Smooth-singing Josh Groban offers edgier sound on new album






LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – After selling more than 22 million albums in the United States and becoming a staple in the classical music field, singer Josh Groban is embracing an edgier sound for his latest record, “All That Echoes,” out on Tuesday.


Groban, 31, put together a collection of covers and original songs for the album, including a rendition of one of his personal favorites, “Falling Slowly” from the movie and stage musical “Once.”






Under the guidance of veteran producer Rob Cavallo, the Warner Bros. Records chairman who has worked with rockers like Green Day, Goo Goo Dolls and Paramore, Groban showcases his usual smooth vocals against a more energetic, live-concert sound.


“It’s not about walking out of your lane and scaring people. It’s about slightly expanding what your lane is and allowing all of that to be part of your world,” Groban said in an interview with Reuters.


Along with covers including a rendition of Stevie Wonder’s “I Believe (When I Fall in Love It Will Be Forever),” Groban also wrote original songs, which he said emerged from frustration.


“It was the frustration of hearing songs that were maybe written for me after a little bit of success, going ‘Ahh, is that really what you think I do?’ Yes, I know the other thing was kind of cheesy, but that’s really cheesy,’” the singer said.


“All That Echoes” features original songs such as “Below the Line,” which draws in Latin jazz beats and sweeping ballads such as “Brave” and “False Alarms,” where Groban showcases his powerful voice.


ACTING CHOPS


Groban first found the spotlight in 1999, when he was asked to fill in for ailing Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli at a rehearsal with Canadian singer Celine Dion.


Groban went on to land a short role on TV show “Ally McBeal” in 2001 and released his debut self-titled solo album later that year.


Five studio albums later, Groban has cemented himself at the top of the list of pop-vocal performers. His 2007 holiday record “Noel” became the best-selling U.S. album of the year.


Los Angeles native Groban has also taken small acting roles in TV comedy “The Office, movie “Crazy Stupid Love” and will make a cameo appearance on an upcoming episode of “CSI: NY.”


If he had his dream gig, Groban said he would be fronting rock band Queen for a day. But in the more foreseeable future, he hoped to become a regular face in theater.


“There are only so many albums I’m going to want to make before I decide to go and follow that dream for a minute or longer than a minute,” the singer said.


“I think that there will come a time very soon, hopefully in the next two or three years, where I’ll take out a big chunk of time and dedicate it to theater and do some of that.”


For now, the singer will hit the road in support of his new album, heading to Australia in April before returning to Los Angeles to perform three dates at the Hollywood Bowl in July.


(Reporting By Lindsay Claiborn, writing by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)


Music News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Steroid shots for tennis elbow may hurt, not help






NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Getting a cortisone injection won’t cure tennis elbow any better than a drug-free saline shot, according to a new study – and it might actually slow recovery.


Researchers found that a few weeks after receiving the steroid shots, people reported less pain and disability than those who’d been given placebo injections. But a year later, the same patients lagged behind the placebo group in their likelihood of complete recovery.






“This absolutely confirms that steroid injections are not a good idea,” said Dr. Allan Mishra, an orthopedic surgeon at Stanford University in Menlo Park, California.


“This is important, because people think that it’s okay to get a cortisone injection (for tennis elbow), and it’s not okay. It puts you at a disadvantage long term in terms of getting better,” Mishra, who has studied tennis elbow treatment but wasn’t involved in the new study, told Reuters Health.


The condition is caused by overuse of tendons in the elbow and typically treated with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, physical therapy and steroid shots.


Last month, a study from Denmark found neither steroid nor platelet injections improved pain and functioning among people with tennis elbow any better than saline shots, over a period of three months (see Reuters Health story of January 22, 2013 here: http://reut.rs/Wl9Ckw).


Researchers at the time cautioned that the study’s follow-up period was short and the results might look different at six months or a year post-injections.


By following patients longer, the new report shines a light on the possible long-term tendon damage that can be caused by cortisone shots, Mishra said.


