Fewer US parents to cut back-to-school budget-poll

NEW YORK, July 27 (Reuters) – Fewer U.S. parents plan to cut their back-to-school budgets, but they will count on smartphones and social networking to find the best bargains during the second biggest shopping season of the year, according to a Deloitte survey released on Tuesday.

“Retailers may be encouraged that fewer consumers are planning to pare back this year, although they may find that shoppers continue to be deliberate in their purchases,” said Alison Paul, Deloitte’s retail sector leader in the United States.

In the online survey, 28 percent of 1,050 parents of school-age children said they were planning to spend more this year on back-to-school clothing and supplies, while 17 percent said they would spend less.

The survey showed that among households that expect to spend more, about 34 percent said their children needed more expensive items, such as computers, and more than 26 percent said school budget cuts meant parents needed to pay more for children’s items.

Back-to-school shopping trails only Christmas for the amount of money consumers spend in a season.

The survey was conducted between July 9 and 11, and has a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.

This year, 58 percent of respondents said they would change the way they shop for back-to-school items by buying more items on sale or only items family members really needed.

Last year, 70 percent of the respondents said they expected to change the way they shopped because of the recession, down from 90 percent in 2008.

“The survey indicates that consumers’ recession-induced behaviors are beginning to wane as households seek to replenish certain items and worry less about the economy,” Paul said.

WHERE’S THE SALE?

Twenty-nine percent or 305 of the people surveyed said they planned to use mobile phones for price information, retailer advertisements and to find discounts and coupons.

An equal number of people said they would use social networking sites to find promotions, look at products, and read reviews and recommendations.

“Consumers are increasingly on the phone, online and on-the-go,” said Paul, adding that retailers using mobile applications, text alerts and video content may win an increased share of shoppers’ back-to-school budgets.

Discount stores were still the No. 1 shopping destination, with 89 percent of consumers surveyed saying they planned to shop at discount stores for back-to-school items.

According to the survey, 31 percent of consumers said they would shop at traditional department stores, up from 26 percent last year, and 23 percent cited specialty clothing stores, an increase of six percentage points over 2009.

After two consecutive years as the second most popular destination, dollar stores dropped to the third most popular destination behind office supply/technology stores. (Reporting by Dhanya Skariachan)

Dowry harassment victim ends life on tracks

Sirsa (Haryana), Jun 6 (PTI) A woman who was allegedly being tortured by her husband for dowry today committed suicide by jumping before a speeding train at a railway crossing here, police said. Rimpy Jangra, a polytechnic student who hailed from Jamvadi village in Hisar”s Hansi town, left for her mother”s home this morning after she was unable to bear the continuous harassment for dowry.

She was moving along the Chattar Garh patti railway crossing and was talking with her husband Manjit Singh on her mobile phone. “Unable to bear the mental torture she committed suicide,” Government Railway Police Sub-Inspector Ram chander said.

Jangra was married to Manjit Singh, a resident of village Raipur in Hisar, in February. According to the victim”s family members, ever since her marriage she was allegedly being tortured by her husband for bringing more money.

They alleged that Jangra told her parents last evening that Manjit had threatened her with dire consequences if her parents failed to give money to him, after which her parents had asked her to return to them. “Rimpy had bought a railway ticket for Hansi, but her husband was constantly threatening her on phone and ultimately unable to bear the mental torture she committed suicide,” Chander said.

Some youths who were playing cricket near the site of the incident told the GRP officials that Rimpy was moving along the railway track while constantly keeping her mobile glued to her ears, they said. A case has been registered against Manjit Singh, police said, adding the body was sent for postmortem.

Khap panchayat slaps Rs one lakh fine on woman for eloping

Muzaffarnagar, Jun 6 (PTI) A self-styled caste council has slapped a fine of Rs one lakh on the family of a woman after she eloped with her husband”s cousin and banished the couple from the village at Kishanpur village here. The decision was taken by the Khap Panchayat yesterday after Anuj Kumar complained to the council that his wife Rina had married his cousin brother Niraj Kumar on April 26.

The members of the panchayat yesterday asked the family members of the couple to pay a fine of Rs one lakh to Anuj. The community elders also asked the couple to leave the village after the woman refused to leave her second husband and return to Anuj.

