Monday, October 29, 2012

Official: Iraq searches Syria-bound Iranian plane

A man inspects the aftermath of Saturday's car bomb explosion, in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City, in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. Iraqi insurgents unleashed a string of bombings and other attacks primarily targeting the country's Shiite community on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012, in a challenge to government efforts to promote a sense of stability by preventing attacks during a major Muslim holiday, killed and wounded scores of people. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

A man inspects the aftermath of Saturday's car bomb explosion, in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City, in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. Iraqi insurgents unleashed a string of bombings and other attacks primarily targeting the country's Shiite community on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012, in a challenge to government efforts to promote a sense of stability by preventing attacks during a major Muslim holiday, killed and wounded scores of people. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

People inspect the aftermath of Saturday's car bomb explosion, in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City, in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. Iraqi insurgents unleashed a string of bombings and other attacks that killed and wounded scores of people, primarily targeting the country's Shiite community on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012, in a challenge to government efforts to promote a sense of stability by preventing attacks during a major Muslim holiday. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

Khalid Abdullah lies in a hospital bed a day after being injured in a bomb blast as his son Mohammed Khalid, 6, left, and his father Abdullah Mahdi, 57, sit next to him at a hospital in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City, in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. Iraqi insurgents unleashed a string of bombings and other attacks that killed and wounded scores of people, primarily targeting the country's Shiite community on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012, in a challenge to government efforts to promote a sense of stability by preventing attacks during a major Muslim holiday. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

People enjoy illuminated fountains during Eid al-Adha celebrations as the sun sets on the horizon of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. Eid al-Adha is a religious festival celebrated by Muslims worldwide. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

(AP) ? Iraqi authorities forced an Iranian cargo plane heading to Syria to land for inspection in Baghdad to ensure it was not carrying weapons, an Iraqi official said Sunday.

It was the second such forced landing this month. The plane was released after the check.

The move appeared aimed at easing U.S. concerns that Iraq has become a route for shipments of Iranian military supplies that might could Syrian President Bashar Assad battle rebels in his country's civil war.

The head of the Iraqi Civil Aviation Authority, Nassir Bandar, said the inspection took place Saturday. The inspectors allowed the plane to continue its flight after they determined there were no weapons onboard, he said.

"Our experts found that the plane was carrying only medical supplies and foodstuffs," Bandar said, "so the flight was allowed to proceed."

Bandar said Iraqi authorities would continue searching planes suspected of transporting arms to Syria. Iraqi officials have repeatedly said they would not allow their country or airspace to be a corridor for arms shipments to either Syrian government forces or rebels.

Iraq ordered another Iranian cargo plane to land for inspection on Oct. 2. No weapons were found in that search, either.

Last month, Iraq banned a North Korea plane from crossing its airspace because of suspicions it was carrying weapons to Syria.

American officials have expressed concern that Iranian planes may be ferrying weapons over Iraq, and they have pressed Baghdad to take stronger action to ensure that no such transfers occur.

Also Sunday, attacks in and around Baghdad killed eight people.

The deadliest attack happened when a car bomb exploded near a restaurant in the Shiite neighborhood of Kazimiyah on Sunday night, killing five people and wounding 20, police said.

Simultaneous blasts earlier in the day near a market in Madain, about 20 kilometers (14 miles) southeast of Baghdad, killed three people were killed and eight, police said.

Medics in nearby hospitals confirmed the casualties. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters.

Sunday's blasts followed a string of attacks that killed 40 people in the Iraqi capital a day earlier, including evening explosions near a market and a bus station in the Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City.

