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The House of Representatives has voted 275-144 to extend three key provisions of the Patriot Act until the end of the year. The measures—which would keep in place surveillance powers including the authority for counterterrorism offices to conduct roving wiretap surveillance of targets—were slammed as “intrusive” and “unconstitutional”…

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The first round of Jeopardy ‘s 2-game man versus supercomputer showdown finished Monday night with humanity having fended off the rise of the machine. Human player Brad Rutter, the game show’s record money-winner, was tied with IBM supercomputer Watson at $5,000 at the close of play, AP reports. The…

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SL floods force fish off the menu

Sri Lanka’s worst floods in half a century could cost an estimated $600m. More than 130 thousand people are still living in temporary shelters and vast swathes of land have been destroyed. And a disease caused by floods has also severely depleted fishermen’s catches. Al Jazeera’s Minelle Fernandez reports from Batticaloa, Sri Lanka.

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Canada veil ban controversy

A row is brewing in Canada, after a politician introduced proposals aimed at mandating the removal of veils in polling stations. The private member’s bill was tabled by a politician from the ruling Conservative Party. He says the law would increase transparency during elections. But critics say it fuels Islamaphobia. Al Jazeera’s Imtiaz Tyab reports.

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Clinton on what’s next for Egypt

Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, has told Al Jazeera that the US is hopeful Egypt will become a model for democracy in the region. There are critics who say the US government is again sitting on the fence — as it did before president Mubarak resigned — in deciding whether to back the people or the army. Al Jazeera’s Abder-Rahim Foukara asked Clinton for her response.

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The Grammys hit a high note in the ratings last night, drawing the show’s biggest TV audience in a decade. Preliminary Nielsen figures today show the CBS broadcast attracted 26.6 million viewers, improving on last year’s robust audience by 680,000 viewers. The 53rd Annual Grammy Awards was also…

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President Obama released his budget today, giving pretty much everyone an ax to grind. But Meredith Shiner over at Politico runs down a list of the winners—as well as the losers—in the president’s 208-page financial blueprint. Winners Arne Duncan : Betting big on bipartisan support for education reform, the…

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Monarch butterflies are back in Mexico this year, after an alarming 75% drop in their numbers last year. A survey released today found that butterfly colonies encompassed 9.9 acres—a significant increase from the 4.7 acres that alarmed experts last year, reports the AP. The figures are “encouraging”…

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A 96-year-old Hungarian police officer has been charged with war crimes committed during World War II, the AP reports. Sandor Kepiro allegedly ordered the killing of four civilians during a massacre of 1,200 that took place in Serbia. Hungarian courts had convicted Kepiro twice in the 1940s, says the…

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I agree with Tim Webb ( Letters , 14 February) that there has been a Labour silence on the events in Egypt, including the participation in this people’s revolution of one of its most powerful sectors – the working class. Last week, over 20,000 workers were participating in strikes, thrusting aside the official Egyptian Trade Union Federation and establishing their own independent Federation of Egyptian Trade Unions. Kamal Abbas, of the independent Centre for Trade Union and Workers’ Services, confirmed reports by al-Jazeera in an interview with US magazine Labor Notes, commenting: “This day [10 February] in the revolution could be named for the labour unions. They have moved all over, with more than 20 strikes in the railroads and also textiles, nurses and doctors.” A textile factory with 24,000 workers was expected to join the strikes; added to these, were protests by workers at coke and cement companies in Helwan, by Suez Canal labourers and by workers at a Schweppes factory. Another account lists bus drivers, railway workers, steelworkers, teachers and sanitation workers among those taking action. Perhaps it’s time to recognise the part played by those unromantic heroes and heroines, the sanitation workers, train drivers, factory workers, labourers and service employees of Egypt. Sheila Cohen University of Hertfordshire • It appears a people’s pro-democracy regime change has all the ingredients of morphing into another Middle Eastern military dictatorship ( Reports , 14 February). What’s the betting the corporations running the US will cheer that on? Ian Lowery Watford, Hertfordshire Egypt Middle East Al-Jazeera guardian.co.uk

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