Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/michigan-mom-disappears-police-ask-for-help/
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School of Management 2013 seniors surveyed by Bloomberg Businessweek ranked SMG?s finance degree seventh nationwide, beating out New York University and Boston College. Photo by Kalman Zabarsky
Michael Tobitsch took his first finance class junior year at BU and never looked back. He landed a job after graduation in investment banking at Wachovia Securities, now merged with Wells Fargo, where he honed his skills before securing a position on the mergers and acquisitions team of insurance broker Marsh & McLennan Companies in New York City.
A rising star in his field, Tobitsch (SMG?07) says BU gave him a strong foundation in finance, so he was hardly surprised to hear that 2013 seniors of the School of Management surveyed by Bloomberg Businessweek recently ranked the school?s finance program the seventh best nationwide, beating out competitors like New York University and Boston College.
Tobitsch credits Kenneth Freeman, Allen Questrom Professor and Dean of SMG, for changing the curriculum so students can select finance courses as early as freshman year (an option unavailable to him) and predicts other top-notch rankings will follow. ?I really think it?s an indication of what?s to come.?
In compiling its results, Bloomberg Businessweek surveyed Class of 2013 seniors about the courses they took and their overall satisfaction with their individual programs. The student satisfaction score rose to 18th overall, an increase from last year?s rank of 26th. And the publication ranked SMG?s overall undergraduate program as 23rd nationwide. Freeman expects more favorable survey results assessing other departments in the coming weeks.
Bloomberg Businessweek ranked SMG's undergraduate program 23rd nationwide. Photo by Vernon Doucette
?Being able to rise to the top 10 for finance is a validation of the really strong commitment of our faculty to our students,? says Freeman. ?It?s heartening to see that our efforts are being recognized by our students to really differentiate the schools of management.?
Marcel Rindisbacher, an SMG associate professor and chair of finance, thinks the survey reflects the school?s decision to redefine the undergraduate curriculum and ?shows the kind of efforts we put in to address students? needs are paying off.?
?Employers know the quality of our curriculum as well as the quality of our students,? says James French, an SMG lecturer in organizational behavior and acting assistant dean. ?Nearly one third of the 2012 graduating class took a position in financial services with a starting salary of over $54,000.?
According to SMG?s Feld Career Center, 92 percent of Class of 2012 graduates concentrating in finance landed a job within six months of graduation, many with Fortune 500 companies, among them Pricewaterhouse Coopers, Fidelity, and J.P. Morgan. Across all SMG departments, 93 percent of Class of 2012 graduates are employed in their respective fields.
Tobitsch wants that trend to continue. That?s why he?s planning his fourth Your Future in Finance conference at BU in September, where young alumni professionals join professors to mentor students for the career of their dreams.
?This ranking was really fully driven by the SMG student experience,? he says, and ?demonstrates that the University and alumni care about them.?
Source: http://www.bu.edu/today/2013/smg-finance-degree-ranked-seventh-nationwide-by-alums/
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All Critics (89) | Top Critics (30) | Fresh (82) | Rotten (7)
The film and its talking head participants paint the picture in both broad strokes and fine detail.
Whatever one's political stripe regarding Israel, it's hard to dispute the impressions and perspective of the film's six eyewitnesses.
The level of candor here may not satisfy hard-liners of either stripe, but it can help viewers begin to formulate new questions about the philosophical, strategic and moral challenges of conflict, in particular "wars on terror."
Ultimately the movie feels evasive, and its flashy, digitally animated re-creations of military surveillance footage unpleasantly evoke the Call of Duty video games.
It offers startlingly honest insight into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from some of those who called the shots.
As a political testament, the result is revealing and important.
...a riveting and sobering documentary about Shin Bet that raises important if unanswerable questions about the morality of state-sanctioned violence in the name of internal security.
[Moreh] asks just the right questions, never prodding these understandably private men too far but getting what he needs.
A riveting but depressing history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
It's a depressing movie, yet there is encouragement to be found in the manifest decency and reasonableness of these six honest, articulate men ...
The former heads of Israel's military anti-terrorism agency Shin Bet break their silence in this unnerving, eye-opening documentary.
The film, though based on the exploits of Shin Bet, gives us reason to think about the drones that take out more than just terrorists.
Makes for truly bracing viewing.
A fascinating film offering a startling look inside one of the most tightlipped intelligence agencies on the planet, and providing powerful resonances with the US and UK's "war on terror".
A compelling overview of a modern security agency - bred in a moral grey area, organising state-sanctioned violence, but uncertain of the strength of its political safety net.
While memorable in sometimes unexpected ways (1980 head Avraham Shalom's long unwashed nails), there is always the nagging feeling that any revelations are being pushed or sold a little too hard.
Dror Moreh's Oscar-nominated documentary is riveting, haunting and depressing in equal measure, offering a sobering assessment of the Israel-Palestine conflict from a unique perspective.
[T]he Oscar-nominated documentary in which the six living former heads of Shin Bet, the ultrasecretive Israeli domestic security agency, talk about their antiterrorism work...
Although The Gatekeepers may not be quite theatrical nor dramatic enough for it to be highly recommended as a cinematic experience, this does feel like a film that really should be seen.
Many secrets are revealed and examined in director Dror Moreh's mind-blowingly fine film. If I have a quibble, it's that he never reveals the most tantalizing secret of all: how the hell he pulled it off.
[An] absorbing documentary, which charts the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from the Six Day War to the presentday.
Insightful, revelatory and profound, Moreh's Oscar-nominated documentary combines riveting interviews, archive footage and - yes - state-of-the-art photographic effects to offer a unique perspective on the Israel-Palestine issue.
Both journalistic coup and unsettling confirmation of the idea that 'you can't make peace using military means.'
Much like Errol Morris' "The Fog of War," Dror Moreh's film is a sobering inside look inside history, at mistakes made and opportunities missed.
Moreh employs a direct interviewing style, reminiscent of Errol Morris' work, to get the men to talk about their days leading Shin Bet.
Moreh gets some startling confessions and insights from each man but also misses the opportunity to truly challenge his subjects on their regard for democracy, basic human rights and their own accountability.
Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_gatekeepers_2012/
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By John Adams
Do you have any important occasion coming up? A wedding, an engagement party, a romantic date, or even an important business partner coming into town? Nothing better than hiring an Orlando limousine service. You can't beat it for style, luxury and comfort. Limousine services have come up all over the US and even across important cities all over the world. People now consider hiring a Limo service as something they can not afford. Instead they have started believing that because of the style and image a limo projects, the cost is well worth it.Cities like Orlando, New York and San Francisco have their fair share of Limousine Rentals. And any reputed limousine service will have a decent fleet with different kinds of Limousines on offer. It would be a good idea to check with the Limo rental service on what kinds of limos they have on offer. More often than not all the good Orlando limo services would have these varieties of limos. You could then figure out which type to rent. Factors to be considered are the occasion for which you want to rent a limo, how many people would have to be transported and of course the price to figure out if it is worth it.
The Standard stretch Limo: This is the kind of limo which comes into mind when you think Limousines. Most of these stretch limos are converted Bentleys. They are very formal and used for important occasions like weddings and funerals. In fact these are the most rented of all limos. You will be surprised to know that the price of renting them does not cost a fortune. Preferred by the older generation though.
The classic style limo; for those who want to ride in class and comfort. The plush interiors and beautiful design will give heads of state and oil tycoons the ride they are seeking. The classic limo was a part of many old Hollywood movies.
Hummers: A Hummer Limo has gotten to be quite popular due to its unconventionality. You can find them in bright colors and they can carry a group of people. If you're a little quirky, this is your best choice.
The SUV Limo: These limos are standard SUVs which have been transformed into limos. They have roomy interiors and can store a lot. They are perfect for longer trips.
The Sedan Limo: This name is actually a misnomer; they are essentially quality vehicles like Mercedes Benz, Jaguars, Cadillac's etc. They have a swanky looking chauffeur and used mostly to transport important business visitors who would not want to stand out unnecessarily.
Source: http://bidding-travel.blogspot.com/2013/04/an-orlando-limousine-service-can-help.html
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KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) ? The fugitive African warlord Joseph Kony recently found safe haven in territory controlled by Sudan, a watchdog group said Friday, accusing the Sudanese military of offering aid to commanders of the Lord's Resistance Army.
The U.S.-based group Resolve said in a new report that Kony recently directed killings from an enclave protected by the Sudanese military. Until early this year, according to the report, Kony and some of his commanders were operating in Kafia Kingi, a disputed area along the Sudan-South Sudan border where African Union troops tasked with catching Kony don't have access.
"The enclave is currently controlled by Sudan, and numerous eyewitness reports indicate that elements of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) in Kafia Kingi have actively sheltered senior LRA commanders there and provided them with limited material support," the report said. "According to LRA defectors and other sources, LRA leader Joseph Kony himself first traveled to the Kafia Kingi enclave in 2010. He returned to Kafia Kingi in 2011 and was present there throughout parts of 2012."
In a series of makeshift camps near a Sudanese army barracks, Kony "continued to direct LRA attacks against civilians in neighboring countries and issue new orders for LRA fighters."
The Ugandan military ? with support from U.S. military advisers ? is the driving force behind the hunt for Kony. Ugandan army spokesman Col. Felix Kulayigye said the report vindicates Uganda's contention that the LRA is a beneficiary of Sudanese support. Ugandan army officials said late last year they believed Kony was hiding in Sudan-controlled territory, although now they believe he has moved elsewhere.
"We always knew Kony was hiding in Kafia Kingi," he said. "The way forward is that no country should be hiding a wanted criminal."
Kony watchdog groups are concerned that Kony can retreat to Kafia Kingi whenever his pursuers get close. Resolve said it has satellite imagery of the now-abandoned camp where Kony was reportedly seen in late 2012. The warlord is no longer believed to be hiding there, the report noted, saying he may have crossed to Central African Republic.
Sudan has consistently denied charges it supports Kony, a warlord wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Sudan's army spokesman Sawarmy Khaled denied reports on Friday that his country has provided shelter or refuge to Kony.
"The report is baseless and rejected. The Sudanese army has no renegade leaders. It is a united army and has no place for individual acts," he told the official state news agency SUNA. "The Sudanese army has no interest in adopting or sheltering rebels from other countries."
The United States government is evaluating the report that the LRA is operating in the Kafia Kingi region, said State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell Friday.
"The U.S. and the international community as a whole would take very seriously any credible evidence of support or safe haven being provided to the LRA," said Ventrell, citing a December statement at the U.N. expressing concern about the LRA's possible presence in Kafia Kingi.
"We continue to discuss our concerns about the whereabouts of Joseph Kony with all governments in the region, including with the government of Sudan, and we have encouraged Sudan to cooperate with regional efforts to counter the LRA," Ventrell added. "We're in a position now where two of the top five commanders are gone, the number of people killed by the LRA has gone down by 66 percent, and defections continue. So our pressure on the LRA continues."
Kony's LRA, which originated in Uganda in the 1980s as a popular tribal uprising against the government, has become notorious for recruiting children as fighters and forcing girls to be sex slaves. Military pressure forced the LRA out of Uganda in 2005, and the rebels scattered across parts of central Africa. LRA fighters are now believed to be operating mainly in the jungles of Congo and Central African Republic.
Ugandan Brig. Dick Olum, the top commander of African forces hunting for Kony, recently said he believed Kony had crossed to Central African Republic, where last month rebels deposed a president and expressed hostility toward foreign troops operating in the country. The lack of cooperation from the new government there forced the African Union to suspend military operations against Kony, who over the years has taken advantage of porous borders and weak governments to regroup.
The LRA is vastly diminished from previous years, and its forces now don't exceed 500, according Brig. Olum. Many of Kony's fighters have defected in the past year, and some of his top lieutenants have been captured or killed in combat. Last year an LRA commander believed to be Kony's military strategist was seized by Ugandan troops.
Sudan's support for Kony threatens progress made against the LRA, said the new report by Resolve.
"Unless addressed, it will also enable LRA leaders to outlast current counter-LRA operations," the report said. "Though international diplomats and military officials working to stop LRA attacks privately acknowledge recent LRA movement in Kafia Kingi, they have not adopted realistic strategies to prevent further support from Sudan to Kony's forces."
