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Ford vehicles are seen on the sales lot at the Metro Ford dealership December 2, 2008 in Miami, Florida. The United Auto Workers is willing to make significant concessions to help rescue the Big Three US automakers, the union's president said Wednesday.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Joe Raedle)AP - Humbled U.S. automakers pleaded with Congress Thursday for an expanded $34 billion rescue package, but heard fresh skepticism in a bumpy encore appearance.



In this Sept. 30, 2008 file photo provided by AT&T Inc., Randall Stephenson, president, chief executive officer and chairman of AT&T Inc., speaks to employees at AT&T's new broadband technical support call center in Goldsboro, N.C. AT&T said Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008, it is cutting 12,000 jobs, or about 4 percent of its work force, because of the economic downturn. (AP Photo/AT&T Inc., Jim R. Bounds, File)AP - AT&T Inc. joined the recession's parade of layoffs Thursday by announcing plans to cut 12,000 jobs, about 4 percent of its work force.



Foreclosed properties are seen in west Detroit on Friday, Nov. 14, 2008. Federal prosecutors twice pursued a former autoworker who was suspected of running a multimillion-dollar drug operation. The first attempt fizzled when Clarence Carson died shortly after an indictment. And the second? Blame it on the collapse of Detroit's miserable real-estate market. The government recently abandoned a plan to sell nearly three dozen properties believed to have been acquired by Carson through heroin, marijuana and cocaine sales. Like any seller, the U.S. Marshals Service, which is in charge of getting rid of assets grabbed by the Justice Department, is finding that location is the key to real estate these days. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)AP - More evidence of consumers' weary state and the nation's deteriorating job market came Thursday with reports that people continuing to draw unemployment benefits climbed to a 26-year high, while retail sales and orders to U.S. factories sank.



A shopper walks past mannequins on display at the Old Navy store in Rutland, Vt., Friday, Nov. 28, 2008. Retailers — with Wal-Mart the notable exception — limped through a miserable November that even a surge of shopping after Thanksgiving couldn't save, marking the weakest month since at least 1969 and deepening fears that the critical holiday period could be the most dismal in decades. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot)AP - Retailers — with Wal-Mart the notable exception — limped through a miserable November that even a surge of shopping after Thanksgiving couldn't save, marking the weakest month since at least 1969 and deepening fears that the critical holiday period could be the most dismal in decades.



A wounded Iraqi policeman is brought to a hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The man was among two policemen wounded when their patrol car was struck by a roadside bomb. i(AP Photo/Karim Kadim)AP - Suicide bombers killed 17 people — including two American soldiers — and wounded more than 100 in a string of blasts in two Iraqi cities Thursday as a timetable for withdrawing all U.S. troops won final government approval.



President George W. Bush participates in a roundtable on mentoring children of prisoners initiative on Tuesday, December 2, 2008, in Greensboro, N.C.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)AP - President Bush and first lady Laura Bush have bought a home in an affluent neighborhood of north Dallas where they will live after the president leaves office in January.



Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Yvo de Boer, greets journalists as he arrives in a solar taxi to the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Poznan, Poland, Thursday, Dec 4, 2008.  The solar vehicle, built by Louis Palmer from Switzerland with the help of Swiss scientists and driven by Palmer has traveled around the world setting a world record of 52,000 km, or 32,300 miles through 38 countries using only solar energy. (AP Photo/Alik Keplicz)AP - The first solar-powered car to travel around the world ended its journey at the U.N. climate talks Thursday, arriving with the message that clean technologies are available now to stop global warming.



March 23 2007 file picture shows Knut, the polar bear cub, at  his first public appearance in the Berlin Zoo . On the eve of superstar polar Bear Knut's second birthday Dec. 5 2008, fans are worried that he will have to leave his home in the Berlin Zoo, despite pleas he stay, because he is getting too big for his enclosure as he reaches maturity.  Now a fully grown bear weighing some 440 pounds (200 kilograms), Knut barely resembles the button-eyed ball of white fluff that stole the hearts of Berliners and the world.  (AP Photo/Herbert Knosowski)AP - Knut the superstar polar bear turns two on Friday looking nothing like the button-eyed ball of white fluff who captured hearts around the world.



Barry Cunningham is reflected in a glass case before encasing his one of only seven copies of JK Rowling's 'The Tales of Beedle the Bard' book during a media preview at the National Library of Scotland in Edinburgh, Scotland December 3, 2008. The copy of 'The Tales of Beedle the Bard' which Rowling presented to her first editor Cunningham, is valued at over two million pounds ($2.95 million) and is due to go on display at the National Library from 5th December. REUTERS/David Moir (BRITAIN)AP - The latest magical tome by J.K. Rowling has started to fly off bookstore shelves.



