Thursday, 27 October 2011

World stocks mixed ahead of Europe plan (AP)

TOKYO ? World stock markets were mixed Tuesday as investors waited for European leaders to unveil a plan to tackle the continent's ongoing debt crisis.

European leaders have said they made progress at a weekend summit and plan to unveil comprehensive plans for containing the crisis by Wednesday.

Among measures, the 17-nation eurozone is set to shore up its bailout fund, and German lawmakers said the plan could boost the fund's lending capacity to more than euro1 trillion ($1.39 trillion).

European stocks rose modestly in early trading. Britain's FTSE 100 was less than 0.1 percent higher at 5,550.49. Germany's DAX fell 0.4 percent higher at 6,033.09. France's CAC-40 slipped 0.5 percent to 3,204.59. Wall Street headed for a lower opening, with Dow Jones Industrial Futures up less than 0.1 percent to 11,819 and S&P 500 futures sliding less than 0.1 percent to 1,246.30.

Asian shares ended mostly higher after a skittish day of trading. Japan's Nikkei 225 index closed 0.9 percent lower at 8,762.31, with exporters struggling in the face of a strong yen. The dollar hovered near the 76-yen line, just above a new record low of 75.78 yen hit before the weekend.

Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Japan would take measures to slow the yen's acceleration if necessary, firing a shot at speculators who may be adding to the volatility.

The yen's sharp climb "does not reflect the real economy, and we have to believe that this is a speculative move," Azumi told reporters, according to Kyodo News agency. "If this goes further, then we will take decisive action."

His comments did little to stem selling in export-reliant sectors like high-tech and autos, which are now also struggling with lost production to the flooding in Thailand. Toyota Motor Corp. fell 1.7 percent, and Canon Inc. was down 1.8 percent.

Credit Suisse describes the eurozone as "inching forward" and that "there are as many questions as answers." But for any plan to be effective in the long term, it says, leaders must spur growth in Europe.

"At a minimum, we believe the crisis in the periphery will not end until there are current account surpluses... or clearly cheap currencies," the Credit Suisse report said. "We believe that the (European Central Bank) has to expand its balance sheet to weaken the euro and thereby create growth."

Elsewhere, South Korea's Kospi lost 0.5 percent to 1,888.65, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose 1.1 percent to 18,968.20. Benchmarks in mainland China, India, Taiwan, Singapore, and New Zealand also advanced.

Thailand's SET index was 2.8 percent higher at 941.93, even though the country is being battered by its worst flood in decades. Ratings agency Moody's says it does not expect the floods ? the worst to hit Thailand in decades ? to affect its creditworthiness.

"The government will have ample fiscal space to absorb flood-related costs without prompting a permanent deterioration in its debt ratios," Moody's said in a report.

Overnight in New York, the Dow Jones industrial average finished with a gain of 104.83 points, or 0.9 percent, at 11,913.62.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose to 1,254.19, marking the highest close for the S&P 500 since Aug. 3, just as Washington was resolving a showdown over raising the country's borrowing limit.

In currencies, the dollar rose slightly to 76.12 yen from 76.07 yen late Monday in New York. The euro stood at $1.3909 from $1.3951.

Benchmark crude for December delivery was up $1.62 cents at $92.84 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $3.87, or 4.4 percent, to settle at $91.27 in New York on Monday.

Brent crude was down 2 cents at $111.43 a barrel on the ICE Futures Exchange in London.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_as/world_markets

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Monday, 24 October 2011

Iraqis fret about security after U.S. withdrawal

Iraqis fretted about the ability of their armed forces to protect them from violence after U.S. President Barack Obama said on Friday all U.S. troops would withdraw by the end of the year.

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Washington and Baghdad failed to agree on the issue of immunity for U.S. forces after months of talks over whether American soldiers would stay on as trainers more than eight years after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

Obama's announcement prompted worries among Iraqis over the stability of their country and a possible slide back into sectarian violence.

"Our forces are still not capable of facing our security challenges. I'm afraid this withdrawal will allow al-Qaida and the militias to return," said Baghdad shoe shop owner Ziyad Jabari.

Live vote: Was Iraq war worth the human, financial costs?

A stubborn Sunni insurgency tied to al-Qaida and Shi'ite militia still carry out lethal attacks in Iraq, where bombings and killings happen daily even though violence has dropped from the height of sectarian fighting in 2006-2007.

At least 70 people were killed last week as a series of attacks rocked the capital Baghdad.

In September, 42 Iraqi police and 33 soldiers were killed, according to government figures.

Iraqi security forces have been the prime target of attacks this year as insurgents seek to undermine security in the country ahead of the scheduled U.S. withdrawal by year-end.

"As an Iraqi citizen, I say to Mr. Obama, you will leave Iraq without accomplishing your mission," said Munaf Hameed, a 47-year-old account manager at a private bank.

"No security, an unstable political regime, sectarian tensions and weak security forces, that's what America will leave behind," he said.

Political stability
Some Iraqi leaders say in private they would like a U.S. troop presence as a guarantee to ward off sectarian troubles and keep the peace between Iraqi Arabs and Kurds in a dispute over who controls oil-rich areas in the north.

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Iraqi and U.S. forces have said Iraq needs trainers beyond 2011 to develop its military capabilities, particularly its air and naval defenses.

Republicans criticize Obama over Iraq withdrawal

The country's power-sharing coalition made up of Sunni, Shi'ite and Kurdish blocs is also caught in a political stalemate many Iraqis fear could worsen without a U.S. buffer.

"I think the fighting between the political blocs will increase because the U.S. presence was a safety valve for security and political issues," said Muntadhir Abdel Wahab, 44, a Baghdad merchant.

But some Iraqis applauded the decision by Obama and Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and said the withdrawal of U.S. troops would help stabilize the country's fragile political situation and quell sectarian tensions.

Obama keeps campaign promise with Iraq

Many Iraqis still have memories of abuses committed by U.S. troops and contractors during the more violent years of Iraq's conflict. That made securing immunity tricky for Maliki.

Iraqi lawmakers backing anti-American Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose political bloc is a key part of Maliki's coalition government, said they would disrupt the power-sharing government if he agreed to keep U.S. forces.

"Iraq's people will realize the necessity of living together in one country despite differences in religion, sect and nationality," said engineer Mahdi Salim, who was visiting family in Kirkuk. "America tried to drag us into civil war."

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44994341/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Sunday, 23 October 2011

Falling German Satellite Enters Atmosphere

A defunct satellite entered the atmosphere early Sunday and pieces of it were expected to crash into the earth, the German Aerospace Center said.

There was no immediate solid evidence to determine above which continent or country the ROSAT scientific research satellite entered the atmosphere, agency spokesman Andreas Schuetz said.

Most parts of the minivan-sized satellite were expected to burn up during re-entry, but up to 30 fragments weighing 1.87 tons could crash into Earth at speeds up to 280 mph.

