Monday, October 31, 2011

Nick is angry video III: Diaz complains about his living conditions

Nick Diaz was on top of the world last night. The former Strikeforce welterweight champ had just beaten a legend in B.J. Penn and talked his way into a title fight against Georges St-Pierre. How did Diaz react?

He ranted for nearly 20 minutes. After explaining why he's not making enough money and that he didn't want to fight B.J. Penn, Diaz told the media that his neighborhood sucks and so does his house.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Nick-is-angry-video-III-Diaz-complains-about-hi?urn=mma-wp8814

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NASA launches latest Earth-observing satellite (AP)

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. ? After a years-long delay, an Earth-observing satellite blasted into space early Friday on a dual mission to improve weather forecasts and monitor climate change.

A Delta 2 rocket carrying the NASA satellite lifted off shortly before 3 a.m. from the central California coast. The satellite separated from the rocket about an hour after launching, unfurled its solar panels and headed toward an orbit 500 miles above Earth.

NASA invited a small group of Twitter followers to watch the pre-dawn launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, where weather conditions were ideal. Skies were clear and there was little wind.

"It was a thrill to watch the bird go up this morning in the beautiful clear night sky with the stars out there," Mary Glackin of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said at a post-launch news conference.

The satellite joins a fleet already circling the planet, collecting information about the atmosphere, oceans and land. The latest ? about the size of a small SUV ? is more advanced and carries four new instruments capable of making more precise observations.

Mission project scientist Jim Gleason said he could not wait for the data to "start flowing." NOAA meteorologists planned to use the information to improve their forecasts of hurricanes and other extreme weather while climate researchers hope to gain a better understanding of long-term climate shifts.

Besides collecting weather information, the satellite will track changes in the ozone, volcanic ash, wildfires and Arctic sea ice.

Many satellites currently in orbit are aging and will need to be replaced. The newest satellite is intended to be a bridge between the current fleet and a new generation that NASA is developing for NOAA.

The $1.5 billion mission's path to the launch pad has been rocky. It was part of a bigger civilian-military satellite program that the White House axed last year because of cost overruns. The satellite was originally scheduled to fly in 2006, but problems during development of several instruments led to a delay.

Engineers will spend some time checking out the satellite's instruments before science operations begin. Built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo., the satellite is expected to orbit the Earth for five years.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_sc/us_sci_earth_satellite

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Former top Wall Streeter denies insider trading (AP)

NEW YORK ? A former board member of Goldman Sachs and Procter & Gamble pleaded not guilty Wednesday to federal charges accusing him of acting as "the illegal eyes and ears in the boardroom" for a friend, a billionaire hedge fund founder sentenced this month to 11 years in prison in the biggest insider trading case in history.

The case, built partially on wiretaps used for the first time in insider trading, has offered unprecedented insight into greed at the highest levels of Wall Street. The arrest of Rajat Gupta took it one step higher.

The indictment unsealed Wednesday accuses Gupta of cheating the markets with Raj Rajaratnam, the 54-year-old convicted hedge fund founder who was the probe's prime target.

Gupta, 62, quietly surrendered early in the day at the FBI's New York City office, a few blocks north of the ongoing Occupy Wall Street demonstration against what protesters call a culture of corporate greed. His lawyer called the allegations "totally baseless."

Swarmed by photographers, Gupta left the courthouse shortly before 4 p.m.

Gupta, of Westport, Conn., pleaded not guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and five counts of securities fraud, charges that carry a potential penalty of 105 years in prison. He was freed on $10 million bail, and conditions require him to remain in the continental United States. An April 9 trial date was set.

The indictment in U.S. District Court in Manhattan alleges Gupta shared confidential information about both Goldman Sachs and Procter & Gamble at the height of the financial crisis from 2008 through January 2009, knowing that Rajaratnam would use the secrets to buy and sell stock ahead of public announcements.

In a release, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said Gupta broke the trust of some of the nation's top public companies and "became the illegal eyes and ears in the boardroom for his friend and business associate, Raj Rajaratnam, who reaped enormous profits from Mr. Gupta's breach of duty."

Alluding to the wide scope of the prosecution, he added: "Today we allege that the corruption we have seen in the trading cubicles, investment firms, law firms, expert consulting firms, medical labs, and corporate suites also insinuated itself into the boardrooms of elite companies."

In all, 56 people have been charged in insider trading cases since Bharara took over shortly before Rajaratanam's October 2009 arrest. Of those, 51 have been convicted and 21 sentenced to prison terms ranging from no prison time to 11 years, the longest prison term ever given in an insider trading case.

FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Janice Fedarcyk said Gupta's arrest was the latest to occur in an initiative launched by the FBI in 2007 against hedge fund cheats.

"The conduct alleged is not an inadvertent slip of the tongue by Mr. Gupta," she said. "His eagerness to pass along inside information to Rajaratnam is nowhere more starkly evident than in the two instances where a total of 39 seconds elapsed between his learning of crucial Goldman Sachs information and lavishing it on his good friend."

Authorities said they relied on wiretaps for the first time because it became apparent inside traders were employing the tactics of common criminals to evade detection. If the Gupta case goes to trial, taped conversations would be key evidence, as it was in the Rajaratnam trial.

The Rajaratnam probe led to a major spinoff investigation of expert networking firms, with investigators targeting those who enabled corrupt employees at public companies to divulge secrets to hedge fund managers as if their conversations were legitimate research.

Gupta's lawyer, Gary P. Naftalis, said in a statement Wednesday that his client had only legitimate communications with Rajaratnam.

"The government's allegations are totally baseless," he said. "The facts in this case demonstrate that Mr. Gupta is innocent of any of these charges and that he has always acted with honesty and integrity. ... We are confident that these accusations ? which are based entirely on circumstantial evidence ? cannot withstand scrutiny and that Mr. Gupta will be completely exonerated of any wrongdoing."

Aside from being a former director of the Wall Street powerhouse Goldman Sachs, Gupta is the former chief of McKinsey & Co., a highly regarded global consulting firm that zealously guards its reputation for discretion and integrity.

Gupta was also a former director of the huge consumer products company Procter & Gamble Co., a pillar of American industry and one of the 30 companies that make up the Dow Jones industrial average. P&G owns many well-known brands including Bounty, Tide and Pringles.

The Indian-born defendant's name played prominently at the criminal trial this year of Rajaratnam, who was convicted after prosecutors used a trove of wiretaps on which he could be heard coaxing a crew of corporate tipsters into giving him an illegal edge on blockbuster trades.

Jurors heard testimony that at an Oct. 23, 2008, Goldman board meeting, members were told that the investment bank was facing a quarterly loss for the first time since it had gone public in 1999.

Prosecutors produced phone records showing Gupta called Rajaratnam 23 seconds after the meeting ended, causing Rajaratnam to sell his entire position in Goldman the next morning and save millions of dollars.

Rajaratnam also earned close to $1 million when Gupta told him that Goldman had received an offer from Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway to invest $5 billion in the banking giant, prosecutors said.

In one tape played at trial, Rajaratnam could be heard grilling Gupta about whether the Goldman Sachs board had discussed acquiring a commercial bank or an insurance company.

"Have you heard anything along that line?" Rajaratnam asked Gupta.

