Gap scraps new logo after outcry

Gap storeCustomers called for a return to the blue box logo

US clothes retailer Gap has scrapped a new logo just one week after its introduction following an “outpouring of comments” online.

The original logo, which has used been used for more than 20 years, has a blue box with “GAP” written in white inside.

The new logo on the website had “Gap” written in black against a light background with a small blue square laid over the top of the letter “p”.

But critics attacked the rebranding on social networks and online forums.

More than 2,000 comments were posted on the company’s Facebook page on the issue, with many demanding the return of the traditional logo.

In a statement released on the Gap website, Mark Hansen, president of Gap Brand North America, said the company’s customers always came first.

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“We’ve been listening to and watching all of the comments this past week. We heard them say over and over again they are passionate about our blue box logo, and they want it back.

“So we’ve made the decision to do just that – we will bring it back across all channels.”

He added that it was clear the retailer “did not go about this in the right way” and “missed the opportunity to engage with the online community”.

“There may be a time to evolve our logo, but if and when that time comes, we’ll handle it in a different way,” he said.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Decision over tuition fees is due

University graduates on graduation day Effectively interest-free student loans may no longer be available

Education and Learning Minister Sir Reg Empey is to make a statement on Tuesday morning about the possibility of increasing tuition fees.

A report for England and Wales recommended colleges should set their own prices.

A DEL report is understood to favour keeping the current fees and improving maintenance grants.

Higher education and student support are devolved issues which mean their levels can be set locally.

However, the fees are collected by HMRC and taxation is not a devolved power, therefore it is likely any changes in England could be mirrored in Northern Ireland.

The Department of Employment and Learning (DEL) said it will have to consider the Browne review of higher education, which was published on Tuesday before it launches a public consultation on tuition fees.

In his report Lord Browne recommended that universities should no longer be restricted in how much they can charge in tuition fees.

UK TUITION FEESEngland, Wales, Northern Ireland: Max £3,290 paScotland: Free to Scottish and EU students, £1,820 pa to other UK (£2,895 for medicine)Students from elsewhere in the EU pay the same as those locallyStudents from outside the EU pay whatever the university charges

Instead it proposes a free market in fees – setting out models of charges up to £12,000 a year for a degree course.

However, Lord Browne’s review makes clear that universities that charge more than £6,000 a year would lose a proportion of the fee to help cover the cost of student borrowing.

The report also suggests that only the least well-off graduates should continue to enjoy subsidised loans

Students would pay nothing up front and only begin repaying when their earnings reach £21,000 a year.

Lord Browne estimates that only 40 % of the top earners will pay back all the money the government has paid on their behalf.

Sir Reg has hinted that the financial crisis could affect any moves to be more generous to students.

“This is a devolved matter, we have to look at our own circumstances,” Sir Reg said.

“The Executive has to prioritise resources and my department can only spend resources if we get them.

Students in Northern Ireland pay around £3,300 a year in tuition fees – that figure could double by 2012, and in the future students could face unlimited fees.

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Kashmir separatist calls protest

Indian police arrest Syed Ali Shah Geelani (arms raised) in Srinagar on 8 September 2010Syed Ali Shah Geelani (arms raised) has long been a thorn in the side of the Indian Kashmir authorities

Authorities in Indian-administered Kashmir have imposed a day-long curfew in the Muslim-dominated valley to foil a protest march called by a hardline separatist group.

The group, led by Syed Ali Shah Geelani, has urged people to march to his residence in Srinagar.

Mr Geelani, who is under house arrest, has been leading protests against Indian rule.

More than 100 civilians have been killed since June in protests.

The authorities say the curfew has been imposed to avoid a situation in which police would have to open fire.

Last month, the federal government announced measures to address surging violence in the valley.

They included compensation for families of those killed during recent clashes between pro-separatists and Indian security forces.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Students to face unlimited fees

Students in a lectureUniversities should no longer face limits on how much they should charge, says Lord Browne’s report

Universities in England should be able to charge unlimited fees, a major review of university funding has recommended.

