Monday, November 12, 2012

Best Buy to name former Williams-Sonoma exec as CFO: report

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BBC chief quits over "shoddy journalism" failures

LONDON (Reuters) - BBC director general George Entwistle resigned just two months into the job, after the state-funded broadcaster put out a programme denounced by its chairman as shoddy journalism.

The BBC, reeling from revelations that a former star presenter was a paedophile, brought further problems on its head when a flagship news programme, Newsnight, aired a mistaken allegation that a former senior politician sexually abused children.

The broadcaster issued a full apology on Friday, but early on Saturday Entwistle had to admit under questioning from his own journalists that he had not known in advance about the Newsnight report, weeks after being accused of being too hands-off over a previous scandal involving the same programme.

Later on Saturday Entwistle announced his resignation, saying the unacceptable journalistic standards of the Newsnight film had damaged the public's confidence in the 90-year-old BBC.

"As the director general of the BBC, I am ultimately responsible for all content as the editor-in-chief, and I have therefore decided that the honourable thing for me to do is to step down," he said.

Entwistle succeeded Mark Thompson, set to take over at the New York Times Co, in September and almost immediately faced one of the biggest crises in the history of the BBC, funded by an annual licence fee levied on all TV viewers.

This was the revelation by rival broadcaster ITV last month that the late Jimmy Savile, one of the most recognisable personalities on British television in the 1960s, 1970s and 80s, had sexually abused young girls, some on BBC premises.

Suggestions have surfaced of a paedophile ring inside the broadcaster at the time and a BBC cover-up. A large-scale police inquiry has been launched.

Entwistle was condemned for the BBC's slow response over the Savile furore and then lambasted after it emerged that Newsnight had axed an expose into Savile shortly after his death and that the broadcaster had gone ahead with planned tributes instead.

His appearance before a parliamentary committee provoked mockery, with one lawmaker saying he had shown a "lamentable lack of knowledge" of what was going on at his own organisation.

Thompson has also had to explain what he knew about the Savile episode and has faced questions from staff at the New York Times over whether he is still the right person to take one of the biggest jobs in American newspaper publishing.

MISTAKEN ALLEGATION

For Entwistle, the knives were sharpening on Friday after the BBC had to apologise following an admission Newsnight had broadcast a mistaken allegation that an ex-politician, later identified on the Internet as a close ally of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, had sexually abused children.

The final straw came when under questioning from his own journalists, he said he had not known in advance about the Newsnight report nor who the alleged abuser was until the name appeared in social media.

"He showed no sign of being in control the first time (over the Jimmy Savile issue) and this morning's interview on the Today programme I think was fatal, because it happened again," said Steve Hewlett, a media consultant and former BBC editor.

"You could forgive him for the Savile situation, he could have survived that if he'd shown he was on top of this situation and he didn't," Hewlett told Reuters.

Senior lawmakers said Entwistle's decision was right because it appeared that under him the BBC, long affectionately known as "Auntie" and widely respected in many parts of the world, was systematically incapable of addressing its failings.

"It is vital that credibility and public trust in this important national institution is restored," Culture Secretary Maria Miller said in a statement. "It is now crucial that the BBC puts the systems in place to ensure it can make first class news and current affairs programmes."

QUESTIONS NEED ANSWERING

John Whittingdale, chairman of parliament's powerful media committee, said the crisis had done enormous damage to public trust and confidence, and that Entwistle's departure did not spell the end of the matter.

"There are still a lot of questions which need answering. Who did take the decision to approve that (Newsnight) programme because quite plainly it was a deeply flawed decision," he told Reuters.

The sudden departure of Entwistle, and the journalistic mistakes that prompted it, is the latest drama to hit the British media industry after two years of soul-searching sparked by a phone-hacking scandal at Rupert Murdoch's newspaper empire.

Any lack of integrity at the BBC is serious for a broadcaster that has been widely respected for decades and is funded by the public. A judge-led inquiry into media standards prompted by the illegality at a Murdoch tabloid is due to be published soon.

Lord Patten, chairman of the BBC's governing body and long a prominent figure in British politics, said it was one of the "saddest nights" of his public life to accept Entwistle's resignation.

