Sunday, April 7, 2013

Embassies staying put in North Korea despite tension

By Jane Chung

SEOUL (Reuters) - Staff at embassies in North Korea appeared to be remaining in place on Saturday despite an appeal by authorities in Pyongyang for diplomats to consider leaving because of heightened tension after weeks of bellicose exchanges.

North Korean authorities told diplomatic missions they could not guarantee their safety from next Wednesday - after declaring that conflict was inevitable amid joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises due to last until the end of the month.

Whatever the atmosphere in Pyongyang, the rain-soaked South Korean capital, Seoul, was calm. Traffic moved normally through the city center, busy with Saturday shoppers.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency quoted a government official as saying diplomats were disregarding the suggestion they might leave the country.

"We don't believe there's any foreign mission about to leave Pyongyang," the unidentified official was quoted as saying. "Most foreign governments view the North Korean message as a way of ratcheting up tension on the Korean peninsula."

North Korea has been angry since new U.N. sanctions were imposed following its third nuclear weapons test in February. Its rage has apparently been compounded by joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises that began on March 1.

China's Xinhua news agency on Friday had quoted the North's Foreign Ministry as saying the issue was no longer whether but when a war would break out.

Most countries saw the appeal to the missions as little more than strident rhetoric after weeks of threatening to launch a nuclear strike on the United States and declarations of war against the South.

But Russia said it was "seriously studying" the request.

A South Korean government official expressed bewilderment.

"It's hard to define what is its real intention," said the official, who asked not to be identified. "But it might have intensified these threats to strengthen the regime internally or to respond to the international community."

The United Nations said its humanitarian workers remained active across North Korea. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, however, remained "deeply concerned" about tensions, heightened since the imposition of U.N. sanctions against the North for its third nuclear arms test in February.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi repeated Beijing's calls for dialogue to resolve the tensions in a phone call with Ban.

"We oppose provocative words and actions from any party in the region and do not allow troublemaking on China's doorstep," a statement on the ministry's website said, citing Wang.

The appeal to diplomats followed news reports in the South that North Korea, under its 30-year-old leader Kim Jong-un, had moved two medium-range missiles to a location on its east coast. That prompted the White House to say that Washington would "not be surprised" if the North staged another missile test.

Kim Jong-un is the third member of his dynasty to rule North Korea. He took over in December 2011 after the death of his father, Kim Jong-il, who staged confrontations with South Korea and the United States throughout his 17-year rule.

North Korea has always condemned the exercises held by U.S. forces and their South Korean allies. But its comments have been especially vitriolic this year as the United States dispatched B-2 bombers from its home bases to stage mock runs.

"MADCAP NUCLEAR WAR"

North Korea's government daily newspaper said tension remained high because the United States was "waging madcap nuclear war maneuvers".

"This is aimed at igniting a nuclear war against it through a pre-emptive strike," the Minju Joson said in a commentary. "The prevailing situation proves that a new war, a nuclear war, is imminent on the peninsula."

A television documentary broadcast on Friday quoted North Korean leader Kim as saying, during a provincial tour last month, that the country needed to "absolutely guarantee the quality of our artillery and shells to ensure a rapid pre-emptive attack on our enemies".

But some commentators examining the outcome of meetings in Pyongyang last week - of the ruling Workers' Party and of the rubber-stamp legislature - concluded that Kim and his leadership were more concerned with economic than military issues.

Internet site 38 North, which specializes in North Korean affairs, cited the reappointment of reformer Pak Pong Ju as prime minister, the limited titles given to top military and security officials and the naming of a woman to a senior party post.

"These personnel appointments make a great deal of sense in the context of Pyongyang's declarations ... that its economic policy will be modified by introducing systemic reforms while also continuing the development of nuclear weapons," 38 North commentator Michael Madden wrote.

"(They) appear to be important steps in moving key economic development products and production away from the control of the military to the party and government."