Lord Browne’s review calls for the £3,290 cap on fees, which students borrow in loans, to be scrapped.

Instead it proposes a free market in fees – setting out models of charges up to £12,000 a year for a degree course.

The UCU lecturers’ union said the plan was “the final nail in the coffin for affordable higher education”.

However, Lord Browne’s review makes clear that universities that charge more than £6,000 a year would lose a proportion of the fee to help cover the cost of student borrowing.

Ministers will now have to the proposals for reforming university funding – with the threat of a Liberal Democrat backbench rebellion.

Increasing fees would mean a direct reversal of personal pledges made at the election by Liberal Democrat MPs – and will cause deep political difficulties for the coalition government.

The Liberal Democrats own youth section has branded the fee rise as a “disaster”.

The far-reaching proposals set out a system in which much of the cost of university places would be transferred from the taxpayer to the student.

It seeks to balance much higher charges with support for applicants from poorer families.

This more competitive market would also mean that for the first time universities could go out of business, says the report.

Universities must compete over students, fee levels and against new providers, says Lord Browne. “If they fail… they might ultimately close or be taken over.”

Lord Browne proposes that the government would guarantee to underwrite fees up to £6,000 per year – but universities would be allowed to charge any amount above that.

“There is no robust way of identifying the right maximum level,” says Lord Browne.

Universities would have to pay an increasing “levy” on fees above £6,000 – but even when charging £12,000, universities will be able to keep almost three quarters of the fee.

As now, students would not have to pay fees up-front, but would receive a loan.

But they would not have to start repaying it until their earnings reached £21,000 per year, up from the current level of £15,000.

Lord BrowneLord Browne outlines a competitive system in which universities could be taken over or shut down

The report recommends that students should pay higher interest rates on these loans, set at the government’s rate of borrowing – currently 2.2% – plus inflation.

All students will be able to borrow £3,750 per year – and young people from families earning less than £25,000 will receive a further £3,250.

There have been warnings that middle-income families will face a particular financial squeeze from such a fee hike.

“There is a feeling that the rich can afford it – and the poor will quite rightly be protected – but people in the middle could find themselves really penalised,” says Justine Roberts of the Mumsnet website.

There are also radical proposals to shake-up how higher education is administered.

Four separate funding bodies and regulators – including the higher education funding council and the fair access watchdog – should be merged into a single Higher Education Council, says the report.

“There is a feeling that the rich can afford it – and the poor will quite rightly be protected – but people in the middle could find themselves really penalised”

Justine Roberts Mumsnet

This would take over responsibility for standards, strategic subjects, access for poorer students and resolving disputes with students.

There are also steps to ensure the quality of degree courses.

University lecturers should be required to have teaching qualifications – and students should reach a minimum threshold of qualifications before receiving student loans.

This summer saw an unprecedented demand for places – with thousands of well-qualified students missing out on places.

The report calls for the number of places to be expanded by 10% over three years.

But it calls for an end to across-the-board funding for more places – and says that extra places should be in response to demand.

There are also suggestions for a more diverse university system, which would encourage the introduction of new providers and different ways of studying.

Part-time students and those studying in private universities would be able to claim student support.

Paul Marshall, head of the 1994 Group of research-intensive universities, welcomed the review as “the first progressive step” towards increasing funding for universities and “targeting student support more effectively at those in most need”.

CURRENT UK TUITION FEESEngland, Wales, Northern Ireland: Max £3,290 paScotland: Free to Scottish and EU students, £1,820 pa to other UK (£2,895 for medicine)Students from elsewhere in the EU pay the same as those locallyStudents from outside the EU pay whatever the university chargesTuition fees: Across the UK

But the Million+ group of new universities says it will deter poorer students.

“Fees at this level – even if they are backed by state-funded fee loans – will undoubtedly mean that some students who would have gone to university will decide not to go,” said chief executive, Pam Tatlow.

