Saturday, August 31, 2013

Syria defiant as UN chemical probe nears end

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) ? President Bashar Assad vowed Thursday that "Syria will defend itself" against Western military strikes over a suspected chemical weapons attack, and the U.N. said inspectors will leave within 48 hours carrying information that could be crucial to what happens next.

British Prime Minister David Cameron argued strongly for military intervention in Syria but was rejected in a preliminary vote in Parliament, while French defense officials said openly for the first time that their military is preparing for a possible operation. The Obama administration was briefing congressional leaders about its case for attacking Syria.

The U.S., Britain and France blame Assad's regime for the alleged chemical weapons attack Aug. 21 on rebel-held suburbs of Damascus. The Syrian government denies the allegations, saying rebels staged the attack to frame the regime.

At the United Nations, a meeting of the permanent members of the Security Council on the Syrian crisis ended after less than an hour after being convened by Russia, a staunch ally of the Assad regime.

As Western leaders made their case at home for intervening in Syria's 3-year-old civil war, Assad remained defiant.

"Threats to launch a direct aggression against Syria will make it more adherent to its well-established principles and sovereign decisions stemming from the will of its people, and Syria will defend itself against any aggression," he said in comments reported by the Syrian state news agency.

It's not clear whether Assad would retaliate against any attacks or try to ride them out in hopes of minimizing the threat to his continued rule. The U.S. has said regime change it not the objective of any military action it may carry out.

The U.N. experts have been carrying out on-site investigations this week to determine whether chemical weapons were used in the attack that the group Doctors Without Borders says killed 355 people. Inspectors visited the eastern suburb of Zamalka, where they interviewed survivors and collected samples.

Amateur video posted online showed U.N. inspectors in gas masks walking through the rubble of a damaged building. One inspector scooped pulverized debris from the ground, placed it in a glass container and wrapped the container in a plastic bag. The video corresponded to other AP reporting of the events depicted.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged Western powers to hold off on any military action until the experts can present their findings to U.N. member states and the Security Council. Speaking in Vienna, Ban said the U.N. team is to leave Syria on Saturday morning and will immediately report to him. He also said that he spoke to President Barack Obama about ways to expedite the U.N. probe.

Some of the experts will take samples to laboratories in Europe after leaving Damascus, according to U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq, adding that the team's final report will depend on the lab results and could take "more than days."

The mandate of the U.N. team is to determine whether chemical agents were used in the attack, not who was responsible. But Haq suggested that evidence collected by investigators ? including biological samples and interviews ? might give an indication of who was behind the attack.

"Their mission is to determine whether chemical weapons were used. It's not about attribution. At the same time, I would like to point out that they will have large number of facts at their disposal ? they have collected a considerable amount of evidence through samples, evidence through witness interviews ? and they can construct from that evidence of a fact-based narrative that can get at the key facts of what happened on the 21 of August," Haq said.

British and American leaders ? who have put the blame for the attack squarely on the regime's shoulders ? faced pushback against possible punitive military strikes, particularly before the investigators release their conclusions.

In a stunning defeat Thursday night, Cameron's government lost a preliminary vote calling for military strikes. Although nonbinding, the rejection means Cameron's hands are tied and he released a terse statement to Parliament saying it was clear to him that the British people did not want to see military action.

The vote lost 285-272 and the prime minister said he would respect the will of the House of Commons.

At the start of the week, Cameron had seemed ready to join Washington in possible military action against Assad. But the push for strikes against the Syrian regime began to lose momentum as Britain's Labour Party announced its opposition to the move.

Cameron promised to give the U.N. inspectors time to report back to the U.N. Security Council and try to secure a resolution there. He also promised to give lawmakers a second vote in a bid to assuage fears that Britain was being rushed into an attack on Assad.

It wasn't enough, however. Suspicions lingered that what was billed as a limited campaign would turn into an Iraq-style quagmire.

Obama also was trying to shore up political support for a move against Syria. The administration planned briefings for leaders of the House and Senate and national security committees, U.S. officials and congressional aides said.

Obama, although still reportedly weighing his options, signaled Wednesday the U.S. was moving toward a punitive strike, saying he has "concluded" that Assad's regime is behind the attacks and that there "need to be international consequences."

U.S. intelligence officials said the intelligence linking Assad or his inner circle to the Aug. 21 attack is no sure thing, with questions remaining about who controls some of Syria's chemical weapons stores and doubts about whether Assad ordered the strike.

The administration has signaled that it would act against the Syrian government even without the backing of allies or the U.N.

French defense officials said publicly for the first time that their military is preparing for a possible operation in Syria ? but President Francois Hollande stopped short of announcing armed intervention.

Unlike Obama and Cameron, he has a freer hand to decide how to deal with the crisis ? Hollande does not need parliamentary approval to launch military action that lasts less than four months.

French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said "the armed forces have been put in position to respond" if Hollande commits French forces to an international intervention.

France has a dozen cruise missile-capable fighter aircraft at bases in the United Arab Emirates and the Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti. France's military was at the forefront of the NATO-led attacks on Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011, and led an intervention against extremists in Mali earlier this year.

The U.S. has already dispatched naval forces toward the eastern Mediterranean toward Syria's shores. If Obama decides on military action, U.S. administration and defense officials in recent days have said the most likely move would be the launch of Tomahawk missiles off ships in the Mediterranean.

Syrian officials have urged the U.N. inspectors to extend their mission to investigate what the regime alleges are three chemical attacks against Syrian soldiers this month in the Damascus suburbs.

Haq, the U.N. spokesman, said the U.N. team will leave despite the government's request, although the appeal is being given serious consideration and that the experts intend to return to Syria to investigate other incidents.

The brief meeting of the Security Council permanent members was the second time in two days they had met on Syria.

In a tension-filled meeting Wednesday, the U.S., Britain, France, China and Russia discussed a resolution proposed by Britain to authorize the use of military force against Syria. Moscow firmly opposes military action.

___

Lucas reported from Beirut. Also contributing reporting were Associated Press writers Yasmine Saker and Karin Laub in Beirut, Gregory Katz and Raphael Satter in London, Sylvie Corbet and Jamey Keaten in Paris, Alexandra Olson and Peter James Spielmann at the United Nations, and George Jahn in Vienna contributed reporting.