"Yeah," Gupta responded. "This was a big discussion at the board meeting."

Prosecutors sought to maximize the impact of the Gupta tape by calling Goldman Sachs chairman Lloyd Blankfein to testify that the phone call violated the investment bank's confidentiality policies.

The Securities and Exchange Commission also brought civil insider trading charges against Gupta on Wednesday.

Besides highlighting the Goldman allegations that came out during the Rajaratnam trial, the indictment also accused Gupta of providing Rajaratnam in January 2009 with a tip that P&G was not going to meet sales growth expectations for the fiscal year. As a result, prosecutors said, Rajaratnam told a portfolio manager about the tip and certain funds sold short about 180,000 shares of P&G stock.

Daniel Alpert, managing partner at the investment bank Westwood Capital LLC, said Gupta, who did not benefit financially, demonstrates that passing information to friends is just as dangerous as trading on secrets.

"There is not a single person out there who doesn't know he is playing at the edges of propriety when he is doing it, and few who don't feel a pang of guilt after having done so," Alpert said.

"This has many of the same attributes as organized crime prosecutions," he said. "Until you throw the kingfishes in jail, there is unlikely to be any deterrent effect."

___

AP Business Writer Daniel Wagner contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_re_us/us_hedge_fund_insider_trading

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An antibiotic effect minus resistance

Friday, October 28, 2011

After 70 years, antibiotics are still the primary treatment for halting the spread of bacterial infections. But the prevalence of antibiotic resistance is now outpacing the rate of new drug discovery and approval.

A microbiologist at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) has discovered a different approach: Instead of killing the bacteria, why not disarm them, quashing disease without the worry of antibiotic resistance?

Ching-Hong Yang, associate professor of biological sciences, has developed a compound that shuts off the "valve" in a pathogen's DNA that allows it to invade and infect.

The research is so promising that two private companies are testing it with an eye toward commercialization.

"We analyzed the genomic defense pathways in plants to identify all the precursors to infection," says Yang. "Then we used the information to discover a group of novel small molecules that interrupt one channel in the intricate pathway system."

Yang and collaborator Xin Chen, a professor of chemistry at Changzhou University in China, have tested the compound on two virulent bacteria that affect plants and one that attacks humans. They found it effective against all three and believe the compound can be applied to treatments for plants, animals and people.

The work was published online this month in the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

Urgent concerns about antibiotics

The economic costs and health threats of antibiotic resistance have become so serious that the World Health Organization (WHO) this year dedicated World Health Day to call global attention to the issue.

Antibiotics are routinely sprayed on crops and widely used in factory farming of animals, which causes resistance to develop quickly. That antibiotic resistance is then transferred to humans who eat the food containing antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Among the bacteria tested by the researchers is Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which is resistant to a broad range of antibiotics. It causes infections in people with compromised immune systems, such as HIV and cancer patients. It's also responsible for lung infections in patients with cystic fibrosis, and hospital-related infections such as urinary tract infections, pneumonia and infections from burns.

The fatality rate from these is about 50 percent. Hospital-acquired urinary tract infections by P. aeruginosa alone cost more than $3.5 billion a year in the U.S.

Road to the market

The research has attracted interest from two companies. Creative Antibiotics, a Swedish pharmaceutical company, is testing the compound and derivatives for human therapeutic uses and Wilbur-Ellis Agribusiness Division, based in Washington and California, is examining them for agricultural uses.

Despite the constant threat of disease in agriculture, says John Frieden, a biologist and R&D manager with Wilbur-Ellis, the industry has not had access to any new antibiotics in many years. U.S. regulatory agencies do not allow agribusiness to use antibiotics that are also used for human health ? even if they would be effective.

"The thing that caught my attention," Frieden says, "was that this was not an antibiotic, but it accomplishes the same thing as an antibiotic."

Although he says it is too soon to tell if a product could spring from the research, the approach is "incredibly unique. I've never seen anything that is even close to a commercial application like this. It could be very big."

The researchers have filed two patents on the work through the UWM Research Foundation (UWMRF), and Yang is partially funded through two UWMRF Bradley Catalyst Grants and a UWM Research Growth Initiative (RGI) grant.

Virulence factors

The compounds Yang and Chen have developed are unique because they take aim at one component of a cluster that makes pathogenic bacteria harmful.

One of those components, the type III secretion system (T3SS), gives pathogens their ability to invade a cell, letting in a host of proteins that enhance the bacterium's ability to cause disease.

"These bacteria are very smart," says Yang. "They grow a narrow appendage that acts as a 'needle,' injecting the virulence factors, such as toxins, into the host cell. The host cell cannot recognize the pathogen's 'needle,' so its defense mechanism is not triggered."

Yang and Chen's compounds block the production of T3SS. Although they have tested the compounds on only three pathogens, they have reason to believe the compounds will be effective against far more.

"T3SS exists in many different kinds of disease-causing bacteria," says Yang, "so the compounds can target multiple pathogens. That's the beauty of it."

He and his lab members are now working on developing more derivatives that could be effective against different kinds of harmful bacteria.

Yang also believes that their therapeutic compounds, like antibiotics, can offer both a broad spectrum of activity and be unique to a specific pathogen, depending on which virulence elements are targeted.

###

University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee: http://www.uwm.edu

Thanks to University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114739/An_antibiotic_effect_minus_resistance

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Friday, October 28, 2011

HP says it will keep personal computer unit

(AP) ? Hewlett-Packard Co. has decided against spinning off or selling its PC division ? a plan first brought to light in August by the technology conglomerate's now former CEO.

HP said Thursday that it reached its decision after evaluating the impact to the company of jettisoning the business unit, which is the world's biggest manufacturer of desktop and notebook computers for consumers and businesses.

The unit supplies a third of HP's revenue, and PCs are an area where the company is a market leader. But it is HP's least profitable division, and its disposal was meant to be part of former CEO Leo Apotheker's plan to transform the Silicon Valley stalwart into a twin of East Coast rival IBM Corp.: a company focused on businesses, rather than both businesses and consumers.

In an interview, HP's new CEO Meg Whitman said the company determined that, given the lost revenue and cost, removing business "makes no sense."

"I have a lot of confidence we've made the right decision and now we're going to go back to work and go execute," she said.

Deciding what to do with the unit has been one of the biggest challenges for Whitman, a former head of online marketplace operator eBay Inc. who joined Palo Alto-based HP in September after Apotheker was fired.

In August, Apotheker said the PC business would go up for sale in a badly blundered announcement that hastened his demise. At that time, HP also said it would exit the tablet computer and smartphone business and buy business software maker Autonomy Corp. for about $10 billion.

Carving out the PC business would have been a tricky kind of surgery, given its enormity. Steve Diamond, an associate professor at Santa Clara University School of Law, told The Associated Press last month that "tearing apart a business unit of that size is like taking out organs."

"It's very painful. It's like dividing Siamese twins. It's very, very difficult to do and you don't know how it's going to come out," he said.

HP appears to have reached a similar conclusion.

The company said that its evaluation of the business unit revealed a deep integration across key operations, such as its supply chain and procurement. Ultimately, the review found that the cost of recreating these operations in a single company outweighed any benefits of separating the PC unit.

