Monday, October 31, 2011

ICC fears son of Libya's Gaddafi may flee justice (Reuters)

TRIPOLI/BEIJING (Reuters) ? The International Criminal Court said on Saturday that Libya's Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was in contact via intermediaries about surrendering for trial, but it also had information mercenaries were trying to spirit him to a friendly African nation.

U.S. military and government representatives held security talks in neighboring Niger with local officials in Agadez, which has been a way station for other Libyan fugitives, including another son of Muammar Gaddafi, Saadi. A Reuters reporter saw a U.S. military plane at Agadez airport.

A top Agadez regional official declined to say what the talks with the Americans were about, but spoke of escape plans by Saif al-Islam and former Libyan intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi, both wanted by the ICC for crimes against humanity.

"Senussi is being extricated from Mali toward a country that is a non-signatory to the (ICC) convention. I am certain that they will both (Senussi and Saif al-Islam) be extricated by plane, one from Mali the other from Niger," said the official, who asked not to be named.

He said there were at least 10 airstrips in the north of Niger near the Libyan border that could be used to whisk Saif al-Islam out of the country.

However, a member of parliament from northern Mali, Ibrahim Assaleh Ag Mohamed, denied Senussi or Saif al-Islam were in his country and said they would not be accepted if they tried to enter.

The arrival of the U.S. delegation followed remarks by Mohamed Anako, president of Agadez region, who said he would give Saif al-Islam refuge. "Libya and Niger are brother countries and cousins ... so we will welcome him in," he said.

The ICC has warned Saif al-Islam, 39, apparently anxious not to be captured by Libyan interim government forces in whose hands his father Muammar Gaddafi was killed last week, that it could order a mid-air interception if he tried to flee by plane from his Sahara desert hideout for a safe haven.

INDIRECT CONTACTS

The ICC's comments offered some corroboration of reports from Tripoli's National Transitional Council (NTC) leaders and African neighbors that he has taken refuge with Tuareg nomads in the borderlands between Libya and Niger.

"There are some people connected with him that are in touch with people connected with us ... it's through intermediaries," ICC Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo told Reuters in an interview during a visit to Beijing.

"We have some information that there is a mercenary group trying to help him to move to a different country, so we are trying to prevent this activity," said Moreno-Ocampo.

"We are also working with some states to see if we can disrupt this attempt. Some of them are South Africans allegedly."

Moreno-Ocampo said the ICC was not making any deal with Saif al-Islam but was explaining through the contacts that he had to face trial because he had been indicted for war crimes. "He says he is innocent," said the prosecutor.

However, surrender is only one option for Saif al-Islam.

The Gaddafis befriended desert tribes in Niger, Mali and other poor former French colonies in West Africa. Other African countries received Libyan largesse during the 42-year rule of Gaddafi, a self-styled African "king of kings."

France, a backer of February's revolt against Gaddafi, reminded African states of their obligations to hand Saif al-Islam over to the international court.

"We don't care whether he goes on foot, by plane, by boat, by car or on a camel, the only thing that matters is that he belongs in the ICC," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero.

Niger, Mali, Chad and Burkina Faso, a swathe of arid states to the south of Libya, are all signatories to the treaty that set up the ICC. Algeria, which took in Saif al-Islam's mother, sister, brother Hannibal and half-brother Mohammed, is not a signatory. Nor is Sudan or Zimbabwe.

AFRICAN MERCENARIES

As well as enjoying protection from Tuareg allies who traditionally provided close security for the Gaddafis, Saif al-Islam may be in the company of mercenaries from elsewhere in Africa, including possibly South Africa, NTC officials say.

A South African newspaper, in an unconfirmed report, said South African mercenaries were working to fly him out.

A bodyguard who saw Saif al-Islam as he fled last week from one of the last pro-Gaddafi bastions near Tripoli told Reuters that he seemed "nervous" and "confused." He escaped even though his motorcade was hit by a NATO air strike as it left Bani Walid on October 19, the day before his father died in Sirte.

Three of Saif al-Islam's brothers were killed in the war.

The arrest or surrender of Saif al-Islam would bring a new prominence for the nine-year-old ICC, whose highest profile suspect to date is Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who remains defiantly in office, defended by many fellow Africans.

Following Gaddafi's killing, probably by fighters who filmed themselves battering and abusing him, Western allies of Libya's new leaders urged them to impose respect for human rights.

NTC leaders would like to run their own trials, but acknowledge that their writ barely runs in the deep south.

NATO countries, now winding up a mission that backed the revolt, have expressed little enthusiasm for hunting a few individuals across a vast tract of empty continent.

Saif al-Islam was once seen as a liberal reformer, architect of a rapprochement with Western states on whom his father waged proxy guerrilla wars for decades. But he responded with belligerent rhetoric after the revolt erupted in Libya.

The ICC accuses him of hiring mercenaries to carry out a plan, worked out with his father and Senussi, to kill unarmed protesters inspired by "Arab Spring" uprisings elsewhere.

Niger's government in the capital Niamey has vowed to meet its ICC commitments. But 400 miles north in a region where cross-border allegiances among Tuareg nomads often outweigh national ties, the picture looks different.

Some of the tens of thousands of people who eke out a living in the Sahara, roamed by smugglers and nomadic herders, say there would be a welcome for the younger Gaddafi.

"We are ready to hide him wherever needed," said Mouddour Barka, a resident of Agadez. "We are telling the international community to stay out of this business and our own authorities not to hand him over -- otherwise we are ready to go out on to the streets and they will have us to deal with."

A U.S. military aircraft flew 25 wounded NTC fighters out of Tripoli on Saturday for medical treatment in the United States. Britain has also taken in wounded fighters.

(Additional reporting by Sara Webb and Aaron Gray-Block in Amsterdam, Samia Nakhoul in London, Mark John in Dakar, Ibrahim Diallo in Agadez and Nathalie Prevost; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/ts_nm/us_libya

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

WSJ best-seller lists to include e-books (AP)

NEW YORK ? The Wall Street Journal has an agreement with Nielsen BookScan to publish best-seller lists that include both physical books and e-sales.

Since 2009, Nielsen has provided the journal with lists based solely on hardcover and paperbacks. The Journal and Nielsen announced Friday that four charts will debut this weekend: combined e-book and physical sales for fiction and nonfiction, and e-sales only for fiction and nonfiction. Eligible releases will include self-published books, children's books and "perennials," older works that continue to sell strongly.

It's the first time that Nielsen has compiled e-books, with Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, Apple and Google among those participating. BookScan numbers reflect around 75 percent of hardcover and paperback sales and offer a rare look at raw data from an industry known for being secretive about how much books actually sell. But the Nielsen statistics became increasingly limited as e-sales took off.