The National Union of Students said students would be left with “crippling levels of debt and many universities face utter devastation as a result of horrific cuts”.

“To make the next generation pick up the bill for cuts and force students to pay even more for less would be both unsustainable and unjust.”

Elsewhere in the UK, Scottish students studying in Scotland do not have to pay any fees. In Northern Ireland and Wales, fees are charged up to a maximum of £3,290.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘No escape’

Elderly people in care homeAll services are under the microscope as cuts loom

Council jobs and local services are facing severe cutbacks in the government’s Comprehensive Spending Review – the details of which are due to be announced on 20 October.

How will they decide what should be saved and what should be sacrificed?

At the imposing headquarters of Lincolnshire County Council, one of the biggest in the country, their coping strategy is under discussion.

A dozen men and women are gathered expectantly round a boardroom table. They are here for a briefing on the impact of the spending review.

As the leading councillors and executives for this local authority, they are responsible for deciding which services in the county will be cut, and by how much.

Lincolnshire County Council is already halfway through a cost reduction programme designed to save £100m. But chief executive Tony McCardle is uncompromising – further cutbacks are inevitable.

“It does look like another £60m to £80m of savings now need to be found,” he tells his colleagues around the table.

“There’s no escaping the fact that some services we provide will have to be turned off, some others will have to be scaled down and indeed you may want to look at how some other services are provided, as to whether or not we go on providing them ourselves or we seek some alternative method of having them provided within Lincolnshire.”

Local authorities are heavily dependent on central government for most their income. Their annual grant from Westminster is worth about £75bn.

But that sum is going to be reduced sharply over the next four years, as the government tightens the purse strings.

In Lincolnshire they expect the cut in the central grant to be at least 25%. Once the councillors here find out the precise figure, they will review their own budgets.

“You can’t take a quarter of your budget away and pretend you can provide the same level of service”

Martin Hill Council leader

Other than money which is ring-fenced for a particular use – like schools – nothing will be off-limits.

All services, from highways to social care, will be under the microscope to see whether they can be delivered more cheaply, or by outside contractors, or whether they are needed at all.

One saving under consideration includes the provision of sheltered accommodation, with the council considering replacing wardens at every site with a duty warden covering a number of facilities.

Already affected by the looming cutbacks is Linelands Care Home, just outside Lincoln.

Elderly patients, many of whom have dementia or are recovering from operations, come to Linelands for the day, for rehabilitation or to socialise and give their carers a break.

The number of over-80s in Lincolnshire is set to double within 15 years.

Yet this home, along with seven others run by the county council, is earmarked for closure. Care worker and union rep Phyl Lyn says her patients are upset at the prospect.

“They’re very worried,” she says. “It’s a service that’s second to none. They don’t want to lose it. It’s all about choice and unfortunately the council are taking away that choice.”

When asked whether people would consider day care centres like Linelands to be a truly frontline service, she insists it is.

Spending review branding

A special BBC News season examining the approaching cuts to public sector spending

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“And it’s keeping vulnerable adults at home for a lot longer. By people receiving day care, short-term care and intermediate care, you’re saving a lot of money for the government.

“When people come out to day care they’re being stimulated, they’re meeting friends, they just enjoy it.”

But this solidly Conservative county council sees things differently.

Leader Martin Hill says people have to realise that government, whether local or national, can’t do anything and everything any more.

“You can’t take a quarter of your budget away and pretend you can provide the same level of service. Yes, there will be some reduction in services or increased charges and that’s the debate we’re going to have with ourselves and make sure we involve the public as well.”

Closures like the Linelands Care Home are just the start of a four-year process.

The councillors in Lincoln, as in local authorities up and down the UK, will be considering their cuts in the run-up to Christmas, before agreeing a formal budget next February.

For those who depend on their services, it promises to be a hard winter and a cold spring.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Newspaper review

Papers

New revelations about the death of kidnapped British aid worker Linda Norgrove in Afghanistan during a rescue attempt feature heavily in the papers.