Saturday was the deadliest day from attacks in nearly six weeks.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-28-ML-Iraq/id-8bd3975758774022b12d218ea78f3406

joe paterno memorial service taco bell breakfast menu ener1 national chocolate cake day epstein joshua komisarjevsky barney frank

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Vivendi's Maroc Tel attracts four suitors: sources

{ttle}

{cptn}","template_name":"ss_thmb_play_ttle","i18n":{"end_of_gallery_header":"End of Gallery","end_of_gallery_next":"View Again"},"metadata":{"pagination":"{firstVisible} - {lastVisible} of {numItems}","ult":{"spaceid":"7664811","sec":""}}},{"id": "hcm-carousel-1491433441", "dataManager": C.dmgr, "mediator": C.mdtr, "group_name":"hcm-carousel-1491433441", "track_item_selected":1,"tracking":{ "spaceid" : "7664811", "events" : { "click" : { "any" : { "yui-carousel-prev" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"prev","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } }, "yui-carousel-next" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"next","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // no more pages, don't beacon again // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } } } } } } })); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function() { try{ if (Math.floor(Math.random()*10) == 1) { var loc = window.location, decoded = decodeURI(loc.pathname), encoded = encodeURI(decoded), uri = loc.protocol + "//" + loc.host + encoded + ((loc.search.length > 0) ? loc.search + '&' : '?') + "_cacheable=1", xmlhttp; if (window.XMLHttpRequest) xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest(); else xmlhttp = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); xmlhttp.open("GET",uri,true); xmlhttp.send(); } }catch(e){} })(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings = '"projectId": "10001256862979", "documentName": "", "documentGroup": "", "ywaColo" : "vscale3", "spaceId" : "7664811" ,"customFields" : { "12" : "classic", "13" : "story" }'; Y.Media.YWA.init(Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if(document.onclick===YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.newClick){document.onclick=YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.oldClick;} }); }); });

Dirty money cost China $3.8 trillion 2000-2011: report

WASHINGTON, Oct 25 (TrustLaw) - China has lost $3.79 trillion over the past decade in money smuggled out of the country, a massive amount that could weaken its economy and create instability, according to a new report.

And the outflow - much of it from corruption, crime or tax evasion - is accelerating. China lost $472 billion in 2011, equivalent to 8.3 percent of its gross domestic product, up from $204.7 billion in 2000, Global Financial Integrity, a research and advocacy group that campaigns to limit illegal flows, said in a report on Thursday.

"The magnitude of illicit money flowing out of China is astonishing," said GFI director Raymond Baker. "There is no other developing or emerging country that comes even close to suffering as much in illicit financial flows."

The lost funds between 2000 and 2011 significantly exceeded the amount of money flowing into China as foreign direct investment. The International Monetary Fund calculated FDI inflows at roughly $310 billion between 1998 and 2011.

Illicit capital flows rob a government of tax revenues and potential investment funds. Capital flight on this scale can be politically destabilizing by allowing the rich to get richer through tax evasion, GFI said.

China has a low level of tax collection given the size of its economy, according to the IMF. Beijing has recognized that corruption and bribery is a significant problem, an issue brought into sharp focus recently by the Bo Xilai scandal. The country has announced a major crackdown as it prepares for its once in a decade leadership transition.

GFI calculates how much money leaks out of a country unchecked by analyzing discrepancies in data filed with the IMF on import and export prices between trade partners and calculating discrepancies in a country's balance sheet.

The developing world overall lost $903 billion in illicit outflows in 2009, with China, Mexico, Russia and Saudi Arabia in that order showing the largest losses, it said.

Trade mispricing was the major method of smuggling money out of China, accounting for 86.2 percent of lost funds, the GFI report found. This scheme involves importers reporting inflated prices for goods or services purchased. The payments are transferred out and the excess amounts are deposited into overseas bank accounts.

Trade mispricing is most common for nuclear reactors, boilers, machinery and electrical equipment, the report said.

The bulk of the money ends up in tax havens - on average, 52.4 percent between 2005 and 2011. Much of this money eventually makes its way back to China as foreign direct investment for a double hit to the economy.

FDI benefits from special tax breaks and subsidies, essentially setting up an elaborate form of money laundering for Chinese businesses, GFI added.

(Reporting By Stella Dawson. Editing by Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dirty-money-cost-china-3-8-trillion-2000-235134873--sector.html

Taylor Swift Red Register To Vote Walking Dead Season 3 Episode 2 chicago bears nascar celiac disease dancing with the stars

Are Social Networks the Media Companies of the Future?