"As consumers and booksellers continue to embrace the potential of e-books, we are very happy to be working with The Wall Street Journal to produce the most accurate best-seller charts available," Jonathan Stolper, vice president & general manager of Nielsen BookScan, said in a statement. "These new charts uniquely reflect what people are really buying and reading and will most definitely advance the industry's understanding of e-book best sellers."

But the industry, and the public, will have to wait before seeing actual Nielsen numbers under the new system. The lists will feature only rankings, not copies sold. And the data will be available exclusively to the Journal.

The New York Times and USA Today also include e-sales in their weekly lists.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_en_ot/us_books_wsj_nielsen

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Climate unknown: If and when tipping points will come

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Syria's Assad: 'Earthquake' if West intervenes

Western powers risk causing an "earthquake" that would burn the Middle East if they intervene in Syria, President Bashar al-Assad said in an interview with Britain's Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

Assad's warning came ahead of Syrian government talks on Sunday with the Arab League aimed at starting a dialogue between the government and opposition and ending violence that has escalated across Syria in recent days.

In the article, billed as his first interview with Western media since the uprising began, Assad is quoted as saying that his forces made "many mistakes" in the early days of the seven-month-old uprising, but now he claims they are targeting "terrorists" only and that the fighting is decreasing.

However, activists said Syrian forces killed more than 50 civilians in the last 48 hours and one activist group said suspected army deserters killed 30 soldiers in clashes in the city of Homs and in an ambush in the northern province of Idlib on Saturday.

UN estimates put the civilian death toll at about 3,000, including almost 200 children. Since the start of protests in March, Syrian authorities have blamed the violence on gunmen they say have killed 1,100 soldiers and police.

(Note: NBC News' Richard Engel recently traveled to Syria and will report on the uprising there for the debut episode of Rock Center with Brian Williams on Monday.)

Assad's suppression of the seven-month uprising has drawn criticism from the United Nations and Arab League. Western governments have called on him to step down and imposed sanctions on Syrian oil exports and state businesses.

Western countries "are going to ratchet up the pressure, definitely", Assad told Britain's Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

"But Syria is different in every respect from Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen. The history is different. The politics is different."

"Syria is the hub now in this region. It is the fault line, and if you play with the ground you will cause an earthquake."

Military option?
NATO military intervention in Libya played a decisive role in toppling Moammar Gadhafi, the third Arab leader to be overthrown after the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt.

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Western nations have shown no appetite to repeat their Libyan operation in Syria, but demonstrators are increasingly calling for a "no-fly zone" over their country.

"Do you want to see another Afghanistan, or tens of Afghanistans?" Assad said. "Any problem in Syria will burn the whole region. If the plan is to divide Syria, that is to divide the whole region."

Since the start of protests in March, Syrian authorities have blamed the violence on foreign-backed gunmen and religious extremists they say have killed 1,100 soldiers and police.

Syria has barred most international media, making it hard to verify accounts from activists and authorities.

But the resilience of the protesters, the determination of authorities to crush dissent and the emerging armed insurgency have combined to make Syria's turmoil one of the most intractable confrontations of this year's Arab uprisings.

Assad, whose father put down an armed Muslim Brotherhood uprising in the city of Hama in 1982, killing many thousands, said the latest crisis was part of the same conflict.

"We've been fighting the Muslim Brotherhood since the 1950s and we are still fighting with them," he said.

Authorities had made "many mistakes" in the early part of the uprising, but he said the situation had now improved and that he had started implementing reform within a week of the troubles erupting in mid-March.

"The pace of reform is not too slow. The vision needs to be mature. It would take only 15 seconds to sign a law, but if it doesn't fit your society, you'll have division," he said.

Assad's opponents say that although he lifted emergency law and gave citizenship to thousands of stateless Kurds, his promises of reform ring hollow while security forces kill protesters and arrest thousands of people. They also say protests are driven by a desire for greater freedoms, not by an Islamist agenda.

'Urgent message'
Friday's shooting of demonstrators prompted Arab ministers to issue their strongest call yet on Assad to end the killing of civilians.

The Arab League's committee on the Syrian crisis sent an "urgent message to the Syrian government expressing its severe discontent over the continued killing of Syrian civilians."

A source at Syria's Foreign Ministry, quoted by state media, said the Arab League statement was "based on media lies" and urged the committee to "help restore stability in Syria instead of stirring sedition".

An Arab League ministerial group is due to meet Syrian officials on Sunday in Qatar to press for dialogue between the government and opposition.

Syria, a majority Sunni Muslim nation of 20 million people, is dominated by Assad's minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam.

Aware of potentially seismic geopolitical implications if Assad were to fall, leaders in the mostly Sunni Arab world have been cautious about criticising the Syrian president as they struggle with domestic challenges to their own rule.

Sunni ascendancy in Syria could affect Israel and shake up regional alliances. Assad strengthened ties with Shi'ite Iran while also upholding his father's policy of avoiding conflict with Israel on the occupied Golan Heights frontier.

Syria has barred most international media, making it hard to verify accounts from activists and authorities.

? 2011 msnbc.com

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45090032/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Structured Settlement : What is The Best Time to Sell ?

Structured Settlement : What is The Best Time to Sell ? is what you find in this page. You can also get recent images and videos for : Structured Settlement : What is The Best Time to Sell ?.



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? If you can not wait to obtain little, spread-out payments more than a lengthy time period as a consequence of a dire fiscal predicament or hefty health-related expenses and/or attorney charges. A lot of with the predicaments which can bring about a structured settlement may also stick the person with this kind of obligations.

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Structured Settlement Annuities

? If that you're of older age and really feel which you might not be all around lengthy adequate to get a fair level of your structured settlement. You might would like to the probability to delight in the advantages of the settlement or may well would like to safe component of it for the household right after your passing. This way you'll be able to distribute the funds as you see match as a substitute of relying on attorneys or courts.

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Verizon says 'exclusively' for the Galaxy Nexus ... But it's not exactly true

Verizon Galaxy Nexus Exclusive

So right about now everybody's freaking out over what so many feared -- and what many of us have been saying for quite a while. There's a distinct possibility that Verizon will have some sort of exclusivity on the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.

First off, it ain't entirely true. There are caveats involved here, folks. But you knew that, because you're smart and you listen to the Greatest Android Pocast in the World and have heard us say this numerous times now and don't freak out when the rest of the world does. Let's break down what a Verizon-exclusive Galaxy Nexus means, in handy list form.

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To win in 2012, McCaskill looks to lessons of 2006 (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Sen. Claire McCaskill is facing re-election with her reformer image bruised by her use of a private plane and Republican efforts to paint her as a conventional, liberal Democrat. To win re-election she'll have to channel the public face of her 2006 campaign ? that of an independent-minded, authentic Missourian bent on changing the way government works.

The question is whether she can. And McCaskill herself says she's going in to the campaign as the underdog.

In her Senate office ? it is decorated with pictures and bobble head dolls of President Harry Truman, a Missourian famous for a come-from-behind victory ? McCaskill said she has never run for statewide office as a favorite. That includes successful runs for state auditor and, in 2004, an unsuccessful run for governor.

