সোমবার, ২৫ মার্চ, ২০১৩

T-Mobile gets rid of contracts for cellphones

(AP) ? T-Mobile USA, the struggling No. 4 cellphone company, is ditching plans centered on familiar two-year contracts in favor of selling phones on installment plans.

The company changed its website over the weekend to sell the new plans. It was set to lay out the rationale for the change on Tuesday at an event in New York.

T-Mobile has been losing subscribers from its contract-based plans for more than two years, chiefly to bigger competitors Verizon Wireless and AT&T. T-Mobile has done better with contract-less, prepaid plans, but those aren't as profitable for the company.

The new plan blurs the boundaries between the two types. Prepaid plans have lower monthly fees, but the buyer usually has to pay full or nearly full price for the phones. With T-Mobile's new plans, the initial phone-buying experience won't be much different from what it's like for contract plans, but customers could save money in the long run.

For instance, someone who wants a Samsung Galaxy S III would pay $70 upfront and then $90 per month for unlimited calling, text and data. That monthly fee includes $20 to pay off the cost of the phone over two years.

By separating the cost of the phone from the service, T-Mobile is making its plans and upgrade options easier to understand. When the phone is paid off, the $20 fee in that example disappears. On traditional contract-based plans, the buyer is deemed to have "paid off" the phone after a certain period of time and become eligible for a new, subsidized phone, but the monthly payments don't decline.

As before, T-Mobile's prices generally undercut those of the bigger phone companies. The chief downside is that its data network coverage is poorer in rural areas.

T-Mobile stopped short of adopting shared-data plans that Verizon Wireless and AT&T introduced last year. Those plans allow all of a family's devices to share a pool of monthly data usage. Instead, T-Mobile is selling data per line in three tiers. The talk and text portion of the plan comes with 500 megabytes of data usage per month. Adding $10 bumps that to 2 gigabytes per month, while adding $20 provides unlimited data.

A big part of the reason for the exodus of contract-signing customers from T-Mobile is that it, alone among the four national-level cellphone carriers, doesn't offer the iPhone. That's because its network has, until recently, not been able to offer high-speed data service to iPhones. It's now able to offer high-speed data to iPhones in some cities, and had been trying to persuade iPhone owners who have come off their contracts with AT&T to move the phones over to T-Mobile.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-03-25-US-TEC-T-Mobile-Phone-Plans/id-eca0f2db1642415ab0d29017ac639eb7

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রবিবার, ২৪ মার্চ, ২০১৩

East Carolina University Student Recreation Center | EXSS 3880 ...

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The East Carolina University Student Recreation Center is a great place to exercise. The student recreation center is home to over 20,000 students, 1,000 faculty and staff, and is also available for the Pitt County community. It is an approximately 150,277 square feet facility, is located on the east campus, and is easily accessible to all members. The facility opens early (5:30 AM) and closes late (11:30 PM), which gives members plenty of time to come in for a workout or to participate in programs and events.

The East Carolina Student Recreation Center is a great facility to jumpstart or to progress in your workouts. The student recreation center has three fitness studios, six basketball courts, one squash court, an indoor running track, and delicious smoothies at The Center Court Juice Bar. Is swimming your thing? East Carolina Student Recreation Center has both an indoor and an outdoor pool. Aqua Groupfitness is available two days a week, free of charge.

Are you a weightlifter? The 10,800 square foot weight and fitness area has plenty of space and equipment. The equipment includes free weights, weight machines, and treadmills. If you need help in becoming more physically fit, personal trainers are there just for you. Personal training sign up sheets are available in the Wellness Center located on the second level of the facility.

In addition to Aqua Groupfitness, other group fitness classes are also available. They are varied in terms of targeted workouts and include classes such as Body Pump, Sh?Bam, Zumba, CXWorx, and Habit. The classes are offered at different times each week so that members can come based on their schedule. A small fee is charged for most group fitness classes, lifestyle enhancement programs, personal training, and adventure equipment rentals. A few other activities offered at the student recreation center include:

  • Intramural sports
  • Club sports
  • 32 foot rock climbing wall
  • Renting bicycles, and outdoor equipment

Lonely-Bear-for-web

In addition to physical activity, the Student Recreation Center offers free health education and events promoting the importance of health and wellness. ?Pirate Fit? and ?Polar Bear Plunge? are two of the most popular events at the student recreation center.

According to the East Carolina University Student Recreation Center website, ?The Mission and Goals of the Student Recreation Center are to support and encourage balanced, healthy lifestyles for the diverse ECU community by providing leadership development through educational and recreational programs. We are committed to providing exemplary student leadership experiences, enhancing individual potential, developing responsible citizenship, and fostering a lifelong commitment to learning skills associated with physical, social, emotional, and mental well-being.? Winner of the prestigious ?Facility of Merit? Award, the East Carolina University Student Recreation Center is a great place to become a better and more physically fit you!

Alfonso Smith, Nicole Manigo, Latecia Johnson, Katherine Moore, Greg Robinson

References:

http://www.ecu.edu/cs-studentaffairs/crw/aboutus/index.cfm

http://www.ecu.edu/cs-admin/mktg/polar_bear_plunge_2011.cfm

http://blog.ecu.edu/sites/poeight/blog/2013/01/18/pirates-prepare-for-17th-annual-polar-bear-plunge/

http://www.ecu.edu/cs-studentaffairs/crw/programs/fitness/pirate-fit.cfm

http://www.ecu.edu/cs-admin/news/ecunewsservices-campus-photos.cfm

ECU Student Recreation Center Brochures

Source: https://blog.ecu.edu/sites/exss3880fall2012/blog/2013/03/23/east-carolina-university-student-recreation-center/

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Should I get a bachelors? - Actuarial Outpost

When I moved to U.S., I had my credentials, a few years of relevant actuarial experience & a 2 years bachelors degree. Companies didn't bother much about my academics but rather focused more on my experience & skills.

I'm now thinking to get a 4 years bachelors degree in the U.S. as I want to pursue an MBA sometime in the near future. Although I'm pretty sure degree shouldn't be a concern for my future potential employers, but I just wanted to have one to be on the safe side.

Since I'm a full time employee & also have a kid, it wouldn't be possible for me to get a degree through a traditional (full-time) system. I've come across this accelerated bachelors in business program offered by a private university. Their schedule is not only quite flexible but it also suits me in many other ways (evening classes, once a week, course-by-course system rather than semester). Unfortunately, I'm not able to transfer much of the credits as my previous degree wasn't quite relevant. This program will allow me to get the full 4-year U.S. equivalent bachelors degree in 3.5 years.