‘DOES NOT SUPPORT’ STEROID SHOTS


Bill Vicenzino from the University of Queensland in Australia and his colleagues randomly assigned 165 adults with tennis elbow to one of four treatment groups: cortisone shots with physical therapy, placebo shots with physical therapy, cortisone shots without physical therapy and placebo shots without physical therapy.


After one year, there was no difference in people’s improvement in pain or functioning based on whether they’d had the eight sessions of prescribed therapy.


Among those who’d received a cortisone shot, 83 percent reported they had completely recovered from tennis elbow by one year. That compared to 96 percent of those who’d received a placebo injection, according to findings published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association.


Symptoms were also more likely to come back after a cortisone injection. The research team calculated that one more person would have a recurrence for every two or three treated with steroids instead of a saline shot.


“This evidence does not support the clinical practice of using corticosteroid injection to facilitate active rehabilitation,” the study team wrote.


Cortisone injections typically start at about $ 100.


Mishra said researchers are looking for better treatments to address what is causing tendon pain in the first place, such as weakening of collagen in the tendon. One possible option being studied by himself and others is so-called platelet-rich plasma injections, but “we’re not quite there yet,” he said.


Many cases of tennis elbow also go away on their own with time and basic stretching, Mishra added.


“I think home-based exercises are probably sufficient for treating this,” he said. “You’d be better off with that than with a cortisone injection. That’s what you should start with, because you might not even need physical therapy.”


SOURCE: http://bit.ly/JjFzqx Journal of the American Medical Association, online February 5, 2013.


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Harvard Flunks Investing, Taps Accel’s Jim Breyer






(Updates 9th paragraph with comments from a Harvard spokesman on Breyer’s role.)


When the Ivy League’s fiscal year ended in June, Harvard University finished in an unfamiliar spot: last. The school’s endowment was the only one in the hallowed group to lose money on its investments, with a return of negative 0.05 percent—below the average gain of 2.3 percent and well behind Dartmouth’s leading return of 5.8 percent. Harvard’s fund is still the Ivy League’s biggest by far, at $ 30.7 billion, but in Cambridge, ranking eighth in anything simply will not do.






And so on Feb. 4, the university announced that prominent venture capitalist Jim Breyer of Accel Partners had joined Harvard’s board.


In Breyer, Harvard is getting one of Silicon Valley’s most successful venture capitalists, best known for an early bet on Facebook (FB) that helped make him a billionaire. In Harvard, Breyer gets to add perhaps the most prestigious name in board memberships to his ever-growing list of affiliations.


Breyer, a graduate of Harvard Business School, collects directorships like baseball cards. At this point, it might be faster to list the places where he’s not a director, but here’s a start: Breyer is on the boards of Facebook, Wal-Mart Stores (WMT), Dell (DELL), News Corp. (NWS), Etsy, Prosper Marketplace, Booyah, Ubermedia, and Bbnt Solutions, according to a Bloomberg database. Accel’s website adds that Breyer “serves on the board of Stanford Technology Ventures Program, Epicenter, the National Center for Engineering Pathways to Innovation, Technet and is a trustee of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), and of The Menlo School.”


Plus, Accel says, Breyer is chairman of the Stanford Engineering Venture Fund and an honorary professor at Hunan University’s Yuelu Academy in China. Previous memberships, chairmanships, and other roles came at the National Venture Capital Association and the Western Association of Venture Capitalists; Harvard’s Global Advisory Council and Harvard Business School; Brightcove (BCOV); Marvel Entertainment; RealNetworks (RNWK); Lightspan; Mpath Interactive; Actuate (BIRT); Thestreet.co.uk (TST); Legendary Entertainment; Model N; and more.


At some point Breyer even finds the time to work at Accel.


In May 2012, New York Times columnist Gretchen Morgenson faulted Breyer for board promiscuity, noting that four of his five directorships at public companies were tainted by scandal or mismanagement. That included News Corp., which had already become engulfed in a phone hacking scandal before Breyer joined the board; Wal-Mart, accused of bribery in Mexico; and Dell, the struggling computer maker that agreed to take the humbling step of going private. Morgenson also criticized Breyer for favoring companies with dual-class stock structures, which tend to have weak board oversight because voting power is concentrated in the hands of a few shareholders. Breyer did not respond to an e-mailed request for comment.


