মঙ্গলবার, ৩০ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Wall Street rally sends S andP to record high and Nasdaq to 12.5-year high

Washington, Apr. 30 (Xinhua-ANI): U.S. stocks rose on Monday, with the S andP 500 closing at a record high and the Nasdaq ending at a high not seen November 2000, boosted by upbeat housing data and climbing tech shares.

The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average Index surged 106.20 points, or 0.72 percent, to 14,818.75 points. The broader S andP 500 soared 11.37 points, or 0.72 percent, to 1,593.61 points. The tech- rich Nasdaq leapt 27.76 points, or 0.85 percent, to 3,307.02 points.

The S andP 500 edged very close to its all-time intraday high of 1, 597.35 points set on April 11 before retreating in the last hour of trading.

U.S. March pending home sales, a forward-looking indicator based on contract signings, rose 1.5 percent to its highest level in three years, according to a report released Monday by the National Association of Realtors. The reading exceeded its market expectation.

Tech shares led the broad gains, helping the Nasdaq outperform the other two main stock indices.

Shares of Conceptus Inc., a U.S. birth-control product manufacturer, surged 19.54 percent to 30.96 U.S. dollars on news that German chemical and pharmaceutical giant Bayer AG agreed to buy Conceptus for approximately 1.1 billion dollars in cash.

Meanwhile, Conceptus reported on Monday that its net income in the first quarter of this year was 1.9 million dollars, or 5 cents per fully diluted share, after logging a net loss of 2.8 million dollars in the same period of 2012.

SINA Corporation's shares jumped 9.40 percent to 55.03 dollars as it announced that Alibaba Group has invested 586 million dollars to purchase shares of Weibo Corporation, SINA's wholly owned subsidiary, before the opening bell in New York market.

The market also regained momentum from Italy's rising stocks as well as bond prices which pushed its borrowing costs to an over- two-year low as a coalition government was established last week, ending two months of political deadlock in the debt-ridden country.

In other economic data, U.S. personal income increased 0.2 percent in March after jumping 1.1 percent in the prior month, and personal consumption expenditures advanced 0.2 percent, weaker than the February's 0.7-percent increase, the Commerce Department said Monday.

Analysts had expected personal income to rise 0.4 percent and consumer spending to increase 0.1 percent in March.

The market rebounded in the previous week due to generally upbeat corporate earnings and rising commodity prices. (Xinhua-ANI)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-street-rally-sends-andp-record-high-nasdaq-045338580.html

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Mini Ninjas for iOS now has animal companions

Mini Ninjas

Mini Ninjas?an endless runner ninja game from Square Enix?received its first content update late last week. You can now have animal companions which help you run further, defeat more enemies, and gain more coins.

Three animals are available in the in-game Dojo shop, each with its own unique abilities:

  • The Panda ? Powerful and wise, the Panda possesses strength like no other. With the Panda on your side, enemies pose no threat. The Panda is invincible to any foe, able to knock any aside with ease.
  • The Fox ? Agile and swift, the Fox?s dexterity is unmatched. When speeding through levels the Fox is able to avoid enemies completely with his double jump, pouncing out of danger and grabbing the hardest to reach rewards!
  • The Crane ? Graceful but deadly, the Crane offers devastating aerial abilities to vanquish foes. No longer will flying enemies catch players out: the Crane is able to leap and attack even the highest baddies from above.

This is just the first of many updates Mini Ninjas will be getting.

Get more information about Mini Ninjas at the game?s?website, Facebook, and YouTube pages.

Mini Ninjas is available at the App Store for the iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, and iPad mini running iOS 5.1 or later for $0.99.

Source: http://www.technologytell.com/apple/116112/mini-ninjas-now-has-animal-companions/

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Kosovo: 3 get jail time in organ trafficking case

PRISTINA, Kosovo (AP) ? A court in Kosovo found two citizens guilty of human trafficking and organized crime Monday in a major trial against seven people suspected of running an international organ trafficking ring that took kidneys from poor donors lured by financial promises.

A panel of two European Union judges and one Kosovo judge sentenced urologist Lutfi Dervishi to eight years in prison and his son Arban Dervishi to seven years and three months. Both also received fines, while Lutfi Dervishi was barred from practicing urology for two years.

A third defendant, Sokol Hajdini, was sentenced to three years in jail for causing grievous bodily harm. Two others received suspended sentences, while two were freed. The defendants can appeal the verdicts.

Organ transplantation is illegal in Kosovo. The trial began in December 2011 and included more than 100 witnesses. All the donors and recipients were foreign nationals.

Seven donors who testified were from Israel, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Turkey. They described how they were flown into Kosovo from Istanbul and then quickly wheeled into surgery in a medical facility named "Medicus" on the outskirts of Kosovo's capital, Pristina.

The victims were promised $10,000 to $12,000 in return for their kidneys, but many said they were never paid.

"At least two were cheated out of the entire amount and went home with no money and only one kidney," the court said in its reasoning.

The donors' kidneys were removed for transplantation into people who paid up to 130,000 euros for the procedure. The recipients were mostly wealthy patients from places such as Israel, Poland, Canada, the U.S. and Germany.

The court ordered that Lutfi and Arban Dervishi pay partial compensation of 15,000 euros to each of the seven victims who testified during the proceedings. The victims may later seek additional compensation in court, the panel said in its reasoning.

At least 24 kidney transplants, involving 48 donors and recipients, were carried out between 2008 and 2009, the period the case covered.

The donors "were alone, did not speak the language, uncertain of what they were doing and had no one to protect their interest," the court's reasoning read. "Some donors had severe second thoughts at the clinic, but were given no opportunity to back out and were psychologically pressured into going forward with the surgery."

Most of the names of donors and recipients were traced through documents seized during a police raid into the clinic in 2008 acting to verify a statement by a Turkish man that his kidney was removed. The man caught police's attention when he collapsed at the Pristina airport.

The defendants are believed to have profited $1 million from the transplants. It's unclear how many total donors and recipients there were.

"In every sense this was the cruel harvest of the poor and weak in our society," Jonathan Ratel, a Canadian prosecutor who brought the charges as part of European Union's rule of law mission in Kosovo, said after the verdicts.

He alleged that the sole motive of the defendants was "obscene profit and human greed." But the defendants claimed they were not guilty, arguing that the donors came to Kosovo voluntarily and that the surgeries saved lives.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kosovo-3-jail-time-organ-trafficking-case-180335330.html

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UDC: Veteran Lender Celebrates 75 Years | Stuff.co.nz

The grizzled grand-daddy of finance companies -the largest and oldest in the country- has turned 75 years old.