Scientists were no longer able to communicate with the dead satellite and it must have traveled about 12,500 miles in the last 30 minutes before entering the atmosphere, Schuetz said.

Experts were waiting for "observations from around the world," he added.

Scientists said hours before the re-entry into the atmosphere that the satellite was not expected to hit over Europe, Africa or Australia. According to a precalculated path it could have been above Asia, possibly China, at the time of its re-entry, but Schuetz said he could not confirm whether the satellite actually entered above that area.

The 2.69-ton scientific ROSAT satellite was launched in 1990 and retired in 1999 after being used for research on black holes and neutron stars and performing the first all-sky survey of X-ray sources with an imaging telescope.

The largest single fragment of ROSAT that could hit into the earth is the telescope's heat-resistant mirror.

During its mission, the satellite orbited about 370 miles above the Earth's surface, but since its decommissioning it has lost altitude, circling at a distance of only 205 miles above ground in June for example, the agency said.

Even in the last days, the satellite still circled the planet every 90 minutes, making it hard to predict where on Earth it would eventually come down.

A dead NASA satellite fell into the southern Pacific Ocean last month, causing no damage, despite fears it would hit a populated area and cause damage or kill people.

Experts believe about two dozen metal pieces from the bus-sized satellite fell over a 500-mile span of uninhabited portion of the world.

The NASA climate research satellite entered Earth's atmosphere generally above American Samoa. But falling debris as it broke apart did not start hitting the water for another 300 miles to the northeast, southwest of Christmas Island.

Earlier, scientists had said it was possible some pieces could have reached northwestern Canada.

The German space agency puts the odds of somebody somewhere on Earth being hurt by its satellite at 1-in-2,000 ? a slightly higher level of risk than was calculated for the NASA satellite. But any one individual's odds of being struck are 1-in-14 trillion, given there are 7 billion people on the planet.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2011/10/22/141623516/pieces-of-german-satellite-expected-to-hit-earth?ft=1&f=1007

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Saturday, 22 October 2011

Turkey: 49 Kurdish rebels killed in fighting (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? Turkey's military says 49 Kurdish rebels have been killed in offensives in southeast Turkey.

The military said in a statement posted on its website Saturday that the rebels were killed in fighting in Hakkari province over the past two days.

Turkey launched anti-rebel offensives ? involving around 10,000 troops ? both in southeastern Turkey and across the border in Iraq on Wednesday, after 24 soldiers were killed by the rebels in the deadliest one-day toll against the military since the 1990s.

Earlier, the state-run television TRT television reported 32 rebels killed in clashes in a valley in Hakkari province.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) ? Turkish troops killed 32 Kurdish rebels in a valley near the Iraqi border, state-run television reported Saturday, as hundreds of troops also pursued Kurdish fighters within northern Iraq.

The rebels were killed in clashes in the Kazan Valley region, near the town of Cukurca, in Turkey's Hakkari province that borders Iraq, TRT television reported, citing unnamed regional officials. There was no immediate confirmation of the deaths from the rebels.

Turkey on Wednesday launched massive anti-rebel offensives involving some 10,000 troops both in southeastern Turkey and across the border in Iraq. The military operations began hours after 24 soldiers were killed by the rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, in the deadliest one-day toll against the military since the 1990s.

Turkey's conflict with the Kurdish rebels has killed tens of thousands of people since the insurgents took up arms to fight for autonomy in the country's Kurdish-dominated southeast in 1984.

The military said Friday its air and ground offensives were mostly concentrated within Turkey, in Cukurca, while operations were also under way "in a few areas" in northern Iraq.

The military has not revealed the number of soldiers that have crossed into Iraq. But the Haber Turk newspaper reported Saturday that 1,500 elite troops were involved in the ground operation against rebel hideouts in northern Iraq. The Vatan newspaper put the figure at 2,000.

The Turkish troops had penetrated three miles (five kilometers) into Iraqi territory, Haber Turk said, while military helicopters were ferrying elite troops in and out of other areas for "spot operations" against PKK rebels. Warplanes and drones were providing air support for the gunbattles.

The paper said the offensive was targeting seven suspected PKK bases along the border, where some 2,000 rebels are believed to be hiding.

The military said the operation includes commandos, special forces and paramilitary special forces ? elite forces trained in guerrilla warfare. They are being reinforced by F-16 and F-4 warplanes, Super Cobra helicopter gunships and surveillance drones.

Turkey has launched more than two dozen air and ground incursions into northern Iraq over the 27 years of the insurgency, with mixed results. The rebels have returned to positions along the border soon after the troops have withdrawn. The current offensive was the largest attack on the insurgents in more than three years.

Turkey is seeking the cooperation of Iraqi Kurds, who control an autonomous region in northern Iraq, and of Iran for the latest offensive.

Hurriyet newspaper reported Saturday that Iraqi Kurdish security forces, the Peshmerga, were helping Turkish troops by providing intelligence.

Iraqi leaders have condemned the rebel attacks and promised to stop the PKK from using Iraqi territory for future attacks against Turkey. The Iraqi Foreign Ministry said both Baghdad and the regional Kurdish government in northern Iraq "are committed to securing the borders."

On Friday, Turkey and Iran vowed to collaborate against the PKK and its Iranian wing, the Party of Free Life of Kurdistan, or PJAK, during a visit by Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi. The PKK and PJAK have both been fighting for Kurdish autonomy in their respective countries and both are labeled as terrorist organizations by the United States.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_kurds

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Ohio wild-animal killings renew call for ban on exotic pets - latimes ...

The release and deaths of wild animals in Ohio renewed calls for a ban on private ownership of such animals
The tragedy unfolding in Zanesville, Ohio -- in which dozens of big-game animals such as lions and bears were released, then hunted down and killed -- has renewed the call for a ban on private ownership of such exotic animals, at least from one group.

"Wild animals should be left in the wild," said Adam Roberts, executive vice president of Born Free USA, a Washington-based animal-welfare and wildlife organization long opposed to keeping animals in captivity. "And that means individuals shouldn't have exotic animals as pets, because it's a danger to the animals and to those that live around them."

He along with countless other animal lovers were appalled by the headlines leading Wednesday's media reports.

The owner of Muskingum County Animal Farm in Zanesville, Ohio, apparently flung open the reserve's cages, slashed open its pens and then killed himself. Dozens of wild and dangerous animals -- including grizzly bears, lions, tigers and a baboon -- were then free to roam the area. Most of them were gunned down by public safety officers.

PHOTOS: Exotic animals on the loose

Ohio law enforcement officials were at an immediate loss to explain why the farm's owner, Terry Thompson, did what he did. Instead, they were focused on protecting citizens, who were told to stay behind closed doors while wild animals roamed the area. Where they could, authorities tried to recapture the animals using a tranquilizer gun.