Joining the Harvard Corporation, as the board is known, must be extra sweet for Breyer. In 2004, Forbes reported, the university dropped its investment in Accel Partners. This came just as the firm’s performance was about take off, thanks largely to its stake in Facebook—which was started in a Harvard dorm room.


Harvard’s endowment is run by the Harvard Management Company, led by Jane L. Mendillo. Kevin Galvin, a university spokesman, emphasized in an emailed statement that Breyer had joined the school’s top board, and not that of the investment company. “The University Board is not involved in setting the investment policy for the University,” he wrote. “Mr. Breyer’s close involvement with leading technology and media companies will no doubt make him an invaluable counselor for the University on a range of issues.”


While Harvard trailed the rest of the Ivy League last year, its investment performance was in line with colleges nationwide. Endowments declined 0.3 percent on average, according to the National Association of College & University Officers. The whole point of Harvard, though, is that it is not average. The university’s operations and ability to compete for academic talent depend on strong financial performance.


As Harvard students know, when your grades start to fall behind the curve, it’s smart to bring on a tutor. Breyer’s expertise can’t hurt—if he can truly find the time to lend it.


Businessweek.com — Top News





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Air Canada to boost capacity in Western Canada as rival gears up






(Reuters) – Air Canada will boost capacity in Western Canada this spring and summer, the airline said on Friday, introducing new, larger aircraft and more flights as its biggest domestic rival launches a short-haul airline.


Air Canada, the country’s biggest airline, will replace its 50-seat Bombardier Inc CRJ100/200ER aircraft on Western Canadian routes with new Bombardier 74-seater Q400 Next Generation aircraft. That is the same plane that competitor WestJet Airlines Ltd will use for its new regional carrier Encore.






Encore will be launched in the second half of this year, connecting smaller communities that have often only been served by Air Canada. WestJet has not yet revealed its initial routes and schedules for Encore but has had a strong presence in Western Canada, where it is headquartered.


Air Canada is boosting capacity to meet “strong demand” in Western Canada, Marcel Forget, vice president of network planning, said in a statement.


More Q400 aircraft will be rolled out on additional routes in British Columbia, Alberta and the Northwest Territories in the coming months, he said.


Seat capacity on some routes will double this spring.


Competition in Canadian skies will further heat up this year as Air Canada also plans to launch a low-cost carrier, Rouge, to fly to Europe and the Caribbean.


Air Canada said on Thursday it was recruiting the first 150 flight attendants for Rouge.


Rouge will begin with older planes from Air Canada’s mainline operations, as new, replacement aircraft, including 37 Boeing 787 Dreamliners, are received.


The delivery schedule has been put in question, given the worldwide grounding of the new, high-tech jetliner over battery problems.


(Reporting by Nicole Mordant in Vancouver; Editing by Janet Guttsman and Jeffrey Benkoe)


Canada News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Facebook After Death: Who Owns Your Pages When You Die?






Most people can’t live without Facebook — but what happens to your Facebook page when you are no longer living? New Hampshire and other states are trying to figure that out.


State Rep. Peter Sullivan has introduced legislation to allow the executor of an estate control over the social networking pages of the dead. Last week, the New Hampshire House of Representatives voted 222-128 to give Sullivan more time to write an amendment that begins a study of the issue.






The bill proposed by Sullivan, a Democrat from Manchester, would allow control of someone’s Facebook, Twitter, and other accounts such as Gmail to be passed to the executor of their estate after death.


According to Sullivan, passage of his bill would bridge a gap in policies of social media sites regarding posthumous users. He said his bill would protect residents who have suffered loss.


“This would give the families a sense of closure, a sense of peace. It would help prevent this form of bullying that continues even after someone dies and nobody is really harmed by it.”


In an interview with WMUR, Sullivan tells the story of a young Canadian girl who committed suicide because of bullying. After she died the taunting continued on her Facebook page.