"George has very honourably offered us his resignation because of the unacceptable mistakes and the unacceptable shoddy journalism which has caused so much controversy," said Patten.

"He has behaved as editor with huge honour and courage and would that the rest of the world always behaved the same."

Patten announced that Tim Davie, the BBC's director of Audio and Music, would be the acting director general.

Some commentators have said the hierarchical management of the 22,000-strong organisation left it unable to respond to large-scale problems and criticism.

(Editing by Stephen Powell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bbc-chief-quits-shoddy-journalism-failures-002050657.html

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Sunday, November 11, 2012

Busch wins pole, Keselowski outqualifies Johnson

Jimmie Johnson looks out of his car following qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

Jimmie Johnson looks out of his car following qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

Kyle Busch gestures to cheering fans after winning the pole during qualifying for Sunday's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

Kyle Busch checks results on a scoreboard after climbing out of his No. 18 car and setting the pole during qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

Danica Patrick reacts as she looks at a scoreboard displaying her time during qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

Kurt Busch, left, talks with Brad Keselowski, right, during qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012, at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

(AP) ? Brad Keselowski isn't rolling over for Jimmie Johnson, not with two races to go in their championship battle and not at Phoenix International Raceway.

Keselowski outqualified Johnson by 10 positions Friday at one of the five-time NASCAR champion's best race tracks.

It was an unusual twist for the top two contenders, as Johnson is typically the better qualifier and Keselowski has struggled in that area through the first eight races of the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.

And there should be no question which driver would be in control at Phoenix, where Johnson is a four-time winner and has a 5.3 average finish and Keselowski has only one career top-five.

But when the qualifying session was over, Keselowski had locked down the 14th starting spot for Sunday's race, while Johnson was in 24th. It's the lowest qualifying position for Johnson in a Chase race since the 2010 opener at New Hampshire, and his worst this season since the August Bristol race.

"Wasn't so good, but we've been fighting a little bit in qualifying trim," Johnson said. "But, we've got a great baseline race setup to go off."

Johnson struggled with the sun glare in the first turn.

"The glare was pretty bad getting into the turn, then getting the power down was tough for me up off of two," he said. "Three and four were pretty good, I felt like on both of my laps, but I struggled oddly enough down there this time."

Johnson moved into the points lead with his win at Martinsville two weeks ago, and widened the margin to seven points with a second-straight victory last week at Texas.

But Keselowski is eager to reclaim the top spot he held down for five weeks of the Chase, and knows how to get it back.

"I'm running to win, whatever that means," he said. "Win the race and things become a lot easier. You don't have to worry about those things."

Neither championship contender was near the front of the field, where Kyle Busch set a track in winning the pole.

Busch ran a lap of 138.766 mph to earn the top starting spot, breaking the mark of 137.279 set by Carl Edwards in 2011.

It was a big improvement for Busch from a year ago, when he came into the race in crisis. He had to fight to keep his job after intentionally wrecking Ron Hornaday Jr. in a Truck Series race at Texas a week earlier, which led NASCAR to park him for the rest of the weekend, qualified poorly and finished 34th.

"It's kind of cool because here a year ago we qualified 36th ? dead last on speed ? and then this year we're fastest, top of the sheets," Busch said. "It's really good for all of us. I'm just proud of the effort."

Martin Truex Jr. qualified second and Denny Hamlin was third to give Toyota the top three starting spots.

All three Toyota drivers thought the track surface and grip was difficult, with Hamlin and Truex even calling it "treacherous."

"At the start of practice it was pretty treacherous just because it's been sitting, so it's just tough to know," Truex said of the track surface. "We go through so

much with transition in the race car throughout practice because the track is new and the tires are kind of hard. This is a great race track and just hope the groove gets a little bit wider before the race starts."

Kasey Kahne qualified fourth and was followed by Aric Almirola, Kurt Busch and Paul Menard.