North Korea has not shut down one symbol of joint cooperation, the Kaesong industrial zone just inside its border. But last week it prevented South Koreans from entering the complex and about 100 of them who have since remained were due to return home on Saturday, leaving a further 500 there.

The barrage of North Korean threats has created jitters in South Korea's financial markets.

Shares slid on Friday, but analysts said much of the decline was linked to the Bank of Japan's monetary easing policies and one analyst said further major falls were unlikely.

"In a sense, for now the yen is of greater concern than the North Korea risk," said Ko Seunghee, a market analyst at SK Securities. "There is a sense that the KOSPI (index) will not fall sharply or drop below the 1,900 level unless big news about North Korea breaks out."

(Additional reporting by Michael Martina in Beijing, Writing by Ron Popeski; Editing by Robert Birsel and Stephen Powell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/embassies-staying-put-north-korea-despite-tension-001315898--business.html

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

Apple iMessage encryption stymies government snoops

Apple's iMessage feature may be impossible for the U.S. government to spy on ? and that seems to have at least one law-enforcement agency worried.

"Text messages sent via iMessages between Apple products (iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and iMac) are not captured," the Drug Enforcement Administration said in a recent unclassified memo addressed to other law-enforcement agencies and obtained by CNET.

"iMessages between two Apple devices are considered encrypted communication and cannot be intercepted, regardless of the cellphone service provider."

However, iMessage might still be able to be eavesdropped upon. It depends on whether iMessages are routed through Apple's own servers or, instead, depend upon totally peer-to-peer encryption with no intermediary.

Apple hasn't revealed whether it archives iMessages, but in a blog posting Thursday, the Cato Institute's Julian Sanchez said there's an easy way to tell.

"If you slip in a mud puddle, destroying your iPhone (along with any locally stored encryption keys) and forgetting your passwords as a result of the bump on the head, can you still recover your data?" wondered Sanchez. "If you can ? and with Apple?s iCloud services, you can ? then the cloud provider must itself hold the keys to unlock that data."

The iMessage question is a small part of what the FBI calls the "going dark" problem. As electronic communications gradually move from relying mostly on hardware to relying mostly on software, and as software-based encryption becomes commonplace, law-enforcement agencies are losing their ability to listen to or read people's conversations.

"It is critically important that we have the ability to intercept electronic communications with court approval," former FBI General Counsel Valerie Caproni told a House subcommittee in February 2011.

"A growing gap exists between the statutory authority of law enforcement to intercept electronic communications pursuant to court order and our practical ability to intercept those communications," FBI Director Robert Mueller told the Senate Judiciary Committee in December 2011.

"Those communications are being used for criminal conversations," current FBI General Counsel Andrew Weissmann told the American Bar Association last month.

[10 Ways the Government Watches You]

A 1994 law, the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), orders telecommunications companies such as AT&T, Sprint or Comcast, as well as networking-device makers such as Cisco, to build backdoors into electronic communications hardware. (NBC News is part of NBCUniversal, which is owned by Comcast, a provider of cable TV and broadband Internet access.)

Using those backdoors, law-enforcement agencies can listen to anything crossing the telecom companies' networks ? including Internet backbone infrastructure ? as long as the telecoms can decrypt any encrypted communications. (A warrant, subpoena or National Security Letter is required in most cases.)

But there's no similar law covering email, messaging and Internet-based voice software owned by companies such as Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft or Yahoo.

The FBI has been pressing hard for a CALEA update or extension that would apply to software companies, and last year the bureau even sent draft amendments to the White House, according to CNET's Declan McCullagh.

There hasn't been much explicit progress on this issue since then, and, in any case, it's not clear whether a CALEA expansion would solve the "going dark" issue. Third-party peer-to-peer-encryption software for voice and text communications have been available for computers and smartphones for years and continue to be developed.

