US firms plan to hire; service sector lags -survey

July 19 (Reuters) – Plans by U.S. firms to increase payrolls over the next six months have risen to the highest level since January 2008, but some service sector companies still see layoffs, according to a survey released on Monday.

The survey by the National Association for Business Economics (NABE) also showed strong demand in the goods-producing sector, while service sector businesses reported a softening in their expansion rates.

The results echo recent trends in the U.S. economy. Although the services sector dominates the economy, the manufacturing sector has led the recovery. Layoffs in the services sector could further slow the recovery.

The survey showed that half of the 79 NABE members who took part expected to increase payrolls.

In the services sector, of the 28 respondents, 4 percent saw layoffs over the next six months, 36 percent planned to hire more workers, while 57 percent saw no change in payrolls.

“Only the services sector continues to anticipate layoffs,” the NABE said in a statement.

The survey was conducted from June 11-29.

After sturdy job gains early this year, the labor market lost strength in recent months, hurting consumer spending and helping to slow the pace of the recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s.

Still, the NABE noted that layoff and attrition activity declined to 14 percent of respondents from 28 percent a year ago.

In the second quarter, the percentage of respondents reporting increases in employment touched its highest level since the second quarter of 2007.

“Over the past two quarters the goods-producing sector has experienced a dramatic recovery in hiring trends,” the NABE said, noting that 42 percent of respondents in the sector reported increased hiring in the current survey, up from zero in January.

The survey also found that about a quarter of respondents’ companies had increased capital spending in the second quarter, with the finance, insurance and the services sector dominating. Transportation, utilities, information and communications sector respondents reported no increase in capital spending.

Industries reported a slowing in the demand growth rate during the second quarter, the survey showed.

Economists have revised down their forecasts for second-quarter gross domestic product growth, on expectations that economic growth slowed in the period.

“Demand growth, though slower in the aggregate than during the first quarter of the year, remained broad-based, with all four major industry sectors expanding for a second consecutive quarter,” the NABE said.

Strong demand was reported in the goods-producing sector, while the finance, insurance, and real estate sector accounted for the deceleration in overall industry demand.

About 59 percent of the firms believed Europe’s sovereign debt crisis would have no impact on them, while 35 percent worried they could be hurt. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Analysis: Obama may not see big boost from Wall Street reform

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama may struggle to reap political rewards from his big win on Wall Street reform — at least in the near term.

Passage of the most sweeping overhaul of the financial regulatory system since the Great Depression of the 1930s comes as Obama is trying to bolster his sinking poll numbers and avert an election catastrophe for his Democrats.

The financial bill could prove more helpful to Obama when he seeks re-election in 2012 than for Democratic lawmakers trying to keep their seats this November.

Wall Street reform marks the latest in a series of major legislative achievements for the president, who campaigned on a promise of change.

Americans are focused on high unemployment and ballooning budget deficits, and some worry Obama is overreaching with his agenda. That has prevented Obama from gaining a lot of traction from two other signature initiatives: health care reform and the $862 billion stimulus package.

Financial reform could fit the same pattern.

“It will have relatively little positive effect on 2010,” said Ross Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers University. “It’s something Obama can take to the voters in 2012.”

The complexity of the 2,300-page financial reform bill is one reason Baker says it might not help Democrats much in the November congressional elections.

“It has yet to play out and affect the lives of Americans,” Baker said. “It will be a long time before people get a sense that somehow their debit cards are better protected than they were before financial regulation reform was passed.”

BILL UNFAMILIAR

Many U.S. voters are unfamiliar with the financial overhaul, according to an Ipsos Public Affairs online poll.

The poll found 38 percent of Americans had never heard of the overhaul and 33 percent had heard of it but knew almost nothing about the legislation. Another 18 percent said they knew “a little bit” about it.

The healthcare measure is also complex, though Baker said voters might come to better appreciate both pieces of legislation by the time Obama seeks re-election in two years.

For now, the jobless rate, which stands at 9.5 percent, trumps healthcare and financial reform.