___
Associated Press reporter Sarah El Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/group-sudan-army-supporting-fugitive-warlord-kony-110043174.html
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Once again, the prospect of missing flights home helped Congress resolve a standoff, this time over sequester cuts that had furloughed air traffic controllers and caused flight delays this week.?
By David Grant,?Staff Writer / April 26, 2013
Travelers stand in line at Los Angeles International airport Monday. Flight delays piled up as thousands of air traffic controllers were forced to take an unpaid day off because of federal budget cuts.
Damian Dovarganes/AP
EnlargeJet fumes.
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In Congress, it?s a phrase used humorously by staffers and aides hinting that the alluring scent of idling jets has a magical way of speeding up the legislative process when time back in lawmakers? home districts draws near.
On Thursday night and Friday afternoon, however, the Senate and House were literally moved to action by jet fumes: Congress rushed legislation to patch funding for air traffic controllers furloughed by the automatic budget cuts known as the ?sequester? just before jetting home for a week in their states.
The Senate passed the bill without a vote Thursday night. House lawmakers approved the legislation, 361-41, before scampering out of town Friday.
The legislation stopped FAA staff reductions that left planes idling on runways across the country and canceled some flights altogether.
The first impact of the legislation, which White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters the president would soon sign, would be to stop flight delays (of which there were 6,000 more between Sunday and Wednesday of this week than in the same time last year, according to the air traffic controllers? union) and potentially reopen dozens of rural airports that would have been shuttered by the furloughs.
But it also shows that the Democratic goal of reaching a grand bargain of targeted spending reductions and higher taxes in place of the $1.2 trillion in sequester cuts now mandated over the next decade has some short-term political problems.
Like air traffic controllers, it turns out.
While President Obama wants to find an alternative for all of the roughly $80 billion in sequester cuts this year, Republicans have instead tried to push the responsibility for deciding who gets furloughed or which programs get cut onto Mr. Obama and his executive agencies by giving them discretion?to decide which specific budget items get whacked. The sequester measure,?as it originally passed Congress, required across-the-board cuts.?
Republicans say the executive discretion creates flexibility, and say that the president is playing political games by, as happened this week, air traffic controllers get furloughed when the Federal Aviation Administration could have shifted $253 million from less-vital airport improvement grants to keep them on the job.
Democrats are loath to place responsibility for meting out sequester cuts at the president?s feet for fear of being blamed for reductions they don?t think should happen in the first place.
On Friday, the GOP claimed victory.
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Woody Guthrie legacy on display at new Oklahoma museum
TULSA, Oklahoma (Reuters) - There was no doubt in Nora Guthrie's mind where the final repository of her famous musician father's legacy would be. The Woody Guthrie Center opened on Saturday in Tulsa, allowing visitors to see the folk singer's handwritten lyrics to "This Land Is Your Land" and thousands of other lyric sheets, letters, postcards, artwork, photos, manuscripts and journals.
"Trombone Shorty" carries on New Orleans jazz tradition
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - Musician Troy Andrews, better known as "Trombone Shorty," witnessed his first New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival at age 12 - not from the viewing area but on stage. "I was playing with my brother's brass band," said Andrews, now 27.
Michael Buble mixes it up on album of standards, original songs
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With a son on the way and a new album with more original songs than ever, Michael Buble is venturing into uncharted territory without letting go of his personal or artistic roots. "To Be Loved," the 37-year-old Canadian singer's follow-up to his 2011 "Christmas" album, mixes standards inspired by jazz, Motown and even the Bee Gees, with tracks written by Buble as well as collaborations with Bryan Adams and Reese Witherspoon.
South Korean rap sensation Psy honored at Tribeca Film Festival
NEW YORK (Reuters) - South Korean rapper and Internet sensation Psy was honored as a transcultural phenomenon by the Tribeca Film Festival on Friday along with a host of other luminaries ranging from choreographer Twyla Tharp to controversial media host Glenn Beck. "Who knew, right?" Psy said as he was presented his Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Award. "Giving me this award in itself is innovation, I think."
Country singer George Jones dead at 81
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - George Jones, a classic country singer with a voice full of raw honky-tonk emotion and a life full of honky-tonk turmoil, died on Friday at age 81, his spokesman said. Jones, whose career spanned more than six decades and included hits such as "He Stopped Loving Her Today" and "Window Up Above," died at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, in Nashville.
Mamma Mia! Bookie offers odds on ABBA reunion
LONDON (Reuters) - A British bookmaker is taking bets on an ABBA comeback after singer Agnetha Faltskog hinted at a possible reunion for Sweden's most successful band. Faltskog, who has come out of retirement to release a solo album called "A", was asked by German's Die Zeit Magazine if she would be open to an ABBA reunion and she responded positively.
African diva Angelique Kidjo wins Songlines Best Artist award
LONDON (Reuters) - African diva Angelique Kidjo was named Best Artist in Songlines magazine's annual world music awards on Friday, lauded for her high-energy shows and her championing of social causes. French veterans Lo'jo, who mix French folk with African and Arabic sounds, picked up the Best Group award and the young Zimbabwean band Mokoomba was chosen as top Newcomer.
Psy knocked from top of Korean charts by 63-year-old singer
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean rapper Psy, whose latest video "Gentleman" tracked global megahit "Gangnam Style" by going viral on the Internet, has been knocked from the top of the music charts in his native country by a 63-year-old easy listening pop singer. "Gangnam Style", which holds the YouTube record for most views with more than 1.5 billion, catapulted the sunglassed Korean with the garish jackets to world stardom and made him one of the best-known faces to grace the growing K-pop music scene.
Documentary about deceased British singer Amy Winehouse in the works
(Reuters) - A documentary is in the works about the late British soul singer Amy Winehouse and it features previously unseen material, the film's distributor said on Wednesday. The film, which will include archival footage never seen by the public, will be directed by Briton Asif Kapadia, whose 2010 film "Senna," about Brazilian auto racer Ayrton Senna, won a BAFTA for best documentary.
