Monday, November 28, 2011

No. 6 Virginia Tech shuts down No. 24 UVa, 38-0

Virginia Tech quarterback Logan Thomas (3) hoists the Commonwealth Cup after they beat Virginia 38-0 in an NCAA college football game at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Virginia Tech quarterback Logan Thomas (3) hoists the Commonwealth Cup after they beat Virginia 38-0 in an NCAA college football game at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer pumps his fist during the first half of a NCAA college football game against Virginia at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va. Saturday Nov. 26, 2009. (AP Photo Don Petersen)

Virginia Tech quarterback Logan Thomas (3) walks in for a touchdown as Virginia cornerback Demetrious Nicholson (1) follows during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Virginia Tech quarterback Logan Thomas (3) tries to run through the line as Virginia linebacker Steve Greer (53) and defensive tackle Will Hill (93) make the stop during the first half of an college football game at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Virginia running back Perry Jones (33) gets some air as Virginia Tech cornerback Jayron Hosley (20) tries to make the stop during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Va., Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

(AP) ? All week long, the chatter about Virginia being on the rise left out an important fact in the mind of Virginia Tech's players: They were still the best in the commonwealth until proven otherwise.

The No. 6 Hokies showed they were tops Saturday night, blanking the No. 24 Cavaliers 38-0, their first shutout loss at home in 172 games ? since a 55-0 defeat to Clemson on Sept. 8, 1984.

"The guys definitely took it as a slap in the face. It's kind of been our way, the rivalry, for the past couple years and nobody was talking about us," Hokies quarterback Logan Thomas said after throwing for two touchdowns and running for another. "They were all talking about Virginia and how good Virginia was going to play against us and how they were going to do."

David Wilson added two second-half touchdown runs for the Hokies, who led 14-0 at the break and drove 79 yards with the opening series of the third quarter, and then let their defense do the rest.

Virginia, which came in averaging better than 177 rushing yards, finished with 30 on 26 carries. They had just 241 yards overall, and quarterback Michael Rocco was sacked four times and intercepted twice.

"I felt like we didn't receive any respect in our home state after all we've done, and we went out there and made a statement," defensive end James Gayle said after registering two of the sacks.

"We weren't getting respect, so we went out there and took it."

And the Hokies (11-1, 7-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) earned the league's Coastal Division title and a rematch with No. 18 Clemson in next weekend's ACC championship game in Charlotte. They suffered their only loss, 23-3 against the Tigers on Oct. 1, and were eager for a rematch.

"Everybody wants it," Thomas said. "We know that we didn't play our best ball that day."

Nope, they saved that for their state rivals, and beat them for the eighth time in a row and 12th time in the last 13 meetings. They will be seeking their fourth league championship in five years.

Virginia defensive coordinator Jim Reid likes their chances. He prepared all week to try and stop Thomas and Wilson in the running game, and said film didn't do them justice.

"When you see those two characters up front, let me tell you, David Wilson is excellent on tape, but he is really dynamic and magnificent in person," Reid said, adding that when he saw Wilson running by him on the sidelines, the only thing he could think to say was "Whoa!"

The Cavaliers (8-4, 5-3) had won four straight and seemed ready to finally challenge their state rival, but without a running game, Rocco was under steady pressure. He also fumbled on a sack.

"We just couldn't finish," he said. "We got down to the red zone a bunch of times, but it was just little things. Either we had a penalty or a dropped ball or a bad pass ? we didn't finish. We talk about being finishers all year and didn't finish in the red zone today. It hurts. It doesn't feel good."

The tone was set very early.

Thomas hit Marcus Davis for 36 yards on the Hokies' first play from scrimmage, and Wilson broke off a 17-yard run on the next play. A 5-yard run by Wilson and 15-yard facemasking penalty on Chase Minnifield moved the Hokies to Virginia's 14, and Thomas ran it in from there.

It was his 10th rushing touchdown, a regular-season record for a quarterback in the 25 years Frank Beamer has been the coach, and Beamer once had Michael Vick as his QB.

Virginia tried to answer, driving to the Hokies' 6, but on fourth-and-2, the Cavaliers elected to go for it, and Kevin Parks was tripped up by Jack Tyler after gaining only a yard.

"We made a stop right there, made a statement right there," Beamer said.

The Cavaliers were trying to do the same thing, second-year coach Mike London said.

"It was the opportunity to send a message to our guys up front that if you're going to win championships, if you're going to win games, you've got to be able to knock people off the ball and gain a yard, particularly when you're favored in run-play," London said. "They did a good job of defending it, and we didn't get it. It set the tone for them to go the other way."

Virginia had no answer for Thomas early or Wilson late, and when the Hokies drove 79 yards for a touchdown to open the third quarter, extending their lead to 21-0, the largest crowd of the season at Scott Stadium (61,124) grew quiet ? except for the Hokies fans.

Wilson capped the drive with a 27-yard burst off the left side. He added a 38-yard run up the middle for another touchdown early in the fourth quarter, and fans headed for the exits.

"It was visible on the field and you could see it in the stands" that the Cavaliers were deflated, Wilson said. "When we first came out for warmups, we couldn't get (the fans) to shut up."

Wilson finished with 153 yards on 24 carries and tied the ACC record with his 10th 100-yard game of the season. Thomas was 13 for 21 for 187 yards and ran for 27 yards on seven tries.

Following an exchange of punts, which found the Hokies starting at their own 4, Thomas twice converted third down plays with first-down runs, then hit Davis again, this time for 52 yards.

