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Nokia confirms acquisition failing French telecom company

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 15 April 2015 | 17.08

Nokia confirmed Wednesday it is acquiring the ailing French telecom company Alcatel-Lucent through a public exchange offer in France and the United States, in a bid to become a leading global networks operator.

The Finnish company said the all-share transaction will be on the basis of 0.55 of a new Nokia share for every share of Alcatel-Lucent. The share offer values the French concern at 15.6 billion euros.

Alcatel-Lucent shareholders would own 33.5 percent of the fully diluted share capital of the combined company, with Nokia shareholders owning 66.5 percent.

The deal has been approved by each company's board of directors and is expected to close in 2016 subject to regulatory and other approvals, Nokia said.

The announcement follows confirmation a day earlier that Nokia was in advanced talks to buy Alcatel-Lucent, which has been racking up billions of euros of losses since its creation in 2006.

Both companies' chief executives, Nokia's Rajeev Suri and Alcatel-Lucent's Michel Combes, met with French President Francois Hollande briefly on Tuesday afternoon, and the French government said it would support the deal.

Nokia has recently made a turnaround since its 5.4 billion-euro sale of the lossmaking handset business to Microsoft a year ago, with three remaining sectors: networks, HERE mapping services and technologies and patents.

Nokia also said Wednesday it has "initiated a review of strategic options, including a potential divestment, for its HERE business." It gave no details.

Alcatel-Lucent, which has undergone repeated rounds of restructuring since the 2006 merger of France's Alcatel and U.S.-based Lucent Technologies, is laying off more than 10,000 workers and last year made a net loss of 118 million euros.


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Rape victim flies 3,000 miles to testify against ex-Goldman exec

A tearful Irish woman flew 3,000 to testify against a former Goldman Sachs banker who she says raped her in the Hamptons.

The woman said former managing director Jason Lee attacked her in the bathroom of his East Hampton rental during a night of partying in 2013.

Identified only as Dana, the alleged victim said Lee, 38, barged into a restroom where she was changing and attacked her.

"With every ounce of strength I had in me I pulled my leg up and I kneed him in the groin," she said as Lee looked on stoically. "He fell off. I just sat there in disbelief. I couldn't believe it."

The woman, a student who lives in Ireland, was visiting her brother as he wrapped up a seasonal job on the East End.

Prosecutors argue that the married banker — who left Goldman in the wake of his arrest — met the victim, now 22, while celebrating his birthday with a pal at the Georgica eatery in Wainscott.

The continued carousing at Lee's $33,000 per month East Hampton rental pad, while his banker wife was back in Manhattan.

Lee's attorney, Andrew Lankler, tried to poke holes in Dana's story by presenting pictures taken prior to the attack of Lee and the woman together.

She told the court that she was never attracted to him and thought he resembled the Mr. Chow character form the Hangover movies.

Lee faces up to 25 years in prison if found guilty of the first-degree rape charge.


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Bipartisan agreement leads to change in doctors’ Medicare fees

Legislation permanently overhauling how Medicare pays physicians won approval Tuesday from an atypically united Congress as lawmakers banded together to erase an irritant that has dogged them for years.

Adding urgency to legislators' work, the measure headed off a 21 percent cut in doctors' Medicare fees that would have hit home Wednesday, when the government planned to begin processing physicians' claims reflecting that reduction. The bill also provides billions of extra dollars for health care programs for children and low-income families, including additional money for community health centers.

Working into the evening, the Senate approved the measure 92-8 less than three weeks after the House passed it by a lopsided 392-37.

"It's a milestone for physicians, and for the seniors and people with disabilities who rely on Medicare for their health care needs," President Barack Obama said in a written statement after the vote. He added, "I will be proud to sign it into law."

Conservatives were unhappy that two-thirds of the bill's $214 billion, 10-year costs were financed by simply making federal deficits even bigger, while liberals wanted added money for children and women's programs. Eager to demonstrate his party's ability to efficiently run the Senate they've controlled since January, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., defended the measure.

"It's another reminder of a new Republican Congress that's back to work," he said. "And while no bill will ever be perfect, this legislation is a sensible compromise with wide bipartisan support."