The only concern to me is their fee. It costs around $400 per credit hour. Therefore, the entire program will cost me around $45,000. I'm wondering if it is really worth the time and money I'm going to spend. The way I'm looking at this situation is "I could save 45,000 bucks if I don't pursue this degree, which I think, is a very decent amount of money, if not incredibly large".

Thoughts?

Source: http://www.actuarialoutpost.com/actuarial_discussion_forum/showthread.php?t=257854

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IRS: warp speed apology for bad 'Star Trek' parody (+video)

IRS training film ? a 'Star Trek' spoof from 2010 ? gets blasted by House committee Friday. IRS quickly admits mistake, saying Star Trek parody wasn't 'best stewardship of resources.'

By Stephen Ohlemacher,?Associated Press / March 23, 2013

IRS says a 2010 'Star Trek' parody along with a training film spoofing 'Gilligan's Island' cost about $60,000 to make. The IRS says the 'Star Trek' film wouldn't be made today.

Nobody's going to win an Emmy for a parody of the TV show "Star Trek" filmed by Internal Revenue Service employees at an agency studio in Maryland.

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Instead, the?IRS?got a rebuke from Congress for wasting taxpayer dollars.

The agency says the video, along with a training video that parodied the TV show "Gilligan's Island," cost about $60,000. The "Star Trek" video accounted for most of the money, the agency said.

The?IRS?said Friday it was a mistake for employees to make the six-minute video. It was shown at the opening of a 2010 training and leadership conference but does not appear to have any training value.

The video features an elaborate set depicting the control room, or bridge, of the spaceship featured in the hit TV show.?IRS?workers portray the characters, including one who plays Mr. Spock, complete with fake hair and pointed ears.

The production value is high even though the acting is what one might expect from a bunch of tax collectors. In the video, the spaceship is approaching the planet "Notax," where alien identity theft appears to be a problem.

"The?IRS?recognizes and takes seriously our obligation to be good stewards of government resources and taxpayer dollars," the agency said in a statement. "There is no mistaking that this video did not reflect the best stewardship of resources."

The agency said it has tightened controls over the use of its production equipment to "ensure that all?IRS videos are handled in a judicious manner that makes wise use of taxpayer funds while ensuring a tone and theme appropriate for the nation's tax system."

The agency also said, "A video of this type would not be made today."

The video was released late in the day Friday after investigators from the House Ways and Means Committee requested it.

"There is nothing more infuriating to a taxpayer than to find out the government is using their hard-earned dollars in a way that is frivolous," said Rep. Charles Boustany, R-La., chairman of the Ways and Means oversight subcommittee. "The?IRS?admitted as much when it disclosed that it no longer produces such videos."

The film was made at an?IRS?studio in New Carrollton, Md., a suburb of Washington. The agency said it uses the studio to make training films and informational videos for taxpayers.

"The use of video training and video outreach through the in-house studio has become increasingly important to the?IRS?to reach both taxpayers and employees," the agency said. "In the current budget environment, using video for training purposes helps us save millions of dollars and is an important part of successful?IRS cost-efficiency efforts."

IRS?YouTube videos have been viewed more than 5 million times, the agency said. A video on the?IRS?website called "When Will I Get My Refund?" has been seen 950,000 times this filing season.

The disclosure of the "Star Trek" video comes as agencies throughout the federal government face automatic spending cuts, including employee furloughs at many of them.

Acting?IRS?Commissioner Steven Miller has told employees they could be furloughed five to seven days this summer. The furloughs, however, will be delayed until after tax filing season so refunds should not be affected.

The agency said the "Star Trek" video "was a well-intentioned, light-hearted introduction to an important conference during a difficult period for the?IRS."

Congressional investigators initially sought both the "Star Trek" video and the "Gilligan's Island" video but after viewing them determined that the "Gilligan's Island" video was a legitimate training video. The?IRS?did not release the "Gilligan's Island" video.

"The video series with an island theme provided filing season training for 1,900 employees in our Taxpayer Assistance Centers in 400 locations," the?IRS?said. "This example of video training alone saved the?IRS?about $1.5 million each year compared to the costs of training the employees in person."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_tmIOpNQE-k/IRS-warp-speed-apology-for-bad-Star-Trek-parody-video

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After disappointing start to 2013, how will hedge funds catch up ...

Despite the early-year rally in equity markets, some hedge funds seem to have had a disappointing start? yet again.

JP Morgan notes that the industry?s benchmark HFRI index was up 2.8% by end-February,? well below the 4.6% for MSCI All-Country index.

Some 4.2 percent of hedge funds suffered losses of at least 5% in the first two months of year, compared with 3.3% in the same period in 2012. Still, this is better than 2008/2009, when losses of this magnitude were seen at more than one in five of hedge funds. According to JP Morgan:

In all, this performance picture is rather unexciting, raising the chance that hedge funds will add risk near term to chase the current momentum in equity markets. This performance chasing happened in each of the previous two years, with hedge funds raising their betas during March/April of 2011 or 2012.

Within hedge funds, a strategy mixing long and short positions performed best. Japan long/short strategy returned 7.44 % so far this year, while China long/short and European long/short gained 6.15% and 4.35% respectively, according to Deutsche Bank.

Still, it seems some investors in the $2-trillion-plus hedge fund industry are not as return ambitious as they used to be. The 2013 survey of hedge funds by Deutsche Bank shows that 79% of institutional investors are targeting returns of 5-10% for their hedge fund portfolios. Back in 2010, more than half of investors surveyed were targeting double-digit returns.

Source: http://blogs.reuters.com/globalinvesting/2013/03/22/after-disappointing-start-to-2013-how-will-hedge-funds-catch-up/

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PSA: BlackBerry Z10 (finally) arrives on AT&T today

The American BlackBerry faithful have been waiting and while those with business (and T-Mobile) intentions got there a little early, the Z10 is now available to the more typical pay-monthly masses from AT&T. Priced up at $200 on a two-year contract, you can pick it up from Ma' Bell's for-real stores and online today, just click on that source link for all those carrier details.