At the office birthday party for UDC Finance earlier this month, staff had plenty to celebrate with profit returning to pre-financial crisis levels last year and the first half of the new financial year improving on every metric again.

UDC took root in 1937, during the Great Depression. It was one of only three big deposit-takers to survive the wholesale destruction of the finance company sector, with younger companies collapsing and taking millions of Kiwi investors' dollars with them.

UDC endured and last month wrote the highest value of new lending since 2006 - beating the previous record by $2.8 million.

Loan provisions fell 29 per cent in the six months to March 2013, while lending rose 5.4 per cent. Revenue and profit -yet to be reported- both rose.

The company's resilience is built on more than good luck.

As the original 'industrial' finance firm, it is far from glamorous. It did not dabble in the speculative property developments that led others astray.

Instead, it's core business involves greasing the more mundane cogs of the economy- manufacturing equipment, plant, trucks and vans.

Chief executive Tessa Price said the company had consistently stuck to what it knew, building up decades of industry knowledge.

''It's not hard- it's trucks and cars and wheels,'' she said.

''It definitely is the customer focus and the industry specialisation that we've always had since day one...we've never steered away from that.''

Strong relationships exist with long-standing customers -on both sides of the ledger- and there was no struggle to source retail deposits.

''We have customers with us who have been investing for 55 years,'' said Price.

PwC financial services partner Sam Shuttleworth said generally, the surviving finance companies had ''stuck to their knitting''.

''They weren't chasing the dollar,'' he said. ''They had appropriate controls in place to manage their risks.''

It didn't hurt to have the backing of the largest bank in New Zealand, either.

UDC has been a wholly owned subsidiary of the ANZ since 1980. The ties remain strong- ANZ's chief executive David Hisco used to be the boss of UDC.

''A strong parent is always helpful during times of trouble,'' said Shuttleworth. It also meant the ANZ's disciplined controls and governance filtered through to UDC, he said.

Now the model has been emulated by Kiwibank. The state-owned bank launched its own UDC equivalent - Kiwi Asset Finance - as a separate company just over two years ago.

''It's part of Kiwibank providing the whole portfolio of financial services that people expect from a major bank,'' said spokesman Bruce Thompson.

Other bank competitors include the BNZ and ASB, which offer asset finance in-house.

UDC is self-funding but has a line of credit available from its parent.

It can also tap into ANZ's substantial network of business customers, giving it a big advantage for its next drive:

''At the moment we're not reaching down the small business end,'' said Price.

Existing clients are mostly larger commercial operators, but the smaller guys need a van or a truck too.

With several hundred thousand small to medium businesses in the country, there's plenty of scope for expansion.

UDC's strong balance sheet also hints at good news for the New Zealand economy.

The climate is still a bit patchy, Price said. But consumer confidence has bounced back and there's less nervousness in the commercial market.
Transport, construction and even agriculture are all tracking well.
''There's definitely more confidence there- but it's across the board,'' said Price.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8606720/Veteran-lender-celebrates-75th-with-positive-results

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Pyongyang glitters, but rest of North Korea still dark

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) ? The heart of this city, once famous for its Dickensian darkness, now pulsates with neon.

Glossy construction downtown has altered the Pyongyang skyline. Inside supermarkets where shopgirls wear French designer labels, people with money can buy Italian wine, Swiss chocolates, kiwifruit imported from New Zealand and fresh-baked croissants. They can get facials, lie in tanning booths, play a round of mini golf or sip cappuccinos and cocktails while listening to classical music.

More than a million people are using cell phones. Computer shops can't keep up with demand for North Korea's locally distributed tablet computer, popularly known here as "iPads." A shiny new cancer institute features a $900,000 X-ray machine imported from Europe.

Pyongyang has long been a city apart from the rest of North Korea, a showcase capital dubbed a "socialist fairyland" by state media.

A year after leader Kim Jong Un promised in a speech to bring an end to the "era of belt-tightening" and economic hardship in North Korea, the gap between the haves and have-nots has only grown with Pyongyang's transformation.

Beyond the main streets of the capital and in the towns and villages beyond, life is grindingly tough. Food is rationed, electricity is a precious commodity and people get around by walking, cycling or hopping into the backs of trucks. Most homes lack running water or plumbing. Health care is free, but aid workers say medicine is in short supply.

And while the differences between the showcase capital and the hardscrabble countryside grow starker, North Koreans feel the effects of authoritarian rule no matter where they live.

It's illegal for them to interact with foreigners without permission. Very few have access to the Internet. They calibrate their words. Most parrot phrases they've heard in state media, still the safest way to answer questions in a country where state security remains tight and terrifying.

___

For decades, North Korea seemed a country trapped in time. Rickety streetcars shuddered past concrete-block apartment buildings with broken window panes and chipped front steps.

But in 2010 and throughout 2011, as then-leader Kim Jong Il was grooming son Kim Jong Un to succeed him, Pyongyang was a city under construction. Scaffolding covered the fronts of buildings across the city. Red banners painted with slogan "At a breath" ? implying breakneck work at a breathless pace ? fluttered from the skeletons of skyscrapers built by soldiers.

Often, the soldiers were scrawny conscripts in thin canvas sneakers, piling bricks onto stretchers or hauling them by hand. In 2011, soldiers working on the Mansudae District complex set up temporary camps along the Taedong River, makeshift shantytowns decorated by red flags. After tearing down the tents, the soldiers built a playground for children where their encampment once stood.

Their work was focused downtown, on Changjon Street, where ramshackle cottages were torn down to make way for department stores, restaurants and high-rise apartments.

Today, the street would not look out of place in Seoul, Shanghai or Singapore. Indeed, many of the goods ? Hershey's Kisses, Coca-Cola and Doritos ? on sale at the new supermarket were imported from China and Singapore.

Changjon Street reflects a change of thinking in North Korea. For years, foreign goods and customs were regarded with suspicion, even as they were secretly coveted, especially by those who had traveled abroad or had family in Japan or China.

Kim Jong Un has addressed their curiosity by importing goods and by quoting his father in saying North Korea is "looking out onto the world" ? a country that must become familiar with international customs even if it continues to prefer its own.

"What is a 'delicatessen'?" one North Korean at the new supermarket asked as a butcher in a white chef's hat sliced tuna for takeaway sashimi beneath a deli sign written in English. Upstairs, baristas were serving Italian espressos and bakers churned out baguettes and white wedding cakes.

English, language of the North's archenemy, is outstripping Russian and Chinese as the foreign language of choice. Over the past six months, a new TV channel, Ryongnamsan, has aired "Finding Nemo," ''The Lion King" and "Madagascar" in English ? the first broadcasts of American cartoons on North Korean state TV.

