47 billion CHICAGO Jan 21 Reuters AMR Corp AMR

D&H's multi-market expertise, account-dedicated sales teams, sterling service and flexible financing options areunmatched in the industry.With an impressive 90-year history serving as a trusted advisor to thereseller channel, D&H has been able to consistently reinvent itself based uponchanging market conditions. The company prides itself on creating businesspartnerships with an astute focus on ease-of-doing-business, relationships,value, performance and service.D&H ships out of six separate locations in North America, including its USheadquarters in Harrisburg and its Canadian headquarters in Mississauga,Ontario.Additional US warehouses are located in Jacksonville, FL; Chicago,IL; Dallas, TX; and Fresno, CA. In addition, please see the "Risk Factors" described in ourSecurities and Exchange Commission filings, including our Annual Report onForm 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2007, for a more detaileddescription of the risks facing our business. All forward-looking statementsincluded in this release are based upon information available to SonicWALL asof the date of the release, and we assume no obligation to update any suchforward-looking statement.NOTE: SonicWALL is a registered trademark of SonicWALL, Inc. Other productand company names mentioned herein may be trademarks and/or registeredtrademarks of their respective companies.SOURCESonicWALL, Inc.Colleen Nichols of SonicWALL, 1-408-962-6131, ; or DrewSmith of Bite Communications, 1-415-365-0401, , forSonicWALL. AMR quarterly net loss is $1.22 per share Stocks Bonds Excluding items, loss was 77 cents per share AMR quarterly revenue was $5.47 billion CHICAGO, Jan 21 (Reuters) - AMR Corp (AMR.N), parent ofAmerican Airlines, on Wednesday said its quarterly net losswidened on higher fuel costs and economic uncertainty wouldforce more capacity cuts in 2009. The company said its fourth-quarter net loss was $340million, or $1.22 per share, compared with $69 million, or 28cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding one-time items, AMR said it lost $214 million, or77 cents per share, compared with Wall Street forecasts for aloss of 73 cents per share, according to Reuters Estimates. Special items included a $23 million charge related toaircraft groundings and capacity cuts as well as a noncashpension settlement charge of $103 million. The airline industry, including AMR, made hefty capacitycuts in the fourth quarter to offset volatile fuel prices andto bolster fares as demand sagged in a weak economy. AMR said it paid 8 percent more for fuel in the fourthquarter of 2008 than it did in the year-ago period.

The companysaid it expects its mainline capacity to decrease more than 8.5percent in the first quarter amid economic uncertainty. (Reporting by Kyle Peterson, editing by Maureen Bavdek) Stocks Bonds. The Ultimate Fighting Championship held its 104th event this past Saturday night, and the main event was a controversial one a virtual technical-striking chess match destined to become one of the most debated cage fights in UFC history.It's this writer's opinion, however, although he looked bad doing it, the right man won in an extremely close fight.Surely, a split decision may have also been fair, but that isn't for us to decide.We are mere mortals who spout our armchair opinions from the comfort of our living room, or the padded chair behind our trusty keyboard, as I am doing this very second.The bottom line here is that I respect the decision of the three well-qualified andcompetent judges who sat at cage-side, and who by the way all scored the fight unanimously for Lyoto "The Dragon" Machida.Now that we have dealt with the elephant in the room, I'd like to focus my attention on another animal a hungry, cage-fighting lion.This 30-year-old heavyweight is a K1-level striker and quite possibly will also become a new and thrilling addition to the UFC heavyweight picture in 2010.Pat"HD" Barry is a native of New Orleans and has a fight record of 5-1 using a Sanshou, Muay Thai kickboxing style, taught to him at Duke Roufus Martial Arts Academy by his trainers, Master Shawn Liu, Ernesto Hoost, and Jeff Roufus.This truly brilliant stand-up fighterdemonstrated why he may become a future force in the heavyweight picture on Saturday night when he faced off with his fellow Rufus Academy sparring partner Antoni Hardonk during the televised UFC 104 preliminary fight on Spike.Barry is only 5'11" andhad his hands full with his 6'4"opponent, a heavy-handedHolland fighter who like Barry is also trained by the four-time K-1 world champion Hoost.Barry got off to somewhat of a rough start inthe match, as he was the victim of a eye poke fromHardonk, who was pawing at him while trying to establish striking distance.The courageous and determined Barry weathered the storm and trudged onward, however, and began to mix up his punches and kicks with lighting-like precision, which began to have the effect of chopping the bigger, taller opponent down systematically.Hardonk, for his part, seemed to be fighting with an inner fury; he refused to touch gloves in thebeginning and seemed as if he was on a mission to murder the much smaller Barry.Sometimes, however, as was the case in this fight, brains will overcome brawn, and although he is a Rickson Gracie-trained blue-belt, Hardonk made a highly questionable move late in the first round when he decided to try and take Barry to the mat.Barry got the better of the mat exchanges with side control and some very nice ground-and-pound before the the round ended with both men standing but blood visibly streaming down the face of the Holland fighter.The second round sawBarrydisplay someof the fastest and most accurate combinations this writer has ever witnessed from a heavyweight cage-fighter.These were crisp, straight, pinpoint-targeted combos, from exactly the right distance. And, once finding this range, it wasn't long before the Holland kickboxer visited the canvas for the first time during the fight, from a perfect Barry straight right hand.A flash knockdown, but a knockdown just the same.Barry then switched to southpaw and began tothrow fast right jabs straight to the chin ofHardonk, who by this time was wondering what to do next. MALVERN, Pa., Jan.

Although theestimated percentage of uninsured motorists decreased nationally, from 14.9percent in 2003 to 13.8 percent in 2007, the recent economic downturn isexpected to trigger a sharp rise in the uninsured motorist rate. The IRC estimates the uninsured driver population using a ratio ofinsurance claims made by individuals who were injured by uninsured drivers toclaims made by individuals who were injured by insured drivers. The studycontains recent statistics by state on uninsured motorists claim frequency,bodily injury liability claim frequency, and the ratio of uninsured motoriststo bodily injury claim frequencies. The magnitude of the uninsured motorists problem varied widely from state tostate. In 2007, the five states with the highest uninsured driver estimateswere New Mexico (29 percent), Mississippi (28 percent), Alabama (26 percent),Oklahoma (24 percent), and Florida (23 percent).