Monday, February 4, 2013

More bodies found after Mexico skyscraper blast

Bernardo Montoya / Reuters

A makeshift memorial to victims of the Pemex skyscraper explosion was erected near an entrance to the headquarters of Mexico's state-owned oil giant. The number of confirmed dead reached 36 over the weekend as more bodies were pulled from the rubble. No cause has been found.

By Michael O'Boyle and Adriana Barrera, Reuters

MEXICO CITY -- Mexican rescue workers found three more bodies over the weekend amid the rubble of a deadly blast that tore through state oil firm Pemex's main office complex on Thursday, the government said as search efforts appeared to near a close.

The death toll from Thursday's explosion stands at 36, Pemex said via Twitter. Rescue workers had been digging through the last sections of the building's basement and may soon call off their search. One person was reported still missing, and at least 121 people were injured.

Attorney General Jesus Murillo said on Friday that it was too early to say whether the explosion was due to an attack, an accident or negligence, but he promised results of an investigation in the coming days.

Murillo toured the site on Sunday but did not publicly comment on the progress of the investigation. Officials have communicated details through social media about the disaster, which struck just before a long holiday weekend.

A powerful explosion shook the building housing the headquarters of Mexican oil giant Pemex. NBC’s Kristen Dahlgren reports.

The investigation will test confidence in President Enrique Pena Nieto, whose Institutional Revolutionary Party ruled Mexico for most of the last century but lost power in 2000, when it was accused of fostering widespread corruption.

Local media reported the three bodies were maintenance workers. A woman who worked as a secretary was still missing, but she was unlikely to be found so deep in the wreckage.

The blast occurred two months into Pena Nieto's presidency, just as Congress was preparing to discuss his plans to open up the state-run energy industry to more private investment.

Hobbled by heavy state taxation, Pemex saw production slump in the last decade and its safety record has been stained by a series of deadly accidents, including an explosion that killed about 30 at a gas facility last year.

Related:

PhotoBlog: Aftermath of the explosion

Full Mexico coverage from NBC News

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/04/16835759-three-more-bodies-found-in-rubble-of-mexico-skyscraper-explosion-death-toll-hits-36?lite

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MF Global trustee says clients may be made whole

(AP) ? Former brokerage customers of MF Global could fully recover cash that was frozen when the trading firm collapsed, according to the bankruptcy trustee in the Chapter 11 case.

The projection is based on the latest analysis of recoverable assets available in MF Global's bankruptcy, versus pending claims, the trustee, former FBI Director Louis Freeh, said in a court filing Saturday.

The report outlines a potential range of recovery for brokerage customers, depending on various scenarios, from a shortfall of $6 million to a surplus of $120 million. Those figures are based on calculations that recoverable assets range from about $6.857 billion to $6.983 billion, versus claims of $6.863 billion.

If there's a surplus, customers whose money was frozen when MF Global collapsed in October 2011 could get a full recovery of their losses.

That does not include other classes of creditors, such as lenders with unsecured claims, which are not expected to fully recover their claims. For example, one such group of lenders is expected to receive a distribution ranging from 14 percent to about 34 percent, according to the filing, with potentially no recovery for other groups.

Freeh's update was filed with Judge Martin Glenn in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for New York's Southern District. Freeh is a former federal judge who served as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation from 1993 through 2001. He's now chairman of Freeh Group International Solutions LLC, a global risk-management firm.

His filing came after an agreement was reached in December that could speed up payment to customers of MF Global. That agreement resolved competing claims filed against MF Global's main brokerage unit and the company's United Kingdom operations.

New York-based MF Global, which specialized in trading futures and options, was headed by former New Jersey Governor and U.S. Senator Jon Corzine. It collapsed in Oct. 2011 after making a disastrous bet on European debt.

Regulators have been investigating whether MF Global tapped money from clients' accounts as its financial condition worsened. That would violate securities laws because brokerages are required to keep customer money separate from the firm's money.

Much of the money that went missing belonged to farmers, ranchers and other business owners who used MF Global to reduce their risks from fluctuating prices of commodities like corn and wheat.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-03-MF%20Global-Bankruptcy/id-96194d644f1e4084ba802cc80e29675c

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Friday, February 1, 2013

On A Whim Home Boutique: Something old and something new!

