Saturday, June 30, 2012

Top women's secret to success: Title IX

La Salle University

Jennifer Ngo, now a special agent for the FBI, during her playing days at La Salle University

By Eve Tahmincioglu

Jennifer Ngo, 32, a special agent for the FBI, played basketball when she was in college. Elyse Darefsky, 54, an IT manager at Cigna, was a big collegiate volleyball and basketball player. And Sarah Ann Slater, 23, who starts graduate school at the London School of Economics in the fall, was a junior tennis champ.

All three women credit sports for their achievements beyond the playing field, and studies show playing sports in your youth can indeed contribute to future career success.

?For me, it was about being part of something bigger than yourself,? said Ngo, who also played soccer growing up. ?As I got older, it helped me with my career.?

Their experiences point to how important it is for girls to have opportunities in athletics.?They also?underscore the significance of Title IX, which paved the way for more gender equity in high school and college sports, and celebrates its 40th anniversary this month.

Engaging in sports in youth can help women, and men, attain career success later in life, and many prominent women often point to that experience as a reason for their ability to climb the ladder.

Irene Rosenfeld, CEO of Kraft Foods, played everything from field hockey to basketball when she was in high school; former Alaska governor and vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin touted her sporting past as a basketball player for the Wasilla Warriors; and SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro was a lacrosse player in college.

As Title IX celebrates its 40th anniversary, hear from three women who've seen the battle from all sides.

Of her lacrosse background at Franklin & Marshall College, where she captained the first varsity team in 1977, Schapiro told Lacrosse Magazine in the March issue, that the game helped her professional life.

?Lacrosse is truly a team endeavor,? she said. ?You have work together, you have to be constantly mindful of where your teammates are, you have to be willing to be in the supporting role, you have to be able to read signals and be prepared to regroup ? all of these are important to workplace success. It also taught me to take risks.?

According to a report by research firm Catalyst published in May, 82 percent of women executives played organized sports after elementary school, and nearly 60 percent said it gave them ?a competitive edge over others in the business world.??

Learning how to compete is among the top life skills youth sport members gain from their participation, according to research from Boston University?s School of Education published last year.

There is ?a direct transfer of life skills from sport to work,? found the research titled ?Career Success and Life Skill Development Through Sports,? which was part of a doctoral thesis by Gavin Bruce Barton.

He found that besides competitiveness, sports participation also developed an individual?s work ethic, ability to handle pressure, resilience, teamwork and confidence.

Surprisingly, the study also found, that ?sport participation as a source of life skill development was cited far more frequently than family, work or education.?

And, the author added, ?Life skills developed in sport can contribute to later work success.?

You don?t have to tell Cigna?s Darefsky?s that. ?I learned more playing sports than I did in school,? she explained. ?I was an introvert, and the confidence that you gain playing sports, you can?t measure that.?

She recalled going on her first job interview at Cigna in her final year of college, right after her basketball team at Clark University had a huge win over Dartmouth. ?It gave me a sense of confidence,? she said, allowing her to nail the interview.

Slater, the recent grad who played tennis, also has seen the benefits.

Courtesy of Sarah Ann Slater

?Being a part of sports actively in my youth and throughout my adolescence really taught me a lot about discipline, time management, and taking responsibility for myself and my own successes or failures,? she said. ?Even though I am not active in competitive sports any more I?was able to successfully transfer those skills into other arenas of my life, mainly academics as a college student, and they continue to be a part of all decisions I make as I go forward with my life.?

Clearly, youth sports can be an ultimate career boon, and Title IX has opened the door for?many women to participate and then reap the future benefits, said Marilyn Strawbridge, professor of physical education at Butler University in Indianapolis, who has studied the impact of sports on women.

Despite the law?s success, however, we have a long way to go when it comes to ensuring more girls get some serious locker room time, an experience that will only help them as they go out into the work world.

?Title IX has been wonderful but there?s still parity to be reached,? stressed Strawbridge. ?Unfortunately we?re still seeing lower rates of sports participation by girls in high school and college and they still get a smaller part of the athletics dollar.?

And that?s a problem given the payoff sports engagement offers women later in their careers and in their lives overall, she pointed out.

Live Poll

Do you think that girls? (and boys?) participation in sports can help lead to greater success later in life?

  • 186770

    Yes

    90%

  • 186771

    No

    5%

  • 186772

    Not sure

    5%

VoteTotal Votes: 366

?Women in sports are better equipped to view themselves as equals; they know how to compete and put themselves out there, and take risks for something better,? she explained. ?They live with consequence and are healthier individuals all the way around, mentally and physically.?

More money and business news:

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Tennis legend Billie Jean King has been a tireless advocate for Title IX both before and since its passage. She reflects on her career and the landmark legislation.

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Source: http://lifeinc.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/29/12459328-playing-youth-sports-helps-women-in-their-careers?lite

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Friday, June 29, 2012

Subway leads to Rome

Construction workers in Greece made an interesting find while digging a new subway tunnel: a hitherto-lost Roman road. [Trib Live]

Where not otherwise specified, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution. Boing Boing is a trademark of Happy Mutants LLC in the United States and other countries.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

AIR.U to bring Super WiFi to small college towns, Microsoft and Google to be part of the process

AIRU to bring Super WiFi to small college towns, Microsoft and Google to be part of the process

Looks like town and gown communities will be among the first to experience "super WiFi," the high-speed broadband made possible, in part, by TV. After getting the FCC nod back in the fall of 2010, the white spaces harboring these unused television frequencies were opened up, paving the way for a host of new wireless broadband services. Now, thanks to AIR.U -- a consortium of over 500 higher learning institutions and tech industry partners like Google and Microsoft -- underserved small college towns will soon see deployments of these high speed networks as early as Q1 2013. Not only will the group's efforts help usher in a low-cost wireless solution, but it'll also tackle a major geographic hurdle: building and terrain penetration. Seems these in-development networks run on a much lower frequency than traditional WiFi and, thus, have greater ease broaching thick walls and covering larger expanses. A pilot effort is underway, although exact details as to the where and when have yet to be revealed. Check out the official presser after the break for the full-on rundown.