But that was not always possible. At last count, 48 creatures had been killed, according to the Muskingum County Sheriff's Department.

"I've been watching the news all day like everyone else; it's an amazing story, it's awfully surreal but on the other hand I'm not surprised," Roberts told The Times. "We often warn that these things can happen, people can be hurt, animals can be hurt, animals can be killed, but we know that these facilities exist and that has to stop."

He called for stricter federal and state oversight, and zero tolerance for the procurement of wild animals. His organization is opposed to keeping animals in captivity under most circumstances, and even opposes zoos.

That said, it acknowledges that there are certain situations in which animals must be held in captivity for their own protection -- say, the case of a tiger raised in a backyard, never learning the skills it needs to protect itself in the wild.

In those cases, however, there should be strict oversight and accreditation, and zero tolerance for violations that jeopardize animal welfare and safety, the group maintains.

The organization oversees a wildlife sanctuary for primates in Texas, and offered to provide a home for the monkeys that were removed from the Ohio farm as well as the one monkey that is still on the loose.

Roberts said the Zanesville incident should come as no surprise to Ohio legislators, as that state persistently falls short when it comes to protecting animal rights.?

"Shame on any state legislator in the state of Ohio, and the governor, if they don't act today to try to prevent something like this from ever happening again," Roberts said. "I sure hope that they will now heed our warnings before another animal is killed and before a human has to lose his or her life."

ALSO:

Exotic animals intentionally let loose in Ohio

Alpine sanctuary offers help for wild animals in Ohio

Animal welfare groups give Ohio a failure mark for its oversight of exotic animals

-- Rene Lynch

Photo: A dead lion lays by the fence Tuesday on Terry Thompson's farm near Zanesville, Ohio, gunned down by safety officials. Credit: Heather Ellers and Dustin Burton

Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/nationnow/2011/10/zanesville-ohio-wild-animal-release-hunt.html

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Friday, 21 October 2011

$3 million luxury camper is a 40? mobile mansion (Yahoo! News)

James and Rupert Murdoch in London on July 10, 2011. (AP/Sang Tan)

When News Corp. executives gather for their annual meeting in Los Angeles on Friday, things could be pretty contentious between the shareholders and executive suite.

Some shareholders, following the recommendation of Institutional Shareholder Services, an advisory firm and corporate governance watchdog group, are expected to withhold their votes from News Corp. directors now seeking re-election--including chairman Rupert Murdoch and his sons James and Lachlan.

The phone-hacking scandal that engulfed the company earlier this year "laid bare a striking lack of stewardship and failure of independence by a board whose inability to set a strong tone at the top about unethical business practices has now resulted in enormous costs--financial, legal, regulatory, reputational and opportunity--for the shareholders the board ostensibly serves," ISS said in a note last week.

But dissident shareholders may not be able to force boardroom change. Rupert Murdoch, News Corp.'s chief executive, owns approximately 40 percent of the voting shares, according to the Wall Street Journal. Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, who owns 7 percent, has publicly supported Murdoch during the scandal.

And despite questions about News Corp.'s executive leadership, the company's shares have jumped about 10 percent since the phone-hacking scandal broke in July--a positive performance that likely won't motivate "swing" shareholders to press for change.

Meanwhile, the New York Times asserted that "infighting" among the Murdoch clan, brought on by the phone hacking episode, is clouding News Corp.'s future:Read More ?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111018/tc_yblog_technews/3-million-luxury-camper-is-a-40-mobile-mansion

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Thursday, 20 October 2011

Turkey's central bank: still a slippery customer | Global Investing

The Turkish central bank has done it again, wrong-footing monetary policy predictions with its latest interest rate moves.

On Thursday, the central bank hiked its overnight lending rate by widening the interest rate corridor.?While most analysts correctly predicted the central bank would leave its policy rate unchanged, few foresaw the overnight lending rate hike to 12.5 percent from 9 percent.

As Societe Generale?s emerging markets strategist Gaelle Blanchard put it:??They managed to find another trick. This one we were not expecting.?

In August, the central bank shocked the market by cutting its benchmark rate despite inflation running well above its 5.5 percent target. Relying on higher banks? reserve rate requirements to curb credit, it argued then that the rate cut was necessary to fend off the threat of a domestic recession heightened by a slowdown in global demand.

Initial market disapproval dissipated soon enough. Other emerging economies grappling with rising prices ? including Brazil and Indonesia ? also decided that the global recession threat was more significant than inflation.

Now, however, the Turks are warning of rising inflationary pressures.

Containing the weakness of the lira ? down 11 percent since August despite foreign-exchange auctions to support the currency ? is crucial in this respect.

Analysts say the central bank?s latest moves bring the interest rate tool back into its arsenal. A 4 percentage point rise in the lending rate would squeeze lira liquidity and make the carry trade expensive.

Despite the central bank?s more hawkish tone, analysts appear no more clued in as to the near-term rate direction.

For instance, both BNP Paribas and Capital Economics hail Turkey?s return to ?orthodox? monetary policy. But BNP Paribas expects the central bank to raise its policy rate should risk sentiment worsen while Capital Economics sees rates kept on hold until 2013 when policy tightening is likely.

?

Source: http://blogs.reuters.com/globalinvesting/2011/10/20/turkeys-central-bank-still-a-slippery-customer/

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Goldman Sachs: Superstar firm falls back to Earth

Goldman Sachs posts higher-than-expected loss of $428 million. Quarterly loss is only the second since the firm went public.

Goldman Sachs, the banking industry's perpetual winner, was this quarter's loser.

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The storied investment bank lost $428 million in the third quarter, driven by sharp drops in underwriting and trading revenue brought on by the wild swings in markets this summer. Goldman also had losses from souring investments in stocks, bonds and other holdings.

The loss announced Tuesday, which was worse than analysts expected, marked just the second time thatGoldman has posted a quarterly loss since going public in 1999. Other Wall Street banks also had trouble in their investment banking divisions, but Goldman fared worse.

It's too early to tell if the loss at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is a temporary blip driven by a wild period in the markets or a sign of cracks in the bank's long-held business strategies. Whatever the case, the results of the bellwether company suggest that big banks are still struggling to figure out how to navigate a new world of weaker economies and tighter government control.

"This is the best proof that the financial crisis is far from over," said Ken Thomas, a Miami-based banking consultant.

Analysts point out that Goldman is naturally more susceptible to swings in the stock market, which has been under pressure because of fears about weak European banks and the losses they could suffer if the Greek government goes through a messy default. Those banks have large holdings of Greek bonds.

Goldman relies heavily on market-driven investment banking services, such as trading bonds and underwriting companies' stock offerings, for its revenue. It doesn't have the same level of plain-vanilla borrowing and lending to fall back on when the investment banking operations falter.