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Comments

Source: AT&T

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/22/psa-blackberry-z10-att/

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শনিবার, ২৩ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Obama lays stone from MLK memorial on grave of Israeli PM slain for trying to make peace

President Obama is headed to Jordan and Bethlehem today to wrap up his trip to the Middle East that also included visits with Israeli and Palestinian officials. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

Barack Obama on Friday laid a stone from the grounds of the Washington memorial to Martin Luther King Jr. on the grave of Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli prime minister assassinated by a Jewish extremist enraged by his efforts to make peace with Palestinians.

"Sometimes it is harder to embark on peace then to embark on war," Rabin's daughter Dalia quoted Obama as telling the family at the grave site on Mount Herzl, Israel?s national cemetery, Reuters reported.

In a televised speech Thursday, Obama appealed to ordinary Israelis to put pressure on their leaders to make a peace deal with the Palestinians. He urged Israelis to put themselves in Palestinians' shoes and recognize their right to "self-determination, their right to justice."

Mark Neyman / Israel government / Getty Images

President Barack Obama places a stone taken from the grounds of the Martin Luther King memorial in Washington D.C. on the grave of Yitzhak and Keah Rabin.

On Friday, the president also visited the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem.

He spoke of the ?wrenching power? of the memorial to the 6 million Jews killed by the Nazis in World War II, calling it a ?sacred place.?

"The state of Israel does not exist because of the Holocaust, but with the survival of a strong Jewish state of Israel, such a Holocaust will never happen again," Obama said.

At the national cemetery, Obama laid another stone -- as is customary at Jewish cemeteries -- on the grave of the man after which it was named, Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism who died in 1904 before realizing his dream of a Jewish homeland.

"It is humbling and inspiring to visit and remember the visionary who began the remarkable establishment of the State of Israel," Obama wrote in the Mt. Herzl guestbook, according to The Associated Press. "May our two countries possess the same vision and will to secure peace and prosperity for future generations."

'Won Israeli hearts'
Obama was due to leave Israel for Jordan Friday after he toured the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

In the church, Obama was greeted by Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III, Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Franciscan Custodian of the Holy Land, and Armenian Orthodox Archbishop Sevan Gharibian.

In Amman, he will have talks and dinner with Jordan?s King Abdullah, an important ally of the U.S. in the region.

An editorial Israel?s Haaretz newspaper said ?Obama?s goal in coming to Israel has been achieved.?

President Barack Obama on Thursday urged the Israeli people to put themselves in the shoes of Palestinians and recognize their "right to self-determination, their right to justice." NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

?He won Israeli hearts and gave Israelis a sense of security, in the hope that now they will take charge and push the leadership toward a peace agreement with the Palestinians,? it added.

The Jerusalem Post said primarily leftist commentators had ?lamented? that Obama?s visit had not focused mainly on the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians.

?Americans understand that it is not their country?s support for Israel that triggers the rabid hatred of America felt by so many citizens of Muslim states. Rather, it is what America stands for ? freedom, liberty, tolerance, democracy ? that is viewed by popular movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood, with its reactionary worldview of restoring the caliphate and Sharia [law], as the real threat to the region and to Muslim sensibilities,? it wrote.

?Washington?s Herculean attempts in recent years to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict emanate from a desire to see both Israelis and Palestinians flourish in free, democratic states of their own. The vast majority of Israelis share that dream. Unfortunately, the majority of Palestinians still do not,? it added. ?A majority of Americans and their president are increasingly recognizing this sad fact. Others have yet to do so.?

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

President Obama receives applause from a crowd in Jerusalem Thursday by challenging groups that reject Israel.

Related:

Obama visits a Bethlehem in midst of change, Islamization

Obama appeals to Israelis: Give justice to the Palestinians

Iran threatens to destroy Tel Aviv, Haifa if Israel attacks

Obama: 'Still time' for diplomatic solution to Iran nuke dispute

This story was originally published on

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Obama withdraws controversial nominee for circuit court judge

The White House on Friday afternoon announced the withdrawal of lawyer Caitlin Halligan's nomination for Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia, a move that will be cheered by?Senate Republicans who have worked for years to block her nomination.

"Today, I accepted Caitlin Halligan?s request to withdraw as a nominee for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. I am deeply disappointed that even after nearly two and a half years, a minority of Senators continued to block a simple up-or-down vote on her nomination.? This unjustified filibuster obstructed the majority of Senators from expressing their support.? I am confident that with Caitlin?s impressive qualifications and reputation, she would have served with distinction," President Barack Obama said in a statement.

The White House's decision follows Senate Republicans' latest filibuster of Halligan's nomination March 6.

Senate Republicans, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, have rejected Halligan's nomination based in part on her background as New York's solicitor general. Opponents accuse Halligan of launching politically-motivated efforts to bankrupt gun manufacturers via the legal system.

But Democrats say Republicans are stalling on appointments to the D.C. Circuit court simply to reduce the president's influence on the court, which Obama described Friday as the nation's second-highest court.

The White House and other Democrats have noted that when Halligan was filibustered in 2011-- the first year she was nominated-- some Republicans objected to her nomination due to the court workload, an argument Democrats use to suggest Republicans are inventing new reasons for opposition.

The court currently has four vacancies, which Obama said Friday is "more vacancies than any other circuit court" in the country.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-withdraws-halligan-nomination-d-c-circuit-court-200450708--politics.html

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Pope: Dialogue with Islam, olive branch to China

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Francis called Friday for more dialogue with Islam and offered an olive branch to China and other countries that don't have diplomatic relations with the Holy See.

In his first foreign policy address as pope, Francis delivered his remarks in Italian rather than the traditional French ? another indication that the Argentine-born pope is less than comfortable speaking languages other than Italian and his mother-tongue Spanish.

The occasion was an audience with ambassadors from the 180 countries that have diplomatic relations with the Holy See, in which Francis explained he would work for peace, the poor and to "build bridges" between peoples. He noted that even his title "pontiff" means bridge-builder.

Francis said it was important to intensify dialogue among different religions "particularly dialogue with Islam" and to deepen the church's outreach to atheists.

The Vatican's relations with Islam hit several bumps during Pope Benedict XVI's papacy: He outraged Muslims with a 2006 speech quoting a Byzantine emperor as saying some of the Prophet Muhammad's teachings were "evil and inhuman." And in 2011, the pre-eminent institute of Islamic learning in the Sunni Muslim world, Cairo's Al-Azhar institute, froze dialogue with the Vatican to protest Benedict's call for greater protection of Christians in Egypt.