Donna Troxler-Shop Owner/Sole Proprietor-Decorating Consultant ,Custom Painted Vintage White Furniture

Katelyn Troxler-Full Time Worker-Granddaughter

Dana Troxler-Part Time Worker-Daughter

Syd Figert-Custom Upholstery PLUS Awesome Furnishings.

Holly Chapple-Wedding Florals PLUS Primitive Style Decor

Jean Crunk-Painted Furniture Plus Unique Home Decor Items.

Jennifer Markoff-Jewelry-Framed Art

Karen Beiler-Hand Painted Stemware and Signs

Nancy Greenan-Unique Furniture-Estate Clean Out

Ruth Blackwell-Custom Oil Painting

Elaine Savona-Original Photography and Custom Made Jewelry and Painted Furniture

Nancy Brown-Custom Made Jewelry

Karey West-Stern - Unique Garden Items and home furnishings-Home Grown Dried Herb Designs

Lorelei Howard - Vintage Jewelry-Fine China Pieces-Thousands of Vintage Post Cards Collected for Years

Jackie Brannan-Romantic Style Funiture and Home Decor. Custom Made Silk Flower Arrangements. Stages Homes for Re-Sale. Part Time Worker.

Celeste Blumenauer-Worked On Extreme Makeover With Tye, Very Unique Painted+Refinished Furniture. Can Do Any Type Paint Finishes On Just About Anything. Annie Sloan Paint Stockest and Teacher Of Annie Sloan Paint Finishes.

Tinia Lively-Beautiful Unique Stained Vintage Furniture. Also Specializes In Elegant Glassware And China.

Carrie Beck-Auction Diva Specializing In Cool Funky Junk, Vintage Finds And Cottage Furnishings

Donna Rutkowski-Unique Cottage Style Furnishings. Specializing in Decorating Do-Overs With Style.

Michelle Wallace + Eliza Chinyaving-Repurposed, Re-Painted Highly Desired Furniture And Home Furnishings With A Flair. Custom Built Work Stations In Your Choice Of Colors.

Michelle Beiler + Karin Nicotra- Unique French Country Vintage Furnishings With A Pop Of Color. Furniture Painted With Annie Sloan Paints. A Real Eye For Color.

Karen Hutchison- Talented Eclectic Artist ,Stylish Home Furnishings, Custom Painted Reclaimed Furniture.

Danielle Reken-Painted Furniture, Home Decor of all styles. Personal Organizer For Your Home.

Jimmy Farula-Custom, Hand Crafted Farm Tables, Benches And Kitchen Islands Made To Any Size And Shape. You Give Your Measurments And The Style You Want And It will Be Made. Have A Picture Of What You Want, It Can Be Reproduces. Chech Out The Sample Table In The Shop.

Jacqueline Regueira-Transforms and Refurbishes Furniture and Decorator Items.

Debbie Coates-Custom Slipcovers, Upholstrey and Window Treatments. Owner of BE HAPPY ANTIQUES.

All of the ladies+men above have so many more talents than I have mentioned. Listed are some of their specialties and the services they do for our customers. Each of these ladies has their own beautifully decorated area in my shop with every type of decor and vintage/antique painted and unpainted furniture you could ever want. They are what makes ON A WHIM such a wonderful ONE-OF-A-KIND Decorating Boutique, and I am so THANKFUL for every one of them.....

Source: http://www.onawhimantiques.com/2013/02/something-old-and-something-new.html

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Negotiators talking to Ala. captor through pipe

MIDLAND CITY, Ala. (AP) ? More than three days after he allegedly shot a school bus driver dead, grabbed a kindergartner and slipped into an underground bunker, Jimmy Lee Dykes is showing no signs of turning himself over to police.

Hostage negotiators in Midland City, Ala., tried Thursday to persuade the 65-year-old retired truck driver to release the 5-year-old, who has Asperger's syndrome and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

But they acknowledged Dykes could hold out for days.

James Arrington is police chief of the neighboring town of Pinckard. He told reporters camped out at the site Thursday that Dykes has been known to hole up in the underground bunker resembling a tornado shelter for as many as eight days.