Top Democrats also expressed support for the legislation.

"This is a significant and hard won achievement that will ensure better quality health care and certainty for millions of seniors and children," said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.

The bill marks a tandem effort by Democrats and Republicans at a time when the two parties are far likelier to block each other's initiatives.

All eight "no" votes came from Republicans, including some of their most conservative members. Among prcongreesidential hopefuls, Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Marco Rubio, R-Fla., voted against the bill, while Rand Paul, R-Ky., voted for it.

The bill's chief feature was its annulling of a 1997 law aimed at slowing the growth of Medicare that has repeatedly threatened deep cuts in reimbursements to physicians and led to threats by doctors to stop treating the program's beneficiaries. Congress has blocked 17 reductions since 2003, an exercise that invites intense lobbying and difficult choices about finding budget savings that both parties detested.

Instead, the measure would create a new payment system with financial incentives for physicians to bill Medicare patients for their overall care, not individual office visits.

While Democrats touted the legislation's added funds for children and the poor, Republicans were claiming victory in changes the bill makes in Medicare that would have a long-term though modest impact on the huge program's finances.

While $141 billion of the measure's costs over the decade would come from added federal red ink, about $35 billion would come from Medicare beneficiaries, mostly by raising the medical and prescription drug premiums paid by some upper-income recipients starting in 2018. Though the affected beneficiaries already pay higher premiums than lower-earning people, Congress seldom increases costs on seniors, fearing retribution come the next Election Day from older voters.

The bill would raise another $37 billion by cutting Medicare reimbursements to hospitals and other providers.

Before passage, senators rejected six amendments, three from each party, that were all but sure to lose but let lawmakers demonstrate their disapproval of provisions they opposed.

A Democratic proposal to extend the two years of extra money the measure provided for the popular Children's Health Insurance Program to four years lost on a 50-50 vote — short of the 60 votes needed to prevail. By 58-42, the chamber rejected an effort by conservatives to force Congress to find enough savings to pay for the entire measure without increasing federal red ink.

"Honestly it's my hope that the amendments are not approved, because we need to get this bill down to the president for signature before midnight," McConnell told reporters.

Senators faced conflicting pressures from lobbying groups.

The American Medical Association and other providers' organizations were urging lawmakers to pass the bill. AARP, the senior citizens' lobby, wanted legislators to back an amendment ending Medicare's annual coverage limits for therapy but stopped short of urging the bill's defeat without that change.

Conservative groups including the Club for Growth and Heritage Action for America pressed lawmakers to support the GOP amendment — which lost — to require Congress to pay for the entire bill.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who crafted the compromise with House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., warned senators of the impending doctors' cuts and underscored the futility of trying to amend the bill.

"The House legislation passed with overwhelming bipartisan support, and we do not plan to act again, so we urge the Senate to approve the House-passed bill without delay," Boehner said in a written statement.

The 21 percent cut in doctors' fees technically took effect April 1. Citing federal law, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services stopped processing those claims two weeks ago — in effect giving lawmakers time to complete the legislation. The agency processes around 4 million Medicare payments for doctors daily.


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Google facing antitrust showdown in Europe

European regulators are poised to file a complaint alleging Google has been abusing its dominance in Internet search to thwart competition and innovation, according to memo that the company sent to its employees Tuesday.

Kent Walker, Google's general counsel, wrote that a "statement of objections" to Google's business practices will be released Wednesday by Europe's top antitrust regulator, Margrethe Vestager.

Besides outlining their belief that Google has been illegally rigging its search results to favor its own services, European regulators also may announce they are opening an inquiry into whether Google is also using its popular Android software for mobile devices to gain an unfair advantage over other digital services, Walker said.

A copy of the memo was posted online by the technology websites Re/Code and TechCrunch after The Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times reported Vestager's plans to take action against Google, the Internet's most powerful company. Google confirmed Walker wrote the memo late Tuesday, but the company declined further comment.

The case sets up a legal battle that could culminate in Google being fined about $6 billion, or 10 percent of its annual revenue, and force the Mountain View, California, company to overhaul its system for recommending websites in Europe. But the process could take several more years resolve, especially if Google appeals any adverse decision issued by European regulators.