However, the Vatican said Friday that Al-Azhar's chief imam, Sheik Ahmed el-Tayyib, sent a message of congratulations to Francis for his election and hoped for cooperation. That's a possible sign of a thaw in relations with the arrival of a pope whose interfaith outreach while archbishop of Buenos Aires has been well-documented.

Francis also said he wanted to begin a "journey" with countries that don't yet have diplomatic relations with the Vatican.

Benedict had made improving relations with China a priority, given the millions of faithful who belong to China's underground Catholic Church, but tensions remain particularly over the appointment of bishops. China insists on naming them, while the Vatican says only the pope can name bishops.

China congratulated Francis for his election but said establishing formal relations would depend on the Vatican cutting diplomatic ties with Taiwan and ceasing activities Beijing considers as interference in its internal affairs ? a reference to bishops' appointments.

The Holy See also doesn't have diplomatic relations with Saudi Arabia. The latest country added to its list of diplomatic recognition was South Sudan, just last month.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-dialogue-islam-olive-branch-china-102330472.html

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শুক্রবার, ২২ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Nigerian author Chinua Achebe dies at 82

Afp/getty Images / AFP - Getty Images file

Author Chinua Achebe outside his home at Ogidi, eastern Nigeria, in 1999.

?

By Eun Kyung Kim, TODAY contributor

Chinua Achebe, the Nigerian novelist and poet whose 1958 novel "Things Fall Apart" addressed the effects of colonialism on African society, has died. He was 82.

Achebe died following a brief illness, his literary agent, Andrew Wylie, said Friday. He added that the author's family has requested privacy.


Brown University, where Achebe taught for the past four years, said the writer passed away Thursday night.

"We join the world in mourning Chinua Achebe's death," John Makinson, chairman and chief executive of Penguin Group, said in a statement. "He was a giant, and a wise and kind man. We are honored to have published his final book, which, like all of his books, will outlast us all."

Achebe?s breakthrough novel focused on the clash between Western and traditional values. It told the story of colonialism for the first time from an African perspective, and?has sold more than 10 million copies and been translated into more than 50 languages.

Nelson Mandela has credited Achebe for bringing "Africa to the rest of the world" and called him "the writer in whose company the prison walls came down."

Achebe played a pivotal role in the development of African literature.?He is the author of more than 20 books, including novels, short stories, essays and poetry collections. In 2007, he won the Man Booker International Prize for Fiction.

Achebe was born Nov. 16, 1930 and raised in the village of Ogidi in southeastern Nigeria. After graduating from college, he started a radio career that ended?abruptly?in 1966 during the national upheaval that led to Nigeria?s three-year civil conflict, known as the Biafran War. Achebe then joined the Biafran Ministry of Information and represented Biafra on various diplomatic and fund-raising missions.

He was known as an outspoken critic of successive dictatorship governments in Nigeria, often refusing to accept literary honors from his home country in protest.

Last year, Achebe published his final book, "There Was a Country," a memoir about the three-year Biafran War.

Russell Perreault, publicity director for the writer?s earlier publisher, Random House, noted Achebe once said, "If you don't like someone's story, write your own."

"We are saddened by the death of the 'Father of African literature' Chinua Achebe," Perreault said. "We are grateful that he told his story and left us with a legacy of great literature and a better understanding of Africa."

At the time of his death, Achebe was a professor of Africana studies at Brown University. Among his activities at the school was the annual Achebe Colloquium on Africa, an international gathering of scholars, policymakers, and others who shared interest in current day African affairs.

"He was more than just a colleague, faculty member, and teacher at Brown. He was a gift to the world," said Corey D.B. Walker, chair of Brown?s Department of Africana studies.?"At a time like this we could draw many words of wisdom and comfort from the deep wells of various African cultures and traditions to honor him. The most fitting is the simple and elegant phrase, 'A great tree has fallen.'"

Prior to Brown, Achebe had taught for more than 15 years at Bard College. He moved there shortly after a car accident in 1990 left him paralyzed from the waist down.

He and his wife, Christie Okoli, had four children.

?

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Iraq to revive cultural life to heal war wounds

In this Tuesday, March 12, 2013 photo, dancers practice at the state-run Iraq Fashion House for an operetta that will display Iraq?s art, culture and history in Baghdad, Iraq. Ten years after the bombs began falling on Iraq, the capital Baghdad is gearing up to host a yearlong cultural extravaganza that organizers hope will quicken the pulse of the city?s ailing cultural life. The city?s designation as this year?s Arab Capital of Culture is also seen as an opportunity to paint a picture of a city of history and hope, and rub out images of death and hatred. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

In this Tuesday, March 12, 2013 photo, dancers practice at the state-run Iraq Fashion House for an operetta that will display Iraq?s art, culture and history in Baghdad, Iraq. Ten years after the bombs began falling on Iraq, the capital Baghdad is gearing up to host a yearlong cultural extravaganza that organizers hope will quicken the pulse of the city?s ailing cultural life. The city?s designation as this year?s Arab Capital of Culture is also seen as an opportunity to paint a picture of a city of history and hope, and rub out images of death and hatred. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

In this Monday, March 18, 2013 photo, a worker looks through paintings at the Hewar Gallery in Baghdad, Iraq. Ten years after the bombs began falling on Iraq, the capital Baghdad is gearing up to host a yearlong cultural extravaganza that organizers hope will quicken the pulse of the city?s ailing cultural life. The city?s designation as this year?s Arab Capital of Culture is also seen as an opportunity to paint a picture of a city of history and hope, and rub out images of death and hatred. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

In this Tuesday, March 12, 2013 photo, a group of youths practices at the state-run Iraq Fashion House for an operetta that will display Iraq?s art, culture and history in Baghdad, Iraq. Ten years after the bombs began falling on Iraq, the capital Baghdad is gearing up to host a yearlong cultural extravaganza that organizers hope will quicken the pulse of the city?s ailing cultural life. The city?s designation as this year?s Arab Capital of Culture is also seen as an opportunity to paint a picture of a city of history and hope, and rub out images of death and hatred. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

In this Tuesday, March 12, 2013 photo, embroiderers and tailors sew costumes for an operetta about Iraq's culture and history, at the state-run Iraq Fashion House in Baghdad. Ten years after the bombs began falling on Iraq, the capital Baghdad is gearing up to host a yearlong cultural extravaganza that organizers hope will quicken the pulse of the city?s ailing cultural life. The city?s designation as this year?s Arab Capital of Culture is also seen as an opportunity to paint a picture of a city of history and hope, and rub out images of death and hatred. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

In this Monday, March 18, 2013 photo, a worker dusts paintings in a classroom at the Hewar Gallery in Baghdad, Iraq. Ten years after the bombs began falling on Iraq, the capital Baghdad is gearing up to host a yearlong cultural extravaganza that organizers hope will quicken the pulse of the city?s ailing cultural life. The city?s designation as this year?s Arab Capital of Culture is also seen as an opportunity to paint a picture of a city of history and hope, and rub out images of death and hatred. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

(AP) ? Sewing machines buzz inside the Iraq Fashion House as dressmakers work late into the night behind concrete blast walls readying intricately embroidered costumes. Models rehearse for an upcoming show upstairs.