Dale County Sheriff Wally Olson said late Thursday that authorities were still communicating with the suspect.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/negotiators-talking-ala-captor-pipe-181459029.html

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Detroit's Big Three off to fast sales start in 2013

Anyone wondering whether the U.S. auto market could maintain the fast pace that helped deliver an unexpectedly strong close to 2012 needn?t worry.? The New Year is off to a fast and promising start based on the first sales numbers to come in for January.

Notably, Detroit?s Big Three makers all posted double-digit gains ? good news for the Motor City considering the two largest domestic brands each lost market share last year.

Chrysler Group LLC reported a 16% increase in U.S. sales in in January as the automaker continued to gain sales, while Ford Motor Co.s January U.S. sales grew 22% year-over-year, and GM jumped 22%. All three makers stressed that their higher-profit retail sales grew at an even faster pace as they continued to shift emphasis away from generally lower-profit fleet markets.

Foreign-owned makers also appear to have had a good month, analysts expecting many to report double-digit gains, as well.? While most are still crunching their numbers, the Toyota brand was up 26.6% for the month, prompting Bill Fay, general manager of the Japanese maker?s mainstream brand to declare, "The sales pace we saw in the fourth quarter of last year rolled into January, exceeding our expectations for the industry.??

The Detroit Bureau:?Handicapping the Super Bowl Auto Ads

Audi missed that double-digit mark with a more modest 7.5% year-over-year increase, though January was still the German brand?s 25th consecutive month of record sales.


The maker generated particularly strong numbers for a wide range of models such as the recently redesigned Escape crossover and the F-Series pickup, the latter clearly benefiting from an upturn in U.S. housing.As for the Detroit makers, ?Our investment in fuel-efficient new vehicles ? including EcoBoost engines and hybrid technology ? continues to pay off,? declared Ken Czubay, Ford vice president, U.S. Marketing, Sales and Service. ?

Sales of all-new Ford Fusion totaled 22,399 vehicles in January, a 65% increase versus a year ago and Fusion?s best January sales ever ? breaking its January 2011 sales record by 56%. In addition, Ford?s small car sales were up 29% in January versus a year ago, with 23,171 Fiesta, Focus and C-MAX hybrid models sold, marking Ford?s best January small car sales since 2000.?

The Detroit Bureau:?Honda to Integrate Apple Siri Personal Assistant

?It?s been a good week for the Chrysler Group. On Wednesday we announced full year 2012 profits of $1.7 billion and followed that today with our January sales, up 16%, marking our 34th-consecutive month of year-over-year sales growth,? said Reid Bigland, Head of U.S. Sales.

Indeed, it has been a good month for Chrysler which won North American Truck of the Year honors for its 2013 Ram 1500 pickup ? which won similar kudos from influential Motor Trend magazine.? The maker also received praise for a number of new products revealed at January?s North American International Auto Show in Detroit.

But perhaps one of the best bits of news for Chrysler was that the Dodge Dart had its best month since its launch last June. The compact sedan has been struggling, acknowledged Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne, forcing the maker to recently reduce production at a Michigan engine plant supplying the Dart assembly line in Belvedere, Illinois.?

The Detroit Bureau:?Chrysler Planning 47 New Models Over Next Four Years

The Chrysler, Dodge, Ram Truck and FIAT brands each posted year-over-year sales gains in January compared with the same month last year. The Dodge brand?s 37% increase was the largest sales gain of any Chrysler Group brand in January. Chrysler Group extended its streak in January to 34-consecutive months of year-over-year sales gains.


Nonetheless, ?The year is off to a very good start for General Motors,? said Kurt McNeil, vice president of U.S. sales operations. ?There?s a sense of optimism among our dealers that only comes when you pair a growing economy with great new products. We started to see the benefits in 2012 with vehicles like the Chevrolet Sonic, Cadillac ATS and Buick Verano. Now in 2013, we?re entering the sweet spot of our product plan in a growing economy,? he said.As for GM, it announced that it sold 194,699 vehicles in the United States in January, up 16% compared with a year ago. Retail sales were up 24% while fleet sales were down 2%. Whether that will be enough to help reverse last year?s market share decline remains to seen, however, as some of the key foreign-owned brands have yet to report their January sales numbers.