While many traditional media companies continue to struggle, business is booming for the social media industry. With millions of users updating statuses, posting photos and sharing articles, these networks have become massive content hubs.

[More from Mashable: Network With Some of the Hottest Brands at the Media Summit]

But how do you harness the best content and use it to engage the larger user base? How can useful news and information be created -- or curated -- from these communities? These are questions social networks are now working to answer by hiring editorial teams and, in effect, becoming the publishers of the future.

Today we'll discuss how social networks are evolving their content strategies with Jessica Bennett, editorial director at Tumblr, and Daniel Roth, executive editor at LinkedIn, in a live Q&A on Google+. Tune in at 3 p.m. ET by viewing the video above.

[More from Mashable: What Digital Media Can Teach Us About Politics]

Have questions or comments for Jessica and Dan? Join us in the Hangout on Mashable's Google+ page or tell us in the comments below.

Get Your Tickets to Mashable Media Summit

The Mashable Media Summit 2012 will explore the impact that technology is having on media, and how digital media is affecting our lives and changing the world. This one-day conference will bring together the brightest minds in media, including content creators, technology leaders, entrepreneurs, social media executives and journalists.

Date: Friday, Nov. 2, 2012

Time: 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Location: The TimesCenter, 242 West 41st Street, New York, NY 10036

Tickets: Purchase tickets on Eventbrite.

A Look Back at Last Year's Mashable Media Summit

Media Summit 2011

The Mashable Media Summit on Nov. 4 at the Times Center in New York City attracted professionals in digital, tech, advertising, sales, marketing, mobile and publishing from all over the world.

Click here to view this gallery.

Supporting Sponsor

Sponsorship Opportunities

A limited number of sponsor opportunities are available for the Mashable Media Summit. This is an excellent opportunity to get in front of Mashable?s passionate and influential audience. Contact sponsorships@mashable.com for opportunities.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/social-networks-media-companies-future-151110027.html

robert griffin iii dontari poe space shuttle nyc monkeypox nick perry 30 rock live nfl draft picks 2012

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Residential Solar Lease vs Solar Ownership - CleanTechnica

?
If you?re in one of the larger solar markets in the country (California, New Jersey, etc) then ?going solar? doesn?t mean going it alone. You can likely get a ?zero money down? lease or some similar financing tool to reduce the upfront cost. But is it worthwhile? The following analysis, done for a friend in Ithaca, NY, provides some context.

Comparing solar ownership to a solar lease can be tricky. The following analysis examines the value of owning a 5 kW solar PV system which can be used for comparison to a quote from a solar leasing company. Overall, long-term solar ownership can be very profitable.

The comparison can be done in two ways. The first examines the cash flow of two options for paying for your own solar array: with all cash upfront or with a bank loan at 5% interest. If you pay cash, you?ll be making money from day one, including all forecast maintenance costs. If paying off debt, it will cost extra until the loan can be paid off in approximately 5 years.

We?re not taking into account what are called the ?opportunity costs? of the investment ? that is, the return it could earn if put into other types of investments. Consumers rarely do this type of analysis, although businesses often do. We are also not including any tax deduction for the interest paid if the solar array were financed with a home equity loan.

The second common way to evaluate an investment is to examine its return. This can be used to compare it to other investments, like treasury securities, mutual funds, or stocks. As we can see, the cash investment has a good return over 15 years, and both solar financing options provide a good return over 25 years.

Financial Measures of Project Value

Finance Type Years to Payback 15-year ROI 25-year ROI Profit/Loss at 15 years Profit/Loss at 25 years
Cash 10 9% 12.50% $5,000 $16,050
Debt (80% of total cost) 18 n/a 7.50% ($2,400) $8,650

Neither of these analyses take into account the increased appreciation of the home because of having a solar array. A number of studies indicate that, when selling the home, one would get back a significant percentage of the installation value.

