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Tuesday, August 20, 2013
EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil stocks snap 9-day rally; miner Vale down
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U.S. crime writer Elmore Leonard dead at 87
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UPDATE 2-Russia's MTS lifts margin forecast, revenue rises
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Steadier China economy offers iron ore hope, but caution stays
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Former executive from China Mobile parent under investigation
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ECB's Asmussen to check up on Greek reform progress
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Kia Cadenza beats Toyota Avalon in Consumer Reports list of large sedans
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CBOE to review batch of trades on CBOE, C2 markets
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EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil stocks snap 9-day rally; miner Vale down
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High-speed trader Infinium Capital starts talks on tie-up
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Nasdaq, CBOE says to review batch of options trades
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UPDATE 2-Medtronic shares slump on soft Q1 defibrillator sales
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UPDATE 3-Ukraine region rejects Chevron shale gas deal draft
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Detroit bankruptcy challenged on constitutional grounds
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Portrait of doomed love conquers British public's hearts
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Steadier China economy offers iron ore hope, but caution stays
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Victorian woman photographer Cameron celebrated at NY museum show
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BHP delays $14 billion Canada potash push as profit drops
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Deutsche Wohnen makes $2.3 billion bet on Berlin property with GSW bid
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Ally to raise capital, buy back stock from U.S.
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Which are the world's friendliest and unfriendliest cities?
Editor's note: "The City" is a CNN special series that profiles the sustainable urban future of five cities over five days. Watch the show every day during our special theme week starting Monday, Aug 19 on "World Business Today" at 1300 GMT and "Connect The World" at 2000 GMT.
(CNN) -- The United States, land of freedom and opportunity, is also the land of scowling faces and folded arms, according to a new poll.
Travel magazine Conde Nast Traveler has unveiled the results of its annual readers' choice survey.
More than 46,000 readers gave their opinions last year on everything from favorite airlines to best hotels and friendliest and unfriendliest cities.
It's the latter category that might cause the most surprises, with U.S. cities dominating the "unfriendly" list.
Newark, New Jersey, is the unfriendliest city in the world according to the survey.
"Newark is best known for being the site of an airport near New York, and for many of our readers, that's the only reason to stop there," says Conde Nast Traveler.
In total, five U.S. cities were voted into the top 10 unfriendly cities list and eight made the top 20.
Oakland, California (third), "has an image problem and a split personality" according to a reader who answered the survey.
New Haven, Connecticut (seventh), home of Yale University, is the city of "rude, unfriendly folks;" Detroit (eighth) was called the "armpit of the world" by one reader and Atlantic City, New Jersey (ninth), was dismissed as a "pale shadow of Las Vegas."
Other cities in the list include Islamabad in Pakistan (second least friendly), Luanda in Angola (fourth), Kuwait City (fifth) Lome in Togo (sixth) and Tangier in Morocco (tenth).
What do you think? Tell us about your own friendly or unfriendly travel experiences in the comments section below.
Conde Nast Traveler stresses that its rankings are inspired by factors including location, political perception, size and language barriers, and don't necessarily correspond to rude behavior of locals.
But enough badmouthing.
The survey also announces the friendliest cities in the world.
Florianopolis, the island city in Brazil, is the world's friendliest city according to the poll.
Hobart in Tasmania followed in second place and Thimpu in Bhutan wrapped up the top three.
One U.S. city made it into the top 10 friendliest cities -- Charleston, South Carolina.
Standing fifth in the global list, Charleston was also voted the friendliest city in the United States in a previous poll.
The world's unfriendliest cities
20. Caracas, Venezuela
19. Bethlehem, Palestine
18. Casablanca, Morocco
17. Wilmington, Delaware
16. Moscow
15. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
14. Shenzhen, China
13. Albany, New York
12. Los Angeles
11. Guangzhou, China
10. Tangier, Morocco
9. Atlantic City, New Jersey
8. Detroit
7. New Haven, Connecticut
6. Lome, Togo
5. Kuwait City
4. Luanda, Angola
3. Oakland, California
2. Islamabad, Pakistan
1. Newark, New Jersey
The world's friendliest cities
20. Cork, Ireland
20. Asheville, North Carolina
18. Edinburgh, Scotland
16.Savannah, Georgia
16. Auckland, New Zealand
14. Victoria, British Columbia
14. Galena, Illinois
13. Dublin, Ireland
12. Christchurch, New Zealand
11. Chiang Mai, Thailand
9. Ubud, Bali, Indonesia
9. Kilkenny, Ireland
8. Mandalay, Myanmar
6. Margaret River, Australia
6. Paro, Bhutan
5. Charleston, South Carolina
4. Queenstown, New Zealand
3. Thimpu, Bhutan
2. Hobart, Tasmania
1. Florianopolis, Brazil
Also on CNN: 20 biggest travel mistakes
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One thing you'd change in your city
"The City" is a CNN special series that profiles the sustainable urban future of five cities over five days. Watch the show every day during our special theme week starting Monday, Aug 19 on "World Business Today" at 1300 GMT and "Connect The World" at 2000 GMT.
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Victorian woman photographer Cameron celebrated at NY museum show
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Floods leave at least 107 dead in China
Beijing (CNN) -- Flooding in China's north and south caused by heavy rain has left at least 107 dead and inundated roads and farmland, the government and state media said.
Three provinces in China's northeast bore the brunt of the floods with 85 dead and 105 missing in Heilongjiang, Jilin and Liaoning as of 4pm on Monday, the government said.
A total of 37 million residents in that region were affected by flood waters, Xinhua said, which were described by a local newspaper as the worst in 50 years in Liaoning province.
More than 787,000 hectares of farmland in the region, a major grain growing area, were flooded and pictures showed roads in many urban areas looking more like rivers.
Xinhua said that the People's Liberation Army had been mobilized to carry out rescue work.
At the opposite end of the country, rainfall in the wake of Typhoon Utor, which made landfall in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong last week, has killed 22 people and caused 8.6 billion yuan ($1.4 billion) of damage there.
Dykes ruptured near Shantou in eastern Guangdong flooding low-lying homes and killing 10.
Some internet users criticized the official response to the floods.
"Government rescue is too slow. They send troops overseas for military exercise, but don't care about its own people," said a user of the Twitter-like Sina Weibo with the name @Lingchenliangdinan.
"Our farmland is completely flooded. The past year's effort is all gone," said another user @WoxiaotarenkanbuchuanL.
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