On third-and-8 from the Virginia 16, he hit Jarrett Boykin over the middle for the TD.

Minnifield, one of 31 fourth- or fifth-year players honored by Virginia before the game, had three 15-yard penalties in the first half, but one was waved off because Davis beat him for the 36-yard catch, and another on a deep ball was negated by a holding call against the Hokies.

J.R. Collins' interception of Rocco and return to the Cavaliers' 6 set up the last touchdown, Thomas' 7-yard pass to Davis. He finished with five catches for 119 yards.

___

Follow Hank Kurz on Twitter at http://twitter.com/hankkurzjr

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-26-FBC-T25-Virginia-Tech-Virginia/id-2edb4986512a43ac96e1d98df29b574e

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Mankato industrial building sold for $3.75 million - Finance ...

Mankato industrial building sold for $3.75 million?(access required)

Posted: 4:19 pm Fri, November 25, 2011
By Burl?Gilyard
Tags: Agristrand Mankato LLC, Dale Severson, Robert Bayer

Agristrand Mankato LLC paid $3.75 million for a 180,000-square-foot manufacturing plant at 221 Mohr Drive in Mankato. Dale Severson and Robert Bayer of Minneapolis-based Coldwell Banker Commercial Griffin Cos. negotiated the sale, which included the building, equipment and adjacent properties. Coldwell Banker Commercial Griffin Cos. was appointed the receiver for the property in October 2010. Under new ...

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Justin Bieber for Macy's Black Friday: AHHHHHHHH!


We know you're tired. We know you've been awake since 4 a.m. in order to take advantage of Black Friday sales across the country.

But Justin Bieber is here to wake you up. In the following for Macy's, the singer gets all excited for that department stores major holiday savings, while everyone around him gets even more excited about... well, him. See for yourself:

It's been a newsworthy week for Bieber. Among other headlines the singer has made:

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/justin-bieber-for-macys-black-friday-ahhhhhhhh/

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

SF, LA negotiating to close Occupy encampments

In this Nov. 2, 2011 photo, an Occupy Los Angeles protester walks past tents set up outside Los Angeles City Hall in Los Angeles. The Occupy Los Angeles encampment around City Hall will be cleared sometime next week, a city official and a lawyer for demonstrators said Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

In this Nov. 2, 2011 photo, an Occupy Los Angeles protester walks past tents set up outside Los Angeles City Hall in Los Angeles. The Occupy Los Angeles encampment around City Hall will be cleared sometime next week, a city official and a lawyer for demonstrators said Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

In this Nov. 2, 2011, photo, a Los Angeles police officer looks at tents set up outside Los Angeles City Hall in Los Angeles. The Occupy Los Angeles encampment around City Hall will be cleared sometime next week, a city official and a lawyer for demonstrators said Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

FILE - In this Nov. 15, 2011 file photo, a group of San Francisco police officers look out at the Occupy SF encampment along the waterfront in San Francisco. Los Angeles and San Francisco are desperate for long-term solutions to the entrenched encampments by anti-Wall Street protesters to end the drain on resources and the frayed nerves among police and politicians. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)

(AP) ? Los Angeles and San Francisco are seeking long-term solutions to the entrenched encampments by anti-Wall Street protesters, hoping to end the drain on resources and the frayed nerves among police and politicians.

Officials in both cities have considered providing protesters with indoor space that would allow the movement to carry out its work in more sanitary, less public facilities.

Occupiers are debating among themselves about whether to hold their ground or try to take advantage of possible moves.

Talks in both cities mark a distinctly different approach than tactics used elsewhere that have seen police sent in to dislodge Occupy camps. Violence and arrests plagued camps in Oakland and New York, while the use of batons and pepper spray against peaceful protesters on University of California campuses has led to national outrage and derision.

San Francisco is negotiating with Occupy SF members about moving their encampment from the heart of the financial district to an empty school in the city's hip Mission district. That would allow the occupiers to have access to toilets and a room for their daily meetings, while camping out in the parking lot of what was once a small high school.

The move also could help them weed out drug addicts and drunks, and those not wholly committed to their cause.

Protesters in Los Angeles said officials rescinded a similar deal, in which the city would have leased a 10,000-square-foot space that once housed a bookstore in Los Angeles Mall to the protesters for $1 a year.

But after the proposal was made public at an Occupy LA general assembly, it generated outrage from some who saw it as a giveaway of public resources by a city struggling with financial problems, and the offer was withdrawn.

Deputy Mayor Matt Szabo told The Associated Press on Wednesday that the encampment around City Hall would be shut down at some point next week.

"The encampment as it exists is unsustainable," Szabo said.

Whether the city continues to negotiate with Occupy LA for a new location remains to be seen.

Occupy LA camper Alifah Ali said she would pack up her tent at City Hall when the order to leave came down in Los Angeles and welcome the possibility of new digs.

"Maybe we need to move," Ali said. "Maybe this will give us room to organize, make our voice clear."

Los Angeles officials initially endorsed the movement and allowed tents to sprout on City Halls lawns. More than 480 tents have since been erected. But problems arose with sanitation, drug use and homeless people moving into the camp.

In San Francisco, several hundred protesters have been hunkered down for some six weeks in about 100 tents at Justin Herman Plaza, at the eastern end of Market Street and across from the tourist-catching Ferry Building on the bay. The city has declared the plaza a public health nuisance, though city officials also credit the campers for their efforts to rid the camp of garbage and keep the grassy area clean.