Comparison to Solar Leasing

Solar leasing offers several benefits over ownership, but also some potential liabilities. Benefits include no maintenance (yearly cleaning, potential inverter replacement, etc) and little to no upfront investment. But a solar lease should be examined closely and its assumptions compared to those in this analysis:

  • Projected Savings: How do projected savings compare to ownership?
  • Inflation Assumptions: A lease typically has two inflation rates, one for the lease payment (fixed) and one for the grid electricity price (a guess). If the latter ends up being lower than forecast (I?ve seen them as high as 5%!), it can significantly reduce projected savings.
  • Lease End: What happens when the lease expires? Can the system be purchased? How does the purchase price compare to the projected savings to that point? This is very important because of the potential value of the solar array to the resale price of the home. Also, one can inquire whether an inverter replacement had already been done when the system is available for purchase.
  • Company History: Will the company be around in 10-15 years to fulfill their lease requirements?

In summary, comparing ownership to leasing isn?t easy, but this guide can help by comparing the economics and challenging the assumptions of the lease agreement.
?

?

Assumptions for the Economics of Solar Ownership

Upfront Costs

Installed cost: $25,000
Combined incentives: $20,000
Total cost: $5,000

Ongoing Balance Sheet

Maintenance: $250 per year (including inverter replacement every 10-15 years)
Electricity savings: $838 in first year
Finance costs (if applicable): $2,600 per year for 10 years

Inflation, Financing, and Incentives

Estimated solar output: 5,776 kilowatt-hour per year for a 5 kW (DC) system
Estimated installed cost: $25,000 ($5 per Watt)
Federal incentive: 30% tax credit ($7,500)
State incentives: 25% tax credit on installed cost, up to $5,000; NYSERDA rebate of $1.50 per Watt ($7,500)
Electricity price inflation: 3% per year, starting at 14.5? per kilowatt-hour
Panel output decrease: 0.5% per year
Borrowing costs: 5% interest on 10-year, $20,000 loan. Largely paid back in year 2 with incentives.

Sensitivity Analysis

What happens if our assumptions are wrong? The following table compares the 15-year profitability of a PV system paid for with cash under different scenarios.

This post originally appeared on ILSR?s Energy Self-Reliant States blog.

Source: http://cleantechnica.com/2012/10/23/residential-solar-lease-vs-solar-ownership/

palmetto rob lowe sanctum the notebook duke basketball miranda july joe paterno near death

Asphalt 7: Heat (for Android)


Who said phones can't deliver console-quality gaming? Asphalt 7: Heat ($4.99 direct, though it's on sale for 99 cents) gives you exactly the kind of arcade racing experience you've been hoping for. It's also the nicest-looking game in the series. Asphalt 7: Heat isn't a simulator, but it's definitely a great buy for old-school Ridge Racer and Outrun fans, or anyone who wants a real arcade-style racing game?without excuses.

Pedal to the Pile Carpeting
Asphalt 7: Heat is a 1.37GB download from Google Play, and there's also an iOS version available. I tested Asphalt 7: Heat on a stock, freshly-formatted Samsung Galaxy S III running Android 4.0. There are 60 different cars you can drive on 15 tracks, set in various cities such as London, Paris, and Rio. You start off with a Fiat 500 Abarth. Gradually, you move up the line to a BMW Z4 M Coupe, a Nissan 370Z, and later, Aston Martins and Lamborghinis, unlocking more cars and upgrading them as you go along. The latest update includes the 2013 Hyundai Veloster Turbo and the refreshed 2013 Hyundai Genesis.

Cars are separated into six different tiers based on their performance characteristics; each event you race in is limited to a single tier. You can also customize the paint, decals, and window tint of each car, as well as upgrade its performance with virtual money you win as you play. But upgrades aren't always worth it; increasing top speed by just 2 km/h cost $18,000, which is ridiculous. Sometimes you get a free car just for one event; I was thrilled to take the wheel of an Audi TT after driving the Fiat, and moving to the second tier starts you off with a fast BMW 1 Series M Coupe.

Knock 'Em Down and Take 'Em Out
You steer your car by tilting the handset right or left, and the car accelerates automatically. Tap toward the left side of the screen, and it will light up a brake pedal icon and slow the car. The right side of the screen is the nitro boost area; tap it for a seven-second overboost. Do it with a full boost gauge, and the screen turns blue with neon blue accents, and you hear a prominent whoosh sound as you charge forward. You can also drift by braking and tilting the handset at the same time, which is fun, although it slows you down considerably.