Continue reading AIR.U to bring Super WiFi to small college towns, Microsoft and Google to be part of the process

AIR.U to bring Super WiFi to small college towns, Microsoft and Google to be part of the process originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 02:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Video: The road ahead for Egypt?s Morsi



>> how is all this sitting in washington?

>> just now the white house announced the president called mohammed morsi and wished him well. he wants to work together with him on egypt 's transition to democracy . they're impressed that dr. morsi promised tonight to abide by international treaties , that means not breaking egypt 's important historic treaty with israel. he also committed to observe women's rights as richard said. and said he plans to be the president of all the people. will he honor those commitments? administration officials say their greatest leverage is, egypt 's economy collapsed after the revolution. they need millions of dollars in u.s. aid and imf loans. today, john kerry , who's done a number of delegate missions for the white house , revealed he recently went to cairo, he had two very candid talks with morsi, and morsi acknowledged the central issue facing his future, economics. kerry believes that morsi understands what he has to do. the immediate question will be whether egypt 's military will let him have the power to make some very tough decisions.

>> andrea mitchell , tonight. thanks.

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South Florida's Hunter-Reay wins second in a row on IndyCar circuit


Hunter-Reay wins again on IndyCar circuit

NEWTON, Iowa - Ryan Hunter-Reay is on a serious roll now.

After winning IndyCar's race last Sunday at Milwaukee, the Andretti Autosport driver won again Saturday night at Iowa Speedway.

Teammate Marco Andretti finished second. Andretti won last year's race at the short track.

Hunter-Reay pushed his career win total to seven. He is within three points of the series points lead, trailing Will Power.

Hunter-Reay became the first driver to win consecutive oval-track races since Helio Castroneves in 2010. He credited Andretti for developing the chassis setup used in the race.

Dario Franchitti's bid for a fourth consecutive championship went up in smoke with an engine failure on the pace lap. He was the pole winner by virtue of winning Friday's main heat.

Title contenders started falling from there. Power, the series points leader going into the race, tried to turn down in Turn 2 only to find EJ Viso's car sitting there. The contact took them both to the outside wall. Neither were injured, but Power acknowledged not knowing that Viso was there.

James Hinchcliffe, who was second to Power in points, crashed during a restart to end his strong run. He led early in the race.

Ryan Briscoe wasn't a top championship contender, but he was poised to win the race until rookie Josef Newgarden hit him. Briscoe was on older tires and was preparing to pit. He said he gave Newgarden, who had fresher tires, the outside lane, but Newgarden seemed confused about Briscoe's intentions.

They touched and crashed in about the same spot that Power and Viso hit. All of them escaped injury.

JR Hildebrand also had contact, a couple of times in fact. The first was a clip of Hunter-Reay that broke Hildebrand's front wing. He had to pit for repairs. Later, he slapped the outside wall as his car drifted too high on the track.

The race started 35 minutes late due to rain. There were sprinkles for a few minutes beginning on Lap 65, but the storm cell stayed south of the track located along Interstate 80.

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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Hyperthyroidism linked to increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease

Hyperthyroidism linked to increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Aaron Lohr
alohr@endo-society.org
240-482-1380
The Endocrine Society

An overactive thyroid gland, or hyperthyroidism, may increase the risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease even after surgery to remove the gland, according to a new study. The results will be presented Saturday at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting in Houston.

"Overactive thyroid gland has long-lasting effects on the patient's heart and vessels," said study principal investigator Saara Metso, M.D., Ph.D. assistant chief of endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, at Tampere University Hospital in Tampere, Finland. "Therefore, it is important to monitor the patient's heartbeat and blood pressure even years after the overactive thyroid gland has been cured."

The thyroid gland, located in the front of the neck, produces thyroid hormone, which helps regulate the process of turning food into energy. When the gland is overactive and produces excessive hormone, many bodily processes speed up. Symptoms include unexplained weight loss, rapid heart rate, increased appetite, profuse sweating, and feelings of anxiety.

Diagnosis of an overactive thyroid gland usually involves a simple blood test, and effective treatments are available. These include radioactive iodine, which destroys part of the thyroid gland; antithyroid medication to reduce thyroid-hormone synthesis; and surgery, or a thyroidectomy, to remove it.

Recently, however, questions were raised about the long-term health effects of treatment after some studies found that patients who had received radioactive iodine treatment or antithyroid medication had an increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease. This risk persisted long after therapy ended, but it was unclear whether it was associated with the treatment itself or the prior overactive thyroid.

In findings implicating the disease rather than the treatment, the current study showed that patients who had undergone surgical thyroid removal also were at greater risk of being hospitalized for heart and blood-vessel disease. Overall, their risk was 17 percent greater compared to those without a history of overactive thyroid, and the increased risk persisted for as long as two decades after surgery.

"Although overactive thyroid gland is usually easy to diagnose and treat, it may be injurious to the patient's heart and vessels," Metso said. "It is probably the disease rather than the treatment that affects the patient's heart and vessels permanently."

Participants included 4,334 patients diagnosed with overactive thyroid who underwent thyroidectomy in Finland between 1986 and 2007, and 12,991 age- and gender-matched controls. They were 86 percent female, their average age was 46 years, and all were white. Average follow-up was 10.5 years.

Investigators obtained hospitalization information from Finland's national Hospital Discharge Registry for the study. They received funding from Research Funding of the Pirkanmaa Hospital District, Finland.