Kim has not made it significantly easier for North Koreans to travel, channel surf or read travelogues posted online, but he is arranging to bring the Eiffel Tower and Big Ben to them in the form of a miniature world park slated to open later this year.

And Pyongyang now has a parade of fashionistas in eye-popping belted jackets, sparkly barrettes clipped to their hair, fingernails painted with a clear gloss.

At one beauty salon, the rage is for short cuts made popular by singers from the all-girl Moranbong band who have jazzed up North Korea's staid performance scene with their bobbed hair, little black dresses and electric guitars.

"There are so many young women asking to get their hair done like them," hairstylist Chae Cho Yong said.

Around her, a cavernous barber shop was empty. An employee explained that most North Koreans are at weekly propaganda study sessions on Saturdays, the only day of the week foreigners are allowed inside.

___

The most coveted housing in North Korea, where homes and jobs are doled out by the state or the powerful Workers' Party, is an apartment on Changjon Street.

One new resident, Mun Kang Sun, gave The Associated Press a tour of the apartment she and her husband were given in recognition for her work at the Kim Jong Suk Textile Factory.

A framed wedding portrait hangs on the wall above their Western-style bed. There's a washing machine in the bathroom, an IBM computer in the study and a 42-inch widescreen TV.

Mun said she was an orphan who began working in factories at age 16. She earned the title "hero of the republic" after exceeding her work quota by 200 percent for 13 years. She says she accomplished that by dashing around the factory floor operating four or five machines at once.

"When we heard the news that we'd get a nest where we can rest, and we got the key for our apartment and took a look around, we were totally shocked because the house is so nice," her husband, Kim Hyok, told AP. "It's still hard to believe this is my home; it still feels like we're living in a hotel."

Though the apartment has faucets, old habits die hard. The bathtub was still filled with water, a bucket bobbing in the tub, as in countless homes across the country where water is pumped from a well, carried in by hand and used sparingly.

One by one, North Korean buildings are getting upgraded but most are still drafty, the walls poorly insulated. Elevators and heat are rare. North Koreans are accustomed to wearing winter jackets and thermal underwear indoors from October to April.

Power cuts have been less frequent in Pyongyang as electricity-generating capacity has grown, but it's still common for the lights to go out in the middle of dinner. Most people just carry on drinking and eating.

___

Outside Pyongyang, the power grid offers little relief from the darkness. West of the capital in the town of Ryonggang, lights were out as soon as the sun set. At one inn, two women stood chatting quietly in a lobby lit with a candle as a shrill voice from a radio broadcast chortled from loudspeakers nearby.

Even North Korea's second-largest city, Hamhung, has little of the capital's urban feel.

Few private cars ply the streets in the city, which is the industrial heart of the country. Hamhung's bus line is largely limited to one main route through town. Soldiers cram into the backs of trucks powered by wood-burning stoves that send smoke billowing behind them.

Some people live in relative comfort. Kim Jong Jin's farmhouse in Hamhung is simple but spotless, the papered floors clean enough to eat from. Water is piped into a well in the kitchen. Heat comes from the traditional Korean "ondol" system of feeding an underground furnace with wood. Waste is turned into methane gas for cooking.

Electric service is spotty, but the family has a generator, so they're able to watch movies at night on the TV they carefully cover with a frilly lace veil.

That is luxurious living compared to the poverty that is evident in the countryside.

A mother huddles over a child as she sits shivering by the side of the road. Barefoot boys in a village destroyed by summer flooding are dressed in little more than underwear, the splotchy faces and gaunt frames of young soldiers who do not get enough to eat.

Bicycles are piled high with bundles of firewood, sometimes even a dead pig. Old men sit crouched by the side of the road with bike pumps, offering to fix flats. Oxen plod past pulling carts.

Paved highways pocked with potholes radiate from Pyongyang. But beyond these roads in dire need of repair, there are no roads between the denuded mountains, just dirt paths that become dangerously muddy with rainfall and treacherously slippery in winter. Villagers struggle to clear snow with makeshift shovels crafted out of planks of wood.

___

Life in the North Korean countryside would be familiar to South Koreans old enough to recall the poverty in their nation just after the Korean War. Indeed, into the 1970s, North Korea was the richer of the two Koreas.

Now, more than a quarter of North Korean children are stunted from chronic malnutrition, the World Food Program reported last month.

North Korea blames its growing international economic isolation on the U.S., which has led efforts to punish it for developing its nuclear weapons program. But in the capital, the effects of that isolation are less apparent, thanks largely to goods from China, the North's most important ally, and other countries such as Singapore and Indonesia. Shelves are stocked with goods, computer labs filled with PCs, streets crowded with VWs.

While millions can't afford meat or fish, and subsist on a few potatoes or a bowl of cornmeal noodles each day, the well-to-do in Pyongyang with extra sources of income can buy beef, pomegranates and vine-ripened tomatoes.

There's even a growing cosmopolitan vibe. At one European-style restaurant Friday, a young couple on a date sipped cocktails topped off with Maraschino cherries and feasted on pizza, their cellphones rattling beside them from time to time.

___

Follow AP's bureau chief for Pyongyang and Seoul at www.twitter.com/newsjean.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pyongyang-glitters-rest-nkorea-still-dark-014946168.html

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সোমবার, ২৯ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Steady rain greets Jazz Fest as 1st weekend closes

Kate Pieroudis, of London, England, dances during the performance by Keith Frank & the Soileau Zydeco Band at The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on a rainy Sunday, April 28, 2013 in New Orleans. (AP Photo/The Times-Picayune, Kathleen Flynn)

Kate Pieroudis, of London, England, dances during the performance by Keith Frank & the Soileau Zydeco Band at The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on a rainy Sunday, April 28, 2013 in New Orleans. (AP Photo/The Times-Picayune, Kathleen Flynn)

Keith Frank & the Soileau Zydeco Band perfrom at The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival sponsored on a rainy Sunday, April 28, 2013 in New Orleans. (AP Photo/The Times-Picayune, Kathleen Flynn)

Art Neville salutes the crowd as the Nevilles Brothers play at The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on a rainy Sunday, April 28, 2013 in New Orleans. (AP Photo/The Times-Picayune, Kathleen Flynn)

(AP) ? A steady, sometimes heavy rain pelted fans Sunday at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, but the music flowed on.

A soaked Dave Matthews and his band played through a strong downpour at the tail end of the closing weekend, much to the fans' delight as they danced along with him and cheered him through the bad weather.

Matthews ended his performance just before a flash of lightning and strong thunder echoed his goodbyes to the crowd, which stretched to the back track and beyond despite the weather, as is usual for that stage.

