Disputed islands covered by US-Japan accord: Hagel

WASHINGTON - Islands at the center of a territorial row between Japan and China are covered by a military protection accord between Washington and Tokyo, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Monday.

"The United States does not take a position on the ultimate sovereignty of the islands, but we do recognize they are under the administration of Japan and fall under our security treaty obligations," Hagel said at a news conference with his Japanese counterpart Itsunori Onodera.

Hagel's comments came amid rising tension over the uninhabited islands known in Japan as the Senkakus and in China as the Diaoyus.

On April 23, Japan's prime minister vowed to "expel by force" any Chinese landing on the islands after a flotilla sailed into the disputed waters in the East China Sea.

The Chinese flotilla was the biggest to do so in a single day since Japan nationalized part of the island chain -- which is surrounded by rich fisheries and believed to harbor vast natural resources below the seabed -- in September.

Calling the dispute a key regional security challenge, Hagel said it "must be resolved peacefully and cooperatively between the parties involved."

Washington "opposes any unilateral or coercive action that seeks to undermine Japan's administrative control," he said, in reference to the recent Chinese actions.

"Any actions that could raise tensions or lead to miscalculations affect the stability of the entire region."

In the talks with Hagel, Onodera said he "explained Japan's basic position that the islands are clearly an inherent part of the territory of Japan in light of historical facts and based upon international law, and that Japan is determined to protect its land, water and air."

Turning to North Korea, the Pentagon chief said the isolated country's "provocative behavior" was "the most obvious threat to stability in the region."

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Disputed islands covered by US-Japan accord: Hagel

Islands Souvenirs opens in Dumaguete

ISLANDS Souvenirs has expanded its presence with the opening of its newest franchise outlet in Robinsons Place Dumaguete last April 18.

Islands Souvenirs, a subsidiary of The Islands Group, unveiled the new look of their kiosks showcasing the vibrant and fun appeal of the brand and at the same time initiating, through its design, the companys advocacy for love of place.

More than being a brand that is considered as a veritable force in various aspects of tourism, Islands Souvenirs is a brand that takes pride in being local," Raymond Migabon, franchise head of The Islands Group said.

"Dumaguete is a beautiful place not only because of its historical landmarks, great outdoor activities, and best restaurants, but most importantly, because of its famously friendly people. This is exactly why Islands Souvenirs would like to expand through franchising here. As soon as weve announced the opening of our branch in Dumaguete, we have received positive feedback especially from the locals," Migabon added.

Islands Souvenirs Dumaguete offers the phenomenal I Heart personalized shirts and Dumaguete destination designs which highlight the iconic spots and tourism activities in the area. Now, anyone can take a piece of Negros with them.

Opening this May is Islands Souvenirs Dipolog. For Islands Souvenirs franchise information visit http://www.theislandsgroup.com or e-mail franchise@theislandsgroup.com.

Published in the Sun.Star Cebu newspaper on May 01, 2013.

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Islands Souvenirs opens in Dumaguete

JCI Accredits 500th Health Care Organization

OAK BROOK, Ill., April 30, 2013 /CNW/ - With accreditation of its 500th health care organization, Joint Commission International has solidified its claim as a preeminent global accreditor of health care quality and patient safety.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130429/DC02732LOGO)

Through its accreditation and certification activities, JCI monitors and supports organizations in 53 countries speaking 28 languages.

"We are a community of the world's best health care organizations committed to delivering the best care possible," says Paula Wilson, president and CEO, Joint Commission International.

Since 2008, JCI has experienced an average of 20 percent annual growth in the number of health care organizations it accredits. JCI leadership sees this steady increase as evidence of an accelerating movement toward a worldwide standard of excellence in the delivery of health care services.

A voluntary process, JCI offers accreditation programs for hospitals, clinical laboratories, long term care, home care, medical transport, ambulatory care, primary care, and academic medical centers, and certification for 15 disease- or condition-specific clinical care programs.