___

Follow Ryan Lucas on Twitter at www.twitter.com/relucasz

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-defiant-un-chemical-probe-nears-end-210855412.html

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Sony shows off how to use the F55 as a full-blown broadcast camera

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H&M says will open first store in South Africa

Swedish cheap'n'chic fashion giant H&M will open its first store in South Africa in 2015, its first foray into sub-Saharan Africa, the company announced on Thursday.

H&M said it had signed a contract for a store in Johannesburg, but it was also looking into opening in Cape Town as well and therefore it could not say which store would open first.

"We're still in the early stages ... but there will be several stores," H&M spokeswoman Camilla Emilsson-Falk told AFP.

The company said it saw great potential in the South African market but refused to disclose any details.

"We see great potential for further expansion in this region. We look forward to bringing fashion and quality at the best price to the customers in South Africa," H&M's chief executive Karl-Johan Persson said in a statement.

The first store that opens will be a full concept flagship store, the company said.

H&M's only other stores on the African continent are in Egypt and Morocco.

The company said it had opened some 100 new stores in the second quarter, bringing its total number of outlets worldwide to 2,908.

Using an average annual exchange rate, H&M remained the biggest clothing company in 2012 with its sales edging out Spanish competitor Inditex, which owns Zara.

But H&M risks losing its number one spot this year to Inditex, which has twice as many stores, is growing faster and is more profitable.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/h-m-says-open-first-store-south-africa-094125032.html

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How To Get Healthy Skin | Health and Fitness - MIO Nonprofit

Great skin does not only happen to super models and in magazines, and it does not happen overnight, but it can happen to you! With a little investigating and effort your skin can be healthier and more attractive. So read on for some great advice on how to turn this often elusive goal of great skin into a reality!

celulitisIf you smoke, you should try to quit smoking. Smoking damages your skin. Your skin is a very large organ and just like the rest of your body, it needs to breathe. Smoking could make your skin take on a greyish quality. No one wants skin that looks dull and lifeless. Stop smoking and let it get the clean air that it needs to look healthy and alive.

Chamomile tea bags make excellent astringents for skin. The next time you enjoy a hot mug of chamomile tea, set the tea bags aside. Placing them on the skin for a few seconds to a minute, can do wonders for skin health and can even clear up an acne breakout.

Add flaxseed to your diet in order to prevent flaky, dry patches of skin. Flaxseed oil is wonderful because it hydrates your skin and is easy to add to your diet. You can use flax oil on salads or while baking, mix ground flaxseed tastelessly into your oatmeal or yogurt, or eat the seeds whole for a unique snack. If you need to eliminar celulitis creams can be good also.

When using a salt or sugar scrub to exfoliate your skin, use the product for a longer amount of time, but do not increase the pressure. Applying too much pressure while you exfoliate may cause damage to sensitive skin. By exfoliating longer, not harder, you will remove impurities and dead skin without stripping away the skin?s protective oils.

Most salon and spa supply stores carry affordable alum blocks, which are small bricks of alum and potassium phosphate that retail for less than five dollars. Use this handy substance as an all-natural underarm deodorant, remedy for small cuts and nicks, or even as an overnight treatment for minor acne blemishes.

Hopefully this article has given you the great ideas you were looking for to improve the look and health of your skin in ways you might never have considered. Skin care can be a complicated, expensive endeavor and can often yield disappointing results, but with the tips and tricks you have just learned, great skin care is now within your reach!

Source: http://www.miononprofit.org/how-to-get-healthy-skin/

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Friday, August 30, 2013

Herbalife billionaire brawl puts spotlight on N.J. professor

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Jennifer Ablan

BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - In the battle of investors who've made opposite bets on the shares of Herbalife , both sides - including firms led by billionaires Bill Ackman and George Soros - have consulted a New Jersey college professor and studied his research.

For decades, William Keep, dean of the School of Business at the College of New Jersey, has pursued a relatively obscure marketing specialty known as multilevel marketing businesses, or MLMs. But as a new go-to adviser for some of Wall Street's biggest players, Keep has been suddenly thrust into the spotlight.

In December, Ackman placed a $1 billion short bet against Herbalife, citing the professor's research. Since then, Soros bought a large block of the company's shares around the time his firm was seeking out Keep's research and personal insights.

Through it all, Keep insists he has remained neutral to the investment implications of his studies.

"As my agenda has to do with MLMs and pyramid schemes, this sideshow is a distraction," he said of the attention he's received from investors and the media.

Multilevel marketers pay their sales force not only for the products they sell but also for recruiting other sales people. A pyramid scheme occurs where a company's sales team earns more for finding new distributors than they get for selling the product.

SHUNS INVESTMENT ADVICE

Ackman cited a paper co-authored by Keep in his December presentation when he lambasted Herbalife's business model. Months later, Ackman called Keep and spoke to him on the phone, though it is not clear what the two discussed.

Herbalife has repeatedly rejected Ackman's characterization of the company as a pyramid scheme that will eventually go bust.

Keep told Reuters in an interview that he has not voiced an opinion one way or another on whether Herbalife is a pyramid scheme. He makes clear to investors he isn't giving them investment advice.

Keep said that in his discussions with investments managers he never gets an indication of how they will react to his research.

"Once I leave the room, they could say, 'this is silly'. I don't know what kind of investment decisions they will make."

But investors still seek him out. Keep has been invited as a guest speaker at several hedge fund events and even visited the offices of Soros' family office.

During the summer, Keep met with some of Soros's investment staff, including portfolio manager Paul Sohn, to give them a tutorial on his research. Keep said Soros's investment team wanted to know how he thinks the epic battle over Herbalife will play out.

Keep declined to tell Reuters what he specifically told the Soros team, but said they had one burning question: Are regulators going to take action against Herbalife - something Ackman has been counting on in betting the company's shares will crash.

He also declined to handicap the outcome of any potential regulatory investigation, saying only that it would take a long time and cost a lot of money.

Keep visited Soros in June and again in July. Regulatory filings show Soros Fund Management purchased 5 million shares of Herbalife in the second quarter, becoming the latest high-profile investor to line up against Ackman and his Pershing Square Capital Management fund.

Another manager investing for Soros, East Side Capital, had a long position on Herbalife long before Ackman made his December presentation and still ranks as Herbalife's seventh-largest investor.

SOUGHT-OUT SPECIALIST

Besides meeting with the Soros team, Keep said he also spoke at a luncheon sponsored by research firm DeMatteo Monness for its hedge fund clients and at an event sponsored by research firm Hedgeye in recent months.