Umbrellas, rain boots and plastic ponchos were out in abundance early as fans stood among the puddles and water-soaked grass, awaiting clearer skies. The rain had stopped for a time in the afternoon, but came back in time to drench the evening crowd.

Paul Rother, of Venice Beach, Calif., said he and his friend, Mark Sender, of Hollywood, drove 2,300 miles to attend this year's festival, and a little rain wasn't going to make them stay inside.

"The bands go on, rain or shine. I was at Woodstock. It rained there, too," he said, laughing.

Rother, a first-timer to the festival, said he decided to attend after Sender spoke so highly of the city and the event.

"New Orleans is the best city in America," Sender said. "And since Katrina, I've wanted to contribute to the economy as much as I can."

As Steven and Jessica Kennedy pushed their 2 ?-year-old daughter, Miriam, in a stroller, the New Orleans residents said weather wouldn't deter them from getting out to hear the likes of the Nevilles, the Dave Matthews Band and B.B. King.

"She wanted to come more than we did," Jessica Kennedy said of the toddler. "We're prepared. We have a lot of rain gear."

"There are 600 bands here," added Steven Kennedy. "You can't beat the price of the ticket for that kind of talent and you get a good mix of national and local artists."

A torrential downpour blew through about 5 p.m. CDT, shortly before the day's final artists would take the stage, sending fans inside any shelter they could find, including covered tents, such as the one where jazz songstress Dianne Reeves entertained a standing-room-only crowd. Reeves canceled last year's scheduled appearance after her mother died.

Fans enthusiastically embraced her when she took the stage and sang her rendition of Lena Horne's "Stormy Weather" and Fleetwood Mac's "Dreams."

"It's such a pleasure and honor to be here with you tonight," Reeves told the crowd, who cheered in response. "We made it through the rain and storm clouds now sit back and relax and enjoy the music."

Calvin Cherry, of Newport News, Va., said when he saw Reeves was on this year's lineup, he knew instantly that he'd be in the house. Cherry, a professional dancer, said Reeves' voice is like "poetry in motion."

"It's so mysterious, so haunting and has such a deep and guttural quality that it's just phenomenal. There are spaces in her voice that just resonate with me and for me to use my body to interpret her music, it's just kismet," he said.

The downpour stopped the music shortly on at least one stage, as crews rushed to cover equipment at the height of the storm. But the sweet sounds of the Gipsy Kings ? a group from Arles and Montpellier in the south of France who perform in Spanish ? quickly returned when the rain slowed to a drizzle.

Just before 7 p.m., another line of severe weather dumped rain on the remaining fans, who stuck it out with Matthews until the end of his set.

Festival producer Quint Davis thanked Matthews for his effort and encouraged fans to return on Thursday when the festival resumes.

New Orleans artists Khris Royal & Dark Matter played the Gentilly Stage early Sunday as pockets of fest-faithfuls grooved and danced to his funky saxophone opening instrumental. Keith Frank & the Soileau Zydeco Band also enticed fans to the front of the nearby Fais Do-Do stage, where couples rocked a two-step to the band's steady beat.

The Nevilles, without brother Aaron, performed just before the Dave Matthews Band, which closed the fest's first weekend and largest stage.

"We almost didn't come," said Sandy Diaz, of Ocean Springs, Miss., after singing along and dancing with the Nevilles on "Meet de Boys on the Battlefront."

"It's a little disappointing that Aaron's not up there with him, but I'm excited about seeing Trombone Shorty next weekend," she said.

Trombone Shorty, whose real name is Troy Andrews, will close the largest stage May 5, the final day of the festival, which is held over two weekends annually.

___

Associated Press writer Stacey Plaisance contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-28-Music-Jazz%20Fest/id-c14b78c9b7db4fba90e4b1a959388204

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Negative Feedbacks: What They Are, and Why They Are Important (Powerlineblog)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/302230757?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Bayer to buy birth-control devices maker for $1.1 billion

By Ludwig Burger

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Germany's Bayer AG has agreed to buy U.S. contraceptive devices maker Conceptus for $1.1 billion, aiming to underpin its position as the world's largest women's healthcare provider,

Bayer, whose shares were down 2.3 percent by 0823 GMT, will launch a public tender offer to acquire all Conceptus shares for $31.00 each in cash, in an offer agreed with Conceptus's management, Bayer said on Monday.

That is a premium of 19.7 percent over the stock's closing price on Friday and a multiple of about 30 times the adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) that Conceptus is targeting for this year.

Shares in global healthcare equipment and services companies on average trade at 9 times annual EBITDA, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine.

Bayer's women's healthcare business had sales of 3.15 billion euros ($4.1 billion) last year, from products including its Yasmin contraceptive pill and Mirena intrauterine device.

"Our experience in the field of gynecology combined with our sales and distribution expertise will help to further develop Conceptus' business," said Andreas Fibig, head of Bayer unit HealthCare Pharmaceuticals.

Conceptus, which makes inserts that are placed into the fallopian tubes as a permanent non-hormonal contraceptive, had $28.2 million in adjusted EBITDA last year on sales of $141 million.

The U.S. company has forecast 2013 adjusted EBITDA of between $34 million and $37 million on sales of between $155 million and $159 million.

Bayer Chief Executive Marijn Dekkers took the post in 2010 with a reputation for being able to handle transformational takeovers, but the Conceptus deal, expected to close by mid-year, is the latest in a line of small and medium-sized buys.

Last September Bayer agreed to buy Teva's U.S. animal health operations for up to $145 million, following the purchase of AgraQuest, a developer of bacteria to fight plant disease, for at least $425 million.

(Editing by David Holmes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bayer-buy-birth-control-devices-maker-1-1-082721088.html

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Obama Yuks It Up With Celebrities At The White House Correspondent?s Dinner (VIDEO)

Obama Yuks It Up With Celebrities At The White House Correspondent’s Dinner (VIDEO)

Obama with bangs photoPresident Barack Obama made fun of his critics, the media, and himself during the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on Saturday. The event was filled with celebrities as Obama joked about not being the “strapping Muslim socialist” he used to be these days. The president slammed Republicans for not working with him on policy ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/obama-yuks-it-up-with-celebrities-at-the-white-house-correspondents-dinner-video/

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PFT: Patience rewarded from top to bottom in draft

dj-haydenGetty Images

After analyzing?the draft needs of all 32 teams, PFT will review how well each team addressed those needs. Up next: The Oakland Raiders.?

What?they?needed: Defensive line, quarterback, offensive line, cornerback, tight end, wide receiver.