"I've always gone in, you know, with people thinking I couldn't win," McCaskill said.

Nearly five years after her narrow victory over Sen. Jim Talent, McCaskill is taking criticism from the right, and even some from the left question her liberal credentials. Though she has sold a private plane that caused the first real political embarrassment of her time in the Senate, even supporters expect the issue to resurface. And she will run in different terrain than in 2006, when Republicans were on the retreat during the Bush administration.

In a twist on 2006, when her victory helped seal control of the Senate for Democrats, a McCaskill defeat could edge the Senate toward Republican control. The GOP needs a net gain of only four seats.

McCaskill emerged as one of the party's rising stars in 2006, and her endorsement of Barack Obama early in the Democratic nomination race in 2008 was widely credited with providing the boost that helped him win Missouri's Democratic primary. Now, with Obama under water in Missouri, Republicans are working to use her ties to Obama as an albatross. And they have likewise used her reformer rhetoric against her, saying that her problems with taxes and reimbursements on her plane show she does not practice what she preaches.

Her overall strategy hasn't changed, she said.

"I just try to be candid and forthright and honest with folks," she said during a recent interview with The Associated Press. "I know everybody in Missouri doesn't like me. I know a huge chunk of folks in Missouri can't stand me. But that's not the issue. The issue is: Are there more people in Missouri that believe I've been moderate, been independent, and represent them on the spectrum?"

McCaskill said she isn't worried about being too closely tied to Obama because he "knows I'm not a vote he can count on."

"We're friends," she said. "What would be the phoniest thing of all would be for me to all of the sudden not be his friend. I'd rather go home, not be re-elected."

The sale this week of a private plane McCaskill co-owned with her husband has quieted an issue that's festered for months. In April, McCaskill said she would "sell the damn plane" after a series of damaging revelations revolving around having reimbursed herself for its use on official and political travel. Amid criticism of the arrangement, she agreed to pay the government $88,000. Days later, she revealed she had not paid all of her taxes on the plane and paid about $320,000 in back taxes, penalties and interest to St. Louis County.

The bipartisan Senate ethics committee dismissed a Republican-filed complaint into the matter. Still, Republicans have used the plane, which was sold for a loss at $1.9 million, to try and portray McCaskill as out of touch and too big for Missouri. Lloyd Smith, the executive director of the state Republican Party, said the plane "draws attention to the fact that she's anything but middle class."

"Most people don't own a $2 million aircraft and sell it for $1.9 million," Smith said.

Some McCaskill supporters said the plane could linger as an issue.

"It depends on who she runs against ... but I think it's a challenge for her to overcome," said Steve Glorioso, a Missouri Democratic operative who has worked for McCaskill's campaigns but isn't working for her now. "It sort of raises the question of if she's going to be susceptible to a challenge that she's not the good-old country girl, down-to-earth person we once knew."

Glorioso is confident she can win out.

"Claire has always overcome controversy, going back to when she was a prosecutor. She's a tough campaigner," he said.

Heading into next year, McCaskill will benefit from a crowded Republican primary. At the moment, the Republican hopefuls ? Rep. Todd Akin, St. Louis-area businessman John Brunner and former State Treasurer Sarah Steelman ? are busy hitting each other.

McCaskill is also steadily raising a pile of campaign cash, with her $3,720,959 cash on hand nearly three times that for Akin, her closest competitor in fundraising. There is no evidence that Republican efforts to highlight her plane problems have hurt her in polls, although that could change when she has an opponent.

Meanwhile, McCaskill said her work in Washington will give her a strong resume of reform to run on. She cites as key accomplishments her work to expand whistleblower protections, her refusal to seek special spending requests, commonly called earmarks, and two pieces of legislation she wrote that became law: a bill that increased the independence of inspectors general to give them more leeway to report fraud and waste in government, and a bill that created a special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

She is most proud, though, of her work to curb what she sees as the excesses of defense contractors. She helped create a subcommittee on contracting oversight and wrote legislation creating a contractor misconduct database.

"If you look back at what we campaigned on, I think I have made a difference in terms of the way the Defense Department deals with contracting," she said. "I have had a lot of great days in this job, but my favorite thing was when someone had been to Afghanistan ... told me he heard out of the commander's mouth, `I think if we did this contract, McCaskill's team would be all over it.'"

McCaskill may have the same formula for her race in 2012 as past races, but she has sensed a change in the mood of voters. She said there's more frustration percolating now than when she ran in 2006, and a general distrust of politicians.

"What worries me the most is that people out there are so disgusted with all of us that they just say, you know, a pox on all your houses ? you're all worthless," she said. "They don't realize that perhaps people need to be discerning and realize who is really willing to compromise and take a moderate position."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_el_se/us_mccaskill

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Do Pets And Apartments Mix? | Webmaster Articles


If you happen to?re a pet proprietor who is contemplating a move to an condominium there are particular belongings you should be hold in mind. First, whether or not or not your pet shall be accepted by most landlords relies upon totally on the kind, size and personality of your pet.

Canine:

If you happen to own a big dog, condominium residing is probably not for you. Not only will accepting landlords be onerous to search out, however your canine will not be completely satisfied within the confined area of an apartment. A big canine needs room to exercise and play, neither of which is usually available in an apartment setting.

When you plan to move to an residence, make sure your canine is one that can adapt simply to this change in environment. Usually smaller, lap dogs are the best choice. Nevertheless, even smaller canines could cause problems.

If your dog barks or whines a lot you could well find yourself at odds with the landlord, in addition to with other tenants. Many times your dog solely causes a disturbance because it is lonely or bored. In case you?re gone during the day, you may sometimes alleviate these issues by hiring a pet walker to come in and provides your dog attention and exercise.

You must also understand that most residence complexes have leash laws so you?ll have to accompany your canine every time it goes outside. Since most complexes haven?t got areas where it?s secure in your canine to run free, this is as much a matter of your canine?s security as it the safety of different tenants.

Cats:

Cats are the pets of alternative for apartments. Most are usually not as socially oriented as canine and are fairly comfortable left on their own. So long as your cat has a pleasant spot to curl up and take a nap, space isn?t an issue. Greater than likely your pet is a house cat so frequent trips outdoors aren?t required.

However you should realize that some landlords don?t accept cats any more willingly than they do dogs. Some have a strict ?no pets? rule. If that is the case, don?t think about renting there. In case your pet is discovered you could be evicted and/or fined.

Different Pets:

?Pocket pets? reminiscent of fish, birds, and reptiles often do not pose a problem when it comes to renting. Nevertheless, it is best to still verify along with your potential landlord to make sure.

Normal Ideas:

Landlords who do settle for pets typically require a pet deposit. That is meant to cowl any injury your canine or cat does to the premises, in addition to extra cleansing which may be necessary whenever you go away the apartment.