Chief financial officer David Viniar said on a conference call with analysts that he's confident the economy and markets will improve, eventually.

"Last week, big market rally; yesterday, big market decline," Viniar said. "So I think there's still a lot of uncertainty and a lot based on who says what on what day."

Goldman Sachs is known for beating the pack of other Wall Street banks. That didn't happen this time. Bank of America's investment banking and trading business reported a loss of $302 million, on a 26 percent decline in revenue. Goldman's overall revenue fell 60 percent. Citigroup Inc. reported a 12 percent decline in its securities and banking division, excluding an accounting gain.

Goldman's losses in the third quarter included losses of $1.1 billion on its stake in the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, $1 billion on other stock holdings and $907 million from bonds and loans.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/zPoV7lHrO8U/Goldman-Sachs-Superstar-firm-falls-back-to-Earth

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Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Cyclops shark appears to be the real thing

In this world of Photoshop and online scams, it pays to have a hearty dose of skepticism at reports of something strange ? including an albino fetal shark with one eye smack in the middle of its nose like a Cyclops.

But the Cyclops shark, sliced from the belly of a pregnant mama dusky shark caught by a commercial fisherman in the Gulf of California earlier this summer, is by all reports the real thing. Shark researchers have examined the preserved creature and found that its single eye is made of functional optical tissue, they said last week. It's unlikely, however, that the malformed creature would have survived outside the womb.

"This is extremely rare," shark expert Felipe Galvan Magana of Mexico's Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias del Mar told the Pisces Fleet Sportfishing blog in July. "As far as I know, less than 50 examples of an abnormality like this have been recorded." [ See photos of the one-eyed "Cyclops" shark ]

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Pisces Fleet, a sportfishing company, rocketed the Cyclops shark to viral status online this summer with their photos of the creepy-cute creature. But this isn't the first time that reports of a mythical-seeming creature have spurred media sensations ? last week alone, Russian officials announced "proof" of a Yeti, and paleontologists spun a theory about an ancient Kraken-like squid. Few reports of mythical beasts, however, come with proof.

Cyclops shark
The Cyclops shark is an exception. While rare, "cyclopia" is a real developmental anomaly in which only one eye develops. Human fetuses are sometimes affected, as in a 1982 case in Israel reported in 1985 in the British Journal of Ophthalmology. In that case, a baby girl was born seven weeks early with no nose and only one eye in the center of her face. The infant, who lived only 30 minutes after birth, also had severe brain abnormalities.

In 2006, a kitten born with one eye and no nose (a rare condition called holoprosencephaly), created a stir online as news organizations and bloggers tried to determine if the bizarre photos of the animal were real. A veterinarian confirmed the kitten's condition; "Cy," as the cat was known, lived only a day. The remains were sold to the creationist Lost World Museum.

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The fisherman who discovered the Cyclops shark is reportedly hanging on to the preserved remains, news outlets reported. But scientists have recently examined and X-rayed the fish, authenticating the catch. According to Seth Romans, a spokesman for Pisces Fleet, Galvan Magana and his colleagues will publish a scientific paper about the find within the next several weeks.

Romans told LiveScience that the fisherman who caught the strange shark is "amazed and fascinated" by the attention his catch has drawn.

It's not the first strange shark fetus Galvan Magana has found; he and his colleagues discovered two-headed shark embryos in two different female blue sharks. It's possible that one embryo started to split into twins, but failed to completely separate because of crowding in the womb, the researchers reported in January 2011 in the journal Marine Biodiversity Records.

Lair of the kraken?
Another recent report of a cryptic creature comes without the benefit of photographic evidence. Nor do the monster-hunters in this scenario have a body to display. ???

That's because the discovery is of an alleged " kraken's lair," a spot where 200-million-year-old ichthyosaur bones mingle in odd patterns. Paleontologist Mark McMenamin reads these patterns as evidence of a giant, ancient squid-like creature playing with its food, and he said as much on Oct. 10 at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America. Supporting his claim, he said, is the fact that even today Pacific octopus, which are also cephalopods like the ancient "kraken," have been seen taking down sharks.

Other researchers responded that McMenamin was seeing what he wanted to see in the patterns.

"To my mind, this hypothesis is like looking at clouds ? being able to see what you desire," Glenn Storrs, the curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Cincinnati Museum Center, told LiveScience.

Mythical krakens are now thought of as giant squid or octopuses, capable of bringing down a ship with their tentacled arms. But many of the earliest kraken reports were of creatures so enormous that they grew vegetation on their backs like islands. These krakens dragged down anchored ships or swamped them by surfacing suddenly. [Read Get Kraken: Why Scientists Should Study Sea Monsters]

The 1816 "Universal Dictionary of the Arts, Sciences Literature, Etc.," (advertised as "intended to supersede the use of other books of reference") defines the kraken as "a most amazing large sea animal," said to be "of a crab-like form."

"Its back or upper part, which seems an English mile and a half (some have affirmed more), looks at first like a number of small islands, surrounded with something that floats like seaweeds," the dictionary author writes. "At last several bright points of horns appear, which grow thicker the higher they emerge, and sometimes stand up as high and large as the masts of middle-sized vessels. In a short time, it slowly sinks, which is thought as dangerous as its rising; as it causes such a swell and whirlpool as draws everything down with it."

Den of the Yeti
October's most recent cryptozoology report comes courtesy of Russia, where researchers claim to have found "indisputable proof" of the yeti, a hairy ape-like creature not unlike Bigfoot.

This "proof" takes the form of a few strands of gray hair and some tracks in the snow, but similar claims have come up short in the past. Some Sasquatch claims have even been brazen hoaxes, such as a 2008 press conference in which two Georgia men claimed to have the body of Bigfoot in a freezer. The "corpse" turned out to be a rubber ape suit.

There's no way of knowing yet whether the Russian yeti enthusiasts are out to pull the wool over anyone's eyes, or whether they genuinely believe their yeti evidence is real. The yeti fur was supposedly found in Azasskaya cave in western Siberia during a yeti conference. [ Mythical Creatures: Beasts that Don't Exist ]

"During the expedition to the Azasskaya cave, conference participants gathered indisputable proof that the Shoria mountains are inhabited by the 'Snow Man,'" a spokesman for the region told LiveScience's sister site Life's Little Mysteries. "They found his footprints, his supposed bed, and various markers with which the yeti uses to denote his territory."

No word on where the supposed yeti went or why researchers didn't stick around with cameras. Unlike the Cyclops shark, it seems this yeti finding may not stand up to scrutiny.

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44938056/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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EPA tries to put to rest 'myth' of farm dust rules (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The EPA is trying to put to rest what it calls a "myth" that it is going to crack down on farm dust.

In letters to two senators last week, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said the agency won't expand its current air quality standards to include dust created by agriculture. The agency released the letters Monday.