Who they got:
Round 1: D.J. Hayden, CB, Houston.
Round 2: Menelik Watson, OT, Florida State.
Round 3: Sio Moore, LB, Connecticut.
Round 4: Tyler Wilson, QB, Arkansas.
Round 6: Nick Kasa, TE, Colorado.
Round 6: Latavius Murray, RB, UCF.
Round 6: Mychal Rivera, TE, Tennessee.
Round 6: Stacy McGee, DT, Oklahoma.
Round 7: Brice Butler, WR, San Diego State.
Round 7: David Bass, DE, Missouri Western.

Where they hit: Hayden, who survived a freakish life-threatening internal injury suffered in November, could be the Raiders? top cornerback in short order. With the second-rounder acquired from Miami, the Raiders added Watson, a tackle prospect with upside. Moore is a good scheme fit, and Wilson could prove a very good value if he plays to his best collegiate form.

Where they missed: The Raiders didn?t draft a defensive lineman until Round Six. There?s playing time to be had for ends Bass and Jack Crawford (2012 fifth-rounder) and tackles McGee and Christo Bilukidi (2012 sixth-rounder) behind the Raiders? veteran starters, but Oakland could use a little more help at both line positions. In McKenzie?s defense, the Raiders have numerous needs, and on first analysis, he did quite well to add talent and depth in this draft.

Impact rookies: Given the state of the Raiders? roster, all 10 drafted rookies have a chance to make the team, and several could earn game-day snaps of consequence in Year One, so we?re going to cast a slightly wider net than usual here.

Hayden has the best shot to start. He should compete with Tracy Porter and Mike Jenkins right off the bat. Moore is also a player to watch; the Raiders have revamped their LB corps this offseason but don?t have any standouts. A talented fresh face has a chance to make an impact early at this position. Watson?s best opportunity to start in 2013 is at right tackle, but that?s no sure thing, given his lack of experience.

Rivera is a potential sleeper, given the Raiders? lack of a clear-cut top target at tight end after the departure of Brandon Myers. And then we come to Wilson. Matt Flynn will get first run at the starting job. Wilson will have to be a quick study to challenge Flynn and Terrelle Pryor. However, it?s not out of the realm of possibility.

Long-term prospects: Give McKenzie credit ? this roster has improved at numerous positions compared to where it stood earlier in the spring. In the best-case scenario for the Raiders? Class of 2013, these three things happen: 1) Hayden is a starter-caliber player from the get-go; 2) Watson and Wilson build on their potential; 3) the Day Three picks other than Wilson provide solid depth, with one or two panning out better than Oakland expected.

Make no mistake: the Raiders have a lot of catching up to do in the AFC West. However, there?s vast opportunity for some young players to seize some key roles. The Raiders have to hope more than a few rise to the occasion.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/27/draft-wrap-up-patience-is-rewarded/related/

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DNA at 60: Still Much to Learn

On the diamond jubilee of the double helix, we should admit that we don't fully understand how evolution works at the molecular level, suggests Philip Ball


DNA

Image: Wikimedia Commons/Yikrazuul

This week's diamond jubilee of the discovery of DNA's molecular structure rightly celebrates how Francis Crick, James Watson and their collaborators launched the 'genomic age' by revealing how hereditary information is encoded in the double helix. Yet the conventional narrative ? in which their 1953 Nature paper led inexorably to the Human Genome Project and the dawn of personalized medicine ? is as misleading as the popular narrative of gene function itself, in which the DNA sequence is translated into proteins and ultimately into an organism's observable characteristics, or phenotype.

Sixty years on, the very definition of 'gene' is hotly debated. We do not know what most of our DNA does, nor how, or to what extent it governs traits. In other words, we do not fully understand how evolution works at the molecular level.

That sounds to me like an extraordinarily exciting state of affairs, comparable perhaps to the disruptive discovery in cosmology in 1998 that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating rather than decelerating, as astronomers had believed since the late 1920s. Yet, while specialists debate what the latest findings mean, the rhetoric of popular discussions of DNA, genomics and evolution remains largely unchanged, and the public continues to be fed assurances that DNA is as solipsistic a blueprint as ever.

The more complex picture now emerging raises difficult questions that this outsider knows he can barely discern. But I can tell that the usual tidy tale of how 'DNA makes RNA makes protein' is sanitized to the point of distortion. Instead of occasional, muted confessions from genomics boosters and popularizers of evolution that the story has turned out to be a little more complex, there should be a bolder admission ? indeed a celebration ? of the known unknowns.

DNA dispute
A student referring to textbook discussions of genetics and evolution could be forgiven for thinking that the 'central dogma' devised by Crick and others in the 1960s ? in which information flows in a linear, traceable fashion from DNA sequence to messenger RNA to protein, to manifest finally as phenotype ? remains the solid foundation of the genomic revolution. In fact, it is beginning to look more like a casualty of it.

Although it remains beyond serious doubt that Darwinian natural selection drives much, perhaps most, evolutionary change, it is often unclear at which phenotypic level selection operates, and particularly how it plays out at the molecular level.

Take the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project, a public research consortium launched by the US National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. Starting in 2003, ENCODE researchers set out to map which parts of human chromosomes are transcribed, how transcription is regulated and how the process is affected by the way the DNA is packaged in the cell nucleus. Last year, the group revealed that there is much more to genome function than is encompassed in the roughly 1% of our DNA that contains some 20,000 protein-coding genes ? challenging the old idea that much of the genome is junk. At least 80% of the genome is transcribed into RNA.

Some geneticists and evolutionary biologists say that all this extra transcription may simply be noise, irrelevant to function and evolution. But, drawing on the fact that regulatory roles have been pinned to some of the non-coding RNA transcripts discovered in pilot projects, the ENCODE team argues that at least some of this transcription could provide a reservoir of molecules with regulatory functions ? in other words, a pool of potentially 'useful' variation. ENCODE researchers even propose, to the consternation of some, that the transcript should be considered the basic unit of inheritance, with 'gene' denoting not a piece of DNA but a higher-order concept pertaining to all the transcripts that contribute to a given phenotypic trait.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=22468e1a163e79ec52d768c51bb020a7

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OpenMobile ACL for webOS resurrected on Kickstarter, hopes to bring Android apps to HP Touchpad

OpenMobile ACL for webOS resurrected on Kickstarter, hopes to bring Android apps to HP Touchpad

The promise of OpenMobile's Application Compatibility Layer is inciting: seamlessly run Android apps on another operating system as if it was meant to be there. Unfortunately for fans of Palm's last hurrah, the project's webOS port died with the HP Touchpad. That won't stop dedicated fans, however -- Phoenix International Communications plans to resurrect webOS ACL. Taking the project to Kickstarter, the team has showed an early build of the project on an HP Touchpad, seamlessly running Android apps in cards alongside native webOS applications. Phoenix hopes that a functional ACL will reduce Touchpad owner's reliance on dual-booting Android, giving them the freedom to enjoy webOS without sacrificing functionality. The team is promising a relatively short development time, thanks to OpenMobile's early work, and hopes to deliver a consumer ready build in July. But first the Kickstarter campaign will need to meet its $35,000 goal. Interested in pitching in? Check out the Kickstarter link at the source.

