9/26/2012

Police: Student shoots self at Oklahoma junior high


STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) -- A student apparently committed suicide before classes started Wednesday at an Oklahoma junior high school, police said.
Police Capt. Randy Dickerson said a school resource officer heard a gunshot shortly before 8 a.m. The student was found dead in a hallway, he said.
"It doesn't appear that anyone else was in danger or threatened," Dickerson said.
The junior high school and a nearby elementary school were locked down and classes canceled for the day, authorities said. The name of the student was not released, pending notification of next of kin.
Kenny Monday told The Associated Press that he'd just dropped off his son, Kennedy, when he heard about the incident. Monday said his son heard the gunshot but did not witness the shooting.
"It's so sad that the kid lost his life, but we're just glad he didn't shoot anyone else," Monday said.
Stillwater Junior High sent a statement to parents saying there had been a "single shooting incident" at the school and that staff and students -- eighth and ninth graders -- had been moved to a safe location. Parents were told to pick up their children at a nearby shopping center.
"Everyone thought it was a joke at first," ninth-grader Ashlyn Lundholm told the Stillwater NewsPress. "Then I heard people screaming. Then we went to lockdown for 35 to 40 minutes."
Dickerson told the NewsPress that "the hallway was probably full of kids that time of day."
Superintendent Ann Caine said counselors would be available for students.
"It is with a heavy heart that I inform you of a tragic incident at our (school) this morning," Caine said in a letter to parents. "At 7:50 a.m. one of our students died as a result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. All other students and staff are safe."
Stillwater is located about 70 miles west of Tulsa.

-  usatoday.com

Oxford Reaches Out to State Schools

57% of students admitted to Oxbridge are from state schools.
Photograph: Oli Scarff/Getty Images

An Oxford college has announced a new initiative that will encourage closer ties with the state-funded high schools that educate most British students, the university said last week.

The announcement from Pembroke College came after Les Ebdon, who began work this month as the director of the government’s Office for Fair Access, warned Oxford and Cambridge that they risked losing their world-class status if they failed to admit more students from state-funded schools, The Guardian reported.

“If the top universities are to retain their positions, they need to access the full range of our society,” he told The Guardian. “Otherwise, they are losing a major source of potential.”

Peter Claus, a history professor at Pembroke College, was appointed to the newly created post of access fellow.

He will oversee a yearlong program to provide tutorials, seminars and interview guidance to high school students in London and northwest England. The program will end in a weeklong residence at Pembroke College.

Oxford drew 57.7 percent of its intake from state schools in 2011. This is an increase from 46.5 percent in 2005 but is still below target levels. — MARY HUI


Hong Kong admissions fee sets off public backlash

A new program starting in October, which will allow parents to pay a hefty fee to improve their children’s chances of entering some state-funded English-language schools, has come under fire from lawmakers and the Hong Kong public.

The English Schools Foundation said last week that parents could pay a 500,000 Hong Kong dollar, or $64,000, nonrefundable debenture to give their children priority in admissions. The public foundation runs schools that are priced midway between free local schools and private schools. — JOYCE LAU

-  Nytimes

Clashes erupt as Greeks protest against austerity


Clashes broke out in central Athens on Wednesday after at least 50,000 people took to the streets of the Greek capital for the largest anti-austerity demonstration the country has seen in over a year.

Although the demonstration was largely peaceful throughout the morning, the atmosphere degenerated after the march hit the Greek parliament, with the angry crowd shouting, “EU, IMF out!” A group of youths dressed in black hurled petrol bombs and bottles at police, sending streaks of flames flying through the streets. Police forces responded with several rounds of teargas, filling the air with clouds of smoke.

-  France24.com

Genghis Khan's descendants inherit ancient instrument


(Xinhua) -- A group of Chinese who consider themselves to be descendants of Genghis Khan have dedicated themselves to preserving the chuer, an ancient flute that comes from the very mountains they call home.

The group of Chinese Tunivians, an ethnic group originating from Mongolia, live near Kanas Lake, a body of water located near the Altay Mountains in northwestern Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The area's picturesque mountains and rivers have served to inspire chuer players in history, with many describing the flute's sound as mimicking sounds in nature.