Since its beginning in 1994, JCI accreditation has been accepted as a symbol of quality that reflects a health care organization's commitment to doing the right things in the right way. JCI's thorough accreditation process focuses on determining whether a health care organization has the right systems and processes in place to support high quality and safe patient care. Accreditation and advisory services are supported by regional offices in Dubai and Singapore.

"Although local needs vary and diverse cultures present unique challenges, JCI stands alone as a beacon for patient safety and quality improvement in the global community," says Paul vanOstenberg, D.D.S., vice president, International Accreditation, Standards and Measurement, Joint Commission International.

JCI is accredited by the International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua), a designation that provides assurance that the standards, surveyor training, and accreditation processes used by JCI meet the highest international principles for accrediting bodies.

For more information about JCI, visit http://www.jointcommissioninternational.org or email jciaccreditation@jcrinc.com.

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JCI Accredits 500th Health Care Organization

Obama administration simplifies health care form

This April 10, 2013 file photo shows Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Acting Administrator Marilyn Tavenner speaking during a news conference at the Health and Humans Services (HHS) Department in Washington, Wednesday, April 10, 2013, to discuss the Health Department's fiscal 2014 budget.

Manuel Balce Ceneta, Associated Press

Enlarge photo

WASHINGTON The first draft was as mind-numbing as a tax form. Tuesday the Obama administration unveiled simplified application forms for health insurance benefits coming next year under the federal health care overhaul.

The biggest change: a five-page short form that single people can fill out. That total includes a cover page with instructions, and an extra page to fill out if you want to designate someone to help you through the process.

But the application form for families still runs to 12 pages, although most households will not have to fill out each and every page.

The paperwork takes on added importance because Americans remain confused about what President Barack Obama's health care overhaul will mean for them. A Kaiser Family Foundation poll released Tuesday found that 4 in 10 are unaware it's the law of the land. Some think it's been repealed by Congress, but in fact, it's still on track.

At his news conference Tuesday, Obama hailed the simplified forms as an example of how his team listened to criticism from consumer groups and made a fix. The law's benefits will be available to all Americans, he emphasized, even if Republicans in Congress still insist on repeal, and many GOP governors won't help put it into place.

When the first draft of the application turned out to be a clunker, "immediately, everybody sat around the table and said, 'Well, this is too long, especially...in this age of the Internet,'" Obama recounted. "'People aren't going to have the patience to sit there for hours on end. Let's streamline this thing.'"

His administration is open to making improvements, Obama added: "Those kinds of refinements, we're going to be working on."

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Obama administration simplifies health care form

Examples Of Genetic Engineering: Bizarre Yet Beneficial Uses Of Modern Biotech

April 29, 2013

Rayshell Clapper for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

After learning about human genetic engineering, many readers might want to find out about some examples of genetic engineering. Both bizarre and beneficial, the following article highlights some truly fascinating and pragmatic examples of modern genetic engineering.

The Biotechnology Forums, a website for professionals and students in biotechnology (the area that studies genetic engineering) recently explained some of these examples. The first animal example of genetic engineering is the spider goat. Yes, you read that correctly. A spider goat is able to produce the strong, stretchable silk used by spiders to create their webs. This silk web is one of the strongest natural materials known to man, stronger even than steel.

Nexia Biotechnologies Company inserted the gene from a golden orb-weaver spider into the genome of goat in such a way that the goat secretes the protein of the spider web in its milk. The milk was then used to create a what Nexia called (and trademarked) BioSteel, a material with characteristics similar to spider webs.

Beyond goats capable of secreting spider webs in their milk, there are a number of other really cool examples of genetic engineering in animals. In one redOrbit blog, this author reported about a cat that glows in the dark. The glow-in-the-dark feline has a fluorescence gene that makes it glow under an ultraviolet light. As the Biotechnology Forum outlines, here is how South Korean scientists first created the glowing cat in 2007:

They took skin cells from Turkish Angora female cat (species that were originally tamed by Tatars, but was later transferred to Turkey and is now considered the countrys national treasure), and using the virus they inserted the genetic code for the production of red fluorescent protein. Then they put genetically modified nuclei into eggs for cloning and such cloned embryos are returned to the donor cat. It thus became the surrogate mothers own clones.