Peer-to-peer encryption
The best known smartphone peer-to-peer-encryption app may be Silent Circle, a company started last year by a team that includes former Navy SEALs as well as Phil Zimmerman, a renowned cryptographer who in the 1990s was threatened with federal prosecution for making his free Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) email-encryption software available to anyone in the world.

Silent Circle is based in Maryland, but houses its servers in Canada, out of the reach of U.S. subpoenas or National Security Letters. The company's executives insist they're not worried about government harassment, and count U.S. government agencies among their clients.

Of course, there's another way to view the DEA memo on iMessage.

A "possible motive is to spread the very false impression that the article creates: That iMessages are somehow more difficult, if not impossible, for law enforcement to intercept," Sanchez wrote. "Criminals might then switch to using the iMessage service, which is no more immune to interception in reality, and actually provides police with far more useful data than traditional text messages can."

Follow Paul Wagenseil @snd_wagenseil. Follow us @TechNewsDaily, Facebook or Google+.

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2a642ef0/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Ctechnolog0Capple0Eimessage0Eencryption0Estymies0Egovernment0Esnoops0E1B9240A866/story01.htm

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Researchers help unlock pine beetle's Pandora's box

Apr. 5, 2013 ? Twenty researchers -- more than half of them Simon Fraser University graduates and/or faculty -- could become eastern Canada's knights in shining white lab coats.

A paper detailing their newly created sequencing of the mountain pine beetle's (MPB) genome will be gold in the hands of scientists trying to stem the beetle's invasion into eastern forests. The journal Genome Biology has published the paper.

"We know a lot about how beetle infestations can devastate forests, just as the mountain pine beetle has been doing to B.C.'s lodgepole pines," says Christopher Keeling, the paper's lead author.

The SFU graduate, now a research associate in Joerg Bohlmann's Lab at the University of British Columbia's Michael Smith Laboratories, says: "It's the beetle's genome that will help us figure out exactly how it does its damage and hopefully stop it."

The genome reveals large variations among individuals in the MPB species -- about four times greater than the variation among humans.

"As the beetles' range expands and as they head into jack pine forests where the defensive compounds may be different, this variation could allow them to be more successful in new environments," explains Keeling.

Eastern Canadians are bracing for the B.C. MPB's threat to appear in Ontario, Quebec and Maritime forests during the next two decades. The rice grain-sized insect has already wiped out an area of B.C. lodgepole pine forest five times larger than the size of Vancouver Island. It is becoming the scourge of Alberta's forests and is headed for Saskatchewan.

"The MPB genome allows us to examine the population differences for beetles at various parts of an outbreak. For example, we can find out whether the ones heading east are well-adapted to their new host and environment," says Steven Jones, an SFU molecular biology and biochemistry professor and SFU graduate.

"Information like this can help the scientists who model an outbreak, which then informs policymakers who must decide where to best put a province's resources to mitigate further damage."

The genome sequencing of the first North American pest bark beetle species in the genus Dendroctonus also uncovers a bacterial gene that has jumped into the MPB genome. This gene codes for an enzyme that digests sugar.

"It might be used to digest woody tissue and/or micro-organisms that grow in the beetle's tunnels beneath the bark of a tree," explains Keeling. "Gene transfers sometimes make organisms more successful in their environments."

The following SFU-related graduates and/or faculty co-authored the paper: Christopher Keeling (M.Sc. Chem, PhD Chem); Steven Jones (M.Sc. Genetics), SFU molecular biology and biochemistry professor; Inanc Birol, SFU computing science adjunct professor; Dezene Huber (PhD, Biol); Maria Li (B.Sc., Biol); Greg Taylor (B.Sc., MBB); Richard Moore, health sciences adjunct professor; Simon Chan (B.Sc., Biol); Pawan Pandoh (B.Sc., Cellular/Molecular Biol), Nancy Liao (M.Sc., MBB); Diana Palmquist (B.Sc., MBB) and Shaun Jackman (B.Sc., Computer Eng.).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Simon Fraser University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Christopher I Keeling, Macaire MS Yuen, Nancy Y Liao, T Roderick Docking, Simon K Chan, Greg A Taylor, Diana L Palmquist, Shaun D Jackman, Anh Nguyen, Maria Li, Hannah Henderson, Jasmine K Janes, Yongjun Zhao, Pawan Pandoh, Richard Moore, Felix AH Sperling, Dezene PW Huber, Inanc Birol, Stephen JM Jones, Joerg Bohlmann. Draft genome of the mountain pine beetle, Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins, a major forest pest. Genome Biology, 2013; 14 (3): R27 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2013-14-3-r27