Some analysts cheered HP's decision as the right move, adding they were happy that Whitman made the announcement so rapidly. She had previously said the company would make a determination about the business by the end of the year.

"The fact that Meg pushed this decision very quickly is absolutely cleaning up the mistakes of the past," said Gartner analyst Mark Fabbi.

Whitman said she wanted to reach a decision on the business as fast as possible because it had "created a lot of uncertainty in the marketplace."

Forrester Research analyst Frank Gillett said HP never should have considered removing its PC unit, and the move to keep it seems like the right decision given market conditions.

"Hopefully it's the beginning of showing they've got the process and people in place to work these things through," he said. "But it is puzzling that it was hard for them to figure out."

Gillett said he thinks HP may now be able to thin out its PC family ? similar to what Steve Jobs did at Apple in order to resuscitate the company in the '90s ? and focus on just a few devices with attractive features.

"It's something they have the potential to do that few others do," Gillett said.

Analysts said they don't see any long-term consequences for HP now that it has made its decision. But there's still a big question mark: How will HP compete in the rapidly growing mobile device market?

As part of its PC business spinoff announcement, HP also said it would stop making tablet computers and smartphones by October ? effectively killing flailing smartphone pioneer Palm Inc., which HP bought in 2010 for $1.8 billion.

With Palm, HP got the intuitive WebOS software, which ran on several smartphones. In July, HP released a tablet called the TouchPad that also ran WebOS. But the devices never caught on with consumers, many of whom were more enticed by Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPad and smartphones running Google Inc.'s Android software. HP still hasn't said what, precisely, it plans to do with WebOS.

Todd Bradley, the head of HP's PC unit, said it's "fair to say Apple got a great jump-start in the tablet space" and now HP is trying to figure out its own best approach. Right now, HP is focused on building a tablet that uses Microsoft Corp.'s upcoming Windows 8 software, he said.

He added that consumers shouldn't be keeping an eye out for a TouchPad 2, but that the company will "clearly look at what's the right path forward for WebOS."

HP shares rose 14 cents to $27.23 in after-hours trading. In regular trading on Thursday, the stock added $1.34, or 5.2 percent, to close at $27.09.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-27-Hewlett-Packard-PC%20Unit/id-b23ad1f25ac34bc6a999777d1088c228

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Huskies offense stalls again in 35-20 loss to Pitt (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? Connecticut spent 10 days trying to figure out a way to stop Pittsburgh star running back Ray Graham.

The Huskies never saw Tino Sunseri coming.

The Pitt quarterback lit up the UConn defense for 419 yards and two touchdowns after Graham went down with a knee injury in the first quarter to lead the Panthers to a 35-20 victory that left the Huskies reeling.

"We were definitely geared up for Ray Graham and the run game, they have a great run game," UConn linebacker Sio Moore said. "They did some things that were a little brand new. At the same time, they did some things where they just made a play on us."

And the Huskies (3-5, 1-2 Big East) didn't have an answer.

Lyle McCombs ran for 124 yards but UConn could get little going in the passing game when it mattered. Johnny McEntee completed 17 of 33 passes for 193 yards and two scores, but the Big East's worst offense again struggled to move the ball for long stretches.

"It seemed like every game we do a pretty good job on certain drives and move the ball really well either we can't get a touchdown in the red zone or can't do it the whole game," McEntee said. "We just have to work on that."

There's plenty of work to go around for the defending Big East champions, who scored all of three offensive touchdowns during a forgettable October in which they lost three of four games.

"This (stuff) can't go on anymore," McEntee said. "We're going home and this is not going to be tolerated."

Particularly if UConn has any hopes of staying alive in the wide-open Big East. The Huskies didn't look like contenders during a rare midweek national television appearance.

Sunseri, whose grasp of the starting job has been tenuous this season, completed 29 of 42 passes and his 419 yards matched the most by a Pitt quarterback in eight years.

"As a quarterback you just want to move the ball down the field, and I felt like we were able to move the ball consistently and we were able to complete passes," Sunseri said.

Even if his coach thought Sunseri would complete a couple more.

"I thought we would throw for 500, I really did," Todd Graham said. "Our rhythm was really there tonight. ... That's what I'm used to."

Just not at Pitt.

Graham built his reputation by turning Tulsa into an offensive juggernaut and hoped for a quick transformation with the Panthers. The "high octane" attack he promised in the offseason has only shown itself occasionally.

Thinking his players were tentative because they were thinking too much, Graham simplified things over the past week. The trimmed down playbook worked.

The Panthers (4-4, 2-1) had little trouble moving the ball against the Huskies behind Sunseri, who made his coach's vote of confidence pay off with the best game of his career.

Pitt needed it when Graham crumpled to the ground at midfield after having his right leg pinned awkwardly underneath him while getting tackled by UConn's Jory Johnson following a 1-yard gain.

Graham clutched the back of his leg before being helped off the field, where he punched an equipment table before heading to the locker room.

The nation's second-leading rusher returned to the field in street clothes and is expected to have an MRI on Thursday to determine the extent of the injury.

The Panthers looked dramatically different without their star running back, but the embattled Sunseri appeared capable of keeping the offense afloat. Hitting receivers underneath and letting them do the work, Sunseri picked apart UConn's defense all night.

His legs weren't bad either. Sunseri ran for a team-high 40 yards, including an 8-yard touchdown four plays after Graham went down that gave Pitt a quick 7-0 lead.

Sunseri was just getting started. He hit Mike Shanahan for a 17-yard score to put the Panthers up 14-0 and led a 68-yard drive late in the first half that ended with a 3-yard dive by Zach Brown to put the Panthers up 21-3.

UConn made a game of it briefly after McEntee hit Kashif Moore for a 62-yard touchdown pass ? the Huskies' first offensive score in nearly a month ? and David Teggart drilled a 31-yard field goal to bring UConn within 21-13 midway through the third quarter.

The Panthers responded quickly, going 82 yards in just five plays with Shanahan doing most of the work on a 27-yard touchdown pass to put Pitt up 28-13.

The Huskies couldn't get back in it, and Pitt finished off UConn with a late touchdown pass from freshman wide receiver Ronald Jones to Devin Street.

"I thought our guys fought, but we just didn't play well enough tonight," UConn coach Paul Pasqualoni said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/fbc_connecticut

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State budget cuts clog criminal justice system (AP)

ATLANTA ? Prosecutors are forced to ignore misdemeanor violations to pursue more serious crimes. Judges are delaying trials to cope with layoffs and strained staffing levels. And in some cases, those charged with violent crimes, even murder, are set free because caseloads are too heavy to ensure they receive a speedy trial.

Deep budget cuts to courts, public defenders, district attorney's and attorney general offices are testing the criminal justice system across the country. In the most extreme cases, public defenders are questioning whether their clients are getting a fair shake.

Exact figures on the extent of the cuts are hard to come by, but an American Bar Association report in August found that most states cut court funding 10 percent to 15 percent within the past three years. At least 26 states delayed filling open judgeships, while courts in 14 states were forced to lay off staff, said the report.

The National District Attorneys Association estimates that hundreds of millions of dollars in criminal justice funding and scores of positions have been cut amid the economic downturn, hampering the ability of authorities to investigate and prosecute cases.