Family hoping for release of kidnapped Manipur sericulture official

Imphal, June 4 (ANI): Dispairing family members of an abducted official of Manipur”s Department of Sericulture, continue to hope for his safe return home.

Suspected ultras of United Kuki Liberation Army-Military Council (UKLA-MC) abducted Nameirakpam Nabakumar, a Farm Overseer (FO) of the Sericulture Department, on May 20, and are now demanding a ransom amount of rupees one crore for his safe release.

Memthoi, Nabakumar”s wife, said: “We are very worried about his well being, we do not know whom to approach and we do not know where to search him.” (ANI)

U.S. believes it killed al Qaeda No. 3

(Reuters) – Al Qaeda’s third-in-command, whose role spanned from operations to fundraising, is believed to have been killed last month in a U.S. missile strike in Pakistan, dealing a serious blow to the embattled group.

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Sheikh Sa’id al-Masri, also known as Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, was believed to be killed along with members of his family in a strike by a pilotless CIA-operated drone attack. Al Qaeda confirmed his death in a statement on a Islamist website earlier on Monday.

“We have strong reason to believe … that al-Masri was killed recently in Pakistan’s tribal areas,” a U.S. official in Washington said on condition of anonymity. “In terms of counterterrorism, this would be a big victory.”

A Pakistani security official said Yazid was most probably killed in a missile strike in North Waziristan on the night of May 21.

“We had a report at the time that one Arab was killed in that strike with some of his family members and I think it was probably him,” said the official, who declined to be named.

The attack targeted a house owned by a tribesman some 25 km (15 miles) west of Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan, a stronghold of al Qaeda and Taliban militants that borders Afghanistan.

Intelligence officials at the time said six militants were killed but residents said 12 people, including four women and two children, were killed. Six women and two children were wounded and treated at a hospital in Miranshah, residents said.

“He was known as Mustafa in the area. His wife was killed in the strike,” a resident of the village where attack took place said on condition of anonymity.

The U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors Islamist websites, said earlier on Monday that al-Qaeda announced al-Masri’s death in an Internet posting.

In addition to al-Masri, the announcement stated that his wife, three of his daughters, his granddaughter and other men, women and children were killed, according to SITE.

The CIA has stepped up the pace of unmanned aerial drone attacks, targeting not only high-level al Qaeda and Taliban targets but largely unknown foot soldiers as well.

A U.S. official said al-Masri was widely seen as al Qaeda’s No. 3 figure and its main conduit to leader Osama bin Laden.

As al Qaeda’s chief operating officer, he had a hand in everything from finances to operational planning, the official said.

CAPACITY DAMAGED, COMMITMENT REMAINS

Analysts say his death will be a major loss for al Qaeda but there would be no weakling of the group’s fighting resolve.

“Definitely it will have an impact because it was their important figure, it’s a big loss for them but there appears to be a generational change taking place in al Qaeda where new ones are replacing old ones,” said Rahimullah Yusufzai, a newspaper editor and expert on militant affairs.

“Al Qaeda’s capacity to operate and strike has been badly damaged because of their losses in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq but we have not yet seen any weakening of their commitment.”

A senior intelligence official in Islamabad said al Qaeda’s No. 3 position was “the most dangerous” rank in the group.

Five other al Qaeda leaders considered third-in-command have been killed or captured since the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States, but al-Masri may be the most difficult to replace.

“They’re not getting enough people of the right caliber that they require as they were getting earlier,” the intelligence official said, crediting pressure from the drone strikes, Pakistani military actions in the tribal areas and stepped-up intelligence actions in the rest of Pakistan.

Yazid served as al Qaeda’s leader in Afghanistan and as well as al Qaeda’s “chief financial officer,” according to the U.S. 9-11 commission.

As chief financier, he was responsible for disbursing al Qaeda funds, making him one of the most trusted and important leaders of the group.

He was a founding member of Ayman al Zawahiri’s branch of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, one of the original groups that merged to form al Qaeda. Following the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981, al-Masri was implicated in the killing along with Zawahiri and others, and they spent time in jail together.

He also served as a top propagandist for al Qaeda and the Taliban.

