Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Nigerian soldiers open fire after blast, 35 killed

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, Oct 8 - At least 35 people were killed on Monday when Nigerian soldiers opened fire after a bomb blast struck their convoy in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, nurses at the hospital that received the bodies said.

The nurses in the Umaru Shehu hospital said 30 of the dead were in civilian clothes, while another five wore military uniforms. Militants of the Boko Haram Islamist sect, headquartered in Maiduguri, sometimes wear civilian clothes.

"They brought in so many dead bodies. They were more than 30 civilians, in civilian dress. We counted five dead soldiers as well," a nurse, who declined to be named, said. Most had died of gunshot wounds, she added.

Boko Haram is waging an insurgency against President Goodluck Jonathan's government with the avowed aim of reviving an ancient Islamic kingdom in majority Muslim northern Nigeria.

Styled on the Afghan Taliban, the sect's purported leader Abubakar Shekau has said he wants to impose sharia, Islamic law, on the country of 160 million people, around half of whom are Christians and the other half Muslim. His movement has become the number one security threat to Africa's top energy producer.

Borno state security spokesman Sagir Musa said he could not confirm or deny the casualty toll, but he admitted troops had opened fire after a bomb they suspected to be remotely detonated wounded two of them in a patrol.

He said the military would give a statement on Wednesday morning.

Nigerian forces launched a fresh operation against Boko Haram over the weekend, killing 30 of its members, including a senior commander, and arrested 10 others in a raid on the northeastern city of Damaturu, they said on Monday.

A crackdown on the group this year has had mixed results, weakening it but also pushing it into new areas south of its heartland. Northerners complain that heavy-handed police and military tactics, including indiscriminate killings and arrests, have made new recruits for the sect.

GUN BATTLES

Lieutenant Eli Lazarus, a spokesman for joint military and police forces in northeastern Yobe state, said in a statement that they had conducted cordon and search operations at a suspected Boko Haram hideout in Damaturu on Sunday and "engaged in a gun battle with the suspected terrorists".

"About 30 suspected Boko Haram terrorists were killed in the battle which lasted several hours ... The notorious one-eyed Bakaka, the field commander of Boko Haram in Damaturu and a close associate of Abubakar Shekau, was killed," he said.

Ten others were arrested and "are presently assisting investigators to track other senior members of the terrorist group", he added. Three homemade bombs, six assault rifles, 90 rounds of ammunition and several knives were seized, he said.

There was no immediate comment from Boko Haram.

The sect's fighters have killed more than 1,000 people in bomb or gun attacks since they intensified their struggle in 2010, rights groups say. But the military are also accused of killing scores of civilians in various raids.

The crackdown appears to have left Boko Haram less capable of carrying out large-scale attacks like the one that killed 186 people in Kano in January. But they remain deadly.

Gunmen shot dead a Chinese national working for the China Geo-Engineering Corporation, at a market in Gubio, northeastern Borno state, the firm's Nigeria personnel manager Albert Audu told Reuters on Monday. But he added that police did not know if it was Boko Haram or robbers.

The United States has labeled Shekau and two other senior members 'terrorists' and put them on its sanctions list.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nigerian-soldiers-open-fire-blast-35-killed-053714353.html

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High court takes up Texas affirmative action plan

Jheanelle Wilkins of New Castle, Del., right, and Neo Moneri of Beltsville, Md., participate in a rally outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012, supporting the University of Texas.. The Supreme Court is taking up a challenge to a University of Texas program that considers race in some college admissions. The case could produce new limits on affirmative action at universities, or roll it back entirely. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Jheanelle Wilkins of New Castle, Del., right, and Neo Moneri of Beltsville, Md., participate in a rally outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012, supporting the University of Texas.. The Supreme Court is taking up a challenge to a University of Texas program that considers race in some college admissions. The case could produce new limits on affirmative action at universities, or roll it back entirely. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

People supporting the University of Texas rally outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012. The Supreme Court is taking up a challenge to a University of Texas program that considers race in some college admissions. The case could produce new limits on affirmative action at universities, or roll it back entirely. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Supreme Court is taking up a challenge to a University of Texas program that considers race in some college admissions. The case could produce new limits on affirmative action at universities, or roll it back entirely.