The analysts are predicting U.S. vehicle and light truck sales will come in about 15% higher than in January 2012. That would put sales on track for a seasonally adjusted annual rate, or SAAR, of 15.3 million new vehicles.

If the predictions hold up, it would be the best January in five years, further evidence that the industry is back on its feet after the brutal beating it took during the financial crisis.

?Auto makers are kicking off the year strong, staying true to disciplined incentive spending as many curtailed their spending in January as the current lineup of products speak for themselves,? said Kirsten Andersson, an analyst at TrueCar.com.

Whether the industry can maintain this pace is yet to be seen. The fact that Wall Street?s Dow-Jones Industrial Average broke the psychologically important 14,000 mark certainly could add momentum. So could the recent indicators of a long-awaited upturn in the U.S. housing market.?

The Detroit Bureau:?The 10 Safest and Least-Safe Vehicles on the Road

Last year reached 14.5 million sales thanks to a final holiday burst. And AutoPacific analyst Ed Kim predicts 2013 will be ?a healthy, profitable year for manufacturers.? The consulting firm is predicting the year will reach the 15.1 million mark. But some industry experts and insiders, including GM CEO Dan Akerson, have suggested the market could nudge as high as 15.5 million if the overall economy continues to rebound.


Not everything was rosy during January, however. TrueCar is reporting that the average transaction price ? the actual cost for a typically new car buyer ? dipped by $416 in January compared to the record set in December 2012. But the ATP was still up from January 2012 by $300, to $$30,812. And incentives declined an average 12% last month, as well, the tracking firm says.One of the factors that will likely contribute to strong demand through the year is that a growing number of buyers will be returning vehicles as their leases come to an end in 2013, according to an analysis by Edmunds.com. Leasing took a sharp tumble during the depths of the recession but has begun a sharp rebound.

Paul A. Eisenstein contributed to this report.

Copyright 2013 The Detroit Bureau

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/chrysler-posts-highest-january-sales-five-years-1B8209091

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From pets to 'recess': High school stress relief

In this Jan. 14, 2013 photo, a student pets Junie, the school's "therapy dog," at Prospect High School in Mt. Prospect, Ill. Stress, anxiety and panic attacks are on the rise at many U.S. high schools, due to heightened academic expectations and troubles at home made worse by the shaky economy. So some schools are trying unconventional methods, such as therapy dogs, to help students cope. (AP Photo/Martha Irvine)

In this Jan. 14, 2013 photo, a student pets Junie, the school's "therapy dog," at Prospect High School in Mt. Prospect, Ill. Stress, anxiety and panic attacks are on the rise at many U.S. high schools, due to heightened academic expectations and troubles at home made worse by the shaky economy. So some schools are trying unconventional methods, such as therapy dogs, to help students cope. (AP Photo/Martha Irvine)

In this Jan. 14, 2013 photo, Junie, a "therapy dog" at Prospect High School, sits in a classroom at the school in Mt. Prospect, Ill. The 18-month-old golden retriever is one way this school is trying to help students cope with a rise in stress, anxiety and panic attacks. Many say these issues are a problem in schools across the country. (AP Photo/Martha Irvine)

In this Jan. 14, 2013 photo, Junie, a "therapy dog" at Prospect High School, lies on the floor in a classroom in Mt. Prospect, Ill. The 18-month-old golden retriever is one way this school is trying to help students cope with a rise in stress, anxiety and panic attacks. Many say these issues are a problem in schools across the country. (AP Photo/Martha Irvine)

In this Jan. 14, 2013 photo, Douglas Berg, a social worker at Prospect High School, watches as a student pets Junie, the school's "therapy dog," at the Mt. Prospect, Ill. school. Stress, anxiety and panic attacks are on the rise at many U.S. high schools, due to heightened academic expectations and troubles at home made worse by the shaky economy. So some schools are trying unconventional methods, such as therapy dogs, to help students cope. (AP Photo/Martha Irvine)

In this Jan. 14, 2013 photo, Douglas Berg, a social worker at Prospect High School, left, and guidance counselor Lynn Thornton stand in the school's office with Junie, a "therapy dog," at the school in Mt. Prospect, Ill. Stress, anxiety and panic attacks are on the rise at many U.S. high schools, due to heightened academic expectations and troubles at home made worse by the shaky economy. So some schools are trying unconventional methods, such as therapy dogs, to help students cope. (AP Photo/Martha Irvine)

(AP) ? The four-legged member of the counseling team at the high school in suburban Chicago waits patiently, as a crush of students fills the hallways. Her tail wags with the first pat on the head, then another and another.