Mayor Ed Lee has met with the occupiers at several heated closed-door meetings at City Hall. He's repeatedly told them he supports their cause and the right to protest the nation's confounding inequality between the rich and the poor.

But they cannot, he has said, continue to camp out overnight in a public plaza.

"The mayor is being patient," said Christine Falvey, a spokeswoman for Lee. "He wants to see some sort of long-term, sustainable plan because the city cannot sustain overnight camping for any long period of time."

Ken Cleaveland of the Building Owners and Managers Association of San Francisco, which represents the hotels and businesses that have been impacted by the noise, loss of tourism and concerns of violence, said some hotels had to reimburse guests who could not sleep, and small businesses in the tourist hub have lost thousands of dollars.

"It's time to move the camp," he said. "Nobody's disagreeing with their right to protest or the inequities in society that they are protesting, but it's not a place to camp out permanently."

A survey by The Associated Press found that during the first two months of the nationwide Occupy protests, the movement that is demanding more out of the wealthiest Americans cost taxpayers at least $13 million in police overtime and other municipal services.

Gentle Blythe, a spokeswoman for the San Francisco public school district, said city officials had approached the district about allowing Occupy SF to relocate to the Mission site that formerly housed Phoenix High School. The School Board is considering a facility permit that would allow the city to lease the property for six months.

Occupy SF members say they're mulling over the proposal.

"We're waiting for whatever caveats the city is going to come back at us with," said Jerry Selness, a retired Navy medic from Eugene, Ore., who has volunteered for a more than a month at the Occupy SF medical tent.

"I do feel that we're at a crux point here: we are either going to give this movement enough time to be able to make our next move, which will be to not only to move this camp, but move to a new phase in the way that we occupy," he said.

There is debate among the occupiers in San Francisco as to whether it's better to stay put, move to another long-term location or make quick hit-and-run occupies at symbolic sites such as bank lobbies and foreclosures auctions.

"For instance, there's a neighborhood in San Francisco right now where they're foreclosing on 11 houses in one street," Selness said. "What a perfect place for us to occupy."

---

Hoag reported from Los Angeles

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-24-Occupy%20California/id-e2ab0262882444eda4a872e75efc25b7

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Video: Danger zone for Americans



>>> we're back now with a frightening look at the dangers facing american farmers and ranchers living under the constant threat of violence, in constant fear all because of where they happen to live and work along our nation's southern border with mexico. nbc's mark potter reports tonight in his award-winning series of reports "the war next door ."

>> there it is there. a large narcotics load under the helicopter.

>> reporter: south of the texas border on the mexican side of the rio grande , surveillance video of what police say are smugglers loading illicit drugs bound for the united states .

>> one, two, three, four, five, six, seven bundles.

>> reporter: they are floated in rafts and carries across private property in the u.s. where increasingly american farmers and ranchers along the border say they and their workers are being confronted, even threatened by armed mexican traffickers.

>> reporter: it clearly has intimidated u.s. citizens who, in many cases, don't believe they are safe on their own land in their own country.

>> they went off road, avoiding the spikes.

>> reporter: fearing retribution, this farmer says he was told by a federal agent to protect himself.

>> one of them recommended that i look into buying a bullet-proof vest.

>> reporter: while you're farming?

>> while i'm farming.

>> reporter: the problem isn't just confined to those right on the border. also affected are land owners miles inland where smuggling is still a huge problem.

>> how does this look? mike vickers leads a group of texas land owners who work closely with law enforcement . they worry about mexican drug and immigrant smugglers trampling their land.

>> this was cut, no question. it was cut and pulled up.

>> reporter: with hidden cameras they have documented waves of smugglers crossing private property .

>> he's carrying at least 40 pounds of drugs in that backpack. we suspect cocaine.

>> reporter: vickers said many families have moved for safety while others arm themselves.

>> this is happening on american soil. this is a war zone . no question about it.

>> right beside the helicopter.

>> reporter: the obama administration and local officials dispute the war zone claim but with mexican traffickers not letting up, u.s. land owners are asking for more federal protection at the front door to their own country. mark potter , nbc news along the rio grande .

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45440396/

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Microsoft announces Windows-specific Kinect for 2012 release

While hackers have been having their way with the Kinect on the PC for a long, long time, Microsoft itself has only recently embraced this sort of behavior. First it was with an official SDK and then, soon after, a follow-up letting things go commercial. We've been eagerly awaiting Office integration -- imagine lazily waving away every boring PPT that lands in your inbox -- but also struggling to figure out just how such a device would fit on our cluttered desks. Microsoft is now promising a PC-specific version to release sometime in 2012, able to focus on objects as close as 50cm from the lens -- quite an improvement given our current Kinect seems unhappy if we're standing anywhere within five feet. The hardware is also said to be "optimized" for desktop use and the USB cable shortened, but we're still in the dark about how exactly it will look. Might we suggest Keepon integration?

Microsoft announces Windows-specific Kinect for 2012 release originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Nov 2011 16:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Microsoft News  |  sourceKinect for Windows Blog  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/22/microsoft-announces-windows-specific-kinect-for-2012-release/

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Why some Ohio schools ban all tech in the classroom (Yahoo! News)

Waldorf schools in Ohio discourage use of technology until kids approach high school age

In this day and age when kids use?iPads and?smartphones in school and parents have a hard time?keeping up, it's difficult to imagine that there are institutions that completely eschew the use of technology in the classroom. But these types of schools really do exist, as evidenced by the?Waldorf schools of Ohio. No computers, TVs,?tablets, or any gadget reside within the schools' premises, and their use is discouraged even at home.