“If he can get job creation going and we start seeing a decline in unemployment, that’s really the only thing that’s going to rescue Obama and the Democrats,” said Chris Arterton, a political scientist at George Washington University.

That may be why Obama focused his weekly radio and Internet address on Saturday on his push for extensions in jobless benefits and a program to spur lending to small businesses.

The Senate scheduled a vote on the unemployment benefits on Tuesday — the day before the signing of financial reform.

The White House has openly expressed fear that Democrats could lose their dominance in the House of Representatives.

Democrats are seen as having a better chance of holding onto the Senate though they are expected to lose seats. That would make it harder for Obama to tackle other items on his agenda like energy and immigration legislation.

The White House depicts the financial reform debate as a choice: Setting responsible rules of the road for Wall Street versus allowing greed and recklessness to run rampant.

Obama has argued Wall Street must be reined in to protect consumers and prevent a repeat of the financial implosion that plunged the country into its longest recession in decades.

CREDIT CARD FINE PRINT

Senior Obama aide David Axelrod disagreed with those who see the financial bill as too complex to resonate with voters.

“I don’t think it’s complicated to tell credit card holders that they have new rights relative to their credit card companies or mortgage holders that their prepayment penalties are now limited,” Axelrod said.

“I understand that not everybody is steeped in the knowledge of derivatives and all of this kind of exotic instruments that were part of the saga of the financial crisis,” he added. “But everybody in America deals with the headache of credit card fine print and variable mortgages.”

The Wall Street measure passed almost entirely along party lines, with only three Republicans breaking ranks to back it.

One obstacle for Democrats is a dampening of liberal enthusiasm because of concerns that industry lobbyists won too many concessions and loopholes in the final bill.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, an outside adviser to Obama, was disappointed in a rule named after him to prohibit banks with federal deposit insurance from betting with their own money. Volcker felt the rule was too watered-down.

But Republicans are prepared to attack the financial bill from a different vantage point. They hope that the bill and Obama’s populist, anti-Wall Street rhetoric will reinforce an “anti-business” image they are trying to pin on him.

House of Representatives Republican leader John Boehner has called the financial legislation ill-conceived and said he wants to repeal it.

“It’s going to make credit harder for the American people to get, clearly harder for businesses to get,” Boehner said. “It’s going to punish every banker in America for the sins of a few on Wall Street.”

(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Xavier Briand)

TREASURIES-Inch up, but 10-yr yield off 1-mth low

June 25 (Reuters) – U.S. 10-year Treasuries inched higher in Asian trade on Friday, pushing the 10-year yield back towards a one-month low hit the previous day.

Bonds

* Treasuries seem to be caught in a tug-of-war between traders betting that the 10-year yield could drop towards 3 percent and other market players that think the rally has gone far enough, said Junji Kojima, senior deputy manager for Sompo Japan Insurance’s global securities investment department.

* “I don’t think it would be a surprise if the 10-year yield makes a try for 3 percent, given the way momentum has been picking up,” Kojima said, referring to the recent rally in Treasuries.

* But Kojima added that he doubted that any such drop in yields would last that long. Current Treasury yield levels seem to be factoring in the possibility of a double-dip U.S. recession, he said, adding that such a scenario seems unlikely at this point.

* Ten-year Treasury notes rose about 3/32 in price to yield 3.123 percent US10YT=RR, down around 2 basis points from late U.S. trade on Thursday. The 10-year yield hit a one-month low of 3.065 percent on Thursday. A fall to below 3.064 percent would take the 10-year yield down to its lowest since April 2009.

* The 10-year yield has declined roughly 10 basis points this week, partly on concerns that the U.S. economy may be relapsing into weakness after a short and tepid recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s.

* Ten-year note futures edged up 2.5/32 in price to 121-13/32 TYv1. (Reporting by Masayuki Kitano; Editing by Joseph Radford)

Even cops believed in Loch Ness’ existence in the 1930s

London, April 27 (ANI): A top police officer believed the existence of a Loch Ness monster was ‘beyond doubt’, according to a historical document.

In 1938, the chief constable of Inverness-shire raised concerns about protecting ‘Nessie’ from hunters, reports the Independent.