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/G-nNCCMq2fU/130405155832.htm

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Conn. Senate approves sweeping gun control bill

Senate Minority Leader John McKinney, R-Fairfield, who represents Newtown, Conn., right, and Senate President Donald Williams, D-Brooklyn, shake hands after the passage of a gun-control bill in the Senate chamber at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, April 3, 2013. The bill passed the Senate and goes onto the Conn. Houses for approval. Hundreds of gun rights advocates are gathering at the statehouse in Hartford ahead of a vote in the General Assembly on proposed gun-control legislation. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Senate Minority Leader John McKinney, R-Fairfield, who represents Newtown, Conn., right, and Senate President Donald Williams, D-Brooklyn, shake hands after the passage of a gun-control bill in the Senate chamber at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, April 3, 2013. The bill passed the Senate and goes onto the Conn. Houses for approval. Hundreds of gun rights advocates are gathering at the statehouse in Hartford ahead of a vote in the General Assembly on proposed gun-control legislation. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Paul Regish of East Hartford, Conn., holds signs as gun rights advocates enter the legislative office building at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Hundreds of gun rights advocates are gathering at the statehouse in Hartford ahead of a vote in the General Assembly on proposed gun-control legislation. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

A Capitol security officer enters a revolving door at the legislative office building, with a sign warning not to bring weapons on to the grounds at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Hundreds of gun rights advocates are gathering at the statehouse in Hartford ahead of a vote in the General Assembly on proposed gun-control legislation. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Gun rights advocates fill the hallways of the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Hundreds of gun rights advocates are gathering at the statehouse in Hartford ahead of a vote in the General Assembly on proposed gun-control legislation. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Paul Regish of East Hartford, Conn., holds signs as he stands with other gun rights advocates outside the legislative office building at the Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Hundreds of gun rights advocates are gathering at the statehouse in Hartford ahead of a vote in the General Assembly on proposed gun-control legislation. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

(AP) ? Connecticut's Senate on Wednesday approved sweeping new restrictions on weapons and large-capacity magazines, a response to last year's deadly Newtown elementary school shooting that would give the state some of the country's tightest gun control laws.

The December massacre of 26 people inside Sandy Hook Elementary School, which reignited a national debate on gun control, set the stage for changes in the state that may have been impossible elsewhere: The governor, who personally informed parents that their children had been killed that day, championed the cause, and legislative leaders, keenly aware of the attention on the state, struck a bipartisan agreement they want to serve as a national model.

"The tragedy in Newtown demands a powerful response, demands a response that transcends politics," said Senate President Donald E. Williams Jr., a Democrat. "It is the strongest and most comprehensive bill in the country."

The bill passed the Senate in a bipartisan 26-10 vote following a respectful and at times somber six-hour debate Wednesday evening. The House of Representatives then debated the bill and was expected to vote later in the night. Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has said he would sign it into law.

The legislation adds more than 100 firearms to the state's assault weapons ban and creates what officials have called the nation's first dangerous weapon offender registry as well as eligibility rules for buying ammunition. Some parts of the bill would take effect immediately after Malloy's signature, including background checks for all firearms sales.

Connecticut will join states including California, New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts in having the country's strongest gun control laws, said Brian Malte, director of mobilization for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence in Washington.