Hyperthyroidism affects approximately 1 percent of the U.S. population. The most common cause is an autoimmune disorder called Grave's disease.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Hyperthyroidism linked to increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Aaron Lohr
alohr@endo-society.org
240-482-1380
The Endocrine Society

An overactive thyroid gland, or hyperthyroidism, may increase the risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease even after surgery to remove the gland, according to a new study. The results will be presented Saturday at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting in Houston.

"Overactive thyroid gland has long-lasting effects on the patient's heart and vessels," said study principal investigator Saara Metso, M.D., Ph.D. assistant chief of endocrinology in the Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, at Tampere University Hospital in Tampere, Finland. "Therefore, it is important to monitor the patient's heartbeat and blood pressure even years after the overactive thyroid gland has been cured."

The thyroid gland, located in the front of the neck, produces thyroid hormone, which helps regulate the process of turning food into energy. When the gland is overactive and produces excessive hormone, many bodily processes speed up. Symptoms include unexplained weight loss, rapid heart rate, increased appetite, profuse sweating, and feelings of anxiety.

Diagnosis of an overactive thyroid gland usually involves a simple blood test, and effective treatments are available. These include radioactive iodine, which destroys part of the thyroid gland; antithyroid medication to reduce thyroid-hormone synthesis; and surgery, or a thyroidectomy, to remove it.

Recently, however, questions were raised about the long-term health effects of treatment after some studies found that patients who had received radioactive iodine treatment or antithyroid medication had an increased risk of hospitalization for heart and blood-vessel disease. This risk persisted long after therapy ended, but it was unclear whether it was associated with the treatment itself or the prior overactive thyroid.

In findings implicating the disease rather than the treatment, the current study showed that patients who had undergone surgical thyroid removal also were at greater risk of being hospitalized for heart and blood-vessel disease. Overall, their risk was 17 percent greater compared to those without a history of overactive thyroid, and the increased risk persisted for as long as two decades after surgery.

"Although overactive thyroid gland is usually easy to diagnose and treat, it may be injurious to the patient's heart and vessels," Metso said. "It is probably the disease rather than the treatment that affects the patient's heart and vessels permanently."

Participants included 4,334 patients diagnosed with overactive thyroid who underwent thyroidectomy in Finland between 1986 and 2007, and 12,991 age- and gender-matched controls. They were 86 percent female, their average age was 46 years, and all were white. Average follow-up was 10.5 years.

Investigators obtained hospitalization information from Finland's national Hospital Discharge Registry for the study. They received funding from Research Funding of the Pirkanmaa Hospital District, Finland.

Hyperthyroidism affects approximately 1 percent of the U.S. population. The most common cause is an autoimmune disorder called Grave's disease.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


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Saturday, June 23, 2012

Dow Jones Ousts Chief Communications Officer

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5. Text 100, San Fran. - $50,425,771
6. WCG, San Fran. - $47,577,000
7. MWW Group, NJ - $38,626,000
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Friday, June 22, 2012

iPhone 5: What's Up With the Dock?

When Apple's next iPhone hits the market, users may notice something different about the device -- something that so far hasn't changed in Apple's iPod/iPhone line for nearly a decade. The company will switch from the iPhone's current 30-pin port to a 19-pin port, according to TechCrunch.


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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Mitt Romney says Marco Rubio is being vetted for VP. What's going on?

First, news reports said Sen. Marco Rubio is not under consideration as a running mate for the GOP ticket. Then Mitt Romney himself said the Florida senator is 'being throughly vetted.' Either way, it wasn't the best day for Rubio.

By Linda Feldmann,?Staff writer / June 20, 2012

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, campaigning with Sen. Marco Rubio (R) of Florida, talks to reporters in Aston, Pa., on April 23.

Jae C. Hong/AP/File

Enlarge

In the span of a day, Marco Rubio has gone from apparently being off the list of potential running mates for Mitt Romney to being back on.

Skip to next paragraph

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Tuesday evening, Mr. Romney told campaign reporters at an unscheduled stop in Michigan that Senator Rubio of Florida was ?being thoroughly vetted as part of our process.?

Just that morning, ABC News had cited ?knowledgeable Republican sources? saying that Romney?s vice presidential search team had not asked Rubio, one of the party?s rising stars, to complete any questionnaires or turn over any financial documents, the usual procedure for a possible running mate. The Washington Post confirmed the report with an ?outside Romney adviser,? who nevertheless left open the possibility that Rubio could still be vetted.

So is Rubio under consideration or not? It never made sense for him not to be, or at least for the Romney campaign to appear to be considering him by asking for the usual documents. Rubio is a young, charismatic, Hispanic conservative from a top battleground state, Florida. In recent weeks, his star had waned as a possible running mate, as safer choices emerged as more likely ? people like Sen. Rob Portman (R) of Ohio and former Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R) of Minnesota.

Rubio, the new conventional wisdom went, is too young (early 40s) and untested. In short, he could have become another Sarah Palin, a choice that electrifies the conservative GOP base but isn?t widely perceived as being ready to be president on Day One if need be. Romney?s management style suggests that he?s not a gambler like 2008 GOP nominee John McCain, who selected Ms. Palin, the charismatic but (at the time) nationally untested governor of Alaska.

More likely, the reasoning goes, Romney will select a running mate who reinforces his own attributes ? experienced, maybe a tad boring, but someone with economic experience who projects maturity and reassurance to an anxious public.

But in recent presidential cycles, nominees have always made it known that they were casting a wide net for a running mate, and always made clear that the list was diverse, including women and minorities. Throwing out names of people who don?t have a serious chance is considered par for the course.

It?s possible the unnamed sources cited by ABC News were wrong. That was Romney?s message Tuesday evening.