Kurdish singer sparks identity debate on Arab talent show
ARBIL, Iraq (Reuters) - A singer from Iraq's Kurdistan region has made it through to the semi-final of an Arab talent contest, igniting heated debates over Iraqi identity and politicizing the popular TV show. A panel of judges praised 24-year-old Parwaz Hussein and she was voted through to the next round of "Arab Idol", in which aspiring popstars from Morocco to Bahrain compete for a recording contract.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-music-summary-133156745.html
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Apartment 2B || Mildly terrifying. The only female in the Red Building. In college majoring in ____. || FC: Taylor Momsen || Open
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EDDITT:
Apartment 2B || [Ben Barnes]'s (adopted) younger brother. Quite...eccentric, to say the least. || FC: Ezra Miller || Open
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/VjwtK6r4pHA/viewtopic.php
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UFC 159 hype, suspensions ending and a state still not jumping aboard on the MMA train ? it was another full week of MMA. See who made the hot or not list.
Hot ? Chael Sonnen: We won't know if he's a winner in the cage until late Saturday night as he takes on Jon Jones for the championship belt at UFC 159. However, this man is already a winner in the financial arena. According to the Los Angeles Times, he took home $8 million for his bout with Anderson Silva. Main event fighters quite often get a percentage of pay-per-view buys, which explains both why he made so much at UFC 148 and why he's working so hard to sell his fight with Jones.
Not ? Nate Diaz: He lost by a TKO to Josh Thomson at UFC on Fox on Saturday night, which was enough to land him on the not list. Diaz took an extra step to make it here by saying that Thomson, who knocked him out, was running from him the entire fight.
"He didn't come in there and put no [expletive] whopping on me. You know what I'm saying? He didn't come in there and make anything happen. I have never fought somebody before who had ever wanted out of a fight so bad. I expected a fight. I expected him to grab me and try to hold on to me or throw some kicks and move and throw some punches and move but that [expletive] was straight running and I had to chase him down."
Again, it was Thomson who finished Diaz.
Hot -- Matt Mitrione: His suspension for using hate-filled language against lasted just a few weeks, and he has a fight scheduled for this summer.
Not -- MMA in New York: Even though UFC 159 is in nearby Newark, N.J., MMA is still not sanctioned in New York. The UFC has poured quite a lot of money into lobbying for the sport but it's done nothing. At this point, even UFC president Dana White is "over" MMA in New York.
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Apr. 25, 2013 ? Belief in God may significantly improve the outcome of those receiving short-term treatment for psychiatric illness, according to a recent study conducted by McLean Hospital investigators.
In the study, published in the current issue of Journal of Affective Disorders, David H. Rosmarin, PhD, McLean Hospital clinician and instructor in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, examined individuals at the Behavioral Health Partial Hospital program at McLean in an effort to investigate the relationship between patients' level of belief in God, expectations for treatment and actual treatment outcomes.
"Our work suggests that people with a moderate to high level of belief in a higher power do significantly better in short-term psychiatric treatment than those without, regardless of their religious affiliation. Belief was associated with not only improved psychological wellbeing, but decreases in depression and intention to self-harm," explained Rosmarin.
The study looked at 159 patients, recruited over a one-year period. Each participant was asked to gauge their belief in God as well as their expectations for treatment outcome and emotion regulation, each on a five-point scale. Levels of depression, wellbeing, and self-harm were assessed at the beginning and end of their treatment program.
Of the patients sampled, more than 30 percent claimed no specific religious affiliation yet still saw the same benefits in treatment if their belief in a higher power was rated as moderately or very high. Patients with "no" or only "slight" belief in God were twice as likely not to respond to treatment than patients with higher levels of belief.
The study concludes: ." .. belief in God is associated with improved treatment outcomes in psychiatric care. More centrally, our results suggest that belief in the credibility of psychiatric treatment and increased expectations to gain from treatment might be mechanisms by which belief in God can impact treatment outcomes."
Rosmarin commented, "Given the prevalence of religious belief in the United States -- over 90% of the population -- these findings are important in that they highlight the clinical implications of spiritual life. I hope that this work will lead to larger studies and increased funding in order to help as many people as possible."
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President Barack Obama laughs with former first lady Barbara Bush during the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center Thursday, April 25, 2013, in Dallas. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
President Barack Obama laughs with former first lady Barbara Bush during the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center Thursday, April 25, 2013, in Dallas. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
DALLAS (AP) ? President Barack Obama is honoring the presidency of George W. Bush, at the dedication of the Bush library in Dallas.
On a day when politics was set aside, the president described his Republican predecessor as a "good man" and as a leader who demonstrated strength, resolve and compassion.
Obama called the dedication of the George W. Bush Presidential Center a "Texas-sized party" befitting the former president.
All five living American presidents are gathered in Dallas for the dedication. Obama says that's a pretty exclusive club ? but it's more like a support group for the men who have held an incredibly difficult job.
The president says, "It's impossible to truly understand the nature of the job until it's yours."
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BANGKOK (AP) ? World stock markets fell Friday after Japan faced an unwelcome drop in consumer prices.
The Nikkei 225 in Tokyo slipped from a five-year high after Japan's consumer price index fell 0.9 percent in March from a year earlier. The result flies in the face of efforts by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who took office in December vowing to reverse a long bout of deflation, or falling prices, which has crippled economic growth. The Nikkei, which in the morning hit its highest intraday level in five years at 13,983.87, fell 0.3 percent to close at 13,884.13.
In early European trading, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 0.3 percent to 6,423.25. Germany's DAX shed 0.3 percent to 7,812.62. France's CAC-40 lost 0.7 percent to 3,815.24. Wall Street also appeared headed for losses, with Dow Jones industrial futures falling 0.2 percent to 14,627. S&P 500 futures were down 0.3 percent to 1,577.50.
Later Friday, the U.S. Commerce Department will release economic growth figures for the first three months of 2013.
"A solid GDP figure out of the US should give markets a boost," said Daniel Martin of Capital Economics in Singapore. He said he expected the data to show that the world's No. 1 economy grew at an annual rate of 3.2 percent. That would be a sharp improvement from the anemic 0.4 percent growth rate reported for the final quarter of the year.