Abigail Fisher, the white Texan who sued the university, arrived at the high court Wednesday morning to hear the argument.

Hundreds of people also wanting seats in the courtroom waited in line on the court plaza on a gorgeous fall morning. The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a supporter of affirmative action, was among advocates on both sides of the issue who gathered outside the court.

While quieter than other protesters who have converged on the court for big cases, several people held signs proclaiming their support or opposition to affirmative action. One man held an "End Affirmative Action Now," while another women held a "Diversity (equals) Success" sign.

The university says the program that fills roughly a quarter of its incoming classes uses race among many factors and argues that it is necessary to provide the kind of diverse educational experience the high court has previously endorsed. The rest of its slots go to students who are admitted based on their class rank, without regard to race.

Opponents of the program say the university is practicing illegal discrimination by considering race at all.

Justice Elena Kagan is not taking part, probably because she worked on the case at the Justice Department.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-10-Supreme%20Court-Affirmative%20Action/id-b035019816dd469682eb2305395e0446

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Jason ?Mayhem? Miller goes on bizarre tirade during ?MMA Hour? (VIDEO)

On Monday's "MMA Hour," retired MMA fighter Jason "Mayhem" Miller went on a bizarre, profane tirade before storming out 45 minutes before the interview was due to end. He stayed in the character of Lucky Patrick, the fighter he plays in the upcoming MMA movie "Here Comes the Boom." He called host Ariel Helwani, who is Jewish, Aryan, dropped the f-bomb several times, and referred to the Columbus Day Parade in New York as the "wop parade."

Watch for yourself. There are several instances of vulgar language throughout the video, so it may not be right for you to watch at work. The 15-minute video is worth watching all the way through, but you only need to watch a few minutes to get an idea of his weird behavior.

In a vacuum, this could be seen as just a bit of poorly-executed promotion for the movie. However, if that was the case, Helwani wouldn't have made so many attempts to get Miller, not "Patrick," to talk. If Miller wanted to do this well, he would have let Helwani in on the joke before the interview started. He didn't. Helwani tweeted:

It's also not the only bizarre incident Miller has been involved with lately. After his release from the UFC, Miller tweeted UFC president Dana White, "Kill yourself, @danawhite, we are all begging you." He was then found naked in a church and arrested for vandalism.

Miller, who fought in the UFC, Strikeforce and Dream, has long been one of MMA's more outrageous personalities. This won him many fans and television work on shows like MTV's "Bully Beatdown," but also got him in trouble occasionally. He ran into the cage after Jake Shields won the Strikeforce championship, which touched off a melee between Shields' camp and Miller.

Hopefully, he will get help with whatever is causing him to act so oddly.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/jason-mayhem-miller-goes-bizarre-tirade-during-mma-140032444--mma.html

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Wall St shying away from minuscule India state deals

MUMBAI (Reuters) - Wall Street banks have had enough of heavy work for puny paychecks on Indian government share sales - at least when it comes to smaller or difficult deals.

That choosiness comes at a bad time for India, which may struggle to hit its goal of raising nearly $6 billion from share sales in state companies by the end of March with investor demand for new shares expected to remain modest.

Just three banks, all local, bid to run a roughly $300 million stake sale in National Aluminium Co Ltd , said bankers with direct knowledge of the matter.

Two years ago, by comparison, 10 banks - four of them global heavyweights - bid to manage a $275 million initial public offering by state manganese ore producer MOIL Ltd .

That was despite a payday of $3 split among three winning banks with no reimbursement for expenses. That is a standard setup for state deals in India, where investment banks can lose $1 million or more on costs but have played along for league table credit and the hope of future business.

Now, global banks, weakened after rounds of job cuts, are shying away from state deals that are too small or difficult to do purely for credit in industry rankings.

"A couple of years ago, we would bid aggressively for all the government deals, hoping to win some of them. Today, we spend a lot of time in deciding the ones we would like to bid for the mandate," said the equity market head at a leading U.S. bank.

"The reason is simple - why take on additional costs when the business itself is bad?" said the executive, who like several other bankers declined to be identified for fear of losing future government business.

Banks lose money on even the biggest Indian state deals.

Coal India Ltd , which raised $3.5 billion two years ago in India's largest IPO, paid fees to its six banks that were not enough to cover a night's stay in a hotel during the investor roadshow to places like Singapore and Hong Kong.