"It's extremely frustrating. Frankly, the people that do these jobs have a lot of passion. They don't do these jobs for the money. They are in America's courtrooms every day to protect victims and do justice," said Scott Burns of the National District Attorneys Association. "And they're rewarded with terminations, furloughs and cuts in pay."

The ripple effects have spread far beyond criminal cases to even the most mundane court tasks, such as traffic violations and child custody petitions. The wait to process an uncontested divorce in San Francisco, for example, is expected to double to six months as the system struggles to absorb state budget cuts that have led to layoffs of 40 percent of the court's work force and the closing of 25 of 63 courtrooms.

Some wealthier residents are turning to private arbitrators to hear their cases, said Yasmine Mehmet, a family law attorney in San Francisco who advises some of her clients to settle disputes outside the public court system.

"We're seeing huge delays in getting trial dates and just getting standard documents processed," she said. "The courts are just so overwhelmed. They just don't have the people-power to handle these cases."

The cuts come as civil and criminal caseloads for many state and county systems have swelled. Maine had a 50 percent increase in civil cases during the last five years, in part because of foreclosures related to the nation's housing crisis, records show.

Iowa's court system is struggling to recover from cuts in 2009 that forced officials to lay off 120 workers and eliminate 100 vacant positions. Staffing levels there are now lower than in 1987, while district court filings since then have increased 66 percent.

Public defenders, whose offices also are absorbing cuts, are taking more clients.

"If you don't have enough lawyers to handle the cases, it leaves them open to speedy-trial challenges and ineffective assistance of counsel," said Ed Burnette, a vice president of the National Legal Aid & Defender Association.

Some of the lapses are testing speedy-trial rules, in some cases resulting in dismissals that otherwise are hard to win. In Georgia, trial and appellate courts have dismissed a handful of indictments against suspects accused of violent crimes because they could not be brought to trial fast enough.

In one case, a judge tossed out murder charges against two Atlanta men because it took Fulton County prosecutors four years to indict them after they were arrested and charged with a 2005 shooting. Local prosecutors say strained resources were partly to blame for the delay.

Legal agencies that represent the poor and depend on government grants also have been hit hard.

State funding for the Georgia Resource Center, which represents indigent death penalty defendants in post-conviction proceedings, has fallen by about $250,000 over three years. This year, the center fell short on a $300,000 grant from a foundation, forcing layoffs of a paralegal and an assistant administrator and the reduction to part-time status of a staff attorney.

"We've been running on a shoestring for years and we are minimally available to take care of all the guys on death row," said Brian Kammer, the center's executive director, who said he is writing grant applications at the same time he is representing death row inmates. "But with this kind of funding loss, we're getting crippled."

New York and California are among the states that have been hit hardest by budget cuts.

California's attorney general's office has considered eliminating units that work with local law enforcement agencies on gang and drug crimes as a way to address a projected $70 million in budget cut over two years.

After the San Francisco Superior Court laid off 67 staffers and shuttered courtrooms because of budget cuts, judges warned it could take residents hours just to pay a traffic fine in person. The court would have been forced to make deeper cuts had it not received an emergency $2.5 million loan from the state.

New York lawmakers slashed $170 million from the Office of Court Administration's $2.7 billion budget, forcing layoffs and a hiring freeze. Judges were ordered to halt proceedings at 4:30 p.m. sharp to control overtime pay, and courts also were told to call fewer potential jurors, who cost $40 a day.

Defendants in New York are generally supposed to see a judge within 24 hours of their arrest. But staff cuts left them waiting an average of about 50 hours over the summer, said Julie Fry, vice president of the Brooklyn division of the union representing Legal Aid lawyers.

"People were waiting for two, three and four days at a time. Some are waiting for administrative code violations, like riding bicycles on the sidewalk or sleeping on a subway train," she said.

"This really disrupts people's lives. Some of these people are on the cusp of being employed, and they can't afford missing a few days of work."

In Alabama, the state's top judge rescinded an order issued by his predecessor that would have dramatically reduced the schedules for civil and criminal trials, telling a local newspaper that the cost of additional jury trials was "not that significant." The move was aimed at coping with a budget that had dropped nearly $30 million in the last year.

"Victims should not become victims of our system," Judge Chuck Malone said in August.

The trial for one high-profile case there was delayed almost a year.

An Alabama man accused of killing his wife while on a honeymoon scuba diving trip in Australia was supposed to be in court in May, but his trial is now scheduled for February because of a shortage of bailiffs and other court personnel. Statewide, more than 250 people have been laid off from Alabama's trial courts.

In California, attorneys with the Sacramento County district attorney's office are taking on heavier caseloads while the office scales back popular services such as its community prosecution program, which dispatched staffers to meet with neighborhood associations to address quality-of-life issues such as public drunkenness.

Attorneys also refer misdemeanor cases to pretrial diversion programs, while marijuana possession, trespassing and other such crimes are often treated as mere infractions.

"We're doing it as best we can," said Jan Scully, the top prosecutor in the county where the state capital is located. "But doing it as best we can doesn't mean we're doing it as best we should be doing."

___

Bluestein can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/bluestein.

___

Associated Press writers Paul Elias in San Francisco, Mike Glover in Des Moines, Iowa, and Bob Johnson in Montgomery, Ala., contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_us/us_broken_budgets_criminal_justice

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

TSX opens higher, helped by U.S. data, earnings (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Canadian stocks looked set to open higher on Wednesday, with natural resource shares helped by rising commodity prices, though investors were on guard ahead of the crucial European Union debt summit.

Investors will also closely watch the Bank of Canada's Monetary Policy Report after the central bank said on Tuesday, the outlook for Canadian economy had weakened, citing European debt crisis and slowing growth in its top trade partner, United States.

FACTORS TO WATCH

* Canadian equity futures pointed to a higher open.

* U.S. stock index futures rose after the S&P fell 2 percent in the previous session as optimism about corporate earnings offset concerns about the results of a meeting of European leaders to tackle the region's debt crisis.

* European shares edged higher in thin, choppy trade ahead of a meeting of regional leaders to try and resolve the two-year-old euro-zone debt crisis.

* Asian shares declined ahead of a key meeting of European policymakers later in the session, with concerns heightening that the outcome to contain Europe's sovereign debt crisis could fall short of expectations.

COMMODITY PRICE MOVES

* The Thomson Reuters-Jefferies CRB index, a global commodities benchmark, rose 0.48 percent in early trade.

* Brent crude futures eased, giving up earlier gains, due to worries that Europe may fail to deliver a firm solution to its sovereign debt crisis.

* Gold hit one-month highs in its longest stretch of gains in over two months as investors sought the safety of bullion in the face of an uncertain outcome to a key EU summit and after a surprisingly poor read of U.S. consumer confidence.

* Copper rose ahead of a European Union summit, but looked vulnerable if markets are disappointed by lack of progress in tackling the euro zone debt crisis.

CANADIAN STOCKS TO WATCH

* Research in Motion: The BlackBerry maker said the software upgrade for its PlayBook tablet has been delayed to February next year. The tablet will ship without the Blackberry messenger software, the company said in a blog post on its website.

* Canadian National Railway Co.: The railroad company reported a 19 percent rise in third-quarter profit on Tuesday thanks to record carloadings and revenues, strong operational execution and cost controls.