Earlier in Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.7 percent to 22,547.71. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.1 percent to 5,097.50. South Korea's Kospi fell 0.4 percent at 1,944.56. Benchmarks in mainland China and India fell.
Wall Street closed higher Thursday after the U.S. government reported the number of Americans seeking jobless benefits dropped last week by 16,000, suggesting that companies are cutting fewer jobs and that the U.S. may be headed for an uptick in job growth.
Benchmark oil for June delivery was down 62 cents to $93.02 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $2.21 to close at $93.64 on the Nymex on Thursday.
In currencies, the euro rose to $1.3027 from $1.3002 late Thursday in New York. The dollar fell to 98.72 yen from 99.31 yen.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/world-stocks-drop-amid-unwelcome-drop-japan-cpi-085442711--finance.html
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Flooding from Superstorm Sandy damaged Gordon Fishell's basement lab at NYU in Manhattan. Almost all of his research mice died.
Courtesy of NYU Langone Medical CenterFlooding from Superstorm Sandy damaged Gordon Fishell's basement lab at NYU in Manhattan. Almost all of his research mice died.
Courtesy of NYU Langone Medical CenterWhen Superstorm Sandy inundated lower Manhattan last year, thousands of lab animals drowned and many scientists lost months or even years of work. One of those scientists is Gordon Fishell, a brain researcher at New York University.
Just hours before Sandy reached New York, Fishell says, he began to worry that animals housed in a basement below his lab were in danger. "I realized Hurricane Sandy and high tide were going to coincide at Battery Park, which is right where my lab is," he says.
But by then, public transportation had shut down and Fishell was stuck at his home in suburban Westchester, N.Y. The next day, as he tried to get back to his lab, his worst fears were confirmed.
"I got through to one of my postdocs who had been there since 7 in the morning," Fishell says. "I asked, 'Well, how about the mice?' And he said he was really sorry, but they were gone."
Fishell describes the events and the recovery process in a commentary in the journal Nature.
He says his first concern was for the younger researchers in his lab. Some had lost more than a year of work. But he was also disturbed to learn that thousands of animals had died unnecessarily.
"It is hard to express how close a partnership we have with these animals," Fishell says. "I mean, they really are [the way] we learn about what we care most about, which in our case is brain function. But they're living, breathing individuals."
They also can be very hard to replace. Fishell's lab studies how cells in the brain communicate and what goes wrong in diseases like epilepsy and bipolar disorder. The research depends on mice that have been genetically altered in very specific ways. He couldn't just order replacements.
? Emails were pouring in from everyone, from my very good friends to my very fierce competitors, to say, 'What can we do?'
- Gordon Fishell, brain researcher, New York University
Fortunately, Fishell had shared his mice with researchers at other institutions. And when those scientists heard what had happened, he says, they responded.
"Emails were pouring in from everyone, from my very good friends to my very fierce competitors, to say, 'What can we do?' " he says. " 'Can we send you mice? Can we take your people and do research here? Can we help you pick up an experiment sooner?' "
Almost immediately, Fishell began rebuilding his research program. He also began thinking about how to prevent something like this from happening again.
That's something places like the University of Texas Health Science Center have been working on since 2001, when a tropical storm flooded downtown Houston.
"We had 12 feet of water in a basement," says Bradford S. Goodwin, a veterinary scientist at the center, "so every animal in our basement did drown." Animals at other downtown institutions also died, he says, because no one had anticipated an event like that.
In this Jan. 18 photo provided by the NYU Langone Medical Center, a technician examines mice to determine their health at the hospital's complex in New York.
New York University/APIn this Jan. 18 photo provided by the NYU Langone Medical Center, a technician examines mice to determine their health at the hospital's complex in New York.
New York University/AP"This is not something you learn in veterinary school," Goodwin says. He also says the loss was "devastating" and something he will "never get over." Every year, he says, researchers still hold a memorial for monkeys who died in the flood.
In response to the loss of so many animals, the University of Texas began building a new facility with a different design, Goodwin says. The lower floors are research laboratories. Animals live on the upper floors.
New York University also plans to move its animals to higher floors, Fishell says. In the meantime, his lab is recovering more quickly than he thought possible. He says one reason is something that happened after he'd been told all the mice were dead.
"About four days later," he says, "the relief crews broke through the roof to the top of where the animal colony was and realized that about 10, 12 percent of all the mice [had] survived."
Fishell says they lived because as Superstorm Sandy approached, the woman in charge of lab animals asked her staff to move some mouse cages to the highest racks possible ? just in case.
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MILAN (Reuters) - Italy is now in a position to ask the European Union to ease up on the country's deficit target, according to Pier Carlo Padoan, chief economist at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
With budget cuts blamed for a second straight year of recession in the euro zone, the EU's top economics official Olli Rehn indicated last weekend that more flexibility on tough economic targets was needed.
The market pressure on Italy to bring down its large public debt burden has eased, with bond yields at their lowest in more than two years, and prime minister-designate Enrico Letta said on Wednesday policy had been focused too much on austerity and not enough on growth.
"Our country is near to achieving a very important objective, the end of the (EU) excessive deficit procedure that had been opened at the height of the crisis," Padoan told newspaper La Repubblica in an interview published on Thursday.
"Italy will now be in a position to join those countries that have some leeway with regards to their deficit/GDP limit."
His comments came amid growing resentment in Italy for the austerity implemented by the technocrat government led by former EU Commissioner Mario Monti, which some economists say has only amplified an existing recession.
Still, Monti's reform drive looks set to see Italy reduce its deficit to 2.9 percent of GDP this year and it hopes to be removed as soon as May from the list of EU countries with a deficit above 3 percent.
Countries subject to the so-called excessive deficit procedure for running above that ceiling must follow European Commission recommendations to rein in the public sector shortfall by set deadlines.
Padoan said the OECD, long a cheerleader for the sort of economics which have dictated Europe's largely austere response to the debt crisis, is asking Brussels to allow all euro zone countries some delay in reaching their deficit targets to take into account a prolonged economic crisis in Europe.