"This would put Connecticut right at the top or near the top of the states with the strongest gun laws," Malte said.

Colorado and New York also passed new gun control requirements in the wake of the Newtown shooting, in which a 20-year-old gunman used a military-style semi-automatic rifle to kill 20 first-graders and six educators.

Compared with Connecticut's legislation, which, for example, bans the sale or purchase of ammunition magazines holding more than 10 rounds, New York restricted magazines to seven bullets and gave owners of higher-capacity magazines a year to sell them elsewhere. Colorado banned ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds.

"There are pieces that are stronger in other states, but, in totality, this will be the strongest gun legislation passed in the United States," Betty Gallo, a lobbyist for Connecticut Against Gun Violence, said of the Connecticut bill.

Many senators spoke of balancing the rights of gun owners with addressing the horror of the Sandy Hook shooting. Lawmakers said they received thousands of emails and phone calls urging them to vote for or against the bill, with veteran Sen. Joan Hartley, a Democrat, saying she's never seen a more polarizing issue at the state Capitol.

But Senate Minority Leader John McKinney, R-Fairfield, whose district includes Newtown, said he felt he was representing the interests of the Sandy Hook victims as he cast his vote.

"I stand here as their voice, as their elected representative," he said, reciting the names of the 26 victims at the school.

Gun rights advocates who greatly outnumbered gun control supporters in demonstrations held earlier in the day at the Capitol railed against the proposals as misguided and unconstitutional, occasionally chanting "No! No! No!" and "Read the bill!"

"We want them to write laws that are sensible," said Ron Pariseau, of Pomfret, who was angry he'll be made a felon if he doesn't register his weapons that will no longer be sold in Connecticut. "What they're proposing will not stop anything."

By the time the Senate voted, many of the gun rights advocates had gone home, leaving behind proponents of the bill who applauded when the tally was read.

In the legislature, where Democrats control both houses, leaders waited to unveil gun legislation until they struck a bipartisan deal that they say shows how the parties can work together elsewhere. They touted the package as a comprehensive response to Newtown that also addresses mental health and school security measures, including the creation of a new council to establish school safety standards and the expansion of circumstances when someone's mental history disqualifies him or her from obtaining a gun permit or other gun credentials.

But momentum on federal legislation has stalled in Congress, and President Barack Obama has planned a trip to Connecticut on Monday to step up pressure to pass a bill.

A silent majority in favor of stronger gun control has emerged following the Newtown massacre, Gallo said.

Among the gun control advocates were Dan and Lauren Garrett, of Hamden, wearing green shirts in honor of the Sandy Hook victims. The Garretts traveled to Hartford with their 10-month-old son, Robert, to watch the bill's passage. They said they hope lawmakers will build on the proposal.

"It's just the beginning of this bill. In six months from now, it's going to get stronger and stronger," Dan Garrett said. "I think they're watching us all over the country."

But gun rights advocates and some lawmakers questioned whether the legislation would have done anything to stop Adam Lanza, the gunman who blasted his way into Sandy Hook Elementary. State police say he fired 154 shots with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle inside the school, then killed himself with a handgun. He had shot to death his mother, Nancy, before going to the school, and search warrants of the Lanzas' home showed it was packed with weapons and ammunition.

In a state where gun manufacturing dates back to the Revolutionary War, law-abiding gun owners are paying the price for the actions of a deranged young man, said a Republican state senator, Tony Guglielmo.

"The problem is I can't connect the dots between Adam Lanza and the good guys. So I think we need to do something, but I guess we should be doing something that does good, not something that just feels good," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Stephen Kalin and Michael Melia in Hartford and John Christoffersen in New Haven contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-03-Gun%20Control-Conn/id-9996af633e0741ca8f7f452a7ad269ea

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Terri Proud, Arizona Official, Fired Over Comment About Menstrual Cycles In Combat

The director of Arizona's Department of Veterans? Services resigned on Wednesday after the woman he hired to coordinate a female veterans? conference, former State Rep. Terri Proud (R), said that women may be less suited to serve in combat because of their menstrual cycles.

