Saturday, July 20, 2013

Photo Flash: Sneak Peek at Michelle London, Ben Nordstrom and More in LEGALLY BLONDE at Stages St. Louis

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: broadwayworld.com --- Friday, July 19, 2013
STAGES ST. LOUIS continues its record-breaking 27th Season when it turns St. Louis pink, with the romantic comedy, Legally Blonde, The Musical tonight, July 19th through August 18th . A plethora of upbeat music, dance and of course laughs, made the show a hit on Broadway in 2007. The Tony nominated score features the hilarious 'Omigod You Guys,' the sassy 'Bend and Snap' and the catchy 'Legally Blonde.' Check out a sneak peek of the cast below ...

Source: http://broadwayworld.com/article/Photo-Flash-Sneak-Peek-at-Michelle-London-Ben-Nordstrom-and-More-in-LEGALLY-BLONDE-at-Stages-St-Louis-20130719

Daft Punk Joyce Brothers atari breakout Amys Baking Company oj simpson chicago bulls ncis

Japan's defense boost aimed at China, experts say

BEIJING -- Japan took a "big leap" in using its defense forces to target China last year as the United States at the same time listed China as its greatest potential security challenge, according to a report from a Chinese think tank on Friday.

Observers said the military tension arose from territorial disputes, unease over China's rapid growth and attempts to use China as a scapegoat to justify a military buildup by Tokyo and Washington.

The annual report on Japanese military power, released by the China Strategic Culture Promotion Association, said two of the most eye-catching changes in Japan's defense forces in 2012 were Tokyo's efforts to normalise its defense power and to use it against China.

Last year, then-Japanese prime minister Yoshihiko Noda became the first Japanese government leader to make "strong military-related statements" on the Diaoyu Islands on public occasions, the report said.

Noda and current Prime Minister Shinzo Abe visited branches of the Japan Coast Guard and the Japan Self-Defense Forces in Okinawa. Such visits have rarely been made by Japanese prime ministers since the end of World War II, it said.

Since tensions over the Diaoyu Islands increased in mid-2012, Japan's military deployment, equipment upgrading, military drills and construction of military facilities have all been accelerated, it added.

"Although this is not meant to provoke China into military action, it has undoubtedly complicated and endangered the situation in which accidents might be triggered and the dispute that already existed might escalate out of control," the report stated.

Japan's national defense budget for the 2012 fiscal year "not only reveals Japan's ambition to step up efforts to become a major military power, but also explains its efforts to continue stirring up the so-called China threat", it said.

The budget lists a string of objectives, including "improving the security environment in the Asia-Pacific region and the world".

The report said Noda had been ambitious in "normalising" Japan's national defense and had acted to achieve that aim since 2011, while the Abe administration is even "more enthusiastic" about this.

For instance, since Abe took office in December, the Japanese government has taken "historic steps" in attempting to revise the constitution, establish national defense forces, amend the national defense programme guidelines, exercise collective self-defense, set up the National Security Council, raise military spending and build up military strength, according to the report.

Luo Yuan, deputy executive of the association, said, "China-Japan relations are also disturbed by growing right-wing forces in Japan, which stir up the China threat to justify their ambition to get rid of the shackles of the post-war system."

Fan Gaoyue, a researcher from the association, said tensions over the Diaoyu Islands can hardly be eased in the short term as the Abe administration further strengthens its hawkish stance.

"If the ruling party led by the conservative Abe wins the Senate elections this month, it is likely to make more provocative moves over the Diaoyu Islands to seek public support to amend the constitution and upgrade self-defense forces to an army," Fan said.

It is the second time the think tank has issued reports on Japanese and US military power. In 2012, it became the first Chinese non-governmental body to touch upon the topic.

In its report on US military power last year, the association said the US national defense budget in the 2012 fiscal year had been increased despite appearing to have been cut.

The entire budget for that year saw a slight decrease due to a cut in the overseas contingency operations budget in Pakistan and Afghanistan. However, the base budget was $553.1 billion, an increase of $4.2 billion from the 2011 fiscal year, the report said.

It also said that according to the new US guidance for defense strategy, issued in January 2012, China and Iran are of particular concern for the US.

"In terms of threat assessment, the US takes China as its greatest potential security challenge," the report said.

A series of US-led joint military exercises, such as Rim of the Pacific 2012 and Exercise Gold Cobra 2012, apparently had China as a target, it said.