In the meantime, the allegations are likely to paint an unflattering picture of Google, which embraced "don't be evil" as its creed a few years after CEO Larry Page and his Stanford University classmate Sergey Brin founded the company in a rented Silicon Valley garage in 1998.

"Expect some of the criticism to be tough," Walker wrote Tuesday.

A complaint challenging Google's conduct "would represent a significant step towards ending Google's anti-competitive practices, which have harmed innovation and consumer choice," said Thomas Vinje, legal counsel for FairSearch Europe, a group that has been urging regulators to rein in Google.

Europe's looming showdown with Google also could intensify scrutiny of a similar U.S. antitrust investigation that the Federal Trade Commission settled in 2013 without finding any significant misbehavior. A confidential report mistakenly released to The Wall Street Journal last month revealed the FTC's legal staff had recommended suing Google for breaking antitrust laws only to be overruled by the agency's governing commissioners.

Google has offered to make concessions on three previous occasions in an attempt to settle Europe's nearly 5-year-old antitrust probe, only to have the negotiations unravel. The efforts to forge a truce occurred under Vestager's predecessor, Joaquin Almunia, who stepped down late last year.

European regulators, like their U.S. peers, have been looking into complaints that Google improperly highlights its own services in its search results at the expense of its rivals. The alleged favoritism corrals Google's services, a strategy that Google's critics contend enables the Internet's most powerful company to sell more of the ads that generate most of its revenue, while diverting traffic from other websites trying to compete with their own products.

Much of the complaint may focus on how Google displays its results in response to requests made by people who appear to be shopping online, Walker wrote.

Google repeatedly has denied any wrongdoing, arguing there is nothing preventing people from using other search engines to find information, entertainment and shopping recommendations. Critics, though, deride Google as a ruthless monopoly that wields its dominant position to stymie its rivals. By some estimates, Google processes about nine out of 10 search requests in parts of Europe — even more than in the U.S., where it commands about two-thirds of the market.

The push to crack down on Google is being led by a group of publishers and technology companies that includes Microsoft Corp., which once tangled with Europe's antitrust regulators over the way it bundled products with its Windows operating system.

An antitrust case against Google would be Europe's biggest since regulators wrangled with Microsoft.


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Somber remembrance will mark 2 years since marathon bombing

BOSTON (AP) — Boston will mark the second anniversary of the 2013 marathon bombings Wednesday with a subdued remembrance that includes a moment of silence, the pealing of church bells and a call for kindness.

Mayor Marty Walsh and other officials will raise commemorative banners on Boylston Street early Wednesday. A moment of silence follows at 2:49 p.m., marking the time the first of two bombs exploded near the finish line April 15, 2013. Church bells will then ring throughout the city.

Mayor Walsh has also declared April 15 "One Boston Day," a new tradition meant to honor the city's resilience and spread goodwill.

"April 15 is a date that has come to stand for our city's deepest values," Walsh has said. "One Boston Day will inspire all of us to come together as the community we are and share the spirit of Boston by giving back."

The relatively modest remembrance comes in contrast to 2014's commemoration of the attacks, which killed three people and injured more than 260 others.

Survivors, first responders and thousands of others gathered at the marathon finish line, and Vice President Joe Biden, at an earlier event, declared: "We are Boston. We are America. We respond. We endure. We overcome. And we own the finish line."

The new One Boston Day is partly inspired by survivors of the attacks, many of whom are now doing charitable works.

Liz Norden, a Stoneham resident whose two adult sons — J.P. and Paul — each lost a leg in the attack, has set up a nonprofit called A Leg Forever to help other amputees pay for costs that insurance won't cover. She says the work has been therapeutic.

"My boys had so much help from the generosity of people from everywhere," Norden said this week. "If you lose your leg to a horrific accident, you don't have the media coverage or the resources that my family was so blessed to have. So it's important that we try to help other amputees that don't have that."

People are encouraged to share their random acts of kindness using the Twitter hashtag OneBostonDay. The city has also launched a website.