Regan Smith was eighth, Tony Stewart was ninth and Mark Martin rounded out the top 10.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-09-NASCAR-Phoenix/id-df1f12b2903444018e78344168b300aa

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Saturday, November 10, 2012

After 3 bumpy years, Europe turns corner on crisis

FILE - In this June 29, 2012 file photo, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, speaks with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, left, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti during a round table meeting at a EU Summit in Brussels. The worst of Europe?s financial crisis appears to be over. European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Much of the credit for easing Europe?s financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi. Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

FILE - In this June 29, 2012 file photo, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, speaks with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, left, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti during a round table meeting at a EU Summit in Brussels. The worst of Europe?s financial crisis appears to be over. European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Much of the credit for easing Europe?s financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi. Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

FILE - In this June 16, 2011 file photo, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, welcomes the governor of the Banca d'Italia and candidate for the European Central Bank presidency Mario Draghi at the chancellery in Berlin. The worst of Europe?s financial crisis appears to be over. European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Much of the credit for easing Europe?s financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi. Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across the region by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber, File)

(AP) ? The worst of Europe's financial crisis appears to be over.

European leaders have taken steps to ease the panic that has plagued the region for three turbulent years. Financial markets are no longer in a state of emergency over Europe's high government debts and weak banks. And this gives politicians from the 17 countries that use the euro breathing room to fix their remaining problems.

Threats remain in Greece and Spain, and Europe's economy is forecast to get worse before it gets better. But an imminent breakup of the euro now seems unlikely, analysts say.

"We are probably well beyond the worst," says Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in London. He says occasional flare-ups in financial markets are likely, but "coming waves of turmoil will be less severe."

Evidence that Europe has turned a corner can be found in countries' falling borrowing costs, rising stock markets and a slow but steady stabilization of the region's banking system:

? The interest rates investors are demanding to lend to struggling countries such as Spain and Italy have plunged ? a sign that investors are less fearful about defaults. Spain's two-year bonds carry an interest rate, or yield, of just under 3 percent ? down from a July 24 peak of 6.6 percent. Italy's bond yields have dropped just as sharply.

? The Stoxx 50 index of leading European shares has surged 26 percent since June 1, while the euro has risen from $1.26 to $1.29 over the same period.

? After months of withdrawals, deposits are trickling back into Greek and Spanish banks, signaling that fears of their imminent financial collapse are abating. And U.S. money market mutual funds loaned 16 percent more to eurozone banks in September. That was the third straight monthly increase in short-term funding to European banks, and follows a 70 percent reduction since May 2011.

More proof the crisis is easing: Gatherings of European financial ministers no longer cause global stock and bond markets to gyrate with every sign of progress or a setback.

As financial-market panic recedes, euro leaders have more time to try to fix the flaws in their currency union. Among the challenges are reducing regulations and other costs for businesses in order to stimulate economic growth, and imposing more centralized authority over budgets to prevent countries from ever again spending beyond their means. That's important because a major cause of the crisis was Greece's overspending during the calm years after the euro's introduction in 1999, and Italy's failure to cut the high levels of debt it joined with. Other governments ? such as Spain and Ireland ? were saddled with debt piled up by banks and real estate developers during boom years.

Much of the credit for easing Europe's financial crisis goes to the European Central Bank, which has become more aggressive over the past year under the leadership of Mario Draghi.

The ECB said Sept. 6 that it was willing to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds issued by countries struggling to pay their debts. The ECB's pledge instantly lowered borrowing costs for Spain and Italy, which earlier in the year had faced the same kinds of financial pressures that forced Ireland, Greece and Spain to seek bailouts.

"Financial market confidence has visibly improved," Draghi said Thursday during a press conference.

The ECB's actions are reminiscent of the aggressive action by the Federal Reserve in the United States in late 2008 and early 2009 after the financial crisis hit. The Fed offered banks cheap loans and started buying bonds to ease long-term borrowing rates and boost the confidence of consumers and businesses.

The Fed didn't solve the problem of high unemployment. But its actions defused panic in the financial markets and helped restore the health of U.S. banks. The Fed bought time for the economy to begin to heal.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has also helped ease financial tensions across Europe by speaking more forcefully about the need to hold the euro together.