In a letter he wrote: “That there is some strange creature in Loch Ness seems now beyond doubt, but that the police have any power to protect it is very doubtful.”

The document has been released by the National Archives of Scotland (NAS) as part of an exhibition An Open Secret.

The letter from William Fraser to the Under Secretary of State at the Scottish Office, describes a London couple, Peter Kent and Marion Stirling, who were “determined to catch the monster dead or alive”.

The document goes on to describe how the party claimed they were having a special harpoon gun made and would return with 20 “experienced men” to track the monster down. (ANI)

Obama: U.S. starting to “turn the corner” on jobs

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama hailed new signs of an improving U.S. labor market on Friday as proof that “we are beginning to turn the corner” but warned it would still take time to achieve sustained job growth.

Seeking to maintain momentum after lawmakers approved his cornerstone healthcare overhaul, Obama shifted focus to tackling high unemployment, a problem threatening to damage his Democratic Party’s prospects in November’s pivotal congressional elections.

Obama spoke after a closely watched government employment report showed that non-farm payrolls grew in March, adding 162,000 jobs, the strongest signal yet that the economic recovery is moving onto a more solid footing.

“Today is an encouraging day. We learned that the economy actually produced a substantial number of jobs instead of losing a substantial number of jobs. We are beginning to turn the corner,” Obama told workers at a battery components plant in North Carolina, a key battleground state he won in the 2008 presidential election.

While welcoming the latest report as the best jobs news in more than two years, he cautioned that there was more work to be done to boost employment, his top domestic priority.

“It’s not quick and it’s not easy,” he said. “It’s important to emphasize while we’ve come a long way, we’ve still got a long way to go.”

The labor market has lagged the overall recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s, creating a political challenge for Obama. Unemployment last month remained stuck at 9.7 percent.

But Obama said, “The worst of the storm is over and brighter days are still ahead.”

He also used his North Carolina visit to promote healthcare reform, mindful of polls showing many Americans are skeptical of the sweeping plan after he pushed it through over fierce Republican opposition.

FINANCIAL REFORM, HIGH POLITICAL STAKES

With the healthcare overhaul largely behind him, Obama is pushing legislative measures to overhaul financial regulation in addition to focusing on job creation. He said he expected results in financial regulations reform soon.

“We’re starting to see a framework emerge both in the House of Representatives and in the Senate where my hope … is that we can actually get this done sometime in the next several weeks,” he said.

With voters nervous over record federal spending, Democrats are advancing job-creation efforts in a series of small steps to avoid the sticker shock of last year’s $787 billion stimulus package.

Obama last month signed into law a bill that includes a $13 billion payroll tax cut for businesses that hire unemployed workers, and $19.5 billion for highway-repair programs — a package that liberal Democrats said was disappointingly small.

Other measures pending in Congress would expand subsidies for state and local construction bonds, extend jobless benefits through the end of the year, and help states pay the salaries of teachers and other public employees.

But these measures have been delayed by differences between the House and the Senate, where Republicans have greater power to block legislation.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told NBC’s “Today” show on Thursday that unemployment will remain “unacceptably high for a long period of time.”

The political stakes are high for Obama, whose approval rating is down from once-lofty levels amid voter anxiety over the halting economic recovery, high unemployment and the divisive healthcare debate.

A Gallup poll released on Thursday showed registered voters prefer the Republican to the Democratic candidate in their districts by 47 percent to 44 percent in the mid-term congressional elections, the first time Republicans have led in 2010 election preferences since Gallup began such weekly tracking last month.

The poll results came after the House passed the healthcare legislation on March 21 and Obama signed it into law.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason in Washington; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Precious research rediscovered, ‘a breakthrough for Indigenous studies’

A long-lost collection of work by one of Australia’s early anthropologists has been recovered by Queensland researchers in what has been heralded a breakthrough for Aboriginal studies.

Caroline Tennant-Kelly worked in the south-east Queensland Aboriginal settlement at Cherbourg in 1934 and at other settlements in New South Wales in the late 1930s.