An elementary school in Reading says students will be writing thank-you letters to local police and fire departments. The Hyatt Regency Boston will be accepting donations of new or gently worn men's sneakers for St. Francis House, a Boston homeless shelter.

Jurors in the trial of marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, meanwhile, have been warned to avoid anniversary events and this year's race. The Boston Marathon — one of the world's premier running events — takes place April 20; the penalty phase in Tsarnaev's trial begins the next day.

The jury has already convicted Tsarnaev of all 30 charges against him. In the next phase, they weigh sentencing the 21-year-old ethnic Chechen to death or life in prison.

Norden says nothing short of execution is warranted.

"He destroyed so many families that day," she said. "I want the ultimate justice."


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Pregnant Brooklyn woman among Americans trapped in Yemen

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 14 April 2015 | 17.08

A pregnant Brooklyn woman is among at least 400 American citizens trapped in Yemen amid a US-backed bombing campaign.

The 24-year-old woman, identified only as Saffa, is holed up with her new husband, their two kittens and two huskies, according to ABC News.

They have tried in vain to get information to help them return home, but have been stalled by misinformation and bad phone lines.

"It's been a big mess," Saffa told ABC. "And I'm sorry, it's really ­f–ked up."

Saffa's sister Amber wrote the State Department from Brooklyn and sent an urgent letter to the agency's Yemen-emergency e-mail address.

She received a reply three days later that said, "We have no way to assist with their evacuation."

The Council on America-Islamic Relations and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee have filed a lawsuit against the State Department and Department of Defense for failing to evacuate its citizens.

Air India has evacuated hundreds of people to Djibouti, about 470 miles away across the Gulf of Aden.


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Brooklyn rep pushes bill to overhaul music royalties

Congress is finally facing the music.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-Brooklyn/Manhattan) is pushing a bill that would overhaul the way authors, performers and record labels are paid for songs streamed online, and end the partial free ride enjoyed by traditional radio.

"For decades, AM/FM radio has used whatever music it wants without paying a cent to the musicians, vocalists, and labels that created it," said Nadler, who is introducing the Fair Pay Fair Play Act.

Currently, digital radio services pay one royalty rate, satellite radio pays a higher rate, and traditional radio pays royalties only to composers


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De Blasio’s Hillary diss leaves Democrats, Clintons fuming

He's Benedict Bill.

Democratic leaders are fuming after Mayor de Blasio turned his back on mentor and megasupporter Hillary Rodham Clinton by not endorsing her presidential bid.

A party source told The Post on Monday that Hizzoner has rankled the top echelon so much that donors may pull support for him when he's up for re-election.

"Some of Hillary's biggest bundlers are like, 'WTF?' " the source said.

A city Democratic insider said he fielded furious calls and texts from Clinton's people all day Monday, the day after de Blasio sniffed on NBC's "Meet the Press" that it was too early to endorse any candidate.

"I need to see any actual vision of where [candidates] want to go . . . We need to see the substance,'' said de Blasio, who has landed political jobs thanks to Clinton and her husband, Bill, and even served as campaign manager during her 2000 Senate bid.

A Clinton source scoffed: "He's known her for, like, 20 years! He doesn't know what her philosophy of government is?"

The Democratic insider added: "The Clinton people are really angry. They're furious."

In a closed-door fund-raiser for de Blasio in 2013, Clinton called him "a partner who always had my back,'' CNN reported.

The source blasted de Blasio as a puppet of progressives.

"He does everything the Working Families Party tells him. The Working Families Party is still not for Hillary," the source said.

Former Public Advocate and Democratic mayoral candidate Mark Green questioned why de Blasio was holding Clinton to a higher standard than Gov. Cuomo — who got the mayor's endorsement last year despite their clashes on taxes and other issues.

"Q for BdB: if you insist on prog vision pre-endorsement, how come u jumped on Cuomo bandwagon unquestioningly?" he tweeted.

Even Republican Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino was more upbeat about Clinton's candidacy than de Blasio.

"Westchester is proud to have Secretary Clinton as a leading candidate for president," he said.

Sources suggested de Blasio refused to endorse Clinton after her aides made it known they were mad he was headed to Iowa to talk about income inequality this week — at the same time she'll be in the state.