And why make a cat that glows in the dark? The researchers explained that this was no frivolous experiment and that potential benefits exist in medicine for treating and testing for human diseases caused by genetic disorders. And just today, researchers in Uruguay announced that they had successfully created a genetically modified glowing sheep. Though not directly applicable to medical technology, the researchers had this to say about the purpose of their research: Our focus is generating knowledge, make it public so the scientific community can be informed and help in the long run march to generate tools so humans can live better, but were not out in the market to sell technology.

Moving on, two other good example are the less-flatulent cow and the so-called Ecopig. As Mother Nature Network explains, cows produce a lot of methane gas, which is second only to carbon dioxide in contributing to the greenhouse effect. So scientists at the University of Alberta identified the bacteria responsible for producing methane and designed a breed of cows that create 25 percent less methane than the average cow. This is one genetic engineering example that directly and practically addresses one of the major problems facing modern man.

The Ecopig (aka enviropig or Frankenswine) is yet another of the many examples of genetic engineering that positively contribute to the environment. The Ecopig has been genetically altered to better digest and process phosphorus. The reason is that pig dung is high in phytate, a form of phosphorous that farmers use it as fertilizer but which over stimulates the growth of algae which can deplete oxygen in the watersheds and thus kill marine life. The Ecopig has been genetically modified by adding E. Coli and mouse DNA to the pig embryo, which reduce the pigs phosphorous output by about 70 percent.

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Examples Of Genetic Engineering: Bizarre Yet Beneficial Uses Of Modern Biotech

Gene therapy to repair failing hearts starts trial

More than 200 people with heart failure are to receive a pioneering form of gene therapy to try to get their hearts beating properly again. "This is the first ever gene therapy trial to target heart failure," says lead investigator Alexander Lyon of Imperial College London.

Heart failure results after damage to the heart muscle causes it to deteriorate, which in turn progressively weakens cells that govern heartbeat. The result is serious fatigue due to the heart's inability to pump blood efficiently. Each year in the UK alone it affects 120,000 people who have never had the condition before, killing a third of them within 12 months.

Doctors will inject participants with harmless viruses that ferry a gene called SERCA2a into their heart muscle. The gene codes for a protein that recycles calcium within heart muscle cells, vital for driving each heartbeat and priming the next one.

In damaged cells, this recycling is impaired. By loading new copies of the gene the aim is to compensate for this decline. "The gene therapy will reset the calcium control," says Lyon.

A preliminary trial of the same therapy three years ago in 39 people demonstrated that it is safe and delivers benefits. Those who got the highest dose of the virus, for example, spent only a tenth as long in hospital as those given a placebo (Circulation, doi.org/bzvxst). The impending follow-up trial will recruit 200 people split equally between the US and Europe.

In a separate trial of the same therapy, doctors will treat 24 people who already have temporary mechanical implants to aid heartbeat while they await heart transplants.

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Gene therapy to repair failing hearts starts trial

Gene therapy to offer up to 1m heart patients new lease of life

The first attempt in Britain to treat heart failure patients with gene therapy is to begin within weeks, as part of study aimed at improving the lives of up to a million people in the UK who suffer the debilitating and potentially fatal condition.

Click HERE to view 'how to treat a failing heart' graphic

Two clinical trials are planned for a few dozen British patients who will be deliberately exposed to a virus carrying a synthetic copy of a human gene known to be involved in boosting heartbeat.

The first trial will be carried out at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London and the Golden Jubilee National Hospital in Glasgow. The patients will be part of a group of 200 from around the world who will have the virus injected via a cardiac catheter inserted through a vein in the leg. A second trial at the Harefield and Papworth hospitals will be based entirely within the UK and involve 24 patients with chronic heart failure who are already fitted with an "artificial heart" known as a left ventricular assist device, which helps to pump blood around the body.

The aim in both trials is to inject additional copies of a healthy gene, known to be responsible for a key protein involved in regulating the rhythmic contraction of the heart muscle. It is hoped that the extra genes will remain active within a patient's heart for many months or even years.