Her work was thought to have been lost.

Two University of Queensland researchers who had worked on Native Title had realised its relevance and begun making enquiries about its possible whereabouts.

PhD student Kim de Rijke placed an advertisement in a newspaper in the Kyogle area of northern New South Wales, where Tennant-Kelly died in 1989.

“It was in the end that ad that made a number of people call me – including a cattleman who said he had been waiting for it for 20 years,’ Mr de Rijke said.

Graham Gooding had found Tennant-Kelly’s work in a shed and kept it for two decades because he suspected someone would appear looking for it.

Mr de Rijke says it was a great thrill to locate the collection.

“Although we have only undertaken a preliminiary it is very significant – particularly the Aboriginal ethnography in it,” he said.

“I think the implications of this work are only just becoming evident.”

“It is very signficiant in terms of Aboriginal history but it also contains lots of other aspects as well.”

Mr de Rijke says Tennant-Kelly was an extraordinary woman who had strong views about how people should be treated and spoke out about issues at Cherbourg.

“The white administrators at Cherbourg had very little regard for what motivated … what was important to Aboriginal people.”

“This is a very valuable record about living conditions and how Aboriginal people were treated.”

The collection has been described as a “quantum leap” for Indigenous studies in Australia.

Mr De Rijke says it makes many references to families and their links to the land.

Tennant-Kelly was involved in the theatre in Sydney in the 1920s and became involved in immigration issues during and after the World War in the 1940s.

The collection includes material from those aspects of her life.

The collection will be donated to the University of Queensland’s Fryer Library.

Madge rediscovers love for Britain

London, Mar 23 (ANI): Queen of Pop Madonna is said to have rediscovered her love for Britain while preparing to direct her new film ‘W.E.’

Madonna, 51, will be directing the movie, which is about the 1930s tale of Edward VIII abdicating the throne to marry his forbidden lover, American divorcee Wallis Simpson.

She will be staying in Marylebone for six-months this summer, as filming gets underway.

“The Big Apple hasn’t gone sour. M has just rediscovered her interest in Britain,” the Sun quoted a source as saying.

“She still owns her place in Marylebone and will be moving back there. She’s going to be filming her new movie about Wallis Simpson in London so it made sense for her to move back.

“Guy is hoping the move will be permanent for his sake with the kids, though he isn’t holding out much hope.

“He is desperate to get the kids over here and be able to see them more often. Rocco is so excited about it, although Lourdes is already working out how she can stay in New York,” the source added. (ANI)

Batman trumps Superman in million-dollar battle

LOS ANGELES: Superman and Batman’s first appearances in comic books have each set auction sales records and broken the $1 million barrier, in an age when traditional investments have fared badly and superheroes look attractive.

A 1939 comic with the first ever appearance of masked crime fighter Batman sold at auction in Dallas on Thursday for a record $1.075 million, said Heritage Auction Galleries. Three days earlier, a buyer paid $1 million for Superman’s world debut in Action Com-ics #1, more than tripling the previous comic book sales record set last year.

Shirrel Rhoades, former publisher and executive vice president of Marvel Comics, said the 1938 Action Comics #1 is arguably more historic than the first appearance of Batman, but that this week’s sales seem to be following their own logic. Back in the 1930s, both Action Comics #1 and Detective Comics #27 sold for 10 cents.

Theron will not play Kidman’s wife in sex-change drama

Washington, Sep 16 (ANI): South African actress Charlize Theron has turned down a role in a new movie about the first person to undergo a sex-change operation.

Theron, 34, was to play as Gerda Wegener, the wife of artist Einar Wegener opposite Nicole Kidman, 42, in ‘The Danish Girl’, but she recently turned down the role.

Kidman will star and co-produce the project, which is adapted from David Ebershoff’s novel about Wegener, who underwent a procedure to become a woman in the early 1930s.

Tomas Alfredson, who will direct the film, is refusing to let the casting hiccup upset his filming schedule.