For those who?re trying to find apartments that accept pets, there are lots of locations to go for help. You may discover numerous websites and message boards dedicated to this subject. You can also enlist the assistance of an area realtor or relocation specialist who often have lists of ?pet-pleasant? apartments. Simply ensure you?re clear on the policy relating to pets earlier than you sign any rental agreement.

In the event you take note of your pet?s wants, in addition to those of your landlord, you may be more likely to find an apartment that meets your needs.

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Witnesses detail Jackson doc's care, thoroughness (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? The doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death cried Wednesday while hearing five witnesses tell jurors he was thorough and caring and not motivated by money.

Dr. Conrad Murray's eyes filled with tears as one of the witnesses, Ruby Mosley, recalled the physician founding a clinic in a poor community in Houston in honor of his father.

Mosley said Murray never would have founded the clinic if he had been greedy, as prosecutors have previously suggested.

"When you went to the doctor, in his office, you did not see a sign when you walked in that (said), `Pay at the time that services rendered,'" Mosley said. "You did not see a sign that said present ID or your insurance card ... You saw the doctor first."

Murray continued to wipe his eyes for several moments after Mosley left the witness stand. She was the last of five character witnesses that Murray's attorneys called during the doctor's involuntary manslaughter trial. He has pleaded not guilty.

The trial recessed for the day after Mosley's testimony and was expected to resume Thursday with Murray's final witnesses ? a pair of medical experts.

Authorities contend Murray gave Jackson a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol in the singer's bedroom on June 25, 2009. Defense attorneys claim the singer gave himself the fatal dose.

Gerry Causey, of Cedar City, Utah, said Murray treated him for a heart attack 11 years ago, and the cardiologist remains his best friend.

Causey said he was not put to sleep at his request while Murray implanted a stent after fully explaining the procedure to him.

"I know his love, his compassion, his feelings for his patients," Causey said. "He's the best doctor I've ever been to."

Murray, 58, last treated Causey in 2008. Causey said the doctor didn't charge him his deductible for office visits.

"I just don't think he did what he's been accused of," Causey said.

Another witness, Dennis Hix of Banning, Calif., said Murray performed a stent procedure for him for free.

Murray agreed to become Jackson's personal physician for $150,000 a month but was never paid because the singer died before the contract was signed.

Prosecutors have contended that Murray was heavily in debt and initially sought $5 million to treat Jackson as he prepared for a series of lucrative comeback concerts.

Another character witness, Andrew Guest, echoed Causey's comments about Murray's skill and care.

"He makes sure you're OK, during the procedure, after the procedure," said Guest, a locksmith at a casino in Las Vegas. "I'm alive today because of that man."

The flurry of witnesses came as defense attorneys wind down their case, which could conclude Thursday. They previously told a judge that after the character witnesses, they will call the two experts to counter prosecution experts who said Murray acted recklessly by giving Jackson propofol as a sleep aid.

The lawyers already called a doctor and nurse practitioner who treated Jackson but refused his requests to help him obtain either an intravenous sleep aid or propofol.

Murray's attorneys contend Jackson was desperate for sleep so he could rehearse for his comeback shows and gave himself the fatal dose of propofol when his doctor left the room.

They attempted to argue that Jackson would have been indebted to concert promoter AEG Live for nearly $40 million if his shows were canceled, but a judge blocked any mention of the figure to the jury.

___

AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch contributed to this report.

___

McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_en_ot/us_michael_jackson_doctor

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Friday, October 28, 2011

What you need to know from this week on ?The Ultimate Fighter?

What you need to know from this week on ?The Ultimate Fighter?

Two fights in one show tonight, which is nothing but good news. More fighting means less time for silly pranks. Who wins the fights? Who is the most hated man int the UFC? Why is Jason "Mayhem" Miller making that face? Read on for spoilers and an episode recap.

The show starts out a reminder of how the last episode ended. Akira Corassani won, even though it seems like tapped in the first round, and Michael Bisping worried about the speck of wood in Jason Miller's eye before removing the plank from his own. Bisping? continued to trash talk about his team's one victory, which helped Miller's assistant coach Ryan Parsons see the light.

"You're the most hated man in the UFC. I didn't get it before. I get it now," Parsons said.

Miller bragged that he had more money than Parsons. Bisping is a class act, as always.

Also a class act? Gator, Mayhem's dog who finally made an appearance in this episode. Adorable puppies make everything better.

Steven Siler (Team Miller) vs. Diego Brandao (Team Bisping) -- featherweight

Round 1: Brandao started with a flying knee that landed nowhere near Siler. Not long after that, he landed a huge right hook that sent Siler to the ground. Brandao followed up with some punches on the ground, but they weren't needed. The fight was over.

Again, Bisping started with the trash talk. Miller responded, "Could you be any more of a douchebag?" Bisping just blathered on after that, saying not a whole lot of note. Miller congratulated Brandao, who wants to win so that he could support his parents.

Bisping continued to trash talk all the way into the locker room, infuriating Miller's coaches. Miller calmed them down, but was befuddled by where Bisping gets his confidence. I don't get it, either.

While Bisping tries to plot out the next fight, Team Mayhem's Roland Delorme showed his badly swollen foot to his coaches. Miller and Parsons are worried that it's a skin infection, and they send him to the doctor.

At the fight announcements, Bisping runs through a long list of rules to keep fighters from "looking like [expletives.]" What he fails to mention is that his fighters are guilty of violating most of the rules. He calls out John Dodson (Team Mayhem*) vs. John Albert (Team Bisping), meaning that T.J. Dillashaw will face Delorme in the final bout.

*Considering Dodson's Benedict Arnoldian ways earlier in the season, he is deserving of an asterisk. His team still doesn't talk to him much, but he says he does not have any regrets because, "If you ain't cheatin' you ain't tryin."

Dodson (Mayhem*) vs. Albert (Bisping ) -- bantamweights

Round 1: Dodson is the exact ball of energy that Miller described him as. He starts out by peppering Albert with kicks, but eventually clips him with a punch and a knee. Albert responds with a takedown, but Dodson works his way out from the bottom. He gets top position, then the fight gets back to stand-up. Albert tries to finish the round with a takedown, but Dodson shakes him off, and gets top position to land a bevy of strikes.

Round 2: This round was much slower, and featured more jawing between Bisping and Miller early on then actual striking. Albert landed intermittent kicks, and Dodson got off a punch occasionally. He backed Albert up with every punch. Again, Albert tried to get a takedown by jumping on Dodson's back, but Dodson landed on top and had better position. Dodson ended the round with a takedown.

Via the judges decision, Dodson won and moved to the next round. He admitted that it was a conservative game plan.

Bisping ends the episode by peeking into Team Miller's ready room, and did even more smack talk. It's not getting old or anything. He ended it by saying, "Go back to 'Bully Beatdown."

