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FILE - In this March 29, 2012 file photo, Mireia Arnau, 39, 
reacts behind the broken glass of her shop stormed by demonstrators during 
clashes with the police at the general strike in Barcelona. In a 
statement released Friday April 19, 2013, this photo by Associated Press 
photographer Emilio Morenatti won the Ortega y Gasset award by Spains leading 
newspaper El Pais, saying Morenatti captures "terrible emotion in the store 
worker terrified at the damage caused by a violent street protest, By 
observing it one feels the fear of the clerk, the jury says. 
(AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti, File)The Associated PressMADRID  An Associated 
Press photographer has won a prestigious Spanish journalism award for his 
image of a store worker terrified by a violent street protest, a 
photograph that illustrates the effects of the country's financial crisis.Emilio 
Morenatti, who has for almost a decade covered war zones from Afghanistan 
and Pakistan to the Middle East, has been awarded the 2013 Ortega 
y Gasset award by Spain's leading newspaper El Pais.In a statement released 
Friday, the newspaper said Morenatti, 44, captures "terrible emotion" in 
his photograph taken in the northeastern city of Barcelona during a general 
strike in 2012."Looking at it, one feels the fear of the clerk," 
the jury says. The award carries a prize of 15,000 euros ($19,580).Morenatti 
was seriously injured in a 2009 accident in Afghanistan.
The House has passed legislation aimed at helping businesses protect their 
networks against sophisticated foreign hackers. But with a White House veto 
threat and no clear path in the Senate, the bill -- and 
the companies that support it -- are in limbo.Under the legislation, enterprises 
and the federal government could share technical data without worrying about 
anti-trust or classification laws. The bill also would grant businesses 
legal immunity if hacked so long as they acted in good faith 
to protect their networks.Civil liberties groups and privacy advocates fought 
against the House measure because they say it would leave Americans vulnerable 
to spying by military intelligence agencies. While not named in the bill, 
the National Security Agency would likely take a central role in analyzing 
threat data.
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