lunes, 30 de marzo de 2015

The New York Times Top Retailer to Tighten Testing of Dietary Supplements


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From: The New York Times.



TOP NEWS




New York State Budget Deal Has Ethics Reforms

The agreement, reached by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and legislative leaders, includes several new ethics measures that the governor had proposed in response to corruption scandals in Albany.

Jewish Leaders Support Menendez Amid Inquiry

As Senator Robert Menendez battles to keep his standing in the Washington as a corruption investigation unfolds, he has found backing in the pro-Israel community.
Dr. George Liu, an endocrinologist, is a leader with the group Advocate Community Providers, which counts more than 770,000 patients.CreditHiroko Masuike/The New York Times

Pay for Performance Extends to Health Care

In a state-federal partnership, 25 groups in New York are part of a trial that would eventually reward health care providers if the conditions of their Medicaid patients improve.

Pilot’s Hometown Is Left Bewildered and Bristling

Residents of Montabaur, Germany, were angry at the media’s intrusion while wrestling with how to react to the reality that one of their own may have deliberately steered 149 other people to their deaths.



Bush and Walker Point Their Party to Contrary Paths

Jeb Bush and Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin are becoming prominent exponents of dueling visions of how a Republican can retake the White House: by extending its reach, or by energizing the base.



The Appraisal: Help for a Skyscraper in Queens

A new apartment building, the city’s tallest outside Manhattan, is relying on air and land rights from a historic clock tower next door and from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

The Opinion Pages

For the Police, Quality Over Quantity

Should the New York Police Department staff up even though crime is at historic lows? Maybe the answer is: It doesn’t matter that much.