The energetic atmosphere is in stark contrast to the nearby Iraqi National Museum, which remains closed to the public a decade after it was looted along with other government buildings following the U.S.-led invasion.

On Saturday, the Iraqi capital becomes this year's Arab Capital of Culture, and organizers are hoping to use the title to quicken the pulse of Baghdad's ailing cultural life. Manama, Bahrain, was the last capital to hold the honor bestowed by the Arab League under a program set up in 1995 with the help of the U.N. Education, Science and Culture Organization program.

But there are signs the battle-scarred city is not yet ready to reclaim its place among the Arab world's cultural jewels.

Despite a staggering $500 million budget for the yearlong initiative, security remains a worry and authorities have failed to renovate several cultural buildings that were damaged or neglected following the March 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

In the coming months, organizers are planning literary and art exhibitions, round tables on heritage and archaeology, poetry and literature symposiums, fashion shows, concerts, films and theater performances.

"This festival will be a clear message to the world that the situation in Baghdad has changed," Culture Ministry spokesman Abdul-Qadir al-Jumaili said. "Baghdad is a city rich in history and culture and is no longer a city of bombings, death and conflict."

Baghdad was once an active cultural hub in the Arab world, but this nearly 1,250-year-old city has faded remarkably since 2003. Deteriorating security, political tension and a more religiously conservative push on both sides of Iraq's sectarian divide have all taken their toll.

The Department of Cinema and Theater building in central Baghdad has not been repaired since it was looted and burned in the chaotic aftermath of the invasion. Baghdad now has only four theaters and three cinemas available for the event, down from 82 before the war. The number of art galleries has dropped from 20 to four.

The National Museum was also looted. Collections that were stolen or destroyed at the museum chronicled some 7,000 years of civilization in Mesopotamia, including the ancient Babylonians, Sumerians and Assyrians.

Louise Haxthausen, the Jordan-based director of the UNESCO office for Iraq, said the country's archaeological sites and cultural facilities have paid a heavy price during Iraq's years of conflict. But she said this year's celebration is an opportunity to restore some of Baghdad's cultural prominence.

"The events scheduled during this year of celebration will also promote the many efforts of Iraqi artists to keep the city's culture alive ... and contribute to help erasing the negative image of a 'war zone,'" she said.

Organizers still have much to do to change the mentality of Baghdad residents, including the owners of theaters dating back decades. Several have rejected government offers to rent or buy the properties, which have been turned unceremoniously into more profitable warehouses and coffee shops.

At Cinema Atlas in central Baghdad, metal bars and wooded boxes are strewn in the corridor. A board meant to display movie posters is dusty, its glass broken. Newly built stalls sell medical equipment and other items. At the entrance, a huddle of plastic tables provides seating for a sidewalk tea shop.

"Cinema and theater died after the fall of Baghdad," said Saad Hashim Abdullah, who began renting out portions of the cinema building to small-time merchants in 2003. Encouraged by improved security, he reopened the cinema in 2009, only to close it again a month later.

"This business is no longer attracting fans. It's ruined," he said.

Not far away, the 1930s-era Cinema al-Zawraa, one of Baghdad's oldest, didn't look much better. A metal plate blocks the entrance. The ornate white facade is falling apart.

Owner Mohammed al-Saadi has no plans to reopen it as a movie hall.

"It is religiously and traditionally unacceptable to run a cinema or theater," he said. "Isn't it better to demolish it and build a beautiful building rather than keep it in ruins for rats?"

Shafiq Mahdi, the director-general of the department of Cinema and Theatre, blamed post-invasion "backwardness" for the loss of Iraq's cultural treasures. He thinks the upcoming year of culture is a "golden opportunity" for Baghdad to rediscover its glamour.

With a government-allocated budget of around $15 million, he bought new equipment, financed production of 24 films and hired experts from France, Germany, Tunisia, Egypt and Iran.

Baghdad-based painter Qassim Sabti echoes Mahdi's optimism.

"We need a new lung to breathe the Iraqi creativity as we have been deprived from such activities long time ago," he said.

Not everyone is convinced.

"Does Iraq really need an event like this now?" asked Baghdad taxi driver Sajad Amjad. He thinks funding for the project could be better spent on improving roads and fixing the city's creaking services.

After a decade of war and sectarian violence, Baghdad is still far from normal.

On Tuesday, al-Qaida affiliated group in Iraq launched a well-coordinated assault of nearly 20 bombings in Baghdad and other cities, killing 65 people and wounding more than 200.

"The timing is not ideal for hosting an event like this," said Hamid al-Shimmari, a Baghdad-based poet. He said Baghdad needs more than upgrades to its cultural infrastructure for an event like this. It also needs a sense of normalcy and stable security.

"Culture is a beautiful world that means tolerance and fantasy, not horror and fear," he added. "The tension is high in every corner and I'm afraid that the upcoming event will not convey a beautiful picture for Baghdad."

But back at the state-run Iraq Fashion House, there is a sense of hope. Artist Ara Yessayan has brought together around 75 youths from different religious and ethnic backgrounds for a performance that will use drama, dance and a fashion show to convey Iraq's nearly 7,000 years of history.

"That's the fact of Iraq. ... Despite the wounds Iraq and Baghdad have suffered, both will survive," he said.

___

Follow Sinan Salaheddin on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/sinansm

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-22-ML-Iraq-Cultural-Hopes/id-8542ac5386d74b99b65e692e2ecc5253

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FedEx cuts forecast as air freight weakness hits profit

By A. Ananthalakshmi

(Reuters) - FedEx Corp cut its full-year forecast after a worse-than-expected quarterly profit as customers shift from air express to slower but cheaper modes of international shipping.