Keep has often been called as an expert witness when the government, including the Federal Trade Commission, has investigated pyramid schemes. And because of his specialist knowledge, Keep has frequently been featured in the media. Even as he was preparing for a new school semester, he said, he has been swamped by calls from reporters.

For months, the battle of the future of Herbalife has fascinated Wall Street, given the number of high-profile investors lining up to bet against Ackman.

Ackman's most notable and outspoken critic has been Carl Icahn, Herbalife's biggest shareholder, who got into the stock shortly after Ackman unveiled his big short positions.

So far, Ackman and his $11 billion Pershing Square have been losers in this contest of Wall Street billionaires, with Herbalife shares rising 83 percent this year. Pershing Square has incurred at least $300 million in paper losses on its investment.

(Reporting By Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Matthew Goldstein and Ken Wills)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/herbalife-billionaire-brawl-puts-spotlight-n-j-professor-010504484--sector.html

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Scant foreign support for US strikes on Syria

FILE - This Oct. 27, 1983 black-and-white file photo shows two officers in the U.S. Army stationed at the Port Salines airport in Grenada confering as they walk near the tarmac. U.S. forces have set up heavy security around the perimeter of the air strip on the tiny island. President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without broad international support or in direct defense of Americans. Not since President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983 has the U.S. been so alone in pursuing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens. (AP Photo/Doug Jennings, File)

FILE - This Oct. 27, 1983 black-and-white file photo shows two officers in the U.S. Army stationed at the Port Salines airport in Grenada confering as they walk near the tarmac. U.S. forces have set up heavy security around the perimeter of the air strip on the tiny island. President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without broad international support or in direct defense of Americans. Not since President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983 has the U.S. been so alone in pursuing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens. (AP Photo/Doug Jennings, File)

FILE - This Jan. 26, 1991 file photo shows dual U.S. Patriot missiles lighting up the skyline of the Saudi Arabia capital city of Riyadh, as Iraq continued attacking with its Scud-B missiles. One Patriot apparently intercepted the inbound Scud and disabled it. President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without broad international support or in direct defense of Americans. Not since President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983 has the U.S. been so alone in pursuing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens. (AP Photo/John Gaps III, File)

FILE - This Jan. 25, 2003 file photo shows an US soldier lying with his rifle in front of an American flag that hangs from a Humvee during live fire exercises in the Kuwaiti desert south of Iraq. Thousands of troops are assembling in Kuwait ahead of possible war with Iraq. President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without broad international support or in direct defense of Americans. Not since President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983 has the U.S. been so alone in pursuing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch, File)

FILE This Nov. 14, 2002 file-pool photo shows a US soldier, a members of the 82nd Airborne Division, securing an area from the top of an armored vehicle on the sunset near the town of Yayeh Kehl, Paktia province, Afghanistan. President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without broad international support or in direct defense of Americans. Not since President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983 has the U.S. been so alone in pursuing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens. (AP Photo/Amel Emric, POOL)

FILE - This March 13, 2002 file photo shows US Troops from 10th Mountain Division sitting in a Chinook helicopter on their way to take up the fight in eastern Afghanistan. President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without broad international support or in direct defense of Americans. Not since President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1983 has the U.S. been so alone in pursuing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens. (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel, File)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is poised to become the first U.S. leader in three decades to attack a foreign nation without mustering broad international support or acting in direct defense of Americans.

Not since 1983, when President Ronald Reagan ordered an invasion of the Caribbean island of Grenada, has the U.S. been so alone in pursing major lethal military action beyond a few attacks responding to strikes or threats against its citizens.

It's a policy turnabout for Obama, a Democrat who took office promising to limit U.S. military intervention and, as a candidate, said the president "does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation."

But over the last year Obama has warned Syrian President Bashar Assad that his government's use of chemical weapons in its two-year civil war would be a "red line" that would provoke a strong U.S. response.

So far, only France has indicated it would join a U.S. strike on Syria.

Without widespread backing from allies, "the nature of the threat to the American national security has to be very, very clear," said retired Army Brig. Gen. Charles Brower, an international studies professor at Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Va.

"It's the urgency of that threat that would justify the exploitation of that power as commander in chief ? you have to make a very, very strong case for the clear and gathering danger argument to be able to go so aggressively," Brower said Friday.

Obama is expected to launch what officials have described as a limited strike ? probably with Tomahawk cruise missiles ? against Assad's forces.

Two days after the suspected chemicals weapons attack in Damascus suburbs, Obama told CNN, "If the U.S. goes in and attacks another country without a U.N. mandate and without clear evidence that can be presented, then there are questions in terms of whether international law supports it; do we have the coalition to make it work?" He said: "Those are considerations that we have to take into account."

Lawmakers briefed on the plans have indicated an attack is all but certain. And Obama advisers said the president was prepared to strike unilaterally, though France has said it is ready to commit forces to an operation in Syria because the use of chemical weapons cannot go unpunished.

The U.S. does not have United Nations support to strike Syria, and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged restraint. "Diplomacy should be given a chance and peace given a chance," he said Thursday.

Expected support from Britain, a key ally, evaporated as Parliament rejected a vote Thursday endorsing military action in Syria. And diplomats with the 22-nation Arab League said the organization does not support military action without U.N. consent, an action that Russia would almost certainly block. The diplomats spoke anonymously because of rules preventing them from being identified.

"Presidents always need to be prepared to go at it alone," said Rudy deLeon, who was a senior Defense Department official in the Clinton administration.

"The uninhibited use of the chemical weapons is out there, and that's a real problem," said deLeon, now senior vice president of security and international policy at the liberal-leaning Center for American Progress in Washington. "It can't be ignored, and it certainly creates a dilemma. I think (Obama) had to make the red-line comment, and so Syria has acted in a very irresponsible way."

The nearly nine-year war in Iraq that began in 2003, which Obama termed "dumb" because it was based on false intelligence, has encouraged global skittishness about Western military intervention in the Mideast. "There's no doubt that the intelligence on Iraq is still on everybody's mind," deLeon said.

Both Republican George H.W. Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton had U.N. approval for nearly all of their attacks on Iraq years earlier. Even in the 2003 invasion, which was ordered by Republican George W. Bush, 48 nations supported the military campaign as a so-called coalition of the willing. Four nations ? the U.S., Britain, Australia and Poland ? participated in the invasion.

