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September 20, 2009

Quiet Goodwill In a Homeland The Writer Knows Too Well

Filed under: Healt — Tags: , , — admin @ 12:55 pm

KABUL — A convoy of big white Land Cruisers roared into a dusty lane on the outskirts of Kabul last weekend. Chickens scattered, children gawked. A slight man in jeans stepped out, trailed by a film crew and several policemen with rifles. After hurried consultations, elders were produced and the visitor was ushered into a mud hut.

“Man namaindai shobe audat mohajirin astam,” he said, politely but vaguely, in perfect Afghan Dari. “I am a representative from office of refugee assistance.”

The elders did not know his name, but they knew an opportunity when they saw it, and they posed obligingly for the cameras as they poured out litanies of fear, frustration and despair.

They were mostly two-time refugees, Afghans who had returned after years of Soviet occupation and civil war only to find their villages ravaged by a new conflict involving Taliban insurgents, foreign troops and predatory ethnic militia bosses. Once more they had left their crops and flocks, this time fleeing to an impoverished capital that offered neither land nor work.

The elders complained to the visitor that American and NATO forces had barged into their homes, insulted their women, even bombed their villages. Yet they also begged him not to let the foreign troops leave. Their worst fear, they said, was that the law would collapse and their country would once more erupt into terrible ethnic conflict.

“Vale, vale, fomidam,” the visitor said over and over, frowning sympathetically. “I understand. I understand.”

All last weekend, he listened to families living in tents and h (more…)

Obama to hold joint meeting with Netanyahu, Abbas

Filed under: World — admin @ 12:46 pm

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama will hold a joint meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Tuesday to try to restart peace talks between the two sides, the White House said.

The meeting — the first between the three men — will be held in New York, where the U.N. General Assembly takes place next week.

Obama will meet with each leader separately before convening a joint session with them, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said in the statement, released on Saturday.

Netanyahu’s office said in a statement the Israeli leader had pushed forward his departure for New York to Monday from Wednesday for the purpose of meeting with Obama and Abbas.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomes the United States’ invitation for talks with President Barack Obama and for a trilateral meeting with President Obama and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas,” the statement said.

A senior Netanyahu aide added, “The meeting will be held without preconditions, as the prime minister had always wanted.”

The White House had been coy on Friday about the chances of a sit-down between the three parties. Officials said the event illustrated the president’s personal commitment to peace in the region.

U.S. Special Envoy George Mitchell just ended a week of shuttle diplomacy in the Middle East with little to show for his efforts as Israel and the Palestinians dug in to opposing positions on Jewish settlements.

Officials from both sides, while reluctant to spurn Obama’s invitation for a meeting, had acknowledged that a photograph and handshake at the United Nations would not be enough to relaunch the peace process without substantial shifts in negotiating positions.

LAYING THE GROUNDWORK

Gibbs said the meeting would continue U.S. efforts to “lay the groundwork for the relaunch of negotiations and to create a positive context for those negotiations so that they can succeed.”

Mitchell, a former senator credited with helping bring peace to Northern Ireland, praised Obama for stepping in.

“It is another sign of the president’s deep commitment to comprehensive peace that he wants to personally engage at this juncture,” Mitchell said in the White House statement.

He said the United States was continuing efforts to “encourage all sides to take responsibility for peace and to create a positive context for the resumption of negotiations.”

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said no announcement was expected to come out of the meeting but he noted the significance of the gesture less than a year after a war in Gaza and several months after the formation of Netanyahu’s government in Israel.

“These three leaders are going to sit down in the same room and continue to narrow the gaps,” the official said.

The meeting comes during a sour spell in Israeli-U.S. relations as Netanyahu, in power since March at the head of a right-wing coalition skeptical of Palestinian intentions, defies Obama’s demand that he curb settlement building.

Palestinians, who say expanding settlements in the West Bank and in East Jerusalem will deny them a viable state, want a full halt to building until a final peace, which might involve Israel keeping some settlements in a land swap.

Netanyahu has offered to freeze building in the West Bank for nine months, Israeli officials have said.

Palestinians reject Netanyahu’s insistence on excluding East Jerusalem from any freeze.