"Countries must pursue the budget deficit reduction, but the target needs to be stripped out of the effects of the recession. This means it needs to be calculated in structural terms," said Padoan.
Italy is expected to have a structural deficit close to balance in 2013.
Letta said on Wednesday the European Union was "too focused on austerity", and appealed to the Italian parliament to back his reform efforts, including convincing the EU to change its current policy direction.
(Reporting by Giuseppe Fonte and Lisa Jucca; editing by Patrick Graham)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-ask-more-room-deficit-oecd-073616870--business.html
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Top Line
Talking to ABC?s Diane Sawyer during a special tour of the newly opened George W. Bush Library, former First Lady Laura Bush says she and her husband have both been brought to tears by the new 9/11 exhibit at the museum.
?It?s very hard to walk through and it's hard to watch this,? the former first lady says, referring to a video in the exhibit that reviews the day-by-day response to the attack. ?People weep, I mean, there's that spot where George almost wept, in the Oval Office, when he was talking about it.?
The new museum, which is designed to progress chronologically through the Bush presidency, starts off in a well-lit room that lays out the agenda President Bush hoped to undertake when he first came into office at the beginning of 2001. But visitors soon turn a corner, moving into the shadows of the 9/11 exhibit, where a large piece of disfigured metal from the 82nd or 83rd of the second World Trade Center tower stands.
?This is the point of impact,? Mrs. Bush tells Sawyer, pointing to the memorial. ?And on the walls around here are the names of all the people who died on September 11th. And this is really, this big piece of the World Trade Center looks like a big sculpture, I think, but it's a memorial.?
As hard as it is for the former first lady to look back on those days, she says it also reminds her of the best qualities of the country.
?There?s something sort of encouraging about it, because of the way our country came together and the way we can come together,? Mrs. Bush says. ?And we forget that now in so much partisan rancor, and I think it's too bad, because I think our responsibility as citizens really is to come together.?
To join Diane and Mrs. Bush on their special tour of the museum, check out this episode of Top Line.
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Apr. 23, 2013 ? Long term exposure to air pollution may be linked to heart attacks and strokes by speeding up atherosclerosis, or "hardening of the arteries," according to a study by U.S. researchers published in this week's PLOS Medicine.
The researchers, led by Sara Adar, John Searle Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, University of Michigan School of Public Health, and Joel Kaufman, Professor of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences and Medicine, University of Washington, found that higher concentrations of fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) were linked to a faster thickening of the inner two layers of the common carotid artery, an important blood vessel that provides blood to the head, neck, and brain. They also found that reductions of fine particulate air pollution over time were linked to slower progression of the blood vessel thickness. The thickness of this blood vessel is an indicator of how much atherosclerosis is present in the arteries throughout the body, even among people with no obvious symptoms of heart disease.
"Our findings help us to understand how it is that exposures to air pollution may cause the increases in heart attacks and strokes observed by other studies," Adar said.
The authors reached these conclusions by following 5362 people aged between 45 to 84 years old from six U.S. metropolitan areas as part of the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and Air Pollution (MESA Air). The researchers were able to link air pollution levels estimated at each person's house with two ultrasound measurements of the blood vessels, separated by about three years. All participants in their study were without known heart disease.
After adjusting for other factors such as smoking, the authors found that on average, the thickness of the carotid vessel increased by 14 ?m each year. The vessels of people exposed to higher levels of residential fine particulate air pollution, however, thickened faster than others living in the same metropolitan area.
"Linking these findings with other results from the same population suggests that persons living in a more polluted part of town may have a 2 percent higher risk of stroke as compared to people in a less polluted part of the same metropolitan area," Adar said.
"If confirmed by future analyses of the full 10 years of follow-up in this cohort, these findings will help to explain associations between long-term PM2.5 concentrations and clinical cardiovascular events," the authors wrote.
In an accompanying Perspective, Nino Kuenzli from the University of Basel in Switzerland says: "the [Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and Air Pollution study] further supports an old request to policy makers, namely that clean air standards ought to comply at least with the science-based levels proposed by the World Health Organization."
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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/fNMbl5NT8J4/130423172706.htm
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Say hello to Vanessa Hayes, a professional organizer, Chief Simplicity Officer at Get Simplifized, and co-host of the Simple Life Together podcast. She was here a few months ago offering her expertise on home organization, and she's back today just in time for spring cleaning season.
Vanessa specializes in helping busy families, professionals, businesses, and even schools organize their lives and processes. She also helps people remain organized (and sane) during moves by preparing their homes for the real estate market and getting them settled into their new digs. If you're moving, have hard-to-tackle clutter, or need to clean up and don't know how to start?she can help! Vanessa is here for the next hour to answer your questions.
The q&a is closed. Thanks for all the great questions!
Have an expert you'd like to see participate? Email us.
Image remixed from Pavel L Photo and Video and blackdaliya (Shutterstock).
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AMSTERDAM (AP) ? A Dutch court has sentenced a diplomat to 12 years for delivering confidential NATO and the European Union documents to Russian agents.
In Tuesday's ruling, judges at The Hague District Court said Raymond Poeteray had endangered the interests of the Dutch state and its allies by passing on military and political documents over a period of years. He was paid at least ?72,000 ($94,000) between January 2009 and August 2011, the court said.
Poeteray, who worked at the Netherlands' Foreign Affairs Ministry, was arrested in March 2012 in connection with an ongoing case in Germany.
In Germany, a couple that called themselves Andreas and Heidrun Anschlag ? true identies unknown ? are on trial for allegedly compiling the information that Poeteray gathered and sending it to Russia's intelligence agency.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dutch-diplomat-sentenced-12-years-spying-091159907.html
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By Warren Rojas Posted at 4:38 p.m. today
Toward the end of Wednesday night?s ?Sidecar Conversation Series? on the love/hate relationship between Hollywood and D.C. ? a discussion which was, at turns, self-congratulatory and hyper critical ? moderator Ron Brownstein asked the entertainment-savvy panelists to name the defining political flick.