* Rogers Communications: The wireless company posted a slightly higher third-quarter adjusted profit, helped mainly by strength in its wireless unit.

* Air Canada: The airline agreed to withdraw its appeal against an arbitrator's ruling on pensions for new hires at the airline after the union representing its check-in and call-center staff threatened job action.

* Capital Power Corp.: The North American independent power producer posted a narrower quarterly loss, helped by higher spot power prices in Alberta and better performance of its plants.

* MEG Energy Corp.: The oil sands developer swung to a loss, hurt mainly by unfavorable foreign exchange and higher planned maintenance costs.

* Pacific Rubiales: The oil firm threatened to suspend operations at its Campo Rubiales oil fields if the Colombian government fails improve protection from illegal armed groups and violent protests.

* Imax Corp.: The giant movie screen maker expects the number of screens in China to rise to 200 in two to three years, up from 85 at the end of 2011, CEO Richard Gelfond said.

* Aecon Group Inc.: The construction company said its mining division secured a C$80 million contract for work at a new potash mine in Saskatchewan.

* Claude Resources: The precious metals miner said it has increased its offer for the rest of St. Eugene Mining Corp in a stock deal that now values the smaller gold exploration company at C$19 million.

* Progressive Waste Solutions: The waste manager's third-quarter profit missed market estimates and the company expects lower pricing at its collection operations in the northeastern parts of United States to continue for the rest of the year.

($1= $1.01 Canadian)

(Reporting by Rahul Karunakar; Editing by Jeffrey Hodgson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111026/wl_canada_nm/canada_us_markets_canada_stocks

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

BPA in pregnant women might affect kids' behavior

Dr. Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2009. Dr. Birnbaum says a study on exposure to BPA before birth contributes important new evidence to "a growing database which suggests that BPA exposure can be associated with effects on human health." (AP Photo/Harry Hamburg)

Dr. Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2009. Dr. Birnbaum says a study on exposure to BPA before birth contributes important new evidence to "a growing database which suggests that BPA exposure can be associated with effects on human health." (AP Photo/Harry Hamburg)

(AP) ? Exposure to BPA before birth could affect girls' behavior at age 3, according to the latest study on potential health effects of the widespread chemical.

Preschool-aged girls whose mothers had relatively high urine levels of bisphenol-A during pregnancy scored worse but still within a normal range on behavior measures including anxiety and hyperactivity than other young girls.

The results are not conclusive and experts not involved in the study said factors other than BPA might explain the results. The researchers acknowledge that "considerable debate" remains about whether BPA is harmful, but say their findings should prompt additional research.

The researchers measured BPA in 244 Cincinnati-area mothers' urine twice during pregnancy and at childbirth. The women evaluated their children at age 3 using standard behavior questionnaires.

Nearly all women had measurable BPA levels, like most Americans. But increasingly high urine levels during pregnancy were linked with increasingly worse behavior in their daughters. Boys' behavior did not seem to be affected.

The researchers said if BPA can cause behavior changes that could pose academic and social problems for girls already at risk for those difficulties.

"These subtle shifts can actually have very dramatic implications at the population level," said Joe Braun, the lead author and a research fellow at Harvard's School of Public Health.

For every 10-fold increase in mothers' BPA levels, girls scored at least six points worse on the questionnaires.

The study was released online Monday in Pediatrics.

Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the National Toxicology Program, said the study contributes important new evidence to "a growing database which suggests that BPA exposure can be associated with effects on human health."

Grants from that federal agency helped pay for the study.

The Food and Drug Administration has said that low-level BPA exposure appears to be safe. But the agency also says that because of recent scientific evidence, it has some concern about potential effects of BPA on the brain and behavior in fetuses, infants and small children. The FDA is continuing to study BPA exposure and supports efforts to minimize use in food containers.

BPA has many uses, and is found in some plastic bottles and coatings in metal food cans. It was widely used in plastic baby bottles and sippy cups but industry phased out that use.

Braun said it's possible that exposure to BPA during pregnancy interferes with fetal brain development, a theory suggested in other studies, and that could explain the behavior differences in his study. Why boys' behavior wasn't affected isn't clear. But BPA is thought to mimic the effects of estrogen, a female hormone.

The researchers evaluated other possible influences on children's behavior, including family income, education level and whether mothers were married, and still found an apparent link to BPA.

But Dr. Charles McKay, a BPA researcher and toxicologist with the Connecticut Poison Control Center, said the researchers failed to adequately measure factors other than BPA that could explain the results.

For example, there's no information on mothers' eating habits. That matters because mothers' higher BPA levels could have come from eating lots of canned foods instead of healthier less processed foods, which might have affected fetal brain development.

The American Chemistry Council, a trade group whose members include companies that use BPA, said the research "has significant shortcomings ... and the conclusions are of unknown relevance to public health."

___

Online:

FDA: http://tinyurl.com/ya4d4ku

Info for parents: http://www.hhs.gov/safety/bpa/

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LindseyTanner

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-24-Bisphenol-Children's%20Behavior/id-b36f6a243b0a421e845f2c06c11615d2

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Monday, October 24, 2011

OU, Wisconsin fall, LSU-Bama set for 1 vs. 2 game

LSU head coach Les Miles, center, sings the LSU fight song with safety Eric Reid (1), wide receiver Armand Williams (81) and others after their NCAA college football game against Auburn in Baton Rouge, La. Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011. LSU won 45-10 to remain undefeated. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

LSU head coach Les Miles, center, sings the LSU fight song with safety Eric Reid (1), wide receiver Armand Williams (81) and others after their NCAA college football game against Auburn in Baton Rouge, La. Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011. LSU won 45-10 to remain undefeated. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Alabama running back Trent Richardson (3) leaps across the goal line past Tennessee defensive back Brent Brewer (17) and linebacker Austin Johnson (40) to score a touchdown in the third quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct, 22, 2011, in Tuscaloosa Ala. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

(AP) ? No. 1 LSU and No. 2 Alabama have locked in their spots for the biggest regular-season game in Southeastern Conference history.

The Tigers and Crimson Tide held the first two spots in The Associated Press Top 25 released Sunday after huge victories a day earlier. With both heading into an off week, LSU and Alabama are virtually assured of meeting on Nov. 5 in Tuscaloosa as the top two teams in the country.

It'll be the second 1 vs. 2 matchup involving SEC teams, but the first time came in the conference championship game.

"It is going to be one of the best games ever," LSU defensive end Sam Montgomery said. "Basketball, football, video games, whatever ? it is going to be the most competitive thing that I have ever been a part of. These guys (Alabama) are just like us. They are big, fast and strong. Two great teams are going to be facing each other in two weeks."

Oklahoma, the preseason No. 1, dropped eight spots to No. 11 after its first loss of the season. The Sooners fell 41-38 to Texas Tech on Saturday night, snapping a 39-game home winning streak. The Red Raiders moved into the ranking for the first time this season at No. 19.

Wisconsin also dropped eight spots after its first loss of the season, falling to No. 12 following a 37-31 loss to Michigan State on the final play of the game. The Spartans moved up six spots to No. 9.

LSU received 49 first-place votes from the media panel. Alabama got nine and No. 5 Boise State had one.

