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Saturday, May 18, 2013 | 5:28 a.m.

Labor

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House advances student loan fix

The days of fixed-rate student loans could be coming to a close, with House Republicans on Thursday advancing a proposal that would link rates to financial markets. The GOP-led House Education and the Workforce Committee sent to the full House a bill that would offer some students a better deal ...

Hospitality Properties reappoints Lamkin to board

Hospitality Properties Trust has reappointed William Lamkin to its board after he didn't receive a majority of the shares needed to be re-elected. The Newton, Mass.-based real estate investment trust said Thursday that when Lamkin didn't receive the necessary amount of shares, he resigned. Hospitality Properties said that it determined ...

Feds propose overhaul for child care centers

Federal health officials proposed Thursday to overhaul 500,000 child care centers across the country, beefing up safety standards including background and fingerprint checks for employees and requiring states to better monitor the facilities. Roughly 1.6 million U.S. children attend child care centers on subsidies — paid in the form of ...

FILE - In this Jan. 15, 2013 file photo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. The expansion of H-1b visas is considered the first major victory for Zuckerberg’s new non-profit lobbying organization, FWD.us, which receives financial backing from such big tech names as Bill Gates of Microsoft, Reid Hoffman of LinkedIn and Napster pioneer Sean Parker. In announcing the group, pronounced “forward us,” Zuckerberg in April called for changes so that U.S. businesses could attract “the most talented and hardest-working people, no matter where they were born.” (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

INFLUENCE GAME: Tech, labor spar on immigration

To the U.S. technology industry, there's a dramatic shortfall in the number of Americans skilled in computer programming and engineering that is hampering business. To unions and some Democrats, it's more sinister: The push by Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg to expand the number of visas for high-tech foreign workers is an ...

Argentina brokers 24 pct wage hikes for millions

Two million Argentines will get wage hikes of 24 percent under a deal President Cristina Fernandez brokered with six allied labor unions. Now the government is hoping for similar numbers in next month's salary negotiations with unions aligned with her political opponents. They're led by truckers' union boss Hugo Moyano, ...

US jobless claims jump to highest level in 6 weeks

The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits rose 32,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 360,000, the most since late March. The jump came a week after applications had reached a five-year low. The less volatile four-week average rose just 1,250 to 339,250, the Labor Department said Thursday. That's a ...

US jobless claims jump to highest level in 6 weeks

The number of Americans seeking unemployment aid rose 32,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 360,000, the most since late March. The jump comes after applications fell to a five-year low. The Labor Department said Thursday that the less volatile four-week average rose just 1,250 to 339,250, a level consistent ...

Map locates factory accident near Phnom Penh, Cambodia

Cambodian shoe factory collapse kills 2, injures 7

The ceiling of a Cambodian factory that makes Asics sneakers collapsed on workers early Thursday, killing two people and injuring seven, in the latest accident spotlighting the often lethal safety conditions faced by those toiling in the global garment industry. About 50 workers were inside a workroom of the factory ...

In this picture taken May 14, 2013 Mufti Tomasz Miskiewicz, Poland’s top Muslim leader, gestures during an interview with The Associated Press in Warsaw.  Miskiewicz is urging Polish lawmakers to pass a law that would re-legalize the practice of Islamic and Jewish religious slaughter, a practice that has been banned since January. The ban came after a campaign by animal rights groups, which consider it cruel because it involves a cut to the throat of a conscious animal, with no pre-stunning to make the animal unconscious. But the kosher and halal industry is also a big business and the ban is causing losses reaching millions of euros, putting pressure on the government to  get the practice reinstated legally. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

Polish exports of meat for Jews, Muslims in limbo

For some, it was a barbaric way to treat animals. For others, it was great business. Until January, slaughterhouses across Poland — a deeply Catholic nation — were the unlikely venues for the Islamic and Jewish slaughter of animals, which in both religions involves a swift cut to the throat ...

Flint public school district plans 139 layoffs

The Flint public school district plans to lay off 139 teachers and staff at the end of the school year as part of an effort to cut costs. The Flint Journal reports (http://bit.ly/18N8Ipz ) the layoffs are effective following the last day of school. Some teachers may be recalled June ...

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