Monday, September 30, 2013

China manufacturing growth slower than expected

HONG KONG (AP) ? Chinese manufacturing activity ticked up more slowly than expected in September, according to a survey Monday, a sign the gradual recovery in the world's No. 2 economy from an extended slowdown could be more fragile than thought.

A survey by HSBC Corp. showed that manufacturing activity expanded marginally this month, rising to 50.2 from August's 50.1. But it surprised analysts by coming in much lower than the 51.2 in a preliminary version earlier this month. The index uses a 100-point scale on which numbers below 50 indicate contraction.

HSBC said the reading was still positive because although it expanded only slightly, it showed further improvement from July, when the index hit an 11-month low.

"Clearly the recovery is not as strong as we thought," said Alaistair Chan, China economist at Moody's Analytics.

Chan said he wasn't surprised that the latest numbers came in lower than expected, because the preliminary HSBC number seemed a little stronger than other economic data released during the month suggested.

"If you looked at industrial production and retail sales, they were showing some recovery but it wasn't a big jump like 51.2 would suggest," Chan said.

China's communist leaders have been trying to reverse a slowdown in which growth hit a two-decade low of 7.5 percent in the latest quarter. But they've held back on implementing broad-based measures.

Instead, China has used targeted measures such as increased spending on railway construction and tax cuts for small businesses to encourage self-sustaining growth and domestic spending rather than trade and investment.

The survey found that factory output grew for a second month, though at a marginal pace. New orders were flat, but new business from overseas customers grew for the first time in six months, with respondents indicating stronger demand from Europe and the United States.

HSBC's report is based on responses from 420 purchasing executives.

An official purchasing managers' index is due out on Tuesday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-manufacturing-growth-slower-expected-050737222--finance.html

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Friday, September 27, 2013

Motorcycle Riders Could Suffer from Carpal Tunnel Syndrome ...

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Follow Me on Pinterest John was very excited about his upcoming motorcycle race and his buddies were all set to cheer for him. But they all had to give up on the entire plan just a few days before the race. The reason? He complained of numb hands and fingers within minutes of riding during practice. He was diagnosed with CRT or Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. It is quite common for bike riders to develop this problem.

Symptoms of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Initial symptoms of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome may range from slight tingling sensations, burning, itching or numbness of hands and fingers. When you suffer from Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, your hand feels numb and you lose control over your fingers. There is also a lot of pain intermittently and your hand or both hands may feel weak, though symptoms first show up in the dominant hand. In acute cases, you could even lose the sensation of hot and cold touch.

There is a median nerve running from the forearm to the palm of your hand, and when this nerve gets squeezed or pressed at the wrist, you experience numbness and pain in your hands, fingers and even all the way to your upper arm. The nerve is housed in the Carpal Tunnel in your wrist along with some tendons.

What Causes Carpal Tunnel Syndrome?

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome is generally associated with people who work a lot on the computer, because typing constantly puts pressure on the median nerve in the Carpal Tunnel. However, motorcycle riders can also suffer from this problem because while riding, the wrists are flexed while gripping the handlebars. The vibrations experienced while riding could make the tendons in the wrist swell and this could in turn put pressure on the nerve. When the rider twists the throttle, it only adds to the pressure as the wrist flexes more. Moreover, if any bumps are hit while the wrist is flexed, it could send violent jerks to the nerve, making the condition worse.

Constantly gripping the handle of the bike along with the vibrations brings on this condition. An example can be taken of construction workers who also grip heavily vibrating construction tools for hours together. For a motorcycle rider, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome while riding means that they could lose the feel of the motorcycle and the road. This could be very dangerous, no matter what the speed is.

Solutions and Precautions

If diagnosed early, some precautions along with appropriate treatment can prevent permanent damage to the median nerve. Try to follow your doctor?s advice as much as you can and keep away from riding for a while.

Rest and Medication

Give your wrist some rest from riding. During the rest, try some ice-packs and also take anti-inflammatory medicines suggested by your physician. You might also need cortisone injections if the condition is severe. Acupuncture could also help alleviate the pain, but you should try this only if suggested by your physician and get it done only by a certified professional.

When You Go Riding

Keeping the wrist in neutral position while riding will keep your wrist from getting stretched or flexed. Keep your grip firm but avoid a tight grip completely. Check your position and sit upright so that the pressure on hands is reduced. Posture also depends on the distance between the saddle and handlebars. Make sure it is not too much. Similarly, low or very high handlebars also put a lot of pressure on your arms, back and shoulders.

Make These Small Changes

  • If your gloves are too tight at the wrist, discard them as any kind of constriction on your wrist or forearm will only worsen the condition.
  • Some handlebars are shaped in a manner that they could hurt your wrist, arms, back and shoulders too. Switching handlebars could solve the issue.
  • Have a bar snake inserted in the handlebars. This will reduce vibration. Having weighted bar-ends and getting foam grips also works similarly.
  • You could try wearing a brace to keep your wrist from getting flexed. There are many kinds of braces available look stylish and are comfortable, too.

Follow the above tips if you are a rider, and save yourself from Carpal Tunnel trouble.

Author Bio: Sameer Gupta is a well-known writer who provides meaningful information regarding the latest technologies and apps which in turn helps surgeons to improvise on their specific tasks. These articles help patients understand the latest treatment options that are available to them.

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Source: http://kodjoworkout.com/2013/09/motorcycle-riders-could-suffer-from-carpal-tunnel-syndrome/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=motorcycle-riders-could-suffer-from-carpal-tunnel-syndrome

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Grenade blast in Kenyan town kills man, wounds three others

ISIOLO, Kenya (Reuters) - One person was killed and three others were wounded in a grenade blast in the Kenyan town of Wajir, including a man suspected to have hurled the device at a supermarket, police said.

David Kirui, the police commander for the town, which is about 500 km (310 miles) northeast of the capital of Nairobi, said it was too early to say who was behind the Wednesday evening attack.

The region is prone to banditry and low-key clan clashes by pastoralist communities but has also suffered sporadic light arms attacks by the Islamist Somali militia group al Shabaab, which attacked a shopping mall in Nairobi last weekend and killed at least 72 people including foreigners in a four-day siege that captured global headlines.

Kirui said the man who was killed was a casual laborer and sometimes mason in the town dominated by a Somali population and located in an arid area near the border with Ethiopia and Somalia.

Kirui said the suspect suffered "serious injuries" from the shrapnel without elaborating, and he promised to track down five of his accomplices who had escaped under a hail of gunfire from police on patrol and others stationed nearby.