Our own Neda Semnani originally blurted out ?The Candidate,? but then amended her choice to tout ?Inherit the Wind?:
?Chasing the Hill? creator and NBC alumnus Brent Roske kept it in the family, tossing his support behind ?The West Wing?:
Bono proxy Michael Elliott made a case for Robert Altman?s hippie, trippy ?Nashville?:
?House of Cards? Executive Producer Beau Willimon went big, giving Orson Welles mad props for ?Citizen Kane?:
Brownstein, meanwhile, sang the praises of ?The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance?:
While many of the aforementioned efforts attempt to expose the underbelly of politics via one trope or another, we would argue that the seminal Tinsel Town-Washington tryst never sizzled across the silver screen. No, the most honest moment between our seedy universes played out, as is so often the case on Capitol Hill, right under everyone?s noses:
As for the heated debate about the entertainment industry?s continuously dismissive treatment of female reporters, we?ll let ?Saturday Night Live? have the last word on that:
Source: http://hoh.rollcall.com/the-trouble-with-turning-a-camera-on-washington/
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What do you do after you and your Amherst College Lord Jeffs men?s basketball team just won the Division 3 NCAA national championship?
If you?re Allen Williamson of Saugus, you celebrate a little bit with teammates, family and friends, and then it?s back to school to finish up your senior thesis. There?s no Disney World in his plans, at least not just yet.
It?s been a whirlwind experience for the Saugonian since that April 7 day, when his Lord Jeffs took home the title after beating Mary Hardin-Baylor of Belton, Texas Crusaders going away, 87-70. But Williamson still found time to answer some post-game questions about the championship and everything that went along with it for the Saugus Advertiser this week.
The atmosphere at Atlanta?s Philips Arena appeared to be electric just watching it on TV. As a player, what are your lasting impressions of the championship game on and off the court from the time the team entered the arena all the way to the end?
I was up before 5 a.m. that Sunday [April 7], and was wide awake.
Playing in a national championship game in an NBA arena was such a unique experience for me, so it all kind of felt surreal.
Everything from our entrance into the arena to the actual game itself to the postgame press conferences and interviews was so official. Bright lights and cameras were everywhere. My most savored memory of the afternoon was the way my team showed up, and represented our school and D3 basketball in general.
When did you realize the title was pretty much wrapped up, and what was it like to run out onto the court to celebrate with your teammates?
We hit a 3-pointer to go up by 17, I think, with under two minutes left, so I knew it was a rap then.
It was great, because we knew we were champions before the game was even over, so we celebrated a bit on the bench before running onto the court. But it was really a relief. So many hours and months of dedication had paid off in the ultimate way.
What was your reaction to be chosen the best player of the Final Four?
I wasn?t even sure there was a Final Four MVP award given out, so when I heard my name I was pretty excited. I wanted more than anything to win it all this year, and the award proves to me that I did what I had to do.
What was the rest of the day like for the team? What did you guys do to celebrate?
We celebrated the win from the moment the buzzer sounded until the moment we woke up the next morning.
It was amazing being with teammates, family, alumni and the members of the class who won it all in 2007 during those hours. Monday [the day after the championship] was incredible, because everywhere we went we were champions.
You mentioned previously that the Division 3 championship team has an invite to the Division 1 championship game, and would be introduced as champions at halftime. What are your thoughts about that experience?
That was literally a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. We stood in front of 75,000 basketball fans as the best team in D3, and I was fortunate enough to be holding up the trophy. I?m just glad I didn?t drop it.
Have you heard from any of your Saugus friends and neighbors since the championship, and what did they say to you?
The congratulations have been amazing, and I?ve made a lot of my friends proud.
I know it was a big win for my boys like Dana Buonopane, Mike Silva, Damon Wilson, Nick Bertrand, Dave Ferreira and Jesse Sullivan.
Jaimie Cappucci was a friend of mine in high school too and she hit me up after the game.
When I was looking through the 50-plus texts I had after the game, it was wild to see all the people who had been following [it].
What are your plans now after the championship run, and when do you think you will be coming back to Saugus?
My immediate plans right now are to finish writing my senior thesis, and to finish up my semester strong.
I?ll be back home in mid-May, and I?m going to start training again to get ready to play ball in Europe next year.
Did you spend time with your family after the championship game, and what was that like? Could you talk about what transpired during that moment with the family?
I had an emotional moment with my parents in the stands right after the game. My mom was screaming: ?You did it!?
It?s so pleasing to have made my parents proud after the relentless commitment they?ve made to my basketball career over the years. This is as much of a win for them as it is for me.
Mom and Dad have been with me every step of the way this season, and I?m thankful they have been such positive influences in my life.
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Board games bring lots of benefits.
I love it when I?m flipping through the newspaper while I eat breakfast and come across an article on board games! Even when it covers something I know well ? like today?s article on the Family Benefits of Board Games ? it?s just great to see it published for more people to come to understand.
Some of the great benefits of board games that today?s article mentions are:
Oh, and that part about Dementia ? it?s a great benefit too. The article references a CBS News report that points out that researchers ?Found a reduced incidence of dementia among the people who participated in reading, playing board games, playing musical instruments and dancing. And the researchers found that people who engage in the activities were more frequently less likely to develop dementia.?
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In reading the article, I was also very happy to see who the writer used for a source ? Tom Vasel of The Dice Tower. We?ve written about The Dice Tower and The Dice Tower Awards a lot because it?s the source of the most board game reviews on the planet. Tom is an icon in the board game industry for his prolific work.
As a former teacher, I taught many seminars on how to use board games in classrooms because there are so many possibilities for kids to develop necessary skills from board games. There are board games specifically created to teach skills in math, science and even to learn a new language.?There are also games where players work together as a team, which allows everyone to win through some negotiation and decision-making.
And I really like this quote by Michael Mindes, founder of Tasty Minstrel Games. ?In addition to a game being fun, parents can learn along with their kids. This will help parents to improve their relationships with their children.?
Life?s all about relationships.
And in our book, developing deeper family relationships is the greatest family benefit of playing board games.
Let?s make the most of them.
?
Posted on April 17th, 2013
No comments so far.
