A magistrate released the Casino Royale from federal court control Thursday. 
The ship’s owner settled claims from crew members, who obtained a court 
order for federal marshals to seize the vessel last week. The ship has been  
docked at Tampa Bay Shipbuilding & Repair Co. since April, while owners try 
to get U.S. Coast Guard approval to carry passengers on the casino boat. 
Microsoft Corp. has announced it will release the business version of the  
long-anticipated update to its flagship operating system at an event at the 
Nasdaq Stock Market on Nov. 30. In addition to Windows Vista, the company 
said it also will release the Office 2007 software suite, which includes  
word processing and spreadsheet programs, and Exchange Server 2007 for 
e-mail and calendars. Shares of Clearwater’s Lincare Holdings Inc., which 
provides oxygen to at-home patients, rose Thursday after 
easier-than-expected Medicare cuts in oxygen reimbursement. Lincare shares  
rose $2.68 to $35.18 on the Nasdaq. On Wednesday, the Centers for Medicare 
and Medicaid lowered its monthly payment for oxygen to $230 from $231, far 
better than the anticipated payment of$209. A bankruptcy judge granted Delta  
Air Lines Inc. a deadline extension to file its plan of reorganization as it 
tries to emerge from Chapter 11 by the middle of next year. The nation’s 
third-largest airline now has until Feb. 15, to file a plan and until April  
16, to solicit approval for the plan from creditors, according to a court 
document dated Oct. 31.
Twinkies baker settle federal case
Interstate Bakeries Corp., the bankrupt maker of Twinkies and Wonder bread, 
said Thursday it has agreed to settle a longstanding federal investigation 
into its record-keeping and accounting practices. The company also said it  
has been ordered by the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Division of 
Enforcement to file a year and a half of delinquent quarterly and annual 
reports by Dec. 31 or its stock could be delisted.
MySpace pioneer files antitrust suit
An early investor in MySpace sued the popular social networking Web site on 
Thursday, claiming the company violated antitrust laws by blocking links to 
his new online video-sharing venture. Brad Greenspan, chief executive of Los  
Angeles-based LiveUniverse Inc., claims that last month MySpace began 
deleting references on user pages to his new Web site, vidiLife.com, and has 
dismantled video links and blocked users from mentioning the site. Both  
sites allow users to post videos and create online profiles for swapping 
media and collecting Internet penpals. 