The U.S. has relied on NATO at least three times to give it broad foreign support for military missions: in bombarding Bosnia in 1994 and 1995, attacking Kosovo with airstrikes in 1999 and invading Afghanistan in 2001.

Only a few times has the U.S. acted unilaterally ? and only then to respond to attacks or direct threats against Americans.

In 1986, Reagan joined ordered airstrikes on Libya to punish then-leader Moammar Gadhafi for the bombing of a Berlin dance club that killed two U.S soldiers and wounded 79 other Americans.

Three years later, George H.W. Bush invaded Panama after dictator Manuel Noriega declared war on the U.S. when his drug-trafficking regime was slapped with crippling American sanctions. The invasion began four days after a U.S. Marine was killed in a shooting in Panama City.

Clinton ordered a missile strike against Iraq in 1993 as payback for an assassination against the elder Bush. And in 1998, Clinton attacked al-Qaida bases in Sudan and Afghanistan to retaliate against U.S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania that killed more than 200 people.

Obama approved the 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden, who had been considered a threat potentially going back to the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. troops living there. Additionally, the U.S. has launched hundreds of deadly drone strikes on suspected al-Qaida havens, mostly in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen during the presidencies of Obama and George W. Bush.

All other major U.S. military attacks since the 1983 Grenada invasion have been sanctioned by the United Nations. That includes the 2011 missile strikes that Obama ordered against Libya as part of a coalition to protect that nation's citizens by enforcing a no-fly zone against Gadhafi forces.

Even the Grenada invasion had some international support. Six Caribbean island countries asked for U.S. intervention, which the Reagan administration said was legal under the charter of the Organization of American States. But the invasion was roundly criticized by Britain, Canada and the U.N.

Making the case Friday for the strikes, Secretary of State John Kerry noted that Turkey, France and Australia have condemned the suspected chemical attacks and said "we are not alone in our will to do something about it and to act."

"As previous storms in history have gathered, when unspeakable crimes were within our power to stop them, we have been warned against the temptations of looking the other way," Kerry said. "History is full of leaders who have warned against inaction, indifference and especially against silence when it mattered most."

He added: "It matters here if nothing is done. It matters if the world speaks out in condemnation and then nothing happens."

Some lawmakers in Obama's party hedged in supporting an attack with little foreign backup.

"The impact of such a strike would be weakened if it does not have the participation and support of a large number of nations, including Arab nations," Senate Armed Services chairman Carl Levin, a Democrat, said Friday.

___

Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-08-30-US-Syria-Going-Alone/id-7406989f0517455f8e1ce076e8121f43

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Vin Diesel's Riddick Got A Lot More 'Morbid' In Nine-Year Hiatus

Following a long absence from the big screen, the furious Furyan is back — and he's brought the darkness with him.
By Brett White, with reporting by Josh Horowitz

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1713357/vin-diesel-riddick.jhtml

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Wall Street Week Ahead: Jobs data could spur Fed action on stimulus

NEW YORK | Fri Aug 30, 2013 6:24pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street is bracing for a wave of economic reports next week, including the August jobs report, which might prove decisive in determining whether the economy is strong enough for the Federal Reserve to dial back its bond purchases in mid-September.

Anxiety about the Fed possibly reducing its $85 billion monthly stimulus, also known as QE3, has hurt the stock market, which recorded its steepest monthly fall since May 2012.

But the stock market's greater anxiety, which has developed in recent weeks, is that the Fed will press ahead with a reduction in support, even as the economy remains fragile. The recent data has failed to provide evidence of the convincing growth the Fed says it wants to see. Until then, stocks will benefit from the cheap money resulting from the Fed's bond purchases.

"Next week's data should make or break the September expectations," said Mike O'Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in Greenwich, Connecticut.

A strong jobs report will likely reinforce the view the Fed will opt to decrease its bond purchases at its September 17-18 meeting, while a weak one would do the opposite, analysts said.

"From a real economy perspective, QE3 has done very little. From a financial markets perspective, it has had a major influence. If it is really not helping the real economy beyond pushing financial assets higher, there is no point in continuing the risk of increasing the balance sheet," said O'Rourke.

For the month, the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 3.1 percent in August; the Dow Jones industrial average lost 4.4 percent and the Nasdaq slipped 1 percent. .N

Speculation on the timing of Fed action has triggered a bond market sell-off that sent mortgage rates to two-year highs. The surge in home borrowing costs this summer has shown signs of slowing the housing recovery. Analysts also are watching if the higher rates have discouraged employers from adding workers.

Economists polled by Reuters forecast domestic employers likely hired 180,000 workers in August, more than 162,000 in July, while the jobless rate likely held steady at 7.4 percent, which is a four-year low.

Deutsche Bank economists said that if the payrolls figure exceeds 190,000 and the unemployment rate falls to 7.3 percent, they expect the Fed will start cutting bond purchases. "August employment would have to meaningfully disappoint for the Fed to back away from the timetable presented by Chairman Bernanke in the June post-meeting press conference," they wrote.

Prior to the payrolls data on Friday, traders will face a heavy schedule of economic releases after the three-day holiday weekend. They include the latest readings on vehicle sales and national factory and service activities. <ECI/US>

U.S. financial markets will close on Monday for the Labor Day holiday.

Investors are watching the tense situation between the West and Syria. Signs of a U.S.-led military strike against Syria after chemical weapons were used to kill civilians could hurt the appetite for stocks globally.

Traders pared expectations on such a move after the British parliament voted against a military strike. But France said it supported punishing the Syrian government for the attack on civilians. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Friday the chemical weapons attack in Damascus last week killed more than 1,400 people.

Despite the sharp moves in equities due to the Syrian unrest, "we still expect the market to stop short of a 10 percent decline," said Mike Dueker, head economist for North America at Russell Investments in Seattle.

Light volume in late summer likely exaggerated August's stock decline, analysts said. The uncertainty has also boosted measures of volatility. The CBOE Volatility Index .VIX rose above 17 on Friday, a two-month high.

Bonds, in comparison, posted small losses. They were poised to lose 0.54 percent in August, according to Barclays' Aggregate bond index that tracks U.S. investment-grade debt returns.

SHAKY SEPTEMBER

While Syria and economic data will be next week's main concerns, other developments, such as President Barack Obama's nominee to succeed Ben Bernanke as Fed chief and another possible showdown between Obama and congressional Republicans over the federal debt might keep investors on edge, analysts said.