Read More About Teens Bullied On Facebook


“The family wasn’t able to do anything; they didn’t have access to her account.” Sullivan said. “They couldn’t go in and delete those comments, and they couldn’t take the page down completely.”


Five other states, including Oklahoma, Idaho, Rhode Island, Indiana and Connecticut, have established legislation regulating one’s digital presence after death. Rhode Island and Connecticut were first, but their bills were limited in scope to email accounts, excluding social networking sites.


According to opponents of Sullivan’s bill, contracts and provisions between the social media user and the site already lay out what happens to the page once the user passes. Opponents say Sullivan’s bill is unenforceable and incomplete. Some also say the issue would be better suited for federal law.


Ryan Kiesel, then a state legislator from Oklahoma, sponsored a similar bill in 2010 called the Digital Property Management After Death law. Though he supports states’ efforts to bring light to this issue, saying that it is a good way to get the conversation started, he also believes that this is a case that should eventually taken up by the federal government.


“Facebook and other online providers have changed their privacy policies to keep up with the times, but we still see a lot of flux within different sites like Facebook , Flickr, or Google, for example.” Keisel told ABC News. “The federal government should pass uniform laws to govern all digital assets because it is quite difficult for an estate to have to navigate endless numbers of digital policies postmortem.”


Kiesel, who now works as a civil rights activist, compared one’s digital legacy to the distribution of someone’s tangible assets after death.


Get more pure politics at ABCNews.com/Politics


“In Oklahoma, if you are administrator of the estate of a deceased person’s house and you find a box under their bed, you are well within your right to see what’s inside that box and if property is worth distributing, you should distribute it accordingly.” Kiesel told ABC News that the same idea goes for digital legacy.


Today marks the ninth Anniversary of the launch of Facebook, which currently has over 1 billion active users. That number, which has grown from just a million users in 2004, suggests there must be an enormous number of Facebook pages that must currently be occupied by deceased people.


Facebook has not completely ignored the growing number of deceased users. The site has created a function allowing Facebook pages to become memorials after they have died.


“Please use this form to request the memorialization of a deceased person’s account,” the site reads. “We extend our condolences and appreciate your patience and understanding throughout this process.”


Memorialization of a Facebook page, however, can only be done via online request. And the terms of service for Facebook’s say that it will not issue login and password information to family members of the deceased. The requestor must contact Facebook and request that the profile is taken down or memorialized.


Also Read
Social Media News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Ed Koch remembered as quintessential New York City mayor






NEW YORK (Reuters) – Former New York City Mayor Ed Koch was memorialized on Monday as an in-your-face, wisecracking leader who helped transform the city from a symbol of urban decay to the vital, glittering metropolis it is today.


As Koch’s casket was led out of Temple Emanu-El, a soaring Fifth Ave. synagogue opposite Central Park, an organ played Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” while mourners including former U.S. President Bill Clinton and a who’s who of New York politics stood and applauded.






Koch died on Friday at the age of 88 in Manhattan — the only place other than heaven he could imagine living, as he was known to say.


“I come today with the love and condolences of 8.4 million New Yorkers who really are grieving with you at this moment,” said the city’s current mayor, Michael Bloomberg.


Speakers joked about the famously attention-loving Koch’s obsession with stage-managing his passing. His grave-stone, complete with an epitaph and a bench bearing Koch’s name, has been ready since 2008, and his friends said he had been planning the funeral for years.


“We started talking about his death in the ’80s,” said his former chief of staff Diane Coffey.


As mayor from 1978 to 1989, Koch, with his trademark phrase “How’m I Doin?”, was a natural showman and tireless promoter of both himself and the city. He helped repair the city’s finances as it teetered on the edge of bankruptcy, and later led a building renaissance that would see 200,000 units of affordable housing erected or rehabilitated in some of the city’s most crime-infested areas.


He could also be a divisive figure. His determination to shut Sydenham, a poorly-performing Harlem hospital that was one of the only city hospitals employing black doctors, angered black New Yorkers. And AIDS activists said he was too slow to react to the epidemic that ravaged the city’s gay population in the 1980s.