(Reporting by Noor Ali; Writing by James Macharia; Editing by Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/grenade-blast-kenyan-town-kills-man-wounds-three-230731025.html

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Indian civil society urges the Prime Minister to review and rescind the damaging US-India bilateral investment treaty

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Forum Against FTAs | 26 September 2013

PRESS RELEASE

Indian civil society urges the Prime Minister to review and rescind the damaging US-India bilateral investment treaty

On the occasion of the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh?s visit to the USA, where he is supposed to discuss a Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) between India and the US, the Forum against FTAs, a coalition of over 75 organisations, farmers groups, trade unions and development activists, calls upon the Prime Minister to review and rescind its decision to engage in this damaging treaty.

In a 4 page open letter (attached) to the Prime Minister, the Forum expresses its serious concern over government of India?s policy on investor protection provisions in Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs). The Forum argues that such a treaty with the US will include Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status to US investors under international law standards, provisions such as no expropriation without due process and full compensation and withdrawal of conditionalities such as domestic content requirement, export performance and regulations on financial transfers from such investments.

Sources also suggest that the US government would expect pre-investment protection i.e. providing market access even before the actual investment. Not only does this mean a shift in stance from India?s earlier BITs, it will make an independent and nationally determined FDI policy impossible to pursue.

The letter in particular stresses the severely adverse impact of the investor-state dispute settlement clauses under such investment agreements that allow foreign investors to sue national governments in secret cases at international arbitration tribunals. These include paying out compensations, damages and court fees often in millions of dollars, and as a result, the freezing of future policy space. These clauses choke the space for development friendly policy and regulation spanning areas such as financial policy for economic crisis management, environment, public health, rights of marginalised groups, natural resource use and conservation and so on.

"India?s current obligations under various BITs have systematically undermined the government?s policy space and even the powers of the Parliament and Judiciary. Hence, any agreement on investment agreement with the current model is a dangerous path to follow", said K. M. Gopakumar, Senior Researcher and Legal Advisor with Third World Network, a leading NGO researching on global policy issues.

India?s experience in the past with US investors, for example, the whole episode of Enron which occurred in Dabhol Power Corporation already establishes a concrete case against investor protection. In the second case that India lost under BITs provisions, is the M/s White Industries Australia Limited (WIAL) case, Australia, where Coal India Ltd paid Australian dollar 98,12,077 (apprx INR 531,502,000) to the investor. The Government of India has received around eight notices from foreign investors threatening to invoke investor state arbitrations under various investment agreements India signed since 1995. Various reports suggest that international arbitrations against India to the tune of over $ 5 billon are in process. A number of companies and foreign investors, such as the Devas Group and Axiata from Mauritius, Deutsche Telekom, Germany, Sistema and Bycell from Russia, Telenor Asia, Singapore, have either launched or threatened to launch international arbitrations processes against India.

The Forum also highlights that in recent times foreign investors around the world are increasingly resorting to investor-state arbitration and holding sovereign governments to ransom. According to UNCTAD, the total number of treaty based cases reached 514 in 2012. At the same time in 2012 alone 58 new cases were initiated, ?which constitutes the highest number of known treaty-based disputes ever filed in one year?. In 66?% of cases respondents are developing countries while 61% of cases originate from investors in developed countries.

This treaty is unwarranted at this time when the Shri Namo Narain Meena, the Minister of State, Ministry of Finance, has stated in the Parliament that India has initiated a review of its bilateral investment agreements and also declared a moratorium on new negotiations of BIT.

"At a time when India is officially reviewing its existing bilateral investment treaties, it would be premature on the part of New Delhi to advance the negotiations with the US on the India-US BIT. What if the internal review concludes that India should not include investor-to-state dispute settlement mechanism or include a restricted most favoured nation clause? Both the trading partners should not prejudge the outcome of the ongoing review", argued Kavaljit Singh, Director of Madhyam, a public interest research and advocacy organisation based in New Delhi.

In the light of these concerns, ?the Forum asks the government to; put on hold all negotiations of investment protection agreements including the BIPA with US; appoint an independent commission to conduct comprehensive assessments from a development perspective and make publicly available the information related to investor-state disputes and compensation/damage paid to investors as a result of arbitration awards under various investment protection agreements?, said G. Manicandan, Coordinator, Forum against FTAs.

26 September, 2013

For further information, please contact:

-?Kavaljit Singh, Director, Madhyam. Email: kavaljit.singh@gmail.com, Mob: 9811314836
-?K. M Gopakumar, Senior Researcher and Legal Advisor, Third World Network, Email: kmgkumar@gmail.com, Mob: 9899976104
-?G. Manicandan, Coordinator, Forum Against FTAs, email: manicandan@gmail.com, Mob: 9868319261

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Source: http://www.bilaterals.org/spip.php?article23921

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Preschool Z's Make Good Memories

Click here to listen to this podcast

The midday nap is a preschool tradition. But is it necessary? Some preschools plan to eliminate this downtime to fit in more teaching. Which could come at the expense of learning. Because a study suggests that the snooze may help kids retain information they learned earlier in the day. The work is published in PLOS ONE. [Laura Kurdziel et al, Sleep spindles in midday naps enhance learning in preschool children] To see how naps affect academic performance, researchers taught 40 preschoolers between the ages of 3 and 6 to perform a memory task. After a few hours of break time the children either stayed awake or got to nap, sleeping for an average of 77 minutes. Although napping made no significant difference to feelings of sleepiness, it did help enhance memory. When tested later in the day, students who had rested performed better. Even the next day, the children who had napped after the initial lesson still retained more information. The benefit was greatest for students who took naps regularly, not just during the study. Which suggests schools may want to keep sleep on the syllabus. ?Sophie Bushwick [The above text is a transcript of this podcast]????
? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/preschool-zs-good-memories-231908461.html

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Attempts to link Fukushima, Hiroshima upset some

HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) ? "No more Hiroshimas!" ''No more Fukushimas!" Those slogans are chanted together at rallies by Japanese who want both an end to nuclear power in the island nation and an end to nuclear weapons around the world. But many in this city, where the world's first atomic-bomb attack killed tens of thousands, are distressed by efforts to connect their suffering to the tsunami-triggered meltdowns at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant.

Like the bomb the United States dropped on Hiroshima Aug. 6, 1945, the March 2011 Fukushima disaster unleashed radiation that will affect the region's health for decades. Hiroshima medical experts, the world's most renowned on radiation-related sicknesses, are being called on for advice on how the meltdowns may have harmed people who lived near the power plant along the northeastern coast of Japan.