"The way my dad played sounded like the mountains and water here, especially the song 'Altay Mountains.' It was so beautiful that you could almost see the outline of the mountains," said Mengkeyi, a budding chuer player who was inspired to take up the instrument after the death of his father Erdeshi.

The chuer is a lightweight wind instrument made out of lovage, a perennial plant that is plentiful in the area. It has only three holes, but produces a variety of sounds, depending on players' skills.

The flutes are created in accordance with sizes of players' hands; therefore, no two chuers or chuer players sound or play alike, Mengkeyi's younger brother Daxi said.

"The plants used to make chuer only grow here. Each autumn, we go to the mountains to find suitable lovage stalks. The ones that grow in the mountains are better than those growing at their base. Thin ones are better than thick ones. Roughly one out of every 10 stalks can turn a good chuer," Mengkeyi said.

The instrument is incredibly difficult to learn to play.

"Many people cannot make any sound with the chuer. I was one of them. I made no sound at all for my first three days of training," said Daxi, who was interviewing local elderly for a purpose of collecting information about the instrument to pass on to others.

"Playing the chuer is truly a difficult job. Our father started learning at nine years old but could not make any sound until he was 13. I wasn't able to make any sound until I was a teenager, too. Many quit after seeing it impossible," Mengkeyi said.

As difficult as it is to learn, the brothers and fellow players are dedicated to maintaining the legacy, as it is tied to not only their culture, but also livelihood.

"We used to live on hunting. Animals would stop and listen to the chuer, offering us time to get them," Daxi said. Although the family no longer depend on hunting for food, the skins they take from foxes, wolves and minks are used to decorate a guest room for visitors.

"The instrument comes from, describes and attracts nature," Daxi said.

Songs written for the chuer are not preserved on any score, but are passed on from one generation to another, each adding a unique flavor to the tune.

Kanas Lake is a lake in Altay Prefecture,Xinjiang, China. 
"I can play my father's songs 'Altay Mountain' and 'Kanas Lake Water,' although a bit differently," Mengkeyi said.

The father Erdeshi became a living part of the country's intangible cultural heritage by learning to play 18 songs on the chuer, the most of any player. But his sons did not learn many of the songs.

"I can play five of them. Others can only be learned from recordings and memories. But my father's songs are carved in my mind," Mengkeyi said. He tried to write his own songs, and completed two thus far. "It's too difficult. I have to write them little by little," he said.

However, Mengkeyi has little worry about the instrument's future.

"Many people come here to learn how to play. Some are professional musicians, others are local residents," Mengkeyi said.

"My 4-year-old son is very interested in the chuer. I will teach him one day," he said.

A local villager named Dielike has spent the last four years under Mengkeyi's tutoring, learning to play two songs.

"It is quite difficult. I am very talented, but still find it hard. I'm not good enough yet," Dielike said.

Dielike has been content to entertain tourists by presenting local music and dance, but he is looking to expand his reach. He has established a band Marmot that he hopes to bring ethnic music out of villages.

"I plans to travel to Beijing this winter and introduce my band at a few TV shows," he said. "I want to bring this music out of the valley and into the rest of the world."

Italian researcher made progress in autism study


ROME, Sept. 25 (Xinhua) -- After three years of research, a team led by an Italian medical researcher has made a promising development that could bring a new perspective to find a cure for autism, local media on Tuesday.

The discovery was conducted by Genoa's Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, where Daniele Piomelli, an anatomy and neurobiology professor of University of California at Irvine, holds a position.

The Fragile X Syndrome is the most common known genetic cause of autism due to a problem with the X chromosome. Children born with Fragile X Syndrome fail to produce a protein called the Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein (FMRP), which is indispensable for normal neural development.

By studying the role of FMRP protein in neural function using the genetically modified mice, Piomelli and his team reported that they had found a molecule that stimulates a "corrective" action in the brain of genetically modified mice carrying Fragile X Syndrome. The molecule appears to normalize neural functioning.

"These results are important because they demonstrate the existence of molecules capable of normalizing the effects of the disease on behavior. Unfortunately, this does not mean that we have a cure yet for autism, but that we have discovered a promising path for orienting pharmacological research," Piomelli said.

