and a woman were in a vehicle near Hollywood’s Hancock Park early Sunday when they became involved in an argument.

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The woman “suffered visible injuries and identified Brown as her attacker,” police said.

Police did not identify the woman, but sources close to the couple told CNN the alleged victim was his girlfriend, singer Rihanna, 20. Brown’s lawyer has not responded to several requests for comment.

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Mugabe rivals to lead battle to fix economy

Tendai Biti will be in charge of fixing Zimbabwe's broken economy.
Zimbabwean opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has picked his party’s secretary-general to hold the difficult and important post of finance minister, he said Tuesday.

The announcement came as Tsvangirai announced which ministries his party will hold in a new unity government to be formed with President Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party this week. Tendai Biti, secretary-general of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), a lawyer by profession, is not an expert in economics. He is, however, the strongest of the ministers chosen by Tsvangirai, which may explain why he was chosen to control the challenging portfolio. Zimbabwe’s economy has all but collapsed, with trade now mainly being conducted in U.S. dollars or South African rand. Tsvangirai is expected to be sworn in as prime minister Wednesday in accordance with the power-sharing agreement signed last September. The ruling ZANU-PF has been allocated 15 ministries and Tsvangirai’s MDC has been given 13. In addition to finance, the MDC will be in charge of constitutional and parliamentary affairs; public works; and water resources and management. The latter two are key areas amid Zimbabwe’s cholera epidemic, which has been exacerbated by poor water lines and sanitation throughout the country. The party will also have six deputy ministers in defense, agriculture, foreign affairs, justice, women affairs, and local government. The MDC and Mugabe’s ZANU-PF will jointly head the ministry of home affairs, which oversees the police. This means ZANU-PF will be in charge of key ministries including state security; defense; as well as justice and legal affairs. It will also retain its hold on the ministry for media, information and publicity, meaning the new government is unlikely to lift a ban on international journalists entering the country. Zimbabweans have not had a legitimate government since they went to the polls almost a year ago. Most are skeptical the two parties can work together, though they remain cautiously optimistic.

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Dressing the stars is other fierce Oscar race

Actress Anne Hathaway adjusts her Marchesa gown as she arrives at last year's Academy Awards.
On Academy Awards night, the biggest speculation is still about whose name is in the envelope. But the most-asked question has become, "Who are you wearing?"

From the moment a star like Kate Winslet steps onto the red carpet leading to the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, she will answer the question countless times — often before a live television audience — as she negotiates the media frenzy beaming her images all over the world. In a matter of hours, her dress will be seen by tens of millions of people, analyzed in detail by fashion pundits and probably “knocked off” for the public eager to wear a cheaper version of red carpet couture. If all goes well — and especially if she turns out to be one of the evening’s winners — the gown can propel not only the actress to new heights of stardom, but her designer as well. “It has been said that coverage at the Academy Awards is equivalent to a $25 million advertising campaign” for a designer, said Bronwyn Cosgrave, author of “Made for Each Other: Fashion and the Academy Awards.” See what it’s like to walk down the red carpet at the Kodak Theatre » With the stakes so high, the competition among fashion houses to have a star wear their creation is fierce. “It’s almost like going to war. They have these huge PR machines. They’ve got men on the ground courting stars to wear their clothes,” Cosgrave said. Months of planning Some actresses stick with one label for the red carpet — think Renee Zellweger in Carolina Herrera gowns — because they either are a spokesmodel for the fashion house or have a special relationship with the designer.