?I can?t imagine who such people are,? Romney told the campaign press pool at a stop in Holland, Mich., referring to ABC?s sources. ?But I can tell you this: They know nothing about the vice presidential selection or evaluation process. There are only two people in this country who know who are being vetted and who are not, and that?s [longtime aide] Beth Myers and myself. And I know Beth well. She doesn?t talk to anybody. The story was entirely false.?

But it?s also possible that word had indeed slipped out that Rubio wasn?t in the running, perhaps as a way to ease into the eventual selection of someone else. If so, the leak was ill-timed.

Last Friday, President Obama electrified the political world by announcing a new policy that will help hundreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants ? a majority of them Hispanic ? stay in the United States legally. Polls show the move is popular with the broad electorate, and could help light a fire under Mr. Obama?s Hispanic base. Obama is already winning Hispanic voters by a wide margin, but there have been questions over whether they will turn out in sufficient numbers to make up for his deficit among white non-Hispanic voters.

Putting Rubio on the ticket would by no means guarantee anything for Romney with the Hispanic vote. Rubio is Cuban-American, which doesn?t necessarily win him points among Mexican-Americans, who face immigration issues that Cubans don?t. But the symbolic importance of having a Hispanic running mate ? the first in American history ? would still mean something.

In the end, it?s possible that Rubio indeed wasn?t being vetted, but in the frenzy after the ABC report, the Romney campaign decided to change the narrative and announce that of course Rubio is being vetted. The bad news for Rubio is that the furor erupted the day his memoir was released. What Rubio no doubt had hoped would be a big moment in the sun turned into a day full of questions about an apparent snub.?

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Court: Mom's punishment over daughter's kiss too harsh

By Miranda Leitsinger, msnbc.com

A woman who beat her 7-year-old daughter with a belt, leaving her with lacerations and bruises on parts of her body for at least a week, was not within her parental rights to mete out punishment that went beyond a ?customary spanking,? a New Jersey court has ruled.

The court?s decision reverses an earlier one in which another judge found the punishment was not extraordinary or excessive by K.T., the girl?s mother.?(Only initials of family members?were provided in the court documents.)


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The girl told a family services caseworker that her mother struck her with a belt after learning that she had kissed a boy during kindergarten class. The Division of Youth and Family Services had been alerted to the injuries on the girl, identified only as S.T. in court documents, by a teacher on June 7, 2011. The division determined the beating occurred around May 31.

Pictures submitted to the court showed bruises on the girl?s arms, back, buttocks and thighs. She also had lacerations to her buttocks and right thigh, probably caused by the prong of a belt buckle, the Appellate Division of New Jersey?s Superior Court said in its decision issued Tuesday in favor of the family services agency.

?We hold that K.T.'s acts against her daughter are excessive corporal punishment and support a finding that S.T.'s ?physical, mental, or emotional condition ... is in imminent danger of becoming impaired as the result of the failure of (K.T.) ... to exercise a minimum degree of care,?? Judges Mary Catherine Cuff and Alexander Waugh said in their decision.

In a recorded interview, K.T. said she struck her daughter with a belt for "a couple of minutes" because she had been sitting on a boy's lap and had been disruptive in school. K.T. said she only meant to strike her daughter?s buttocks, but the girl?s squirming around led to the other bruises. She also said she had used a belt to discipline her daughter in the past, according to the judges? decision.

When asked if she knew what she did was wrong, she replied, "No, because that's pretty much how I was raised," the court documents said.

K.T., citing a prior New Jersey court case, said her actions fell within her constitutional right to use this type of punishment, and the record was void of ?any objective evidence? that she had, in spanking her child, ?recklessly created a risk of serious injury to S.T.?

The court reviewed another New Jersey case where the slapping of a disruptive older child did not constitute excessive corporal punishment. It also said the law didn?t prohibit corporate punishment, and that a parent could inflict reasonable moderate correction, but that was not the case here.

?Multiple strikes with a belt to a seven-year-old child, which left bruises and marks all over the child's body that were visible seven days after the incident, is hardly the occasional discipline of a wayward or incorrigible teenager condoned by the Court? in an earlier case, the judges said. ?Neither the school nor K.T. asserts S.T. exhibited other behavioral problems or was generally a difficult child. The punishment inflicted by K.T. is hardly a ?customary? spanking.?

The earlier trial judge, identified as Union County Superior Court Judge James Hely by the New Jersey Law Journal, had granted physical custody to the girl?s father, M.H., and joint legal custody to both parents. It?s not clear if the custody arrangements have changed with the appellate court?s decision, and the family services?division did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

K.T.'s lawyer, Justin Walker of Piekarsky & Associates, told the law journal that she "may have been angry but I don't believe (her actions) crossed into the realm of abuse."

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Biotech Corp, California group in tie-up

MALAYSIAN Biotechnology Corp (BiotechCorp) and the California
Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3) will work together to set up a QB3 satellite programme in Malaysia in a bid to
produce more entrepreneurs in the budding biotechnology industry.

The move underscores the country?s commitment to develop the industry, having identified it as a new engine of growth for the economy, back in 2005.

QB3 is a consortium of more than 200 labs from the University
of California?s campuses that boast top researchers and facilities as well as entrepreneurial resources.

Its collaboration with Biotech-Corp will see it providing specialised technology training that could help local
biotech researchers in commercialising their products.

The two parties exchanged documents at a symposium held in conjunction with the 2012 Bio International Convention (BIO) that began here on Monday.

This is one of five agreements that Biotech-Corp, the lead agency responsible for developing Malaysia?s biotechnology industry, is set to ink at the four-day convention.

?This collaboration will initiate a positive transfer of knowledge from QB3?s researchers to our researchers that will branch off into streams of knowledge to students, academicians, entrepreneurs and interested parties that will eventually
contribute towards a biotechnology-driven economy as we move towards becoming a highincome nation,? BiotechCorp?s chief executive officer Datuk Mohd Nazlee Kamal said at the event.