Some in the historical movement against nuclear non-proliferation have joined the protests that have popped up after Fukushima, calling for an end to nuclear power. Calls out of Hiroshima to do away with nuclear weapons carry great moral weight in Japan, and activists are asking the city to join forces and sign their petitions demanding the government ditch nuclear power.

To opponents of this idea, the differences between Hiroshima and Fukushima dwarf the similarities. Only one of the two catastrophes was an act of war that unleashed death, fire and horror on a scale the world had never seen.

"Our position, and this is a position we can never compromise, is that nuclear weapons are an absolute evil," Hiroshima Mayor Kazumi Matsui said in an interview at city hall, his voice trembling. "I oppose connecting the two simply because they both involve radiation."

The widespread sentiment in this southwestern city, he said, is that Hiroshima has endured something more terrible than the aftermath of a nuclear accident, and people resent getting lumped together. Matsui lost relatives in the attack, and his parents' home was destroyed.

The bombing killed some 140,000 people ? some instantly, others within months. Three days later, the U.S. dropped a second atomic bomb on Nagasaki, killing an estimated 70,000 people shortly before the end of World War II. Those categorized by the government as sick from the Hiroshima bombing's radiation still number more than 200,000.

No one is known to have died from the Fukushima radiation, but the plant's three nuclear meltdowns will take decades to clean up and it is impossible to know what the health toll will ultimately be. Only recently has the government acknowledged that much more radioactive water is leaking into the sea than it had previously believed.

The Japanese government has detected 44 confirmed and suspected cases of thyroid cancer among the 217,000 youngsters, 18 and under, checked in Fukushima. Thyroid cancer among children is generally rare, estimated at only one in a million. The link to radiation is still inconclusive, and extensive testing of Fukushima children could account for the higher numbers. But according to the World Health Organization, thyroid cancer struck thousands of people after the only nuclear-plant disaster worse than Fukushima, the 1986 Chernobyl meltdown in what is now Ukraine.

Robert Jacobs, professor at the Hiroshima Peace Institute, sees similarities between Hiroshima and Fukushima, calling the latter a "slow-motion nuclear war." He said the cumulative radiation dosage from Fukushima could be quite significant because the leaks are likely to continue for decades.

Some medical experts are worried about sickness that may emerge in coming years, although the amount of deadly energy released at the moment of the atomic bombing was far greater than what spewed from Fukushima.

Hiromichi Ugaya, a former journalist at the Asahi newspaper who has been documenting Fukushima, said it is "an irony of history" that Japan failed to prevent the world's second-worst nuclear-plant disaster, even though it is the only country on Earth to have been attacked with nuclear weapons.

"Japan was the one country that should have been careful with nuclear technology," said Ugaya, who recently wrote a book called "Road From Hiroshima to Fukushima."

He considers nuclear weapons and nuclear power to share a historical backdrop. "The atomic bomb and nuclear power are like twin siblings if you trace their history," he said.

Some in Hiroshima are adamant about denying any ties.

One reason is that they feel closer than ever to finally achieving their goal of nonproliferation, or at least winning an international commitment to that goal. Hopes are high that U.S. President Barack Obama will visit Hiroshima before his term ends. If realized, it would mark the first ever visit by an American president in office. And they fear that allying with Fukushima too much may derail that effort.

Another reason: Hiroshima was strategically used to promote nuclear power. It was seen as the perfect place to highlight the technology's peaceful uses.

At the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, it is bombs and not reactors that are the enemy.

A digital clock ticks away the days since the nuclear attack. Another clock shows the days from the last nuclear test. People line up to pray before a nearby memorial. The sad skeletal remains of a dome have become an international symbol, a prayer for peace.

"Look at these pictures," said Kenji Shiga, chief of the museum, pointing to a photo of a corpse so blackened and deformed one must squint to make out a head. "And this is one of the less gruesome ones."

"Here, it all came with a bang," Shiga said, stressing the differences between Hiroshima and Fukushima. "This is not a place merely dripping radiation."

Sunao Tsuboi, 88, is a bomb victim, who survived miraculously.

A part of his ear is gone, and his face is blotched with burn marks. When he emerged from unconsciousness 40 days after the bombing, the war was long over. He was so weak and scarred he had to start by practicing crawling on the floor.

He pities Fukushima, but, like the others, stresses the differences.

The people of Hiroshima are "hibakusha," which means "radiation victims," while the people of Fukushima are "hisaisha," which means "disaster victims," said Tsuboi.

"They wanted to kill us ? no mistake about that," he said. "Maybe there will be problems in Fukushima because of the radiation, and we don't know yet if some people may end up dying. But here it was about annihilation."

Shuntaro Hida, 96, was among the doctors who treated the people of Hiroshima within days of the bombing. He has been outspoken about the dangers of what scientists call internal radiation, the ingestion of radioactive material from the air, water and food.

Hida said he witnessed the deaths of hundreds of people who entered Hiroshima after the bombing, victims of radiation exposure that led to diseases including cancer, strokes, organ failure and leukemia.

"No one wanted the world to know that the bomb could continue to kill for so many years later," he said.

In Hida's view, that is at least one area in which the nuclear cataclysms are intertwined. He said Hiroshima never fully faced up to the effects of internal radiation, and that same mistake is being repeated in Fukushima.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at www.twitter.com/yurikageyama

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/attempts-fukushima-hiroshima-upset-053931653.html

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Russian rocket speeds to space station

Three crew members arrived at the International Space Station, Wednesday evening. They join three others to bring the station's crew back to full-strength. During their time in space, one of the group's tasks will be to showcase the Olympic torch.?

By Irene Klotz,?Reuters / September 26, 2013

The Soyuz-FG rocket booster with Soyuz TMA-10M space ship blasts off in Kazakhstan, Thursday. The Russian rocket carried U.S. astronaut Michael Hopkins, Russian cosmonauts Oleg Kotov and Sergey Ryazanskiy to the International Space Station.

AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky

Enlarge

A Russian Soyuz rocket blasted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Wednesday to deliver three new crew members to the International Space?Station.

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The Soyuz rocket and capsule lifted off at 4:58 p.m. EDT (2058 GMT) on an express route to the station, which orbits about 250 miles (400 km) above Earth.

Less than six hours after liftoff, veteran Russian commander Oleg Kotov and rookies Sergey Ryazanskiy of Russia and Michael Hopkins of the United States reached the outpost, a $100 billion project of 15 nations. Only two other crews have made the journey as quickly. Previous Soyuz capsules took two days of orbital maneuvers to reach the station.

The arrival of Kotov, Ryazanskiy and Hopkins returns the station to its full, six-member live-aboard crew. Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin, NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg and European Space?Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano have been running the station on their own since Sept. 10.