“We have been in talks for close to a year, and we are soon going into production,” Contactmusic quoted him as having told Daily Variety. (ANI)

Mirren to star in big-screen remake of Graham Greene’s novel Brighton Rock

London, Aug 28 (ANI): Actress Dame Helen Mirren is set to star in new film Brighton Rock, adapted from Graham Greene’s classic 1939 novel of the same title.

The Oscar winner will play amateur detective Ida Arnold in the movie.

The plot revolves around teenager Pinkie, who seduces a young waitress after she stumbles on evidence linking him and his gang to a revenge killing committed by Pinkie.

Mirren will have the task cut out to find the truth behind the killing.

Rowan Joffe has written the script and will direct the film too.

And he intends to make it look as contemporary as possible.

“We’re making Brighton Rock as contemporary as we possibly can because the story feels ‘modern’. It’s too alive, too vibrant and too relevant to be contained in the late 1930s,” the BBC News quoted him as saying.

Also starring in the film, set in 1964, is Sam Riley, who will play the lead character Pinkie Brown apart from Pete Postlethwaite and Happy Go Lucky’s Andrea Riseborough.

Shooting is scheduled to start in October this year. (ANI)

‘I was an idiot for Hitler comments’, says Bernie Ecclestone

London, July 9 (ANI): Formula One head Bernie Ecclestone has for his support of Adolf Hitler’s style of functioning saying he was an “idiot” to discuss Hitler or Saddam Hussein.

Ecclestone apologised through a German tabloid saying: “I’m sorry. I apologise honestly and sincerely, not just superficially.”

“I would never support such people. I should never have been so foolish as to have been drawn into discussing these people but the fault was entirely mine, which I deeply regret,” he added.

Ecclestone had made the remark in an interview published in The Times, in which he also criticised the removal of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, The Telegraph reports.

In another article in The Times, Ecclestone had attempted to clarify his Hitler statement, saying that: “During the 1930s, Germany was facing an economic crisis but Hitler was able to rebuild the economy, building the autobahns and German industry.”

“That was all I meant when I referred to him getting things done. I’m an admirer of good leadership, of politicians who stand by their convictions and tell the voters the truth. I’m not an admirer of dictators, who rule by terror,” he added. (ANI)

Bale praised by real life FBI agent’s family for Public Enemies role

Washington, Jun 24 (ANI): ‘The Dark Knight’ star Christian Bale has earned himself praise from the family of the real life FBI agent he portrayed in his new movie ‘Public Enemies’.

Bale, 35, plays Agent Melvin Purvis, the man who tracked down legendary 1930s bank robber John Dillinger, who is portrayed by Johnny Depp in the movie.

Bale spent time with Purvis’ relatives in preparation for the role and even visited the late law enforcer’s grave with his son Alston, who was delighted with the on-screen results.

“Bale had my father’s mannerisms and accent down to the exact detail. He is a superb actor. He wanted to see my family home in South Carolina. We went to the cemetery to see my father’s grave,” Contactmusic quoted Alston as saying. (ANI)

Bale praised by real life FBI agent’s family for Public Enemies role

Washington, Jun 24 (ANI): ‘The Dark Knight’ star Christian Bale has earned himself praise from the family of the real life FBI agent he portrayed in his new movie ‘Public Enemies’.

Bale, 35, plays Agent Melvin Purvis, the man who tracked down legendary 1930s bank robber John Dillinger, who is portrayed by Johnny Depp in the movie.

Bale spent time with Purvis’ relatives in preparation for the role and even visited the late law enforcer’s grave with his son Alston, who was delighted with the on-screen results.

“Bale had my father’s mannerisms and accent down to the exact detail. He is a superb actor. He wanted to see my family home in South Carolina. We went to the cemetery to see my father’s grave,” Contactmusic quoted Alston as saying. (ANI)

UK taxpayer to fork out 800,000 pounds as legal fees for hate cleric Hamza

London, May 18 (ANI): The UK taxpayer is all set to fork out 800,000 pounds as legal fees for jailed hate preacher Abu Hamza.

Two years ago, hook-handed Hamza was ordered pay a million pounds as defence costs, but he has paid nothing so far.