Republicans and some farm-state Democrats have used the issue on the campaign trail, arguing that the EPA is set to penalize farmers for everyday activities. Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain said in a recent debate that the agency is "out of control" and was preparing to regulate dust.

The House GOP has pushed a host of measures aimed at weakening, delaying or scrapping environmental regulations in recent months, saying they view them as job killers. Similar efforts are not expected to be successful in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

Obama administration officials have tried to deflect talk of a dust rule for months, to little avail. A statement released by the agency Monday said that "EPA hopes that this action finally puts an end to the myth that the agency is planning to expand regulations of farm dust."

National Farmers Union President Roger Johnson said there has been considerable anxiety in farm country about the possibility of increased regulation on agriculture.

"We hope this action finally puts to rest the misinformation regarding dust regulation and eases the minds of farmers and ranchers across the country," Johnson said.

Nebraska Sen. Mike Johanns and South Dakota Rep. Kristi Noem, both Republicans, have pushed legislation that would block the dust rule if it had been proposed.

Noem issued a statement Monday saying that the announcement does nothing to change the fact that the agency has the ability to regulate farm dust. But Johanns called the EPA statement a "victory," saying he would abandon an amendment on the issue he planned to offer to a spending bill this week.

"EPA has finally provided what I've been asking for all along," Johanns said. "Unequivocal assurance that it won't attempt to regulate farm dust."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111017/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_epa_farm_dust

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Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Apple earnings to showcase iPhone strength (Reuters)

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) ? Apple Inc once more faces lofty expectations after smashing iPhone sales records, but Wall Street remains confident the world's largest technology company will deliver another bumper quarter.

Investors worried about crumbling consumer spending, a darkening economic outlook and the rapid expansion of Google Inc's Android mobile software got some assurance after the company moved 4 million iPhone 4S units in three days -- more than double its predecessor -- despite lukewarm reviews.

Apple's shareholders have had plenty to fret about since August, when Steve Jobs handed the reins to Tim Cook.

The company then lost its leading visionary and co-founder when he died October 5. Some analysts say the short-term disruption offered a brief window for rivals like Google and its foremost Android partner, Samsung, to swoop in.

But the world's largest technology company by market value is expected to present a positive short-term picture -- sparked by roaring sales of its iPhone and iPad -- when it reports results for the July-September period Tuesday.

The iPhone 4S sales numbers catapulted Apple's shares to a record high last week, even though some of that rally rested on the iPhone 4S being available in two additional countries and more telecoms carriers from launch day.

The record sales have heightened expectations for the current quarter, which many investors expect will be enormous for Apple.

"The quarter we are focusing on is the holiday quarter," said Channing Smith, co-manager of the Capital Advisors Growth Fund, which owns Apple shares.

"We expect Apple to absolutely blow the doors off during Christmas."

Still, Apple has encountered a few uncharacteristic glitches or hiccups since Jobs exited in August. While the iPhone 4S rode pent-up demand and wider availability to record numbers, the initial response was disappointment over a lack of design changes.

And while the woes of rivals such as Research in Motion -- which experienced its severest outage last week -- appear to benefit Apple, the impending re-launch of Microsoft Corp and Nokia into the mobile arena and the increasing footprint of Android could hit Apple's sales.

Others worry that Apple's shares have gone too far, too fast.

On Monday, BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis lowered his recommendation on Apple to hold, citing a steep run-up in price and some short-term turbulence such as some risk to profit margin from education pricing discounts offered on some Apple products and competition to the iPad from low-cost manufacturers.

"The company has to constantly set records just to meet expectations," Gillis said. "There is nothing wrong with Apple's business model or execution, but we do see that sentiment is overwhelmingly positive."

"It is possible shares pull back below $400, possibly even this week after the earnings report," he added.

For Cook and his executive bench, quarterly results offer what some analysts say is a welcome opportunity to focus on business, after headlines were dominated for a fortnight by Jobs' passing, which ignited a spontaneous outpouring of grief and sympathy from heads of state, Silicon Valley royalty and across the Internet.

Apple's iPhone delivers more than 40 percent of its revenue and provides much of the growth momentum. Wall Street has begun building in projections for up to 30 million of the smartphones sold in the December quarter, the crucial holiday period.

As with previous quarters, Apple -- which provides current-quarter estimates that Wall Street says are typically conservative -- needs to truly surpass expectations to drive a share rally, analysts said.

Current average projections put fiscal fourth-quarter revenue at $29.6 billion and earnings per share at $7.38.

But according to StarMine SmartEstimates, which places more emphasis on the timeliest forecasts by the most historically accurate analysts, Apple is expected to post earnings of $7.47 per share -- about 2.4 percent above the average estimate.

Revenue could come in at $29.8 billion -- about 1 percent above the average expectation.

BEYOND IPHONES

Some investors recommend looking beyond merely iPhones and looking at Apple's other main devices: the two-year-old iPad, and the stalwart Macintosh line of desktop and laptop computers.

Wall Street in general expects sales somewhere in the neighborhood of 20 million to 22 million iPhones in the September quarter, north of 4 million Macs, and about 10 million iPads.

"Investors have plenty to look forward to from Apple as the year comes to a close, including stronger than expected demand for the new iPhone 4S, a strengthened digital ecosystem with the recent launch of the iOS 5 and iCloud, the continued momentum around the iPad 2," Ticonderoga Securities analyst Brian White said.

Beyond 2011, the picture is less clear. Many analysts expect Apple, sustaining its long-established product cycle, to unveil the third version of the iPad, which helped create the tablet computing market that it still dominates.

But rivals aren't sitting still. Microsoft is gearing up to launch Windows 8 for tablets, and its new phone operating software will soon debut on new partner Nokia.

Google, whose Android is already the world's most-used mobile software, continues to score partners. And Samsung, riding Android's success, may overtake Apple as the world's bestselling smartphone brand in the fourth quarter and beyond.

Still, investor enthusiasm for Apple continues for now.

"It's very hard to find any type of problem in the business," Capital Advisors Growth Fund's Smith said.

(Reporting by Poornima Gupta and Edwin Chan; Editing by Gary Hill)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/bs_nm/us_apple

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Monday, 17 October 2011

Kelly Rowland Flaunts Fake Boobs in Revealing Dress (omg!)

Kelly Rowland loves her breast implants and she's not afraid to show it.

The 30-year-old star struck a sexy pose in a hot pink sheer dress with a gaping keyhole design that put her black bra (and enhanced assets) on display, while leaving a taping of The X Factor in London on Saturday.

PHOTOS: Stars with boob jobs

The former Destiny Child's member told Cosmopolitan UK's November issue that she was tired of having "little nuggets for boobs," so she went under the knife in October 2007.

Four years later, the "Motivation" singer says she has no regrets about enhancing her cup size.

PHOTOS: Can you guess the bra sizes of your fave celebs?