Scientists believe the approach could lead to a significant improvement in the efficiency of the diseased heart to pump blood around the body so improving the quality of life of thousands of patients with progressive heart failure who develop serious ailments as well as severe fatigue.

Scientists warned that it will still be several years before the technique can be made widely available. They do not want to raise hopes unduly as many previous gene therapy trials on patients with a range of other illnesses have failed to live up to expectations.

However, the heart researchers said they are optimistic that the gene technique will improve the quality of life in at least some of the patients, who would otherwise suffer deteriorating health and life expectancy a third of patients die within a year of diagnosis.

"Once heart failure starts, it progresses into a vicious cycle where the pumping becomes weaker and weaker, as each heart cell simply cannot respond to the increased demand," said Alexander Lyon, a consultant cardiologist at the Royal Brompton.

"Our goal is to fight back against heart failure by targeting and reversing some of the critical molecular changes arising in the heart when it fails."

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Gene therapy to offer up to 1m heart patients new lease of life

Gene therapy to offer heart patients new lease of life

The first attempt in Britain to treat heart failure patients with gene therapy is to begin within weeks, as part of study aimed at improving the lives of up to a million people in the UK who suffer the debilitating and potentially fatal condition.

Click HERE to view 'how to treat a failing heart' graphic

Two clinical trials are planned for a few dozen British patients who will be deliberately exposed to a virus carrying a synthetic copy of a human gene known to be involved in boosting heartbeat.

The first trial will be carried out at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London and the Golden Jubilee National Hospital in Glasgow. The patients will be part of a group of 200 from around the world who will have the virus injected via a cardiac catheter inserted through a vein in the leg. A second trial at the Harefield and Papworth hospitals will be based entirely within the UK and involve 24 patients with chronic heart failure who are already fitted with an "artificial heart" known as a left ventricular assist device, which helps to pump blood around the body.

The aim in both trials is to inject additional copies of a healthy gene, known to be responsible for a key protein involved in regulating the rhythmic contraction of the heart muscle. It is hoped that the extra genes will remain active within a patient's heart for many months or even years.

Scientists believe the approach could lead to a significant improvement in the efficiency of the diseased heart to pump blood around the body so improving the quality of life of thousands of patients with progressive heart failure who develop serious ailments as well as severe fatigue.

Scientists warned that it will still be several years before the technique can be made widely available. They do not want to raise hopes unduly as many previous gene therapy trials on patients with a range of other illnesses have failed to live up to expectations.

However, the heart researchers said they are optimistic that the gene technique will improve the quality of life in at least some of the patients, who would otherwise suffer deteriorating health and life expectancy a third of patients die within a year of diagnosis.

"Once heart failure starts, it progresses into a vicious cycle where the pumping becomes weaker and weaker, as each heart cell simply cannot respond to the increased demand," said Alexander Lyon, a consultant cardiologist at the Royal Brompton.

"Our goal is to fight back against heart failure by targeting and reversing some of the critical molecular changes arising in the heart when it fails."

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Gene therapy to offer heart patients new lease of life

Gene therapy for heart failure

Doctors at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London will treat 200 patients next month as part of the first ever gene therapy trial for heart failure, which is taking place in 50 centres around the world.

A separate trial, which will test the same therapy in 24 patients who have been fitted with mechanical heart pumps, is expected to begin later this year.

Prof Sian Harding of Imperial College London, who developed the treatment, said: "It's been a painstaking, 20-year process to find the right gene and make a treatment that works, but we're thrilled to be working with cardiologists to set up human trials that could help people living with heart failure."

Prof Peter Weissberg, Medical Director of the British Heart Foundation, which is co-funding the research, said: "While drugs can offer some relief, there is currently no way of restoring function to the heart for those suffering with heart failure. Gene therapy is one of the new frontiers in heart science."

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Gene therapy for heart failure

New gene therapy trials aim to mend broken hearts

British scientists are stepping up clinical tests of gene therapy in a bid to help people with advanced heart failure pump blood more efficiently.