Tall, nearly bald and speaking with a high-pitched voice, Koch was an unmistakable presence. He was famously argumentative, and rarely walked away from verbal jousting.


His friend James Gill remembered Koch’s response to someone who had written a letter criticizing the former mayor.


“You are entitled to your opinion of me and I am entitled to my opinion of you,” Koch replied. “My opinion of you is that you are a fool.”


His nephews and grand-nephew and grand-niece remembered Koch, who never married, as devoted “Uncle Eddie” – eager to hear what they thought of his appearances on talk shows but also happy join his 11-year-old grand-niece for a manicure.


Clinton read from a stack of letters Koch had sent him over the years and said Koch had “a big brain, but he had an even bigger heart.”


Koch remained relevant in politics long after 1989, when he lost the Democratic nomination to David Dinkins for what would have been a record fourth term as mayor. But when asked if he would run for office again, he liked to say, “The people threw me out and the people must be punished.”


His endorsement was coveted by candidates decades after he left office. And his unwavering and loud support of Israel made Koch “one of the most influential and important American Zionists,” said former Ambassador Ido Aharoni.


At Monday’s memorial, Bloomberg noted the synagogue Koch had chosen for the funeral stood just a few blocks from the midtown bridge that had been renamed to honor him. Last year, the city released a video of Koch standing at the bridge’s entrance ramp, calling out to approaching cars: “Welcome to my bridge! Welcome to my bridge!”


“No mayor, I think, has ever embodied the spirit of New York City like he did. And I don’t think anyone ever will,” Bloomberg said. “Tough and loud, brash and irreverent, full of humor and chutzpah – he was our city’s quintessential mayor.”


(Reporting By Edith Honan; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Alden Bentley)


Celebrity News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Adult diabetes drug may work in very obese youths






NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A drug originally approved to treat adults with diabetes may also help severely obese youths lose some weight, according to a new study.


“We’re encouraged by these trial results because there is potentially a role for this class (of drugs) to be useful in terms of weight reduction and cardiovascular risk control,” said Aaron Kelly, the study’s lead author from the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis.






Exenatide, which is marketed by Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. as Byetta, was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2005 to boost production of the hormone insulin in adults with type 2 diabetes. People with the disease do not produce enough of the hormone, or their body is resistant to it.


The drug, which is injected in a person’s belly twice a day and costs about $ 2,000 per year, was also found to reduce body weight by slowing down how quickly food moves through the body, which gives a person the feeling of being fuller longer.


The researchers write that there are few treatments available for severely obese children outside of lifestyle changes and surgery, and they wanted to see if the weight loss seen in adults would also happen in children.


For the new study, Kelly, who also works at Amplatz Children’s Hospital, and his colleagues recruited severely obese participants between 12 and 19 years old from around Minnesota, and separated them into two groups.


Between 4 percent and 6 percent of American youths under 18 years of age are severely obese, according to the authors, who published their study in JAMA Pediatrics on Monday.


Severe obesity in children is classified as a body mass index (BMI), a measurement of weight in relation to height, of 35 or more on the adult scale. That’s the BMI of a 12-year-old girl who is five feet tall and 155 pounds.


One group of 12 youths injected themselves with exenatide before breakfast and dinner every day for three months. The other group of 10 youths injected themselves with an inactive placebo.


At the start of the study, the participants in both groups had an average BMI of about 43. But, at the end of the three months, the BMI of the youths in the exenatide group fell to about 41, while the BMI of the placebo group fell to about 42.


That meant that on average, the group taking exenatide lost about 7 pounds more than the placebo group.


The researchers then started giving exenatide to all of the participants for another three months. After that time, the group that started out taking the drug ended up with a 4 percent lower BMI, compared to those who started out taking the placebo.


NOT APPROVED FOR CHILDREN


While the results were modest, Dr. Ronald Williams, head of the Penn State Hershey Children’s Hospital Weight Management Program in Hershey, Pennsylvania, said the weight loss could stack up over a few years.


“If that is a sustained effect over a few years, that’s great,” said Williams, who was not involved with the new research.