?Women have certain things during the month I?m not sure they should be out there dealing with," Proud told the Arizona Senora News Service on Tuesday. "I don?t know how to address that topic in a very diplomatic manner.?

Proud was fired for the comment that led to director Joey Strickland's resignation. A spokesman for Gov. Jan Brewer (R) told the News Service that the governor's office had specifically told Strickland not to hire Proud in the first place.

?Col. Strickland was given very specific instructions about a year ago to avoid hiring this individual," Matt Benson, Brewer's spokesman, told the News Service. "He chose to do so anyway and unfortunately that individual?s questionable judgment was on display this week with some ill chosen public remarks regarding women in the military."

Proud had been a controversial figure in the state legislature, notoriously telling one constituent in an email that women should be required to watch an abortion procedure before legally being permitted to have one.

"Personally I'd like to make a law that mandates a woman watch an abortion being performed prior to having a 'surgical procedure,'" Proud wrote at the time. "If it's not a life it shouldn't matter, if it doesn't harm a woman then she shouldn't care, and don't we want more transparency and education in the medical profession anyway?"

Proud told the News Service that her recent controversial comment about women in combat was not meant to be taken seriously and that Brewer's decision to fire her is "asinine" and "wrong."

"I don't have a problem with women being on the front line if that's their choice," she said. "I'm not going to sit there and say, 'No you don't have that right.' I was making a funny comment, ?What are they going to do?'"

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/04/terri-proud-fired-women-in-combat_n_3014428.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Weak economic reports send stock market lower

(AP) ? Weak reports on hiring and service industries sent the stock market sharply lower Wednesday, giving the Dow Jones industrial average its worst day in more than a month.

The Dow fell 111.66 points, or 0.8 percent, to 14,550.35, its worst decline since Feb. 25. The Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 16.56 points, or 1.1 percent, to 1,553.69. Both indexes closed at record highs the day before.

The stock market started 2013 with a rally as investors became more optimistic about the U.S. economy, especially housing and jobs. The reports Wednesday disappointed the market and came two days after news that U.S. manufacturing growth slowed unexpectedly last month.

The losses were widespread. All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index fell. Banks and energy stocks had the worst losses, 1.7 percent and 1.6 percent. Utilities, which investors hold when they want to play it safe, fell the least, 0.3 percent.

"The market is overdue for a correction," said Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading. "I don't think that the economy supports this type of a rally."

Signs of investor skittishness appeared across a number of different markets.

Commodities slumped. Crude oil dropped $2.74, or 2.8 percent, to close at $94.45 a barrel and industrial metals like copper fell.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.81 percent from 1.86 percent, the lowest level for the benchmark rate since January. The decline means investors are moving money into low-risk U.S. government debt.

The Russell 2000 index, which tracks small company stocks, fell for a third straight day, dropping 1.7 percent. It's now down 3.5 percent so far this week, far worse than the declines in the Dow, 0.2 percent, and the S&P, 1 percent. That's another signal that investors may be becoming more bearish about the U.S. economy.

Small company stocks, which did better than the Dow and the S&P 500 in the first three months of the year, are more sensitive to the outlook for the U.S. economy than the larger companies in the Dow and S&P. That's because they rely far more on domestic sales than global giants like IBM and Caterpillar, which sells heavy machinery and construction equipment around the globe.

The Dow Jones Transportation Average, an index of 20 stocks including airlines like Delta and freight companies FedEx and UPS, fell more than 1 percent for a third straight day. The index, which is regarded as a leading indicator for broader market indexes as well as the economy, has fallen 3.9 percent this week, after surging 17.9 percent in the first quarter.

U.S. service companies kept growing at a solid pace in March, but the expansion was less than economists were expecting. The Institute for Supply Management's index of service companies fell to 54.4 from 56 a month earlier. The report was the weakest in seven months.