“If nothing else is found, it means the taxpayer will have to pay 800,000 pounds for the shortfall,” The Sun quoted a Whitehall source, as saying.

The trial judge said a house linked to Hamza, who pleads poverty, should be sold as a contribution.

Legal officials face trouble in seizing the house, as Hamza, 51, claims it belongs to his sister, who lives in Egypt.

Even if the 1930s property in Greenford, West London, is grabbed it will probably fetch only 200,000 pounds instead of the original 235,000-pound value.

A Legal Services Commission spokesman said: “We will go to court to apply for the seizure of the property. We are waiting for a date.”

Hamza, jailed for seven years in 2006 for soliciting murder, is in London’s Belmarsh Prison and is fighting extradition to the US.

“This is Abu Hamza continuing to thumb his nose,” Tory MP Patrick Mercer said. (ANI)

Journal from Darwin’s ship HMS Beagle fetches £97,250 at auction

London, May 8 (ANI): A journal from HMS Beagle, the ship which Charles Darwin voyaged on, has fetched 97,250 pounds at an auction.

The journal was kept by a commanding officer on the ship, which was the vessel that Darwin used during some of his most important journeys that helped him form his evolution ideas.

The journal details the end of its first hydrographic surveying voyage to Patagonia in South America, reports The Telegraph.lso on auction were 1930s photos of the royal visit of Princess Alice to Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

Sotheby’s specialist Richard Fattorini said: “The visually stunning and historically important album sheds light on a turning point in Anglo-Saudi relations.

“Princess Alice’s trip was the first of its kind to the region and it coincided with the hugely important discovery of commercial quantities of oil in the region.” (ANI)

Tongas still hold their charm in Kashmir

Srinagar, May 3 (ANI): Though people across the country are today fascinated to travel around through luxury cars, a lot of people in Kashmir still prefer traditional horse carts as a popular medium to commute.

One can say the Kashmiris have not given up on their favourite mode of transportation, popularly called ‘Tonga’ and still prefer enjoying its ride while moving from one place to another in the nearby areas.

The horse carts still gallop through the thoroughfares of the hills.

Some of the districts including Baramullah in Kashmir still use this traditional mode of commutation and have many old shops dealing in accessories related to tongas.

Shopkeepers selling these accessories say they have a good sale.

“The items we have at our shop are vital to those using horse cart. People from far off places often come to us to buy these accessories like horseshoe, saddles, wheels and its rubbers. Many such accessories are still in demand in this modern age,” said Bashir Ahmad, horse cart accessory shopkeeper.

Some of these old shops of tonga accessories are also running in Parimpora area, which is ten kilometers away from Srinagar.

The districts where the horse cart accessories are most in demand are Sopore, Baramullah, and Bandipora.

“I have come here to buy accessories for my tonga all the way from Banipura Hajan. I want to buy wheels and saddles. I have come here because there are only few shops here. Therefore, I had to cover such a long distance,” said Nazir Ahmad, a horse cart owner.

The history of tongas in Kashmir dates back to the 1930s when the Maharajas used to travel in luxurious horse carts. By: Afzal Bhat(ANI)

Ice bridge ruptures in Antarctic

London, April 5 (IANS) An ice bridge linking a shelf of ice the size of Jamaica to two islands in Antarctica has snapped, BBC reported.

Scientists say the collapse could mean the Wilkins Ice Shelf is on the brink of breaking away, and provides further evidence of rapid change in the region.

Sited on the western side of the Antarctic peninsula, the Wilkins shelf has been retreating since the 1990s.

Researchers regarded the ice bridge as an important barrier, holding the remnant shelf structure in place.

Its removal will allow ice to move more freely between Charcot and Latady islands, into the open ocean.

European Space Agency satellite pictures indicated last week that cracks were starting to appear in the bridge. Newly created icebergs were seen to be floating in the sea on the western side of the peninsula, which juts up from the continent towards South America’s southern tip.

David Vaughan, a glaciologist with the British Antarctic Survey who planted a GPS tracker on the ice bridge in January to monitor its movement, said the breaking of the bridge had been expected for some weeks; and much of the ice shelf behind is likely to follow.