"The decision was 10 years in the making, so I'm comfortable talking about it," Rowland said. "It's something I really wanted to do for myself -- not for a man, not for work, for myself."

Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/http___omg_yahoo_com_news74691/43286336/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/kelly-rowland-flaunts-fake-boobs-in-revealing-dress/74691

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Friday, 14 October 2011

Celebrities come out for Wall Street protest (AP)

NEW YORK ? As the nearly monthlong Occupy Wall Street protests have grown, they've attracted the support of celebrities.

Kanye West and Russell Simmons most recently visited the protests in lower Manhattan on Monday. They followed visits from documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, actress Susan Sarandon, actor Mark Ruffalo, comedian Roseanne Barr, actor Tim Robbins, rapper Talib Kweli and "Gossip Girl" actor Penn Badgley.

Their involvement suggests broadening cultural support for the protests, which take on Wall Street companies and denounce what the demonstrators see as corporate greed. Protesters have been camped out in New York's financial district for 3 1/2 weeks, and crowds have gathered in cities including Washington, Boston and Los Angeles, as well as abroad.

"I'm so impressed by what I'm seeing here," Moore told protesters at one of the demonstration sites. "It's not just the hundreds or thousands that have come down here to Liberty Plaza, it is millions of Americans who have suffered as a result of the decisions made by the people in these buildings."

On Tuesday, protesters marched past the homes of wealthy residents, singling out buildings where media mogul Rupert Murdoch, banker Jamie Dimon and oil tycoon David Koch have homes. They decried the impending expiration of New York's 2 percent "millionaires' tax" in December.

When Barr attended, she gave a speech in which she proposed "a new capitalism, one not fueled by wars, one that doesn't pass out its wealth to handful of white guys and call that free trade."

Simmons, the hip-hop mogul, last week dispensed 500 bottles of water to protesters, calling them "sweet kids."

Sarandon, the Academy Award winner who often lends help to left-wing causes, offered some advice on how the protesters could organize themselves and urged people to participate in the political process. She called the protests "incredibly moving."

"I don't know that much about Wall Street, but if I was running a business and I made that big of a mistake and lost that many people's future, I don't think I would get a bonus or even keep my job," Sarandon told reporters. "So something's wrong."

Because a focal point of the protests is to highlight the growing gap between the rich and the poor, some have questioned whether wealthy entertainers who are among the top 1 percent in income have a place in the protests. The protesters claim to represent "the other 99 percent."

Critics have cited that West ranked No. 3 on Forbes' list of top earners in hip-hop. The rapper didn't make a speech when he attended the protests but simply walked through the throngs, who warmly greeted him.

Disdain for Wall Street is far from unique to any income bracket, though. President Barack Obama has called the demonstrations representative of wider feelings.

"I think people are frustrated and the protesters are giving voice to a more broad-based frustration about how our financial system works," he said last week.

The blog Celebrity NetWorth has listed what it claims are the top 10 richest celebrities supporting the protests. Others have pointed out the corporations some of the supportive celebrities endorse.

Yoko Ono, Alec Baldwin and Jane Fonda have voiced support for the protests. Baldwin is a pitchman for Capital One Bank.

Baldwin has used his Twitter account to rebut criticism. Responding to claims that he was hypocritical for being anti-capitalist and a wealthy actor, Baldwin wrote, "No. They just want regulated capitalism."

Ono tweeted: "I love OccupyWallStreet As John said, `One hero cannot do it. Each one of us have to be heroes.' And you are. Thank you."

When Badgley attended the demonstration last week, he acknowledged some awkwardness in his celebrity status as a sign-carrying protester.

"I mean, listen, it's cheesy ... but I want to do whatever I can," Badgley told the website Capital New York. "Let's be honest: I'm on ... `Gossip Girl.' ... It's absurd that celebrity power is what it is, but, like, use any tool you have, you know?"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111012/ap_en_ce/us_wall_street_protests_celebrities

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Rugby news - Haven job a great chance | Central Sports News


rugby Haven job a great chance

Gailer worked with Australia and Queensland State of Origin great Darren Lockyer (pictured) during his 36 years as a coach in Queensland rugby league

Australian rugby league coach Don Gailer has described the Whitehaven job as an ?outstanding? opportunity, following his appointment on Friday.

Gailer, 56, arrived at the Recreation Ground with 36 years of experience in Queensland, where he worked with one-time Australia captain Darren Lockyer.

?I have wanted to come over and coach in England for years,? Gailer told BBC Radio Cumbria.

?The opportunity to link up with Whitehaven is outstanding.?

He added: ?It?s going to be a great adventure.?

Gailer has spent much of his coaching career working with youth development and city/state sides and former Queensland Origin, Cronulla and Castleford prop Danny Nutley listed him as the biggest influence on his career.

He takes over from former Haven player David Seeds, who stepped down from the post after last month?s Championship One play-off defeat by Doncaster.

?I sent over an email to the club to say I was coming over to England and I was looking for a coaching position,? Gailer continued.

?Then I got an email back from the club to say there was a position vacant and all of a sudden we traded a few emails, I luckily got to communicate ultimately with Barry Richardson, and everything they said got me excited about coaching at Whitehaven.

?From my own knowledge, from the old Australian Kangaroos tours, they always played against Whitehaven so it was a sensational opportunity to link up with a club that has such great history.?

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/sport1/hi/rugby_league/15265516.stm

Source: http://www.centralsportsnews.com/rugby/haven-job-a-great-chance/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=haven-job-a-great-chance

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Thursday, 13 October 2011

What Are The Different Types Of Auto Insurance? | Financial Crossing

Purchasing auto insurance can be a big decision for some consumers, especially with each individual state having their own minimum insurance requirements that they mandate vehicle owners have in order to legally drive their car. Prior to purchasing any type of automobile insurance it?s important to know the various types of auto insurance services and coverage available from the insurance providers.

At a minimum every state requires all vehicle drivers to be insured with liability insurance. Basically, liability insurance covers the expenses that occur if you cause an accident and destroy someone else?s car or auto. Liability insurance doesn?t pay for any damage that your automobile sustains in an accident that you cause. Almost every financial lender or loan provider will require a consumer to have full auto insurance coverage instead of just liability insurance in order to preserve the value of their loan against a new or used car that is financed by the bank.

Property damage is the amount of insurance needed to pay for repairs or damages to another motorist?s vehicle if you are the root cause of an accident. This is one portion of the minimum required liability insurance as mandated by the individual states. Without this insurance the consumer responsible for the accident would be held accountable to pay for any damages or financial liabilities as a result of the accident. With the price of today?s automobiles this could prove to be financially disastrous which is why every state requires a minimum amount of property damage coverage.

Personal injury protection is insurance coverage that pays for a percentage of any medical bills as a result of hospitalization or medical treatment received. It also provides some assistance with wages that are lost as a result of the accident and some death benefits.