By comparison, fees for private sector IPOs in India are between 2 percent and 4 percent of the money raised, while for secondary share deals they range from 1.5 to 3 percent, banking sources said. In China, state companies pay about 2.5 percent for IPOs in Hong Kong, and 1 to 1.5 percent for follow-on sales.

"It's tough to build a sustainable investment banking business or indeed a sustainable disinvestment process based on no fees while also bearing all the costs of the offering," said Tarun Kataria, CEO of India's Religare Capital Markets, who was previously HSBC's India head of global banking and markets.

For graphic on divestment and proceeds, fiscal deficit, click http://link.reuters.com/xuf23t

LOW FEES, LOW EFFORT?

Bankers have long grumbled in private about New Delhi's miserly fees. The downside for the government is that it may not get the best effort from banks, and deals sometimes fizzle.

"There's got to be some incentive to do these deals. If the banks are losing money on these deals, they won't put in their best effort," said a banker with an Indian investment bank.

State investors led by Life Insurance Corp of India (LIC) have ended up bailing out several big share sales that failed to generate sufficient market demand.

In a botched deal in March, LIC ended up with most of the shares in a $2.6 billion stock auction in Oil and Natural Gas Corp that led to finger-pointing over its handling, with the government coming in for a big part of the blame.

New Delhi can be a difficult client, sometimes ignoring advice from banks on pricing and timing. The floor price for the ONGC auction was set at a 2.3 percent premium to its trading price, giving little incentive to buy.

Many state deals are long in coming to market.

The lowest-ever winning bid was on a share sale by Steel Authority of India - one-hundredth of a rupee split among six banks including JPMorgan , Deutsche Bank and HSBC . That mandate was awarded in 2010 and the deal, worth over $1.5 billion then, is still pending.

"The government is not as flexible as the private companies. They call us to New Delhi at the drop of a hat for meetings and despite that some deals take years to get executed, if at all," said the equity market head at a big foreign bank in Mumbai.

MORE TO COME

India is in the process of appointing banks to manage share offerings in four firms - National Aluminium, MMTC Ltd , Oil India Ltd and NMDC Ltd .

Last month, Credit Suisse was the only foreign bank among six to pitch for a share sale in Neyveli Lignite to raise up to roughly $150 million. It is one of the three banks short-listed for the deal.

The deadline to run the sale of 9.33 percent of trading firm MMTC was extended last month after drawing a muted response, a government source said.

Global banks have shied away from MMTC, which is 99.33 percent state-owned and has a price-to-earnings ratio of over 600 times, making it tough to price.

Major banks still covet the bigger state deals.

Last week, India short-listed five banks including Goldman Sachs , Citigroup and Bank of America-Merrill Lynch to sell 10 percent of iron ore miner NMDC for roughly $1.5 billion.

The winners were chosen from 16 bidders including Credit Suisse, Barclays and Deutsche Bank.

The short list for Oil India's $550 million share sale is expected next week, and it may see more interest from banks due to its size and hopes of getting follow-up business, including M&A advisory, from the cash-rich company, banking sources said.

(Additional reporting by Manoj Kumar in NEW DELHI and Elzio Barreto in HONG KONG; Editing by Tony Munroe and Ryan Woo)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-st-shying-away-minuscule-india-state-deals-003611102--sector.html

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Reference Librarian, Springfield College, Springfield MA

Reference Librarian

Springfield College seeks applications for the position of Reference
Librarian in the Public Services Department. This librarian will
coordinate all aspects of library related eLearning as part of a team in
the Public Services Department. The eLearning coordinator will collaborate
with and train faculty on WebEx for online instruction, work with the
Educational Technologist on Moodle-related instructional design and
coordinate with IT to assist faculty in using technology for effective
teaching. This position is responsible for providing in-person and virtual
reference service; participating in collection development; and teaching
information literacy sessions in all learning formats. This position is
the Library Liaison to ten regional campuses for the Springfield College
School of Human Services.

Qualifications include: Master?s degree in Library Science from an ALA
accredited institution and a minimum of two years experience in library
services is required. Knowledge of webinar, learning management system, and
eportfolio software is preferred as is higher education teaching
experience. This position requires a 35 hour week from Tuesday through
Saturday with occasional work in the evening.