Shares of the No. 2 U.S. package-delivery company fell 5 percent in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

FedEx's express unit, its biggest source of revenue, has also been hit by overcapacity in the industry that has squeezed margins. Operating income in the express unit fell 66 percent.

FedEx said the express unit underperformed due to weakness in Asia and other international markets, where margin pressures arising from excess capacity more than offset increased volumes.

"We have a yield issue that exaggerated itself this quarter over last quarter," Dave Bronczek, CEO of FedEx Express, said on a conference call with analysts.

FedEx plans to cut express capacity to and from Asia from April 1 and is looking at reducing its fleet by retiring more of its older, less-efficient aircraft.

The actions, along with cost cuts, will help the express unit perform better in the fourth quarter, Bronczek said.

"They have got to lower their costs because they are getting paid a lot less for the packages they are shipping," said BB&T Capital Markets analyst Kevin Sterling.

"It is hard for them to adjust quickly because we are talking about planes which cannot just be parked in the garage overnight," said Sterling, who doesn't expect margins to improve for a few quarters.

FedEx, considered an economic bellwether because of the massive volume of goods it moves, forecast fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of $1.90 to $2.10 per share. Analysts on average expect $2.07 per share.

The company now expects a profit of $6.00 to $6.20 per share for fiscal 2013 ending May 31. It had earlier forecast $6.20 to $6.60 per share. Analysts on average expect earnings of $6.31 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Rival United Parcel Service Inc in January forecast weaker-than-expected 2013 profit, citing an uneven global economy.

COST CUTS

FedEx announced a plan in October to improve profits by $1.7 billion over four years by cutting costs in the express unit.

FedEx said a number of its executives accepted voluntary buyouts in early February, and that it had notified thousands more of their eligibility for buyouts.

Third-quarter net income fell 31 percent to $361 million, or $1.13 per share. Excluding items, FedEx earned $1.23 per share.

Revenue rose 4 percent to $11.0 billion. Analysts expected earnings of $1.38 per share on revenue of $10.85 billion.

FedEx shares were trading at $101.01 in early trading. UPS shares were down 0.6 percent at $84.59.

(Reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fedex-profit-falls-31-percent-air-freight-weakness-114051997--sector.html

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Start on Line Business: Advertisment Swap Miracle

Right here is a little method you can execute to build your mailing list for no added cost. I call it "making use of subscribers to make subscribers" like much in the context of "making use of cash to get money".

This simple listing developing formula can be summarized in 2 words: ad swap.
Generally, you trade ads with other eZine authors, ideally of the same mailing list size or bigger. You broadcast the eZine publisher's ad to your mailing list while the eZine author recommends your advertisement to his listing. Yes, you are really cross promoting or cross advertising each others products to each of your mailing list.
Your advertisement's goal ought to be to obtain as many customers feasible from the various other eZine publisher's mailing list to sign up for yours.
The outcome:
You grow your newsletter/list. This technique does not need money, meaning it can be done for free. And the return of subscribers? Infinite!

You just have to do this with one eZine publisher at least as soon as, because his customers who are likewise your customers can now be followed up within the borders of your newsletter.
Execute ad swaps with as many eZine authors as possible and quickly, you will have a substantial mailing list of your own-- constructed without spending a dime.

Source: http://wwwbasedathomebusiness.blogspot.com/2013/03/advertisment-swap-miracle.html

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Pilgrims hope Francis can revive Church with simple values

By Catherine Hornby

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pilgrims who flocked to Rome for the inaugural Mass of Pope Francis on Tuesday had high hopes he can reform and revive the Catholic Church, bring it closer to ordinary people and focus global attention on helping the poor.

"Ideas are changing under Francis. The powerful have to finally understand they can't destroy the world for money," said Francisca Fernandes, a psychologist who traveled to Rome from Patagonia in Argentina for the inauguration.

People watched and cheered as Francis toured St. Peter's Square in an open white jeep, frequently stopping to greet the crowds and kiss babies. Many of them said they were struck by the new pope's openness and accessibility.

"He has a very special presence, his smile and attitude. I feel close to him," said Veronique Blaise, a 40-year-old purchasing manager from Paris. "We need someone sincere and simple like him to bring back traditional values."

Up to 200,000 people waving flags and banners crammed into the square to hear a homily in which Francis appealed for the protection of the environment and the defense of the weakest in society.

"He touched me the most when he was talking about the poor, the sick and the aged - he has the world at heart," said Rev. Emmanuel Korsah, a priest from Ghana studying Church law at a Catholic university in Rome.

"There will be a lot of challenges, but he means to face them, in the name of St. Francis and with the lifestyle of simplicity he wants to live," he said.

Others noted that the Jesuit pope's humble style was a clear break with the past.

"The new pope seems different. He is closer to young people," said Michele Del Grosso, a 17-year-old student who traveled overnight from Olevano sul Tusciano in southern Italy to take part in the Mass.

"His approach is almost revolutionary," said 42-year-old sports writer Marco Da Milano. "His words are very interesting and also easy to understand."

The former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio has tried his best so far to flout Vatican pomp, stressing his role as bishop of Rome and frequently reaching out to greet well-wishers, to the obvious discomfort of his security detail.

Some pilgrims attending the Mass said they believed Francis also has what it takes to shake up the Church's dysfunctional central administration, or Curia, which has been blighted by rivalry, scandal and infighting.

"I hope he can reform the establishment. Because he is an outsider, he can clean up a bit, said Franz Schoen, a 70-year-old pensioner from Lucerne, Switzerland. "There's a lot to do. I hope he has enough time to do it."

(Reporting By Catherine Hornby; Editing by Philip Pullella and Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pilgrims-hope-francis-revive-church-simple-values-144541649.html

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Senate drops assault weapon ban from gun reform bill

Democrats on Tuesday confirmed that a proposed ban on assault weapons will not be included in a package of gun reform legislation yet to be introduced in the Senate, suggesting the measure does not have broad support in Congress.

The bill's sponsor, Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, confirmed to reporters Tuesday that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will remove an assault weapons ban from a package of gun reform legislation, and offer it separately as an amendment.

"I very much regret it," Feinstein said of Reid's decision. "I tried my best."

Reid's decision signals how politically volatile the issue of an assault weapons ban remains and suggests that any gun reform measure would die in the Senate if it included such a ban?something many political observers have long suggested.