There are 15 leagues and 150 races to complete. You also get a series of goals ahead of each event, such as completing three career events, earning three stars in any one event, and collecting 10 dollar pick-ups. As you complete goals, new ones appear, such as drifting a certain total distance during an event, wrecking less often, or "knocking down" a certain number of opponents by causing them to crash. Meanwhile, power ups are strewn throughout the course. Some of them add to your nitro boost, while others give you prize money. ?Push it too hard?say, crash into an oncoming car head-on, or hit a building?and you'll wreck, although aside from wasting a few seconds, it doesn't have much effect on the game itself.

The computer-controlled AI offers a moderate level of difficulty, and a new multiplayer mode lets you race with up to five friends, either online or locally. Overall, there's a nice sense of accomplishment as you move through the various events. And between the races, time-trials, and position elimination modes, there's enough variety to keep you engaged.

Stellar Visuals?With One Problem
Asphalt 7: Heat is one of the most impressive-looking racers I've seen on a phone. The 30-second-ish intros at the beginning of each event deliver a nice feel for the city you're about to race in; you can also abort these sequences and skip right to the countdown. On the road, there's plenty of detail in the dense urban environments, including nicely textured pavement, building structures, and sun glare, and the car models are all easily recognizable.

Draw-in distances are sometimes a little short. But worse is the uneven frame rate, which becomes more common during races with computer-controlled opponents. Usually, the game delivered 30 frames per second and above. But I caught many short periods of less than that, and even split-second hang-ups that were just long enough to be noticeable and irritating. I also saw a few bugs; on one course, some drone cars disappeared as I approached them, although most events worked perfectly.

The soundtrack is somewhat characterless electronic techno, with a steady, pulsing beat and no vocals. It's well-produced, at times sounding Daft Punk-esque. Sound design is pretty thorough as well. Each car has a distinct engine note; the BMW 1 Series M Coupe had a smooth, throaty, high-RPM bark appropriate for a twin-turbo straight six, while the Fiat 500 Abarth belched and rasped at high RPMs, and the Audi TT surged with its quiet, refined turbo four. All the standard skid-out, collision crunches, and power-up sounds are present and accounted for.

55 MPH Is No Fun?Unless You're Still In First Gear
There's very little here that's new. But even so, Asphalt 7: Heat delivers plenty of racing excitement. If you can ignore occasional interruptions in the frame rate, the game delivers an awesome sense of speed; it's tough not to feel the adrenaline rush as you play. It feels closer to that of a triple-A console title than it does a throwaway game?and a good one, too. That's an easy marker for an Editors' Choice award if you ask us.

More Mobile Game Reviews:
??? Silversword (for iPad)
??? Comedy Central's Indecision Game (for iPad)
??? Bad Piggies (for Android)
??? Hello Kitty Cafe (for Android)
??? Amazing Alex (for iPhone)
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/L4f4yO5dQeM/0,2817,2411189,00.asp

Webb Simpson Fathers Day Quotes Stevie J mothers day 2012 cinco de mayo osama bin laden death spinal muscular atrophy

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Police take bike from where NJ girl's body found

Photos released by Clayton, N.J. Police Department show Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J. Authorities say her family reported her missing Saturday. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Clayton Police Department at (856) 881-2301. (AP Photo/Clayton, N.J. Police Department)

Photos released by Clayton, N.J. Police Department show Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J. Authorities say her family reported her missing Saturday. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Clayton Police Department at (856) 881-2301. (AP Photo/Clayton, N.J. Police Department)

A teen who declined to be identified is overcome with grief after visiting the crime scene on Clayton Avenue in Clayton NJ on Tuesday Oct. 23, 2012, after the discovery of a girl's body in a home's recycling bin. Gloucester County prosecutors say a body believed to be that of Autumn Pasquale was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