"There is no doubt that September is teed up for a tsunami of data coming at us and headlines coming at us," said David Lyon, investment specialist at JP Morgan Private Bank in San Francisco, California, which manages $910 billion in assets.

"So the market will look at September and really start to find its footing based on some of the economic data that comes out as well as clarity around some of these policy decisions at the central bank level or the geopolitical level," he said

History might complicate that view.

September has traditionally been the worst month for stocks, with an average 0.6 percent decline in the S&P 500 index over the past 62 years, although it rose 2.4 percent last September.

This September marks a milestone - the five-year anniversary of the global credit meltdown during which Wall Street witnessed the downfall of Lehman Brothers, the sale of Merrill Lynch, the near-demise of insurance giant AIG.

In that turbulent September 2008, the market tumbled 9.1 percent.

(Additional reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak and Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/IvFwOO2uAbA/story01.htm

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Roundtable: The March on Washington & The Future of the Civil Rights Movement

Today we're recognizing the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for what it was: A turning point in the civil rights movement that motivated Congress to take action on inequality. First came the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and then later the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Those who marched on the Washington Mall 50 years ago today made their demands clear?they wanted fair labor standards, decent housing, desegregated schools, a higher minimum wage, and job opportunities. But half a century later, though progress had been made, many of the marchers' demands remain unmet.

Joining to discuss the future of the modern civil rights movement is Farai Chideya, a distinguished writer in residence at New York University?s Journalism Institute; Peter Blair Henry, the Dean of New York University?s Stern School of Business; and George Packer, a staff writer at The New Yorker.

Source: http://www.thetakeaway.org/2013/aug/28/roundtable-unmet-goals-march-washington-and-future-civil-rights-movement/

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Thursday, August 29, 2013

US jury set to mull Fort Hood shooter's fate

A US military jury was expected to begin deliberating Wednesday on whether to sentence an Army officer to death or life in prison for killing 13 people in a 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood.

Major Nidal Hasan was convicted Friday of 13 charges of premeditated murder for the killing spree at the Texas base, which left more than 30 others wounded.

Closing arguments in the sentencing phase of the trial on Wednesday will provide Hasan with one last opportunity to address the court before the jury deliberates on his sentence.

The jury will then decide whether the 42-year-old one-time Army psychiatrist should spend the rest of his life in military prison or face the death penalty.

If he gets the death penalty, the US-born Muslim of Palestinian descent would be the first member of the Army to receive such a sentence since the 2005 conviction of Hasan Akbar, who killed two in an attack on fellow soldiers in Kuwait in 2003.

Many legal experts had expected Hasan, who is representing himself, to use the trial as a platform to espouse radical Islamic views.

He instead has put up virtually no defense at all.

Hasan has called no witnesses, entered scant evidence and has only made one statement to the jury, telling the court at the outset of the trial, "I am the shooter."

"I've never seen anything like this before. This is quite unprecedented," said Richard Rosen, a military law expert at Texas Tech University.

On November 5, 2009, Hasan opened fire at a medical processing facility in the sprawling Fort Hood base that serves as a staging point for soldiers to deploy to combat zones.

Twelve of the dead and 30 of the wounded were soldiers. Hasan was himself shot by a civilian police officer who responded to the attack and he is now partially paralyzed.

He initially attempted to defend the rampage as a pre-emptive attack on soldiers who would strike Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But the presiding judge, Colonel Tara Osborn, disallowed that tactic, stating it held no legal merit.

Since Osborn's ruling, Hasan has remained quiet in court, while strategically leaking documents to media outlets.

In a letter to AFP, he stated religion was his motive in the attack, and criticized US foreign policy he believes aims to topple Islamic governments to install secular leadership.

Many, including the Army attorneys advising Hasan, believe his lack of action in court shows he is pursuing a death sentence.

In an Army mental health report from 2010, Hasan said a death sentence would make him a martyr.

His attorneys unsuccessfully attempted to enter evidence on Hasan's behalf Tuesday.

The judge denied their request, and told Hasan he is "the captain of the ship."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-jury-set-mull-fort-hood-shooters-fate-160841481.html

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Avis aux m?dias : Infrastructure Canada

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Source: www.marketwire.com --- Thursday, August 29, 2013
MONTR?AL, QU?BEC--(Marketwired - 29 ao?t 2013) - Les repr?sentants des m?dias sont invit?s ? assister ? une annonce importante en mati?re d'infrastructure en pr?sence du ministre d'?tat (R?forme d?mocratique), l'honorable Pierre Poilievre, de la premi?re ministre du Qu?bec, l'honorable Pauline Marois, du ministre des Relations internationales, de la Francophonie et du Commerce ext?rieur et ministre responsable de la r?gion de Montr?al, Monsieur Jean-Fran?ois Lis?e, du ministre de l'Enseignement sup?rieur, de la Science et de la technologie, Monsieur Pierre Duchesne, du maire de Montr?al, Monsieur Laurent Blanchard, de la chanceli?re de l'Universit? de Montr?al, madame Louise Roy et du recteur de l'Universit? de Montr?al, monsieur Guy Breton. ...

Source: http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release.do?id=1825983&sourceType=3

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Schumer Funding Could Bring 600 Jobs to Delaware County

Senator Charles Schumer is trying to make a connection that would bring up to 600 jobs to Delaware County.

The jobs would be created at a call center to be built in Hancock.? Schumer says he's pushing for funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.?
?
Schumer says the funding could help the Data Control Group company choose Delaware county over another spot in New York.

If it does set up operations, it would put it in an upgraded Becton Dickinson building, which shut down it's operations in 2002.

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The Clearest Sign Yet That Hillary Clinton is Running (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

MLK marchers remember 'one of the most electrifying moments'

Editor?s note: The following seven vignettes are from first-person accounts of men and women who attended the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and witnessed Martin Luther King?s speech. Excerpts are from interviews unless otherwise noted.

?It was like a glacier moving down the avenue?

The march was Nan Grogan Orrock?s introduction to the civil rights movement. In 1963, just shy of her 20th birthday, she lived with her aunt in Washington where she worked as a clerk for the federal government. Orrock worked for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in 1964 and the Southern Student Organizing Committee (SNCC) in 1965-66. She served in the Georgia Statehouse, starting in 1987 and, in 2007, she was elected to the Georgia state Senate. Here are portions from her story, which she told to Yahoo News this week:

I was at the end of the reflecting pool, closest to the Lincoln Memorial. The massive, massive size of the march was incredible. It was a living thing. It was like a glacier moving down the avenue.