It's not because the people behind Waldorf are anti-technology ? they just believe learning computers in the first 12 or 13 years of a child's life is "not what's best for them." They also believe that kids don't need to be taught how to use computers as they're intuitive machines anyway. By the time the students reach eighth grade (which is the last possible year in the Waldorf system), though, teachers begin allowing them to use computers for basic purposes like research.

Clear Fork Valley Local, another school in Ohio, takes a similar approach. Principal Roger Knight believes technology, like a?car, is a tool that should be used by teachers instead of the students. He also believes that in this tough economic climate, investing in good teachers should be the focus instead of buying?iPads for students. The school does have a computer lab, but it's not an integral part of the students' education. As Clear Fork Valley Local is rated one of the best in the country, it's safe to say Knight's no-iPad policy works well for his school.

In spite of these institutions' presence in Ohio, the state's curriculum is actually very pro-technology. Government department?e-Tech Ohio's Kate Harkin says putting technology in classrooms is never about replacing teachers. Her division merely seeks to ensure that children statewide have access to technology in order to supplement a student's experience in school. Other than that, being tech-savvy in this era is certainly an advantage. "If you walk onto a college campus, a new job, or anywhere else, if you don't have [computer] skills you are left behind," she says.

[Image credit:?Waldorf Education]

SGWS via?NPR

This article was written by Mariella Moon and originally appeared on Tecca

More from Tecca:

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111123/tc_yblog_technews/why-some-ohio-schools-ban-all-tech-in-the-classroom

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Fewer Dying in U.S. From Throat, Mouth Cancer, Study Finds (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Nov. 21 (HealthDay News) -- Death rates for U.S. patients with throat and mouth cancers decreased between 1993 and 2007, a new study shows.

The finding comes from an analysis of National Center for Health Statistics data on white and black men and women, aged 25 to 64, in 26 states.

The researchers also found that the largest decreases in death rates for mouth and throat (pharynx) cancers were among black patients with at least 12 years of education.

The study appears in the November issue of the Archives of Otolaryngology -- Head & Neck Surgery.

Death rates increased among white men with fewer than 12 years of education, according to Dr. Amy Y. Chen, of Emory University School of Medicine and the American Cancer Society, and colleagues.

Another study in the same issue of the journal found that poor overall quality of life, pain and continued tobacco use seem to be associated with poorer outcomes and a higher death rate two years after diagnosis for patients with head and neck cancer.

The study included 276 patients diagnosed between September 2001 and September 2008. The overall survival rate two years after diagnosis was 90.8 percent.

The likelihood of death within two years of diagnosis was: four times higher for those who reported low quality of life than for those who reported a high quality of life; four times higher for those who continued to use tobacco than for those who had quit or never used tobacco; and two times higher for those who reported pain than for those who said they had no pain.

"In addition to older age and advanced stage, which are known to have a negative effect on survival, the presence of pain and continued tobacco use should flag patients who might need longer and more intense follow-up care to improve their observed and disease-specific survival rates," concluded the researchers at the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics in Iowa City in a journal news release.

"This information is useful for clinicians in the development of management plans for patients who are transitioning from treatment into survivorship," they said.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about head and neck cancer.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111122/hl_hsn/fewerdyinginusfromthroatmouthcancerstudyfinds

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Making most of scarcer aid will be vital: World Bank's Mulyani (Reuters)

WASHINGTON, Nov 22 (Reuters) ? Developing nations face weaker growth over the next two years as the euro zone debt crisis deepens and making the most of scarcer aid dollars will be vital, a senior World Bank official said on Tuesday.

World Bank Managing Director Sri Mulyani Indrawati told Reuters the biggest challenge for developing countries now was how to minimize the fallout from the euro zone crisis, which is likely to be felt through a decline in trade, workers' remittances and investment.

She said ending uncertainty around the euro zone crisis, which was driving up borrowing costs across the world, should be the focus of European policymakers.

"Ending this uncertainty is so important," Indrawati said.

"For many developing countries the choice is tougher for them because they have to choose between defending their fiscal soundness and sustainability," she added.

Indrawati said fiscal space in developing countries was already limited because current crisis was following so soon after the last global financial meltdown of 2009, which drained resources of poor nations.

She was speaking ahead of a meeting next week in Busan, South Korea, on aid effectiveness.

With budgets of rich but often highly-indebted Western donors under pressure, Indrawati said it was important that aid be made to work better through more transparency and results driven anti-poverty programs.

She said the World Bank was adopting a scorecard that could help governments in poorer countries measure aid spending and its impact on reducing poverty.

"Donors are facing a real choice between maintaining or continuing their international aid commitments," she said. "You have to be accountable for each dollar to taxpayers as well as beneficiaries, which are the poor people in developing countries," said Indrawati, a former Indonesian finance minister.

She said the arrival of new donors from fast-growing emerging powers like China or Brazil meant more focus should be put on better coordinating development program to avoid overlap.

Traditional donors have long worried that new donors will repeat mistakes they have long struggled to fix, such as the billions of dollars in debt amassed by poor countries during the 1970s and 1980s that have since been canceled .

"The strength of these new donors is not from their money but their experience and knowledge" in fighting poverty, Indrawati said. She pointed at social programs that target the poor in Brazil and Mexico that have radically reduced poverty and been replicated in Peru and even in New York City.

But Indrawati said the new donors, including private sector-led initiatives to fight malaria and HIV/AIDS, had also forced institutions like the World Bank to modernize.