Researchers said on Tuesday they planned to enroll patients into two new clinical trials using Mydicar, a gene therapy treatment made by privately held U.S. biotech company Celladon.

After more than 20 years of research, the ground-breaking method for fixing faulty genes is starting to deliver, with European authorities approving the first gene therapy for an rare metabolic disease last November.

In the case of heart failure, the aim is to insert a gene called SERCA2a directly into heart cells using a modified virus, delivered via a catheter infusion. Lack of SERCA2a leads to ever weaker pumping in people with heart failure.

Although drugs offer some relief, there is currently no way of restoring heart function and the prognosis for those with advanced disease is worse than for many cancers.

One of the studies, led by scientists at Imperial College London, is part of a wider mid-stage Phase II project sponsored by Celladon that involves 200 patients worldwide, some of whom have already been treated in the United States and Denmark.

The second trial, which is due to start in the summer, will test the same treatment in 24 British patients already fitted with mechanical heart pumps to see how the approach may help in this particular setting.

It promises to be a long haul, with extensive Phase III studies still needed once results of the current mid-stage tests are received, which Celladon expects in the first half of 2015.

Gene therapy has experienced a series of advances and setbacks over the decades. The most notable blow came in 1999 when an Arizona teenager died in a gene therapy experiment. More recent results, however, have been promising in fields ranging from immune system diseases to blindness.

"It is a great example of the slow burn of good laboratory science translating into a potential clinical treatment," said Peter Weissberg, medical director of the British Heart Foundation, which is co-funding the second trial.

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New gene therapy trials aim to mend broken hearts

Chinese Dreams: Freedom, Democracy And Clean Air

Pro-democracy supporters in Hong Kong sing and shout slogans during a January protest. Chinese leaders and the state-run media are now speaking often of the Chinese dream, though there's no real consensus on what it means.

Pro-democracy supporters in Hong Kong sing and shout slogans during a January protest. Chinese leaders and the state-run media are now speaking often of the Chinese dream, though there's no real consensus on what it means.

"What is your Chinese dream?"

With Chinese leaders and the state-run media now talking about the notion of the Chinese dream, we posed this question on our NPR Weibo account. In China, Weibo is the equivalent of Twitter. Within several hours, we received more than 100 replies.

Looking over the first 100 answers, 13 mentioned the word "freedom," including LuP whose Chinese dream was that free people would be able to live their lives freely.

For those seeking more freedom, Ziweixiong offered an ironic solution: emigration.

Taking that even further, Kongyijun summarized his Chinese dream as becoming an American.

Others invoked China's Constitution, which has become an acceptable way of hoping that the government will respect the rule of law.

One prominent figure who responded this way was Liu Xiaoyuan, a lawyer who has some 88,000 followers on Weibo and is the legal adviser to dissident artist Ai Weiwei. Liu said his dream was realizing what is in the constitution.

Bushuobukuai521 dreams that there will be no corruption and that society will become fairer.

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Chinese Dreams: Freedom, Democracy And Clean Air

Newport Coachworks in Production on New FREEDOM 40’ Bus Line

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Green Automotive Company (www.thegreenautomotivecompany.com) (GACR) announced today that its subsidiary, Newport Coachworks Inc., has completed tooling and is starting production on its new FREEDOM 40 bus.

Newport Coachworks new generation vehicle line is built using the M2 Freightliner platform that is very popular in the high end shuttle segment of the market. It incorporates many technological improvements including certain key components being made out of lighter, stronger material.

Newport Coachworks President Carter Read: Tooling for each vehicle line that our Company produces is a challenging process because we are incorporating new innovations in each line. Thanks to our close collaboration with our American suppliers, we have found new ways to increase considerably the performance of existing technology and deliver unique products that are of superior quality and give full satisfaction to our customers. Our aim is to become a leading company in our sector thanks to technological innovation, a strong partnership with our local suppliers and excellent customer service.

Said Fred Luke, President Green Automotive, The FREEDOM 40 bus is another vehicle line for which Newport Coachworks has standing orders, meaning as these buses are produced and delivered, the Company should experience a corresponding increase in revenue.