Vicky Armstrong cries as she watches police investigate the crime scene on Clayton Avenue in Clayton NJ on Tuesday Oct. 23, 2012, after the discovery of a girl's body in a home's recycling bin. Gloucester County prosecutors say a body believed to be that of Autumn Pasquale was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for her safe return. (AP Photo/ Joseph Kaczmarek)

Jennifer Cornwell, mother of the missing girl Autumn Pasquale, comforts her other daughter Natalie Pasquale, 11, during a candlelight vigil, Monday Oct. 22, 2012, in Clayton, N.J. About 200 law enforcement officials and hundreds more volunteers searched Monday for a southern New Jersey girl who disappeared over the weekend, raising anxiety in a rural town and pulling residents together. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

Clayton, N.J. Police Department shows an undated photo of missing Autumn Pasquale, 12, of Clayton, N.J. Authorities say Autumn Pasquale was last seen on her white bicycle on West High Street in Clayton at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. Her family reported her missing at 9:30 p.m. Police are still searching for her. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Clayton Police Department at (856) 881-2301. (AP Photo/Clayton, N.J. Police Department)

(AP) ? Police removed a bicycle Tuesday from a home near where a 12-year-old girl's body was found in a recycling bin, a case that has spread fear and worry through a town that had been desperately searching for her since she disappeared while on a ride through the neighborhood.

Authorities did not confirm the bike was the one belonging to Autumn Pasquale, but it matched the description of the white BMX she was seen riding Saturday afternoon before she disappeared. They also recovered a backpack they believe was hers.

Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton would not call the death a homicide and said there were no suspects. Autopsy results were pending.

But if someone is found responsible for the death of Autumn, who would have turned 13 next Monday, "they don't deserve to be walking the streets," he said at a news conference Tuesday.

Three teenage brothers live at the home where the bike and backpack were found, said two friends of the brothers, Na'eem Williams and Jodie Robinson, both 16. One of the teens in the home traded BMX bike parts, according to a young man, Corey Hewes, 19, who said he was among those who traded with him.

The house was a place where teens frequently hung out and had parties, some neighbors said.

Autumn's body was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for her safe return. It was not clear whether the bin was on the same property where the bike was recovered or on the adjacent lot of a vacant home.

"The search for Autumn is over," Dalton said Tuesday. He called Clayton a safe community but said parents should continue to keep close watch on their children.

The girl's great-uncle, Paul Spadofora, gathered with other relatives at the news conference to thank the community for its help in the search. The victim's parents did not attend.

"There's evil everywhere, even in the small town of Clayton," Spadofora said.

Crime scene investigators arrived shortly before 9 a.m. in the neighborhood where the body was found. Authorities did not say exactly where the recycling bin was found.

But Tuesday was trash collection day, and many residents had dragged their trash cans and recycling bins to the curb the night before. The covered recycling bins are collected by an automated truck that picks them up and dumps the contents into the back.

Police barricaded the block, and friends and neighbors came by to see. Some mothers said they were keeping their kids out of school for the day. Even before the body was found, students reported that Spirit Week had been canceled because of the sorrow.

One young man rode a bike up, sat on a porch of a home and cried, then biked away.

Clayton Mayor Thomas Bianco walked to the scene, cried, hugged a police officer and gave a brief statement to the gathered reporters.

"You hear about it in other places but never think it would happen in our little town," he said.

Howard Kowgill, 60, who lives in town and, like many, knows members of Autumn's family, said the discovery of the body changes the nature of the town.

"Until they find out who did it, you don't let your kids out," he said.

Autumn was last seen around 12:30 p.m. Saturday pedaling her bike away from the home where she lives with her father, her two siblings, her father's girlfriend and the girlfriend's children, authorities said.

Relatives said they believed she was heading to see a friend, and they became worried only after she did not return by her 8 p.m. curfew.

Sunday morning, her disappearance became not only a crisis but a town-wide cause in Clayton, a town 25 miles south of Philadelphia. Volunteers by the hundred joined the search, scouring malls, nearby towns and passing out fliers.

By Monday evening, officials were thanking the volunteers for their help but asking them to call it a night.

Hundreds of people returned Monday for the vigil. Spadofora, the great-uncle, said he hoped the town could gather again a week later, with Autumn back, with candles to mark her birthday.

