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rsation about how to get China to 
join the United States in putting pressure on Pyongyang, according to a 
senior administration official who was present. The debate encapsulates 
America's struggle to come up with a strategy   based on 
sticks, carrots or a combination of both    to convince 
China to police its own backyard.As Kerry heads to East Asia for 
his first time as America's top diplomat, some progress has been made 
in convincing Beijing, North Korea's biggest benefactor, to start getting 
tough with its neighbor. The question is whether it will make a 
difference.North Korea's government agency said Thursday that it has "powerful 
striking means" on standby for a launch, amid speculation in Seoul and 
Washington that North Korea will test-fire a mid-range missile designed 
to reach the U.S. territory of Guam in the Pacific Ocean. It 
was the latest warning from the North, which launched a long-range rocket 
in December and conducted an underground nuclear test in February.For years, 
Washington has been putting its hopes in Beijing to rein in the 
provocative behavior and combative rhetoric from North Korea. China has 
more leverage over the North than any other country, having massively boosted 
trade ties with the isolated regime in recent years and maintaining close 
military relations.But the U.S. has been frustrated by the reaction from 
a government that in many ways has different priorities. China, analysts 
and officials often say, f
A Home Depot store is seen in New York, August 18, 2008. 
Analysts are expecting Home Depot to report a second-quarter profit of 61 
cents a share on Tuesday, compared with 77 cents a year earlier, 
according to Reuters Estimates. The industry leader has said per-share earnings 
could fall as much as 24 percent this year.   REUTERS/Shannon 
Stapleton (UNITED STATES)ReutersA man in a suburban Los Angeles Home Depot 
Wednesday evening used saws normally used to slice sheet rock to cut 
both his arms down to the bone in front of several horrified 
customers, police said.The man, who was not immediately identified, suffered 
severe injuries. He was found in a pool of blood in the 
store's tool section. He had a slight pulse but was passing out 
as help arrived."People just couldn't believe it," Cpl. Rudy Lopez, with 
West Covina Police Department, told KNBC-TV. "He walked into the saw area, 
picked up a couple of saws in the saw area and started 
cutting both of his arms."An off-duty paramedic from the Pasadena Fire Department 
had been shopping nearby and hurried to the scene.- Cpl. Rudy Lopez, 
with West Covina Police Department"The officers had already found the man 
down, face down, blood all over the store, multiple aisles, and the 
whole store is in chaos," the paramedic, Art Hurtado, told KNBC-TV.Hurtado 
thought the man was dead but when he checked he found breath 
and a slight pulse and said he thought to himself, "I can 
save this guy."With help fro
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