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September 12, 2009

Facebook Lite: Thanks, but No Apps

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 5:22 pm

Facebook has made a potentially risky choice in designing Lite, the simpler version of its social network that is generating much buzz: Lite doesn’t run any of the tens of thousands of external applications built for Facebook’s main site.

While Lite was originally intended for countries with low-bandwidth users, the site has gotten an initial round of endorsements from pundits and experts in the blogosphere now that it’s available to Facebook members in the U.S.

Considering how U.S. Internet users readily embrace simple online services that they find useful, such as Google and Twitter, it will be interesting to see what percentage of Facebook members will adopt Lite as their preferred Facebook site.

If it’s a sizeable chunk, Facebook may have to consider opening Lite to the third-party applications, so that developers don’t lose access to a big segment of Facebook users.

The question is whether it will be possible to maintain Lite’s appeal as a stripped-down version of Facebook if it’s tweaked to support external applications. A compromise solution might be to create a separate application platform for Lite.

What would seem unlikely would be to shut out developers entirely from Lite, considering how much Facebook credits them with helping the regular site grow in popularity in the past two years.

More than 1 million developers and entrepreneurs from more than 180 countries have created about 350,000 active applications for Facebook, which has become the most popular social-networking site in the world.

Lite isn’t entirely devoid of third-party ties. Lite does support Connect, the data portability technology that lets people use their previously created Facebook accounts to sign in to other Web sites.

“If a user is logged in to the Lite site, they can access Facebook Connect sites across the Web,” Facebook spokeswoman Malorie Lucich said via e-mail. “So if you are logged into the Lite site, you can access Connect sites as normal.”

Of course, Facebook Connect, generally available since December 2008, is but a small part of the Facebook developer story, having been implemented in some 15,000 Web sites, devices and applications.

“We are evaluating Lite’s performance now, and are considering incorporating more [application development] Platform elements in the future,” she said.

In the meantime having a version of Facebook without third-party applications may be a revealing test of how attached members truly are to these programs.

According to Facebook, Lite could help attract new users. “We have found that people who are new to Facebook tend to be most interested in a simpler experience, and focus on establishing their network of friends and communicating with them by writing on their walls, sending messages, and looking at pictures. We have introduced the Lite site with these new users in mind,” the company said in a statement. Lite lets people post and share videos, photos and events, as well as exchange one-on-one messages.

What Lite does seem to be doing is beginning to provoke a spirited discussion among Facebook officials, their throngs of third-party developers and the 250 million-strong user base, that will only grow louder as it rolls out to all users in the coming days.

Lite’s impact could be rather heavy.

Discovery Detours Florida, Touches Down In California

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 5:20 pm

 

Windsor Genova – AHN News Writer

Edwards Air Force Base, CA (AHN) – Stormy weather in Florida prompted the U.S. space shuttle Discovery to land at the Edwards Air Force Base in California instead of at the Kennedy Space Center on Friday.

Emerging from the space shuttle, Discovery Commander Rick “C.J.” Sturckow announced that he and six other astronauts were happy to be back after a 14-day mission to bring supplies and scientific equipment to the International Space Station.

The shuttle was supposed to land in Florida Thursday but postponed it to Friday due to unfavorable weather condition. But a rainy and cloudy Florida sky on Friday prompted Mission Control to advise landing in the backup touchdown site in California, which had pristine weather.

Meanwhile, the astronauts will fly to the Johnson Space Center in Houston Saturday while the Discovery will be flown to the Kennedy Space Center by a modified 747 after a week.

September 11, 2009

Twitter: Your ‘Tweets’ Belong to You

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 8:39 pm

Twitter has modified the terms of service that govern the proper user of the microblogging and social-networking site to state unequivocally that messages posted belong to their authors and not to the company.

Twitter is allowed to ‘use, copy, reproduce, process, adapt, modify, publish, transmit, display and distribute’ your tweets because that’s what we do. However, they are your tweets and they belong to you,” wrote Twitter co-founder Biz Stone in a blog post Thursday announcing the modifications.

There has been controversy over the question of who owns the messages, photos, videos and other material that people post to social media and social-networking sites like Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, and YouTube. For example, Google and Facebook got into hot water when critics complained about what they perceived as terms of service that claimed ownership of the data end users store in Google Apps and Facebook profiles.