___

Follow Mulvihill at http://www.twitter.com/geoffmulvihill

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-23-Missing%20NJ%20Girl/id-f75e7195511e423ea74d864153bda21e

denver broncos Candy Crowley binders of women giants Alexis Wright presidential debates seahawks

High School Sports: Fall prep sports athlete of the week nominees 10/22

October 22, 2012

Nominees for The Columbian's fall sports athlete of the week for the week of Oct. 15-20.

CARLY CANNON, HUDSON'S BAY GIRLS SWIMMING: Cannon won two events -- the 100 butterfly and 100 backstroke -- at the Southwest Washington Invitational in Longview, including posting a state-qualifying mark of 1:01.54 in the backstroke.

ALEXA EFRAMISON, CAMAS GIRLS CROSS COUNTRY: The sophomore won her second district title and first at the 4A level, easily outdistancing the field by 37 seconds to win in 18:09.

JONATHAN HO, CAMAS BOYS TENNIS: Ho captured the 4A district title with four straight-set victories, including a 6-4, 6-4 win over Union's Tanner Blake in the championship match.

NICK HUFF, HOCKINSON BOYS GOLF: Huff placed second in the Class 2A district tournament with a two-day total of 144 to help the Hawks capture the team championship over W.F. West.

MARK TEDDER, BATTLE GROUND BOYS CROSS COUNTRY: The Battle Ground senior captured his first 4A district title, beating Skyview's Colby Gilbert by seven seconds to win in 15:42.

To cast your vote, go to The Columbian's prep sports facebook page at www.facebook.com/360preps.

Voting will continue until 8 p.m. Thursday and be announced in Friday's edition of The Columbian.

Source: http://www.columbian.com/weblogs/highschoolsports/2012/oct/22/fall-prep-sports-athlete-week-nominees-1022/

supreme court health care joe oliver joba chamberlain new york mega millions jetblue jetblue michelle malkin

Zombie wrestling gets weird, wonderful and gruesome

Zombie Wrestling TorontoThings are about to get weird. As a rule of thumb, when a story is pitched and it involves zombies and burlesque dancing, my interest is piqued, naturally. Toss in a pinch of "booze, babes, blood and brains" as is promoted on the event's Facebook page, and I'm all in (forever a sucker for alliteration).

Presented by Fight Brand, which holds various wrestling matches succinctly called Fight!, they mixed things up a bit this time with, well, zombies. So, following a day of the living dead mindlessly meandering throughout Toronto's downtown core, an attentive audience of zombies, zombie enthusiasts, wrestling enthusiasts and one asshole sporting black face packed Tranzac Club in the Annex.

Zombie Wrestling TorontoAnd this is what happens: In the middle of Tranzac, they've set up a perfectly legit wrestling ring. With chairs on all sides, a passionate and eclectic audience looks on, sipping beers as a burlesque dancer behind the ring parades a sign that reads "BRAAAAINS." Following an opening music set by the Yaqubi Bros, four brothers from Scarborough who are influenced by Metallica and Muse, the bell rings. The announcer, who resembles Bill the Butcher from Gangs of New York, says, "I'm being informed that Toronto has been overrun by zombies. Oh wait, I'm now being informed the zombies are here ... and they want to ... wrestle."

For about an hour and a half, a number of zombie wrestlers take on their human counterparts, and wrestle. The wrestling, albeit clearly choreographed, is equally impressive and violent, at times bringing the action into the audience. Featuring the dead and alive, wrestlers such as Ashley Sixx, former WWE fighter, Colin Delaney, and Alex Vega battle it out. The entertainment is filled with comic jabs, like zombies doing the "Thriller" dance and yelling, out of nowhere, "prostitutes."

Zombie Wrestling TorontoWhen one of the human wrestlers tries to suffocate zombie wrestler extraordinaire, "Pyscho" Mike Rollins, the human yells, in feigned horror, "Why doesn't this work?" Zombie Mike retorts, "Because I'm a zombie you asshole!" and continues to pummel his foe. And that's how it goes on, all but one of the humans losing and the undead exhibiting their wrestling prowess and insatiable lust for human flesh.