I was nervous because there were TV cameras and [there was] a chance I would end up on TV. That made me uncomfortable because I had not told my family what I was doing. I had certainly not told my aunt. I knew better than to tell her that I was going to join that march. I told her I had a date that afternoon. The date I had was a date with history.

Overwhelmingly, I realized, as a white Southerner, I had been mis-educated. As smart as I thought I was, I really had failed to understand the enormity of racial discrimination in the country and the intensity of a movement to topple the color bar. I had been raised in all-white schools where we were taught that America was the land of the free and home of the brave, and that we were a democracy and a wonderful place. What was completely left out in that upbringing was any understanding of the way that African-American people had been treated and the enormity of it and the sordid, sordid history.

And, out of that, I came away knowing I was going to be part of this fight. You could describe it as being born again. My sense of fairness and justice were really activated that day.

Years later, my mother wrote me a letter ? years later because they were very disapproving when I finally broke down and told them what I had done ? saying, ?I just want you to know, as your mother, that I am proud that you understood at such a young age what Dr. King was trying to do and that you decided to take a stand. I?m very, very proud of you.? It was quite a moving thing, needless to say, because they had really struggled to understand what on Earth I was doing with my life.

For her to have that kind of turn around, as Southern whites, to understand what I was doing, was quite significant.

?It was one of the most electrifying moments I?ve ever had in my life?

Monte Wasch, then 21, began his civil rights work in the late 1958 and '59, helping organize student and youth marches. In 1960-61, he worked on behalf of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference?s (SCLC) New York arm in Atlanta and Jackson, Miss., before assisting the transportation efforts for the March on Washington. His team worked with airline, bus and rail companies to transport marchers, and he coordinated with D.C. police on parking. Wasch was on the podium when King began to speak.

I was working most of the morning, and I was on the platform about noon when the speechifying started. By 4 o?clock in the afternoon, which is when King came on, I was bushed. I?d been up for probably 24 hours straight. My work was done, so I wandered off to get a feeling of what the crowd was like. And I walked down to the reflecting pool, so I was maybe a half mile away from the Lincoln Memorial when Dr. King began his speech. His speech at the beginning [?] was pretty conventional. It was a speech. And then, about 10 minutes into it, the preacher in him took over. And he began preaching, ?I have a dream.?

You have to understand it was 98 degrees that day, and people were fanning themselves and putting their bare feet into the reflecting pool to cool off. By 4 o?clock in the afternoon, most of them were sun-drunk.

People were kind of dozing at the beginning of his speech, and when he began to orate, it was a like a lightning bolt. It was like a burst of electricity had moved through the crowd. People perked up. They began to take notice. They began to listen intently. They began to sway with the rhythm of the speech. They began to murmur, ?Yes, yes.? It was one of the most electrifying moments I?ve ever had in my life. That?s the only way I can describe it.

King was a much more rounded person than the King of ?I have a dream.? I also remember he was brave enough to come out in opposition to the war in Vietnam at a time when other black leaders were saying that that was diversionary. And I also remember that his focus was as much on the moral imperatives as it was on the economic imperatives ? full employment and job training and ending second-class status of black people in the workforce.

Related: 'A Moses parting the Red Sea moment'

Historically, I think it ranks among the three or four speeches of the 20th century. Churchill?s famous ?we?ll fight them on the beaches,? Roosevelt?s ?we have nothing to fear but fear itself,? and King.

?Nothing but buses, solid buses?

Bruce Hartford began his civil rights work in 1963 in Los Angeles with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). He helped fight for housing integration, school desegregation and fair employment. After the march, Hartford joined voting-rights campaigns in Selma, Ala., and rural Alabama in 1965, and the field staff of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference for two years. Here are edited excerpts of his memories, as told to the Civil Rights Movement Veterans, and published on Yahoo News with permission:

We [were] coming on the bus, and it was pitch dark, maybe 4 in the morning. We were coming down from the north and we cross over this big bridge. I think it might have been the bridge over the Delaware River. And on the far side there were maybe 20 or 30 or more people with flares and torches and signs saying, "We're with you," [and] "God speed," cheering the buses on.

We on the busses didn't know whether the march was going to be a success or not. There had been all this stuff in the newspaper ? no one will come, or it'll be a disaster, the civil rights movement is a hoax, it's just a few malcontents, outside agitators, [and] communist propaganda.

And then other papers were in total panic mode ? Call out the National Guard! Alert the 101st Airborne! Close the liquor stores! Hide the white women! Evacuate the children to the countryside! It was like they thought the Mongol hordes of Genghis Khan were descending on the nation's capitol to rape, ravage, and pillage. And we'd just had Birmingham, where fire hoses and police dogs were used to attack children in Kelly Ingram Park, [and] nonviolent demonstrators had been clubbed, beaten, and arrested.

So the first thing we see are people who probably could not come to the march ? it was on a weekday, a workday ? but had gotten up in the dead of night to give support. And then as we're driving towards D.C., the sun comes up over the eastern shore, and it's just buses, the whole damn freeway. Just busses bumper to bumper, and we're still miles out. Nothing but buses, solid buses. And that's when we knew.

?Any kind of revolution is about change?

Seventeen when she accompanied her family to the march, Fatima Cortez-Todd made bus banners for her group?s trip from New York to Washington. After graduating from high school, and over her parents? objections, she worked for CORE in Baton Rouge, La., where she assisted in voter registration and taught literacy classes.

My mom was very active with CORE. We used to have these Sunday fundraisers at different people?s homes, and, at 17, I helped serve sandwiches and be there for the adults. We did what kids do when their parents are doing something exciting and important: We try to figure out how to be part of it.

What sticks out is that [King] talked about segregation in the South. Then he talked about segregation in the North, and people haven?t really talked about that. In New York City, where I was born and raised, there were enormous amounts of discrimination in housing and jobs. He addressed that ? the segregation in the skyscrapers. He talked about the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and inalienable rights, and that the United States made all these promises [related to them].

He even used the word ?revolution.? People are afraid of the word, but any kind of revolution is about change and holding us, as the people, responsible for those changes and holding the government accountable for its behavior.