To apply, send letter of application and resume to:

Manager of Employment

Position Code RL -

Springfield College

263 Alden Street

Springfield, MA 01109

Springfield College is an equal opportunity educator and employer

Source: http://alanis.simmons.edu/blogs/jobs/2012/10/02/reference-librarian-springfield-college-springfield-ma-2/

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Use a Barbell to Build Muscle Faster: Try the Deadlift and Squat ...

A barbell may seem like something reserved for grunting meatheads, but it?s a great training tool for women and an efficient way to create the lean, sculpted body you want. With a barbell, you can increase the amount you lift in smaller increments, which of course leads to more muscle, and using only one piece of equipment makes for a faster workout.

Before you attempt a move with a barbell, you need to first master the exercise using only your bodyweight and then with dumbbells or kettlebells. When you feel ready for the bar, perform the exercise without any weight and slowly add plates as you feel more comfortable and gain strength, but always be sure you?re using proper form.

While there are certainly some advanced barbell exercises that will take time to build up to, two of the simplest and most effective exercises you can perform with a barbell are front squats and deadlifts. While they might seem like solely lower-body exercises, they actually engage the entire trunk, shoulders, and back muscles because the rest of your body has to work to stabilize the load of the barbell. Both will take your strength (and your booty!) to fabulous new heights. Try 3 to 5 sets of 5 to 10 repetitions of each.

?

Barbell Front Squat: Set the bar on the rack so that you have to bend your knees a little to get underneath it. Make sure the bar is lying right across the top of your shoulders and is close enough to your neck that you could balance it on your shoulders. Then cross your arms so that your hands are touching the opposite shoulder. Let the bar sit flush on your shoulders, keeping your elbows up high in order to keep the bar from falling forward. Stand up and take two small steps back.

?Once you have the bar in the ?rack? position, breath in and sit down and back until your hips drop below your knees. It is important to stay as upright as possible, keeping your midsection tight, your upper arms parallel to the floor, and your heels planted firmly on the ground.
?Breathe out as you ascend back to the rack position, taking care to keep your knees spread out (not caved in) and squeezing your glutes and abs at the top.
?Barbell Deadlift: Set the bar up on the rack so that you back to bend your knees slightly to reach it. Place your feet under the bar, bend at your hips and knees, and grab the bar with hands shoulder-width apart, engaging your lats by squeezing under your armpits. Stand up and take two small steps back.
?Once you have a firm grip on the bar, breathe in and, without allowing your lower back to round, hinge forward from the hips while keeping your knees soft and maintaining a straight spine. The bar should be very close to your body, even touching your shins if possible, and your torso end up parallel to the ground.
?Then breathe out and aggressively push your feet through the ground to return to the starting position. Make sure you squeeze your glutes and abs at the top.

Neghar Fonooni is a fitness coach, presenter, and blogger on the east coast via Los Angeles. She is the founder of Eat, Lift and be Happy, a blog and online business that educates and inspires readers to find their best possible nutrition, fitness, and lifestyle strategies. Fonooni is also a co-founder of Girls Gone Strong, the Women?s Fitness Authority, and a contributing writer at Schwarzanegger.com.

Source: http://www.shape.com/blogs/working-it-out/raise-bar

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Explosive Attack on Kenya Church Kills 1 Child

The acting police chief in Kenya's capital says an explosive device set off in a Sunday school class killed one child and seriously wounded three.

Moses Ombati said he suspects sympathizers with the Somali militant group al-Shabab were behind the attack at an Anglican church in Nairobi.

Kenya has seen a series of attacks on churches ever since Kenyan forces moved into Somalia to fight al-Shabab last year. Kenyan forces kicked the rebels out of their last stronghold, Kismayo, on Friday.

Grenades are often used in the attacks; Ombati is describing the cause of Sunday's attack as an explosive device.

One church member, Julius Macharia Maina, brought four children to the hospital. One child's head was cut open; the others had bruises. Maina described the attack "emotional and very scary."

Source: http://feeds.abcnews.com/click.phdo?i=ac66c138083dce23e25c00cf01a97a2f

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Chavez sweats to find old election magic

GUARENAS, Venezuela (Reuters) - Dancing, singing odes to the moon and even jogging gingerly onto stage, Venezuela's cancer-weakened President Hugo Chavez is squeezing out every last ounce of energy to recapture some of his old campaign magic before Sunday's election.