‘We know that (the Wilkins Ice Shelf) has been very stable since the 1930s and then it started to retreat in the late 1990s; but we suspect it’s been stable for a very much longer period than that,’ he told BBC News.

‘The fact that it’s retreating and now has lost connection with one of its islands is really a strong indication that the warming on the Antarctic is having an effect on yet another ice shelf.’

Big men ‘at increased abnormal heart rhythm risk’

Washington, Apr 4 (ANI): Older men who were big during their 20s are at an increased risk of suffering from atrial fibrillation, or abnormal heart rhythm, says a new study.

According to the new research from the Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, being big includes height and weight.

The study, which has been published in the latest issue of the European Heart Journal, was initiated in 1970.

Over 7,000 men living in Gothenburg aged between 45 and 55 were examined and asked questions about their lifestyle. The subjects were asked to state their weight at the age of 20. The research material has now been compared with the National Patient Register.

“Atrial fibrillation proved to be significantly more common both among those men who were big during their youth, as well as among those who gained a considerable amount of weight later on in life,” says Annika Rosengren, Professor of Medicine at the Sahlgrenska Academy.

The study reveals that the risk of atrial fibrillation increases linearly with both body size and weight gain. The larger the men were in their 20s and the more weight they gained during their life, the greater the risk.

The fact that the men were big in their youth does not mean that they were obese. Obesity in young men was extremely unusual during the 1930s and 40s, and these big men were quite simply tall and well-built.

“Since both weight and height are increasing among young people, it’s quite likely that atrial fibrillation will become more common when today’s young men reach their 60s and 70s, particularly if the tendency to put on several kilos later on in life continues,” says Rosengren. (ANI)

US economic policy is the “road to hell,” Topolanek says

Strasbourg, France – The United States’ decision to pump ever-larger sums into its economy is the “road to hell,” the holder of the European Union’s rotating presidency said Wednesday, just a week before he was set to meet the US president in London.

The US is repeating the mistakes of the 1930s and has chosen the “road to hell” in the process, said the Czech Republic’s fallen prime minister, Mirek Topolanek, the morning after his government failed a vote of no confidence by the narrowest of margins.

The vote throws into question not just the Czech presidency of the EU, but a bilateral agreement to host US anti-missile radars on Czech soil – a deal which has polarized Czech opinion.

Topolanek took a strong stance against US economic plans as he addressed the European Parliament, calling the EU’s rejection of US calls to go beyond the
400-billion-euro (543.8-billion- dollar) stimulus package it agreed in December “a clear success.”

The Czech premier was speaking just a week before he is set to represent the EU at a summit of the Group of 20 (G20) leading economies in London on April 2 – a meeting which US President Barack Obama is also expected to attend.

That meeting is set to be followed three days later by an informal EU-US summit in Prague.

Topolanek said that the EU-US summit would focus on the outcome of the G20 meeting, climate change and a joint strategy for dealing with Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East.

But he warned listeners not to expect too much from the summit, saying that the US president “is not a Messiah.”

Despite the fall of his government, most analysts expect Topolanek to remain in office until the end of the EU presidency on June 30.

He said that the fall “will not threaten the presidency.” (dpa)

Meet the 100-year-old woman who eats 30 bars of chocolate a week!

London, Mar 13 (ANI): It is often said that eating too much of chocolate is bad, but for Peggy Griffiths, it certainly seems to have worked out well.

Griffiths has turned 100 and is still scoffing thirty bars of chocolate a week.

Peggy, of Abbotsham, Devon, has munched her way through an estimated 70,000 Cadbury’s Dairy Milk bars that would weigh four tons.

She owned her own sweet shop in the 1930s – until it closed down after she ate all of the profits.

“When I was young I could buy a bar of chocolate with my pocket money. It only cost tuppence and tasted exactly like it does now,” the Sun quoted Peggy, as saying.

Her daughter Eileen Osborne said: “When mum was a little girl, her mother told her that sweets were bad for you but chocolate was good. She absolutely loves it. She’s a chocoholic and her diet agrees with her.” (ANI)