"He doesn't want to be taken for granted," a city party insider said.

Democratic National Committee member Rob Zimmerman ripped Hizzoner.

"It is a moral imperative for people who are leaders of the progressive movement to support her," Zimmerman told The Post.

State Democratic Chair and ex-Gov. David Paterson also rapped him.

"When you know someone is running for president, I would think you would have [your endorsement] resolved by the time it's announced," he told Fox's "Good Day New York."

But de Blasio had some allies.

"Today is not the day to discuss endorsements,'' said City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, who also declined to back Clinton.

De Blasio refused questions at Monday's Mets opener, where the Red Sox-loving mayor was booed by the crowd.

Additional reporting by Yoav Gonen, Reuven Fenton and Kate Sheehy


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Woman attacked, raped in bathroom of Gramercy bar

A 23-year-old woman was raped in the bathroom of a Gramercy bar, where a man grabbed her by the throat, forced her into a stall and attacked her, cops said.

The victim entered the woman's restroom of the Turnmill Bar on East 27th Street at around 7:45 p.m. on Saturday.

Bathroom stall at the Turnmill Bar.

The attacker, who is still at large, was hiding in another stall waiting to pounce, police said Monday.

The bathrooms at Turnmill are down one flight from the main floor and at the end of a hallway.

"When you have bathrooms downstairs, it isolates the victim from everybody else," a female patron said. "You're more prone to attract sketchy people down there."

The suspect was seen on video footage from outside the bar.


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The Lincoln assassination: A haunting look back

The Lincoln assassination: A haunting look back | New York Post
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Then-President Abraham Lincoln on Feb. 9, 1864

Reuters / Library of Congress

Lincoln is photographed in Washington on Feb. 8, 1865, 10 weeks before his assassination.

Reuters / Library of Congress / Anthony Berger

John Wilkes Booth prepares to assassinate Lincoln.

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John Wilkes Booth races to the Ford's Theatre stage in Washington after shooting Lincoln.

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John Wilkes Booth flees from Ford's Theatre in Washington after shooting Lincoln.

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Lincoln's house in Springfield, Ill., is draped in black after his assassination in 1865.

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Lincoln's box at Ford's Theater in 1865

AP

Lincoln wore his trademark silk top hat the night of his assassination. It's currently on display at

Reuters

Crowds gather at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington.

Reuters

John Wilkes Booth in Washington in 1865

Reuters / Library of Congress

A mold of Lincoln's face is displayed at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill.

Reuters

A print shows John Wilkes Booth shooting Lincoln.

Reuters / Library of Congress

A hand-colored 1870 lithograph shows John Wilkes Booth shooting Lincoln as he sits in the presidential box at Ford's Theatre in Washington April 14, 1865. Major Henry Rathbone rushes to try to stop Booth as Rathbone's fiancee Clara Harris (left) and first lady Mary Todd Lincoln (second from left) look on.

Reuters / Library of Congress

The presidential box is arranged April 3, 2015 identically to the way it was the night Lincoln was shot through this doorway at Ford's Theatre in Washington.

Reuters

A giant bust of Lincoln by artist David Adickes in a field outside of Williston, N.D.

Reuters

A man dressed as the Statue of Liberty poses in front of a Lincoln statue in Chicago.

Reuters

Various global stamps with Lincoln's image are displayed in the visitor center at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington.

Reuters

The single-shot Deringer pistol John Wilkes Booth used to kill Abraham Lincoln is displayed at the Center for Education and Leadership at Ford's Theatre in Washington.

Reuters

A wanted ad for Lincoln's murderer

Reuters

Lincoln's blood-stained gloves that were tucked into his coat pocket at the time of his assassination are displayed at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill.

Reuters

Crowds gather for Lincoln's funeral procession in Washington on April 19, 1865.

Reuters / Library of Congress

The headline of The National News reports on the shooting of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln in Washington on April 14, 1865.

Reuters

Lincoln in Washington in February 1865

Lewis Emory Walker / Library of Congress / Reuters

The Lincoln Memorial

Reuters

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