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Other stars, however, are up for grabs. The process of wooing them can begin as early as the Cannes Film Festival in France, Cosgrave said, about nine months before the Academy Awards even take place. Cannes gives fashion publicists a chance to look for break-out stars, a process that snowballs as the year progresses and more film festivals and movie premieres arrive. The strategy also means designers zero in on stylists who work directly with the actresses. “They woo you in the sense that they call and beg and plead and send pictures,” said Phillip Bloch, who famously styled Halle Berry when she won an Academy Award in 2002 and who is styling two presenters at this year’s ceremony. See memorable moments of Oscar history » Bloch said he’s always looking for the right gown for his clients, but for many designers, the real race to dress the stars begins in January, when Oscar nominations are announced. “As soon as they have the nominees out, you start pitching right off the bat,” said Pamella Roland, a New York-based designer whose gowns have been worn by Faye Dunaway and Jane Seymour to the Academy Awards. The pitching process can include sending out sketches, images and finished dresses. Roland said some of her designs have been requested this year by Taraji P. Henson, who is nominated for an Academy Award as best supporting actress for her role in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.” The request isn’t a guarantee Henson will wear her dress, Roland added. Meanwhile, bigger designers can spend lavishly to ensure that their gowns end up on the red carpet. Major fashion houses courting A-list actresses may treat them to trips to Europe, where they get a front-row seat to a designer’s fashion show and visit his atelier, or studio, Cosgrave said. Decision time In the end, stars can look at dozens of gowns before deciding on a shortlist. Bloch said he typically brings a client 40 to 100 dresses to try on. An actress usually doesn’t decide which dress to wear until the last couple of days before the awards, he added. See some of last year’s standout Oscar fashions » It all adds up to nail-biting time for the designers. “[Stars] can hold these dresses, and you don’t know until they walk on the red carpet what they’re wearing,” Roland said. “It’s become a crazy business.” The gowns are often gifted to big-name celebrities, who usually keep them after the ceremony. Fashion experts predicted that the bad economy won’t have any impact on how actresses dress at the Oscars this year. “You’ve seen opulence all the way through. You saw it at the Golden Globes. You saw it at the SAG Awards,” Bloch said. “In times of economic crisis and hardship in America, Hollywood is escapism, it’s not real.” The Academy Awards didn’t use to create much of a stir among designers, but Cosgrave identified two key moments when that changed. The first was in 1986, when Cher showed up at the Academy Awards in a “Mohawk” ensemble by Bob Mackie. The look sparked enormous debate, showing how much publicity a designer could get on the red carpet, Cosgrave said. She traced the second milestone to the mid-1990s, when Georgio Armani made a concerted effort to court stars to wear his designs at red carpet events, prompting other designers to take notice. “Once they all started moving in on the territory … it became a real cat fight,” Cosgrave said. Today, the dresses are so closely watched, they can filter down to the public quickly thanks to labels like ABS, which rush to produce similar designs at a fraction of the cost. Oscar styles can also influence prom dresses and bridal gowns, as well as spark color trends. But for the stars, dressing up for the Academy Awards is more than a night on the town.

“The public always mistakes the Oscars for a really big party. It’s not. It’s a complete part of the job to go and network and look good at these things,” Cosgrave said. “The entire fashion industry is looking to Hollywood on that night to find their next big girl.”

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More than 1,000 attend Caylee’s memorial service

The child's grandparents, Cindy and George Anthony, attended the memorial but their daughter did not.
More than 1,000 mourners from Florida and beyond gathered at an Orlando church Tuesday for what a pastor called a celebration of the short life of slain toddler Caylee Marie Anthony.

“I believe today Caylee’s home,” said the Rev. David Uth, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Orlando, where the public memorial service was held. “My goodness,” he continued, “if she could step into this room for just a moment, in a childlike way she would tell us … she would jump up and down to somehow to show us the incredible place that heaven is.” Caylee was 2 when she was last seen in June. Her remains were found in December in a wooded area about a half mile from the home of her grandparents, George and Cindy Anthony. The girl’s mother, Casey Anthony, 22, is charged with first-degree murder in her death. Jail officials said Casey Anthony had not asked to watch the televised memorial service as of Tuesday morning, and the television would not be on in her unit. She met with her attorney, Jose Baez, during the service in a jail interview room, jail officials said. There was no television in the room. Baez was permitted to bring in a laptop, although it was unknown whether they watched the service. She said through her lawyer on Monday that she was opposed to the service being open to the public. Watch why she was against the public memorial »

A picture of the smiling mother and daughter was among those in front of the altar, placed next to a candle lit by Caylee’s grandparents during the service. The program featured many songs, a fitting tribute for a little girl who, according to her family, loved music. But there was no statement read from Casey Anthony. Casey Anthony’s parents and brother spoke, giving attendees a glimpse into Caylee’s life and the child she was. Her grandfather, George Anthony, recalled how Caylee called him “Jo Jo,” how she devoured her favorite food — green beans — and how she enjoyed singing and dancing with him. “She was a comedian to me,” he said. “She cherished not only the time that I had with her but cherished every day that she was around each and every one of us.” Watch more of his eulogy » Cindy Anthony remembered Caylee coming to wake her up on Sunday mornings. “Her face would be right in my face, ‘Cee cee, wake up,’ and she’d be right there,” she said, holding her hand just in front of her face. She said she missed swimming in the pool with Caylee and talking with her on the phone. Both the Anthonys expressed their support for their daughter. George Anthony asked those present to withhold judgment, to pray for his daughter and to write her letters. “I miss my daughter, Casey,” he said. Cindy Anthony said one of the things she misses the most is watching the love Caylee shared with her mother. “It breaks my heart that Casey’s not with us today to honor the child she loves so very, very much,” she said. Speaking to her daughter, she said, “I love you, and I wish I could comfort you right now. … Caylee was so much like you. She got your beauty and your compassion, and she got your spirit.”