"Puppy! Ohhh, puppy dog!" one teenager croons, as he affectionately tousles the ears of the 18-month-old golden retriever. Junie began her role as a "therapy dog" at Prospect High School less than four months ago.

It's just one of a number of ways high schools across the country are trying to address what some call an epidemic of stressed-out, overwhelmed students.

Some schools now offer yoga classes or teach relaxation techniques in the classroom. Others, from California to Minnesota and New Jersey, are instituting homework-free nights or are offering a bit of free time between classes ? the equivalent of recess for teenagers.

In Maine, at least two high schools have converted classrooms into "wellness rooms" staffed by volunteer professionals who offer massage therapy and other stress-reducing treatments for students, with parental permission.

The idea is to help them slow down and cope with their problems in an overpacked, 24-7 world, where many students stay up late to finish homework and fall asleep with their cellphones in their hands.

"Things cycle for them so quickly. So it's hard for them to be able to develop the patience, or the ability to think something through and to realize that it may take some time for it to get resolved," says Douglas Berg, a social worker at Prospect High, where he and other staff are seeing more students hospitalized with anxiety and panic attacks related to stress.

Some might question whether a dog in the school corridors, or a 20-minute break, addresses the deeper issues at hand. But many school officials say they have to do what they can to alleviate the growing pressure to achieve. That pressure, they say, has only been heightened by the commonly held belief that it's tougher than ever for a young person to make it in this economy.

More than ever, a college degree is seen as a must. So more students are taking college courses in high school, and even more are enrolling in rigorous "advanced placement," or AP classes to try to earn college credit. Add year-round sports and after-school jobs and volunteering, as a way to bolster the college application, and many students say they have little time for anything else.

"There's just too much," says Lexi Botts, a senior at Prospect High who sought comfort from Junie and, ultimately, school counselors after her grandfather's death last fall.

The intensity of school has become so great, says one mom in Paoli, Pa., that she and her family have dubbed the senior year of high school "the crying year."

"When does a child get to be a child anymore?" said Carol Meerschaert. "I fear how they will burn out when the pressure has been on them since elementary school."

Abbie Kaplan, a junior at the Boston Latin School ? a public high school that requires students to take an exam for entry ? knows what she means.

On a scale of 1 to 10, she places her stress level at a pretty steady 9. She regularly has four hours of homework a night, some done before swim practice. She eats dinner around 9:30 p.m., then finishes the rest of her homework and generally goes to bed at 11:30. Then she's up at 6 a.m. so she can be at school by 7:45.

She calls her hectic schedule "the new normal."

"You keep telling yourself that it will prepare you for the future," Kaplan says. "It's just sort of how it is."

She, too, has had anxiety attacks related to her workload, she says. And some parents say school shootings, including the recent massacre in Newtown, Conn., only worsen the stress.

"My son came home from school and said, 'I'm really worried this could happen at our school,'" says Jane Robertson, a mother of a 16-year-old in Belfast, Maine. She's also a chiropractor, who helped start one of the wellness rooms in her area. The first one opened in Camden, Maine, after a spate of suicides more than 10 years ago, she said.

Overall, a recent national survey of adolescent mental health found that about 8 to 10 percent of teens ages 13 to 18 have an anxiety disorder. And of those teens, only 18 percent received mental health care, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.

School officials across the country, meanwhile, say they're seeing a steady uptick in mental health referrals, often stress-related. Timothy Dorway, a principal at a high school in Chanhassen, Minn., just outside Minneapolis, is among them. He says such referrals have doubled since his school opened in 2009.

"We're asking these kids to do things that we don't even ask adults to do," Dorway says, noting sports and academic requirements that often leave them sleep-deprived.

Besides the mental health issues, he noted that students from his school have been in car accidents after falling asleep at the wheel ? one of them on the way to school, at 7:45 a.m.

All of it led him and his school community to come up with a motto ? "Balance, Perspective, Growth" ? and to look for ways to put it into practice.