Though a far cry from the inexhaustible showman who swept to power in 1998 and has since won two more presidential elections, Chavez is trying to put the cancer behind him and win another term.

"I've had to confront death to fulfill my commitment to the people who I love more than my own life," the 58-year-old socialist leader told adoring supporters in the working-class town of Guarenas. "I won't let you down."

After undergoing surgery for two cancerous tumors, Chavez has defied predictions by some foes that he might not even make it to election day. In July, he declared himself cured - for the second time - of an undisclosed cancer in the pelvic area and is exuberantly talking up his plans for a new six-year term.

He leads most polls but it looks like a close race and the president has been unable to campaign with the vigor of his younger opponent, Henrique Capriles.

Chavez's events and speeches are much shorter and he has not been crisscrossing the nation as he did in past campaigns and as the 40-year-old Capriles does now.

Instead, Chavez has made quick-fire visits and maximizes his exposure with brief, near-daily TV slots where he showers state spending on factories and new homes.

In Guarenas, he inched through the multitudes on the back of a truck, waving and blowing kisses at the crowd. On stage, he sang traditional songs, including one praising the full moon overhead, lifted children into the air in a show of strength, and gave a pulsating stump speech.

By the end of the hourlong appearance on stage, he was sweating profusely under the spotlights.

Despite such efforts, gone are the whirlwind pace and grueling walking tours that took him through rural backwaters and Caracas slums where he earned the love of millions. He is more bloated than usual - from steroids, according to some opposition media - and often disappears out of sight for a day or two.

Some supporters fear this election campaign might be too much of a strain on Chavez's health. Even if he wins on Sunday, the possibility of a recurrence of cancer will hover over him and keep Venezuelans on edge, stoking a long-running guessing game over possible successors inside his ruling Socialist Party.

"The people believe in their leader, but I'm not sure he'll last another term. We have to be prepared," said Ramon Garcia, a 50-year-old shop owner as he sat helping friends who were manning a Chavez campaign booth in downtown Caracas.

"He's a sick man, I can tell, I can see him slowing down. He's making a brave effort," added Garcia, who said he himself suffers from a pancreatic illness and had not yet decided which way to vote on Sunday.

Chavez's precise condition remains a state secret, although most doctors agree that at least two years must pass before a cancer patient can confidently say he is cured.

"His political agenda comes before his personal agenda," said Sunil Daryanani, a Caracas-based oncologist who has not treated Chavez but like many Venezuelans follows any hints about his health closely. "I doubt he's following medical advice very well. But we don't know what cancer he has. He's very cagey."

SOCIALIST CRUSADE

Capriles, a market-friendly lawyer, is whipping up fervor in this campaign, even mimicking Chavez' old style as he wades through the crowds and knocks on voters' doors. He has drawn the support of a broad coalition of opposition parties and confidently predicts victory.

But Chavez has frustrated Venezuela's opposition time and again - defying huge protests and strikes, and even returning to power after briefly being toppled in a 2002 coup.

His charismatic style, nationalizations in the oil, power and telecommunications industries, and heavy spending on social programs have won him an almost Messianic status in Venezuela's slums, and loyalists are backing him to win again.

"Of course, we are worried about his health," said Juan Gabriel Orozco, who works at a "Socialist Arepa Shop" in Caracas, one of a chain of government subsidized restaurants

"But we know the comandante by heart, and if he says he's healthy enough to run and win, then that's all I need to know."

Chavez barely mentions his cancer any more.

He has been able to make about two dozen visits around Venezuela since the formal campaign began on July 1, far short of the frenetic Capriles' tour of some 300 villages, towns and cities.

Chavez, though, milks every appearance to the maximum.

In the carefully stage-managed show at Guarenas, the ultimate master of ceremonies led the crowd in the national anthem and then roused them with insults hurled at Capriles.

"You loser, you bourgeois," Chavez said, to wild cheers from the crowd. "You will never rule Venezuela!"

(Additional reporting by Girish Gupta and Mario Naranjo in Caracas, Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Kieran Murray)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chavez-sweats-old-election-magic-151837270.html

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