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She asked mourners to stay hopeful. “Hope is what we need more of. With hope, we can concentrate on our faith. Faith is why I stand before you today with a smile.” ‘This family is incomplete. I am incomplete,” said Casey’s brother, Lee Anthony. He said the death of his niece had left him broken and repeatedly invoked her initials, “C.M.A.” “If I could ask something from anybody that was willing to hear it, it would be this: For those of us that are frightened or angry or mournful or that just don’t understand, I ask that you fill your heart with patience and grace, and that you allow yourself to yield any judgments that you may already have,” he said. “For those of us who will never be the same again, I ask that you fill your heart with hope and forgiveness and you allow yourself to cope and heal.” A slide show of Caylee as a baby and a little girl was played. Uth and the Rev. Shane Stutzman, pastor of Eastside Baptist Church, acknowledged that many people may have questions — some of which may never be answered. But both urged mourners to trust in God. “He has the answer. Let the peace that surpasses all your understanding hold you now in the palm of his hand,” Stutzman said. “I don’t think we understand all the things he could show us right now, but I know that he understands us.” “We don’t have to say goodbye this morning to Miss Caylee Marie,” he continued. “If you know Jesus Christ, you can say, ‘See you soon.'” Mourners were required to pass through metal detectors and not permitted to carry bags into the church. “We feel like we know this little girl. We need this day for closure,” said Sandra Mckeller, who drove six hours from Georgia to attend Tuesday’s service. “Today is about Caylee,” she added.

A large makeshift memorial, with teddy bears, candles and balloons, continues to draw the curious to the site where a meter reader found the child’s remains. Caylee’s body was found in a laundry bag wrapped in a plastic trash bag, and her skull was wrapped in duct tape, according to police documents.

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Bad economy forcing immigrants to reconsider U.S.

Pedro Pablo, an illegal immigrant from Guatemala, headed home recently due to the bad U.S. economy.
Pedro Pablo slowly folds up his American flag blanket and stuffs it in his duffel bag. With it goes his American dream.

“I left my family and lost four years with them. I will ask them to forgive me,” he said. Pablo is an illegal immigrant from Guatemala who came to the United States to support his wife and five sons back home. When he arrived, construction jobs were plentiful. Over the last year, he says, he’s worked three days. He recently boarded a bus with a one-way ticket home, paid for by the Guatemalan consulate in Los Angeles. “I thought I could get ahead here. I regret coming.” Watch day laborers head home » Across the United States, tens of thousands of immigrants — those here legally and illegally — are facing a similar dilemma: Do they continue to search for jobs in a struggling U.S. economy or return home to an even bleaker economic situation “Things are very dire, and I think it’s impacting those at the very bottom even more so,” said Abel Valenzuela, a professor at the University of California-Los Angeles who has spent years studying day laborers. “Day laborers are being really, really impacted.” America’s economic boom during the 1990s and 2000s created a high demand of day workers needed for anything from building homes to picking fruit and from working at slaughterhouses to working as nannies. Many of those jobs have since evaporated, resulting in more and more people — immigrants and native-born Americans — flooding day labor job sites and standing on street corners in search of any type of work they can get. “All of them are competing for the few jobs being dispatched,” Valenzuela said. Immigration experts say it’s not yet clear how large an immigration exodus of Latin Americans is under way. But they say anecdotal evidence suggests day laborers, like Pablo, have begun packing — a result of the economy and tougher immigration enforcement. For some immigrants, the experts say, the reasons for toughing out the U.S. economic depression outweigh the reasons for leaving, including: • One or two days of work per month at $8 an hour is often better than what they can make back home; • Tougher border enforcement along the U.S.-Mexico border has made it harder for them to return once they leave; • Smuggling costs to get into the United States from Mexico have skyrocketed from about $1,500 three years ago to about $6,000 today.