Kelly, who’s received research funding from Amylin, which supplied both exenatide and the placebo for the study, told Reuters Health that the results of the new study jibe with an earlier trial they conducted. They are also in line with other obesity drugs, including orlistat (marketed as Xenical and Alli) and metformin.


Kelly said the most common side effects from exenatide were headaches, diarrhea and vomiting.


But both Williams and Kelly said parents and their children should not expect to get exenatide right now, because it is not approved for use in children for weight loss and will most likely not be paid for by insurance.


“We’re really viewing this as preliminary evidence for this general drug class. We wouldn’t recommend this medication to be used (for weight loss in youths) at this point,” said Kelly.


SOURCE: http://bit.ly/Ms92Cy JAMA Pediatrics, online February 4, 2013.


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Lloyds bonuses ‘will be lowest’







The chairman of Lloyds Banking Group, Sir Winfried Bischoff, has said that employees’ bonuses this year will be the “lowest undoubtedly of any bank”.






He appeared before Parliament’s banking standards committee alongside chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio.


The pair also backed the chancellor’s call for the break-up of banks that did not implement the ring-fence properly.


They used the question-and-answer session to portray the 40%-state-owned bank as in tune with public opinion.


“We are very conscious of the point,,, that as a taxpayer-owned company we should, perhaps more than others, be very much aware of the public sentiment in relation to [bonuses] and we will be,” said Sir Winfried.


Mr Horta-Osorio would not be drawn on whether he himself would receive a bonus this year, saying that it was wrong to speculate on something that had yet to be discussed by the bank’s board.


Two other bank bosses have waived their bonuses this year follow scandals: Antony Jenkins following Barclays’ admission of its involvement in rigging the multi-trillion-dollar Libor interest rate and Royal Bank of Scotland’s Stephen Hester after a massive computer failure caused payments into customers’ accounts to be delayed by several days.


‘A different view’


The two Lloyds executives threw weight behind Chancellor George Osborne’s announcement earlier in the day that the forthcoming Banking Reform Bill would “electrify” the ring-fence, as recommended by the banking standards committee.


The ring-fence will require banks to put their High Street banking activities – such as taking deposits and lending to UK businesses – into a separate subsidiary from their riskier investment banking operations.


In contrast to most other bank bosses, Mr Horta-Osorio supported the ring-fence when it was first proposed.


He and Sir Winfried have also now come out in favour of Mr Osborne’s decision to give regulators the power to force a complete separation of any bank that fails to respect the spirit of the ring-fence.


“If we think that for society as a whole it is important to have ring-fencing, both from a financial stability point of view and from a cultural point of view, I absolutely agree it should have strong enforcement and strong incentives in order for this to happen,” said the chief executive.


In doing so, the bank again parts company with its peers, represented by the British Bankers’ Association (BBA), which has opposed the electrification.


“There are two views and one view has been expressed. We have a different view,” said Sir Winfried.


New mis-selling bill


However, the banking duo did join the BBA in calling for a deadline on payment protection insurance (PPI) compensation claims.


Lloyds, along with all the other main High Street lenders, has had to set aside billions of pounds to cover the cost of payouts to home-buyers who had been mis-sold PPI along with their mortgage.


They agreed that a deadline of April 2014 should be imposed on claims in order to avoid the cost of investigating false claims brought by claims management companies.


While PPI mis-selling has already cost Lloyds over £5bn, Mr Horta-Osorio said the bank had so far only set aside £90m to cover claims by small businesses for the mis-selling of interest rate hedging products.


The figure, which is considerably less than at some of Lloyds’s rivals, may however be set to rise.


Last week, the Financial Services Authority announced that all of the big four High Street banks had agreed to start a complete review of all such interest rate products sold to unsophisticated business clients.


The Lloyds chief executive said that so far it had only investigated the most egregious cases of mis-selling, involving the most complicated versions of such products, which had been at the centre of the FSA’s original investigation, and it had only identified 60 victims.


However, the new review ordered by the financial regulator would also look at clients sold even the most simple version of the product.


“The new scope of the review is significantly wider than it was in December” said Mr Horta-Osorio.


