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| Over 600 passengers, crew fall ill on Royal Caribbean cruise Monday, Jan 27, 2014 07:25 PM PST (Reuters) - The number of passengers and crew who fell ill aboard a Royal Caribbean cruise ship climbed to more than 600 on Monday, many of them vomiting and suffering diarrhea. The updated sick count aboard the Explorer of the Seas, which cut short its Caribbean cruise and was expected to dock in New Jersey on Wednesday, is more than double the 300 originally thought to have been felled by gastrointestinal illness, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Among those sick were some of the onboard entertainers, which caused shows to be canceled, passengers said. Another ill passenger, Arnee Dodd of Connecticut, wrote on Twitter: "I've been sick and quarantined... Everything I touch goes in a biohazard bag." Passenger Brittany Ann Schneider, who did not get sick, told Reuters that for two to four days she saw few people. Full Story | Top |
| China says New York Times reporter broke visa rules, will leave Monday, Jan 27, 2014 07:23 PM PST | Top |
| Asian shares pinned at five-month lows, Turkey in spotlight Monday, Jan 27, 2014 07:14 PM PST | Top |
| Congressional negotiators reach deal on U.S. farm bill Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:49 PM PST | Top |
| U.S. Senate subcommittee sets hearing on consumer data security Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:44 PM PST The U.S. Senate banking panel has scheduled a subcommittee hearing for next week on safeguarding consumers' financial information following the theft of data at retailers such as Target Corp and Neiman Marcus, the committee said on Monday. Witnesses at the subcommittee on national security and international trade and finance hearing next Monday will include officials from the U.S. Secret Service, the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Consumer Protection, the American Bankers Association and National Retail Federation, the committee said in a statement. A data breach over the holiday shopping season at Target, the third-largest U.S. retailer, resulted in the theft of about 40 million credit and debit card records and 70 million other records with customer information such as addresses and telephone numbers. Full Story | Top |
| Quentin Tarantino sues Gawker over links to leaked movie script Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:34 PM PST | Top |
| Brutal cold shuts schools, delays travel in U.S. Midwest Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:21 PM PST | Top |
| Venture capitalist Perkins apologizes for Nazi analogy Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:16 PM PST By Sarah McBride SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Legendary venture capitalist Tom Perkins apologized for comments comparing the treatment of wealthy Americans to the Nazi's persecution of Jews, although he stood by his belief in the danger of demonizing the rich. "I deeply apologize to you and anyone who has mistaken my reference to Kristallnacht as a sign of overt or latent anti-Semitism," he said in an interview Monday on Bloomberg Television. "This is not the case." Perkins, 81, sparked criticism when he likened the Nazi party's war on Jews to what he called "the progressive war on the American one percent, namely the 'rich'," in a letter published Saturday in the Wall Street Journal. "Kristallnacht was unthinkable in 1930," he wrote, referring to the 1938 attack on Jews in Nazi Germany and Austria. Full Story | Top |
| 'Marlboro Man' who later warned against smoking dies of lung disease Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:09 PM PST By Steve Gorman LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Eric Lawson, one of several actors who depicted the "Marlboro Man" cowboy in a long-running series of cigarette ads for Philip Morris and later appeared in an anti-tobacco message for the American Cancer Society, has died of lung disease. He was 72, and died at his home in the central California town of San Luis Obispo of respiratory failure due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which the U.S. surgeon general has linked to smoking. Full Story | Top |
| Global smartphone shipments top one billion for first time in 2013: IDC Monday, Jan 27, 2014 06:04 PM PST Global smartphone shipments topped 1 billion units for first time in 2013, climbing 38.4 percent from the previous year to 1.004 billion units, research firm IDC said. Smartphones made up 55.1 percent of all mobile phone shipments last year from just over two-fifths in 2012, IDC said. Samsung Electronics Co's market share edged up one percentage point year-on-year to 31.3 percent to keep its place as the world's biggest smartphone vendor, while second-place Apple Inc's fell from 18.7 percent to 15.3 percent, according to IDC. Huawei Technologies Co, LG Electronics and Lenovo Group were third, fourth and fifth largest respectively, each with a market share of just under five percent in 2013. Full Story | Top |
| Ex-strategist must arbitrate whistleblower claim against UBS: U.S. judge Monday, Jan 27, 2014 05:57 PM PST | Top |
| Apple's iPhone sales, revenue forecast fall short; shares slide Monday, Jan 27, 2014 05:26 PM PST | Top |
| Shares in Apple's Japan suppliers stumble over iPhone sales Monday, Jan 27, 2014 05:22 PM PST Shares in Apple Inc's Japanese component makers took a beating on Tuesday after the U.S. tech giant missed Wall Street's target for iPhone sales over the key holiday shopping season and offered a weaker-than-expected outlook. The world's most valuable technology company sold a record 51 million iPhones in the December quarter, but that was shy of the 55 million or so analysts had expected, reflecting intense competition from arch-rival Samsung Electronics Co Ltd during the crucial period. Apple shares sagged 8 percent in after hours trading following the announcement. The results weighed on Apple's Japanese suppliers, with Alps Electric Co Ltd, Taiyo Yuden Co Ltd, TDK Corp and Nitto Denko Corp down between 0.9 and 3.9 percent. Full Story | Top |
| Pentagon notifies Congress of possible F-16 upgrades for UAE Monday, Jan 27, 2014 05:01 PM PST | Top |
| Ride service Uber faces new lawsuit after fatal San Francisco crash Monday, Jan 27, 2014 04:56 PM PST By Dan Levine and Sarah McBride SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The family of a young girl killed by a driver affiliated with fast-growing private transportation service Uber sued the company on Monday, adding to Uber's growing list of legal problems. On New Year's Eve Sofia Liu, 6, died after she, her younger brother and their mother were hit by a car in a San Francisco cross-walk, according to the lawsuit. At the time of the crash, driver Syed Muzzafar was logged on to the Uber X smartphone app and was available to provide rides, the lawsuit said. In a statement immediately after the San Francisco crash, Uber said the tragedy did not involve a vehicle "doing a trip on the Uber system," and that Uber "deactivated" the driver's account. Full Story | Top |
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