Rim of the Pacific 2012, which was expanded to cover 22 participant countries including India and Russia, did not invite China, one of the major nations in the region, the report added.

Luo Yuan said Washington is concerned that a rising China may challenge its leading role in global affairs.

"China is willing to enhance trust with the two countries (Japan and the US) through cooperation and improving its military transparency," Luo said. "But Beijing also has to prepare itself economically and defensively for any emergency triggered by outside provocation."
?

Source: http://www.stripes.com/news/pacific/japan-s-defense-boost-aimed-at-china-experts-say-1.231461

fabrice muamba collapse prometheus trailer patrice oneal shamrock slainte the quiet man yellow cab

Woods in the mix on another sunny day at Muirfield

Tiger Woods of the United States acknowledges the crowd on the 18th green after his second round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Friday July 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Tiger Woods of the United States acknowledges the crowd on the 18th green after his second round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Friday July 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Tiger Woods of the United States lines up a putt on the 14th green during the second round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Friday July 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

Lee Westwood of England plays out of a bunker on the 4th hole during the second round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Friday July 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)

Lee Westwood of England waits to play off the second tee with the fairway reflected in his sunglasses during the second round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Friday July 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)

Tiger Woods of the United States, left, holds up his ball after putting on the 14th green as Graeme McDowell of Northern Ireland prepares to putt during the second round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Friday July 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Scott Heppell)

(AP) ? Tiger Woods plodded along most of the day. He lipped out a putt from 2? feet. He settled for a bunch of pars.

Then, with his final stroke, he looked like the Tiger of old.

Woods rolled in a 15-footer for birdie on Muirfield's tough closing hole Friday, raising his putter toward the blue sky with a flourish, fully aware he was positioned again to break the longest major drought of his career.

"It will be a fun weekend," Wood said. "This golf course is going to be difficult."

He finished with an even-par 71 that looked pretty good under the circumstances. This was another day for surviving the perilous, rock-hard setup, and Woods walked to the clubhouse just three shots behind first-round leader Zach Johnson, one of the last guys to tee off.

Not bad, considering Woods went through a stretch of 12 holes without a birdie before stealing one at the 18th.

"I was kind of fighting it," he said.

Everyone was.

Lee Westwood was one of the few morning starters to put up a score in the 60s, but even he was staggering a bit by the end. After a brilliant front nine ? he carded five birdies ? the 40-year-old Englishman bogeyed three of the last six holes to finish with a 68.

Still, he joined Woods and Henrik Stenson at 2-under 140 overall, solidly in contention for his first major title. The last English golfer to win the British Open was Nick Faldo in 1992.

"Why not enjoy it out there?" Westwood said. "It's tough for everybody. So smile your way through."

Woods is trying to break a drought of his own. He's 0-for-16 at majors since the 2008 U.S. Open, and missed four others during that stretch recovering from injuries.

Whoever wins this one will have to earn it. While the weather has been unseasonably warm and dry, the fearsome wind more of a gentle breeze, there weren't many chances for going low. Not on a tabletop of a course that is more brown than green, with pin conditions that some players complained were downright unfair.

As expected, the conditions toughened in the afternoon as the bright sun firmed up the greens even more. Johnson bogeyed three of the first six holes. Phil Mickelson drove into a bunker at the second and took a double-bogey. Brandt Snedeker doubled the 10th. Rafael Cabrera-Bello did the same at the 14th. At one point, there was a four-way tie for the lead with Johnson, Miguel Angel Jimenez, two-time major champion Angel Cabrera and long-hitting American Dustin Johnson.

The morning was tough for Mark O'Meara, the 1998 Open champion who opened with a surprising 67 that left him one stroke behind Johnson. The course bit back Friday, sending the 56-year-old plunging out of contention. He lost his ball at No. 6, leading to a double-bogey, and stumbled to the finish with a 78.

"It's pretty simple: If you don't hit it good in an Open championship with the rough the way it is out there, you're going to make some bogeys," O'Meara said. "The short game is key. You have to putt well. I did none of those well."

O'Meara wasn't the only old-timer to fall back. Fifty-four-year-old Tom Lehman followed a 68 Thursday with a 77 less than 24 hours later.

The young weren't spared, either.