BBC News – Business





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Israel suggests responsibility for Syria airstrike






MUNICH (AP) — Israel‘s defense minister strongly signaled Sunday that his country was behind an airstrike in Syria last week, telling a high profile security conference that Israeli threats to take pre-emptive action against its enemies are not empty. “We mean it,” Ehud Barak declared.


Israel has not officially confirmed its planes attacked a site near Damascus, targeting ground-to-air missiles apparently heading for Lebanon, but its intentions have been beyond dispute. During the 22 months of civil war in Syria, Israeli leaders have repeatedly expressed concern that high-end weapons could fall into the hands of enemy Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese militants.






For years, Israel has been charging that Syrian President Bashar Assad and Iran have been arming Hezbollah, which fought a monthlong war against Israel in 2006.


U.S. officials say the target was a convoy of sophisticated Russian SA-17 anti-aircraft missiles. Deployed in Lebanon, they could have limited Israel’s ability to gather intelligence on its enemies from the air.


Over the weekend, Syrian TV broadcast video of the Wednesday attack site for the first time, showing destroyed vehicles and a damaged building identified as a scientific research center. The U.S. officials said the airstrike hit both the building and the convoy.


In his comments Sunday in Munich, Barak came close to confirming that his country was behind the operation.


“I cannot add anything to what you have read in the newspapers about what happened in Syria several days ago,” Barak told the gathering of top diplomats and defense officials from around the world.


Then he went on to say, “I keep telling frankly that we said — and that’s proof when we said something we mean it — we say that we don’t think it should be allowed to bring advanced weapons systems into Lebanon.” He spoke in heavily accented English.


While Israel has remained officially silent on the airstrike, there seemed little doubt that Israel carried it out, especially given the confirmation from the U.S., its close ally.


Israel has a powerful air force equipped with U.S.-made warplanes and has a history of carrying out air raids on hostile territory. In recent years, Israel has been blamed for an air raid in Syria in 2007 that apparently struck an unfinished nuclear reactor and an arms convoy in Sudan believed to be delivering weapons to Hamas.


Israel has not confirmed either raid, but military officials routinely talk about a “policy of prevention” meant to disrupt the flow of arms to its enemies.


In the days preceding the airstrike, the Israeli warnings were heightened. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a series of dire comments about the threat posed by Syria’s weapons.


Israel considers any transfer of these advanced weapons to be unacceptable “game changers” that would change the balance of power in the region.


Israel has grown increasingly jittery as the Arab Spring has swept through the Middle East, bringing with it a rise of hostile Islamist elements. While Assad is a bitter enemy, Israel’s northern front with Syria has remained quiet for most of the past 40 years.


If Assad is toppled, the threat of al-Qaida forces operating along Israel’s frontier with Syria would pose a new and unpredictable threat. Israel has been racing to reinforce its fences along its northern frontiers with Lebanon and Syria.


In addition, Israel fears that its archenemy Iran, the close ally of Syria and Hezbollah, is moving closer to developing a nuclear weapon.


Israeli leaders have vowed to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear arms, making veiled threats to use force if international diplomacy and sanctions fail.


Israeli defense officials tried to play down Barak’s comments, saying that he was voicing a general policy that Israel is ready to defend its interests and not discussing a specific incident. They also noted that he was not speaking in his native Hebrew.


Even so, it seemed that Barak, a former prime minister, military chief of staff and regular participant on the world stage, was sending a message that Israel’s warnings are not hollow and that further military action should not be ruled out.


“There is a real danger now that seriously problematic weapons will reach Hezbollah, and Israel is trying to prevent this,” said Reuven Pedatzur, a defense analyst at Tel Aviv University. He said the threat has reached the point “where weapons are actually being loaded on trucks and sent on their way. That is new.”


Pedatzur said the decision by Syria to try to move weapons to Lebanon could indicate that Assad’s days are numbered. Assad may fear that he won’t be able to secure the weapons for much longer, or may be under pressure from Iran to transfer the arms to Hezbollah before he is toppled.


