Title: Iran's president calls for dialogue
1Iran's president calls for dialogue
2Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who is
considered a moderate, made his case Thursday to
the American people and the world for "a
constructive approach" to contentious issues
including his nation's nuclear program, arguing
that failing to engage "leads to everyone's
loss. "We must work together to end the
unhealthy rivalries and interferences that fuel
violence and drive us apart," Rouhani wrote in an
op-ed published Thursday evening on the
Washington Post's website. Chief among those
issues, for Iran, is its nuclear program. Iranian
officials have insisted its aim is peaceful and
for energy purposes only, but skeptical U.S.,
Israeli and other officials accuse Tehran (the
capital and government center of Iran) of working
to develop nuclear weapons. Iran's lack of
openness on the issue and its lack of cooperation
with international nuclear authorities, have led
to increased tensions in the region. Secretary of
State John Kerry -- also speaking in Washington
-- characterized some of the new Iranian
president's remarks as "very positive. Yet he
offered his compliment with a caveat "Everything
needs to be put to the test, and we'll see where
we go."
3In Other News
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possibility. And federal agencies have been
instructed to make plans for one just in case.
The House on Friday will vote on a short-term
government funding bill that will include a
provision to defund Obamacare. That provision is
a no-go for Senate Democrats and President Obama.
If they can't work out a compromise, many
functions of the federal government will be shut
down indefinitely on Oct. 1. Besides causing
inconvenience and delays, a shutdown could have
larger consequences. A long, broad shutdown could
weaken an already modest economic recovery.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke noted that
"a government shutdown and, perhaps even more so,
a failure to raise the debt limit could have very
serious consequences for the financial markets
and for the economy." Many, if not most, federal
government offices, programs, museums and parks
would be shut down. Hundreds of thousands of
federal workers would be furloughed without pay. - Joy Covey, who was Amazon.com's CFO in its
startup days and guided the company through its
IPO, died Wednesday in a bicycle accident in
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while cycling on Skyline Boulevard in the
mountains of San Mateo County. - The new iPhones went on sale in the U.S., China
and seven other countries Friday, and throngs of
people lined up around the world to be among the
first to snag one. For the first time, Apple
(AAPL, Fortune 500) is offering two new iPhones
the flagship 5S and the cheaper, plastic iPhone
5C. - Take-Two launched the latest edition of its Grand
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worldwide, breaking a company record.