Uninsured motorist insurance coverage provides relief to you in case you are involved in an accident without being at fault and the other driver has no car insurance coverage. Although every state requires a minimum amount of liability insurance there are still many drivers that don?t carry or have any auto insurance making this form of insurance almost a necessity in order to give you some peace of mind while driving on the road.

Comprehensive and collision coverage are additional types of insurance coverage that fall under the full coverage umbrella. Normally these types of insurance are required by banks and lenders for any consumer vehicle financing they intend to approve. Comprehensive coverage provides for any type of damage to your vehicle to include theft and vandalism. Collision coverage provides insurance coverage for your vehicle or car if you are found at fault in an accident. In most cases the cash value (as determined by the insurance institution, provider or company) of your vehicle is paid if a total loss of the automobile occurs as a result of the accident.

Finally, bodily injury is another of the minimum required insurance services (under the liability insurance umbrella) required by the states in order to legally drive your car. This insurance provides coverage against medical bills that are a result of an accident that you are found liable for as causing.

Understanding the many different types of auto insurance will help you find the auto insurance coverage you need at a price you can afford thereby allowing you to legally drive in the state you currently reside in.

What Are The Different Types Of Auto Insurance?


Source: http://www.financialcrossing.com/what-are-the-different-types-of-auto-insurance-2/

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Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Christians under siege in post-revolution Egypt

Egypt's Coptic Christians have long felt like second-class citizens in their own country.

Now many fear that the power vacuum left after the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak is giving Muslim extremists free rein to torch churches and attack Coptic homes in the worst violence against the community in decades.

An assault Sunday night on Christians protesting over a church attack set off riots that drew in Muslims, Christians and the police. Among the 26 people left killed in the melee, most were Copts. For Coptic scholar Wassem el-Sissi, it was evidence that the Christian community in Egypt is vulnerable as never before.

"In the absence of law, you can understand how demolishing a church goes unpunished," he said. "I have not heard of anyone who got arrested or prosecuted."

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Story: Egyptian Christians renew clashes with police amid worst violence since Arab Spring uprising

Once a majority in Egypt, Copts now make up about 10 percent of the country's 85 million people. They are the largest Christian community in the Middle East. Their history dates back 19 centuries and the language used in their liturgy can be traced to the speech of Egypt's pharaohs. Proud of their history and faith, many Copts are identifiable by tattoos of crosses or Jesus Christ on their right wrists, and Coptic women do not wear the veil as the vast majority of Muslim women in Egypt do.

Under Mubarak, the problems of Copts festered even if they faced less violence than they do now. Their demands for a law to regulate construction of churches went unanswered and attacks on churches went unpunished.

Copts shared in the euphoria of the 18-day revolution that ousted Mubarak and like so many other Egyptians their hopes for change were high. Mainly, they wanted to be on equal footing with Muslims.

At Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the revolution against Mubarak, there were glimpses of a fleeting utopia where coexistence and mutual respect between Muslims and Christians was the rule. The iconic image of Christians forming a human shield around Muslim worshippers during Friday prayers to protect them from thugs and pro-Mubarak loyalists spoke volumes to the dream.

But shortly after Mubarak's ouster, a series of assaults on Christians brought home a stark reality: The fading of authoritarian rule empowered Islamist fundamentalists, known here as Salafis, who have special resentment for Christians.

While the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood has long been Egypt's best organized opposition movement, the Salafis are a new player in politics. They are ultraconservatives, close to Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi interpretation of Islam and more radical than the Brotherhood. They seek to emulate the austerity of Islam's early days and oppose a wide range of practices they view as "un-Islamic" ? rejecting the treatment of non-Muslims as citizens with equal rights as well as all forms of Western cultural influence.

The Salafis persistently accuse the Copts of trying to spread Christianity in a Muslim nation, echoing Wahhabism's deep distrust and hostility of other religions.

Mubarak's regime tolerated the Salafis and they expanded in numbers and power over the years. However, after Mubarak's overthrow, they enjoyed more freedom than ever before to go after their No. 1 target ? Christians.

Now rarely a month passes without a sectarian incident ? a Muslim-Christian love affair or battles over constructing a church.

On Feb. 23, less than two weeks after Mubarak's ouster, a priest was found dead with several stab wounds and witnesses say masked men shouting Allahu-Akbar (God is Great) were seen leaving his apartment. The incident triggered protests in the southern city of Assiut where Christians scuffled with Muslims.

Not long after in March, a Muslim-Christian love affair led a Muslim mob to torch a church in Soul village to the south of Cairo and set it on fire. When Christians held a protest denouncing the attack on the church, they were attacked by Muslim mob wielding guns, knives and clubs. When it was done, 13 were dead and 140 injured.

The next month, thousands of protesters, most of them Islamic hard-liners and members of the Muslim Brotherhood, protested in front of the governor's office in the southern city of Qena to denounce the appointment a day earlier of a new Coptic Christian governor. In the face of the protests, the government replaced the Coptic governor.

Then in May, Islamic ultraconservatives burned a church in the working-class district of Imbaba in Cairo and clashed with Christians leaving 12 dead.

Those riots were triggered by a Christian woman who had an affair with a Muslim man. And when she disappeared, the man spread rumors that Christian clergy had snatched her and were holding her prisoner in a local church because she converted to Islam.

Then a few months passed with no attacks, until Sunday night, now known as the "bloody Sunday."

The Christians were protesting in Cairo over the events of Sept. 30 when a Muslim mob that set fire on a church in southern village of Marynab in Aswan province because they believed the Christians were illegally constructing a new church. Church officials had documents showing they had permission to build a new church to replace a previous, run-down one at the same site.

Under Mubarak-era rules, the building of a church or repairs for an existing one required permission from local authorities and the state security agency but since permission was rarely given, Christians at times resorted to building churches in secret, often in parish guesthouses.

Even before the attack, Muslim protests prompted priests to turn to security officials, who arranged a meeting with local elders and Salafis. In the face of their demands, the priests agreed to take down a cross and bells on the church, according to church officials. Still, after the Christians erected a dome, the mob attacked, setting the church and nearby homes and shops on fire.

Aswan's governor, Gen. Mustafa Kamel al-Sayyed, escalated the tensions by telling the media that the church was being built on the site of a guesthouse, suggesting it was illegal.

In response, hundreds of Christians marched in front of the governor's office last week, demanding those behind the attack be prosecuted and families who lost homes be compensated. Christians also protested in Cairo, cutting off a main avenue in the heart of the capital, demanding the governor's ouster, until soldiers dispersed them by force.

Days after the Aswan attack, Muslim villagers in the southern province of Sohag tried to storm Saint Girgis church, shouting "No to church construction," as Christians on rooftops rained stones down on them. The assault was prompted by construction of a church in a guesthouse.