Watching

  • Eight people were killed and 10 injured in Florida after the van they were riding in careened across a highway and crashed into a canal, the authorities said.
    NBC News
  • Top managers at a Dutch-owned lender said they wouldforgo pay raises that were criticized by lawmakers.
    The New York Times
  • Chinese corruption investigators looking into a top security and intelligence official have found that he had six mistresses and two sons by them, according to a report.
    The New York Times
  • South Korea’s military preliminarily chose Korea Aerospace Industries as a partner in its $7.7 billion project to develop an advanced jet fighter with help from Lockheed Martin.
    The New York Times
  • Warplanes struck the Yemeni capital, Sana, overnight and after daybreak on Monday, residents said, on the fifth day of a campaign by Saudi-led forces against the Houthis.
    Reuters
  • Prime Minister David Cameron is expected to tell voters they face a “stark choice” between him and Ed Miliband of Labour, as Britain’s election campaign gets under way.
    BBC News
  • The passport numbers and other personal details of world leaders at the last G-20 gathering were accidentally disclosed by the Australian immigration department.
    The Guardian
  • Even as Ford hopes the new Continental will invigorate its Lincoln luxury brand in the United States, the company expects most of the car’s sales to be in China.
    The New York Times
  • Greece and its creditors continued talks on overhauls to unlock loans, and the lenders said it could take several more days before a proper list of measures was ready.
    Reuters
  • Australia has ordered that two people remain in the cockpitat all times during commercial flights carrying 50 people or more, after last week’s Germanwings crash.
    BBC News
  • Solar Impulse, the fuel-free airplane, left Myanmar for Chongqing, China, in what is the fifth leg of an around-the-world flight that started in Abu Dhabi 20 days ago.
    BBC News
  • SAEED KHAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES
    Australia won its fifth Cricket World Cup on Sunday, defeating New Zealand by seven wickets in the final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
    The New York Times
  • Amid growing violence in Yemen, China is sending three navy ships to evacuate about 500 citizens of its citizens there and will suspend anti-piracy patrols in the area.
    The Associated Press
  • The Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing’s longtime companion, Solina Chau, struck 20 deals valued at $70 million last year as head of Horizons Ventures.
    The Wall Street Journal
  • Security experts say that an onslaught of Internet traffic to the American coding website GibHub could be an attempt by China to shut down anticensorship tools.
    The Wall Street Journal
  • Federal data shows that Medicare spent $4.5 billion last year on new medications that cure the liver disease hepatitis C — 15 times more than the year before.
    The Washington Post
  • My goal every day is to try to keep 218 frogs in a wheelbarrow long enough to get something passed.
    Rep. John Boehner, Republican of Ohio, on his job as House Speaker, via The Hill
  • A federal appeals court panel upheld the conviction of a woman found guilty of lying about her role in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda so she could get U.S. citizenship. 
    The Associated Press
  • NINTENDO OF AMERICA
    The next game in the Legend of Zelda series will not come out in 2015 as expected, Nintendo announced. Above, Link, the main character, in a 2006 game.
    Kotaku
  • Mexico is the first developing nation to promise cuts in global-warming pollutants, ahead of climate talks. It said emissions will peak in 2026, then fall 25 percent by 2030.
    Bloomberg News
  • BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY IMAGES
    The Madison Square Garden Company says it has decided to split its businesses into two publicly traded companies, one for sports and entertainment and one for media.
    The New York Times
  • After leading St. John’s to the N.C.A.A. men’s basketball tournament for the first time in four years, Coach Steve Lavin will not return next season
    The New York Times
  • Intel is said to be in discussions to buy Altera, a designer of specialized computer chips, in what would be one of the technology giant’s biggest-ever deals.
    The New York Times
  • California’s governor signed legislation with more than $1 billion for water projects, including infrastructure and emergency relief for drought-stricken areas.
    The Los Angeles Times
  • Yuri Sucart, a cousin of Yankees star Alex Rodriguez, pleaded guilty to conspiring to distribute human growth hormone. He was A-Rod’s personal assistant.
    The Associated Press
  • The Somali ambassador to Switzerland, Yusuf Bari Bari, is among the 10 people killed in an attack by the Shabab militant group on a hotel in Mogadishu.
    BBC News
  • ALLAN GRANT/THE LIFE IMAGES COLLECTION, VIA GETTY IMAGES
    “Following guest, please!” How did “customers” become “guests” at drugstores, banks and retailers? Some say itstarted with Disney.
    The New York Times
  • Follow
    The #Pao jury has reached a verdict. Judge Kahn will take it at 2 p.m. in Dept. 602-604. #kleinerperkins
    Ellen Pao is suing her former employer, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, claiming the prominent venture capital firm discriminated against her and retaliated when she complained.
  • The estate of Tupac Shakur is getting a “total reset,” potentially leading to the release of new music the rapper had recorded.
    Billboard
  • GABRIEL BOUYS/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE -- GETTY IMAGES
    Italian police recovered a lost Picasso, “Violin and Bottle of Bass,” worth $16 million after its owner, a retired frame-maker who said he received it as a gift, tried to export it for auction.
    Reuters
  • Dr. Dre, who hasn’t released an album since 1999, said he’s working on a soundtrack for the N.W.A. biopic “Straight Outta Compton,” but he may not release it.
    Rolling Stone
  • The Oklahoma City Thunder confirm thatKevin Durant will miss the remainder of the 2014-15 regular season with a foot injury,returning in four to six months.
    Oklahoma City Thunder
  • A University of Mississippi student was charged with federal civil rights crimes and is accused of hanging a rope and a flag depicting a Confederate symbol on a statue of the college’s first black student, James Meredith.
    Department of Justice
  • KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS
    The show creator and cast members of “Mad Men,” which is entering its final season, are donating 1960s-era costumes and props to the Smithsonian. Above, Jon Hamm, and some Don Draper clothes.
    The Associated Press
  • A judge revealed that five teenage girls barred from travel abroad attend the same London school as three girls thought to have fled to join the Islamic State in Syria.
    BBC News
  • Follow
    Apple is open for everyone. We are deeply disappointed in Indiana's new law and calling on Arkansas Gov. to veto the similar #HB1228.
    Tim Cook, Apple's chief executive, on an Indiana law that allows businesses to refuse service to same-sex couples, via Twitter.
  • President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi of Yemen arrived in Egypt for an Arab League summit to deal with the Saudi-led military campaign against the Houthi forces he fled.
    Reuters
  • Anna Cross, 25, a British military medic who contracted Ebola while working in Sierra Leone, has been discharged from Royal Free Hospital in London.
    The Guardian
  • POOL PHOTO BY CJ GUNTHER
    Shayanna Jenkins, the fiancée of the former N.F.L. star Aaron Hernandez, testified in his murder trial. Prosecutors pressed her about a gun in the home she shared with him.
    The Boston Globe
  • I’m not the only gay person in the N.F.L.
    Michael Sam, who was drafted by the St. Louis Rams in 2014 but did not make the team, said several gay players had reached out to him, via the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
  • Britain advised its citizens to avoid coastal resorts in Kenya, a blow to a tourism industry already battered by a series of attacks.
    Reuters
  • MAJA SUSLIN/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
    Tomas Transtromer, the Swedish poet and 2011 Nobel literature laureatehas died at 83, his publishing house Bonniers said.
    Agence France-Presse, via Yahoo News UK
  • An Alabama police officer who threw an Indian man to the ground during a stop in February has been indicted on federal charges involving the use of unreasonable force.
    AL.com
  • The White House unveiled a $1.2 billion plan to fight antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a growing threat that causes an estimated 23,000 deaths a year in the U.S.
    The Washington Post
  • BARBARA WALTON/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
    Thailand’s airlines are facing bans on new international flights and heightened scrutiny of carriers after a United Nations group raised “significant” safety concerns.
    The Associated Press
  • A British watchdog said it is looking into new claims that the police covered up accusations of child abuse. One case involved allegations against lawmakers, judges and clergy.
    The Associated Press
  • A war crimes tribunal charged two more former members of the Khmer Rouge, which brutalized Cambodia during the 1970s, with crimes against humanity.
    Reuters
  • SAID YUSUF WARSAME/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
    Gunmen of the Shabab, Somalia’s Qaeda affiliate, fought their way into a popular hotel in Mogadishu, killing at least seven people, the police and witnesses said.
    Reuters
  • About 1,000 workers helping to build a much needed power plant in South Africa were fired after they staged an illegal strike to demand bonuses and an end to layoffs.
    The Associated Press
  • The dollar extended its rebound after Federal Reserve officials signaled they were on track to raise rates in 2015. The Fed’s Janet L. Yellen is speaking at 3:45 p.m. Eastern.
    Reuters
  • Zayn Malik talked about his decision to leavethe wildly popular British boy band One Direction. “I feel like I’ve let the fans down but I can’t do this anymore,” he said.
    People
  • The University of Tennessee fired its men’s basketball coach, Donnie Tyndall, saying he was “highly likely to be found responsible for serious violations of N.C.A.A. rules.”
    ESPN
  • BioMed Central, a scholarly publisher based in Britain,retracted 43 papers because of “fabricated” peer reviews.
    The Washington Post
  • NICHOLE SOBECKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES
    Nigeria’s Army said it captured the town of Gwoza, the headquarters of the terrorist group Boko Haram. Separately,rare video emerged of military operations in Bama, above.
    Reuters | Agence France-Presse, via YouTube
  • BlackBerry, the smartphone company, reported a surprise quarterly profit, in a sign that efforts to refocus the company may be paying off.
    Reuters
  • SERGEI ILNITSKY/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
    Scott J. Kelly — above left, with two Russian colleagues — is scheduled to begin the longest space mission ever undertaken by a NASA astronaut on Friday.
    The New York Times
  • Italy’s highest court is expected to issue a final ruling on Friday on the conviction of Amanda Knox, an American, in the killing of a British student in 2007.
    Reuters
  • Oisin Tymon, a producer for “Top Gear,” said he would not press charges against Jeremy Clarkson over the attack that led to the hostbeing dropped from the BBC show.
    The Guardian
  • The Greek police rescued about 70 migrants stranded on a berm on the border with Turkey after they crossed a river dividing the countries and found floods on the Greek side.
    The Associated Press
  • Turkey’s Parliament passed a law to broaden police powers and allow the use of firearms against demonstrators,deepening fears of crackdowns before elections.
    Reuters
  • Follow
    Air traffic has been severely disrupted due to a power failure in the area. Airport is running on emergency power.
    The international airport near Amsterdam, the Dutch capital, which was struck by a major power failure, via Twitter
  • Premier League clubs have agreed to spend at least one billion pounds, or almost $1.5 billion, to improve soccer in England and offer a living wage plan to full-time employees.
    Sky Sports
  • A television station owned by the Russian Defense Ministry has offered a job to Jeremy Clarkson, who was ousted as host of “Top Gear” after a clash with a colleague.
    The Associated Press
  • In a pre-election TV program, Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain was put under severe pressure but appeared to do better than his opponent Ed Miliband.
    The Guardian
  • stampede during a Hindu ritual at a river in Bangladesh left at least 10 people dead, the police said.
    The New York Times
  • The leader of Thailand’s military junta, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, was engaging in “political satire” when he suggested he would execute reporters, a government spokesman said.
    Voice of America