According to a report released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of U.S., the autism affects 1 child in 88 in the U.S., while the incidence in Italy was recorded 0.01 percent, according a report in 2006.

Gran Torino (2008)

Gran Torino is a 2008 drama film directed and produced by and starring Clint Eastwood. It also stars Bee Vang and Ahney Her. The film marked Eastwood's return to a lead acting role after four years, his previous leading role having been in Million Dollar Baby. The film features a large Hmong American cast, as well as one of Eastwood's younger sons, Scott Eastwood. Eastwood's oldest son, Kyle Eastwood, provided the score. The film opened to theaters in a limited release in North America on December 12, 2008, and later to a worldwide release on January 9, 2009. Set in Detroit, Michigan, it was the first mainstream U.S. film to feature Hmong Americans. Many Lao Hmong war refugees resettled in the U.S. following the communist takeover of Laos in 1975.

The story follows Walt Kowalski, a recently widowed Korean War veteran alienated from his family and angry at the world. Walt's young neighbor, Thao Vang Lor, is pressured into stealing Walt's prized 1972 Ford Gran Torino by his cousin for his initiation into a gang. Walt thwarts the theft and subsequently develops a relationship with the boy and his family.

Gran Torino was a critical and commercial success, grossing nearly $270 million worldwide (making it Eastwood's most successful film ever). Within the Hmong community in the United States, the film received both praise and criticism.

Robert Pattinson Moves Back in With Kristen Stewart

Just one week after rumors of a "dramatic makeup" between Kristen Stewart and her estranged boyfriend Robert Pattinson, Us Weekly is reporting that the vampiric pair is living together once more.

According to the magazine, the reunited couple is "living together and have reconciled," though a source says that Pattinson is taking things slow because he's "extra-sensitive right now. He's insecure."

Pattinson, 26, and Stewart, 22, famously split back in July after Stewart admitted to an affair with her married "Snow White and the Huntsman" director Rupert Sanders.

Though the Hollywood hotshots remained mum about their break-up to the press, they both quietly moved out of the $6.3-million Los Angeles-area home that they shared shortly afterward.

"The entire thing has been such a blow to Rob. Talk about having his heart ripped out," a source close to the couple told People magazine at the time. "Rob just isn't going to be able to get past the cheating - one time or not."

Pattinson then headed to pal Reese Witherspoon's ranch in Ojai, Calif. to hide out, while Stewart opted to hole up at home.

A report last week revealed that the pair has been tepidly toeing the line of a reconciliation in the months since, however.

"Rob sees it as Kristen made a really stupid mistake," a source told UK tabloid The Sun. "After a lot of long tearful talks, they've worked it out.

"Rob can see how truly sorry Kristen is and has totally forgiven her. They really do love each other."

Stewart was spotted stepping out in Paris on Wednesday, looking calm in a T-shirt, skinny jeans and hoodie as she arrived at the Charles de Gaulle aiport.

"We're going to be fine," she told the Associated Press earlier this month.

(Source: nydailynews.com)

Headline Sep27,2012/


''BA BAH BLACK SHEEP! 
Have You Any Shame?''



Recall Gabriel Zhang, from the earlier Posts.This name as it turned out was a Fake, a pseudonym. Oh, dear! Master Gabriel   Zhang, the God fearing Chinese Fake Drug Manufacture's real name was Li Wenhui. Fate and law finally caught up with him in August 2005 because of a joint US-China investigation codenamed ''Operation Ocean crossing''.In its course the authorities seized 440,000 pills that were pending sale and shipment to 10 countries including UK.


But it remained a mystery how a man who was supposed to have been in a Chinese Jail could be out producing fakes 2 years later. Regardless, Wenhui remained unapologetic to the day. But he also claims to be getting out of the Fake Trade altogether. ''I am out of the after all the troubles I've had,'' he stated on an email to the under cover journalist. The message was unbelievable as it was predictable. After years of ignoring the problem, the Chinese Government finally started to crack down on a small number of manufacturers. An example of tough action, Chinese style, was the punishment meted out to the former Food and Drug Regulator, Zheng Xiaoyu, for taking bribes to approve fake medicines. He was later executed.