The revised Twitter terms also state that end users allow Twitter to make posted messages available to external applications that use the Twitter API (application programming interface). However, Twitter is still hammering out a set of guidelines for developers on the proper use of the API.

The API guidelines are still in draft form and require that developers identify the authors of “tweets,” maintain the integrity of the text and obtain permission to send messages on end users’ behalf or turn their message into a commercial product, like a poster.

Twitter is also keeping mum on details about the display of advertising on the site, an issue of much discussion among pundits who follow the company and have raised questions about how it will generate advertising to sustain its business.

Twitter welcomes feedback on its terms of service and will revise them as it deems necessary. “These updates complement the spirit of Twitter. If we’ve left something out, or the nature of the service changes, then we’ll revisit the Terms — there’s a feedback link on the page,” Stone wrote.

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Wall Street’s New Gilded Age

Filed under: Business — admin @ 8:36 pm

Since its birth, the United States has grappled with the problem of an over-mighty financial sector. With the exception of Alexander Hamilton, the Founders’ vision was of a republic of self-reliant farmers and small-town tradesmen. The last thing they wanted was for New York to become the London of the New World—a mammon-worshiping metropolis in which financial capital and political capital were rolled into one. That was why there was such resistance to creating a central bank, and why—despite two attempts—we have no Bank of the United States to match the Bank of England. That was why populists railed against the adoption of the gold standard after the crash of 1873. That was why there was so much suspicion when the Federal Reserve System was created in 1913. That was why government regulation of Wall Street was so strict from the Depression until the 1970s.

But now, barely a year after one of the worst crises in all financial history, we seem to have returned to the Gilded Age of the late 19th century—the last time bankers came close to ruling America. A few Wall Street giants, led by none other than -JPMorgan, are back to making serious money and paying million-dollar bonuses. Meanwhile, every month, hundreds of thousands of ordinary Americans face foreclosure or unemployment because of a crisis caused by … a few Wall Street giants. And what makes the losers in this crisis really mad is the fact that there’s now one law for the small debtors and another for big ones. If you lose your job and fall behind on your $1,500 monthly mortgage payment, no one’s going to bail you out. But Citigroup can lose $27.7 billion (as it did last year) and count on the federal government to hand it $45 billion.

A hundred years ago, people angrily compared the House of Rothschild to a giant octopus with its tentacles wrapped around the U.S. economy. Today it’s the turn of Goldman Sachs to be likened to a “great vampire squid.” To understand why, you need to go back 12 months.

With the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last September, 9/15 supplanted 9/11 as the costliest day in the history of New York City. It was also the most cataclysmic American bank failure since 1931.

The Lehman bankruptcy was in fact only one of seven events that, in the space of just 19 days, signaled the end of an epoch. On Sept. 7, the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. (Freddie Mac) were nationalized. On Sept. 14, Merrill Lynch was bought by Bank of America. On the same day that Lehman failed, the money-market fund Reserve Primary “broke the buck” because of losses on unsecured commercial paper it had bought from Lehman. The next day—to avoid a lethal chain reaction in the market for credit default swaps—the insurance giant AIG was given an $85 billion bailout by the Federal Reserve. On Sept. 22, the investment bank went extinct as a species when Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley converted themselves into bank holding companies. Finally, on Sept. 25, Washington Mutual was placed into the receivership of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC).

Not everything that has gone wrong in the world economy since 2007 can be blamed on these seven events, much less on the Lehman bankruptcy alone. At most, about a fifth of the total 50 percent decline in the U.S. stock market between the peak of October 2007 and the low of March 2009 could be attributed to what happened in September of last year. (October 2008 was an even worse month for stocks.) But other indicators better reveal the scale of the financial trauma. In the 24 hours after Lehman failed, the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR, for short)—the rate that financial institutions charge each other for unsecured borrowing—soared 3.33 percentage points, to 6.44 percent. The commercial-paper market froze. The resulting credit crunch set off a chain reaction. Firms canceled orders and started laying off workers. International trade collapsed.