Jordan Spieth, the 19-year-old who last weekend became the PGA Tour's youngest winner since 1931, made only two bogeys through his first 32 holes and was 3 under. Then came a double-bogey at the 15th, back-to-back bogeys at the next two holes, and a missed chance at No. 18 when a 4-footer for birdie slid by the cup.

Just like that, the youngster found himself at 1-over 143.

Spieth conceded that he got a little bored making all those pars.

"Yesterday, I was for some reason extremely patient with just taking my 30-footers and just trying to give myself tap-ins and not worrying about making birdies," he said. "Today I finally got to a point where I had enough and wanted to really hit it closer. And that's what happens when you try."

Darren Clarke, the surprise Open champion in 2011 but mostly an afterthought since then, had no trouble making birdies on the front side. He rolled in four of them. Unfortunately for him, all that good work was wiped out by one bad hole ? a quadruple-bogey 8 at the sixth. He finished with a 71 and also was at 143.

Zach Johnson had not been atop the leaderboard at any major since he rallied to win the Masters six years ago. He took advantage of kinder conditions Thursday morning to shoot a 66, helped along by a 45-foot eagle putt. But, after making only one bogey in the opening round, he started to find trouble lurking around every pot bunker, the course hardening in weather that looked more like Southern California than Scotland.

Not far from the course, swimmers frolicked in the Firth of Forth, taking advantage of the northern edge of a heat wave sweeping the British Isles.

Rory McIlroy can go swimming this weekend if he likes.

He struggled to a 79 in the opening round, and kept going in the wrong direction by playing the first seven holes at 4 over ? including his third double-bogey of the tournament. The former No. 1 player in the world has been in a baffling slump since his runaway victory at last year's PGA Championship, and a 12-over total assured he won't be back on Saturday.

Ditto for Luke Donald, who also spent time at the top of the world rankings. He followed a dismal 80 in the opening round with a mediocre 73, leaving him with a 10-over score that had no chance of making the cut.

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-07-19-GLF-British-Open/id-516ffd0b586a44e4b952007c12543149

grilled cheese allen west north korea missile don t trust the b in apartment 23 world financial center zimmerman charged bonobos

Russian opposition leader sentenced to 5 years

KIROV, Russia (AP) ? Alexei Navalny, the most charismatic and creative of Russian opposition leaders who challenged the Kremlin with exposures of high-level corruption and biting satire, was sentenced to five years in prison Thursday in a verdict that fueled street protests near Red Square and drew condemnation from the West.

In a bizarre development a few hours after Navalny, a Moscow mayoral candidate, was led from the court in handcuffs and bused to a jail, prosecutors asked that he be kept free pending appeal.

The move came as several thousand opposition supporters gathered just outside the Kremlin to protest his conviction for embezzlement and his sentence. The sudden motion could reflect both an attempt to soothe public anger and an effort to lend legitimacy to September's mayoral race, which a Kremlin-backed incumbent is expected to win.

Navalny, a popular blogger and corruption-fighting lawyer, rose to a rock star status among the opposition during a series of massive protests in Moscow against President Vladimir Putin's re-election to a third presidential term in March 2012.

Sentencing Navalny is the latest move in a multi-pronged crackdown on dissent that followed Putin's inauguration, including arrests of opposition activists and repressive legislation that sharply hiked fines for participants in unsanctioned protests and imposed tough new restrictions on non-government organizations.

The Russian stock market, sensitive to politically charged issues, dove within minutes of the verdict, with the main MICEX index dropping 1.4 percent before partly recovering.

The conviction galvanized the opposition, which has been increasingly cornered by the Kremlin's crackdown and weakened by internal rifts. A few hours after the verdict, several thousand activists gathered on a central avenue a few hundred meters (yards) from Red Square, clapping their hands and chanting "Freedom!" and "Putin is a thief!"

They briefly blocked traffic on busy Tverskaya avenue, shouting "This city is ours!" Police rounded up several dozen demonstrators, but didn't move to disperse the rally that went on for several hours.

The protesters stuck posters to advertising billboards that read: "Putin, you coward, come out!" and "Navalny isn't guilty! Navalny to president, Putin to prison!"

Activists handed out bright red stickers reading "Navalny, change Russia! Start with Moscow" as many passing motorists blared horns in support.

The unsanctioned protest looked small compared to the massive anti-Putin demonstrations which attracted more than 100,000 in the fall of 2011 and the beginning of the following year. But unlike those protests, which were allowed by the authorities, the participants in Thursday's rally braved the threat of heavy fines and prison sentences.