The event was witnessed by Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Datuk Seri Maximus Ongkili, who led an 80-member Malaysian delegation to BIO, the world?s largest gathering of biotechnology experts and policymakers.

This marks the eighth year that Malaysia is participating in
the annual event.

?As Malaysia moves further into the second phase of its National Biotechnology Policy ? turning science to business ? we welcome initiatives that would accelerate the commercialisation of our biotechnology companies where the industry is expected to undergo an ultimate test of viability as it embarks upon efforts to intensify the business appeal of all the initiatives,? Ongkili said.

The government is targeting for the industry to account for five per cent of its gross domestic product (GDP) by 2020 and create 300,000 jobs.

It now accounts for nearly 2.3 per cent of the country's GDP and has created more than 40,000 jobs since 2006, said officials at BiotechCorp.

"We hope to create more jobs by collaborating with QB3," said Mohd Nazlee.

To date, BiotechCorp has granted BioNexus status to 215 companies, of which 67 are in the healthcare sector and five - including PureCircle and Holista Biotech - are listed on local or foreign stock exchanges.

Companies with BioNexus-status enjoy incentives such as tax breaks, freedom to source funds globally and freedom of ownership, among other things.

BiotechCorp is an agency under the purview of Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MOSTI) and is owned by the Ministry of Finance Incorporated.

BiotechCorp is responsible for executing the objectives of the National Biotechnology Policy (NBP).

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Monday, June 18, 2012

Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 caught on video bearing Telcel wallpaper

The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is rightly so an interesting, and anticipated device. First shown off at Mobile World Congress back in February, what we're seeing here, and ultimately we're supposedly seeing at launch, is something different to the initial device we went hands on with. There's talk of the Note 10.1 going quad-core, as well as there having been a slight design change with a slot for the S-Pen being included now.

We thought the launch was getting closer only to be told that Amazon made a boo-boo. There is though a new, unofficial, video out there on the interwebs, of the Note 10.1 bearing a Telcel wallpaper. If nothing else on that front, it gives a bit of a clue as to one place it'll be heading when it eventually is released.

It's a pretty detailed video, and we won't spoil it for you. All the text is -- expectedly being Telcel anyway -- in Spanish, but reading isn't really necessary. The one spoiler we will throw in, is that at one point in the video, there is clearly a phone dialer on the screen. Absolutely enormous phone anyone? 

via GigaOM



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Sunday, June 17, 2012

Police say they found body of fugitive Buffalo surgeon

Authorities in Buffalo, N.Y., announce that they have recovered the body of Dr. Timothy Jorden in a wooded area near his home. Jorden suffered what appears to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

By msnbc.com staff and wire reports

Updated 6:35 p.m.:?A scrubs-clad body found in a ravine south of Buffalo, N.Y., is the trauma surgeon suspected of shooting his ex-girlfriend at a hospital, police said Friday.?He was killed by a?self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head, they said.

The body of Timothy Jorden was found in the woods along Eighteenmile Creek behind his home in Lake View, N.Y.?One of Jorden?s neighbors had told police Thursday that he heard a gunshot in the area around 9 a.m. on Wednesday morning.


?

Police launched a nationwide manhunt for?Jorden, 49,?after hospital administrative assistant Jacqueline Wisniewski, 33,?of West Seneca,?was?found?dead in a stairwell at the Erie County Medical Center in Buffalo.

Jorden was considered armed and dangerous. He?joined the National Guard in high school, went into the Army after graduation and served with the Army?s Special Forces, first as a weapon?s expert, then as a medic in the Caribbean, Japan and Korea.

Police Commissioner Daniel Derenda?at a Friday evening news conference said Jorden apparently planned the killing and suicide. Jorden, he said, had withdrawn about $36,000 and had been giving away gifts of cash.

No suicide note was found, Derenda said.

A?personal video surveillance system at his home showed Jorden?returned?to his residence?at 8:37 a.m. immediately following the shooting at the hospital, returned to his car and?re-entered the house and?four minutes?later went out his back door?to the woods behind his home, he said.?Hamburg and Buffalo police found the body Friday morning. A handgun of the same type used in the killing was found in his hand, Derenda said.

Hospital video had shown Jorden toting a handgun and a shotgun before the shooting, he said. Jorden apparently lured Wisniewski to the stairwell through a 17-minute phone conversation with her. He shot her five times with the handgun, Derenda said.

A friend of Wisniewski?s told WIVB-TV that she used to live with Jorden but left him because she believed he was having affairs with other women. But, Heather Shipley said, ?when they broke up, he wouldn?t let go.?

She said Jorden had once held Wisniewski captive in her home for a day and a half, wielding a knife, and he also put a GPS tracking device in her car.

?She told me if anything happened to her,? Shipley said, ?that it was him.?

A nationwide manhunt continues for Dr. Timothy Jorden, a surgeon in Buffalo, N.Y., suspected of murdering a receptionist, who was also his ex-girlfriend, at the Erie County Medical Center Wednesday.

Neighbors and colleagues said they suspected something was wrong with Jorden, a decorated surgeon and respected community member, when he began putting less effort into things he previously cared about, became less friendly, and changed his appearance.

?I saw him at the beginning of the season and noticed how much weight he had lost,? June DuPree, a neighbor of Jorden?s in an exclusive cluster of homes on the shore of Lake Erie, told the Associated Press. ?He said, ?Yeah, I lost a little bit.? But it was more than a little bit. It was a lot. He wasn?t too friendly that time I saw him. He just didn?t want to talk.?

One of Jorden?s colleagues estimated Jorden had dropped about 75 pounds in recent months.

Additionally, neighbors say Jorden?s waning attention to maintaining the well-manicured grounds of his half-million dollar home in his Lake View neighborhood south of Buffalo suggested something might be wrong.

