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Ohio auto parts plant blast hurts 9 near Toledo (AP)

AP - An explosion at an auto parts plant in northern Ohio has injured nine people.

Top US commander: Burning Quran endangers troops (AP)

Afghan protesters step on a U.S. flag during a demonstration against the United States, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Sept. 6, 2010. Hundreds of Afghans railed against the U.S. and called for President Barack Obama's death at a rally in the capital Monday to denounce an American church's plans to burn the Islamic holy book on 9/11. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq)AP - The top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan warned Tuesday an American church's threat to burn copies of the Muslim holy book could endanger U.S. troops in the country and Americans worldwide.


Hundreds of looted artifacts returned to Iraq (AP)

An AK-47, with Saddam Hussein's image on it, is displayed at the Iraqi Ministry of foreign Affairs in Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010. Hundreds of Iraqi artifacts looted from museums and archaeological sites across the country have been returned to Iraq. The display is part of Iraqi efforts to repatriate its looted cultural heritage. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)AP - Hundreds of Iraqi artifacts looted from museums and archaeological sites across the country — including a 4,400-year-old statue of an ancient king stolen during the U.S.-led invasion — have been returned to Iraq and were displayed Tuesday.


Stocks fall on fresh European bank concerns (AP)

The New York Stock Exchange is shown, Friday, Aug. 27, 2010. Stock futures slipped to start the holiday-shortened week after some fresh concerns about the health of European banks rattled overseas markets, Tuesday, Sept. 7. 2010. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)AP - Fresh worries Tuesday about the health of European banks sent stocks lower in the U.S.


Wall Street opens down on Europe bank worries (Reuters)

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, August 30, 2010. REUTERS/Brendan McDermidReuters - Stocks opened lower on Tuesday pressured by fresh concerns about Europe's financial stability.


Norway man pleads not guilty to terror financing (AP)

Defending lawyer Frode Sulland, front right, and prosecutor Jan Glent, front left, in court in Oslo Tuesday Sept. 7, 2010, prior to the start of the trial of Osman Abdirahman Abdi (not in picture). The Somali-born Norwegian citizen pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges of sending over $30,000 (23,280 euro) to top leaders of an al-Qaida-linked Somali militant group, al-Shabaab, at the start of the first trial under Norway's 2002 terror financing law. (AP Photo/Scanpix, Berit Roald) ** NORWAY OUT **AP - A Somali-born Norwegian citizen pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges of sending over $30,000 to top leaders of an al-Qaida-linked Somali militant group at the start of the first trial under Norway's 2002 terror financing law.


Boat collision triggers Japan-China diplomatic spat (AFP)

A Taiwanese fishing vessel sails alongside a Japanese coastguard boat (L) near the disputed Diaoyu Islands or Senkaku in Japanese in the East China Sea, 2006. A tense maritime incident Tuesday in which two Japanese patrol vessels and a Chinese fishing boat collided near a disputed island chain triggered a diplomatic spat between the Asian giants.(AFP/File/Japan Coast Guard Via Jiji Press)AFP - A tense maritime incident Tuesday in which two Japanese patrol vessels and a Chinese fishing boat collided near a disputed island chain triggered a diplomatic spat between the Asian giants.


HSBC confirms Chairman Green to step down (Reuters)

Group chairman of HSBC Holdings Stephen Green speaks at the Institute of Directors (IOD) annual convention at the Albert Hall in London in this April 28, 2010 file photo. REUTERS/Luke MacGregorReuters - Change swept through the top of Britain's banks on Tuesday as Barclays said its investment banking supremo Bob Diamond will take over as chief executive and HSBC said its chairman is leaving to go into government.


Mozambique scales back price hikes after riots: minister (AFP)

A Mozambiquean sends a text message during violent protests that paralysed Mozambique's capital Maputo on September 2. Mozambique will reverse an increase in the price of bread that sparked deadly rioting last week, and restore some subsidies for electricity and water.(AFP/Arthur Frayer)AFP - Mozambique will reverse an increase in the price of bread that sparked deadly rioting last week, and restore some subsidies for electricity and water, the planning minister said Tuesday.