Following the Dec. 14 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Feinstein introduced legislation to reinstate the assault weapons ban, which was first passed in 1994 under President Bill Clinton and expired in 2004.

But despite a burst of energy behind the reduction of gun violence in the wake of the shooting?energy that some believe has already begun to wane?the ban threatens to place Democrats who represent strong gun rights constituencies in a tough electoral position, and continues to be highly unpopular among Republicans.

The Senate Judiciary Committee on March 14 passed Feinstein's bill, which would have banned assault weapons as well as magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition. The committee has also passed a bill that would expand background checks for gun buyers and close the so-called gun show loophole that allows people to avoid a background check if they buy weapons from private sellers. That bill, which Democrats on the committee hoped could attract Republican support, passed without a single Republican vote, a bad sign for its chances in the Senate.

The assault weapons ban was hailed by Democrats, including President Barack Obama, who has advocated for the measure. "These weapons of war, when combined with high-capacity magazines, have one purpose: to inflict maximum damage as quickly as possible. They are designed for the battlefield, and they have no place on our streets, in our schools, or threatening our law enforcement officers," Obama said, in a statement, at the time.

Liz Goodwin contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/assault-weapons-ban-dropped-senate-bill-193259307--politics.html

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Cyberwar manual lays down rules for online attacks

LONDON (AP) ? Even cyberwar has rules, and one group of experts is putting out a manual to prove it.

Their handbook, due to be published later this week, applies the practice of international law to the world of electronic warfare in an effort to show how hospitals, civilians and neutral nations can be protected in an information-age fight.

"Everyone was seeing the Internet as the 'Wild, Wild West,'" U.S. Naval War College Professor Michael Schmitt, the manual's editor, said in an interview before its official release. "What they had forgotten is that international law applies to cyberweapons like it applies to any other weapons."

The Tallinn Manual ? named for the Estonian capital where it was compiled ? was created at the behest of the NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence, a NATO think tank. It takes existing rules on battlefield behavior, such as the 1868 St. Petersburg Declaration and the 1949 Geneva Convention, to the Internet, occasionally in unexpected ways.

Marco Roscini, who teaches international law at London's University of Westminster, described the manual as a first-of-its-kind attempt to show that the laws of war ? some of which date back to the 19th century ? were flexible enough to accommodate the new realities of online conflict.

The 282-page handbook has no official standing, but Roscini predicted that it would be an important reference as military lawyers across the world increasingly grapple with what to do about electronic attacks.

"I'm sure it will be quite influential," he said.

The manual's central premise is that war doesn't stop being war just because it happens online. Hacking a dam's controls to release its reservoir into a river valley can have the same effect as breaching it with explosives, its authors argue.

Legally speaking, a cyberattack that sparks a fire at a military base is indistinguishable from an attack that uses an incendiary shell.

The humanitarian protections don't disappear online either. Medical computers get the same protection that brick-and-mortar hospitals do. The personal data related to prisoners of war has to be kept safe in the same way that the prisoners themselves are ? for example by having the information stored separately from military servers that might be subject to attack.

Cyberwar can lead to cyberwar crimes, the manual warned. Launching an attack from a neutral nation's computer network is forbidden in much the same way that hostile armies aren't allowed to march through a neutral country's territory. Shutting down the Internet in an occupied area in retaliation for a rebel cyberattack could fall afoul of international prohibitions on collective punishment.

The experts behind the manual ? two dozen officers, academics, and researchers drawn mainly from NATO states ? didn't always agree on how traditional rules applied in a cyberwar.

Self-defense was a thorny issue. International law generally allows nations to strike first if they spot enemy soldiers about to pour across the border, but how could that be applied to a world in which attacks can happen at the click of a mouse?

Other aspects of international law seemed obsolete ? or at least in need of an upgrade ? in the electronic context.

Soldiers are generally supposed to wear uniforms and carry their arms openly, for example, but what relevance could such a requirement have when they are hacking into distant targets from air-conditioned office buildings?

The law also forbids attacks on "civilian objects," but the authors were divided as to whether the word "object" could be interpreted to mean "data." So that may leave a legal loophole for a military attack that erases valuable civilian data, such as a nation's voter registration records.

___

Online:

The Tallinn Manual: http://www.ccdcoe.org/249.html

Raphael Satter can be reached at: http://raphae.li/twitter

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyberwar-manual-lays-down-rules-online-attacks-161234113--finance.html

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Condoleezza Rice writing book on democracy

NEW YORK (AP) ? Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is working on a book about democracy.

Henry Holt and Company announced Tuesday that the book, currently untitled, will be published in 2015. The 58-year-old Rice has previously written or co-written a handful of policy books, along with memoirs about her family and her years in the George W. Bush administration.

She served as national security adviser during Bush's first term and secretary of state during his second term. She is currently a professor of political economy and political science at Stanford University, where she has taught off and on since the early 1980s.

In her new book, Rice will draw upon personal and professional experiences to address such issues as self-government, immigration and education.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/condoleezza-rice-writing-book-democracy-152613713.html

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iWatch as gesture control interface

iWatch as gesture control interface

With rumors of an Apple iWatch swirling, speculation over potential feature sets and use cases are swirling with them. Designer Neven Mrgan has an interesting one:

Today it occurred to me that it could have an interesting use: acting as a gestural, accelerometer-based, Kinect-like remote.

Or like a wearable Wii-mote or PlayStation move. Go read the rest of it to see how Mrgan thinks it could be used.

Source: Neven Mrgan



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/G4FpZubtetE/story01.htm

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Kenyatta lawyers push international court to drop case

By Sara Webb and Thomas Escritt

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Lawyers for Kenya's president-elect, Uhuru Kenyatta, will push the International Criminal Court on Monday to drop charges against him after the case against his co-accused collapsed.

The case against Kenyatta, on charges of crimes against humanity over bloodshed in the aftermath of Kenya's 2007 election, has been further complicated by his victory in a ballot which was held largely peacefully this month.

The case is also an important test for the court, which was set up more than a decade ago as the world's first permanent war crimes tribunal but has only secured one conviction.

Kenyatta and former civil servant Francis Muthaura were among six suspects initially charged by ICC prosecutors with orchestrating violence after the 2007 election, when some 1,200 people were killed.

But on March 11, prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said the decision of a key witness to recant testimony forced her to drop charges against Muthaura. She said that would have no impact on Kenyatta's case, which was closely linked.