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Source: Kickstarter

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/28/openmobile-acl-for-webos-resurrected-on-kickstarter/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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AP PHOTOS: Survivors found in Bangladesh collapse

Working round-the-clock, rescuers have pulled more than two dozen survivors from the rubble of a Bangladesh garment factory that collapsed 4 days ago, killing some 350 people.

From within the wreckage, "We are still getting response from survivors though they are becoming weaker slowly," said Brig. Gen. Ali Ahmed Khan, the head of the fire services.

"The building is very vulnerable. Any time the floors could collapse. We are performing an impossible task, but we are glad that we are able to rescue so many survivors," he said.

The disaster is the worst ever for the country's booming and powerful garment industry, surpassing a fire five months ago that killed 112 and brought widespread pledges to improve worker-safety standards.

Here are some images from the recovery scene.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photos-survivors-found-bangladesh-collapse-163536116.html

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Royals make magic with ?Harry Potter? wands



>>> the news because they did something -- anything really. the duke and duchess of cambridge along with prince harry toured the new harry potter exhibit at the warner brothers theme park near london, getting their own wands and a few lessons in how to use them. other reportable things they did was take a walk and then they had lunch. just wanted to pass that along. it was a busy day for them.

>> they were breathing too.

>> i read somewhere, she is wearing a polka dot dress there and wherever she bought it from they sold out immediately.

>> it's amazing how that happens.

>> not stuff i normally read.

>> sure he doesn't. right?

>> you digest it. you process. now you told america.

>> i didn't know the name of the store. you have to google it.

>> he just know. just not telling.

>> top shop?

>> there you go. but you can't get it anymore.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2b3e54b8/l/0Lvideo0Btoday0Bmsnbc0Bmsn0N0Cid0C51685677/story01.htm

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রবিবার, ২৮ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Facts About Hearing Aid Repairs ? Hot Article Depot

Hearing aid repairs is an important part of owning the hearing devices. For these devices to perform their work to the fullest, the owner must maintain them well. Failure to do this will result in the devices malfunctioning.

One of the reasons why these devices need repair is the fact that wax will always accumulate in the ears. There are those devices that are worn inside the ear canal; these are the most affected compared to the ones that are worn outside the ear. This is because of the fact that there is more wax inside the ear than outside.

Water is another factor will necessitate these aid repairs. It should be noted that these aids are basically electrostatics devices. This means that water should not be allowed to penetrate into the circuits. This is because water will essentially cause a short circuit.

There are some instances when the devices may malfunction because of an electronic problem. These circumstances are rare. It should be noted that this situation can only be handled by the experts. Attempting to fix such a situation on your own can have a lot of implications. You may lose the warranty that you had for the device. This can be a big blow if the gadget was expensive. This means that you now have to pay for the device to be repaired.

Hearing aid repairs needs to be done regularly so that the wearer can be assured of their performance. The smaller devices need to be assessed more often than the larger ones. The reason for this is that these are more susceptible to damage than the larger ones.

The frequency of repair or maintenance may be influenced by a lot of factors. This is obviously how much a person sweats or how much works they form. This means that the more you sweat, the more frequently you should take your devices for maintenance. The more wax you form, the more times you need to seek maintenance. Generally, the smaller devices need repair after every 8 months. The larger devices on the other hand will need repair after 15 months.

Maintenance of these devices can be done the user of the device. This means that they can clean the device alone. This applies only for the minor cleaning. If the device needs to be checked inside, then this should be done by either the manufacturer or the audiologist. This is because doing this alone can result in damaging the equipment.

While cleaning the device, never use water. It should be known that water can have negative implication on the functioning of this device. The reason for this is that water can easily cause a short circuit which is damaging to the device.

Hearing aid repairs can attract a variety of charges. The difference on the amount charged is based on a number of factors. One of those factors is the type of device. The smaller devices will always cost more than the larger ones. The other factor is the type of repair that needs to be done.

Read more about Facts About Hearing Aid Repairs visiting our website.

Source: http://hotarticledepot.com/facts-about-hearing-aid-repairs/

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Twinkies return by midsummer? Hostess factories reopening soon.

Twinkies will return, announced the company that bought partnership that bought Hostess Brands' snack cake lines, including Twinkies.

By Associated Press / April 25, 2013

Twinkies first came onto the scene in 1930 and contained real fruit until rationing during World War II led to the now-standard vanilla cream Twinkies.

Interstate Bakeries Corporation / AP

Enlarge

The partnership that bought Hostess Brands' snack cake lines, including Twinkies, has announced it will reopen the bakery in Emporia this summer, with 250 employees to start.

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The private equity groups Apollo Global Management and Metropolis & Co. ? now doing business as Hostess Brands LLC ? recently paid $410 million for the rights to buy the Hostess and Dolly Madison snack cake lines as well as five plants, including the one in Emporia.

But Emporia City Commissioner Jon Geitz told KVOE-AM there had been no assurance the local bakery would reopen, so Thursday's announcement was good news.

"Having 250, 300 new employees coming in is a big win for the community," Geitz said, noting the plant and the city had been "'good partners for nearly 40 years."

Hostess Brands LLC said hiring is already underway for an initial 250 employees. The company is aiming for a total workforce of about 300 over the next several years, and the plant will be expanded. Officials hope it will start turning out Twinkies, HoHos and other Hostess mainstays by mid- to late summer.

Company spokesman Mike Cramer declined comment on whether union employees would be a part of the picture. More than 90 percent of the plant's employees at the time of the shutdown were union members.

Geitz is vice president of the Regional Development Association of Eastern Kansas, which together with Emporia Mayor Bobbi Mlynar worked to convince the new owners to reopen the plant.

In a statement issued by the company, Mlynar said the plant has been a "good corporate citizen in our community. We look forward to the same type of relationship with the new owners."

Kansas officials also worked for the reopening.

"Certainly the city and state were way out in front, trying to stay in touch, seeing what they could do to help," Cramer said.

With the plant idle since November, Cramer said a lot of work is needed to make the plant current. Besides cleaning and maintenance, the company is investing in new equipment and refurbishing existing equipment. It is also changing its packaging and shipping methods before starting to roll out cake products.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/3l78x0F9cJ8/Twinkies-return-by-midsummer-Hostess-factories-reopening-soon

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শনিবার, ২৭ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

George Jones: Why he was the greatest ever

By Matthew Diebel, NBC News

Opinion:?Johnny Cash had a stock answer to that oft-asked question, "Who is your favorite singer?" "You mean," he teased, "apart from George Jones?"