And before Master Gabriel Zhang signed off to oblivion, he stated, ''They made out that I was some kind of a Mafia Figure, but I am really just a small dealer.'' Given the huge huge amounts of bogus Pills flooding the Global Markets, this could be the most honest thing he ever said.


And looking out across River Thames from MHRA Headquarters, you can make out the site of the UK's largest known counterfeit Drug Factory. The Investigators discovered the plant in a Kitchen Appliances business on a trading estate in Wembley, northwest London. Instead of supplying worktops and fridges, the unit was mass producing Fake Viagra, the tranquilisers diazepam and nitrazepam, and steroids, The police estimated that it had the capability of producing 500,000 fake pills a day.


In 2004, the head of the operations, Allen Valentine, was jailed for five and a half years and fined pound 1.25million. When he was arrested, the 47 years old Sales Rep from Pfizer had just offered pound 1.2million cash for a home on a private estate in Hertfordshire, and given his son Roshan, a gift of flying lessons worth pound 48,000. After his release from the Prison, he seemed remarkably sanguine,''The real villains are the pharmaceutical giants and the authorities,who cravenly act on behalf of these conglomerates''. This, as !WOW! discovered was the bitterest sweet real pill!


Good Night and God Bless!

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless

Sharapova reaches Tokyo quarter-finals


(Reuters) - Maria Sharapova overcame more problems with her serve to beat Czech Lucie Safarova 6-2 7-6 and reach the quarter-finals of the Pan Pacific Open on Wednesday.

French Open champion Sharapova finished the match with an ace but double-faults on big points almost cost the Russian the second set as the sun set over Tokyo.

"After a long match yesterday, I was just happy to win in two (sets)," said Sharapova, who had taken more than three hours to dispatch British qualifier Heather Watson the previous day.

"Obviously, I had a bit of a let-down in the second set," added the second seed, almost forced into a decider having blown a 3-0 advantage in the set before digging in to claim the tiebreak 7-5.

Sharapova will next face eighth seed Samantha Stosur of Australia after last year's U.S. Open champion beat Slovakia's Dominika Cibulkova 6-4 7-5.

"I expect a really tough match," said Olympic silver medalist Sharapova, twice a Pan Pacific Open winner, who served 14 double-faults in her opener and six against Safarova.

"Hopefully I'll play better tomorrow."

Italy's Sara Errani ended the French resistance in Tokyo, overcoming ninth seed Marion Bartoli 3-6 6-2 6-2 to reach the last eight of the WTA premier five event.

The sixth seed won in two hours and 22 minutes, clinching victory with a crunching forehand her opponent could only dump into the net.

"I'm a bit tired but I have lots of motivation to keep winning," said Errani, who has captured titles in Acapulco, Barcelona, Budapest and Palermo this year.

"It's been an amazing year but I still have to qualify for the (season-ending) Championships."

Errani set up a quarter-final against Russia's Nadia Petrova, the 17th seed battling to a 7-6 6-7 6-4 victory over Croatia's Petra Martic.

Nine of the world's top 10 women are competing at the hardcourt event, with U.S. Open champion Serena Williams the only absentee among the WTA's elite.

Villa knock Manchester City out of Cup


Manchester City suffered a shock Capital One Cup third round extra-time defeat by Aston Villa.
Mario Balotelli drove in a shot to put the home side in front before Gareth Barry turned an Andreas Weimann cross into his own net for Villa's equaliser.
Aleksandar Kolarov's free-kick put City back ahead but Gabriel Agbonlahor swept in a shot as Villa levelled again.
In extra-time, Charles N'Zogbia slotted in after a parried shot by Agbonlahor, whose deflected strike sealed the win.
The League Cup may not have been high up on City manager Roberto Mancini's list of priorities this season but the defeat and the manner of it will be a concern.
His side have already conceded 13 goals in seven games this season as City struggle to recapture the defensive qualities which helped them win the Premier League last season.