In March, U.S. officials said a drone strike in Pakistan killed a key al Qaeda planner.

Jagan defensive, says rally was for father

New Delhi, May 31 (IANS) Congress MP Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy Monday defended his controversial rally that triggered violence in Telangana region in Andhra Pradesh and said it was for his father, the late Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy who died in a helicopter crash last year.

‘Whatever I’m doing is for my father. I’m sure the Congress president will understand my point,’ the Kadapa MP, known as Jagan, told reporters here.

The son of the former Andhra Pradesh chief minister, who reached the national capital Sunday to attend a meeting of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance, has sought an appointment with Congress president Sonia Gandhi and other senior party leaders, said party sources.

The central leadership of the party had asked him not to conduct the rally in Telangana in view of the tension prevailing there over the separate statehood issue.

Senior Congress leader and Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee had Saturday asked Jagan to call off his rally.

Defying the directive, Jagan embarked on the rally May 28, triggering violence between his supporters and opponents as he was taken into preventive custody while on his way to Mahbubabad in Warangal district.

Jagan reiterated that the rally was to console family members of those who committed suicide or died of shock following the death of his father, then chief minister, in a helicopter crash last year.

A deafening sound, silence, then another crash

West Midnapore, May 29 — Sukumar Banerjee’s five relatives, including two children aged five and ten years, died in Friday’s mishap. They were all in S5, one of the four derailed bogies of Gyaneshwari Express that were crushed by the goods train, but Banerjee was some distance away from them, at one end of the bogie. That’s why he is alive. Banerjee (49) along with the family members of his two brothers-in-law was going to attend a sacred thread ceremony of another relative in Rourkela. While Banerjee is a resident of Nadia district, his relatives were from Domkol in West Bengal’s Murshidabad district. “My younger brother-in-law had booked all their tickets in April while I booked it in May. This made the difference,” he said. “While they got their berths together I was separated. Their berths were from 33 to 36, while mine was 63,” Banerjee said, with bleary eyes. “They are all dead.” Like most other passengers they had gone to sleep before 12am. Around 12.35 am, the train reached Kharagpur. Everything seemed normal. Around 1.15 am, Banerjee heard a loud sound and fell off his seat. “I could feel that the train had turned on its side and was dragging along the tracks,” he said. Passengers screamed for help. The bogie dragged for what seemed like a couple of minutes before it came to a halt, he said. Then, a few seconds of silence, Banerjee recalled.

It was after many more minutes that he would start counting those he had lost.

Former Pak captain Mohammed Yousuf’s family members embrace Islam

Islamabad, May 20 (ANI): Family members of former Pakistan cricket captain Mohammed Yousuf have embraced Islam, almost five years after he turned to the religion from Christianity.

The Nation quoted a private television channel as reporting that Yousuf’s three brothers along with their family members have embraced Islam.

Yousuf, who was known as Yousuf Youhana prior to his change of religion, had accepted Islam in 2005 much to the discomfort of his family members, particularly his mother.

“I don”t want to give Yousuf my name after what he has done. We came to know about his decision when he offered Friday Prayers at a local mosque. It was a shock,” Yousuf’s mother had said when the news about his son changing his religion was first made public.

Yousuf was effectively banned from playing international cricket for an indefinite period by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) in March following an inquiry into the team”s defeat during the tour of Australia, which held him responsible for the team’s shoddy performance during the tour.

He later announced his retirement from all formats of the game in protest against the PCB’s decision. (ANI)

Mel B, Eddie Murphy attend Shrek US premiere together

London, May 18 (ANI): Former Spice Girl Melanie Brown joined ex-partner actor Eddie Murphy for the US premiere of his animated film ‘Shrek’.

The couple split a few months before the birth of their daughter, Angel Iris, in 2007 – leading to a public paternity spat but she supported him by attending the screening of Shrek Forever After in Los Angeles on Sunday.

It is the final film in the animated series about the loveable green ogre, reports BBC.

Murphy, who lends his voice to Donkey, arrived on the red carpet with his family, joking, “It”s crowded in the limo!”