Yes, there's pretty much universal agreement among country singers that Jones, who died Friday at age 81, was the greatest of all time. From the oldies -- Cash, Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard -- to the relative newbies -- Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson, Randy Travis -- all were of one mind.

And even non-country singers appreciated him -- none other than Frank Sinatra called him "the second best white singer in America." (No prizes for guessing first place)

What they loved was that rarest of combinations: a seamless voice -- no change of tone and timbre between low and high registers -- exquisite phrasing, and enough soul to rival Ray Charles and Otis Redding.

I believe, though, that there is also a case to be made that Jones was?the greatest American popular singer ever recorded. The ones usually named are Charles, Billie Holliday, Sinatra, Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin. I would argue that he has them beaten on all counts. Sinatra's phrasing, without Sinatra's forcedness. Charles's soul, without Charles's hamminess. Franklin's power, but without Franklin's screeches. Holliday's ability to laugh at his troubles, but without her self-pity. (Redding, though brilliant, was not tested by a long career.)

So, why isn't he usually mentioned among this pantheon? Why, when I bring up my Jones obsession, do people say, "Isn't that the guy who was married to Tammy Wynette?"

Partly because, somehow, he didn't manage to die young.

Also because country music has hardly ever been cool. Mostly, it has operated in its own universe, rarely crossing over into the pop world. And the artists who have had mainstream hits, such as the brilliant Patsy Cline, are about as far removed on the country spectrum from Jones as you can get.

And partly because he was drunk and/or high most of the time, a fact that made his career trajectory one of a few highs and many lows. Jones loved the music fiercely, but the limelight frightened him, a fear that led him to inoculate himself with the bottle and harder drugs, which in turn resulted, famously, in missed concerts, exasperated record companies and fuming fans. And his lack of self-control led him to sign contracts he was too bombed to understand, leaving him to be dragged into session after session to mouth lyrics that he should have known were rubbish. He put out (literally) hundreds of albums, mostly filled with trash.

Among the dreck, though, were diamonds. Quite a few, in fact, including 15 No. 1 hits (and dozens of Top 10 ones), starting with "White Lightning" in 1959. If Jones honed in on a song he liked, he put his heart and soul into it.

His biggest success came in the '70s and early '80s with such hits as "The Door" and "He Stopped Loving Her Today," the latter often cited as the greatest recorded country performance of all time. I think, though, that his best recording came in the early '60s before his long association with producer Billy Sherrill, the Nashville schlockmeister he signed with in 1972, after he met Wynette and with whom he made "He Stopped Loving Her Today.? It's not that I don't like the later material; it's just that the earlier tracks, free of the dubious delights of massed violins and warbling choruses, highlight his incredible voice. At the same time, enhanced studio technology -- including the newly created stereo -- had improved on the sound quality that marked his rudimentary early discs.

Jones was best known for his ballads, especially in the later part of his career; however, he was actually a greater master of fast-paced material. His rhythmic genius was particularly effective when matched with a tight session band, such as with "Mr. Fool," a driving honky-tonker about lost love that is perhaps the supreme recorded example of Jones's exquisite phrasing. "No one can ever call me Mr. Fool no more," runs the last line of the chorus. Each of four renditions of the phrase takes you on a spellbinding journey of his vocal arsenal -- swooping, clipping, playing with the beat, riding herd on the back-up band. In those lines, as with the rest of the song, you never know where Jones is going to lead you; at the same time, none of it sounds forced or contrived. The whole happy confection is aided by the spare production of his first producer (and discoverer), Pappy Daily.

I also think that the early '60s, when "Mr. Fool" was recorded, was when he was at his vocal peak. Writers often rave about how Sherrill persuaded Jones to explore a greater range, but the high-lonesome sound on this cut has a rawness and emotion that travels even further into the heart than his later efforts. (If you agree, "Cup of Loneliness," a 1994 double-CD, is worth the investment. It has 51 songs -- with hardly a dud -- excellent liner notes, and has been carefully re-mastered from the original recordings.)

Mark Humphrey / AP

What these songs do is breathe emotion. In his never-equaled way, Jones drifts across the beat, never failing to surprise with a speeded-up phrase or a well-placed drawn-out note. At the same time, he never made a mush of the lyrics; one of his great assets was that the listener understands every word.

Jones just sounds so sad, it's painful. He's as sad-sounding as Hank Williams at his most abject. Of course, the difference is that Jones could sing, whereas Williams only wailed. Some words are clipped, some are stretched and played with, as only Jones did. Some lines are almost whispered; others cried out -- all beautifully set up by man who really understood -- whether by design or instinct -- what to do with a lyric.

High and lonesome, but not always alone. A measure of Jones' greatness was his generosity and skill as a duetist. Most often, he took the harmony part -- the most difficult -- and never sought to dominate. His most famous duets, of course, were with third wife Wynette ("Golden Ring," "We?re Going to Hold On"), but probably his best are with Melba Montgomery in the mid-'60s. In these collaborations, he was the much bigger star and could easily have hogged the sessions. But no -- these are real duets, not a lead singer with a backup.

As a live performer, Jones was even more mixed than his records. He could be very lazy and unfocused, leading to lackluster concerts that were intensely disappointing. But when he was on, it was electrifying. I feel bad saying this, but the drunker and higher he was, the better was his performance. It seemed that the more reason was stripped from his mind, the better he sang, as if his emotions were uncontrolled and he was operating on instinct alone.

I will never forget one concert I witnessed, in the early '80s, when he was at the depth of his drinking and drugging. As was his usual pattern, he had his band, the Jones Boys, warm up the audience with several songs. But the tunes just kept on coming, and there was no George. After about six songs, there he was, literally being dragged onto the stage. "Oh, no," I thought, "he?s going to be terrible." It was the best concert I ever saw. In contrast, the ones I witnessed when he was stone-cold sober (or a near facsimile) tended to be rote and unrewarding, with Jones making light of his material -- "slobbing tear-jerkers" was how he disparaged some of his greatest songs.

Quite simply, no one else -- before, then or now -- was capable of his vocal fireworks, or at least carrying it off without making it sound like he or she is showing off. That was one of the joys of Jones: Though he had every tool at his disposal, he never used them other than to enhance the song.

That?s why he was often called "the singers? singer." Powerful, yet somehow understated. Apparently revealing raw personal emotion, but at the same time a mystery. If one were to compare him to a painter, I pick Velazquez.