World T20 cricket: Pakistan beat Bangladesh to reach Super Eights



Pakistan easily chased down a daunting target to beat Bangladesh by eight wickets and surge into the Super Eights of the World Twenty20.
Needing a 36-run win to progress at Pakistan's expense, Bangladesh were given hope by Shakib Al Hasan's brilliant 84 in a total of 175-6.
But Imran Nazir (72) and Mohammad Hafeez (45) put on 124 for the first wicket to set Pakistan on their way.
Nasir Jamshed and Kamran Akmal wrapped up victory with eight balls to spare.
Pakistan's triumph rounded off the group stage of the tournament and booked them a spot in a Super Eight pool that also comprises fellow group winners Australia, India and South Africa.
England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and West Indies make up the other group, with the top two teams in each progressing to the semi-finals.

-  BBC.co.uk

Mars rover examines rock close up

The rover's arm manoeuvres the "hand lens" and
X-ray spectrometer close to the pyramidal rock
 
Nasa's Curiosity rover has completed its first close-contact science.

The robot pushed its arm instruments up against a pyramidal rock to assess the atomic elements that were present.

The rock - dubbed "Jake Matijevic" after a late rover engineer - was not expected to have high research value. Rather, it was regarded as an early opportunity to demonstrate the performance of the arm's "hand lens" and X-ray spectrometer.

Curiosity has now continued driving.

On Monday, it moved some 42m (138ft), the single biggest roll for the robot since landing seven weeks ago in Mars' equatorial Gale Crater.

The vehicle is endeavouring to get to location that scientists have nicknamed Glenelg, which satellite images have indicated is a junction between three types of geological terrain.

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Ford to axe 'hundreds' of jobs in Europe

Ford is hoping to revive sales in Europe

US car giant Ford has said that it will cut several hundred jobs in Europe because of declining demand, including in the UK.

Jobs will also go in Germany and in other parts of Europe.

The carmaker will offer voluntary buyouts for staff and cut jobs for "agency workers and purchased service", it said.

Ford has warned its European operations could suffer losses of $1bn (£630m) this year.

The carmaker has said it does not yet know the final number of axed workers in Europe.

Ford employs 15,000 workers in the UK and has plants at Southampton and Dagenham, among others.

In a dispute over pay and pensions, 67% of Ford's UK workers represented by the Unite union - about 1,200 white-collar employees - voted in favour of industrial action after a ballot in May.

"Ford of Europe expects the programmes to result in the reduction of several hundred salaried positions, but exact figures won't be known for a few months," Ford said.

"Any Ford salaried staff separations across all three programmes will be purely voluntary."



Lowest in decades
Earlier this month, the carmaker unveiled a string of new models, including revamped versions of its best-selling Fiesta, Mondeo and Kuga brands, to revive sales in Europe.

Ford's European chief executive Stephen Odell, speaking at the launch in Amsterdam, said at the time that Europe offered tremendous growth potential in the long term.

The US automotive giant's sales fell almost 10% in Europe during the first half of 2012, to its lowest level in 17 years.

Ford wants to reduce labour costs and improve plant utilisation in Europe, where industry watchers say it uses less than 65% of its capacity.

With closing factories in Germany politically difficult, Ford is trying to get the unions and national politicians in Belgium, Germany, Spain and the UK to agree to structural changes.

Glass slivers that store data forever unveiled by Hitachi


TOKYO —
The Hitachi company unveiled a method of storing digital information on slivers of quartz glass that can endure extreme temperatures and hostile conditions without degrading, almost forever. And for anyone who updated their LP collection onto CD, only to find they then needed to get it all on MP3, a technology that never needs to change might sound appealing.
The volume of data being created every day is exploding, but in terms of keeping it for later generations, we haven’t necessarily improved since the days we inscribed things on stones, The possibility of losing information may actually have increased, noting the life of digital media currently available CDs and hard drives is limited to a few decades or a century at most. And the rapid development of technologies has resulted in frequent changes of data-reading hardware.
Provided a computer with the know-how to understand that binary is available simple enough to program, no matter how advanced computers become the data will always be readable, The prototype storage device is two centimeters square and just two millimeters thick and made from quartz glass, a highly stable and resilient material, used to make beakers and other instruments for laboratory use.
The chip, which is resistant to many chemicals and unaffected by radio waves, can be exposed directly to high temperature flames and heated to 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 Fahrenheit) for at least two hours without being damaged. It is also waterproof, meaning it could survive natural calamities, such as fires and tsunami.
The material currently has four layers of dots, which can hold 40 megabytes per square inch, approximately the density on a music CD, researchers said, adding they believe adding more layers should not be a problem. Hitachi have not decided when to put the chip to practical use but researchers said they could start with storage services for government agencies, museums and religious organizations.

