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<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xml:lang="en"><title>News on Senegal</title><link href="http://factsabouth1n1.com/topic/senegal" rel="alternate"></link><id>http://factsabouth1n1.com/topic/senegal</id><updated>2011-01-02T15:00:17Z</updated><entry><title>Stanford California Basketball</title><link href="http://factsabouth1n1.com/photo/stanford-california-basketball-2405169p" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2011-01-02T15:00:17Z</updated><author><name>AP News</name></author><id>tag:factsabouth1n1.com,2011-01-02:/photo/stanford-california-basketball-2405169p/</id><summary type="html">&lt;a title="Stanford Cardinal (Women's Basketball)" href="/topic/Stanford+Cardinal+(Women's+Basketball)" &gt;Stanford&lt;/a&gt;'s &lt;a title="Sarah Boothe" href="/topic/Sarah+Boothe" &gt;Sarah Boothe&lt;/a&gt;, right, struggles for the ball with &lt;a title="California" href="/topic/California" &gt;California&lt;/a&gt;'s Rama N'diaye of &lt;a title="Senegal" href="/topic/Senegal" &gt;Senegal&lt;/a&gt;, during the first half of an &lt;a title="National Collegiate Athletic Association" href="/topic/National+Collegiate+Athletic+Association" &gt;NCAA...</summary><category term="Basketball"></category><category term="College Basketball"></category><category term="College Athletics"></category><category term="United States"></category><category term="California"></category><category term="Africa"></category><category term="Berkeley (California)"></category><category term="National Collegiate Athletic Association"></category><category term="Senegal"></category><category term="West Africa"></category><category term="Sarah Boothe"></category><category term="Stanford Cardinal (Women's Basketball)"></category></entry><entry><title>Senegal Adopting Haiti</title><link href="http://factsabouth1n1.com/photo/senegal-adopting-haiti-2363752p" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-10-14T04:01:43Z</updated><author><name>AP News</name></author><id>tag:factsabouth1n1.com,2010-10-14:/photo/senegal-adopting-haiti-2363752p/</id><summary type="html">&lt;a title="Senegal" href="/topic/Senegal" &gt;Senegalese&lt;/a&gt; soldiers control a crowd at a ceremony to welcome a group of Haitian students to &lt;a title="Dakar" href="/topic/Dakar" &gt;Dakar&lt;/a&gt;, Senegal Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Senegal is one of the poorest countries in the world and its GDP is only marginally higher than &lt;a title="Haiti" href="/topic/Haiti" &gt;Haiti&lt;/a&gt;'s, but that didn't stop the government from going ahead with a plan to offer a new home to 163 victims of Haiti's devastating quake who...</summary><category term="Economies"></category><category term="Accidents and Disasters"></category><category term="Natural Disasters"></category><category term="Earthquakes"></category><category term="Africa"></category><category term="Caribbean"></category><category term="Senegal"></category><category term="West Africa"></category><category term="Haiti"></category><category term="Dakar"></category><category term="Latin American Economy"></category><category term="Rebecca Blackwell"></category><category term="Haiti Earthquake"></category></entry><entry><title>Senegal Haiti</title><link href="http://factsabouth1n1.com/photo/senegal-haiti-2363743p" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-10-14T04:01:32Z</updated><author><name>AP News</name></author><id>tag:factsabouth1n1.com,2010-10-14:/photo/senegal-haiti-2363743p/</id><summary type="html">&lt;a title="Abdoulaye Wade" href="/topic/Abdoulaye+Wade" &gt;Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade&lt;/a&gt;, second right, poses for a picture with Haitian students, wearing tee-shirts reading 'Thank you President Wade' at a ceremony welcoming the students to &lt;a title="Dakar" href="/topic/Dakar" &gt;Dakar&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a title="Senegal" href="/topic/Senegal" &gt;Senegal&lt;/a&gt; Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010. Senegal is one of the poorest countries in the world and its GDP is only marginally higher than &lt;a title="Haiti" href="/top...</summary><category term="Economies"></category><category term="Politics"></category><category term="World Politics"></category><category term="African Politics"></category><category term="Accidents and Disasters"></category><category term="Natural Disasters"></category><category term="Earthquakes"></category><category term="Africa"></category><category term="Caribbean"></category><category term="Senegal"></category><category term="West Africa"></category><category term="Haiti"></category><category term="Abdoulaye Wade"></category><category term="Dakar"></category><category term="Latin American Economy"></category><category term="Rebecca Blackwell"></category><category term="Haiti Earthquake"></category></entry><entry><title>Senegal Female Mechanics</title><link href="http://factsabouth1n1.com/photo/senegal-female-mechanics-2354552p" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-09-30T06:15:57Z</updated><author><name>AP News</name></author><id>tag:factsabouth1n1.com,2010-09-30:/photo/senegal-female-mechanics-2354552p/</id><summary type="html">In this Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2010 photo, female mechanic Fatou Sylla, center, works on a car with apprentice mechanic Abdou Ndiaye at Fatou-Fatou Garage, the car repair shop she owns with her cousin Fatou Kamara in &lt;a title="Dakar" href="/topic/Dakar" &gt;Dakar&lt;/a&gt;, &lt;a title="Senegal" href="/topic/Senegal" &gt;Senegal&lt;/a&gt;.Fatou Sylla is used to being laughed at. She owns her own car repair shop with her cousin in a country where few women work outside the home and fewer still fix car engines. Since open...</summary><category term="Entertainment"></category><category term="Celebrity News"></category><category term="Africa"></category><category term="Senegal"></category><category term="West Africa"></category><category term="Dakar"></category><category term="Rebecca Blackwell"></category></entry><entry><title>Senegal Black Eyed Peas</title><link href="http://factsabouth1n1.com/photo/senegal-black-eyed-peas-2351526p" rel="alternate"></link><updated>2010-09-24T13:30:36Z</updated><author><name>AP News</name></author><id>tag:factsabouth1n1.com,2010-09-24:/photo/senegal-black-eyed-peas-2351526p/</id><summary type="html">&lt;a title="Senegal" href="/topic/Senegal" &gt;Senegalese&lt;/a&gt; women display foods prepared with flour made from black-eyed peas, in &lt;a title="Dakar" href="/topic/Dakar" &gt;Dakar&lt;/a&gt;, Senegal Friday, Sept. 24, 2010. To address its increasingly insecure food situation, Senegal is looking to a crop from its past, the cowpea, known more commonly in the &lt;a title="United States" href="/topic/United+States" &gt;U.S.&lt;/a&gt; as the black-eyed pea. Small businesses are transforming local cowpeas into cowpea flour and ...</summary><category term="Small Business"></category><category term="Food and Cooking"></category><category term="African and Middle Eastern Food and Cooking"></category><category term="United States"></category><category term="Africa"></category><category term="Senegal"></category><category term="West Africa"></category><category term="Dakar"></category><category term="Rebecca Blackwell"></category><category term="Ethnic and Regional Cuisines"></category></entry></feed>