[The speech] inspired me to figure out what my place was in the revolution. So when I came back and started college, I volunteered in a literacy program in Harlem. The idea that were there folks in New York City and kids in high school that didn?t know how to read ? that concept was so foreign to me. He inspired me to do the work. And that?s what I?ve been doing ever since.

[Today, people] don?t really look at the whole speech. They get caught up in the romanticizing of ?I have a dream.? There are very clear specific things said in that speech, which are as apropos today as they were in 1963: the responsibility of folks to vote and the responsibility of holding your government accountable.

?It was the apogee of people?s aspirations?

Louis D. Armmand, then 19, joined CORE in June 1963. He and five high school friends organized a 5,000-person rally in Staten Island, N.Y., the weekend before the march and sent five buses ? with about 200 total riders ? to D.C.

The thing about that day was it was eerie, quiet. We must?ve hit D.C. about 9 o?clock. We were able to get reasonably close [to the podium]. It was the first time I?d been to the mall, and it was magnificent. We were within a 100 feet or so of the speakers. It was pretty awe-inspiring to see that assembly of people. After 9 o?clock people started coming in thick and fast. Once people started crowding in, you had to stay in your section because it was shoulder to shoulder.

Looking back on King?s speech, it wasn?t seen as momentous as it was now because, frankly, we keyed on the speech that John Lewis made [...] because he was a student, he was in the field, he was in the South, and we felt SNCC was on the cutting edge even more deeply than Dr. King.

I think everybody was moved at the particular time. It was a culmination. It was the apogee of people?s aspirations.

But the biggest [question] was, ?Could this be done?? Most people thought this was an impossible task. People were predicting violence. Johnson had 8,000 troops surrounding the whole site. We saw the armed sailors standing at the parade when we came into the mall. It was surprising to the establishment, to the elite press, who expected that there were going to be riots. There was not one disruption caused by the participants themselves. They came peacefully, they participated peacefully and they left peacefully.

Dr. King and his vision have been sort of frozen in time, and I think that?s a disservice to his development because, clearly, three years later with that ?Beyond Vietnam? speech, his consciousness of the nature of American society had progressed quite broadly and quite accurately.

But after leaving, I have to admit, after returning home, after that march, I felt a certain pause. We weren?t given a message as to, ?Where do we go from here? How do we proceed??

?You couldn?t help but be awestruck by the crowd?

Joanne Gavin, then 31, was a civil rights veteran with CORE in 1963. In August, she rode a chartered bus from San Francisco to Washington, D.C., with the intent to join SNCC in the South. After the march, however, she stayed to work in the organization?s D.C. offices.

I had gone that morning down to the Justice Department because people from southwest Georgia, who were heroes of mine, were picketing the FBI, so I picketed with them and then walked to the march with them. So we were late. We were way back by the Washington Monument at the edge of the reflecting pool. You couldn?t help but be awestruck by the crowd.

King has been totally sanitized and made into an angelic figure with a halo who had a dream, and that?s not what King was about. What I took away wasn?t the dream speech, but that a promissory note was going unpaid by the government and the country.

I would advise [everyone] read the whole thing. Most people don?t know the whole speech. Most people only hear those [I have a dream] lines, which I understood from some associates were an afterthought that he hadn?t actually written that into the speech. Read the whole thing and the rest of his writing and see what he was really about ? which was organizing people and struggling against the economic inequality of the country and the oppression of people.

There was a lot of optimism, and the feeling that we were going to go forward rapidly from here, but there was a lot of work to be done. And I remember one person I met in D.C. that said that her young child woke up the next morning and said, ?Mommy, are we free now?? Certainly the adults didn?t think they were free right that minute, but they were energized to work harder.

?Free at last, free at last?

Twenty-six when he marched on Washington, Lonnie King Jr. was the founding chairman of the Committee on the Appeal for Human Rights in Atlanta. He challenged segregation and discrimination at lunch counters and in churches, movie theaters, courthouses, parks and recreation centers. According to the Civil Rights Movement Veterans organization, he used sit-ins, kneel-ins and ?jail no bail? tactics and filed a lawsuit that integrated Atlanta?s recreational facilities. Here are excerpts from recollections he wrote for Yahoo News this week.

The march came as the d?nouement of the struggle for equal rights in this country. The NAACP had been on the battlefield since 1909, and had achieved outstanding results, but young people who were born during the Depression and had come of age by 1960, were of a different breed. They had observed the slow pace of racial progress in the country, especially in the South. Thousands of them were at the march. Dr. King, sensing the importance of the occasion, delivered one of the greatest speeches of the 20th century, or any century.

He had been prescient when he titled one of his early books ?Why We Can?t Wait.? He told the audience, and the world, that the African-American had been waiting for hundreds of years to enjoy the blessings of liberty promised in the Declaration of Independence for all of its citizens. He moved the audience through the annals of America?s sordid record on race and appealed to the country to finally become the home of the free and the bastion of justice for all its citizens. He dreamed of a day when all peoples would be judged by their abilities and not by the color of their skin.

I observed his speech at a distance less than 50 feet away from the podium, and I was so proud that someone I had known since 1945 had captured in a message that lasted approximately 30 minutes all of the hopes and dreams of a race of people who had been the nation?s ?step-children? since 1607.

His greatest line to me was his closing statement: ?Free at last, free at last, thank God almighty, we are free at last.? The speech was a masterpiece and so much of it resonates today.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/for-marchers--king-s--dream--speech-was--electrifying----momentous--203548888.html

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Rafael dos Anjos: ?I?m going to win decisively.?

UFC lightweight Donald Cerrone is definitely a bigger star than UFC Fight Night 27 foe Rafael dos Anjos and has undoubtedly drawn a lot of action as a favorite to win tonight?s tilt. Be that as it may, Dos Anjos is actually the hotter competitor at the moment, tearing through competition like Anthony Njokuani, Mark Bocek, and Evan Dunham during a four-fight run in the Octagon.

Dos Anjos spoke to MMAJunkie about his sudden surge, joking that surgery for a broken jaw had made him a bionic man of sorts.

?Nowadays, I have 20 screws and four titanium plates. Since then I broke two hands with my chin: Gleison Tibau?s and Njokuani?s,? cracked Dos Anjos before explaining a move to Kings MMA was truly the source of his recent results. ?I have better training partners now. I moved to the U.S. I train harder here. Things have improved for me.?

In terms of the 20-5 Cerrone, Dos Anjos understands he has a tough test in front of him but is confident he?ll perform at the level he knows he?s capable of.