The status conference, or pre-trial hearing, was called by the judges in The Hague at 3 p.m. (10:00 a.m. EST) to look at the consequences of the withdrawal of the charges against Muthaura for the case against Kenyatta.

Kenyatta's lawyers will call for the case against him to be dropped or at least postponed, said one lawyer who was familiar with the case but did not want to be quoted by name.

"The collapse of the case against Muthaura has a profound impact on the viability of the prosecution's case against Kenyatta," the lawyer said.

The prosecutions are based on a lot of the same evidence. Both men have always denied any wrongdoing.

Kenyatta, elected by a slim margin, faces a big challenge in bridging Kenya's ethnic divides even without the court case. His opponent, defeated presidential contender Raila Odinga, challenged the election result in court on Saturday, alleging widespread ballot rigging.

Prosecutors could be expected to resist any moves to drop the charges against Kenyatta, which were brought by Bensouda's predecessor.

However, lawyers for Kenyatta could also say the prosecution case has changed so much in the past year that the case should be moved back to the pre-trial "confirmation of charges" phase.

The prosecution would then have to show again that it has a strong enough case to go to trial.

Kenyatta's lawyers have argued that so much information was disclosed by prosecutors at the last minute that the case is fundamentally different from the one judges initially approved.

Judges have not yet formally dropped the case against Muthaura.

(Reporting by Sara Webb and Thomas Escritt; Editing by Matthew Tostevin)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kenyatta-lawyers-push-international-court-drop-case-070134876.html

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Venezuela election rivals clash over crime

By Daniel Wallis

CARACAS (Reuters) - Moments after he registered to run in Venezuela's April 14 election, acting President Nicolas Maduro vowed to go on foot, unarmed, into the toughest slums of Caracas and ask the gangs there to lay down their guns.

Maduro and his opponent, Henrique Capriles, have clashed over a top campaign issue: the daily murders, armed robberies and kidnappings that make the South American country one of the most dangerous in the world.

"We'll go like this, with our chests bare!" Maduro cried at the campaign event, driving the crowd wild as he pulled open his Venezuelan-flag tracksuit top to reveal a red T-shirt emblazoned with the eyes of his late boss, Hugo Chavez.

"We'll go without fear, to tell these youths to stop the killing, to give up the guns, to come to Christ the Redeemer!"

Fears about personal safety routinely top polls of voters' concerns in the country with the world's biggest oil reserves - despite the many programs started by Chavez during his 14-year rule aimed at bringing down the homicide figures.

In a report last week, the U.N. Development Program said that only Honduras, El Salvador, Ivory Coast and Jamaica had worse rates than Venezuela's 45.1 murders per 100,000 people. The rate in the United States was 4.2.

The Venezuelan government concedes the country suffers more violent crime than most of the region. But it accuses opposition politicians of exaggerating the problem and shamelessly stoking fears to tarnish Chavez's socialist "revolution."

On Sunday, Maduro accused the U.S. Department of Defense and Central Intelligence Agency of plotting to assassinate Capriles and blame it on the government to cause chaos and trigger a coup ahead of the vote. Washington categorically denied it.

The opposition candidate, a 40-year-old centrist state governor who accuses Maduro of exploiting the emotion over Chavez's March 5 death in an effort to win the election, kicked off a provincial tour over the weekend.

Capriles calls Maduro a poor imitation of Chavez and mocked his performance outside the electoral authority offices.

"Do you think Nicolas is going to solve the violence problem? It's not opening your jacket and saying 'I'm Superman and I'm going to go I don't know where,'" Capriles said.

"I'd like to leave my house at 11, 12 o'clock in the night, for my children to be able to go out and me not to be terrified. Can we do that today? Can we live like that? No."

WEAK JUSTICE SYSTEM

At the root of the country's crime problem, experts say, is a proliferation of firearms and drugs, and a weak justice system that means the majority of offenses go unpunished.

Among a spate of attacks on prominent victims, a U.S. Major League baseball player and diplomats from Mexico, Chile, Belarus and Costa Rica have been abducted in recent months.

So-called express kidnappings, where targets are dragged off city streets or from their cars and taken to cash machines, or held for a few hours until a ransom is paid, are common.

The government says there were 16,000 homicides nationwide last year, but non-governmental organizations put the figure much higher. The Venezuelan Violence Observatory said its conservative estimate for 2012 was more than 21,000 murders.

Without detailed statistics from the authorities, it is not possible to crosscheck the numbers.

Stung by allegations that the situation is out of control, Chavez's administration revamped the main investigative police unit last year, created several new public safety bodies, and said it cut the homicide rate in Caracas by 10 percent.

Most afflicted by the gangs of criminals are poor residents living in the myriad shantytowns where the late president found his most fervent followers.

Voters seldom held Chavez personally responsible for the high crime rate. Some viewed him almost as a member of the family, others in near-religious terms. Maduro is trying to forge the same emotional bond, but lacks Chavez's charisma.

On Sunday, he inaugurated a new sports facility in the capital's gritty Petare barrio, briefly taking to the court to play basketball with a group of youths. There were wild cheers when he made a basket on his third attempt.

The acting president, who appeared to have visited the neighborhood with the normal level of security and bodyguards that he normally would, blames violent crime on a decadent legacy left behind by capitalist governments in the OPEC nation.

"They've given us these values from birth through narco-TV shows, fashion linked subliminally to drug consumption, fashion linked to pistols, and the cults of guns and of criminal gangs," he said after he registered his candidacy for the presidency.

He accuses the opposition of cynically allowing bandits to roam unchecked - for example, in Miranda state, which includes poor parts of Caracas and where Capriles is governor.

"You know why?" Maduro said to the crowd. "Because they don't care about people's lives. They prefer barrios that are full of drugs and criminality so they can continue stigmatizing the people like they have done for the last 500 years."

(Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/venezuela-election-rivals-clash-over-crime-133114206.html

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AAA Mich.: Gas prices rise 7 cents from last week

DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -- AAA Michigan says gasoline prices have risen about 7 cents during the past week to a statewide average of about $3.77 per gallon.

The auto club says Monday the average is about 20 cents per gallon less than last year at this time.

Of the cities it surveys, AAA Michigan says the cheapest price for self-serve unleaded fuel is in the Flint area, where it's about $3.70 a gallon. The highest average is in the Ann Arbor area at about $3.81.

Dearborn-based AAA Michigan surveys 2,800 Michigan gas stations daily.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/aaa-mich-gas-prices-rise-161105329.html

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