Oracle hires HP's former chief Mark Hurd (Reuters)

Mark Hurd, chairman, CEO and president of HP speaks at the Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference in Pasadena, California, in this July 24, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Fred Prouser/FilesReuters - Silicon Valley technology giant Oracle Corp has hired Mark Hurd, the former chief executive of Hewlett-Packard Co who resigned amid a scandal, as president.


Abbas asks US to step into settlement dispute (AP)

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton looks on as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, right, and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands as she hosts the re-launch of direct negotiations, Thursday, Sept. 2, 2010, at the State Department in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)AP - Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said he has asked the U.S. to settle a dispute with Israel over settlement expansion that is threatening to derail Mideast peace talks.


Coke Enterprises sets profit, revenue growth plan (Reuters)

Reuters - Coca-Cola Enterprises said it expects revenue to increase 4 percent to 6 percent annually, with earnings per share up in the high-single digits after its pending deal to sell some operations to Coca-Cola Co closes.

EU OKs new financial supervision deal (AP)

From left, European Central Bank President Jean Claude Trichet, Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders, and Spanish Finance Minister Elena Salgado speak during a meeting of EU finance ministers at the EU Council building in Brussels on Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010. European finance ministers meet Tuesday to discuss taxes on banks. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)AP - European Union nations agreed to create new financial oversight institutions Tuesday, hoping to prevent a repeat of the government debt crisis that nearly left Greece bankrupt and brought the European banking system to its knees.


2nd Afghan bank with Dubai ties defends links (AP)

AP - A top official at the company controlling Afghanistan's second-largest private bank says the firm's property investments in Dubai don't pose a risk like those that sparked a bank run at another Afghan lender.

Google to start TV service in U.S. this autumn (Reuters)

Reuters - Google will launch its new service to bring the Web to TV screens in the United States this autumn and worldwide next year, its chief executive said, as it extends its reach from the desktop to the living room.

Peter Carey, Emma Donoghue up for Booker Prize (AP)

Judges, from left, Rosie Blau, Literary Editor of the Financial Times, Frances Wilson, writer, Chair Andrew Motion, Professor of Creative Writing at Royal Holloway College, Deborah Bull, Creative Director of the Royal Opera House, and Tom Sutcliffe, author, broadcaster and journalist, pose for photographers with short listed books during a press conference for the 2010 Man Booker Prize for Fiction in London, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010. The judges have Tuesday announced the short listed books, which are Peter Carey 'Parrot and Olivier in America', Emma Donoghue 'Room', Damon Galgut 'In a Strange Room', Howard Jacobson 'The Finkler Question', Andrea Levy 'The Long Song', and Tom McCarthy 'C'.(AP Photo/Akira Suemori)AP - Australian writer Peter Carey moved closer to a literary hat trick Tuesday when he was named a finalist for fiction's prestigious Booker Prize, an award he has already won twice.


Imam behind NYC mosque back in US after Gulf trip (AP)

VIDEO: The proposed construction of a 100-million-dollar, 13-story mosque and Islamic center near Ground Zero in New York City, has stirred raw emotions in the United States as the country prepares to mark the ninth anniversary of the September 11 attacks. Duration: 01:00(afp.com)AP - An imam who has become the public face of a proposed Islamic community center and mosque near ground zero has returned to the United States following a taxpayer-funded tour of the Middle East, his wife said Monday.


The Treasury's New Research Office (BusinessWeek)

BusinessWeek - Don't expect an Elizabeth Warren-style campaign for the first director of the Office of Financial Research, yet another agency set up under the financial system overhaul. Unlike the pending decision over who will lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has prompted online petitions and a viral rap video in support of the Harvard law professor, the competition over who will be the head of the research office is a wonks-only affair. ...

Oil prices drop, weighed down by energy supplies (AFP)

World oil prices fell on Tuesday as the market reacted to the end of the peak demand season coming at a time when supplies are high, analysts said.(AFP/DDP/File/Norbert Millauer)AFP - World oil prices fell on Tuesday as the market reacted to the end of the peak demand season coming at a time when supplies are high, analysts said.


Australia PM Gillard handed power by independents (AFP)

Australia's independent members of parliament Rob Oakeshott (3rd right), Tony Windsor (2nd right) and Bob Katter (right) are seen here with opposition leader Tony Abbott (left) and Deputy Opposition leader Julie Bishop at the parliament in Canberra, on August 25.(AFP/File/Andrew Taylor)AFP - Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard retained power by a tiny, one-seat majority Tuesday after winning the backing of two key independent MPs in the first hung parliament in decades.