"I know one bully," Miller responded.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/What-you-need-to-know-from-this-week-on-The-Ult?urn=mma-wp8571

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Will The Future?s Pixels Be Micro-Mirrors?

zircI unintentionally set off a nice little flame war last week when I criticized Samsung's decision to go with a Pentile sub-pixel matrix for their new Galaxy Nexus phone, a display technology that doesn't have an illustrious past and, while it may prove itself in this generation, still made me lose confidence in the phone. Sub-pixel layouts are something few people consider, but (as the Engineer Guy explains) all those pretty colors you see on your displays are almost always made up of a few tiny monochromatic dots. E-ink screens use one dot per pixel, but they are of course monochrome, and the Mirasol and Pixel Qi displays we've seen also use an RGB matrix. But research being done in Taiwan may combine the best of both worlds. Wallen Mphep?, a researcher at National Chiao Tung University, has created a new kind of pixel that operates completely differently from existing technologies. The way the new screens work is that each pixel, normally created by a set of sub-pixels, is instead a single mechanism of silvered crystal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/uxiggUf5hjI/

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Insects are scared to death of fish

ScienceDaily (Oct. 27, 2011) ? The mere presence of a predator causes enough stress to kill a dragonfly, even when the predator cannot actually get at its prey to eat it, say biologists at the University of Toronto.

"How prey respond to the fear of being eaten is an important topic in ecology, and we've learned a great deal about how these responses affect predator and prey interactions," says Professor Locke Rowe, chair of the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB) and co-principal investigator of a study conducted at U of T's Koffler Scientific Reserve.

"As we learn more about how animals respond to stressful conditions -- whether it's the presence of predators or stresses from other natural or human-caused disruptions -- we increasingly find that stress brings a greater risk of death, presumably from things such as infections that normally wouldn't kill them," says Rowe.

Shannon McCauley, a post-doctoral fellow, and EEB professors Marie-Jos?e Fortin and Rowe raised juvenile dragonfly larvae (Leucorrhinia intacta) in aquariums or tanks along with their predators. The two groups were separated so that while the dragonflies could see and smell their predators, the predators could not actually eat them.

"What we found was unexpected -- more of the dragonflies died when predators shared their habitat," says Rowe. Larvae exposed to predatory fish or aquatic insects had survival rates 2.5 to 4.3 times less than those not exposed.

In a second experiment, 11 per cent of larvae exposed to fish died as they attempted to metamorphose into their adult stage, compared to only two per cent of those growing in a fish-free environment. "We allowed the juvenile dragonflies to go through metamorphosis to become adult dragonflies, and found those that had grown up around predators were more likely to fail to complete metamorphosis successfully, more often dying in the process," says Rowe.

The scientists suggest that their findings could apply to all organisms facing any amount of stress, and that the experiment could be used as a model for future studies on the lethal effects of stress.

The research is described in a paper titled "The deadly effects of 'nonlethal' predators," published in Ecology and highlighted in Nature this week. It was supported by grants to Fortin and Rowe from the Canada Research Chairs program and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and a post-doctoral fellowship awarded to McCauley.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Toronto.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Shannon J. McCauley, Locke Rowe, Marie-Jos?e Fortin. The deadly effects of ?nonlethal? predators. Ecology, 2011; 92 (11): 2043 DOI: 10.1890/11-0455.1

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/KJzcraN1UAo/111027125241.htm

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Sen. Marco Rubio to promote jobs in Tampa, 2 other cities (tbo)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/154272468?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Fairy tales cast spell on U.S. television (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Fairy tales are back with a darkened vengeance on U.S. television, scaring up a fright and putting a new twist on a genre long dominated by pretty princesses and charming princes.

Inspired by the 19th century tales from the German storytellers the Brothers Grimm, "Grimm," debuts on NBC on Friday just days after "Once Upon a Time" premiered on rival network ABC.

Part crime drama, part fantasy, "Grimm" features Detective Nick Burkhardt (played by David Giuntoli) who battles mythical evil creatures such as the Big Bad Wolf from "Red Riding Hood."

But only Burkhardt can see the creatures behind their every day disguises as average inhabitants of present day Portland as he fights evil in human and supernatural forms.

"It's a sort of a marriage of a police procedural and mythological fracturing fairy tales every week," said David Greenwalt, one of the executive producers of the news series.

Greenwalt and co-producer Jim Kouf also intersperse the show with humor.

"People love to be scared, and they love to have a little bit of a laughter while they're being scared," Greenwalt said.

Although tales like "Cinderella" and "Snow White" have turned into lighter, happier stories by Disney, "Grimm" returns the fables to the darker original form presented by the Brothers Grimm and blurs the line between good and bad.

"The 'big bad' comes in a little different form in 'Grimm' because we're presenting some characters that appear to be bad but may actually have some good agendas," explained Greenwalt.

ZOMBIES AND DWARFS

NBC isn't the only network tapping into the revival of the dark fairy tale.

"Once Upon A Time" is a series about storybook characters like Snow White who find themselves unknowingly trapped in the real world, where things don't always have a happy ending. It opened on Sunday to a strong audience of 12.9 million viewers.

AMC's zombie series "Walking Dead" is the cable network's biggest hit, while FX has new series "American Horror Story".

The rising popularity of dark fairy tales may be partially attributed to the success of the "Twilight" vampire film and book franchise, which is a love story embedded in an epic tale transcending real and supernatural worlds.

The producers of "Grimm" believe the new trend is also down to people going back to classics to find new ideas.

"That's pretty interesting that all of sudden so much of attention was given to fairy tales," said Greenwalt.

"I think people are just looking for things to remake and books and source material for a lot of different projects. So everybody suddenly starting paying attention to the Brothers Grimm," he said.

"Twilight" director Catherine Hardwicke also delivered an adult "Red Riding Hood" film starring Amanda Seyfried earlier this year, while Vanessa Hudgens and Alex Pettyfer switched up the tale of "Beauty and the Beast" in the edgy movie "Beastly."

The trend on the big screen will continue next year as the tale of "Snow White" gets two remakes.

"Twilight" star Kristen Stewart dons medieval armor in "Snow White and the Huntsman", while Lily Collins and Julia Roberts take the lead in a second 2012 movie in which the seven dwarfs try to reclaim their destroyed kingdom.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant and Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111026/tv_nm/us_grimm

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Nokia unveils Windows smartphones to catch rivals (AP)

HELSINKI ? Nokia Corp. on Wednesday launched its long-awaited first Windows cell phones, hoping to claw back market share it has lost in the tough, top-end smartphone race to chief rivals, Apple Inc.'s iPhone, Samsung and Google's Android software.

But some analysts say it may be too little, too late, for the world's top mobile phone maker.

With price tags of euro420 ($580) and euro270, the Lumia 800 and 710 are based on Microsoft Corp.'s Windows 7 software and come eight months after Nokia and the computing giant said they were hitching up.