Several hundred demonstrators also rallied in Navalny's support in St.Petersburg and a few dozen were detained by police.

Navalny was found guilty Thursday of heading a group that embezzled 16 million rubles ($500,000) worth of timber from a state-owned company in 2009.

The blue-eyed 37-year-old played with his smartphone for much of the nearly 3 ?-hour verdict reading. A post on his Twitter account after the sentence was announced told his supporters: "Oh, well. Don't get bored without me. And, importantly, don't be idle."

Navalny handed his phone and watch to his wife, Yulia, before bailiffs took custody of him and a co-defendant Pyotr Ofitserov, who was given a four-year sentence.

Navalny's mayoral campaign chief, Leonid Volkov, said he would stay in the race if set free. "It's quite simple: if he is released he will; if not, he won't."

The U.S. and EU both criticized the ruling within hours, arguing that the case appeared to be politically motivated.

Former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev joined the protests, saying in a statement that the conviction demonstrated that "our courts aren't independent."

"It's inadmissible to use courts against political opponents," Gorbachev said.

Navalny began his rise to prominence by blogging about his investigations into corruption at state-owned companies where he owned shares, reaching hundreds of thousands. Navalny and his team of lawyers and activists have plumbed property registers abroad to identify top officials and lawmakers who own undeclared foreign assets and hold foreign citizenship.

Navalny's blog quickly became an Internet sensation not only because of his exposures but because it was very user-friendly, with lots of illustrations, funny images and witty catchphrases.

It was Navalny who first called the dominant United Russia party "the party of crooks and thieves," a phrase that has dogged Kremlin loyalists ever since.

Navalny's investigations targeted a wide circle of loyalists to President Vladimir Putin ? from members of parliament to state bankers, threatening to discredit the system of governance he has built.

Navalny meticulously listed all the promises Putin made each of his year in power about upgrading Russia's crumbling housing. He named Putin "Obeshchalkin" or Mr. Promise-sky for failing to keep these promises.

When the evidence of massive fraud in the 2011 parliamentary elections triggered protests, Navalny quickly became a driving force thanks to a combination of energy, quick wits and talent of a public speaker.

His chant "We are the power!" has become a battle cry for the protesters. At one of the protests, he energized the demonstrators that the crowd was big enough to take the Kremlin. He launched biting harangues at Putin and his lieutenants, once likening them to jackals huddling to each other in fear.

Clearly shaken by the big rallies, Putin tried to dismiss Moscow protesters as representatives of the spoiled elite at odds with the needs of blue-collar workers, his main support base. He struck back at his foes after his victory, and the relentless Kremlin crackdown culminated in Navalny's trial.

After hearing the judge pronounce him guilty, Navalny looked distressed but soon became his usual cheerful self, exchanging reassuring glances with his wife and parents as the judge read the sentence. Navalny cracked jokes and his observations of the hearing on Twitter, and asked his followers to send him funny things to "cheer everyone one up."

When the judge announced the prison sentence, the wife of Navalny's co-defendant, Pyotr Ofitserov, collapsed on the floor. Navalny's wife looked shaken but kept her composure.

"If someone hopes that Alexei's investigations will cease, that's wrong," she told reporters outside the court.

The charges against Navalny date back a few years when he worked as an unpaid adviser to the provincial governor in Kirov, about 760 kilometers (470 miles) east of Moscow. Prosecutors say he was part of a group that embezzled 16 million rubles' ($500,000) worth of timber from state-owned company Kirovles.

The defense said Ofitserov's company bought the timber from Kirovles for 14 million rubles and sold it for 16 million rubles in a regular commercial deal. Navalny's lawyers presented invoices proving the transactions.

None of the managers at Kirovles who appeared in court, except for former Kirovles director, Vyacheslav Opalev, testified that Navalny defrauded the company.

Navalny insists Opalev framed him out of revenge: Navalny had recommended that Opalev be fired and that officials investigate potential corruption in his company.

Opalev got a suspended sentence in an expedited trial in December after pleading guilty to conspiring with Navalny.

Navalny had long said he expected to be convicted, and in a final blog post before leaving Moscow for Kirov, he downplayed his personal importance.

"The most important thing is to muster up the strength, shake off laziness and do something. This doesn't require any leadership as such," he wrote.