  • Arizona narrowly beat Xavier, 68-60, setting up a rematch with Wisconsin in the N.C.A.A. regional final.
    The New York Times
  • The worst thing is how saddened Stieg would have been. He never let anyone work on his literary texts. He would have been furious.
    Eva Gabrielsson, whose late partner, Stieg Larsson, wrote the "Millennium" crime novels, on a coming fourth novel in the series, written by another author, via Agence France-Presse
  • EDGAR SU/REUTERS
    Singapore urged residents not to join the line of people paying last respects to the former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, where waiting times have reached eight hours.
    The Straits Times
  • Bangkok’s governor was criticized for telling residents of the Thai capital who were unhappy about recent flooding to “go live on a mountain.”
    The Bangkok Post
  • Three men accused of slaughtering calves were being sought in the Indian state of Maharashtra, in what the police called the first case under a new law banning beef.
    The Hindustan Times
  • HENRY ROMERO/REUTERS
    Thousands of Mexicans marched to mark the six months that have passed since 43 students disappeared, as parents of the missing continued to demand answers.
    The Associated Press
  • Dynel Lane, accused of stabbing a Colorado woman and removing a fetus from her womb,will not be charged with murder, the Boulder County district attorney’s office said.
    The Denver Post
  • Recovering from a lackluster first half, Frank Kaminsky led top-seeded Wisconsin to victory over North Carolina, 79-72, in the first N.C.A.A. West Regional semifinal.
    The New York Times
  • BALAZS MOHAI/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY
    Frustrated by the confusion, Fred Durst, the Limp Bizkit frontman, gave a reminder: He is not Robert Durst, the real estate mogul who has been charged with murder.
    The Hollywood Reporter
  • Notre Dame beat Wichita State, 81-70, to advance to the round of 8 in the N.C.A.A. men’s basketball tournament. It will play the winner of the Kentucky-West Virginia game.
    The New York Times
  • California will stop enforcing a ban on all sex offenders living within 2,000 feet of schools and parks. A court said it violated the rights of parolees in San Diego County.
    The Los Angeles Times
  • A deputy police chief in Fresno, Calif., was among four people arrested on federal drug charges, including conspiracy to distribute oxycodone, heroin and marijuana.
    KFSN-TV (Fresno, Calif.)
  • Apple’s chief executive, Tim Cook, said he planned to give away all his wealth after providing for the college education of his 10-year-old nephew.
    Fortune
  • Google’s new chief financial officer, Ruth Porat, will get a $70 million pay packagewhen she joins the search giant from Morgan Stanley.
    The New York Times
  • Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin denied that he changed his stance on immigration after reports that he would endorse a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
    The New York Times
  • A top immigration official did not act illegally in expediting select visa reviews, but did violate a code of behavior, the inspector general for Homeland Security said.
    The New York Times
  • JASON MERRITT/GETTY IMAGES
    Jason Alexander will take over for Larry David in the Broadway play ”Fish in the Dark.” “I am sure the cast will be relieved to be working with a professional,” Mr. David said. 
    The New York Times
  • The number of people in northern Cameroon who have fled their homes in fear of Boko Haram doubled in March to 117,000, according to a United Nations survey.
    Reuters
  • An incompatible cocktail of nitrate salts and organic cat litter caused a breach that forced closure of the U.S.’s only underground nuclear waste repository, experts said.
    The Associated Press
  • A jury recommended life without parole for an Alabama woman convicted of killing her 9-year-old granddaughter by running her to death. A judge makes the final decision.
    The Associated Press
  • The N.C.A.A., the college sports governing body based in Indianapolis, said it is concerned by an Indiana law that allows businesses to refuse service to same-sex couples.
    The New York Times
  • President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey said the countrymight consider providing logistical support to the Saudi-led military campaign against Houthis in Yemen.
    France 24
  • The United Nations more than doubled its estimate of Syrians living in besieged areas to around 440,000, up from 212,000, as the civil war enters its fifth year.
    The Associated Press
  • ELLEN OZIER/REUTERS
    Dean Smith, the former U.N.C. basketball coach who died in February, left $200 each to his players, suggesting they “enjoy a dinner out.” Above, with Michael Jordan in 2007.
    ESPN
  • President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya promised to lead a battle against corruption and said that anyone implicated in a new antigraft report should step aside pending investigation.
    Reuters
  • Pepsi overtook Diet Coke as the second-most popular soda in America, according to an industry report. Americans bought less soda for the 10th straight year in 2014. 
    The Associated Press
  • Arab foreign ministers agreed to a draft resolution to form aunified military force, the Arab League’s secretary general said.
    Reuters
  • One person was killed and several injured when parts of an overpass fell on Interstate 35 in central Texas after a truck hit a supporting beam.
    Austin American-Statesman
  • A nationwide crackdown on auto dealers resulted in more than 250 enforcement actions over deceptive advertising and other violations, the government said.
    The Associated Press
  • Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will speak before a joint meeting of Congress on April 29, making him the first leader from Japan to give such an address.
    Reuters
  • HBO, the premium cable channel, announced that it would air a daily half-hour Vice newscast, the first daily news program that HBO has ever broadcast.
    The New York Times
  • MAX WHITTAKER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
    Stanford University is facing a “troubling” rise in reports of cheating aided by technology, an administrator said.
    Bloomberg News
  • Bank of America’s chief executive, Brian T. Moynihan, took a pay cut in 2014 as the bank faced rising legal costs. He received $13 million, down from $14 million in 2013.
    The New York Times
  • An Army National Guard soldier and his cousin have been arrested on charges of conspiring to support the Islamic State, the Department of Justice said.
    Reuters

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