?He had a lot of money invested in his house and the landscaping. And when I came back from Florida in May, it was really neglected. I was just shocked,? neighbor Tom Wrzosek told the AP.

?We presumed he was sick, that maybe he had some sort of major ailment,? he said. ?He was sick, but not in the way we thought he was sick.?

Jorden?s colleagues told the Buffalo News that Jorden, normally a soft-spoken and even-keeled man, had been acting strangely in recent months, avoiding eye contact and basic communication.

A police official told the Buffalo Newsthat Jorden may have been having mental health issues or ?some type of serious physical ailment that caused the drastic weight loss.?

Jorden's office may offer clues to his mental status. A police source said it appeared he had been living in the office. Hidden above ceiling tiles, police found rancid takeout containers and dirty laundry, the Buffalo News reported.

Jorden has been licensed to practice medicine in New York for a decade. He has a medical degree from the University of Buffalo and trained at the Madigan Army Medical Center in Tacoma, Wash. He received his certification from the American Board of Surgery in 2004.

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Friday, June 15, 2012

Credit Agricole mulls letting Emporiki fail - WSJ

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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Lithuania vigilante case exposes social divides

FILE - This Thursday May 17, 2012 file photo shows protesters rallying outside the Presidential palace in Vilnius after riot police helped a mother, Laimute Stankunaite regain custody of her now 8-year-old daughter Deimante, in a tragic case that has riveted Lithuania and led to three deaths. Drasius Kedys, the father of the girl launched a bloody vendetta against an alleged pedophile network of judges and politicians that he claimed preyed on his then 5-year-old daughter. Experts say the dispute, which has become a national obsession, reflects deeper currents of discontent in a post-Soviet society plagued by emigration and the world's highest suicide rate. (AP Photo/Liusjenas Kulbis)

FILE - This Thursday May 17, 2012 file photo shows protesters rallying outside the Presidential palace in Vilnius after riot police helped a mother, Laimute Stankunaite regain custody of her now 8-year-old daughter Deimante, in a tragic case that has riveted Lithuania and led to three deaths. Drasius Kedys, the father of the girl launched a bloody vendetta against an alleged pedophile network of judges and politicians that he claimed preyed on his then 5-year-old daughter. Experts say the dispute, which has become a national obsession, reflects deeper currents of discontent in a post-Soviet society plagued by emigration and the world's highest suicide rate. (AP Photo/Liusjenas Kulbis)

FILE This April 26, 2011 file photo taken in southern Lithuania shows the grave of Drasius Kedys, a Lithuanian man who died in April 2010 after alleging that his daughter, Deimante, at the time nearly 5-years-old, had fallen prey to a pedophile ring. Drasius Kedys launched a bloody vendetta against an alleged pedophile network of judges and politicians that he claimed preyed on his then 5-year-old daughter. Experts say the dispute, which has become a national obsession, reflects deeper currents of discontent in a post-Soviet society plagued by emigration and the world's highest suicide rate. (AP Photo)

(AP) ? A desperate father launches a bloody vendetta against an alleged pedophile network of judges and politicians that he says preyed on his 5-year-old daughter. After two murders, Drasius Kedys hides in the countryside until he is found dead under mysterious circumstances.

It's not the plot of a Stieg Larsson crime novel but the outline of a sad and sordid case that has split Lithuania into two camps. One side believes Kedys fabricated the allegations as part of a custody dispute with the girl's mother; the other sees a wider conspiracy of corrupt child molesters running the country. Experts say the dispute, which has become a national obsession, reflects deeper currents of discontent in a post-Soviet society plagued by emigration and the world's highest suicide rate.

Two years after Kedys' body was found, the case still inflames passions in Lithuania, and last month even reached the U.S., where an angry mob of Lithuanian-American Kedys supporters swarmed the Lithuanian president's motorcade ahead of the NATO summit in Chicago.

"If I were able to say where the truth is and who is right, I would have done so long ago," President Dalia Grybauskaite told a group of Lithuanian-Americans in Lemont, the Chicago suburb where she ran into the protest. "Unfortunately, the whole story is very complicated and corrupted by investigators from the beginning."

The drama unfolded in Kaunas, a city of 500,000 in south-central Lithuania notorious for lousy infrastructure, lopsided wooden homes, and not least of all, corrupt officials wedded to local crime syndicates.

Kedys, a bodybuilder businessman, was a man determined to retain custody of his daughter, Deimante.

Not only did he accuse the girl's mother of pimping Deimante to a pedophile ring, but he video-recorded the girl giving detailed descriptions of sexual acts he claims she was asked to perform by three grown men, then sent the video to over a hundred politicians and law enforcement officials.

When his appeal fell on deaf years, Kedys took the law in his own hands.

In October 2009, he allegedly shot and killed two people he had accused of abetting the alleged pedophile ring ? one of whom was the mother's sister. He then disappeared, only to be found dead six months later, in April 2010. Police said he died after binge drinking and choking on his own vomit ? a finding that many Lithuanians don't believe.

The tragedy didn't end there. Two months later, one of three men whom Kedys accused of molesting his daughter, died after ostensibly falling from his dune buggy and drowning in a creek ? one that was only 8 inches (20 centimeters) deep.

Lithuania appears evenly split between those who see Kedys as a vigilante hero, and those who believe he snapped while trying to win the custody dispute against the girl's mother.

The division cuts like a knife through Lithuanian society, souring dinner party conversations and ruining friendships.

The most fervent group of Kedys supporters ? dubbed "the violets" after the color of a T-shirt Kedys wore in a now iconic photo of him and his daughter ? have continued his struggle on the streets. For six months they surrounded the house where Kedys' relatives were keeping the girl, determined to prevent police from enforcing a court order that gave custody to the mother, Laimute Stankunaite, who claims Kedys fabricated the pedophilia claims to discredit her.