Oklahoma State is No. 3, followed by fellow unbeatens Stanford, Boise State and Clemson. The Cowboys have their best ranking since Nov. 19, 1984, when they were also No. 3.

In the USA Today coaches' poll, LSU replaced Oklahoma as No. 1, followed by Alabama at No. 2, Stanford at No. 3, Oklahoma State at No. 4 and Boise State at No. 5.

The Harris poll top five was LSU, Alabama, Stanford, Oklahoma State and Boise State.

Those two polls are used in the BCS standings, which were due out Sunday night.

In the AP rankings, No. 6 Clemson has its highest ranking since 2000, when the Tigers spent four weeks at No. 5.

No. 6 Clemson has its highest ranking since 2000, when the Tigers spent four weeks at No. 5.

No. 7 Oregon, Michigan State, Arkansas and undefeated Kansas State round out the top 10.

Moving into the rankings this week along with Texas Tech were No. 20 Southern California, No. 21 Penn State and No. 24 Cincinnati, which is ranked for the first time this season.

Falling out after losses were Washington, Georgia Tech, Illinois and defending national champion Auburn.

Nos. 13-18 were Nebraska, South Carolina, Virginia Tech, Michigan and Houston, which has its best ranking since 2009.

Joining the four teams moving into the rankings at the bottom were No. 22 Georgia, No. 23 Arizona State and No. 25 West Virginia.

For Alabama and LSU, the No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup likely will decide which of the SEC West rivals plays in the conference championship and could ultimately determine which teams plays for the national title in New Orleans on Jan. 9.

LSU's only appearance in a 1-2 game was in the BCS title game in 2008. This will be Alabama's sixth No. 1 vs. No. 2 game, but first in the regular season.

The last time there was a No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup in college football not played in a bowl or conference title game was 2006, when No. 1 Ohio State beat No. 2 Michigan on the final weekend of the Big Ten's regular season and went on to lose the BCS championship game to Florida. Earlier that season, top-ranked Ohio State also played No. 2 Texas.

____

AP Sports Writer Brett Martel in Baton Rouge, La., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-10-23-FBC-T25-College-FB-Poll/id-6cb93a8e8c82489388b4aabd5ea93c0f

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Breakthrough in the production of flood-tolerant crops

Breakthrough in the production of flood-tolerant crops [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Lindsay Brooke
lindsay.brooke@nottingham.ac.uk
44-115-951-5751
University of Nottingham

This week thousands of families lost their homes and crops as flood waters swept across Central America. In Thailand huge tracts of farmland were submerged as the country faced its worst flooding in 50 years. Across the globe agricultural production is at risk as catastrophic flooding becomes a world-wide problem.

Prolonged flooding drastically reduces yields by cutting off the supply of oxygen crops need to survive. Now experts at The University of Nottingham, working in collaboration with the University of California, Riverside, have identified the molecular mechanism plants use to sense low oxygen levels. The discovery could lead, eventually, to the production of high-yielding, flood-tolerant crops, benefiting farmers, markets and consumers across the globe.

The mechanism controls key proteins in plants causing them to be unstable when oxygen levels are normal. When roots or shoots are flooded and oxygen levels drop these proteins become stable. The research is published on Sunday October 23 in the prestigious journal Nature.

Michael Holdsworth, Professor of Crop Science in the School of Biosciences at Nottingham said: "We have identified the mechanism through which reduced oxygen levels are sensed. The mechanism controls key regulatory proteins called transcription factors that can turn other genes on and off. It is the unusual structure of these proteins that destines them for destruction under normal oxygen levels, but when oxygen levels decline, they become stable. Their stability results in changes in gene expression and metabolism that enhance survival in the low oxygen conditions brought on by flooding. When the plants return to normal oxygen levels, the proteins are again degraded, providing a feedback control mechanism".

As Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Australia, the UK and America have all fallen victim to catastrophic flooding in recent years tolerance of crops to partial or complete submergence is a key target for global food security. Starved of oxygen, crops cannot survive a flood for long periods of time, leading to drastic reductions in yields for farmers.

Professor Holdsworth's work, in collaboration with Professor Julia Bailey-Serres, a geneticist and expert in plant responses to flooding at the University of California, Riverside, is just the beginning. The team expects that over the next decade scientists will be able to manipulate the protein turnover mechanism in a wide range of crops prone to damage by flooding.

Professor Bailey-Serres said: "At this time, we do not know for sure the level of conservation across plants of the turnover mechanism in response to flooding. We have quite a bit of assurance from our preliminary studies, however, that there is cross-species conservation. Our experiments on Arabidopsis show that manipulation of the pathway affects low oxygen stress tolerance. There is no reason why these results cannot be extrapolated to other plants and crops. Still, we have many research questions to answer on the turnover mechanism. What we plan to do next is to nail down this mechanism more clearly."

Professor Holdsworth, an international expert in seed biology had the first hint of the discovery while investigating the regulation of gene expression during seed germination. He connected the mechanism of degradation of key regulatory proteins with changes in the expression of genes associated with low oxygen stress that Bailey-Serres has studied extensively.

Professor Holdsworth said: "The puzzle pieces fell quickly into place when the expertise of the two teams was combined."

###

The work was carried out by Professor Holdsworth and his team in the School of Biosciences in collaboration with researchers at the University of California, Riverside in the United States, Rothamsted Research in the United Kingdom and University Pierre and Marie Curie, France.

The work was funded by the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), Malaysian government through MARA, the US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture (USDA-NIFA), and the US National Science Foundation.


[ 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.


Breakthrough in the production of flood-tolerant crops [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Lindsay Brooke
lindsay.brooke@nottingham.ac.uk
44-115-951-5751
University of Nottingham

This week thousands of families lost their homes and crops as flood waters swept across Central America. In Thailand huge tracts of farmland were submerged as the country faced its worst flooding in 50 years. Across the globe agricultural production is at risk as catastrophic flooding becomes a world-wide problem.

Prolonged flooding drastically reduces yields by cutting off the supply of oxygen crops need to survive. Now experts at The University of Nottingham, working in collaboration with the University of California, Riverside, have identified the molecular mechanism plants use to sense low oxygen levels. The discovery could lead, eventually, to the production of high-yielding, flood-tolerant crops, benefiting farmers, markets and consumers across the globe.

The mechanism controls key proteins in plants causing them to be unstable when oxygen levels are normal. When roots or shoots are flooded and oxygen levels drop these proteins become stable. The research is published on Sunday October 23 in the prestigious journal Nature.

Michael Holdsworth, Professor of Crop Science in the School of Biosciences at Nottingham said: "We have identified the mechanism through which reduced oxygen levels are sensed. The mechanism controls key regulatory proteins called transcription factors that can turn other genes on and off. It is the unusual structure of these proteins that destines them for destruction under normal oxygen levels, but when oxygen levels decline, they become stable. Their stability results in changes in gene expression and metabolism that enhance survival in the low oxygen conditions brought on by flooding. When the plants return to normal oxygen levels, the proteins are again degraded, providing a feedback control mechanism".

As Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Australia, the UK and America have all fallen victim to catastrophic flooding in recent years tolerance of crops to partial or complete submergence is a key target for global food security. Starved of oxygen, crops cannot survive a flood for long periods of time, leading to drastic reductions in yields for farmers.