Merkel's support is critical because Germany, the eurozone's largest economy, has the most at stake financially in any bailouts. Merkel has backed the ECB's bond-buying plan and has made conciliatory statements toward Greece.

That has paved the way for the so-called troika of international lenders ? the ECB, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund ? to allow Greece more time to meet deficit-reduction targets. The Greek Parliament took a big step Wednesday toward securing its next batch of rescue loans from the troika by approving a new round of tax hikes and spending cuts.

Another key breakthrough in the financial crisis came in late June, when leaders meeting in Brussels took new steps to steady banks and governments. They agreed to ease up somewhat on austerity demands; to use bailout funds to buy government bonds and help ailing banks; and to create a single supervisor for all of Europe's banks.

Some analysts worry that as the financial pressure eases Europe's leaders could lose their recent momentum.

A breakup of the euro "is still possible," says Marie Diron, senior economic adviser to Ernst & Young. "I don't think we have removed the risk altogether."

Europe's leaders have big challenges left.

The most pressing is saving Greece. If the country was forced into a default and began printing its own currency, investors would assume other countries might go next and begin pulling their money out of those countries too, or demand higher returns to keep it there. The coming months could severely test Germany's new willingness to help. Despite two bailouts totaling ?240 billion ($311.3 billion) since 2010, Greece needs an estimated ?30 billion more from the other eurozone countries as its economy shrinks.

Berenberg's Schmieding thinks there's a 25 percent chance that Greece will leave the euro in the next six months, if its parliament balks at painful austerity measures and euro members are reluctant to provide more help. But he thinks a Greek departure would cause "only temporary damage." Other economists think it could break up the euro.

Another hotspot is Spain, the eurozone's fourth-largest economy. The country's debts are piling higher as its regional governments struggle and its economy shrinks. The ECB's offer two months ago to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds is a potential life-saver, but the country's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy needs to formally request such aid. He has held off, apparently hoping the current market calm will last and he won't suffer the political humiliation of taking a bailout. Analysts say that if he waits too long Spain's borrowing costs could rise again to unsustainable levels and reignite broader fears in financial markets.

Banks are another problem. Weakened by massive losses on the government bonds they bought and real estate loans that aren't being repaid, banks across the eurozone have been propped up by governments that are themselves struggling financially. Even with the help, these banks have been forced to reduce lending, which has hurt Europe's economy.

A banking supervisor for all of Europe could provide some relief, by forcing crippled banks to merge with healthier ones. But it will be the second half of next year, at the earliest, before the supervisor is in place, banking analysts say. European leaders disagree over how much authority to give the supervisor and how to fund it.

Economic growth is what would ultimately end Europe's crisis. But robust growth remains far off. The European Union forecast Wednesday that the 17-nation eurozone economy would grow just 0.1 percent in 2013.

Privately, European officials say the ECB's bond-buying plan has afforded them a crucial window of opportunity ? a year, perhaps ? to resolve their biggest challenges.

Much depends, they say, on what gets accomplished in that time.

____

Melvin reported from Brussels. He can be reached at http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-09-Europe-Less%20Panic/id-9b4577803b3a49f08279fd469bf24ab6

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Friday, November 9, 2012

EA WorldView - Home - The Latest from Iran (8 November): Death of ...

Blogger Sattar Behesthi with his mother0740 GMT: Nuclear Watch. More support for talks with the US over the nuclear programme, and this time it comes from the Ministry of Intelligence....

In a lengthy report assessing an Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, the Ministry says ignorance of the possibility of "imminent force" would be an "unforgivable sin". Instead, "one of the options is to take diplomatic and political measures and use the potentials of international bodies, which is a necessary and less costly option."

The report then asserts that President "hopes to solve this issue peacefully and through diplomacy", even as he pursues "severe sanctions", as he does not think Tehran's uranium enrichment is an imminent threat.

0650 GMT: The family of blogger Sattar Beheshti have expressed fears that he died from abuse after he was detained on accusations of?activism on Facebook.

Police seized Beheshti from his home in the Robat-Karim, southwest of Tehran, last week. Yesterday relatives said they had received phone calls from prison authorities asking them to collect his body.