"We don't want to be out of the game and want to be seen as providing global leadership in development goals and convening and coordinating across donor agencies," she said. (Editing by Kim Coghill)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/bs_nm/us_worldbank_aid

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

The capture of Gadhafi's son

The chic black sweater and jeans were gone. So too the combat khaki T-shirt of his televised last stand in Tripoli. Designer stubble had become bushy black beard after months on the run.

But the rimless glasses, framing those piercing eyes above that straight fine nose, gave him away despite the flowing nomad robes held close across his face.

Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, doctor of the London School of Economics, one-time reformer turned scourge of the rebels against his dictator father, was now a prisoner, bundled aboard an old Libyan air force transport plane near the oil-drilling outpost of Obari, deep in the Sahara desert.

The interim government's spokesman billed it as the "final act of the Libyan drama." But there would be no closing soliloquy from the lead player, scion of the dynasty that Moammar Gadhafi, self-styled "king of kings," had once hoped might rule Africa.

Video: Gadhafi's son captured without fight (on this page)

A Reuters reporter aboard the flight approached the 39-year-old prisoner as he huddled on a bench at the rear of the growling, Soviet-era Antonov. The man who held court to the world's media in the early months of the Arab Spring was now on a 90-minute flight bound for the town of Zintan near Tripoli. He sat frowning, silent and seemingly lost in thought for part of the way, nursing his right hand, bandaged around the thumb and two fingers. At other times he chatted calmly with his captors and even posed for a picture.

In the dead of night
Gadhafi's run had come to an end just a few hours earlier, at dead of night on a desert track, as he and a handful of trusted companions tried to thread their way through patrols of former rebel fighters intent on blocking their escape over the border.

"At the beginning he was very scared. He thought we would kill him," said Ahmed Ammar, one of the 15 fighters who captured Gadhafi. The fighters, from Zintan's Khaled bin al-Waleed Brigade, intercepted the fugitives' two 4x4 vehicles 40 miles out in the desert. "But we talked to him in a friendly way and made him more relaxed and we said, 'We won't hurt you'."

The capture of Saif al-Islam is the latest dramatic chapter in the series of revolts that have swept the Arab world. The first uprising toppled the Ben Ali government in Tunisia early this year. The upheaval spread to Egypt, forcing out longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak in February; swept Libya, where the capital Tripoli fell to rebels this summer and Moammar Gadhafi died after being beaten and abused by captors last month; and is now threatening the Assad family's four-decade grip on Syria.

Saif al-Islam was the smiling face of the Moammar Gadhafi's power structure. He won personal credibility at the highest echelons of international society, especially in London, where he helped tidy up the reputation of Libya via a personal charitable foundation. He threw that reputation away in the uprising, emerging as one of the hardest of hard-liners against the rebels.

This account of his capture and his final month on the run is based on interviews with the younger Gadhafi's captors and the prisoner himself. The scenes of his flight into captivity were witnessed by the Reuters reporter and a Reuters cameraman and photographer who also were aboard the plane.

Facing death penalty
Caught exactly a month after his father met a violent end, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi is wanted by the International Criminal Court at The Hague on charges of crimes against humanity - specifically for allegedly ordering the killing of unarmed protesters last spring. Libya's interim leaders want him to stand trial at home and say they won't extradite him; the justice minister said he faces the death penalty.

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His attempt to flee began October 19, under NATO fire from the tribal bastion of Bani Walid, 100 miles from the capital. Ammar and his fellow fighters said they believed he had been hiding out since then in the desolate tracts of the mountainous Brak al-Shati region.

Aides who were captured at Bani Walid said Saif al-Islam's convoy had been hit by a NATO air strike in a place nearby called Wadi Zamzam - 'Holy Water River.' Since then, there had been speculation that nomadic tribesmen once lionized by his father might have been working to spirit him across Libya's southern borders - perhaps, like his surviving brothers, sister and mother, into Niger or Algeria.

He did not get that far. Obari is a good 200 miles from either. But his captors believe he was headed for Niger, once a beneficiary of Moammar Gadhafi's oil-fueled largesse, which has granted asylum to Saif al-Islam's brother Saadi.

'I know you'
Ammar said his unit, scouring the desert for weeks, received a tip-off that a small group of Gadhafi loyalists - they did not know who - would be heading on a certain route toward Obari. Lying in wait, they spotted two all-terrain vehicles grinding through the darkness.

"We fired in the air and into the ground in front of them," Ammar said. The small convoy pulled up, perhaps hoping to brazen it out.

"Who are you?" Adeljwani Ali Ahmed, the leader of the squad, demanded to know of the man he took to be the main passenger in the group.

"Abdelsalam," came the reply.

It's a common enough name, though it means "servant of peace" in Arabic; Saif al-Islam's real name means "Sword of Islam."

Squad leader Ahmed, sizing the man up, took Ammar aside and whispered: "I think that's Saif."

Turning back to the car, a Toyota Landcruiser of a type favored on these rugged desert tracks, Ammar said: "I know who you are. I know you."

Cash and Kalashnikovs
The game was up. The militiamen retrieved several Kalashnikov rifles, a hand grenade and, one of the Zintani fighters said, some $4,000 in cash from the vehicles. It was a tiny haul from a man whose father commanded one of the best-equipped armies in Africa and who is suspected by many of holding the keys - in his head - to billions stolen from the Libyan state and stashed in secret bank accounts abroad.

"He didn't say anything," Ammar said. "He was very scared and then eventually he asked where we are from, and we said we are Libyans. He asked from which city and we said Zintan."