Equally dramatic—and more long-lasting—has been the effect of the crisis on government policy. Prior to 9/15, it seemed unlikely that Congress would approve a large-scale bailout for Wall Street. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson had told potential buyers of Lehman Brothers there would be “no government money” to sweeten any takeover deal. Even after the Lehman failure, it still took two attempts to secure passage of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program through Congress. Since then we’ve witnessed the fiscal equivalent of a dam bursting. We’re now looking at $9 trillion of new federal debt in the decade ahead.

Prior to 9/15, the Federal Reserve Board argued that the Fed could not buy “shaky assets” from Lehman, but could only lend against “good collateral.” In the week that followed, the Fed’s balance sheet leapt upward by 21 percent after the institution announced it would accept equities as collateral for the first time in its history. Other new measures included the FDIC’s guarantee of all bank debt—a remarkable undertaking given the quantity of bonds issued by U.S. banks.

Six months earlier the Treasury and Fed had saved Bear Stearns from bankruptcy by brokering its sale to JPMorgan Chase. Though shareholders and bondholders had lost money, they had not been wiped out completely. By treating Lehman differently, the authorities shattered the illusion that some major financial institutions were “too big to fail.” But starting with the bailout of AIG just a day later, they quickly began the expensive process of trying to restore that illusion. Now it’s no longer an illusion. It’s become a very dangerous reality.

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AAA: Pump prices drop 11 cents across state

Filed under: Business — admin @ 8:36 pm

Motorists in New Mexico and across the country are seeing a decline in gas prices this week, according to AAA-New Mexico.

A gallon of regular unleaded now averages $2.57 in the state. Nationally, prices fell to $2.58 a gallon.

Albuquerque and Las Cruces have the least expensive gas in the state, at $2.49 a gallon. The Santa Fe area has the highest at $2.61.

Gas prices reached a summer peak on June 21, when they averaged $2.68 in New Mexico — $1.12 a gallon less than this time last year.

“Summer gasoline prices have been remarkably stable,” AAA Corporate Communications Manager Dan Ronan said.

Prices in New Mexico have remained at or slightly below the national average for more than a year.

Average gas prices:

•National $2.58

•New Mexico $2.57

•Texas $2.39

•Albuquerque $2.49

•Las Cruces $2.49

•Santa Fe area $2.61

•Flagstaff (Ariz.) $2.79

•Tucson (Ariz.) $2.42

•Denver $2.44

•Durango (Colo.) $2.76

•Las Vegas (Nev.) $2.72

•Amarillo (Texas) $2.34

•El Paso (Texas) $2.50

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FedEx Rises as It Says Quarterly Profit Beat Forecast

Filed under: Business — admin @ 8:33 pm

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — FedEx Corp. rose to an 11-month high in New York trading after the second-largest U.S. package- shipping company said first-quarter profit topped its forecast.

Earnings for the quarter ended Aug. 31 will be 58 cents a share, the Memphis, Tennessee-based company said today in posting preliminary results. FedEx had forecast 30 cents to 45 cents, and the average of 15 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg was for 45 cents.

FedEx’s announcement suggests shipping demand is starting to pick up, particularly for higher-priced international service. FedEx and larger rival United Parcel Service Inc. are considered proxies for the U.S. economy because they handle almost 80 percent of domestic package shipments.

“Today’s news shows continued progress in the global economic recovery we have been looking for,” Jim Corridore, a Standard & Poor’s equity analyst in New York, said in a note. Corridore, who recommends buying FedEx shares, raised his full- year earnings estimate to $3.26 a share from $2.63.

Helane Becker, a Jesup & Lamont Securities analyst in New York, said international growth will be in the Asia-Pacific region and the Indian subcontinent, rather than between Asia and the U.S. or Asia and Europe.

“Growth will be outside the U.S.,” said Becker, who recommends buying the shares. “FedEx participates in worldwide growth.”

FedEx rose $4.35, or 6 percent, to $77.01 at 12:57 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, after increasing as much as 7.8 percent. It was the biggest intraday gain since July 16 and pushed the shares to the highest since Oct 7.

‘Cost Controls’

The earnings topped the forecast “thanks to better-than- expected FedEx International Priority volume, strict cost controls and solid execution of our strategy,” Chief Financial Officer Alan Graf said in a statement.

The first-quarter profit is a 53 percent decline from a year earlier, FedEx said. The company will report final results for the period on Sept. 17.