At the White House, spokesman Jay Carney said the Obama administration was "deeply disappointed and concerned" by the conviction, calling the verdict the latest example of a "disturbing trend of government action" to suppress civil society in Russia.

Sen. Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said that "Russia is returning to its old authoritarian ways where opposition voices were silenced and trumped up charges ended in unfair verdicts."

Catherine Ashton, the European Union's foreign policy chief, said the verdict and sentence, "given the procedural shortcomings, raises serious questions as to the state of the rule of law in Russia."

_____

Jim Heintz, Vladimir Isachenkov, Alexander Zemlianichenko and Aliaksei Pakrovsky in Moscow, Raf Casert in Brussels, Geir Moulson in Berlin, Darlene Superville and Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-opposition-leader-sentenced-5-years-084213369.html

september 11 9/11 Memorial 911 masterchef Dictionary.com Chicago teachers strike september 11 2001

Friday, July 19, 2013

Dynamical properties in antibiotic resistance enzyme investigated

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Using biophysical modeling and bioinformatics analysis, researchers show significant evolution in the structural characteristics and physiochemical properties of the antibiotic-destroying enzyme beta-lactamase across bacterial families, but also find that these evolutionary characteristics do not appear to be specifically related to different versions of antibiotic resistance. The results are far from reassuring, since they show that new antibiotic resistance is relatively easy for bacteria to evolve.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/nQbaUi8n1t4/130719085200.htm

Sage Stallone Mermaid Body Found Celeste Holm Stephen Covey klimt breaking bad breaking bad

Thousands march to back ousted Egypt president

CAIRO (AP) ? Thousands of protesters calling for the return to power of Egypt's ousted Islamist president demonstrated in Cairo on Friday as the military warned it would crack down on any violence, underlining the point with a show of force by fighter jets flying over the capital.

Youth activists who launched the mass protests that led to Mohammed Morsi's toppling by the military gathered in Cairo's Tahrir Square and outside two presidential palaces to celebrate their gains, raising fears of a fresh round of clashes in the capital.

The Interior Minister in charge of police, Mohammed Ibrahim, issued a statement on the ministry's Facebook page cautioning the ousted president's supporters against going to Tahrir Square and warning both sides against committing acts of violence.

The rival gatherings came just days after a new interim Cabinet was sworn-in that includes women, Christians and members of a liberal coalition opposed to Morsi, but no Islamists. The ousted president's Muslim Brotherhood party has refused to take part in talks with the interim leadership.

The country has been deeply polarized over the July 3 military coup that was supported by millions who accused Egypt's first democratically elected leader of abusing his power and giving too much influence to his Brotherhood group.

On Friday, pro-Morsi protesters waving Egyptian flags and pictures of the ousted leader chanted slogans against army chief Gen. Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi. "El-Sissi is a traitor!" the crowds shouted. "Morsi is our president!"

"The problems of the first years could have been solved by dialogue, but the opposition always refused," said 28-year-old Osama Youssef, who traveled to Cairo from the eastern province of Sharqiya to show his support for Morsi. "The opposition didn't succeed in getting power through constitutional measures, so it chose to take power by staging a military coup."

Mainly Islamist supporters of Morsi have been holding a sit-in in front of a mosque in eastern Cairo since the former leader's ouster and the numbers swelled Friday as his backers answered a Brotherhood call to join the rallies, dubbed, "Breaking the Coup."

The Brotherhood organized marches across Cairo as thousands of people defied the sweltering heat to take to the streets in support of Morsi in other cities, including Alexandria and several Nile Delta provinces.

"People are united in their call for the return of President Mohammed Morsi, the elected, legitimate president," said Ayman Wahid, who joined a march in Cairo. He said he represents "real Egyptians" who want Morsi back.

Yasser Meshren, who came to Cairo from the southern province of Bani Suweif, accused the military of tricking the people by overseeing the elections only to then remove Morsi, disband the country's interim parliament and suspend the constitution, which was approved in a referendum.

"You stole my mother and my sister's voice," Meshren said of the armed forces.

Police and military troops and armored vehicles were deployed heavily in Cairo around security and military installations, court houses, and the capital's entrances.