The skeleton crew was to have overseen the arrival of a commercial cargo ship on a test flight to the station this week.

But a software problem left the unmanned Cygnus freighter unable to receive navigation data properly from the station, delaying its arrival until no earlier than Saturday to avoid conflicting with the Soyuz's berthing. Typically, at least 48 hours are needed between spacecraft dockings.

The cargo ship, built and launched by Orbital Sciences with backing from NASA, blasted off aboard an Antares rocket on Sept. 18 from a new launch pad on the Virginia coast.

"As a crew we're very excited to be up there when Cygnus rendezvous and docks and (we're) looking forward to opening that hatch," Hopkins said on Tuesday during a prelaunch press conference.

Hopkins and Ryazanskiy are making their first flights. Kotov, who will take over command of the station when Yurchikhin leaves in November, has made two previous long-duration missions on the station.

During their five-month stay, Kotov and Ryazanskiy are scheduled to make three spacewalks, the first of which will include taking an unlighted Olympic torch outside the airlock to promote the Sochi Olympic Games in Russia, which open in February 2014.

"Our goal here is to make it look spectacular," Kotov, speaking through a translator, told reporters.

"We'd like to showcase our Olympic torch in space. We will try to do it in a beautiful manner. Millions of people will see it live on TV and they will see the station and see how we work," Kotov said.

The torch is scheduled to be delivered to the station on Nov. 6 by the next crew launching to the outpost. Yurchikhin, Nyberg and Parmitano will then bring it back to Earth when they return home four days later so the traditional torch relay can continue.

"Unfortunately we cannot light it in space?so we will simply take it to space?and take pictures and some video with the station and the Earth in the background," Ryazanskiy said in a prelaunch NASA interview.

An Olympic torch previously flew aboard NASA's now-retired space?shuttle Atlantis prior to the 1996 Olympics.

(Reporting by Irene Klotz in Mojave, California; Editing by Jane Sutton, Cynthia Osterman and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://www.csmonitor.com/Science/2013/0926/Russian-rocket-speeds-to-space-station

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Interview with James Horwitz (Offthekuff)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Stocks little changed after 4 days of declines

NEW YORK (AP) ? The stock market was flat in early trading Wednesday as investors continue to worry about the economy and the growing possibility of a government shutdown.

The Dow Jones industrial average is down less than a point to 15,335 as of 10 a.m. Eastern. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was down less than a point 1,697. The Nasdaq composite is down two points to 3,765.

The U.S. government will run out of funding on Sept. 30, unless both parties can agree to pass a temporary funding bill in the next few days. The Dow and S&P 500 have fallen four consecutive days on concerns a government shutdown could harm the fragile economic recovery.

The Senate will vote Wednesday on the temporary measure, which will then likely head back to the House of Representatives for debate. The funding fight is expected to go through the weekend.

Investors did get an unexpectedly positive August durable goods report. Orders for long-lasting manufactured goods rose 0.1 percent last month, following an 8.1 percent decline in July.

Among stock making big moves:

Mako Surgical soared $13.34, or 83 percent, to $29.51 after medical technology company Stryker said it would buy Mako for $1.65 billion, or $30 per share.

Ascena Retail Group shares jumped $2.38, or 14 percent, to $19.70. The parent company of Lane Bryant, Dressbarn and Maurices, reported results that were significantly better than financial analysts expected in its most recent quarter.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stocks-little-changed-4-days-declines-134539852--finance.html

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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

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Amazon announces 2700 extra jobs in Scotland in lead up to Christmas

Online retailer Amazon has announced it is hiring 2700 seasonal staff in Scotland to meet customer demand in the lead up to Christmas.

The announcement comes as the US internet giant revealed it will bring in a total of 15,000 new workers for the festive season.

Amazon, which is expanding operations in this country, said it expected hundreds of the temporary staff would later be able to take up permanent jobs.

The company said it was creating a variety of roles across its eight "fulfilment centres" and its Edinburgh customer service centre. Two of those are based in Scotland, with bases in Dunfermline, Fife and Gourock in Inverclyde.

The company said it will split 2500 jobs between the two bases with a further 200 appointments expected at the Edinburgh customer service centre.

The six other distribution sites across the UK are in Doncaster; Hemel Hempstead; Milton Keynes; Peterborough; Rugeley, Staffordshire; and Swansea Bay.

Catherine McDermott, director of operations at Amazon.co.uk, said: "On our busiest shopping day last Christmas, customers ordered a total of 3.5 million items during one 24-hour period at a rate of 44 items a second.

"During the Christmas season, seasonal associates play a critical role in making sure we meet increased demand from customers. As we continue to expand our UK operations, we expect many hundreds of these temporary associates to move into permanent positions as has been the case in previous years."

Amazon said last year it hired 10,000 seasonal staff in the run-up to the festive season and by the end of January had offered roles to 1000 of them.

In February a protest was held outside Amazon?s Dunfermline distribution centre against low wages and working conditions.

The GMB union said employees at the site were paid ?6.20 an hour, just 1p above the minimum wage.

They also claimed staff were ?exploited? and made to wear digital terminals on their arms which track their movements and there are no regular breaks. Workers also said they were protesting against a culture of bullying and harassment within the company.

However the corporation hit back, saying they give staff a "safe and positive working environment".

Recruitment for the latest roles will be ongoing in the run-up to the Christmas period and prospective employees can apply online.

Amazon, which recently opened a 210,000 sq ft office in central London as it eyes UK expansion, has more than 6000 permanent employees in the UK.

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Source: http://news.stv.tv/east-central/240634-amazon-announce-2700-new-jobs-in-scotland-in-lead-up-to-christmas/

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Older is wiser, at least economically

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The brains of older people are slowing but experience more than makes up for the decline. Researchers came up with this conclusion after asking the participants a series of financially related questions.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/4f-nj_4EW0E/130924141037.htm

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The Biggest Obamacare Change Won't Affect Most Americans' Insurance

The biggest part of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul is just days away from its debut, and the American public remains confused. For many consumers, the most important question is personal: What do I have to do?

If you're one of the roughly 80 percent of Americans who already has health insurance through an employer or is enrolled in a government program like Medicare, the answer is: probably nothing.

On Oct. 1, new health insurance websites will debut in each state. Some will be run by the state, and others will be run by the federal government. These sites, called health insurance exchanges or marketplaces, are designed to serve those without insurance and those who buy insurance on their own.

Seven million people will purchase private health insurance on the exchanges for 2014, the Congressional Budget Office projects. An additional 9 million will use the exchanges to enroll in Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program, two joint federal-state health programs for low-income people. The number of uninsured will drop by 14 million next year, the budget agency projects.