Zintan sits far from the spot of Gadhafi's capture in the Western, or Nafusa, Mountains, just a couple of hours drive south of the capital. The people of Zintan put together an effective militia in the uprising, and they are seeking to parlay their military prowess into political clout as new leaders in Tripoli try to form a government. At Obari, a fly-speck of a place dominated by the oil operations of a Spanish company, Zintan fighters have extended their writ since the war deep into traditionally pro-Gadhafi country peopled by Tuaregs, nomadic tribes who recognize no borders.

The Zintanis are also a force in the capital. On Saturday morning, the Antonov flew in to Obari from Tripoli, bearing the new tricolour flag of "Free Libya" - and piloted by a former air force colonel turned Zintan rebel. Just a few minutes after it landed, the purpose of the flight became clear.

Flight to captivity
Five prisoners, escorted by about 10 fighters in an array of desert camouflage, piled aboard, ranging themselves on benches along the sides of the spartan hold of the Antonov An-32, which is designed to carry four dozen paratroopers.

Two of the men were handcuffed together. A third had his arms cuffed in front of him. A dozen or so bulky black bags were carried in, and some thin mattresses - the scant belongings of the prisoners, their captors said.

All wore casual, modern dress - with the exception of Saif al-Islam.

His brown robe, turban and face scarf, open sandals on his feet, were typical of the Tuaregs of the region. The choice of costume offered concealment for a man more commonly seen in sharp suits and smart casual wear, and a visual echo of his late father's penchant for dressing up.

As they shuffled on the benches, rifle butts scraping on the metal floor, one of the guards said: "He is afraid now."

The pilot, though, insisted that he had had a paternal word with the 39-year-old captive and put him at ease before he was brought on board.

?Like a small child'
"I spoke to him like he was a small child," said Abdullah al-Mehdi, a diminutive, heavily moustachioed ball of energy in a green jumpsuit. His ambition - typical of Zintanis in these anarchic days in Libya - is to start up a whole new air force. "I told him he would not be beaten and he wouldn't be hurt and I gave my word," said al-Mehdi.

Interactive: Gadhafi's children (on this page)

He and the other two crewmen in the cockpit chain-smoked their way through the flight, navigating over the barren wastes the old-fashioned way, on analog instruments, with just occasional help from a new GPS device clamped awkwardly to the windshield.

The howl of the propellers was numbing, and there was little conversation during the flight. Saif al-Islam by turns stared ahead or turned back to crane his neck out at the land he once was in line to rule. Every so often, holding his scarf across his mouth Tuareg-fashion, he would say a few words to a guard.

The calm was in stark contrast to the frenzy that greeted the capture of Moammar Gadhafi on October 20 as he tried to flee the siege of his hometown of Sirte, on the Mediterranean coast. Fighters from the long embattled city of Misrata filmed themselves on cellphones hammering the fallen leader, howling for revenge and inflicting a series of indignities on him before his body was displayed to crowds of sightseers for several days.

Surrounded
The reporter caught Saif al-Islam's eye a few times, but on each occasion he looked away. At one point he asked for water, and a bottle from the journalist's pack was passed up to him. The other prisoners, too, did not want to speak.

After the plane bumped down on the tarmac in the mountains at Zintan, it was surrounded within minutes by hundreds of people - some cheering, some clearly angry, many shouting the rebels' Islamic battle cry, "Allahu Akbar!" (God is Greatest.)

Some held up cellphones to the few windows in the cargo hold, hoping to catch a snap of the most wanted man in Libya. At one point others were rattling the catches of the doors, intent it seemed on storming inside.

While his companions, clearly nervous, huddled together, Saif al-Islam seemed calm. He sat back and waited. The plane rocked gently as crowds clambered over the wings. The prisoners talked a little to each other and the guards.

Asked about the Hague court's statement that he was in touch through intermediaries about turning himself in to the international judges - who cannot impose the death penalty - he seemed to take offence: "It's all lies. I've never been in touch with them."

After more than an hour, the fighters decided they could get the other four captives off. They were helped out of the front door. Gadhafi remained where he was, on his own at the back, silent and aloof.

An injured hand
A further hour went by, the crowds still idling on the runway. The guards suggested it was time for the journalists to leave.

Moving back to speak to the solitary Gadhafi, the reporter asked, in English: "Are you OK?"

"Yes," he replied, looking up.

The reporter pointed to his injured hand. He said simply: "Air force, air force."

"NATO?"

"Yes. One month ago."

The reporter moved past him to the aircraft steps. Gadhafi looked up and, without a word, briefly took her hand.

Later, television footage showed him being helped off the plane as people among the crowd on the tarmac tried to slap him. His captors shoved him into a car and sped off for a hiding place somewhere in town.

Additional reporting by Mahmoud al-Farjani in Obari and Oliver Holmes in Zintan; Writing by Alastair Macdonald in Tripoli.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45366152/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Monday Morning Open Thread: Calendar Call for Pet Pics (Balloon Juice)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/164690500?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Video: Testifying Against the News Corp. Empire

CNBC's Kayla Tausche and David Faber have the details on News Corp's phone hacking victims, who are speaking out, as well as what it means for the future of the company.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45387054/

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

China's Wen warns "outside forces" off sea dispute (Reuters)

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) ? Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said on Friday that "outside forces" had no excuse to get involved in a complex dispute over the South China Sea, offering a veiled warning to the United States and others not to stick their noses into the sensitive issue.

But Wen also struck a softer line during a summit with leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, offering $10 billion in loans and lines of credit and saying China only wanted to be friends.