Beheshti's sister told exiled journalist Masih Alinejad by phone: "Last Tuesday they raided into our house and took my brother with them....Today they called my husband and asked him to prepare me and my mother and buy a tomb for his dead body."

The Baztab website reported, "Sattar Beheshti, who was arrested by Fata [cyber] police, has died while being interrogated."?Saham News, close to detained opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi, said Beheshti had died "under torture" during a session with security officials. It also quoted a family member: "They called us today and asked us to collect his dead body tomorrow from Kahrizak."?

The detention centre at Kahrizak became infamous when protesters were abused there, with at least three dying, after the disputed 2009 Presidential elections.

Before his arrest, Beheshti wrote on his blog: "They threatened me yesterday that my mother would wear black because I don't shut my mouth."

Beheshti's sister speaking to Masih Alinejad:

The website

Source: http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2012/11/8/the-latest-from-iran-8-november-death-of-a-blogger-in-detent.html

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Pope to join celebs, presidents with Twitter feed

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Celebrities do it. Presidents do it. Now even the pope will do it.

The Vatican spokesman said Thursday that Pope Benedict XVI will start tweeting from a personal Twitter account, perhaps before the end of the year.

The 85-year-old Benedict sent his first tweet from a Vatican account last year when he launched the Vatican's news information portal. The new Twitter account will be his own, though it's doubtful Benedict himself will wrestle down his encyclicals, apostolic exhortations and other papal pronouncements into 140-character bites.

Benedict, who writes longhand and doesn't normally use a computer, will more likely sign off on tweets written in his name.

Spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi says details about Benedict's handle and other information will come when the Vatican officially launches the account.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-join-celebs-presidents-twitter-feed-193901456.html

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Higher dietary glycemic load linked to worse colon cancer survival

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Researchers have identified a link between higher dietary glycemic load and total carbohydrate intake and increased risk of cancer recurrences or death among stage 3 colon cancer patients, a finding that suggests that diet and lifestyle modification can have a role in improving patient survival, according to a study published November 7 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

The role of one's lifestyle behavior has been shown to play an important role in the development of colorectal cancer. Risk factors, such as obesity and physical activity have been shown to directly influence insulin levels and recent studies have shown a direct link between host factors that lead to hyperinsulinemia and cancer recurrence and mortality in colorectal cancer survivors; however, the influence of glycemic load and other related dietary intakes have on the survival of colon cancer patients is unknown.

In order to determine the effects that glycemic load and total carbohydrate intake have on the survival of stage III colon cancer patients, Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt, M.D., M.P.H., of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston and colleagues, performed an observational study on 1,011 stage III colon cancer patients who reported their dietary intake both during and 6 months after participating in an adjuvant chemotherapy trial. The researchers assessed the influence of glycemic load, glycemic index, fructose, and carbohydrate intakes on both mortality and recurrence of the disease.

The researchers found that increasing dietary glycemic load and total carbohydrate intake where both linked with increased cancer recurrence and death and survival of the patients had a distinct correlation with overweight and obese patients. "Given that patients who consume high glycemic loads or carbohydrates after cancer diagnosis may have consumed a similar diet before diagnosis, we cannot exclude the possibility that individuals with these dietary exposures acquire tumors that are biologically more aggressive."

In an accompanying editorial, Neal J. Meropol, M.D. and Nathan A. Berger, M.D. both of the Division of Hematology and Oncology at University Hospitals Case Medical Center and Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland note that these new clinical findings are consistent with an observation more than 50 years ago that cancer cells are "avid sugar consumers." "Although not definitive regarding the impact on colorectal cancer recurrence, the convergence of clinical observations and biology provides a compelling justification to test-hypothesis-driven interventions in prospective randomized clinical trials," the authors write, adding that the study reinforces that, "the epidemiologist is an essential member of the translational science team in oncology."

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Journal of the National Cancer Institute: http://jncicancerspectrum.oupjournals.org

Thanks to Journal of the National Cancer Institute for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125147/Higher_dietary_glycemic_load_linked_to_worse_colon_cancer_survival

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