For nearly everyone else -- the 170.9 million people covered by employers and the 101.5 million enrolled in government health programs -- the ballyhooed launch of the Obamacare exchanges will mean little, according to health care, consumer and business experts.

"If you have employer coverage now, do not worry," said Lynn Quincy, a senior policy analyst at Consumers Union in Washington who specializes in health care issues. "If you're on Medicare now, please don't worry," she said.

Still, a lot of people are worried over the introduction of a new way to buy health insurance and the health care law's "individual mandate" that nearly every legal U.S. resident obtain health coverage or face a tax penalty.

People who don't get health insurance will have to pay $95 dollars or 1 percent of their annual income -- whichever is higher. That amount will rise each year until it hits $695 or 2.5 percent by 2016. The mandate has numerous exemptions, including for financial hardship. Most company health plans already meet the health care reform law's standards for benefits and affordability, as do government health programs like Medicare, Medicaid and military benefits.

"For the vast majority of the population, the individual mandate will be a non-event," said Larry Levitt, the co-executive director of the Program for the Study of Health Reform and Private Insurance at the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation in Menlo Park, Calif.

The open enrollment period for 2014 health plans bought on the exchanges begins Oct. 1 and runs through the end of March. People will use the exchanges in their home states to compare the price and benefits of various insurance plans. The exchanges also are the only way to get the financial assistance available to those who earn less than four times the federal poverty level, which amounts to $45,960 for a single person this year.

Those shopping on the marketplaces will see changes. People who currently buy their own insurance will find that some cheap, skimpy plans sold to individuals today won't be available, and some younger, healthier people may see higher sticker prices -- especially if they don't qualify for tax credit subsidies. Others will gain access to coverage they didn't have and get help paying for it.

Survey after survey shows the public to be confused, anxious and misinformed about what health care reform does and how it will affect them.

Fewer than half of Americans think they know enough about the law to understand how it affects them, according to poll findings the Kaiser Family Foundation published last month. More than a third believe they'll be worse off, 23 percent think they'll be better off and 37 percent say it won't make much difference.

When Congress wrote the law known as the Affordable Care Act, their idea was to maintain Americans' current health coverage as much as possible, to boost consumer protections in the health insurance market for individuals, and to cover the uninsured.

That doesn't mean all workers will keep what they have. The Congressional Budget Office predicts that 7 million fewer people will get their health insurance through work by 2023, although jobs will remain the most common source of health coverage for Americans. People who work part-time, have low-wage jobs or are employed by smaller companies are most likely to lose their job-based benefits and to use the exchanges instead.

There's already been a steady drumbeat of news stories about companies changing health benefits, like Trader Joe's and Home Depot dropping part-time workers from their health plans.

While this phenomenon is real and disruptive to those workers, the outliers shouldn't be cause for concern for most people who have job-based health benefits, said Helen Darling, the president and CEO of the National Business Group on Health, a Washington-based association of large employers.

"Nothing has to change for you if you have employer-sponsored coverage," Darling said.

A survey of U.S. employers found that 93.5 percent of companies definitely or very likely will continue to offer health benefits to workers, compared to 1 percent that definitely won't or are very likely not to, according to a report the International Federation of Health Benefit Plans, a London-based trade group, issued in May.

Employers provide health benefits both as a means of attracting and retaining employees and because they aren't taxed like wages (so they're cheaper than raises). "No one is going to say, 'Whoops, we just decided that we're not going to give you health benefits because we don't think they're that important.' It just isn't going to happen," Darling said. And experts don't expect large employers to make more changes or raise premiums much more than if the health law hadn't been enacted, she said.

But anecdotes about individual companies are causing some worry among workers -- worry fomented by Obamacare opponents and the media, Darling said.

"It's more the press that is drumming up attention in a negative way, much of it being driven by people who want to make it a negative experience," Darling said.

Likewise, the debate over whether Obamacare will cause health insurance premiums to soar on the exchanges -- so-called rate shock -- needlessly confuses people who have coverage from work, Levitt said.

"They see these headlines that premiums may skyrocket and they think that's them," he said. It's not; it's about insurance people buy directly.

In fact, a survey of employers the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust published last month showed job-based health insurance prices rose an average of just 5 percent for single people this year. "There's no reason to think that's going to change dramatically," Levitt said.

On the individual market for health insurance, some people, especially those who are younger and healthier, may see higher premiums, not counting the available tax credits. Others will pay less than today. That's largely due to new rules, such as requiring better benefits than commonly available on the individual market today, guaranteeing coverage to people with pre-existing conditions and limiting how much more older people can be charged than younger consumers.

Medicare beneficiaries have even less cause for concern, Quincy said, even though a Kaiser Family Foundation poll found that older Americans disapprove of the Affordable Care Act at higher rates than younger people.

Express Scripts, which manages prescription drug benefits for health insurance plans, surveyed Medicare enrollees and discovered many misperceptions -- including 17 percent who think they have to buy coverage on the exchanges. In reality, it's illegal for a health insurer to sell a plan through the exchange to someone on Medicare.

People on Medicare don't need to do anything different this year than they have in the past, Quincy said. "The main message is: Nothing has changed for you. You're good to go."

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/23/obamacare-change_n_3975425.html

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"New Is Easy, Right Is Hard"

Whether or not you like the products it creates, Apple's philosophy builds in the best of intentions. When speaking to Business Week, Craig Federighi (Apple's VP of software engineering) stated their overarching goal in a way that ought to serve as the backbone for most good work: "new is easy, right is hard."

Casey Newton at the Verge reports:

While skeptics look at the new iPhones and sing their annual chorus of "meh," Cook and his deputies have come together to offer a full-throated defense of their products' steady evolution. "You've got a sense about perhaps not what we are building, but the way we approach problems as a group," Ive says in USA Today. "About how we go back again and again until something is just right." Federighi puts it more succinctly, offering up an unofficial tagline for the modest improvements of the iPhone 5S: "New is easy," Federighi tells Businessweek. "Right is hard."

Opinions of the latest iPhones aside, Federighi's simplified philosophy makes a lot of sense. We can all find new ideas exciting, but when you get them wrong they fall flat and fail to last. When we approach our own projects and ideas, we shouldn't focus so much on new. Very little is new, but just seems that way. Good, better, and right?those things require struggle and ultimately make for better goals.

Apple's most important introductions: Tim Cook, Craig Federighi, and Jony Ive | The Verge

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/7oKsy4mNofE/new-is-easy-right-is-hard-1371919541

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Nonprofit health insurance company forming in Wis. - TODAY'S TMJ4

CREATED 9:28 AM

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MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Business leaders and community organizers in Milwaukee are forming a nonprofit health insurance company to provide coverage to small businesses and individuals.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports Common Ground Healthcare Cooperative is one of 24 being started nationwide with almost $2 billion in federal loans.