“A tragic failure” is how the Daily Mail describes it. US and British officials are investigating whether she may have been killed by a US grenade.

On its front page, the paper asks: “Why did Linda have to die”?

“Killed on Helmet Cam” is the Daily Mirror’s headline. It says a US soldier was caught on film lobbing the grenade.

But the Express says responsibility for the 36-year-old’s death rests squarely with those who took her hostage.

The Times says David Cameron seemed “absorbed by tragedy”, and asks if the outcome might have been different if British forces had had a greater role.

Writing in the Daily Mirror, the former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, Colonel Richard Kemp, says we will never know.

But he says that, however she died, the Taliban is to blame.

Former SAS soldier Andy McNab, writing in the Sun, says the rescue attempt was the right thing to do as those holding Miss Norgrove were likely to kill her.

The Financial Times says the conclusion of Sir Philip Green’s review of government spending – that an “upsetting” amount of public money is wasted – is hard to argue with.

But it says solutions that work in Sir Philip’s Arcadia Group do not always work in the public sector – because accountability can impose inefficiencies.

The Independent says there is much to praise in the review but warns procurement savings are not a “pain-free” way to cut spending as they tend to be bad news for all but the largest suppliers.

Several papers, including the Guardian, highlight a study by scientists at Bristol University which has found what many dog-lovers have always suspected.

Its study of 24 animals at dog homes in the UK concluded that some canine companions are optimistic “bowl-half-full types”, while others are better described as “bowl-half-empty”.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Asian military ties warm in Hanoi

A Chinese ship launches a missile during a military exercise in the South China Sea on 29 July 2010Both China and the US have increased naval drills in the Asian region

US Defence Secretary Robert Gates has accepted an invitation to visit China and Australian officials said military ties with Vietnam have improved.

The progress in regional defence links is taking place as part of a major Asian security meeting under way in the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi.

Tensions have risen this year around China’s claims to seas in the north and south of the region.

Transnational crime and natural disasters are also on the agenda.

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“This meeting is a new and important step forward in Asean’s defence cooperation,” said Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, whose country holds the current chairmanship of the grouping.

“China’s defence development is not aimed to challenge or threaten anyone, but to ensure its security and promote international and regional peace and stability,” China’s Defence Minister General Liang Guanglie said.

“China pursues a defence policy that is defensive in nature,” he said, endorsing the aims of the new defence ministers’ forum.

The BBC’s South East Asia correspondent Rachel Harvey says China in particularly has been increasingly willing to flex its muscles in ways that many other delegates find distinctly unnerving.

But even before the formal meeting got underway in Hanoi, bilateral discussions appeared to have eased some tensions.

Both the US and Japan sought to improve fractious ties with China on Monday, the first day of talks.

Asean Defence “plus 8” talksAsean members: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and VietnamAlso attending the talks: Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand, Russia and the United States.

Military ties between China and the US had been broken off by Beijing eight months ago in protest at US arms sales to Taiwan, and since then, the US had aligned itself with Asean efforts to find a multilateral solution to competing maritime claims.

Mr Gates said that a military dialogue between the two powers was too important to be derailed by political issues.

“The dialogue between the two militaries ought to be sustainable regardless of the ups and downs in the relationship,” Mr Gates told reporters travelling with him.

“Having greater clarity and understanding of each other is essential to preventing mistrust, miscalculations and mistakes,” he said.

He hinted the fraught topic of China’s claim to the South China Sea could be discussed today: “I think that it’s clearly on everybody’s mind and falls within the rubric of maritime security,” he said.

Some Asean ministers have said sensitive topics should be avoided at this first ever meeting of the region’s defence ministers, although analysts say this approach is too limited.

“Its utility will be called into question if it doesn’t address some of the hard security issues in Asia-Pacific, like the Korean peninsula, like the South China Sea,” said Ian Storey, a regional security analyst at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore.

Map

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.