AIG seeks Sept 21 approval for AIA IPO: sources (Reuters)

Reuters - American International Group Inc plans to seek Hong Kong listing committee approval on September 21, to list its Asian life insurance unit, aiming to raise about $15 billion, two sources with direct knowledge of the deal said on Tuesday.

Commuters walloped by strikes in France, London (AP)

Cyclists wait at a junction on the Embankment in London, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010. Millions of Londoners are struggling to get to work by road, rail boat and bicycle as a strike by London Underground workers shuts down much of the city's subway system. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)AP - Strikes hobbled public transit across France and in London on Tuesday, with tourists and commuters bearing the brunt of a wave of discontent over government austerity measures.


Afghan elections: Candidates flock to Kabul for safety (Time.com)

Time.com - More than 600 candidates are running for office out of Afghanistan's capital because it isn't safe to campaign in the provinces

Uganda: Democratic Reform and Security Top U.S. Agenda (Time.com)

Time.com - Pushing for electoral reform is tricky when the strongman in power is also a key ally against extremist violence

Chavez's base, the poor, wobbles as election looms (AP)

AP - On a hilltop overlooking Caracas, dozens of shacks made of wood scraps and corrugated zinc have risen among tall weeds — a new slum tacked on to an old one as the poor face harder times in Venezuela.

Obama to propose plant, equipment tax write-off (Reuters)

Reuters - President Barack Obama will propose on Wednesday that businesses be allowed to write off all their new investments in plant and equipment through 2011, an administration official said on Monday.

The glittering Gulf states' dark labor secret (The Christian Science Monitor)

The Christian Science Monitor - The rise of the Arab states of the Persian Gulf is a now-familiar tale. Tiny societies of pearl divers, coastal merchants, and nomadic Bedouin were transformed in the last half of the 20th century by oil and natural-gas wealth. Sparkling office towers and hotels sprang into the muggy air, the monarchs that rule these tiny emirates became bywords for financial excess, and newspapers described the region's economic "miracle."

New Two-Hour TB Test (OneWorld.net)

OneWorld.net - JOHANNESBURG, Sep 3 (PlusNews) - A new, accurate, easy-to-use test can diagnose tuberculosis (TB) - including drug-resistant strains of the disease - in less than two hours. It has the potential to save thousands of lives in developing countries, where current tests are often unreliable, take weeks to process, or are simply unavailable.

Venezuela OKs payment for French retailer Casino (Reuters)

Reuters - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has approved a $690 million payment to French retailer Casino and other owners of a supermarket chain nationalized earlier this year, state media said on Saturday.

China tells state companies to explore Potash bid (Reuters)

Reuters - Chinese officials have ordered state companies to meet investment bankers to explore ways to block BHP Billiton's $39 billion bid for Potash Corp, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said.

Summary Box: Stock market snaps a three-week slump (AP)

AP - SEPTEMBER RALLY: The stock market had its first winning week in a month after better news on employment and manufacturing lifted shares.

Settlers defy Netanyahu with vow to begin construction (McClatchy Newspapers)

McClatchy Newspapers - JERUSALEM — Jewish settlers across the West Bank have vowed to begin construction in more than 60 locations, posing a direct challenge to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he returned home from Thursday's first round of direct peace talks in Washington.

Campbell reports Q4 profit rise on better margins (AP)

In this June 19, 2010 photograph, people walk along inside the new building at the Campbell Soup Co. headquarters, in Camden, N.J.  The Campbell Soup Co. said Friday, Sept. 3, 2010, it made a profit of $113, or 33 cents per share during the fourth fiscal quarter, when the temperature rises and its soup sales traditionally drop.  (AP Photo/Mel Evans)AP - Summer is rarely a hot sales season for Campbell Soup Co., and this year's sweltering June and July made that even more true, but the company said Friday that cost-cutting and strong drink sales helped its net income climb.


MGIC added $1.2B in mortgage coverage in August (AP)

AP - Private mortgage insurer Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp. said Friday it added $1.2 billion in new primary insurance coverage in August and the number of delinquent loans it insures declined.
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