Source: http://www.theboardgamefamily.com/2013/04/dont-get-dementia-play-board-games/
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By Andrea Shalal-Esa
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top aviation regulator said on Tuesday he expects to decide "very soon" whether to approve Boeing Co's
Federal Aviation Administration chief Michael Huerta, testifying to a congressional committee on air safety, said the agency is reviewing tests and analysis submitted by Boeing and will approve it when "we are satisfied Boeing has shown the redesigned battery system meets FAA requirements."
Huerta told reporters after the hearing that he expects the battery decision to be made "very soon."
Huerta said the FAA was working closely with the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating battery problems on two separate 787s in January, but would not necessarily link its decision to an NTSB hearing next week.
"We're on our own timetable in terms of completing the analysis," Huerta told reporters. "Once we're ready to move and make a determination, we will."
He also told the committee the FAA was considering separately whether to certify Boeing's 787 for extended-range operations, known as ETOPS. The plane was approved for flights over remote areas of up to 180 minutes when it was grounded for two battery meltdowns in January.
Before the grounding, Boeing had requested an upgrade to 330 minutes, but Huerta told reporters the agency was "not considering any expansion beyond that (180) at this time."
Separately on Tuesday, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood also acknowledged a decision on Boeing is expected soon. LaHood was speaking at a dinner hosted by the Arab American Institute.
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL
In a wide-ranging hearing, senators raised concern about Huerta's decision to close 149 air traffic control towers without providing an assessment of the safety risk as committee members requested. The closures of smaller towers would leave pilots to sequence landings themselves via radio, without an air-traffic controller.
Huerta also warned the senators that air travelers should expect "significant delays" from air traffic control furloughs that are due to start April 21. He said the reductions in air service would affect commercial, corporate and general aviation travelers. But the agency will try to minimize the harm and "buy back" furlough days for workers in coming months, to help keep towers staffed.
"We hope to buy back more of the furlough days ? as we're able to. This is a not a one-shot deal. We're managing this on a weekly basis."
Air traffic control experts have said the furloughs, prompted by sequestration-related budget cuts, would reduce staffing at FAA-run air control facilities by about 10 percent. That could prompt some busy airports to close runways and could lead to delays in flights. Furloughs also are expected to affect customs clearance and security screening at airports, leading to long lines for those services.
At the hearing before the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation committee, Senator Claire McCaskill argued vehemently for dropping the ban on use of personal electronic devices during takeoff and landing, arguing that similar rules were not observed on general aviation flights. General aviation covers all non-scheduled civil air services.
She said a print copy of Tolstoy's "War and Peace" arguably posed more of a danger to a passenger than a Kindle version. Committee Chairman Senator Jay Rockefeller and other senators on the committee backed the request for more information on the issue from the FAA.
McCaskill asked Huerta to find out if passengers on Air Force One shut off electronics during take-off and landing. "Because if it's safe enough for the president of the United States, it's safe enough for the flying public," she said.
Huerta said he had asked the FAA's rulemaking committee to look into the issue, noting that personal electronic devices had evolved since the ban was first implemented. He said the committee could make some initial recommendations by July.
But he stressed that the Federal Communications Commission had jurisdiction over cell phone use on airliners, not the FAA.
NTSB Chairman Deborah Hersman said her agency had never investigated an accident in which a passenger's personal electronic device had interfered with an airplane's communications systems.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal-Esa and Alwyn Scott; Editing by James Dalgleish, Nick Zieminski and Cynthia Osterman)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/faa-chief-says-boeing-787-battery-decision-likely-003333440--finance.html
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(Reuters) - Google Inc is experiencing a small outage of some of its popular applications such as Gmail and Google Drive, the search engine said on Wednesday.
The company disclosed on its website that six of its 13 applications were having partial status disruptions.
The issue with Gmail, for example, is affecting less than 0.007 percent of Google Mail users, who cannot access their accounts.
Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting By Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/google-services-hit-partial-outage-133904974--sector.html
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Apr 15 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $4,139,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $3,137,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,442,389 4. Adam Scott (Australia) $2,100,469 5. Steve Stricker $1,935,340 6. Phil Mickelson $1,764,680 7. Dustin Johnson $1,748,907 8. Jason Day $1,659,565 9. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 10. Keegan Bradley $1,430,347 11. Charles Howell III $1,393,806 12. John Merrick $1,375,757 13. Russell Henley $1,331,434 14. Michael Thompson $1,310,709 15. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 16. Bill Haas $1,271,553 17. Billy Horschel $1,254,224 18. ...
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/liberian-president-appoints-chief-justice-173157366.html
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NEW YORK (AP) ? The price of oil dropped to a four-month low, as a slowdown in China's growth added to doubts about the strength of the world economy and global demand for crude.
China's slowdown, weak economic reports from the U.S. and Europe's malaise suggest demand for crude and refined fuels won't be strong enough to absorb the ample supplies on the world market.
West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark crude in the U.S., dropped $2.58, or 2.8 percent, to finish at $88.71 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier in the session, it hit $87.86. Crude hasn't been that low since December, and it's dropped more than 8 percent in the past two weeks.
Brent crude, which is used to price oil used by many U.S. refiners to make gasoline, fell $2.41 to end at $100.63 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London. It briefly fell below $100 for the first time in nine months.
Those declines, if they hold or get steeper, could mean a further drop in U.S. gas pump prices. The average price for a gallon of gasoline fell 3 cents over the weekend to $3.53. That's 26 cents lower than the high for the year, set on Feb. 27. And gas is now 38 cents cheaper than a year ago.
The Chinese government on Monday said growth in the world's second-largest economy slowed to 7.7 percent in the first quarter from 7.9 percent in the final quarter of last year. Growth was expected to accelerate slightly after several quarters of decline.
"Poorer-than-expected data from China has fuelled new fears about demand. On Friday the U.S. had already published disappointing retail sales figures," said a report from Commerzbank in Frankfurt. "In other words, demand in both of the leading oil consumer countries is currently weaker than anticipated."
In other futures trading on the Nymex:
? Wholesale gasoline fell 4 cents to finish at $2.76 a gallon.
? Heating oil dropped 4 cents to end at $2.83 a gallon.
? Natural gas fell 9 cents to finish at $4.14 per 1,000 cubic feet.
__
Pablo Gorondi in Budapest contributed to this report.
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