Minor incidents of violence broke out in Cairo, according to security officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to give information to the media. Pro-Morsi supporters and opponents shouted at one another after Friday prayers in the main Al-Azhar Mosque and police detained six Islamist protesters for throwing rocks. Separately, a man was stabbed and hospitalized when a crowd of the deposed president's supporters questioned his identity and found out he was a policeman in civilian clothing.

Fears of greater violence were high after 51 Islamist protesters were killed last week when the military opened fire on demonstrators outside the Republic Guard forces club. The Brotherhood has accused the troops of gunning down the protesters, while the military said it was provoked by armed Morsi supporters who were trying to storm the military building.

In response to the recent violence, Britain announced it was revoking five export licenses for equipment destined for Egypt's military and police.

On Friday, fighter jets flew over the protesters and military spokesman Col. Ahmed Mohammed Ali issued a stern warning on Facebook, telling civilians not to pose as military personnel or approach military installations or troops, saying anyone doing so risked death.

The military also dropped flyers warning against violence as a crowd of at least 400 pro-Morsi protesters marched through northern Sinai's main city of el-Arish. The flyers urged people to protect their land and the Sinai Peninsula from "terrorists" and provided two numbers for people to call to report suspicious behavior.

The area has been the most lawless corner of the country since autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak was ousted in a popular uprising in 2011, and the number of attacks by militants against Egyptian security forces has risen since Morsi's overthrow. To combat the wave, Egypt has beefed up its forces there with the agreement of neighboring Israel, which is also concerned about the growing strength of religious extremists in the area.

Friday's rallies coincided with the 10th day of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which Egyptians celebrate as the day their armed forces crossed the Suez Canal in the 1973 war with Israel. The surprise assault led to the return of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt, which had been occupied by Israel.

Fighter jets flew overhead in an air show throughout the city to commemorate the day.

Meanwhile, the Brotherhood party said seven leaders of its parent group, including the former speaker of the parliament and an ultraconservative Salafi preacher, were transported to a heavily guarded prison, a move the group said was illegal because the men have not yet been charged. They have been accused, among other things, of inciting violence.

The ousted president, who has been replaced by interim leader Adly Mansour, has been held incommunicado at an undisclosed military facility since his ouster. He has not been charged with any crimes.

The Brotherhood's TV channel has been taken off the air along with other Islamic channels seen as sympathetic to the group. Al-Jazeera's Egypt affiliate was raided by security forces, and on Friday, the channel's signal, along with its flagship English and Arabic news channels, were intermittently interrupted. The reasons for the disruptions were not clear.

Pro-Morsi protester Mostafa Fathi, a 33-year-old accountant participating in a march along one of Cairo's main roads, said he viewed Morsi's ouster and the closure of the TV channels as signs the country was targeting Islamists, as it did during Mubarak's near three-decade-long rule.

"We were on the right path. We had several elections. We were building democratic state institutions," he said. "We don't want to go back to a police state or a state of injustice."

___

Associated Press writer Sarah El Deeb contributed reporting from Cairo.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thousands-march-back-ousted-egypt-president-163306998.html

Stores Open On Christmas Day Santa Claus Feliz Navidad Ryan Freel Melissa Nelson sound of music foot locker

Coronavirus is not global emergency: WHO committee

GENEVA (Reuters) - The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS) is not a "public health emergency of international concern", the emergency committee of the World Health Organization said on Wednesday.

Its 15 international experts issued a unanimous decision after hearing reports from authorities in Saudi Arabia and other countries affected by the deadly SARS-like virus that has infected 82 people and killed 45 of them since April 2012.

"Based on these views and the currently available information, the (WHO) Director-General (Margaret Chan) accepted the Committee's assessment that the current MERS-CoV situation is serious and of great concern, but does not constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern at this time," the WHO said in a statement issued in Geneva.

The health experts began urgent talks on MERS on July 9 amid concerns about larger numbers of milder infections possibly going undetected.

The committee, which held its second private teleconference on Wednesday, can make recommendations on travel and trade, disease surveillance, as well as the exchange of data.

Cases have also been found in Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Tunisia, Britain, France, Italy and Germany.

Millions are expected to travel to Mecca in October for the haj pilgrimage, but Saudi authorities have cut the number of visas this year, citing safety concerns over expansion work at the main mosque site.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Andrew Roche)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus-not-global-emergency-committee-170431655.html

KTLA Ash Wednesday 2013 ted nugent westminster dog show Pope Resigns Christopher Dorner Manifesto mardi gras