Brown kept a low profile and preferred to hug and chat with Murphy”s family members. (ANI)

Afghan peace cleric Rahman Gul shot dead in Kunar

Chapa Dara (Afghanistan), May 18 (ANI): A prominent Afghan Muslim cleric was shot dead along with two of his family members in the country’s restive Kunar province on Sunday.

According to the BBC, Maulvi Rahman Gul was gunned down as he was returning home. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

His assassination was followed by the death of two Italian soldiers in a roadside bomb explosion in Herat.

On Sunday two US soldiers died in southern Afghanistan.

Gul was the chief cleric of his district and a member of a clerical council for eastern Afghanistan. (ANI)

Afghan peace cleric Rahman Gul shot dead in Kunar

Chapa Dara (Afghanistan), May 18 (ANI): A prominent Afghan Muslim cleric was shot dead along with two of his family members in the country’s restive Kunar province on Sunday.

According to the BBC, Maulvi Rahman Gul was gunned down as he was returning home. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

His assassination was followed by the death of two Italian soldiers in a roadside bomb explosion in Herat.

On Sunday two US soldiers died in southern Afghanistan.

Gul was the chief cleric of his district and a member of a clerical council for eastern Afghanistan. (ANI)

New Brit Govt. to ask Queen to take ‘at least’ five percent pay cut

London, May 16 (ANI): David Cameron led coalition government is expected to ask the Queen to take a pay cut from the 7.9 million pounds-a-year Civil List payment the royal family receives from taxpayers money.

The royal family had been expecting an increase when the current 10-year agreement comes to an end this year.

But senior figures in the new coalition government have warned that the royals will be advised to follow the Cabinet’s lead and accept a reduction of “at least” five percent, the Daily Star reports.

Downing Street advisers fear increases in royal spending could cause a backlash.

“The round of government cuts that are on their way are so deep, so severe, that there won’t be a single family in Britain who won’t be feeling the pinch.

“There couldn’t be a worse time for the richest family in the country to go to the taxpayer with a begging bowl,” the paper quoted an adviser, as saying.

The Queen will also be urged to make a round of royal redundancies, with low-ranking family members like the Duke of Kent and the Duchess of Gloucester being “sacked” from front-rank royal duties, losing their grace and homes.

Experts say it costs more than 40 million pounds a year to keep the royals running, plus 50 million pounds for police and security, the Daily Star reports. (ANI)

Presley wrote ”I love ya mama” on Bible after mum’s death

London, May 13 (ANI): Elvis Presley wrote ”I love ya mama” and signed his name on a Bible he possessed, after the burial of his mother on August 14th, 1958, it has emerged.

The King inscribed the note in block capitals on the last page of the holy book, following his mother’s funeral ceremony in Forest Hill Cemetery on Highway 51.

He wrote in large blue handwriting, “I love ya mama – Elvis Presley 59.”

However, David Smith, a Baptist minister, who now owns the unique edition of the King James Version, insists Presley may have never read the Bible.

“It was evidently important to Elvis, he had a Bible in every room in his house. He kept one at his bedside,” the Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

He added: “There’s a number of these Bibles around and I happened to get this one in Las Vegas, Graceland was selling memorabilia in an auction. It was a considerable sum of money.

“I had seen some and chased some but never acquired one. He had six and that’s a lot for the average family. There’s maybe three left at Graceland and two others that I’ve seen for sale.

“He purchased this Bible and in the front is a list of all his family members and their birthdays, and he’s put his uncle’s hardware store and apparently he owed his uncle some money and he’s put a reminder to pay him.

“This is 1959 he buys this Bible. His mother’s died not long since and he’s written this sweet ‘I love ya mama’ in there and where she’s buried. It’s a sentimental Bible to him.”

He continued: “You can tell when a Bible’s been read and this Bible has never been read.”

Smith will display the Bible at the annual International Christian Resources Exhibition. (ANI)

Thai PM�s ultimatum to Red-Shirts to quit protest or face action

Bangkok, May 12 (ANI): Thailand�s Prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has issued an ultimatum to the agitating Red-Shirts to end their opposition or face action.

Vejjajiva had offered the olive branch to United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD) also known as the Red-Shirts. He had agreed to hold elections in line with Red-Shirts� demands.