China claims a large swathe of the South China Sea, which straddles key shipping lanes and is potentially rich in energy resources.

Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei are the other claimants to parts of the sea, and along with the United States and Japan, are pressuring Beijing to try and seek some way forward on the knotty issue of sovereignty, which has flared up again this year with often tense maritime stand-offs.

While the White House says U.S. President Barack Obama will bring up the issue at another summit on Saturday, also in Bali, China has said it does not want it discussed, preferring to deal with the problem bilaterally amongst the states directly involved.

"The dispute which exists among relevant countries in this region over the South China Sea is an issue which has built up for several years," Wen told the ASEAN leaders, according to a copy of his remarks carried on the Foreign Ministry's website (http://www.mfa.gov.cn).

"It ought to be resolved through friendly consultations and discussions by countries directly involved. Outside forces should not, under any pretext, get involved," he added.

Japan has also expressed concern over the dispute, and India has become involved via an oil exploration deal with Vietnam in the South China Sea.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told reporters that China had sent positive signals about further discussing the code of conduct for the waters.

"I think this is an important development," the minister added.

In July, China and Southeast Asian countries agreed on a preliminary set of guidelines in the South China Sea, a rare sign of cooperation in a row that has plagued relations in the region for years.

LOANS AND TRADE

Despite the disagreements over the South China Sea, Beijing has been keen to deepen trade and economic ties with Southeast Asia, and has a free trade agreement with the bloc.

"The China-ASEAN relationship is solidly based and has great potential and a promising future," Wen said.

"China will forever be a good neighbor, good friend and good partner of ASEAN. We will work closely with you to implement all the agreements we have reached to bring more benefit to our people and make greater contributions to peace and prosperity in our region."

To this end, Wen said China would offer ASEAN another $10 billion in loans and lines of credit, including $4 billion of soft loans, on top of a similar pledge of $15 billion two years ago.

China will also set up a 3 billion yuan ($473 million) fund to expand practical maritime cooperation by promoting cooperation in environmental protection, navigational safety and combating transnational crimes, Wen added.

He said that China and ASEAN should step up cooperation in the financial field, by increasing the use of local currency swaps and "encourage the quoting of China's yuan and ASEAN currencies in each other's interbank foreign exchange."

"The world is undergoing profound and complex changes. The global economy may experience uncertainty and instability for a long time to come," he said.

"China and ASEAN should be both confident and sober-minded, keep our destiny firmly in our own hands and advance in the direction we have set to pursue our goal."

(Additional reporting Olivia Rondonuwu.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111118/wl_nm/us_asean_china

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Analysis: Obama gambles on Myanmar reforms (reuters)

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Oil spikes to $100, could go higher

Joshua Roberts / Reuters

A long protest against a pipeline through Nebraska appears to have been resolved.

By Martin Wolk

U.S. oil prices surged Wednesday, closing at a five-month high of more than $100 a barrel after a Canadian energy company?ended a standoff by agreeing to shift the route of a?planned oil pipeline out of an environmentally sensitive area of Nebraska.

The agreement has two companies, Enbridge Inc. and TransCanada Corp., racing?forward with new pipeline plans in a?fierce battle to unclog a yearlong U.S. oil bottleneck.

A glut of oil that has built up in the Midwest has created what has been described as an?unprecedented distortion in crude markets, with the global Brent crude benchmark trading for about $9 a barrel more that domestic West Texas Intermediate. The gap, which had been more than $12,?narrowed Wednesday as U.S. crude rose about $3 to $102.59, while Brent fell 51 cents to $111.67.

Several developments helps send domestic oil prices higher Wednesday, but they add up to energy companies racing to ship oil in the Midwest to Gulf Coast refineries, where it can fetch a premium.

The Nebraska legislature?Wednesday voted unanimously to advance a proposed law that would reroute the controversial TransCanada Keystone XL pipeline to avoid the sensitive Sandhills and Ogallala aquifer.

The news followed TransCanada's agreement Monday to find a new route, something it previously had said would be impossible.

Gas prices rose about 4 cents to $2.63 a gallon on futures markets Wednesday?although gas?prices fell sharply last month,?more than offsetting other price increases, according to the latest monthly inflation figures. ?Crude oil prices peaked in April at nearly $114 a barrel on turmoil in the Middle East before falling to as low as $76 last month. Since then crude has been rising sharply.

?Our friends at The Motley Fool note that oil prices have surged by one-third over the past month and suggest the commodity?could be on its way to $200 a barrel, as some experts once predicted.

David Lee Smith writes:

A number of game changers can -- and probably will -- occur as we move into the impending new year. I'm wagering that a host of the potentially catastrophic events could involve Iraq and its neighbor to the east, Iran. The result, almost certainly, would be a steep escalation of crude levies.

Smith sees four factors leading to a potential run-up in oil prices next year:

  • The complete withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, opening the way for a closer alliance with Iran.
  • ExxonMobil's move into the Kurdistan region, which has riled the Iraqi government.
  • Iran's effort to develop nuclear weapons.
  • The potential for renewed civil war in Iraq.

The Middle East and North Africa -- and especially the all-important Iraq-Iran-Saudi Arabia region -- remain very much a tinderbox, with the potential to drive crude prices to stratospheric levels

Click here for the full story.

?

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/16/8843426-oil-spikes-to-100-could-go-higher

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Ai Weiwei makes tax battle a 'social performance' (AP)

BEIJING ? Dissident artist Ai Weiwei's latest provocative piece was handed to him by the Chinese government: a $2.4 million tax bill that he says is a trumped-up effort to silence him.