Stakeholders can visit Newport Coachworks production facility in Riverside, California, on the Open day organized by the company on the 4th of May.

To confirm your presence, go to http://www.thegreenautomotivecompany.com/.

About Green Automotive Company

Green Automotive Companyis a state-of-the-art niche vehicle design, engineering, manufacturing, and sales company, driving innovation in the use of cutting edge zero and low emission technologies. Our 3 main divisions areLiberty Electric Cars Ltd,Newport Coachworks Inc.andGoinGreen Ltd. Green Automotive Companyshares are traded on the OTC QB under the symbol"GACR".For further info, visitwww.thegreenautomotivecompany.com.

Forward Looking Statements - This release includes forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on management's current expectations and are subject to certain factors, risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results, events and performance to differ materially from those referred to or implied by such statements. For a copy of the Companys full statements regarding forward-looking statements please click here: Safe Harbor Statement Green Automotive Company.

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Newport Coachworks in Production on New FREEDOM 40’ Bus Line

MPs and Freedom of Information

OVERALL, Pakatan Rakyat (PR) Members of Parliament (MPs) who were voted in in 2008 demonstrated much stronger support for the establishment of a Freedom of Information (FOI) Act compared with Barisan Nasional (BN) MPs.

PR MPs, who were approached for The Nut Graphs MP Watch project, also showed better understanding of what a FOI Act is about. Fewer PR MPs confused freedom of information with freedom of speech and media freedom compared with BN MPs.

BN: Umno

Umno MPs appeared divided on the issue of freedom of information. Out of the 24 MPs who responded to the question, Would you support a Freedom of Information Act? Why or why not?, eight were very supportive of enacting a FOI Act. Three flatly refused the idea, while the rest either did not state their stand on the issue clearly, or confused freedom of information with freedom of speech. Two MPs refused to comment.

Those who supported a FOI Act generally believed that the rakyat has the right to information, and that freedom of information would ensure greater government transparency and accountability.

Datuk Seri Azmi Khalid (Padang Besar) said the Official Secrets Act (OSA) should be abolished to allow for more transparency. Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin (Rembau) said having a FOI Act would increase government transparency and accountability as well as reduce corruption across the board. But he cautioned that private information and information that would jeopardise national security or criminal investigations should remain confidential.

In stark contrast, MPs like Datuk Hasan Malek (Kuala Pilah) and Datuk Abu Bakar Taib (Langkawi) said there was no need for a FOI Act because existing laws such as the OSA were sufficient to regulate the flow of information.

At least four Umno MPs, including Datuk Bung Moktar Radin (Kinabatangan) and Datuk Ronald Kiandee (Beluran), confused the concept of freedom of information with freedom of speech.

Additionally, seven other Umno MPs were ambiguous on the issue. Datuk Ismail Kasim (Arau), for example, opined that the Malaysian public was not yet mature enough to handle certain information. Datuk Razali Ibrahim (Muar) cautioned that a FOI Act may be abused by certain quarters with ill intentions.

BN: MCA, MIC and other component parties

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MPs and Freedom of Information

Freedom bus line adds stop at Tanger Outlets

Tanger Outlet customers and employees will soon be seeing the South Strabane Township shopping complexs first and only public transit stop.

The Washington County Transportation Authority plans to add the stop to all but its earliest morning runs beginning Wednesday.

The stop will be in the parking lot adjacent to the walkway to the Brooks Brothers and Calvin Klein stores.

Its good news, I think, said Sheila Gombita, executive director of the Washington County transportation agency.

The first stop at Tanger Outlets on the McDonald-Canonsburg trip to Washington will be at 9:15 a.m., and approximately every 90 minutes thereafter, with the last stop on that run at 4:45 p.m.

The Washington to Canonsburg-McDonald run will make its first stop at Tanger Outlets at 10:35 a.m., with its last Tanger stop at 6:05 p.m.

Wednesday also marks the beginning of the third and final year of the Freedom Line pilot program, which has a variety of funding sources.