"Lumia is reasonably good ... but it's not an iPhone killer or a Samsung killer," Neil Mawston from Strategy Analytics said. "But where Nokia does stand out is on their price ? it looks like they are going to be very competitive."

Lumia 800, with Carl Zeiss optics and 16GB of internal memory, will be available in selected European countries in November, including France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain and Britain. It will be sold in Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan before the year-end.

Lumia 710, with a 1.4 GHz processor, navigational applications and Nokia Music ? a free, mobile music-streaming app ? will first be available in Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan toward the end of the year.

The company's share price jumped almost 3 percent to euro4.96 ($6.90) in otherwise depressed market in Helsinki.

Nokia also unveiled four cheaper smartphones aimed at emerging markets ? the Asha range priced euro60 to euro115 ? with cameras, navigation applications and fast downloads ? in a bid to help "the next billion" users connect to the Internet, Nokia CEO Stephen Elop said at the Nokia presentation in London.

Equipped with QWERTY keyboards and some with the popular dual SIM cards, the Asha handsets will be shipped globally in the fourth quarter or early 2012.

Nokia, which claims 1.3 billion daily users, has steadily been losing ground in smartphones, squeezed in the low end by Asian manufacturers like ZTE and in the high end by the iPhone, Research in Motion's Blackberry, Korea's Samsung Electronics and Taiwan-based HTC Corp.

The iPhone has set the standard for smartphones among many design-conscious consumers, the Blackberry has been the favorite of the corporate set and increasingly Google Inc.'s Android software has emerged as the choice for phone makers that want to challenge the iPhone.

Samsung and HTC ? snapping at Nokia's heels for third place in top-end smartphones behind the iPhone and Samsung ? are the biggest users of the Android platform.

Nokia is still operating Symbian software, older than Apple's software and considered clumsy by many, although it has been upgraded. Nokia also introduced the MeeGo platform in its flagship N9 model launched last month.

Elop has said Windows software will become the cell phone maker's main platform but that Nokia won't stop developing Symbian or MeeGo.

Mawston says Nokia has been pushed into a corner as Symbian was unable to compete with other operating systems and MeeGo took too long to develop.

"It's a risk that they may be juggling too many balls at once," Mawston said. "They were pushed into a multi-platform strategy for at least the short-term, but given the competitive situation with Symbian and MeeGo they really had no choice but to develop a third (platform) and juggle all three at once."

Elop described the Lumia phones as a "new dawn" for Nokia.

"Lumia is light ... Lumia is the first real Windows Phone," Elop declared to the London audience.

He acknowledged that since he took over the Nokia leadership a year ago there had been "some difficult moments and some tough decisions to make," including more than 12,000 layoffs, but was upbeat about the future.

"Eight months ago, here in London we outlined a new direction for Nokia," Elop said. "Since then we've gone through a significant transition and we are playing to win ? no holding back, no hesitation, no second guessing."

Ovum analyst Nick Dillon said the success of the new Windows devices will be critical.

"The challenges which Nokia faces are significant ? many potential Windows Phone customers will have already bought an Android or iPhone and will have some form of attachment to those platforms," Dillon said. "Nokia will have a challenge to convince them to switch to what is a largely unknown, and therefore risky, alternative."

____

Online:

Nokia: http://www.nokia.com.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_hi_te/eu_finland_nokia

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

DaVita says U.S. govt probes payment for infusion drugs (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? DaVita Inc, the biggest U.S. operator of dialysis clinics, said it is the subject of a government probe into payments for infusion drugs covered by the Medicaid health program for the poor in New York.

DaVita said it believed the inquiry was civil in nature and did not have details about the time period covered.

The company said it has been notified that it will receive a request for documents, which may include a subpoena, from the Office of Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The inquiry is being carried out by the U.S. Attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York.

DaVita said that certain other providers that operate dialysis clinics in New York and provide services to New York Medicaid patients may also receive, or have received, a similar request for documents.

The company said it intends to cooperate with the government and that no proceedings have been initiated against it at this time.

DaVita shares were down 5 cents at $68.75 in pre-market trade. They closed at $68.80 on Monday on the New York Stock Exchange.

(Reporting by Esha Dey in Bangalore; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Roshni Menon)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/meds/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111025/hl_nm/us_davita

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Sex and Priorities: Do They Matter In Business?

I?ve heard this my entire life:???A rising tide raises everything in the ocean.? It?s true for life, and it?s true for business. Every untapped resource is an idea left on the table, a skill set ignored, an untouched opportunity ? and that?s bad for business.

woman business owner

Battle of the Sexes

In ?The State of Women-Owned Small Businesses Is Strong, But Could Be Stronger,? Anita Campbell highlights a report released by American Express OPEN earlier this year. It demonstrates the impact that women have in the business sector. Anita says,

?The 8.1 million women-owned businesses would leave a huge hole in the U.S. economy if they disappeared tomorrow. Women-owned businesses account for more than $1.2 trillion in revenues annually. They employ more people than the entire population of Switzerland?7.7 million people.?

Women have an impact on business, and since we are a part of the same global (and in this case national) economic team, that?s good news for everyone. Our piece of the pie has continued to rise but it?s still not proportionate to our place on the planet. Women are roughly 50 percent of the American population, but according to the State of Women-Owned Businesses Report by American Express OPEN, only 28.9 percent of businesses are owned by women (that is an increase from 25.9 percent in 1997).

Get Your Priorities Straight

Whether you?re a man or a woman, your ideas could be game changers for your personal economy, your local economy and even our national and global economies. The solutions that you have and the problems that you solve are too important to leave to the foggy chaos that often envelops the creative small business owner.

In ?The Key to Prioritization,? John Mariotti says, ?all priorities are not created equal?not even close.? It?s our job (and pleasure) to get to the core priorities and get those done.? John gives a simple piece of advice: Delete the stuff that doesn?t belong on the list in the first and then prioritize what?s left.? Make sure you list is filled with the task that are core to you.

And since you?re moving forward with clear priorities, I?m sure that marketing is on the list ? so you may want to check out Ivana Taylor?s advice in ?The Overwhelmed Marketer?s Guide to Attracting Customers and Looking Good Online.?

My favorite advice from the guide:

Define a target landing page for each channel. When people find you on Twitter or Facebook or at the end of someone?s blog, you want them to care enough to click through to your site. And when they arrive they need a message that relates to them. So create a special landing page instead of directing them to your site?s home page (I?m working on this one right now).

Get familiar with Google Analytics. You will learn about the type of people who visit your site, where they go and what they like and dislike about your content. It?s priceless information that can help you position yourself (knowing this has changed my Web presence and my ranking?I?m still working on this one).

It?s foundational advice for online marketing and worth the time and energy.