“If the situation in the country does not return to normal, it will affect the election. Protesters should return home on May 12,” the Bangkok Post quoted Abhisit as saying.

But they have refused to call off their rally since he offered a �reconciliation road-map, and according to Vejjajiva, this translates into their rejection of the existing arrangement.

The Red-Shirts on the other hand, maintain that the agitation will end only if Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban turns himself in to the police following complaints from family members of those killed during the clash between the security forces and the protestors. The clashes left 25 people dead and more than 800 injured, the paper reports.

“On the day Mr Suthep reports to authorities as the accused, the Red Shirt protesters will call off our demonstration on the same day,” the Bangkok Post quoted Natthawut, a Red-Shirts� leader, as saying.

The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) has said that Nonglak Chaimaen and 13 other people, who claim they were relatives of those killed and injured on April 10 have lodged a complaint with the DSI against Suthep.

Vejjajiva is now considering enforcement of measures like cutting off water and electricity supply to the Ratchaprasong Area, the site of the rally, to put more pressure on the Red Shirts to go home.

The agitation has severely affected the normal life in the area, forcing schools to be shut down.

Vejjajiva�s concerns include the re-opening of schools, scheduled for Monday and ensuring that the election, that start on May 12 take place in a peacefully. (ANI)

Centre okays visa for Prabhakaran mother

In a careful move, the Union Government accorded sanction to Parvathiammal, the ailing mother of slain LTTE chief V Prabhakaran, to visit Tamil Nadu on a six-month visa, even as it placed riders to ensure that the pro-Tiger outfits did not draw mileage out of her presence.

Parvathiammal had arrived at the Chennai airport from Malaysia on the night of April 16 on a valid medical visa, but was immediately deported by the immigration authorities as her name figured in the blacklist.

Reiterating that the state government was kept in the dark about the earlier visit, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi informed the Assembly today that the Centre has now communicated the official permission to the Indian mission in Malaysia on May 7, a copy of which was received by the government here yesterday.

“Though such matters usually move at a slower pace, the central and state governments moved swiftly, taking into consideration her health condition,” Karunanidhi said.

The High Commission in Malaysia, where Parvathiammal has been staying for the past few months, has been asked to provide her a visa for six months on medical grounds so that the octogenarian could seek treatment in Trichy as per her request — though under certain conditions.

She has been barred from staying anywhere outside the hospital where she is seeking treatment, and only her family members can remain in touch with her — she has to list these relatives. She has also been asked not to contact any political party or organisations that have connections with banned outfits.

These conditions effectively rule out pro-Tiger MDMK leader Vaiko, Tamil activist P Nedumaran and others from contacting her or using her presence to attack the state government, the DMK or the Congress, as the proposed visit coincides with the first anniversary of Prabhakaran’s death and the end of war in Lanka.

Vaiko and Nedumaran were present at the airport when Parvathiammal was deported, and had strongly criticised Karunanidhi and his government over the incident.

Iowa senator demands Congress probe on how Shahzad became U.S. citizen

Washington, May 7 (ANI): The Republican Senator from Iowa, Charles Grassley, has sent a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano asking for the “Alien” file on Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad and his family members and for everyone who has been a reference or a sponsor for the terror suspect.

Keen to know how Shahzad was granted American citizenship, Senator Grassley wants to know if this file was in the hands of the official who approved Shahzad”s citizenship.

An Alien or “A” file includes visa and travel history, financial and personal information as well as any derogatory information from law enforcement.

According to CBS News, Grassley also wants Shahzad”s arrival forms that he filled out each time he re-entered the United States and whether or not he sponsored other individuals to become citizens.

CBS news reported Wednesday that Faisal Shahzad had appeared on a Department of Homeland Security watch list between 1999 and 2008 because he brought 80,000 dollars of cash into the United States.

Grassley wants the documents by May 11, 2010. (ANI)

Indian man sentenced to death by Sharia Court for killing lover’s husband in UAE

Dubai, May 3 (ANI): The Sharia Court of First Instance has sentenced a 27-year-old Indian man to death. The man has been charged with murdering his Indian lover’s husband.

The lover a 26-year-old woman, was not on good terms with her Pakistani husband. He would consume alcohol and mistreat her, she claimed.