Police finally broke through the wall of protesters on May 17 ? arresting nearly 40 of them ? allowing Stankunaite and her lawyer to whisk the girl into an awaiting police van.

Later the same day hundreds of enraged Kedys supporters turned up to demonstrate outside the President Grybauskaite's residence in Vilnius.

"Lithuania is being demolished with the help of authorities as they use force against an innocent child and destroy the republic's moral foundations," said protester Darius Kuolys, a former adviser to ex-President Valdas Adamkus.

Days later, Grybauskaite got another feel of public wrath ? only this time in Chicago, where she was attending the NATO summit. In Lemont, as she headed to a Lithuanian community event, a crowd of hostile Lithuanian-Americans blocked her car, shouting "disgrace" and waving banners saying Lithuania was "blind to children's tears." Secret Service officers had to jump out of their vehicles and push aside protesters to let the motorcade pass.

What actually happened to the girl is a mystery.

The main evidence cited by "the violets" is the 3-year-old video testimony Kedys made of the girl, who is now 8. A psychiatric evaluation found it unlikely that she had made it all up, but skeptics say it's possible that Kedys had coached her. Doctors who examined her found no physical injuries, and prosecutors dropped the investigation for lack of proof.

The fact that so many Lithuanians are prepared to side with a presumed killer despite such inconclusive evidence reflects an overwhelming lack of trust in public institutions. A Eurobarometer survey in November 2010 showed that faith in the courts was the lowest in Lithuania among 27 European Union member states.

"People have found a way to express their dissatisfaction with their lives and their country. This is the main driving force of the movement," said Andrius Kaluginas, a psychologist who has criticized the "violets."

Lithuania's exuberance at joining the EU and NATO in 2004 was soon replaced by disillusionment as the previously booming economy nearly collapsed during the global financial crisis.

Lithuania remains one of the EU's poorest members and has not overcome the social problems that have dogged it before and after the Soviet breakup in 1991. Alcoholism is rampant, and the suicide rate is the highest in the world, according to the most recent data from the World Health Organization.

Many Lithuanians feel nostalgic for the economic security of Soviet times. Life was grim behind the Iron Curtain but at least the state provided a stable living and welfare benefits. The freedoms of capitalism have also brought wrenching uncertainties and widened the gap between haves and have-nots.

Reaching deeper back in history, the people of this tiny nation recall the greatness of medieval times, when Lithuania, together with Poland, lorded over a swath of eastern Europe from the Baltic to the Black seas ? a golden age that the country will never resurrect.

And the country is shrinking ? at an alarming rate. Hundreds of thousands of Lithuanians have moved other EU countries, primarily Ireland, Britain, and Norway, in search of a better life. Over the past decade, Lithuania's population, now 3 million, has declined 1 percent annually for a total loss of more than 300,000 people, according to last year's census.

With such problems at home, Lithuanians have shown little interest in the wider economic crisis in Europe, which is seen mainly as an issue affecting wealthier nations in the West.

The Kedys saga is likely to continue until general elections in October, as many politicians are keen to keep tensions high. Kedys' supporters have even registered a party that will vie for seats in Parliament: The Way of Courage.

Critics say the mob justice mentality prevailing in the case is a sign that Lithuania has not fully embraced the values underpinning the EU.

"A person who likely killed two people was made a martyr, and the mob has created its own code of law," said Dalia Kuodyte, a liberal member of Parliament. "Lithuania must prove it is still a judicial and democratic state that respects the law and human rights."

Associated Press

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Three things to know as Supreme Court prepares to issue SB 1070 ...

Photo by Kitty Felde/KPCC

The crowd outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. as the court heard arguments on Arizona's SB 1070, April 25, 2012

There are three weeks left in the U.S. Supreme Court?s current term, and it?s during this time that the high court is to issue?its ruling on Arizona?s SB 1070 anti-illegal immigration law. It?s been one of the court?s most closely-watched cases this year, with the potential to have a broad effect on the degree to which states can pursue their own immigration laws.

What exactly will the court be ruling on, what is at stake, and what might the outcome be? Here are some key bullet points as we await a ruling on Arizona v. United States:

What the justices are weighing

In a nutshell, after hearing oral arguments in April, the Supreme Court justices are deciding on whether provisions of Arizona?s state law are in conflict with federal immigration law. This is what the federal government asserted in its legal challenge filed in July 2010, shortly before SB 1070 partly took effect.?That month, a?federal judge in Phoenix issued a ruling temporarily blocking four of the measure?s most controversial provisions.

That decision was upheld later by a federal appeals court. Arizona countered by petitioning the Supreme Court, challenging the two lower courts? decisions; last December, the high court took the case.?From a?guide to Arizona v. United States?put together by an attorney with the?American Immigration Council, here are the four provisions that the Supreme Court is considering:

Section 2(B)?requires state and local police officers to attempt to determine the immigration status of any person stopped under state or local law if ?reasonable suspicion? exists that the person is unlawfully present in the United States. (Note: ?reasonable suspicion? means having a valid reason to suspect unlawful activity, but not enough evidence to make an arrest.) This section also requires state and local authorities to determine the immigration status of any person placed under arrest, regardless of whether the person is suspected of being in the country unlawfully.

Section 3?makes it a crime under Arizona law for unauthorized immigrants to violate the provisions of federal law requiring them to apply for ?registration? with the federal government and to carry a registration card if one has been issued to them. Violations of this provision are punishable by up to 20 days in jail for a first violation and 30 days in jail for subsequent violations.

Section 5(C)?makes it a crime under Arizona law for immigrants who are not authorized to work in the United States to apply for work, solicit work in a public place, or perform work within the state?s borders. The term ?solicit? means any form of communication, including a gesture or nod, indicating that a person is willing to be employed. Violations of this provision are punishable by up to six months in jail and a $2,500 fine.