?It?s my (13th) fight in the UFC and my first co-main-event spot. Now is my time,? said Dos Anjos. ?I?m going to win decisively. I want to fight for the belt. It?s my dream, and it?s why I moved to this country. I am uninjured for this fight, as opposed to the previous one where I had various setbacks. I know I?m coming out on top.?

Dos Anjos is 19-6 in his career with ten stoppages including eight submissions. Fans can catch his fight with Cerrone on FOX Sports 1.

Source: http://fiveouncesofpain.com/2013/08/28/rafael-dos-anjos-im-going-to-win-decisively/

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Teachers? Union Prepared To Make Concessions

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Source: http://www.philly.com/r?19=961&43=241162&44=221498641&32=3796&7=229017&40=http://www.philly.com/philly/video/221498641.html

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University of LIberia Entrance Exam Failed By All Students

What?s a first day at university without the freshmen?

The University of Liberia is about to find out after almost 25,000 test takers failed the school?s admissions exam.

A university official told the BBC that the students did not have a basic understanding of English and lacked enthusiasm.

"I know there are a lot of weaknesses in the schools but for a whole group of people to take exams, and every single one of them to fail, I have my doubts about that," said the country?s Education Minister Etmonia David-Tarpeh.

"It's like mass murder."

BBC reports:

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, a Nobel peace laureate, recently acknowledged that the education system was still "in a mess," and much needed to be done to improve it.

Many schools lack basic education materials, and teachers are poorly qualified, reports the BBC's Jonathan Paye-Layleh from the capital, Monrovia.

However, this is the first time that every single student who wrote the exam for a fee of $25 (?16) has failed, our reporter says.

Read the full story here.

BET Global News - Your source for Black news from around the world, including international politics, health and human rights, the latest celebrity news and more. Click?here to subscribe?to our newsletter.

Source: http://feeds.bet.com/~r/AllBetcom/~3/QS8WGmDj6j0/university-of-liberia-entrance-exam-failed-by-all-students.html

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The Moffat County football team had a successful scrimmage against Coal Ridge but lost starting quar

Photo detail

August 24, 2013

The Moffat County football team had a successful scrimmage against Coal Ridge but lost starting quarterback Matt Hamilton (center, handing off the ball) to a dislocated shoulder. The Bulldogs open their season in Watkins on Saturday at Ridge View Academy.

Stories this photo appears in:

Source: http://www2.craigdailypress.com/photos/2013/aug/24/64950/

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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

FAA approves drone use over Alaskan oil fields

The federal government has given the green light to private drone flights over America?s Last Frontier.

The Federal Aviation Administration approved oil giant ConocoPhillips? application to fly two small unmanned aerial vehicles UAVs over the Alaskan Arctic Ocean, The Associated Press reports.

The company says it?s not ready to fly the aircraft yet, but hopes to use the?UAVs ? formally called unmanned aerial systems (UAS), or drones ? to survey Arctic Ocean ice flows and the migration of whales in oil exploration areas.

ConocoPhillips also plans to use the aircraft for ?emergency response monitoring and wildlife surveillance over the Beaufort Sea,? reports the AP.

The two types of UASs the FAA approved for ConocoPhillips? use are the AeroEnvironment Puma AE and the Insitu ScanEagle.

Engadget reported in July that the two aircraft were the first UASs approved for commercial use.

Environmental surveying, wildlife management and search-and-rescue missions are among the various anticipated uses for domestic drones.

The UAS industry, unhappy about the stigma the aerial platform has earned in the media, has begun pushing back against calling the machines drones, due to the word?s association with war and death.

That stigma has provoked privacy organizations to advocate for the federal government to exercise caution and deliberation as the FAA introduces the aircraft into domestic airspace.

The Aerospace States Association (ASA), headed by Alaska Senate candidate?Alaska Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell, recently released a paper in Washington, D.C. advocating that law enforcement obtain a warrant before using a drone to track suspects.

Law enforcement officers have also advocated against the arming of domestic law enforcement drones, although in 2010 the federal Customs and Border Protection agency proposed arming the aircraft with non-lethal weapons.

In February, the Electronic Privacy Information Center discovered through a Freedom of Information Act request that CBPs drones are also capable of intercepting electronic communications and identifying human targets.

In June, FierceHomelandSecurity reported that CBP drones increased its drone flights on behalf of other federal agencies

CBP, ? a federal law enforcement agency inside of the Department of Homeland Security ? flew missions on behalf of the FBI, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the U.S. Marshalls, and various state law enforcement agencies, reports the publication.

Follow Josh on Twitter and Facebook

Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/08/26/faa-approves-drone-use-over-alaskan-oil-fields/

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Video: Measles outbreak strikes North Texas



>>> we're back now with news about measles, a virus declared all but wiped out more than a decade ago in this country but making a troubling comeback. the latest outbreak is centered on a mega church near ft. worth texas, at least 21 cases have originated there, including 14 children, the youngest just 14 months old. why is this happening now and what do parents need to know? here's chief medical editor dr. nancy snyderman .

>> reporter: julian aguilera is getting his measles shot, a quick pinch to the arm and a lollipop later he's all smiles. it's a relief to his mom too.

>> you don't want your kids to get sick.

>> reporter: measles is making a comeback, and the latest outbreak in north texas . at least 16 of the cases were not fully vaccinated.

>> someone who actually had the disease in july, had come back from a country where measles is more common, ink baiting the disease, became sick here and other people got it.

>> across the country there have been 161 cases of measles in 16 states so far this year. that's nearly triple the number in 2012 . while nine out of the ten children old enough to receive vaccinations get them. a pediatrician is concerned about the growing number of families who are opting out for nonmedical reasons.

>> it's more middle class , upper middle class , people are deciding they're afraid of vaccines. they bought the idea that autism is connected with mmr, and that's a lie.

>> reporter: health officials say well intentioned parents who choose not to vaccinate are needlessly putting their children and communities at risk. measles is so contagious, that if one person has it, the cdc says 90% of the people who are not fully immunized and come in close contact to that person will also get the infection.

>> maybe if they lived remotely on an island somewhere, that would work, but we don't.

>> vaccinations have been so successful over the last few decades. for a lot of young couples who forget that these illnesses can have a resurgence and they can kill. a reminder that vaccinations can protect not only your child, but they take care of your community too. lester?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/nightly-news/52859835/

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