Now, Chanhassen High is among a small but growing number of schools that has homework-free nights scattered throughout the school year. Two days a week, students at Chanhassen also get a 20-minute "recess" break in the morning. Some play hackie sack or grab a snack. They chat in the hallways, catch up on homework or rest.

The break is a time "to let all the information of the day settle in my mind," says Zach Anderson, a junior at the school. "We need time to think."

The changes at the school have not come without controversy. A few parents see the break as a waste of time that could be better used at the beginning of the school day.

"Let them sleep in, or get a better breakfast, or come to school at the usual time to talk to a teacher if they need to," says Karrie Shroyer, a mom of a sophomore at Chanhassen High.

When it comes to homework, she says the school would better serve students by cutting back on what some view as an inordinate amount of "busy work," repetitive work that students who've mastered the concepts may not need to do.

"Are we trying to hide the real problem with a simple fix?" Shroyer asks.

Raychelle Lohmann, a professional counselor and author based in South Carolina, says any step schools take to reduce stress for students is a "step in the right direction."

But she says parents, too, need to keep their own expectations in check, even for young children.

"We're seeing parents who are putting their preschoolers in tutoring programs," she says. "The intentions are good. But we're missing the important point, to let them develop and play" ? even in high school.

She says parents also have to model the behavior for their children.

"I'll be honest. I'm guilty. I don't take a day off," she says. "But at some point, we just have to stop ? and prioritize ? and teach our children to do the same.

"We have to give up this 'go, go, go' mentality."

Lisa Lawrence, a mom in Austin, Texas, said she realized this when her daughter, now a sixth-grader, told her she felt like "nothing she did was ever good enough" for her mom.

"It sent chills down my spine," Lawrence says. "I think I felt that way growing up."

So she's backed off. And so has Dorway, the principal in Minnesota who's also a dad.

After his son's seventh-grade band concert last year, he recalls watching three kids "running down the hall, literally stripping out of their band uniforms with basketball uniforms underneath."

"This is insane," he says. So once the homework issue is further examined, he's vowing to take on the "holy grail" of issues at his school ? the packed practice and game schedules of student athletes.

Back at Prospect High in suburban Chicago, counselor Lynn Thornton ponders the question of expectations, as she pets Junie, who is sitting next to her in a school counseling office.

Educators are feeling the pressure to perform, too, she says. And while raising standards can be good thing, she wonders if we've taken things too far by making "high school the new college."

"I really don't see it changing," Thornton says, "until maybe colleges would really step up and say, 'Hey, you know what? You guys teach high school and we'll teach college."

Until then, students will find Junie at their beck and call, often on the counseling office couches.

___

Martha Irvine is an AP national writer. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org or at http://twitter.com/irvineap

___

AP reporter Jeff Baenen in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-31-Stressed%20Students/id-4b2010592ccb438eada9236fb1845603

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White House on offensive to get Hagel as defense secretary

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As Chuck Hagel, President Barack Obama's nominee to lead the Pentagon, prepared to meet with senior New York Senator Chuck Schumer in mid-January, the White House stepped in and ensured that the get-together would take place quickly - and in the West Wing.

Some of the loudest objections to Obama's choice of Hagel for secretary of defense stemmed from lawmakers' concerns about his past comments on Israel and Iran.

And with Schumer, the leading Jewish Democrat in Congress, among those expressing doubts, the administration wanted to make absolutely clear that it expected his support. Hosting the meeting in the White House wing housing the president's official offices was a symbol of its importance to the administration.

The West Wing session - followed by Schumer's effusive endorsement of Hagel - was part of an all-out offensive Obama's White House has launched to secure Hagel's nomination, administration officials and congressional aides said. The campaign has included a Pentagon task force, hours of meetings and, at times, some judicious direct intervention.

Hagel, 66, a decorated Vietnam War veteran and former two-term Republican senator, emerged as a leading candidate to replace Leon Panetta almost as quickly as the defense secretary announced his retirement.

Hagel's Senate confirmation hearing is scheduled for Thursday morning, and his approval is less than a sure bet.

To battle a well-financed firestorm of objections from neoconservative and gay rights groups, the White House lined up a large team to work with Hagel and make the former Nebraska senator's case to his former colleagues.