Decisions are to be made within the next four to five months as to where were going to go with it. We plan to try and look for a local match. Ride it now, and that way it will continue, Gombita said.

The stop at the shopping complex, which opened in August 2008, came about through requests from both Tanger employees and people who wanted to take the bus to shop there.

With the addition of Tanger Outlets comes the subtraction of a stop at the Meadowbrook housing plan in North Strabane Township, due to lack of ridership.

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Freedom bus line adds stop at Tanger Outlets

Freedom Riders Pilgrimage Stop

In front of the statue. The Veterans of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement is the host. Learn more about the pilgrimage to sites where civil rights workers were slain.

Momentum appears to be growing for the Freedom Riders for Vot-ing Rights Never Forget, Never Again Pilgrimage in Mississippi on April 30 and in Alabama on May 1. Co-sponsoring organizations have grown to 17.

The Pilgrimage is one in a series of activities organized to support Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act because its constitutionality is being challenged by Shelby County, Alabama. A large rally was held at the U.S. Supreme Court when they heard oral arguments in the Shelby case on February 27, and was followed by a Freedom Rider stop and rally in Richmond, Charlotte, Greenville, Atlanta, Birmingham and Mont-gomery. The Veterans of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement, Inc., filed a brief to the Supreme Court to uphold the constitutionality of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

A Pilgrimage was also conducted on April 4 at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., monument in Atlanta. April 4th is the day that Dr. King was murdered.

The Freedom Riders will be met by Mississippi co-sponsors for stops in Jackson at the Medgar Evers Library and Statue for a press conference. The Freedom Riders will then drive by the Evers home that is presently under construction. The pilgrimage will proceed to Tougaloo College, Woodworth Chapel, where they will join with civil rights activists, students and the general public for a memorial service honoring mar-tyrs of the Voting Rights Movement. In the afternoon, they will journey to Philadel-phia to honor the memory of the James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner, Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore. The bus will leave Mississippi for Alabama where they will meet Bernard Lafayette, who was the Director of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committees (SNCC) Alabama Voter Registration Project. Lafayette was slated to be assassinated on the same day as Medgar Evers.

The Pilgrimage will make stops in Marian, Alabama where Jimmie Lee Jackson was killed, in Selma where Rev. James Reeb was killed, in Lowndes County where Jonathan Daniels and Viola Liuzzo were killed, and in Tuskegee where Sammy Younge was killed. The Pilgrimage will end with a rally at the Ala-bama State Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama.

Leading up to the Pilgrimage in Jackson on April 29, a caravan of cars will travel to Liberty, Mississippi where Herbert Lee and Louis Allen were killed and to Hattiesburg where Vernon Dahmer was killed. They will meet up with the Freedom Riders bus in Jackson on April 30.

The co-sponsoring organizations include: Alabama New South Coalition Alabama Democratic Conference Ancient Africa, Enslavement and Civil War Museum Bridge Crossing Jubilee, Inc. Mississippi State Conference of the NAACP Mississippi Student Justice Alliance Mississippi Workers' Center for Human Rights National Action Network National Coalition of Leaders to Save Section Five (NCLSS) National Coalition on Black Civic Participation National Policy Alliance National Voting Rights Museum and Institute Rainbow PUSH Coalition Save Ourselves Summit Southern Christian Leadership Conference Veterans of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement, Inc. World Conference of Mayors Women of Will

The public is cordially invited to meet the Pilgrimage at each stop.

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Freedom Riders Pilgrimage Stop

Freedom Africa Launches Exclusive Traveller Gift Vouchers

(PRWEB UK) 30 April 2013

African holiday specialists Freedom Africa have launched exclusive traveller gift vouchers providing the perfect present that keeps on giving in terms of unforgettable experiences on the continent, whether travellers crave a South African adventure starting in Cape Town or Zambia holidays providing the magic and awe of Victoria Falls.

Available in denominations as small as 50 right up to 5000, Freedom Africa gift vouchers can satisfy most requirements and are valid for three years from the date of issue meaning for those lucky enough to receive one, they can truly take enough time to carefully ponder where they fancy travelling to in Freedom Africas fulfilling itinerary.