Though jarred after spending nearly three months in police detention this year, he turned the demand into performance art ? posting official documents online, tallying loans from supporters and making a video of himself singing an anti-censorship song.

It opened a window on an opaque system, and showed that many in China share his desire for government accountability. Supporters donated more than $1.3 million (8.5 million yuan) to him in just two weeks, some of it folded into paper airplanes or wrapped around fruit and thrown over his gate.

To Ai, who has created installations around the world but had been able to show little of his work domestically, it is all art ? right down to the scathing commentaries against him in the official Global Times newspaper. State media normally decline to acknowledge his existence.

"This has become a social performance and there are so many people involved. Even the Global Times. They are also playing a role in this," Ai said. "This has generated such energy which has never happened in the history of China. If they want to crush somebody, then normally, for that person, what's left there is just silence."

The thrust of the artist's approach is to give the public what he says the authoritarian government denies them ? transparency.

When Beijing tax officials delivered the massive bill to him on Nov. 1, scanned versions appeared on his Google profile page within hours. Responses from his company's lawyers and tax office receipts are also posted, as is a daily tally of money that supporters have sent. Volunteers even post pictures of the cash donations that land in his yard.

"What (the authorities) are afraid of the most is transparency and openness and it's the most powerful tool, so we have to do everything in front of the people, so we put our information on the Internet so everybody can see it," he said.

A New York-based art critic with expertise on China says Ai's social media-driven political action of recent years is viewed by many in the West as art.

In 2008, Ai recruited volunteers on Twitter to compile the names of thousands of students who died in poorly built schools that toppled during a massive earthquake in Sichuan. He later made an installation piece out of 9,000 children's backpacks that covered the facade of a German museum and that formed the Chinese characters for: "She lived happily for seven years in this world."

"A lot of the work that Ai Weiwei's done with Twitter and his blog and all of that stuff that might look like just political protest in China, many curators in the West have called it social sculpture," said Barbara Pollack, author of "The Wild, Wild East: An American Art Critic's Adventures in China." "It's very much about using your interaction with people to make an artistic statement."

Perhaps emboldened by the support, Ai has been creeping back into the public eye after keeping a low profile following his June release from detention. At first he gave only interviews to print media. Then he appeared on the cover of Newsweek magazine.

On Wednesday, he spoke to TV reporters on camera while wearing a T-shirt with his picture in a missing person poster ? an unmistakable reference to his detention ? and said a $1.3 million guarantee he had just paid to the tax bureau felt like ransom money.

He has referred to the money he has received as loans, not donations, and said his supporters were casting votes with their cash.

By Monday, 30,000 loans amounting to $1.4 million had been sent, including a symbolic 100 euro ($137) donation from the German government's human rights commissioner.

Fang Zhixiong, a 39-year-old repairman in the southern city of Shenzhen, said he was one of Ai's "early debtors," sending him more than 100 yuan ($15) and urging his friends to do the same.

"I really admire people like Ai who are fighting in their personal capacity to win rights or to seek freedom," Fang said by phone. "If they didn't do this type of work, they could be leading better lives, but they do this because of an ideal and the price they pay is very great."

Though the number of donors is small compared to China's population of more than 1.3 billion, it "is still extremely large when you consider the political terror," said Mo Zhixu, a liberal-minded author.

Ai was the most high-profile target of a sweeping crackdown on activists that started in February in a bid to prevent protests similar to those in the Middle East and North Africa. Dozens of bloggers, writers, rights lawyers and other activists were detained, arrested or questioned. Many have been released but continue to face restrictions on whom they can see and talk to.

To thank his supporters, Ai made a video of himself singing along to a song composed by Chinese Web users about a fictional animal known as a "grass mud horse" ? so-named because the Chinese characters are homonyms for a graphic slur. It gained popularity as a sly insult to China's Internet censors.

The Global Times newspaper has said Ai's supporters do not represent the larger Chinese population, and that dissidents like him would be rendered obsolete by the tide of Chinese progress.

Ai's actions expose a divide between China and the West in how the audiences see political action and art, Pollack said.

"In the West, it's viewed as first of all heroic but second of all as an extremely good use of performance art or social sculpture art, bringing it onto a whole new level. But when I'm in China and I talk to people, it's often seen as egotistical and drawing attention to himself," she said. "I think Ai Weiwei is extremely conscious of playing to both audiences."

The donation campaign marks a turning point for Ai, who had been concerned about a lack of support in his own country, Pollack said. She noted that while Ai was in custody none of the country's leading artists spoke up for him.

"He was very despondent about that when I saw him in September, and now receiving this money means that he has won an audience in China," she said.

Ai and his company's lawyers have 60 days to challenge the tax bill. He said they plan to demand evidence from the authorities and to be allowed to see the firm's accountant and manager, who have been uncontactable.

But the possibility of being taken away by police again is always on the artist's mind.

"I worry about my child, my mother and people around me, people who care," he said. "But at the same time, if I don't make this an argument, the kind of terrible things, the dangerous conditions will remain there and can happen to anybody. I cannot bear this kind of responsibility."

___

Gillian Wong can be reached at http://twitter.com/gillianwong

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_re_as/as_china_ai_weiwei

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Model Niki Taylor Welcomes a Baby Boy!

The model and hubby Burney Lamar have their fourth child! Plus, see more stars who welcomed new bundles of joy

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-babies-2011/1-b-16266?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-babies-2011-16266

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

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