Myspace gives peek at website redesign


SAN FRANCISCO —
Myspace this week provided a glimpse at a major overhaul of the music-centric online community striving to reclaim lost glory. A message atop the myspace.com home page promised: Coming soon. The new Myspace, and provided a link to video showing a redesigned user interface that deeply integrates Facebook and Twitter.
Myspace said, whether you’re a musician, photographer, filmmaker, designer or just a dedicated fan, we’d love for you to be a part of our brand new community. Visitors could leave email addresses to be sent invitations to the redesigned Myspace service. Early this year, Myspace launched a new music player that it said attracted a flood of new fans.
Myspace is vying with hot Internet music services such as Spotify, Pandora, and Rdio as people increasingly go online for entertainment content. Myspace claims the largest library of online music with about 42 million tracks.
News Corp sold Myspace in June for $35 million, just six percent of its $580-million purchase price, to Specific Media, a digital ad-targeting platform.

Camera adjusts focus after taking pictures


SAN FRANCISCO —
A radical camera that lets users adjust the focus after taking pictures will be available in October at shops in Australia, Canada, Singapore, Hong Kong and the United States. Since introducing the Lytro camera just six months ago, nearly 400,000 light field pictures have been shared on Lytro.com.
The telescope-shaped camera uses what is known as light field technology to allow the focal point of a digital image to be changed after the picture is taken, a feature that Lytro calls shoot now, focus later. Clicking on a Lytro picture displayed on a computer screen allows a viewer to shift the focus from a subject in the foreground, for example, to a subject in the background. The Lytro can do this because it uses powerful sensors to capture significantly more light than a conventional camera.
When Lytro pictures are shared online, the light field engine travels with each image so anyone can change focal points as desired. The 16-gigabyte model of the camera, which is about the same size as a stick of butter and can fit easily in a pocket, costs $499 and can hold 750 pictures. An 8GB version costs $399 and can capture 350 images.
There has been a lot of excitement to be a part of this next phase in photography and start producing light field pictures in Australia.

Endurance: 'Still time' for Shackleton centenary search


Shackleton's ship Endurance was crushed
by the ice in Antarctica's Weddell Sea
 
A long-standing bid to locate the wreck of polar explorer Ernest Shackleton's ship Endurance could still be mounted in time for the centenary of his most famous expedition in 2014.

That's the view of expert David Mearns, who heads the ambitious proposal.

Mr Mearns said any effort to find Endurance would be technically challenging and expensive.

But he says it could be prepared in a year-and-a-half if financial backing could be secured.

Mr Mearns, who is director of UK-based Blue Water Recoveries, calls it "a 100-year dream".

He said there were no "concrete" plans at present to search for the wreck. But the project is under discussion, and Mr Mearns adds: "There is certainly more interest today than there was two years ago."
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Sao Paulo: A city with 180km traffic jams


Next time you complain about being stuck in traffic, spare a thought for the drivers in Brazil's biggest city, which has some of the worst congestion problems in the world.

Friday evenings are a commuter's worst nightmare in Sao Paulo.

That's when all the tailbacks in and out of the city extend for a total of 180km (112 miles), on average, according to local traffic engineers, and as long as 295km (183 miles) on a really bad day.

Red brake lights stretch as far back as the eye can see, blinking repeatedly as drivers endure an exasperating stop-and-go journey, which can continue for hours.

"It's like a sea. A sea of cars," says Fabiana Crespo, as she slowly navigates the congested streets with her 10-month-old baby Rodrigo.

Continue reading the main story

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We have become slaves of traffic”

Fabiana Crespo
"For a long time I lived with my family in the south of Sao Paulo and worked on the other side of town.

"So when I got married, I decided to move to the north of the city to be close to the office, because commuting can make your life hell," she says.

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