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“I’m not convinced it’s a tidal wave of exodus,” Valenzuela said. “There really is a fear mentality [of leaving], and as a result many immigrants are buckling down — that is they’re hiding or living in the shadows of our law. So they think more than twice about whether or not they want to go back to their country of origin, because they know very well that it’s going to be extremely difficult and very expensive to come back if they want to pursue their dream.” Steven Camarota with the Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington-based think tank that seeks a “pro-immigrant, low-immigration vision,” said Census data indicate that more than 1 million illegal immigrants left last year, a departure that began even before the nation’s economy took a turn for the worse toward the end of the year. He said better border enforcement and workplace raids on illegal immigrants “let people know that the immigration law was back in business.” With illegal immigrants returning home, he said, “It’s certainly good for two groups: taxpayers and less educated natives.” The lack of work in the United States has had a trickle down effect in the immigrants’ countries of origin. The money sent back home by Mexican immigrants in 2008 fell for the first time since record-keeping began 13 years ago. Watch lack of remittances has “real large economic implications” » The remittances dipped 3.6 percent, from $26 billion in 2007 to $25 billion, according to Mexico’s central bank. Remittances are Mexico’s second-largest source of foreign income, behind only oil. Other Latin American countries also have seen money sent from immigrants in the United States slow. Erik Camayd-Freixas, a professor at Florida International University who has served as an immigration court interpreter for two decades, recently traveled to Guatemala, where he saw the effects of less money being sent home by immigrants. “Everybody was talking about it,” he said. “The local economies are severely impacted and the unemployment is rampant.” He said scores of people deported from the United States are trying to find any type of job in Guatemala. “They’ve been there six months and they have no work,” Camayd-Freixas said. That’s why he said he believes most immigrants already in the United States are willing to stick it out, despite the hard-scrabble times in America. “The truth of the matter is, despite our 7.6 percent unemployment, most Americans are not going to do those jobs that migrant workers do,” Camayd-Freixas said. “They’re certainly not going to pick tomatoes, grapefruits and oranges.” Camarota disagrees. He said Americans most likely to compete for day labor jobs — those with a high school degree or less — are currently unemployed at an astounding rate of about 15 percent. “It’s very hard to argue that we’re desperately short of unskilled workers,” he said. Geronimo Salguero is the director of a day labor site in Los Angeles. He says employment for day laborers has dipped 75 percent over the last year. He said on any given day three years ago, his center found work for nearly 50 percent of the people who gathered there. Now, that figure is about 5 percent of the 250 men who huddle daily searching for work. A study issued in January by the Pew Hispanic Center found that nearly three of four Latinos surveyed said their personal finances were in fair or poor shape, compared to 61 percent of the general U.S. population. Among Hispanic immigrants who sent remittances home over the last two years, about 70 percent said they sent less in 2008 than in 2007. Salguero said to help offset the hard times, immigrants are crowding about 20 men into apartments. He’s now working with the Guatemalan consulate. Once a week, he said, the consulate purchases a bus ticket for an immigrant to go home. “They are completely desperate,” he said. “Each day, I have workers coming into the office and say, ‘Geronimo, help me. I want to go back to my country.’ ”

Pablo was one of those men. He had lived in a one-bedroom apartment with seven other men. His “bedroom” was a corner of the living room where he kept his blanket, duffel bag and picture of his family. “I can’t make it here,” he said. “If I have to suffer, it’s better to suffer in Guatemala with my family.”

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Giant horse to tower over UK countryside

The 50-meter high horse will dominate the landscape around Ebbsfleet.
A sculpture of a giant white horse taller than the Statue of Liberty is set to tower over the countryside as part of an unusual scheme to help revive the fortunes of a depressed region of England.

The 50-meter equine artwork was Tuesday announced as the winner of a competition to design a landmark to dominate the skyline of the Ebbsfleet Valley, set to be a new stop on the Eurostar London-to-Paris rail link. Designed by artist Mark Wallinger — whose previous work has included dressing in a bear suit and wandering around a gallery in Berlin — the £2 million ($3 million) horse will be one of the largest artworks in the UK. Wallinger’s horse — which echoes ancient white horse symbols carved into hillsides around Britain — beat a shortlist of designs that included a tower of stacked cubes and giant steel nest. Victoria Pomery, head of the panel that selected the design, described the 33-times normal size horse as “outstanding.” “Mark is a superb artist of world renown and his sculpture will become a real landmark for Ebbsfleet Valley and the whole region,” she said. It drew a less favorable response from readers of local Web site Kentnews.com, who described it as a “waste of money,” an “abomination” and “depressing.” One correspondent, Andy Smith, added: “This horse looks extremely silly.”

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