In this Oct. 7, 2008, file photo, New Orleans Saints defensive end Will Smith is shown during a  football game against the Carolina Panthers at the Superdome in New Orleans. The NFL Players Association is suing to block five of the six player suspensions for violating the league's anti-doping policy. The suit filed in federal court is on behalf of Kevin Williams and Pat Williams of the Minnesota Vikings, and Charles Grant, Deuce McAllister and Will Smith of the New Orleans Saints. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon,file)AP - The NFL Players Association filed a lawsuit Thursday to block five of the six player suspensions for violating the league's anti-doping policy.



Richard Wagoner (L), chairman and CEO of General Motors, talks with Ron Gettelfinger, President of the United Auto Workers International Union before testifying at the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on the 'The State of the Domestic Automobile Industry: Part II,' on Capitol Hill, December 4, 2008. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)Reuters - The chief executives of the major U.S. auto companies pledged to refocus on higher fuel efficiency and lower production costs as they asked Congress again on Thursday for billions of dollars in emergency cash.



The AT and T logo in an undated photo. AT and T said on Thursday it would eliminate 12,000 jobs, about 4 percent of its workforce, as it joins a raft of corporations trying to slash costs in the face of the economic downturn. (Handout/Reuters)Reuters - Top U.S. phone company AT&T Inc said it will eliminate 12,000 jobs, or about 4 percent of its workforce, in a fresh wave of cuts to cope with an economic downturn that has exacerbated a decline in traditional phone sales.



European Central Bank (ECB) President Jean-Claude Trichet (L) and Belgium's National Bank Governor Guy Quaden arrive for a news conference at the end of an ECB Governors Council meeting in Brussels, December 4, 2008. (Eric Vidal/Reuters)Reuters - The European Central Bank, Britain and Sweden all made big cuts in interest rates on Thursday to shore up economies across Europe in the face of ever-bleaker financial news.



Members of a bomb detection and disposal squad examine a suspected explosive material near a hospital in Mumbai December 4, 2008. (Stringer/Reuters)Reuters - U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Thursday Pakistan had given assurances of its commitment to root out terrorism and round up anyone connected to last week's attack in the Indian city of Mumbai.



Reuters - Iraq's Presidency Council has approved a security pact with the United States that paves the way for a complete U.S. troop pullout by the end of 2011, a spokesman for the council said on Thursday.

Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin answers questions during his annual question-and-answer session with the Russian people in Moscow, December 4, 2008. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin vowed on Thursday that Russia would come through the global economic crisis with 'minimal losses' and pledged not to allow a sharp devaluation of the rouble. (RIA Novosti/Pool/Alexei Druzhinin/Reuters)Reuters - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin hinted on Thursday that he may return to his old job in the Kremlin, but not before his ally President Dmitry Medvedev's term expires in 2012.



Thailand's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej attends the annual Trooping of the Colour, an annual military parade, in Bangkok's Royal Plaza, December 2, 2008. (Adrees Latif/Reuters)Reuters - Thailand's revered and influential king missed his traditional birthday eve address due to illness on Thursday, a speech many Thais had hoped would provide short-term relief to the country's intractable political crisis.



A still from a 2002 advertising campaign launched by the U.S. government to persuade Muslims around the world that U.S. Muslims are free to live and worship as they wish. (Handout/Reuters)Reuters - Hate crimes against Arab Americans have decreased steadily since the September 11 attacks but are still more common than they were before the hijackings, a civil rights group said on Thursday.



European Central Bank (ECB) President Jean-Claude Trichet gives a press conference after a meeting of ECB governors in Brussels. Leading European central banks took historic action Thursday to ward off spreading recessions, slashing their key lending rates to boost businesses and consumers.(AFP/BELGA/Dirk Waem)AFP - Leading European central banks took historic action Thursday to ward off spreading recessions, slashing their key lending rates to boost businesses and consumers.



A map locating the western Iraqi city of Fallujah. Car bombers killed at least 15 people in a former rebel bastion on Thursday as Iraq's security pact with Washington won final approval before its launch at the end of the month.(AFP/Graphic)AFP - Car bombers killed at least 15 people in a former rebel bastion on Thursday as Iraq's security pact with Washington won final approval before its launch at the end of the month.



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