Israel and Hezbollah fought a monthlong war in mid-2006 that ended in a stalemate, and Israeli military planners believe it is just a matter of time before another war breaks out.


Israel says Hezbollah has already restocked its arsenal with tens of thousands of rockets and missiles, and that obtaining chemical weapons or the advanced Russian-made anti-aircraft missiles would severely hinder Israel’s ability to operate in Lebanon.


In Beirut, the Lebanese military issued a statement saying that six Israeli flew over different areas of the country on Sunday.


In Syria, Assad said during a meeting with a top Iranian official that his country would confront any aggression, his first comment on the airstrike.


“Syria, with the awareness of its people, the might of its army and its adherence to the path of resistance, is able to face the current challenges and confront any aggression that might target the Syrian people,” Assad was quoted as saying by the state news agency SANA.


He made the remarks during a meeting with Saeed Jalili, the head of Iran’s National Security Council. Iran is Syria’s closest regional ally. Jalili, on a three-day visit to Syria, has pledged Tehran’s continued support for Assad’s regime.


Jalili, who also serves as his country’s top nuclear negotiator, condemned the Israeli raid, stressing that it has proven the “aggressive nature of Israel and its threat of the region’s security and stability.”


The chief of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards said Sunday that Tehran also hopes Syria will strike back against Israel.


Syrian opposition leaders and rebels have criticized Assad for not responding to the airstrike, calling it proof of his weakness and acquiescence to the Jewish state.


The Syrian defense minister, Gen. Fahd Jassem al-Freij said Israel attacked the center because rebels were unable to capture it. Al-Freij called the rebels Israel’s “tools.” He told the state TV, “The heroic Syrian Arab Army, that proved to the world that it is a strong army and a trained army, will not be defeated.”


Ahmad Ramadan, an opposition leader, said Syria’s claim that the rebels are cooperating with Israel “is an attempt by the regime to cover its weakness in defending the country against foreign aggression.” He spoke by telephone from Turkey.


____


Federman reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writers Bassem Mroue in Beirut and Ian Deitch in Jerusalem contributed.


Europe News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Take-Two delays launch of Grand Theft Auto V video game






(Reuters) – Take-Two Interactive Software Inc said on Thursday it has pushed back the launch of the latest game from its hit “Grand Theft Auto” franchise to September 17 from its previously announced release window of spring 2013.


Shares of Take-Two were down six percent at $ 12.31 in early afternoon trading on the Nasdaq.






The delay was to allow Take-Two’s Rockstar Games studio, which develops “Grand Theft Auto” games, additional development time, the video game company said.


Grand Theft Auto V” will be released worldwide for Microsoft Corp‘s Xbox and Sony Corp‘s PlayStation3 game consoles on September 17, the company said.


The action-adventure game lets players complete criminal missions in urban settings. The franchise’s last title “Grand Theft Auto IV” has sold over 25 million units since its release in 2008.


Grand Theft Auto V is set in a fictional city inspired by present-day Southern California.


The delayed launch pushes earnings from Grand Theft Auto V sales from June to September, Sterne Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia said. The new title of the massively popular franchise has the potential to rake in close to $ 1 billion in retail sales and sell 15 to 20 million units, according to Bhatia.


“It adds to their development cost and it’s launching closer to what we think is going to be a period where new consoles will be coming out and there will be more competition from other titles,” Bhatia said.


The video game industry has been struggling to cope with flagging sales over the last year. Analysts say consumers are holding back from buying hardware and software as they wait for rumored next-generation versions of Sony Corp’s PlayStation and Microsoft Corp’s Xbox, expected later this year.


The delay could mean Take-Two is possibly creating a “cross-generation” title that could work on current and next-generation consoles, said analyst Mike Hickey of National Alliance Capital Markets.


“Remember, Xbox signed an exclusive deal with Rockstar at the beginning of the prior cycle for episodic content, and Sony provided exclusive resources for the completion of Grand Theft Auto IV,” Hickey said.


(Reporting by Malathi Nayak in San Francisco; Editing by Leslie Adler and Alden Bentley)


Gaming News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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