Image from Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock

About the Author

Jamillah WarnerJamillah Warner (Ms.J), a poet with a passion for business, is a Georgia-based writer and speaker and the Marketing Coordinator at Nobuko Solutions. She also provides marketing and communication quick tips in her getCLEAR! MicroNewsletter.

Connect with Jamillah Warner:

?

Source: http://smallbiztrends.com/2011/10/sex-priorities-matter-in-business.html

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Declining numbers of blacks? in math, science

With black unemployment reaching historic levels, banks laying off tens of thousands and law school graduates waiting tables, why aren't more African-Americans looking toward science, technology, engineering and math ? the still-hiring careers known as STEM?

The answer turns out to be a complex equation of self-doubt, stereotypes, discouragement and economics ? and sometimes just wrong perceptions of what math and science are all about.

The percentage of African-Americans earning STEM degrees has fallen during the last decade. It may seem far-fetched for an undereducated black population to aspire to become chemists or computer scientists, but the door is wide open, colleges say, and the shortfall has created opportunities for those who choose this path.

STEM barriers are not unique to black people. The United States does not produce as high a proportion of white engineers, scientists and mathematicians as it used to. Women and Latinos also lag behind white men.

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Yet the situation is most acute for African-Americans.

Black people are 12 percent of the U.S. population and 11 percent of all students beyond high school. In 2009, they received just 7 percent of all STEM bachelor's degrees, 4 percent of master's degrees, and 2 percent of PhDs, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

From community college through PhD level, the percentage of STEM degrees received by blacks in 2009 was 7.5 percent, down from 8.1 percent in 2001.

The numbers are striking in certain fields. In 2009, African-Americans received 1 percent of degrees in science technologies, and 4 percent of degrees in math and statistics. Out of 5,048 PhDs awarded in the physical sciences, such as chemistry and physics, 89 went to African-Americans ? less than 2 percent.

Story: Women making slow, sure strides in science, math

Several factors are cited by scientists, educators and students. One is a self-defeating perception that STEM is too hard. Also mentioned are a lack of role models and mentors, pressure to earn money quickly, and discouraging academic environments.

The impact reaches beyond the black community as America struggles to produce enough scientists to prosper in a world ruled by technology.

"White men make up less than 50 percent of the U.S. population. We're drawing (future scientists) from less than 50 percent of the talent we have available," says Mae Jemison, the first black woman astronaut, who has a medical degree and a bachelor's in chemical engineering.

"The more people you have in STEM," she says, "the more innovations you'll get."

___

Jemison says the problem begins for children of all backgrounds in grade school, where they are usually asked to memorize facts out of a book instead of satisfying their natural curiosity through experiments and exploring. She also says many primary school science teachers took little science in college.

Allen Gordon has been teaching math in Oakland, Calif., for seven years. He always tries to apply real-word situations to his lessons ? coupons, compound interest on bank accounts, album sales.

"If math and science seem boring and of no use on a primary education level, who would want to pursue it while in college?" he says. "Especially when you don't see many, if any, black men or women teaching."

"Math and science are not something that black men and women sit around and pontificate about at home, dinner parties, the sports bar, hair salon, et cetera," he says. "It doesn't fit into their social idea of status.

"Let's face it, there is no glory in saying, 'I teach math or science.' Career school teachers still seem to be very proletarian."

Even some of Gordon's fellow teachers ask how he can teach math, saying, "Funny, you don't look like the nerd type."

That's a stereotype Jemison knows well.

"The media images you see of scientists are older white males who are goofy or socially inept in some way," she says. "That's the mad scientist, the geek" ? and it doesn't include role models for young black and Hispanic students.

Jemison, who watched "Star Trek" growing up, declines to call the black female character Lieutenant Uhura an inspiration, but the fictional space traveler did affect her.

"Her character was really an affirmation that my assumptions about going into space were shared by others, and that everyone had a right and a role to play. So that affirmation, for a little kid growing up, it's an image of possibilities."

___

Growing up in Murfreesboro, Tenn., Christopher Smith used to tutor fellow black students at his high school.

The students would often start solving a complicated math problem by doing everything right. "Then they would say, 'I don't know what I'm doing!'" recalls Smith, now pursuing a PhD in biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

He thinks some African-Americans psych themselves out of STEM.

"Today I talk to friends back home, and they say, 'I wouldn't be able to do good in college anyway.' A lot of it is just confidence," Smith says. "If people convince you that science and math is harder than everything else, and you already have low self-esteem, maybe that's one reason there are so few black scientists."

"Few" is a generous term in Smith's field of biological and biomedical sciences, where 6,957 PhDs were awarded in 2009. Only 88 went to black men ? that's 1 percent. (176 went to black women.)

LaMont Toliver also sees a problem with what he calls "self-doubt." He is director of the University of Maryland Baltimore County's Meyerhoff Scholars Program, a national leader in increasing STEM diversity.

"Advanced placement courses, calculus, chemistry, these are hard courses," Toliver says. "Some of them believe that they just can't do it. . Then you couple that with a lack of encouragement."

"If we were more supportive as a community, as parents and providing guidance and mentoring at an early age, then more African-American students would do it."

___

Money is another factor in the STEM disparity. It takes many years after college to get the advanced degrees needed to become leaders in math and science fields ? university professors, directors of research labs, heads of engineering departments ? and some black students can't afford to wait that long.

Before one recent New Year's Eve, Smith, the Johns Hopkins student, was debating whether to purchase a bus ticket from Baltimore to New York City to hang out with friends. It was a tough decision ? the ticket cost $37.

Smith, 27, received a fellowship for black scientists this year from Merck and the United Negro College Fund. As he works toward his PhD, Smith lives on a salary and stipend of about $25,000 per year.

Like many black students, Smith comes from modest means. His mother was a homemaker with a high school diploma; his father earned a GED, became an electrician and eventually owned a business.

"I get paid to go to school, so I don't want to complain," Smith says.

But he's still several years away from completing his PhD, and he's tired of agonizing over a $37 bus ticket. Even after he gets that degree, he'll need to do a year of post-doctoral study. "If I stay here at Hopkins" for post-doc work, he says, "I'll make the same or less than a city sanitation worker."

At each stage of science education, many black students feel pressure to stop studying and start earning real money. Smith, who has an undergraduate degree from MIT, says he could be making as much as $115,000 per year in a corporate job.

Yet it's hard to advance far in science without at least a master's, if not a doctorate.

Joseph Francisco, a black chemistry professor at Purdue and past president of the American Chemical Society, has a PhD from MIT. He says his undergrad students are always telling him, "I got to think about a job."

"With first-generation college students, there is enormous pressure," Francisco says. "Without a mentor who can tell you about what to expect beyond undergrad, who can explain what are the opportunities after a postgraduate degree, they just stop at a bachelor's degree."

___

Francisco mentions another source of pressure affecting black STEM students: isolation.

In 1981, Francisco was studying at MIT when he heard about a national organization for black chemists. He went to its convention, in Chicago.