Section 6?authorizes state and local police officers to arrest immigrants without a warrant where ?probable cause? exists that they committed a public offense making them removable from the United States. (Note: ?probable cause? means having enough evidence of unlawful activity to obtain a warrant or make an arrest.) Under the provision, Arizona law enforcement officers may arrest lawfully present immigrants for crimes committed outside the state, or for crimes for which they were previously incarcerated, if the commission of such a crime is grounds for deportation.

Eight of the nine justices (with Justice Elena Kagan recused) are considering whether these provisions are?preempted?by federal law, meaning they are in conflict with federal law because federal law takes precedence as the law of the land.

What is at stake

What precedent is set by the high court?s ruling would have the most immediate effect on states that have recently enacted anti-illegal immigration laws, styled after SB 1070. More broadly, the ruling could either encourage more state immigration laws, or put a halt to the trend that so far has led to five states enacting SB 1070-style measures since the passage of the Arizona law.

While similar laws have been floated in numerous states, those in which they have taken root include Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, Utah and Indiana, all of which have enacted their own versions of SB 1070.?Alabama,?South Carolina?and?Utah?have also been sued by the federal government on pre-emption grounds; others have been sued by civil rights groups.

More context from this recent post:

In some cases, lower federal court judges have issued preliminary injunctions ? just as was done in Arizona ? blocking some of the more controversial parts of these laws. For example, a judge in October blocked?a provision of the Alabama law?that required public schools to check student?s immigration status, initially prompting a rash of school absences.?The decision by the Supreme Could could have a bearing on these lower court decisions as well; if the partial block of the Arizona law is lifted, it could also affect the injunctions blocking portions of the other state laws as the federal pre-emption challenges and other lawsuits wind their way through the courts.

The preliminary injunctions issued have varied from state to state. For example,?a?September ruling by a federal judge in Birmingham temporarily blocked a provision that would bar undocumented immigrants from state universities, but still allowed police to question people they suspect of being in the country illegally. (The controversial public schools provision was blocked the following month, after the federal government appealed.) Last summer in Georgia, where civil rights groups?have filed suit against the state,?a?federal judge?temporarily blocked?the provision allowing police to check for immigration status.

Beyond the effect on the states, what the court decides could further influence the tone of the immigration debate in general, as SB 1070 has. Since its passage in 2010, the Arizona law has inspired not only copycat laws, but a more stringent enforcement-related legislative climate that has included attempts in some states to end birthright citizenship,?among other things.

The anticipated outcome

Based on the oral arguments in April, there?s?been speculation?that Arizona might prevail on some provisions. There was a line of questioning that set this tone during the April 25 hearing; here?s an excerpt from the transcript?of an exchange between?Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Antonin Scalia, and U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, representing the Obama administration:

JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: General, could you answer Justice Scalia?s earlier question to your?adversary? He asked whether it would be the Government?s position that Arizona doesn?t have the power to exclude or remove ? to exclude from its borders a person who?s here illegally.

GENERAL VERRILLI: That is our position,?Your Honor. It is our position because the Constitution vests exclusive authority over immigration matters with the national government.

JUSTICE SCALIA: All that means, it gives?authority over naturalization, which we?ve expanded to immigration. But all that means is that the Government can set forth the rules concerning who belongs in this country. But if, in fact, somebody who does not belong in this country is in Arizona, Arizona has no power??What does sovereignty mean if it does not include the ability to defend your borders?

After the hearing two legal experts, one siding with Arizona and the other with the federal government, provided?their own prognoses?to Multi-American. Both indicated that while the judges didn?t seem altogether opposed to the controversial ?reasonable suspicion? provision, for example, another provision targeting unauthorized immigrants who seek work might not make it.

From the interviews with constitutional law experts?John C. Eastman, who favors SB 1070,?and?Elizabeth B. Wydra, who doesn?t:

Eastman: ?I think the key provisions, the most controversial, are going to be upheld and they may be upheld by a significant majority. I think the justices rightly recognized that Arizona was not intruding on federal authority here. And the big point on that issue came when the Solicitor General had to concede that law enforcement officers in Arizona could ask about people?s legal immigration status even before this law passed. Once you concede that, the fight becomes simply whether the state can direct its officers how to exercise their discretion.? And that is clearly permissible.

The provision of the Arizona law imposing sanctions on employees for working while illegally present looks like it might fall. The issue there is a bit complicated. Under the Supreme Court?s existing preemption doctrine, if the federal statute says that states can?t impose any criminal sanctions on the employees, then state laws that tried to do that would be expressly preempted. Here, the federal law has penalties against the employer, but does not provide for penalties against the employee.

Wydra:?It did seem like several of the justices, and perhaps a a majority of the justices, did not see a preemption problem. That is, they did not see a conflict with SB 1070?s ?show us your papers? provision. But there also seemed to be a majority of the justices who were very concerned about the other provisions of the law, which include state criminal sanctions for people who don?t carry their immigration documents and unauthorized immigrants who seek work in Arizona.

The questioning really did focus on the provision that the public is certainly most concerned about, which is the provision that authorizes law enforcement officers to ask a person for their immigration papers if there is ?reasonable suspicion? that the person is in the country illegally.

Also worth noting is that the Supreme Court ruled earlier this year in favor of?a previous Arizona anti-illegal immigration law, one mandating employers to use a federal program called?E-Verify?to check workers?s immigration status and punishing those who don?t comply.

All this said, the justices will make the final call. Not that their ruling will put SB 1070 to rest:?While this decision will address the federal preemption question, there are still other pending legal challenges that explicitly address civil rights and racial profiling concerns. This is something that the case in the Supreme Court does not get into, a different set of arguments altogether.

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