According to Gulf News, Police said that three days after the murder, the wife went to the police station with her husband”s photo claiming that he had left home and did not come back.

Further probing revealed that there was marital discord. During questioning, the woman admitted that her boyfriend killed her husband. She said she did not want to kill him and only wanted him beaten up. Her boyfriend was arrested while he was trying to leave the country through Dubai airport.

The boyfriend told the court that he was forced by police to confess. His lawyer told the court that he did not mean to kill the victim.

The family members of the deceased had asked for capital punishment for both the accused but the woman has been sentenced to life imprisonment and paying blood money to the plaintiffs, because she is the mother of the victim’s son. The son is counted amongst the relatives who ask for death penalty.

Under Sharia a son cannot seek capital punishment for his parents.

Jharkhand Police detains woman scribe’s parents

Koderma (Jharkhand), May 3 (ANI): Jharkhand Police on Monday detained the parents of a woman journalist, who was found dead near here, for interrogation.

“We have taken the parents of Nirupama Pathak, who was attached with a English daily from New Delhi, for interrogation in connection with her murder,” said Koderma Superintendent of Police Kranti Singh said.

However, Singh refused to comment whether Pathak’s case was an honour killing.

He said the investigation was still on and it would reveal the intention behind the killing.

Police said they would investigate the role of other family members and friends in the killing.

On April 29, Pathak was found dead at her home in Koderma, her family said she had been found hanging.

The mysterious death of the journalist turned out to be a case of murder in the post-mortem report released on Sunday.

The report also confirmed that a ligature mark was formed around her neck as she was strangulated with a rope after she died. (ANI)

Mandela may miss FIFA World Cup opening ceremony

Johannesburg, Apr 29 (ANI): Nelson Mandela, possibly South Africa’s most famous citizen and the country’s unofficial brand ambassador to the world, may not attend the World Cup opening ceremony on account of his old age.

Asked if the 91-year-old former South African president would attend, Chief Mandla Mandela replied: “Certainly not. My grandfather at this age is very elderly and we are not trying to intensify his programme. He”s said he would prefer to be at home.”

His family will take the final call at a date closer to the June 11th opening ceremony.

According to The Telegraph, his absence would be a setback for the organisers. Last week, Sepp Blatter, the FIFA president, said he was hopeful that Mandela would be strong enough to open the finals.

His decision to stay away from the ceremony has raised concerns over his deteriorating health, though his family members have reassured that he is in good shape. (ANI)

Prostate cancer risk increases with number of affected family members

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): The more of a man”s direct relatives, i.e. brothers and fathers, are affected with prostate cancer, the higher is his personal risk to develop the disease himself, claims a study.

Researchers of the department headed by Kari Hemminki at DKFZ have studied how high is an individual person”s risk in familial prostate cancer.

The largest ever such study included 26,651 prostate cancer patients, 5,623 of whom came from families in which the disease had been diagnosed before.

And the researchers calculated that men up to an age of 65 years with three affected brothers have a risk that is 23 times higher than that of the control group (men without affected family members).

Men aged between 65 and 74 years, whose father was or is the only one affected, have a risk that is increased by 1.8 times and, thus, the lowest risk elevation in the familial cancer group.

The DKFZ researchers recognized a general tendency that the personal risk is the higher, the younger affected relatives were at the time of diagnosis.

Elevated familial cancer risks are often doubted.

Critics argue that results tend to be distorted because relatives of affected persons are alarmed and have early detection exams more often than the rest of the population.

Thus, the argument runs, they are more frequently overdiagnosed, because even tumours are found that might never have caused any symptoms during their lifetime.

In order to refute this criticism, the researchers also investigated the prostate cancer mortality in relation to the number of affected family members.

They arrived at the same risk distribution as for newly diagnosed cases—the more direct relatives are affected, the higher is a person”s risk of dying from prostate cancer.

Thus, the scientists have proved that the risk increase is real and not just due to more frequent early detection examinations.

“Our results provide a good guidance for doctors. If a man has several affected relatives who may even have been diagnosed at a young age, then his personal risk is substantially increased. In this case, a family doctor should urgently recommend having an early detection examination,” said study head Kari Hemminki. (ANI)