It will focus on Milwaukee and eastern Wisconsin to start, selling coverage through the federally run online marketplace, or exchange, that opens Oct. 1.

Kettle Moraine Hardwoods owner Jim Wesp is on the cooperative's board. He says he was attracted by the idea of a cooperative because membership gives him some say in how the company is run.

It's not the first nonprofit health insurance company in Wisconsin. Group Health Cooperative of South Central Wisconsin was started in the 1970s with a federal loan.

------

Information from: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, http://www.jsonline.com

Source: http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/Nonprofit-health-insurance-company-forming-in-Wis-224864162.html

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Head Coach Paolo Di Canio 'Parts Company' With Sunderland

Sunderland have parted company with head coach Paolo Di Canio after less than six months with the club.

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Di Canio leaves Sunderland after less than six-months in charge at the Stadium of Light.

Di Canio took over from former manager Martin O'Neill who was sacked after defeat to Manchester United in March this year with the club hovering above the relegation zone.

Di Canio took Sunderland to Premier League safety which included two consecutive victories over Newcastle United at St. James' Park and Everton.

The 3-0 win in the Tyne-Wear derby over Newcastle United was one of particular significance as it was the first time Sunderland had won on Tyneside in over a decade.

Di Canio made wholesale changes to the Sunderland squad in the summer transfer window which saw 14 new players brought into the squad.

The current campaign has been a tough one for Sunderland though as, after five games they are bottom of the Premier League with one point from five games.

The decision to part company with Di Canio comes after Sunderland's fourth defeat of the league campaign which saw them go down 3-0 away at West Brom.

A statement on the club's official website said:

"Sunderland AFC confirms that it has parted company with head coach Paolo Di Canio this evening (Sunday September 22)

"Kevin Ball will take charge of the squad ahead of Tuesday night?s Capital One Cup game against Peterborough United and an announcement will be made in due course regarding a permanent successor.

'The club would like to place on record its thanks to Paolo and his staff and wishes them well for the future."

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Source: http://tyneandwear.sky.com/sunderland/article/82526/head-coach-paolo-di-canio-parts-company-with-sunderland

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Google launches Healthcare

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Source: chennaionline.com --- Sunday, September 22, 2013
Google had launched healthcare company to handle the most difficult cases regarding ageing which marks a biggest step in the Internet business. ...

Source: http://chennaionline.com/Technology/internet/20131421041456/Google-launches-Healthcare.col

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Suicide Bomber Kills 72 Inside Pakistan Church! Mostly Women & Kids Killed :(

Published on?Sep 22, 2013 by?DAHBOO77

2 Suicide Bombers kill mostly women and children that were in sunday school and choir !

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/09/22/wor?

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Source: http://www.fromthetrenchesworldreport.com/suicide-bomber-kills-72-inside-pakistan-church-mostly-women-kids-killed/58656

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The Truthseeker: World War 3, Greater Israel & Real Axis of Evil

ALL CONTENT ON 'SGTREPORT.COM' AS WELL AS THE 'SGTBULL07' YOUTUBE CHANNEL IS PROVIDED FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. 'SGTREPORT' ASSUMES ALL INFORMATION TO BE TRUTHFUL AND RELIABLE; HOWEVER, THE CONTENT ON THIS SITE IS PROVIDED WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. NO MATERIAL HERE CONSTITUTES "INVESTMENT ADVICE" NOR IS IT A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO STOCKS, COMMODITIES, OPTIONS, BONDS, FUTURES, OR INTRINSICALLY VALUELESS FEDERAL RESERVE NOTES, PRINTED FROM THIN AIR BY A PRIVATELY OWNED, THIEVING, OFFSHORE CORPORATION, OPERATED BY SATAN HIMSELF. ACTIONS YOU UNDERTAKE AS A CONSEQUENCE OF ANY ANALYSIS, OPINION OR ADVERTISEMENT ON THIS SITE ARE YOUR SOLE RESPONSIBILITY. THANK YOU.
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Source: http://sgtreport.com/2013/09/the-truthseeker-world-war-3-greater-israel-real-axis-of-evil/

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Golf, firewood, fishing...all share commonalities in Oregon's great ...

The similarities are striking; the benefits similar; settings identical.

Firewood/golf, golf/firewood. Both happen outdoors, both are good exercise, both pit you mostly against yourself, both let you hit something and, most important ? both reward a good shot with instant gratification.

And we're not cheating here by buying pre-split. It's not a miniature golf putting rink, where you simply buy, stack it up and call it a hole in one.

Rather, it's the basic act of gathering firewood, i.e., cutting and splitting your own. Whether a bag of clubs or an ax and a maul, it's all about sticks out in the sticks.

Tens of thousands of deer hunters will move out to camp this week for Saturday's buck deer opener and Oregon's forests will echo with the sound of chain saws as campfire piles grow. Many of us will bring some home; statistically, it will likely be the only success for most hunters.

I was on the golf team in high school (Hoover, in San Diego), but have little time to play anymore. There are simply too many hunting and fishing seasons.

Still, I do get out once every year or two ... and I also enjoy splitting my own firewood each summer. I'll probably swing a golf club a bit longer than a maul someday soon, but not quite yet.

The similarities occurred to me this summer, while watching Phil Mickelson sweep the British Isles' opens (Scottish and British); I retreated into the air conditioned house in snippets to mop the sweat and cool off between his and my wedge shots.

For example:

Teeing off (with woods, of course) -- Cutting the logs.

Fairway irons -- Sawing the rounds to size (I prefer 16-inchers).

The short game -- Most crucial; line up the split; take a good stance; swing with acceleration and a good follow-through; choke up on the maul to help the aim; you may even have to use a wedge for the tough shots.

I also love the similarities in the strike.

In golf, you can pretty much tell by the sound and feel of the club meeting the ball whether it's going to be ok. Yeah, maybe a bit of a slice or a hook, but still OK. Well, the same is true when the maul strikes the round. A "thud" isn't good. An echoing sort of "pock" sound relieves all the day's stress and tension as new chunks of firewood fall off on each side.

That's a par for a woodcutter, by the way. A birdie occurs when the same thing happens unexpectedly (or after concentration on the swing and follow through) to a tough piece of wood. The rare eagle (I had three this summer) occurs when you aim for one split, but end up with three pieces instead of two.