"It was incredible," Francisco remembers. "I remember having the feeling, 'you are not alone.' That sense of isolation can be powerful."

It was different when he was growing up on the black side of segregated Beaumont, Texas. He was raised by his grandmother, who had a third-grade education, and his grandfather, who laid concrete pipes. There was a black pharmacist in his neighborhood, and Francisco worked part-time in the shop. There was a black doctor, teachers, a college professor.

That changed when he went to the University of Texas and then MIT, where there were few black faces.

In a 2010 Bayer Corp. survey of 1,226 women and underrepresented minority chemists and chemical engineers, 40 percent said they were discouraged from pursuing a STEM career. Sixty percent said college was where most of the discouragement happened.

Jemison, the astronaut, says that while at Stanford, "some professors were not that thrilled to see me in their classrooms."

"Stereotypes impact the people who have an opportunity to influence your career," she says. "They don't see you as a peer."

After receiving his PhD, Francisco had several job offers. He chose Wayne State University in Detroit, and would later become president of the National Organization for the Professional Advancement of Black Chemists and Chemical Engineers.

"I saw an opportunity at Wayne State to do good science in a supportive place that gave me the flexibility to make a contribution to the community," he says. "To give something back, to a black community."

___

In the world of atoms and numbers, does the color of the person who studies them really matter?

Many of America's technology giants say, yes. Merck has funded tens of millions of dollars in United Negro College Fund scholarships. Bayer has a special focus on recruiting and promoting minorities. Technology giants such as Boeing, General Electric and Xerox support organizations dedicated to raising black STEM participation.

Their motivation is simple math. If bright and capable students' talents go undeveloped, "this represents a loss for both the individual and society," the National Science Board said in a 2010 report.

The report said that after the Soviet Union beat America into space with Sputnik, the U.S. was inspired to educate a new generation of innovators. This national urgency faded by the 1970s, the report said, and was replaced by complacency.

Some 16 percent of all U.S. undergraduates major in natural science or engineering, compared with 25 percent in Europe, 38 percent in South Korea and 47 percent in China, the report said.

To reverse this decline, the report said America must "cast a wide net to identify all types of talents and to nurture potential in all demographics of students."

Jemison identifies another incentive. Even though scientists may use the same methodology, "what topics they choose to research, even the interpretation of facts or what they choose to look at is influenced by experience."

"So many times it's the diversity of thought and perception and experience base that starts to make the difference in the problems you research and the solutions you consider," she says.

"It's a much more robust reason for diversity that just the head count."

__

Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He can be reached at www.twitter.com/jessewashington or jwashington(at)ap.org.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45007879/ns/us_news-life/

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Protest forces iconic London cathedral to close

Occupy London Stock Exchange protesters listen as they have a meeting to discuss what to do after being urged to leave now that they have made their point with their protest outside St Paul's Cathedral, near the London Stock Exchange in London, Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The protesters who have camped outside the building in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday. The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "heavy hearts" because of health and safety concerns. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Occupy London Stock Exchange protesters listen as they have a meeting to discuss what to do after being urged to leave now that they have made their point with their protest outside St Paul's Cathedral, near the London Stock Exchange in London, Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The protesters who have camped outside the building in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday. The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "heavy hearts" because of health and safety concerns. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Occupy London Stock Exchange protesters have a meeting to discuss what to do after being urged to leave now that they have made their point with their protest outside St Paul's Cathedral, near the London Stock Exchange in London, Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The protesters who have camped outside the building in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday. The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "heavy hearts" because of health and safety concerns. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

People leave a side door after attending a service at St Paul's Cathedral, near the London Stock Exchange in London, Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The protesters who have camped outside the building in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday. The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "heavy hearts" because of health and safety concerns. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

An Occupy London Stock Exchange protester looks over a police officer's shoulder as protesters hold a meeting to discuss what to do after being urged to leave now that they have made their point with their protest outside St Paul's Cathedral, near the London Stock Exchange in London, Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The protesters who have camped outside the building in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday. The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "heavy hearts" because of health and safety concerns. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

An Occupy London Stock Exchange protester looks over a police officer's shoulder as protesters hold a meeting to discuss what to do after being urged to leave now that they have made their point with their protest outside St Paul's Cathedral, near the London Stock Exchange in London, Friday, Oct. 21, 2011. The protesters who have camped outside the building in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday. The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "heavy hearts" because of health and safety concerns. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

(AP) ? Protesters who have camped outside St. Paul's Cathedral in central London for six days have forced the venerable cathedral to close to visitors for the first time since World War II, church officials said Friday.

The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said the decision to shut the doors of the iconic London church to visitors and tourists following the afternoon service was made with "a heavy heart" because of health and safety concerns.

He urged the protesters ? numbering roughly 500, according to organizers, allied with the "Occupy Wall Street" demonstrations ? to leave now that they have made their point.

"I'm asking the protesters to recognize the huge issues facing us at this time, and asking them to leave the vicinity of the building so that the cathedral can reopen as soon as possible," he told reporters.

Knowles stressed that he recognizes the group's right to protest but wants them to recognize that the church also has "a right to open for our visitors."

There was no set date for the reopening of the cathedral, which was designed by Christopher Wren and has hosted numerous royal ceremonies. The cathedral is where Prince Charles married his first wife, the late Princess Diana, in a ceremony televised worldwide in 1981.

The protesters, who have set up about 100 tents around the church, arrived last Saturday as part of a series of protests in many cities across the world in solidarity with the "Occupy Wall Street" activists in New York. The group decamped to the cathedral's grounds after police blocked them from entering the London Stock Exchange building near it.

Protesters said they had done all they could to address the cathedral's concerns, and showed no intention to leave.

"It's about deciding when it's no longer effective to be here," said Ian Chamberlain, 27, a self-employed researcher. "Many of us are determined to stay here as long as possible."

Protester Diane Richards, 36, said the cathedral closure was unnecessary because the impromptu camp has been safe and well organized.

"I'm really disappointed, because there has been no violence here," she said of the decision, which church officials had hinted at in recent days.

Knowles said potential health and fire problems ? notably smoking in tented areas and the presence of flammable liquids and stoves set up by protesters ? were at the heart of the issue because the church has an obligation to keep visitors safe.

Earlier this week, the church said the "increased scale and nature" of the temporary camp could make it more difficult for the cathedral to stay open for worshippers and tourists.

The protesters have drawn a mixed response from Londoners, especially the many well-heeled bankers who work in the nearby financial district known as the City.

The movement has received many donated food items and blankets from the public and some City workers were seen deep in discussion with the activists, but others were more skeptical of their cause.

"I have a sneaking suspicion they don't know what their message is," lawyer Tom Day said after reading some of the protesters' messages posted at the tent city.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-21-EU-Britain-Wall-Street-Protests/id-3acd8aa025ea4d14ad323f6dba33c299

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