The group included Obama allies like Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, who pushed Schumer and other balky Democrats to back Hagel, White House officials and Hagel aides from his two terms in the Senate.

Administration officials have reached out to Jewish groups and reassured gay rights activists. Hagel met with leaders of some of the largest Jewish-American groups at the White House on Friday, where he was joined by Vice President Joe Biden.

And they have enlisted an array of luminaries to serve as Hagel ambassadors. Thirteen former secretaries of defense and state and national security advisers from both parties sent a letter to senators last week strongly backing his nomination.

Hagel will be introduced at his hearing by two former Senate Armed Services committee chairmen, Democrat Sam Nunn and Republican John Warner, who both - like Hagel - were known for breaking from party doctrine on a range of issues.

'MURDER BOARDS'

Hagel has set up a Pentagon office and has a transition team helping him to prepare. He has met with Panetta, deputy defense secretary Ashton Carter and other military leaders, including Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The nominee has had two "murder board" sessions, panels to grill him to prepare for questions from skeptical - and hostile - senators.

A source close to the confirmation process said Hagel may squeeze in a third "murder board" session before Thursday.

Carter, who will stay on as deputy secretary of defense during Obama's second term, told reporters at the Pentagon on Friday that Obama had called him to tell him about the Hagel nomination and asked him to remain, which would provide a measure of stability.

Critics have questioned Hagel's past statements over the power of the "Jewish lobby" in Washington, and what they say is his resistance to sanctions on Iran and eagerness to further cut defense spending. No Republican has yet publicly endorsed him.

Hagel is expected to have a tougher time with the Armed Services Committee, which must clear his nomination, than in the full 100-member Senate, where Republicans hold 45 seats.

There are 12 Republicans on the 26-member panel, but many are among the Senate's most conservative members. At least three, including the panel's top Republican, James Inhofe of Oklahoma, said they would oppose Hagel even before hearing his testimony.

But others, including fellow Vietnam War veteran John McCain, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, Utah's Mike Lee and Deb Fischer of Nebraska, said they would reserve judgment until after Hagel's testimony.

McCain's vote is considered key. He campaigned for Hagel in 1996, and Hagel was national co-chairman of the Arizona Republican's unsuccessful 2000 presidential bid. On Tuesday, McCain said he would wait to make up his mind until he hears Hagel's testimony.

TRAITOR TO THE RIGHT, WORRY TO THE LEFT

Some Republicans view Hagel as a traitor for questioning the Bush administration's handling of the Iraq War, which he initially supported.

Some Democrats and moderate Republicans, meanwhile, question Hagel's social conservatism, saying it raises concerns about how strongly he would support equal rights for women or homosexuals in the military.

"Hagel annoyed people on both the right and left with some of his comments," said Lawrence Korb, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and assistant secretary of defense under President Ronald Reagan.

"My guess is in the committee, he's going to get out, but not by a lot," Korb said.

Controlling 55 seats in the Senate, Democrats have enough votes to confirm Hagel by a simple majority. They would need five Republican votes to overcome Senate procedural hurdles, although an effort to block Hagel would infuriate Democrats as the two parties try to negotiate delicate issues like spending cuts and a bipartisan immigration plan.

Hagel has held dozens of meetings with senators to address their concerns and appeal for their support, staying on Capitol Hill from early morning well into the evening repeatedly in the weeks leading up to his confirmation hearing.

He was due to have 10 more meetings on Tuesday, cramming for his make-or-break appearance before the panel. Aides have said they expect he will have met with at least 50 of the 100 senators before Thursday morning.

Despite a grueling schedule, Hagel has shown glimpses of humor.

He accidentally wandered into the Senate press gallery last week while looking for a men's room and gamely fielded a few questions - saying little - when he emerged.

And the Omaha World Herald newspaper reported that Hagel ran into Elizabeth Warren, Massachusetts' new senator, in the Capitol basement while hurrying between meetings one day last week.

"We were just talking about you," Warren said.

To which Hagel replied, "Everybody's been talking about me."

(Additional reporting by David Alexander and Phil Stewart; Editing by Warren Strobel and Cynthia Osterman)

(This story was refiled with a new headline, no changes to text)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/big-push-hagel-no-leading-behind-white-house-060912084.html

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