And, of course, there are the frequent bogies, double- and even triple-bogies, when it takes more than one (or two or three) swing(s) to finish the split. I always handicap myself in advance by anticipating what will happen with the round. Fir, alder and, sometimes, maple are the easiest to score on. Oak, one of the toughest woods, almost always is at least a par 5 and usually is bogey woodcutting at best.

After splitting two cords of fir, birch and a few par-five oak rounds, I was also able to compare firewood with fish.

Seriously.

Fir -- Pink core, like steelhead. Pretty good firewood, pleasant odor when burning or freshly split.

Alder -- Deeper red core; chinook or even coho. Excellent heat values and commanding odor under flame.

Western Larch (mistakenly called tamarack by hunters) -- Prime firewood; spring chinook for a woodstove, with pungent outdoor odor and high heat value.

Cedar -- Trout-like, maybe bass; burns fast and puts on a great show.

Oak -- Definitely the halibut of the lot.

Maple/birch -- Lingcod or rockfish, perhaps.

Finally, like salmon or venison in the freezer, I'll head into the winter with the same secure feeling a good friend has after a great season on the links with a hot putter.

Every chunk I put in the woodstove will carry a memory -- and some sweat equity.

HUNTER INFO BOOTHS: Despite recent rains, it's possible you may not be allowed to cut firewood in camp this year.

Be sure to check in at any of several hunter information centers open by Thursday along most major highways leading into deer country. Fire restrictions, off-road driving, smoking and other information (and coffee) will be available at most locations.

(Or you can always find a telephone number and call the land manager's office before departing.)

Booths will be open on U.S. 26 (Prineville and Mt. Vernon), U.S. 20 (Sisters), U.S. 97 (La Pine), U.S. 58 (mp 71), Interstate 84 (Memaloose Rest Area), and Dodson Road (The Dalles).

WHOA! Fall chinook counts are off the charts at every counting station in the Columbia River hydroelectric system as biologists are looking for a record 1 million-plus upriver fall chinook return.

The total Columbia fall chinook return, already a record at more than 800,000, is expected to number close to 1.2 million adults.

What went right? Agencies are scrambling for answers.

Anglers are (finally) cheering them on.

-- Bill Monroe

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Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregonian/bill_monroe/index.ssf/2013/09/golf_firewood_fishingall_share.html

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Monday, September 23, 2013

The Military's War on Women Continues | JONATHAN TURLEY

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Despite the increased interest some in Congress and in the Pentagon have shown in how accusations of rape by female members of the military are treated, women can still jeopardize their careers and their mental well-being ...

Source: http://jonathanturley.org/2013/09/22/the-militarys-war-on-women-continues/

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Coastal Style: Smooth Sailing

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Source: http://coastal-style.blogspot.com/2013/09/smooth-sailing.html

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Kenyan forces say they rescued 'most' hostages

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? Kenyan's military said late Sunday it had rescued "most" of the remaining hostages held by al-Qaida-linked militants in an upscale Nairobi mall after launching a major operation to end a two-day standoff that had already killed 68 people.

The assault, which began shortly before sundown, came as two helicopters circled the mall, with one skimming very close to the roof. A loud explosion rang out, far larger than any previous grenade blast or gunfire volley.

Kenyan police said on Twitter that a "MAJOR" assault by had started to end the bloody siege.

"This will end tonight. Our forces will prevail. Kenyans are standing firm against aggression, and we will win," Kenya's National Disaster Operation Centre said on Twitter.

Kenya Defence Forces later said it had rescued most hostages and had taken control of most of the mall. Officials did not immediately release the number of hostages rescued or the number that remained. Four Kenyan military personnel were wounded in the operation, the military said.

The assault came about 30 hours after 10 to 15 al-Shabab extremists stormed the mall Saturday from two sides, throwing grenades and firing on civilians.

Loud exchanges of gunfire emanated from inside the four-story upscale mall throughout Sunday. Kenyan troops were seen carrying in at least two rocket propelled grenades. Al-Shabab militants reacted angrily to the helicopters on Twitter and warned that the Kenyan military action was endangering hostages.

Kenyan officials said they would do their utmost to save hostages' lives, but no officials could say precisely how many hostages were inside. Kenya's Red Cross said in a statement citing police that 49 people had been reported missing. Officials did not make an explicit link but that number could give an indication of the number of people held captive.

Kenya's Red Cross said the death toll on Sunday rose to 68 after nine bodies were recovered in a joint rescue mission.

A United States State Department spokeswoman condemned the "despicable massacre of innocent men, women and children." U.S. law enforcement, military and civilian personnel in Nairobi were providing advance and assistance as requested by Kenya, spokeswoman Marie Harf said.

Somalia's al-Qaida-linked rebel group, al-Shabab, claimed responsibility for the attack that specifically targeted non-Muslims. The attackers included some women. The Islamic extremist rebels said the attack was retribution for Kenyan forces' 2011 push into neighboring Somalia.

Al-Shabab said on its new Twitter feed ? after its previous one was shut down Saturday ? that Kenyan officials were asking the hostage-takers to negotiate and offering incentives.

"We'll not negotiate with the Kenyan govt as long as its forces are invading our country, so reap the bitter fruits of your harvest," al-Shabab said in a tweet.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta reiterated his government's determination to continue fighting al-Shabab.

"We went as a nation into Somalia to help stabilize the country and most importantly to fight terror that had been unleashed on Kenya and the world," said Kenyatta. "We shall not relent on the war on terror."

He said although this violent attack had succeeded, the Kenyan security forces had "neutralized" many others. Earlier in the day Kenyatta said he his nephew and his nephew's fiance were killed in the attack.

Former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga told reporters at the mall that "quite a number" of people were being held hostage in two locations of the mall, which includes stores for Nike, Adidas and Bose. Many hostages were believed to be in a grocery and general department store called Nakumatt.

Kenyan security officials sought to reassure the families of hostages but implied that hostages could be killed. The security operation is "delicate" because Kenyan forces hoped to ensure the hostages are evacuated safely, said Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Lenku.

"The priority is to save as many lives as possible," Lenku said, adding that more than 1,000 people escaped the attack inside the mall on Saturday.

"We have received a lot of messages from friendly countries, but for now it remains our operation," Lenku said.

More than 175 people were injured in the attack, Lenku said, including many children. Kenyan forces were by Sunday in control of the mall's security cameras, he said.

Britain's prime minister, in confirming the deaths of three British nationals, told the country to "prepare ourselves for further bad news."

Westgate Mall is at least partially owned by Israelis, and reports circulated that Israeli commandos were on the ground to assist in the response. Four restaurants inside the mall are Israeli-run or owned.