Second-quarter earnings will fall to 65 cents to 95 cents a share from $1.58 a year earlier, when the company benefited from rapidly declining fuel prices and a lag in the reduction of fuel surcharges that had been in place, FedEx said. The average of 15 analyst estimates was 71 cents.

‘Continued Modest Recovery’

The second-quarter forecast “reflects the current outlook for fuel prices and a continued modest recovery in the global economy,” FedEx said in the statement. Graf said that “despite some encouraging signs in the global economy, it is difficult to predict the timing and pace of any economic recovery.”

FedEx’s 20 percent share-price gain this year is outpacing those of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index and UPS, the biggest package-delivery company. The S&P has climbed 16 percent, while Atlanta-based UPS has gained 5.1 percent.

That signals investor optimism that FedEx’s results are climbing past a “wall of worry,” Gary Chase, an analyst at New York-based Barclays Capital, wrote in a Sept. 8 note to clients. He estimated first-quarter profit of 53 cents a share.

FedEx also said today that the U.S. Internal Revenue Service plans to assess $14 million in taxes and penalties, plus interest, on the company to cover 2002 federal employment and withholding taxes for independent contractors working for the FedEx Home Delivery division. FedEx said in a U.S. regulatory filing that it will contest the findings.

“We believe that we have strong defenses to the proposed assessment and will vigorously defend our position, as we continue to believe that all of FedEx Ground’s independent contractors, including those providing the FedEx Home Delivery service, are independent contractors,” the company said.

An IRS audit team proposed no similar assessments for other FedEx Ground contractors. FedEx contract drivers in several states have sued the company, claiming they deserve benefits because FedEx treats them as full-time workers by mandating hours, pricing and the clothing they wear.

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Senate G.O.P. Blocks Stronger Albany Ethics Rules

Filed under: World — crier24 @ 3:29 pm

ALBANY— Republicans in the State Senate blocked a plan to overhaul the state’s ethics laws Thursday night, the latest blow to attempts to reform New York’s scandal-prone government.

The vote was taken at a special session of the State Senate as lawmakers also returned to the capital to confirm new leaders for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the state Insurance Department.

But lengthy debate over two ethics bills, the most closely watched legislation during the daylong session, delayed consideration of a host of relatively uncontroversial bills, from legislation that would increase pay for some county clerks to a measure that would require ignition interlocks in the cars of convicted drunken drivers.

After the defeat, Austin Shafran, a Democratic spokesman, said: “Republicans just don’t get it. New Yorkers want reform, and Republicans are unwilling to provide it.”

But Dean G. Skelos, the Senate Republican leader, blamed Democrats for introducing a bill that he described as a “poison pill to prevent passage of much-needed ethics reform.”

Lawmakers had been seeking to revamp the Commission on Public Integrity, which regulates ethics rules for the executive branch and enforces lobbying laws. The commission has been beset by scandal, culminating with a scathing report released in May by the state inspector general, Joseph Fisch, that denounced the commission and its former executive director over their handling of an investigation into the Spitzer administration.

The Senate package included steps that would have toughened oversight of the Legislature, which currently undergoes no meaningful ethics supervision. Such steps faced stiff resistance within both houses of the Legislature. The bills also would have created a new entity to enforce campaign finance laws, an area of regulation that is currently full of loopholes, and the state’s Board of Elections, widely derided as dysfunctional.

“Right now when we are in the streets and when we’re in our communities, we are not looked at very highly,” Senator John L. Sampson of Brooklyn, the leader of the Senate Democrats, said during the debate, imploring Republicans to support the bill. “We need to restore the honor and dignity back to this chamber.”

But Republicans argued that a new nine-member panel with the power to choose the director of a new campaign finance enforcement unit would be dominated by Democrats, since Democrats hold all statewide offices at the moment and those officers would appoint most of the members of the panel.

“I don’t think we should be establishing a hit unit of nine people,” said Senator Frank Padavan, a Queens Republican. “We have a Star Chamber arrangement here,” he added. “It’s not democratic, it’s not bipartisan, and it creates potential problems that the people of New York don’t need.”