On Monday, the Coptic church declared three days of morning for those killed the night before and blasted authorities for allowing repeated attacks on Christians with impunity. The statement lamented "problems that occur repeatedly and go unpunished."

Outside the Coptic Hospital in Cairo, where bodies of 17 slain protesters were brought, a Coptic woman named Iman Sanada with a small cross tattooed on her wrist, lamented the deaths and shrieked: "It's my right to live as a citizen and not a second-class citizen."

____

Associated Press reporter Aya Batrawy contributed to this report from Cairo.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44850834/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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NFL: Jets bench Mason for complaining

Sebastian JanikowskiAP

WR Naaman Roosevelt stepped up for the Bills after Donald Jones left with an injury.

The play of Dolphins T Marc Colombo this season hasn?t given the impression that there?s much left in his tank.

A well-designed play sprung Patriots WR Wes Welker for a 73-yard gain.

WR Jeremy Kerley saw more time than Derrick Mason when the Jets went with three wide receivers.

Ravens DT Terrence Cody has shown much improvement over last season.

Brandon Tate?s punt returns helped set the Bengals up offensively in their win over the Jaguars.

Browns WR Greg Little hopes to be the team?s leading playmaker as the season moves on.

RB Jonathan Dwyer had the seventh-longest run in Steelers history on his way to 111 rushing yards overall.

Texans TE Joel Dreessen was a bright spot in Sunday?s loss.

Said Colts DE Robert Mathis, ?Stopping the run, stopping the pass. It?s indescribable. I wish I could hit the re-set button. I don?t think we got any passing grades in Football 101. This is by far the angriest I?ve been after a game. By far.?

The end was ugly, but Jaguars QB Blaine Gabbert seemed to make some strides on Sunday.

Special teams blunders hurt the Titans more than once against the Steelers.

Broncos RB Willis McGahee topped 100 yards for the third time in the last four games.

WR Steve Breaston played a bigger role in the Chiefs offense.

Raiders K Sebastian Janikowski tied an NFL record with three field goals of 50 yards or more in Sunday?s win.

Said Chargers coach Norv Turner, ?You don?t want to be in a situation where you feel like you?ve controlled a game and you let them back in. But if you win the game, and you use that to get better, I don?t know you can ask for more than that.?

Cowboys CB Orlando Scandrick is looking forward to getting back in the lineup this week.

G Chris Snee was taken to the hospital with a concussion he suffered in the Giants loss.

The Eagles missed 13 tackles by one count, with 11 of them coming in the secondary.

Are the Redskins for real or are they a mirage?

Bears CB Tim Jennings promises to be physical with Lions receivers on Monday night.

The return of the Lions to Monday Night Football fits in with a hot time in Detroit sports.

Packers WR James Jones made the most of his opportunities on Sunday night.

Chip Scoggins of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune writes that Vikings QB Donovan McNabb isn?t off the hook because of Sunday?s win.

The Falcons offense came crashing to a halt after two good drives to start the game.

Panthers RB DeAngelo Williams ran for more than 100 yards for the first time in almost two years.

Jimmy Graham became the first tight end in Saints history with three-straight 100-yard receiving days.

Gary Shelton of the St. Petersburg Times calls Sunday?s 48-3 Buccaneers loss as bad as any in franchise history.

The Cardinals? road losing streak is now at 10 games.

Said Rams offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, ?The focus has gotta always be on playing our best in November and December. And if we can get to that point where we?re doing that, you never know. So we?ve got to continue to push and fight.?

49ers CB Carlos Rogers never had three interceptions in a season before coming to San Francisco, but he?s got three in his last three games.

Seahawks DT Anthony Hargrove, a Brooklyn native, made a big play when he dropped Giants RB D.J. Ware for a safety in the third quarter.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/10/report-derrick-mason-benched-for-complaining/related

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Tuesday, 11 October 2011

3 Crucial Reasons Internet Businesses Need Online Business ...

New internet businesses can be the most vulnerable of all businesses because of lack of education and development.? Online business education could be the single most important factor to building a successful internet business.? All internet marketers start out at the beginning honing their skills and training to become the expert.? As this training continues and the business starts to generate a profit; a marketer looks to education to keep up with the industry.

Because we all start out novice and unfamiliar with the power of the internet.

That?s right we all start out at the beginning with no idea how what the lingo means and have no idea how to generate traffic to our sites.? The first thing all of us do is dive into education and training on how to drive traffic to our websites. So because we have just entered a very foreign territory; internet businesses need online business education more than ever.? The great thing is that all of us get paid as we learn to harness the power of the internet.

Train to become an expert in the industry

Online business education can pay off as a very lucrative investment. ?See we are all in the business of ?Attraction Marketing? and for ?Attraction Marketing? to start working you have to have developed a reason for people to be attracted to you.? You have to create value and deliver valuable content for people to want to follow you and purchase your products.

google_ad_channel = ?7940249670, ? + AB_cat_channel + AB_unit_channel;
google_language = ?en?;
google_ad_region = ?test?;


Andy McLean -
About the Author:

Andy McLean is an internet marketing mastermind and trainer living in Charleston SC and creating a full-time income from his home.? Andy is committed the online business education of aspiring internet entrepreneurs into million dollar earners.? He assists individuals step by step on their way to financial freedom by teaching them to harness the power of the internet.? To learn more from Andy?s coaching visit his training website below.

?

Source: http://tricirclemarketing.com/2011/10/10/3-crucial-reasons-internet-businesses-need-online-business-education/

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Attention deficit disorder Media And Treatment ... - Health and Fitness

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The newest ADHD research noted within the Centres regarding Condition Manage and also Reduction (Centers for disease control) points too far too many children are wrongly diagnosed together with ADHD. Probably the most shocking fact develops ... We should be looking much more significantly at green period (children display significantly much less signs and symptoms following this), eating habits and also behavior treatment. But a majority of of, we need an ...

Source: http://myhealthandfitnesstoday.org/attention-deficit-disorder-media-and-treatment-options-have-you-been-up-to-date-on-which-is-occurring

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Monday, 10 October 2011

Yoga to Improve Health : Yoga to Alleviate Tiredness | Fitness Xtreme

Yoga can be a great way to increase energy and alleviate tiredness. Alleviate tiredness with yoga with help from a longtime fitness trainer in this free video clip. Expert: Lorilyn Haubrich Bio: Lorilyn Haubrich is a longtime, dedicated fitness trainer who began practicing the art and science of yoga over 20 years ago. Filmmaker: David Kumpe Series Description: Yoga can be an invaluable tool when it comes to both relieving pain and improving your general health and movement. Use yoga to improve health with help from a longtime fitness trainer in this free video series.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Source: http://fitnessxtreme.org/yoga-to-improve-health-yoga-to-alleviate-tiredness

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