In Israel, a senior defense official said there were no Israeli forces participating in an assault, but the official said it was possible that Israeli advisers were providing assistance. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a classified military issue, would not elaborate.

Israel has close ties to Kenya going back many years. And in recent years, Israel has identified East Africa as an area of strategic interest and stepped up ties with Kenya and other neighboring countries, due to shared threats posed by al-Qaida and other extremist elements. In 2002, militants bombed an Israeli-owned luxury hotel near Mombasa, killing 13 people, and tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner at the same time.

Kenyans and foreigners were among those confirmed dead, including British, French, Canadians, Indians, a Ghanaian, a South African and a Chinese woman.

Kofi Awoonor, a Ghanaian poet, professor and former ambassador to Brazil, Cuba and the United Nations, died after being injured in the attack, Ghana's presidential office confirmed. Ghana's ministry of information said Awoonor's son was injured and is responding to treatment.

Kenya's presidential office said that one of the attackers was arrested on Saturday and died after suffering from bullet wounds.

Britain's Foreign Office said that Foreign Secretary William Hague has chaired a meeting of Britain's crisis committee and sent a rapid deployment team from London to Nairobi to provide extra consular support.

The United Nations Security Council condemned the attacks and "expressed their solidarity with the people and Government of Kenya" in a statement.

There was some good news on Sunday, as Kenyan media reported that several people in hiding in the mall escaped to safety in the morning, suggesting that not everyone who was inside overnight was being held by al-Shabab.

Police lobbed multiple rounds of tear gas throughout the day to disperse hundreds of curious Kenyans who gathered near the mall.

___

Associated Press reporters Jacob Kushner in Nairobi, Kenya; Josef Federman in Jerusalem; Louise Watt in Beijing; and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenyan-forces-rescued-most-hostages-210527873.html

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Pope offers hope to Sardinia's poor, unemployed

CAGLIARI, Sardinia (AP) -- Pope Francis denounced what he called big business's idolatry of money as he traveled Sunday to one of Italy's poorest regions to offer hope to the unemployed and entrepreneurs struggling to hang on.

"Where there is no work, there is no dignity," he said.

Francis left aside his prepared remarks and spoke off the cuff to thousands of people in Sardinia's capital, telling them he knew well what it was like to suffer from financial crisis. He recalled that his Italian parents, who immigrated to Argentina before he was born, spoke about it often at home.

"My young father went to Argentina full of illusions of making it in America," a somber Francis told the crowd at the start of a daylong visit to the island. "And he suffered the terrible crisis of the 1930s. They lost everything. There was no work."

He said it's easy for a priest to come and tell the poor to have courage, but that he really meant it. Amid shouts of "Lavoro! Lavoro!" (Work! Work!), Francis called for a dignified work for all.

Sardinia, known for its pristine beaches and swank vacation homes, has been particularly hard-hit by Italy's economic crisis, with businesses closing and more and more of the island's families forced to seek charity. The island's desperation made headlines last year when a coal miner, participating in an underground sit-in to protest the planned closure of the mine, slashed his wrists on television.

Unemployment in Italy is at 12 percent, with youth unemployment a staggering 39.5 percent. In Sardinia and the rest of Italy's south and islands, the figures are even worse: Unemployment is nearing 20 percent, with youth unemployment at 50 percent.

Francis told the Sardinians, some of whom wore hardhats from their defunct factory jobs, that the economic problems were the result of a global economic system "that has at its center an idol called money."

Francis has made reaching out to the poor and most marginal the priority of his pontificate. This is only his second visit to an Italian city outside Rome; the first was to the isolated island of Lampedusa, where thousands of migrants come ashore each year.

Francis noted the similarity, saying both islands were places of immense suffering but also hope.

"It's easy to say 'don't lose hope,'" he said. "But to all of you who have work, and to those who don't, let me tell you: Don't let yourselves be robbed of hope."

Later, Francis celebrated Mass in the piazza outside the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Bonaria, the island's patron and namesake of Francis' native Buenos Aires. The pope is particularly devoted to the Madonna and wanted to make a pilgrimage to the shrine.

After Mass, Francis met with the poor and some prisoners in the capital's cathedral, delivered a speech at the island's Catholic university and gave an off-the-cuff pep rally to young Sardinians gathered in a main square before returning to Rome.

He shared a personal detail with the kids, that Saturday had marked the 60th anniversary when he first felt the call to be a priest.

"In all these years that have passed, I've had some successes, joys, but also years of failure, fragility and sin," he said. "Sixty years on the path of the Lord."

In a sign that the exhausting day was starting to take its toll, Francis inadvertently slipped into his native Spanish in his final public remarks in Sardinia, which like many of Italy's regions has its own dialect.

"Hah," he chuckled. "Even I'm speaking dialect here."

____

Winfield reported from Rome.

___

Follow NicoleWinfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-offers-hope-sardinias-poor-075819971.html

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Tesco launches its own Android tablet

Tesco has entered the tablet market with the Hudl.

Although?early rumours suggested?the device would cost under ?100, Tesco has revealed today that it will cost ?119 and go on sale from September 30th.

The device comes with a 1.5Ghz quad-core processor, 7-inch screen, 16GB of storage, front and rear-facing cameras and Android 4.2.2.

Sister site PCR has the full story.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/McvOpinions/~3/7cVG17YCbxQ/0121479

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Paul: GOP unlikely to stop Affordable Health Care

Sen. Rand Paul acknowledged Saturday it is unlikely Republicans in Congress can repeal President Barack Obama's signature health care law.

"We probably can't defeat or get rid of Obamacare," Sen. Paul told reporters.

Speaking to the press at a Republican conference on Mackinac Island, Michigan, the freshman senator from Kentucky conceded he doubts the House resolution passed Friday, which would defund the Affordable Care Act, could emerge from a Senate debate unscathed and unamended. One of the most vocal opponents of the Affordable Care Act, Paul holds hope that threatening to not pay for the legislative program could result in a finished product that's "less bad."

"In the end the sausage factory in Washington will make the sausage," Paul told the Detroit News.

Paul, whose potential as presidential contender in 2016 has been a subject of much speculation, admitted that absent a sudden and total alignment behind an approach to tackling the health care law, his caucus' "disunity" means Republicans will most likely fall short of canceling, or even delaying, the law from going into effect.

"Leverage doesn't work unless people believe you'll actually do something," Paul said. "The fact that Democrats don't believe we'll do anything, in the end they'll get what they want and a bill will be cobbled together."

Source: http://www.wapt.com/news/politics/paul-gop-unlikely-to-stop-affordable-health-care/-/9156836/22061584/-/125axfaz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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