Separately, payrolls processor ADP reported that U.S. employers added 158,000 jobs last month, down from February's gain of 237,000. The ADP report is often seen as a preview for the government's broader survey on employment, which is due out Friday.

The slowdown in hiring was due in part to construction firms holding back on adding new employees. That sent the stocks of homebuilders lower. PulteGroup fell 85 cent, or 4.3 percent, to $19.01 and D.R. Horton dropped 57 cents to $22.84.

In other trading, the Nasdaq composite fell 36.26 points, or 1.1 percent, to 3,218.60.

Even though stocks started the second quarter lower, markets typically add to their gains after ending the first quarter up, said Sam Stovall, an equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ. Using data going back over more than 60 years, Stovall says that the S&P 500 has gained an average of 9 percent from April to December after rising in the first quarter.

"Investors believe that the economic trajectory is improving," said Stovall. Stocks "do not reflect the true valuations based on where the economy will be at the end of the year."

Among stocks making big moves:

? Zynga rose 46 cents, or 15 percent, to $3.53 after the online game maker said two casino games would debut in the United Kingdom Wednesday.

? Abercrombie & Fitch rose $1.74, or 3.8 percent, to $47.20, making it the biggest percentage gainer in the S&P 500. The company said late Tuesday that it planned to expand internationally and place greater emphasis on cost control.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-03-Wall%20Street/id-6c21d71c6d3a4c9faecf733bcedaa045

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How to Get the Best Deals on a Dhow Cruise Dubai | ArticlesMagic ...

An evening on a dhow is one of the best things you can do on your next vacation in Dubai. The option not only enables you to create lifelong memories and bond with your families but also enables you experience nature at its best. On the dhow, you will have remarkable views to the colorful city, enjoy the cool breeze and experience the best in traditional and contemporary entertainment. All in all, it is important to note that your enjoyment will be dependent on the deals you get. Most people, when contemplating on a dhow cruise dinner in Dubai focus more on cost and complementary benefits rather than other important things. Finding a great deal does not have to be as daunting. There are only a few details you need to focus on.

Timing: Whether you are looking for a competitive price deal or a fully furnished dhow, timing is always the key. Timing is crucial to getting the best deals on dhow cruise Dubai. The best time to book is from January through March. This is a time when most cruise industries make the most bookings. You will be able to get last minute discounts during this time. All in all, you need to understand that your booking must be made in good time. At times, booking late will land you on the second best Dubai dhow cruise. This is because the best ones might already have been taken. The earlier you make your reservations the better.

Details: Details are paramount when searching for the best deals in dhow cruise dinner in Dubai. More often than not, people end with the second best deals simply because they are too reluctant to communicate their needs profoundly to the service provider. You need to mention your age, location, group size and anything else that may help the service provider understand your needs. You should also give information on the intent of your vacation as well as your preferences when it comes to cuisines and entertainment. The more information you give to the service provider the better.

Classified: A quick way of getting the best deals on a Dubai dhow cruise is to look out for promotions. In an effort to lure more clients, cruise companies offer promotions. Making use of these advertisements could help find the most remarkable deal on dhow Dubai. Start your search with the local newspapers and then proceed to the official website of the cruise company.

Travel agents: One resource you should never ignore is that of using the travel agents. The travel agent has been in business for many years and understands the pros and cons of different firms and packages in Dubai dhow cruise. He or she will give you indispensable pieces of information relating to the cruises. The agent may also work on your behalf in making all the necessary preparations. All you need to do is explain your needs to him.

You should always remember that the best dhow cruise Dubai is out there and all you need to do is a little research. Refrain from confining to the first deal that comes your way.

Ishrat Ali Khan is the author of this article on Dhow Cruise Dubai.
Find more information, about Dubai Dhow Cruise here

Source: http://articles-plus.com/how-to-get-the-best-deals-on-a-dhow-cruise-dubai.html

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