With Botswana, Kenya, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, South Africa and Zambia all part of Freedom Africas 2013 operations, the possibilities are seemingly endless and once those who have received a voucher decide on their ideal destination, Freedom Africas ABTA and ATOL protection ensures peace of mind in terms of safe and secure travel arrangement.

Not only this, but Freedom Africa places the holidaymaker at the centre of their operations and travel can be tailored to the tourists exact requirements with gift vouchers valid for holidays to Africa with stopovers too should individuals choose to take in the beauty of another destination prior to their main retreat.

Freedom Africa gift vouchers are versatile in respect of the fact that they can be utilised in so many different ways. Offering a wide plethora of choice, they are the ultimate present in regards to opening up a range of possibilities, rather than a single gift which is either unfavourable or restricting.

Victoria Falls, the Serengeti National Park, Cape Town, Zanzibar and Mount Kilimanjaro are just some of the destinations that can be visited upon receipt of a voucher and for those giving the gift; you are likely to endear yourself to your friends markedly.

Selecting a gift voucher with Freedom Africa is just the start however. By choosing your holiday with the company, you are offered the freedom of choice, to explore a new nation at your own leisure, basing yourself in one location or alternatively journeying around and taking in as many retreats as possible.

The choice is entirely down to you. To obtain your Freedom Africa traveller gift vouchers, simply call 08445674020 and fulfil those holiday dreams for real. Whether it be an African safari, Mombasa marine break or the Garden Route in South Africa, Freedom Africa gift vouchers are valid for all these destinations and more.

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Freedom Africa Launches Exclusive Traveller Gift Vouchers

US panel: Afghans need more religious freedom

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) Despite significant improvements since the hard-line Taliban ruled Afghanistan, religious freedom remains poor, especially for minorities, and Afghans still can't debate religion or question prevailing Islamic orthodoxies without fear of being punished, a U.S. commission said in a new report on Tuesday.

As the country braces for next year's presidential election and the planned withdrawal of most foreign combat troops by the end of 2014, the panel urges the U.S. government and its allies to work harder to promote religious rights in the war-torn nation.

The environment for exercising religious freedom remains "exceedingly poor" for dissenting members of Afghanistan's Sunni Muslim majority and for minorities, such as Shiite Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs and Christians, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said in its report.

"Individuals who dissent from the prevailing orthodoxy regarding Islamic beliefs and practices are subject to legal actions that violate international standards," according to the commission, which was created in 1998 to review violations of religious freedom internationally and make policy recommendations to the U.S. government.

"The Taliban and other non-state actors continue to target individuals for activity deemed 'un-Islamic,' and the Afghanistan constitution fails explicitly to protect the individual right to freedom of religion or belief."

An Afghan government official disputed the findings.

"The Afghan government is fully committed to ensuring religious freedom for followers of all religions in Afghanistan, something our constitution is very clear about," Janan Mosazai, spokesman for the Afghan foreign ministry, said in an email to The Associated Press. Mosazai said that even though Islam is Afghanistan's official religion, the constitution clearly states that "followers of other faiths shall be free within the bounds of law in the exercise and performance of their religious rituals."

In its 2013 annual report, USCIRF praises that clause of Afghanistan's 2004 constitution, but notes that another part of the charter says these fundamental rights can be superseded by ordinary legislation. This shortcoming is compounded by "a vague, repugnancy clause" that says no law can be contrary to Islam and allows courts to enforce it, the commission says.

In addition, the penal code discriminates against minorities by allowing courts to defer to Shariah, or Islamic law, in cases involving matters such as apostasy and conversion that are not explicitly addressed by the penal code or the constitution, resulting in those charges being punishable by death, the report says.

Because of legal restrictions, "Afghans cannot debate the role and content of religion in law and society, advocate for the rights of women and religious minorities, or question interpretations of Islamic precepts without fear of retribution or being charged with religious "crimes' such as apostasy, blasphemy or insulting Islam," USCIRF says.

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US panel: Afghans need more religious freedom