Professor Holdsworth's work, in collaboration with Professor Julia Bailey-Serres, a geneticist and expert in plant responses to flooding at the University of California, Riverside, is just the beginning. The team expects that over the next decade scientists will be able to manipulate the protein turnover mechanism in a wide range of crops prone to damage by flooding.

Professor Bailey-Serres said: "At this time, we do not know for sure the level of conservation across plants of the turnover mechanism in response to flooding. We have quite a bit of assurance from our preliminary studies, however, that there is cross-species conservation. Our experiments on Arabidopsis show that manipulation of the pathway affects low oxygen stress tolerance. There is no reason why these results cannot be extrapolated to other plants and crops. Still, we have many research questions to answer on the turnover mechanism. What we plan to do next is to nail down this mechanism more clearly."

Professor Holdsworth, an international expert in seed biology had the first hint of the discovery while investigating the regulation of gene expression during seed germination. He connected the mechanism of degradation of key regulatory proteins with changes in the expression of genes associated with low oxygen stress that Bailey-Serres has studied extensively.

Professor Holdsworth said: "The puzzle pieces fell quickly into place when the expertise of the two teams was combined."

###

The work was carried out by Professor Holdsworth and his team in the School of Biosciences in collaboration with researchers at the University of California, Riverside in the United States, Rothamsted Research in the United Kingdom and University Pierre and Marie Curie, France.

The work was funded by the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), Malaysian government through MARA, the US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture (USDA-NIFA), and the US National Science Foundation.


[ 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.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-10/uon-bit101811.php

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Tunisia Prepares to Vote: A Harbinger of More Spring or Stormy Weather? (Time.com)

The Republique area of downtown Tunis is filled with the markers of a democracy in the making. Banners for the Modernist Democratic Pole, a coalition of leftist parties, compete for the attention of passersby with a honking parade of cars flying flags of the Islamist Ennahda party. Nearly everyone in Tunisia's busy capital says they plan on voting in the first real democratic election in the country's history to be held on Sunday. And if the populace is unused to voting (it rarely participated in the sham democracy of ousted President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali), it is getting a lot of help. For example, the entire wall of an apartment building above the Republique train tracks is devoted to showing how it's done. "I put the paper in the ballot box," reads step 10 on the illustrated chart.

But politics is complicated. There are more than 100 parties vying for spots in the assembly that will write the country's new constitution. Many of them are unknown to voters, having sprouted in the democratic free-for-all that followed the revolution. "I have my ID card and I'm going to vote. I've been waiting for it my whole life," says Rizqi Habib, a retired painter. But he has no idea who he'll vote for. "I'm not going to lie to you," he says. "I can't read. So it will be random. I'm going to just make an X." (See more on Tunisia's election)

Still, Tunisians are among the best educated in the Arab world, and the country has a well-developed middle class. Those two factors combined with a relatively smooth transitional period in the months following their dictator's Jan. 17th ouster ? compared to that of their revolutionary counterparts in Egypt and Libya ? have left Tunisia poised to become the Arab Spring's most likely success story.

And yet, Tunisians are not without worry. "The regime was responsible for the absence of any dialogue between the Islamists and others," says Emna Jebloui, an activist at the Arab Institute for Human Rights in Tunis. "And now we are paying the price for the absence of that debate." Jebloui is one of many Tunisians who have grown fearful at the post-revolution emergence of Islamists and their seemingly broad appeal in what has typically been North Africa's most secular country. Ben Ali had repressed extreme religiosity so intensely that the months following Tunisia's revolution marked the first time that some Tunisians said they had ever seen women wearing the niqob, the all-encompassing black face veil that is more commonly affiliated with the conservative Islam of Saudi Arabia. (See TIME's video, "Tunisia Prepares to Vote.")

But nine months after the revolution, Islamists appear poised to claim the largest chunk of the seats in the constitutional assembly. The most popular Islamist party, Ennahda, is considered moderate, even liberal, by regional standards of political Islam. Many of its new adherents are educated youth. But for the members of Tunisian society who value their rights to drink alcohol, read western literature, and mingle with the opposite sex, the rise of any kind of Islamism is alarming. "The Islamists will try to add that Sharia be one source or a major source of legislation," predicts Hamadi Redissi, a political science professor at the University of Tunis El Manar, who has written critically of Ennahda. (See why the U.S. should cheer Tunisia's risky revolution.)

And then there are other challenges. Some Tunisians, including Ennahda's leader Rached Ghannouchi, have warned of vote-rigging at the hands of ex-regime sympathizers, many of whom have joined new parties. Young revolutionaries, meanwhile, object to any participation by ex-regime members in the new Tunisia's politics. Others fear violence if results are displeasing to one party or another. And still more worry that even if elections run smoothly, the assembly's primary task of drafting a new constitution in the space of a year will prove too onerous for the diverse array of parties and independent candidates that are sure to wind up in the assembly's 217 seats.

The country's transitional leaders ultimately chose an electoral model that would ensure that no single party is able to dominate in a period of democratic fragility, Jebloui says. But parties and politicians have found a way around it. "Tunisians are too smart, and they can do independent lists," she says. "There are many independent lists that will have an alliance with Ennahda after the election."

Indeed, it's the latter point that underscores a national rift that goes beyond religiosity. Ghannouchi has confidently predicted a 50% win for his Ennahda party ? a percentage that is only possible with a coalition of like-minded independents. But it's not Ghannouchi and the Ennahda elite ? returning from abroad and prison sentences after decades of Ben Ali's rule ? that liberal intellectuals fear most. It's their appeal. "Desperate people. The young, and maybe fragile. Unemployed, also," says Jebloui, listing the array of voters who have found the Islamists so enticing. "They have much time, and they haven't enough money to go to the cinema, to read books, to go outside to other countries," she says "They don't have many solutions. So maybe they find in religion the magical solution."

See photos of Tunisia's tumultuous month.

Ben Ali left Tunisia reeling from the effects of a deeply corrupt political economy, a heavy-handed police force, and high unemployment. Few of the unemployed youth in the revolution's epicenter of Sidi Bouzid, where the self-immolation of a vegetable seller set off the uprising, have found relief in the event's aftermath. And the debate over an Islamist versus non-Islamist solution has, in some ways, further highlighted the divide between urban and rural, employed and unemployed, educated and less educated. Most commonly, perhaps, it represents the rift between those who lived comfortably, albeit silently, under Ben Ali versus those who gained nothing from it. "Religion is going to help because it will tame us," says Ayeshi Rabhi, an unemployed 23-year-old from Kasserine in the country's poor interior. "The state is corrupt. We need religion to purify us."

Rabhi plans to vote for Ennahda, but more because it seems obvious, he says, than out of any personal commitment to the party. It's a tendency that some say underscores a political vulnerability in the months ahead. Many of Ennahda's young followers are more strongly influenced by the fundamentalist Wahhabi preachers they see on television than by the party's elites, recently returned from abroad, says Jeboui. (See a video on the uprisings against Tunisia's old ways.)