Democrats, who narrowly control the Senate, 32 votes to 30, were hindered Thursday by the absence of Senator Brian X. Foley of Long Island, whose father died this week. One Republican was also absent during the vote.

In the end, the Senate voted down one of the two ethics bills they were considering, 31-29, along party lines. They did not take up a second ethics bill that had been on the agenda.

Senator Daniel L. Squadron of Brooklyn, a freshman Democrat who helped prepare the package, called its failure “shocking and disappointing.”

Ethics legislation was among a number of weighty issues delayed by an attempted takeover of the Senate by Republicans that blocked state business for much of the summer.

After Thursday night’s vote, there was some hope that the legislation could be revived if lawmakers from both houses return to Albany later this year, as expected, to close a budget deficit of more than $2 billion.

Earlier this year, government watchdog groups pressed to have all ethics and lobbying oversight combined into a single commission that would oversee both the executive and legislative branches. Board members would have been appointed by a variety of political leaders to avoid giving any one official undue influence.

But Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, the Legislature’s most powerful Democrat, rejected that plan. Instead, he proposed a measure that would split the Commission on Public Integrity into separate ethics and lobbying commissions, an arrangement that existed two years ago. Mr. Silver’s Assembly bill would keep in place an existing legislative ethics commission, but would create a new office of investigation with its own board; all of its members would be appointees of the legislative leaders.

A bill identical to Mr. Silver’s was sponsored in the Senate by Mr. Squadron, but that measure, on its own, was not seen as sufficient by some government watchdogs. So Democrats held a vote on a second bill that was meant to bolster Mr. Silver’s original bill. The second bill failed to pass, and Democrats shelved the original bill.

Government watchdog groups expressed dismay over the current state of ethics in Albany.

“If nothing happens, legislative ethics will continue to go unenforced, campaign finance law will be essentially not enforced, and you have the mortally wounded Commission on Public Integrity,” said Blair Horner, legislative director of the New York Public Interest Research Group. “That’s a status quo that should not stand.”

Missing Yale student wrote article on staying safe

Filed under: World — crier24 @ 3:27 pm

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — A Yale University graduate student whose disappearance is being investigated by police and the FBI wrote a magazine article earlier this year about how to stay safe around the Ivy League campus.

Annie Le’s article, called “Crime and Safety in New Haven,” was published in February in a magazine produced by Yale’s medical school. It compares higher instances of robbery in New Haven to cities that house other Ivy League schools and includes an interview with Yale Police Chief James Perrotti, who offers advice such as “pay attention to where you are” and “avoid portraying yourself as a potential victim.”

“In short, New Haven is a city and all cities have their perils,” Le concludes. “But with a little street smarts, one can avoid becoming yet another statistic.”

Le, a 24-year-old doctoral student in pharmacology originally from Placerville, Calif., was last seen Tuesday at her laboratory in the Yale Medical School complex, slightly less than a mile from the main campus.

Le’s purse, cell phone, credit cards and money were found in her office. She planned to get married on Sunday, but has not contacted her family, co-workers or friends.

On Thursday, state police with bloodhounds searched the area where Le was last seen, and authorities were seen searching nearby trash bins. Perotti said the FBI was assisting, and investigators also were reviewing images from closed-circuit cameras. Le’s fiance, professors, colleagues, friends and family also were helping, he said. FBI agents were spotted Thursday at her New Haven apartment but declined to comment.

Asked about the possibility of foul play, Yale spokesman Tom Conroy said Thursday, “There’s no evidence of it at this time.”

Le was excited about getting married and is energetic and conscientious, said Debbie Apuzzo, who works in the pharmacology department.

Le, 4-foot-11 and 90 pounds, is of Asian descent and has brown hair and brown eyes. She received her undergraduate degree in bioscience in 2007 from the University of Rochester in New York, said Sharon Dickman, a university spokeswoman.

While at the University of Rochester, she did a summer project at the National Institutes of Health on bone tissue engineering with a goal of regenerating tissue for people suffering from degenerative bone diseases. She said her career goal was to work as an NIH investigator or as a professor.

Her mentor, Rocky Tuan, described her as bright and hardworking, saying the NIH undergraduate scholars program was very selective.

“She’s a very happy person,” Tuan said. “Everybody got along with her. She’s always smiling, laughing.”

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