Unlike Velazquez, though, who was loved and lauded by his patrons, Jones was too wild and uncompromising for the tastes of the Nashville establishment, a factor that kept him from its greatest prizes until relatively late in his career.

For instance, on the cover of one of Jones' early 1960s albums is a photo of him next to an incongruously inset picture of the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville. Somehow, though, Jones didn't make it in until 1992 after many inferior singers had been chosen for admission.

That's like making Babe Ruth wait until the '70s to get into Cooperstown.

Was Jones the greatest ever? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

Matt Diebel is a senior producer for NBCNews.com. He has been listening to George Jones since he was a teen in England. His son is named George.

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/04/26/11292071-george-jones-the-greatest-american-pop-singer-ever-recorded?lite

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U.S. won't allow Castro's daughter to visit Philly

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? The daughter of Cuba President Raul Castro cannot visit Philadelphia to receive an award for her gay rights activism because the State Department has denied her permission to travel there, officials said Thursday.

Mariela Castro had been expected to attend a conference next week on civil rights for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities sponsored by the Equality Forum, according to Malcolm Lazin, the advocacy group's executive director.

"We find it shocking that our State Department would deny freedom of speech, particularly at an international civil rights summit, to anyone, let alone the Cuban president's daughter," Lazin said.

State Department spokesman Noel Clay said he could not comment on the case because visa records are confidential.

Mariela Castro, the niece of retired leader Fidel Castro, is director of Cuba's National Center for Sex Education. As that country's most prominent gay rights activist, she has instituted awareness campaigns, trained police on relations with the LGBT community and has lobbied lawmakers to legalize same-sex unions.

Guillermo Suarez, spokesman for Cuba's United Nations Mission, confirmed that Mariela Castro was in New York on Thursday attending meetings related to the U.N. population conference in Cairo in 1994. She is one of the experts designated by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to work on the 20-year follow-up to the action plan adopted in Egypt, Suarez said.

"That's why she asked for the visa and it's the reason for her presence in New York," he said.

Suarez said Castro "doesn't have any personal reaction" to the State Department's denial of her request to travel to Philadelphia.

The State Department bars Cuban diplomats from traveling more than 25 miles from central Manhattan.

The Philadelphia-based Equality Forum sponsors an annual, dayslong international summit on LGBT civil rights. Each year, the event spotlights issues being faced by the LGBT community in a particular nation; this year, the featured nation is Cuba.

Lazin said Castro had agreed to speak on a panel about Cuba on May 4 and was to accept an award for her activism at a dinner that night. He did not expect any visa problems because she had been granted permission to attend an academic conference in San Francisco last year.

However, a number of Cuban-American politicians criticized the State Department for issuing Castro an entry visa for that event. They noted that U.S. rules prohibit Communist Party members and other high-ranking Cuban government officials from entry without special dispensation.

Castro has no official link to the government aside from kinship, although the sex education center is part of Cuba's public health ministry.

___

Associated Press writer Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.

___

Online:

www.equalityforum.org

___

Follow Kathy Matheson at www.twitter.com/kmatheson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-wont-allow-castros-daughter-visit-philly-001327257.html

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Sheriff: Woman killed by lion after she left cage door open

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Authorities in Central California said Thursday that a volunteer worker killed in a lion attack at an animal park accidentally caused her own death by leaving the animal's door open.

Fresno County Sheriff's Capt. Steve Wilkins said that his office has closed its investigation of Dianna Hanson's death by determining it was an "unfortunate accident."

"We've determined that it was an accident and there was no criminal liability toward the park's owner," Wilkins said. "Based on the results of the investigation, it was an accident."

Wilkins said Hanson, a 24-year-old intern at Cat Haven, failed to secure the door to a feeding cage where the lion was sitting while she cleaned an adjacent closure.

Hanson's family had been kept in the loop as the sheriff's office probe was taking place, Wilkins said. They were notified quickly when the investigation was completed, the sheriff's captain said.

"She accidentally left the door open. It was an unfortunate accident," Wilkins added. "The case is closed."

A 550-pound Barbary lion named Cous Cous escaped from the partially closed feeding cage on March 6 and struck Hanson, who died immediately from a broken neck, according to the coroner's autopsy report.

Sheriff's deputies shot the lion after it couldn't be coaxed away from Hanson's body.

The sheriff's office investigation comes after the U.S. Department of Agriculture recently found that Cat Haven, a 100-acre private zoo run by the nonprofit group Project Survival, had proper safety procedures in place for feeding the animals and cleaning the enclosures.

Hanson's family told The Associated Press last month that they believe no rules were broken at the wild animal park in Dunlap, Calif., and that her death was not a mauling, but rather a tragic accident.

"We're thankful to know she didn't suffer," Hanson's brother, Paul R. Hanson, said. "It wasn't a vicious attack ... because you would expect severe lacerations and biting on the neck and that was not the case."

Hanson had been working for two months as an intern at Cat Haven. Her father, Paul Hanson, described his daughter last month as a "fearless" lover of big cats and said her goal was to work with the animals at an accredited zoo.

She died doing what she loved, he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sheriff-woman-killed-lion-left-door-open-014546937.html

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শুক্রবার, ২৬ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Former government lawyer charged with espionage

By Lawrence Hurley

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. prosecutors on Thursday alleged that a former federal government lawyer helped the Cuban intelligence service recruit a woman who was later sentenced to 25 years in prison for spying.

An indictment filed in 2004 was unsealed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia charging Marta Rita Velazquez with conspiracy to commit espionage for her alleged role in recruiting Ana Belen Montes to the Cuban intelligence service and helping her get a federal government job.

Velazquez and Montes became friends while studying together at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C. in the early 1980s, according to the indictment.

In 1984, Velazquez took Montes to New York, where they met with a Cuban intelligence officer, the government alleged. Velazquez, who the Justice Department said kept in contact with Cuba via encrypted messages, also traveled with Montes to Cuba in 1985, according to the indictment.

Velazquez now lives in Sweden and is unlikely to ever face trial, a federal law enforcement official said. During her government career, Velazquez worked as a lawyer at the U.S. Agency for International Development, where she had top secret security clearance.

Montes, who worked at the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency for 16 years, was arrested in 2001 and later pleaded guilty to an espionage offense. She is still serving her prison sentence.

The indictment against Velazquez was originally filed in 2004 but kept sealed until Thursday.

Velazquez, who is from Puerto Rico, left the United States in 2002 after news of Montes's guilty plea, according to the Justice Department.

A Justice Department official said Velazquez was aware of the charge and that there was no longer any reason to keep the indictment sealed. The extradition treaty between the United States and Sweden does not allow for extraditions for espionage, the official added.

(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Howard Goller and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-announces-espionage-charge-against-former-government-lawyer-211714192.html

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