Last week, violent protests erupted after Nessma TV, a private station, broadcast the award-winning animated film Persepolis about the Iranian revolution, in which a girl's imagined version of god takes human form. Islamists, and even some liberals, deemed the film blasphemous for portraying an image of god. In the uproar that ensued, protesters clashed with police, and attacked the TV station and the home of the station's owner. "What happened with Nessma was very important," Radissi says of the protests that sent Tunisians into a soul-searching debate over the religious character of the state and freedom of expression. "Either people are going to rally around Islamists," he says, giving them an edge in the polls. "Or [what happened] will provoke a fear reaction and people we will say, 'These people are dangerous.'"

If the latter scenario plays out, the Islamists are likely to scale back the religious rhetoric and re-think their strategy. If the protests yield more votes, however, they will be emboldened to pursue dramatic religious-based legislation, he argues. (See the Tunisian resort where Libyans were fleeing.)

There are those who say that Radissi, Jebloui and others who have voiced such fierce opposition to the Islamist rise, are merely overdramatic alarmists. After all, Ennahda officials have given little indication that the party would pursue any policies that deviate strongly from Tunisia's liberal, secularist tradition of government. Polls suggest that other parties, including the old opposition party, the Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) and the leftist Congress for the Republic (CPR) are likely to gain a sizeable portion of the seats as well.

Either way, few would deny how important this election is. Where Tunisia's uprising last winter was the all-important domino that set off an Arab Spring of revolutions and region-wide dissent, so too will Sunday's vote serve as both a catalyst and a harbinger for what's to come. "It's a very important test," Radissi says. "If it works in Tunisia, I'm sure that all the other regimes in the Arab world will try to imitate the Tunisian case. If it doesn't succeed here, no where will it succeed."

And if the Islamists win in Tunisia, he adds: "Kayf, kayf" ? that is, likewise, they will sweep the region. "And you can put an X through the Arab Spring."

See "Tunisia's New Turmoil: The Unfinished Revolution."

See the top 15 toppled dictators.

View this article on Time.com

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20111022/wl_time/08599209755400

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

HP Pavilion p7-1110


If you're looking to buy an affordable entry-level desktop PC, the HP Pavilion p7-1110 ($529.99 list at Staples) packs a decent dual-core Intel Core i3 processor and large 1TB hard drive into an attractive (though rather generic) tower. The p7-1110 is a decent find, offering day-to-day computing power that rivals top budget systems?like the Editors' ChoiceLenovo IdeaCentre K330-11691AU ($599.99 list, 4 stars)?but does so for a more affordable price.

Design & Features
On the outside, the p7-1110 looks like the HP Pavilion p7-1154's ($519.99 list, 2.5 stars) twin: a standard mid-tower PC with a black boxy tower and a glossy black front panel highlighted with silver-grey plastic trim, and a white-blue LED power-indicator light at the top. There's a plastic sliding door that hides headphone and microphone jacks, and two USB 2.0 ports. There's a DVD burner that sits right underneath a handful of card reader slots at the top of the panel that will accommodate up to 15 different formats (including popular formats such as SD, xD, MS/Pro and Compact Flash).

On the back of the tower you'll find four USB 2.0 ports, DVI and VGA video connections, audio and microphone connections, and a Gigabit Ethernet port. Two of those USB ports will be occupied, however, by the wired keyboard and optical mouse included with the desktop.

Inside the tower, you'll find a 1TB 7,200rpm hard drive, offering plenty of space for all of your family photos, digital media collections, and plenty of programs. Additionally, you'll find a PCIe mini card offering 802.11n Wi-Fi, and 6GB of DDR3 RAM. If you're looking to make upgrades, there's a bit of room, with one empty drive bay, and several open PCIe slots (one PCIe x16, three PCIe x1, and one PCIe Mini Card slot). The two DIMM slots are full (6GB of RAM), but the memory can be bumped up to 8GB, and while there's room for a video card, you'll be limited by the 250 Watt power supply.

The HP Pavilion p7-1110 comes with a selection of software pre-installed on the system, (aka, bloatware), like Microsoft Office Starter 2010, a 60-day trial of Norton Internet Security, a 30-day trial of Norton Online Backup, and a collection of sample games from Wild Tangent. The p7-1110 also comes with HP LinkUp, a program that lets you access other Windows 7 computers on the same local network. Even computers from other manufacturers can download the LinkUp software to share files.

Customers who buy this system from Staples can avail themselves of several services the retailer offers. This includes setting the new system up, data transfer from your old PC to your new one, software installation, and tech support and protection plans that range in price from $14.99 to $169.99.

Performance
HP Pavilion p7-1110 The p7-1110 is equipped with a 3.3GHz dual-core Intel Core i3-2120 processor, paired with 6GB of RAM. Thanks to Intel's Hyper-Threading technology, this dual-core CPU can run two logic threads per core, allowing performance that rivals other manufacturers' quad-core chips. In PCMark 7, our day-to-day performance test, the p7-1110 scored 2,621 points, putting it ahead of the Asus Essentio CM1730-05 ($569.99, 3 stars) (1,911) and AMD-equipped HP p7-1154 (1,986), and within striking distance of the Dell Inspiron i620-3708NBK ($649.99 list, 3.5 stars) (2,709). In Cinebench R11.5 speed tests, it scored 3.16 points, beating out the Editors' Choice Lenovo IdeaCentre K330-11691AU ($599.99 list, 4 stars) (2.98) and HP p7-1154 (2.61), but falling behind the Dell i620-3708NBK (4.78) and Asus CM1730-05 (5.19).

The p7-1110 is also fairly well equipped for multimedia tasks, cranking through Handbrake in 1 minute 36 seconds and completing Photoshop CS5 in a category-leading 3:34. That's good enough for the user who wants to clean up family photos or make minor edits to a YouTube video. The system with the closest scores was the Dell i620-3708NBK, which finished Handbrake in 1:22 and Photoshop in 3:35. Contrast this with the AMD-powered HP p7-1154 (Handbrake 2:49, Photoshop 7:13), and you can see the wide difference that can be found between similarly-priced systems.

The p7-1110 utilizes the Core i3's integrated graphics, which offers plenty of graphics processing for day-to-day use, but 3D gaming might be out of reach. Without DirectX 11 compatibility, the p7-1110 was unable to run either our 3DMark 11 graphics benchmark test or our Lost Planet 2 gaming test. However, in our DirectX 10 Crysis test (at Medium quality), the p7-1110 produced 13 frames per second. Though not quite playable?it looked like a fast flickering slideshow?it was still on a par with both the Editors' Choice Lenovo K330-11691AU (12 fps) and Dell i620-3708NBK (13 fps).

As entry-level systems go, the HP Pavilion p7-1110 is a compelling choice for anyone on a budget. The included Intel Core i3 processor and 1TB hard drive will easily keep you working and browsing the Web for the next five or six years, and does so for a little bit less than other comparable systems, including the Editors' Choice Lenovo K330-11691AU. It would take top honors, except that the Core i5-equipped HP Pavilion p7-1187c packs superior performance into the same chassis.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the HP Pavilion p7-1110 with several other desktops side by side.

More desktop reviews:
??? HP Pavilion p7-1110
??? HP Pavilion Elite h8-1124
??? Toshiba DX735-D3201
??? HP Pavilion p7-1154
??? Dell XPS 8300 (X8300-4004NBK)
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/_TdWXLepCLw/0,2817,2395136,00.asp

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