Zombie Wrestling TorontoHalfway through the show, to mix it up, Eve of Destruction, a burlesque dancer in full Mummy garb enters the ring. With metal music playing, she struts her stuff, performs some elaborate and impressive handstands and proceeds to rip off her mummified outfit revealing nothing but tassels and a g-string, naturally.

Zombie Wrestling TorontoIn the end, the "quarantined" referee wearing something akin to a hazmat suit, turns out to also be a zombie (surprise!) and aides "Psycho" Mike, the reigning champion, in eating his opponent's face.

Zombies win!

Additional Photos

Zombie WrestlingZombie Wrestling TorontoZombie Wrestling TorontoZombie WrestlingPhotos by Brian Morton

Source: http://www.blogto.com/sports_play/2012/10/zombie_wrestling_gets_weird_wonderful_and_gruesome/

paul mccartney duggar miscarriage roman holiday belize adele lyrics best new artist 2012 grammys

Beirut girl hurt by car bomb needed 300 stitches

COMBO - This combo of two photographs shows at top, Jennifer Shedid, 10, recovers in intensive care in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday Oct. 22, 2012; and at bottom, a Friday, Oct. 19, 2012 file photo, of a Lebanese man as he carries Jennifer Shedid, 10, at the scene of an explosion in the mostly Christian neighborhood of Achrafiyeh, Beirut, Lebanon. Nearly five minutes after arriving home from school with her cousin, 10-year-old Jennifer Shedid was hungry. As she asked her sister what food they have, a strong explosion shook their street turning the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that cut through her from head to toe.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

COMBO - This combo of two photographs shows at top, Jennifer Shedid, 10, recovers in intensive care in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday Oct. 22, 2012; and at bottom, a Friday, Oct. 19, 2012 file photo, of a Lebanese man as he carries Jennifer Shedid, 10, at the scene of an explosion in the mostly Christian neighborhood of Achrafiyeh, Beirut, Lebanon. Nearly five minutes after arriving home from school with her cousin, 10-year-old Jennifer Shedid was hungry. As she asked her sister what food they have, a strong explosion shook their street turning the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that cut through her from head to toe.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Nisrin Shedid, kisses her daughter, Jennifer Shedid, 10, as she lies in her bed in intensive care in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday Oct. 22, 2012. Jennifer was seriously injured during a car bomb that assassinated Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan Friday. Nearly five minutes after arriving home from school with her cousin, 10-year-old Jennifer Shedid was hungry. As she asked her sister what food they have, a strong explosion shook their street turning the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that cut through her from head to toe. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

FILE - In this Friday, Oct. 19, 2012 file photo, a man carries Jennifer Shedid, 10, at the scene of an explosion in the mostly Christian neighborhood of Achrafiyeh, Beirut, Lebanon. Nearly five minutes after arriving home from school with her cousin, 10-year-old Jennifer Shedid was hungry. As she asked her sister what food they have, a strong explosion shook their street turning the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that cut through her from head to toe.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File)

Nisrin Shedid, left, the mother of Jennifer Shedid, 10, visits her daughter's bedside in intensive care in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday Oct. 22, 2012. Jennifer was seriously injured during a car bomb that assassinated Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan Friday. Nearly five minutes after arriving home from school with her cousin, 10-year-old Jennifer Shedid was hungry. As she asked her sister what food they have, a strong explosion shook their street turning the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that cut through her from head to toe. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Jennifer Shedid, 10, recovers in intensive care in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday Oct. 22, 2012. Jennifer was seriously injured during a car bomb that assassinated Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan Friday. Nearly five minutes after arriving home from school with her cousin, 10-year-old Jennifer Shedid was hungry. As she asked her sister what food they have, a strong explosion shook their street turning the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that cut through her from head to toe. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

(AP) ? Jennifer Shedid had just arrived home from school and she was hungry. As she asked her older sister what she could eat, a massive explosion shook their entire block and turned the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that slashed 10-year-old Jennifer from head to toe.

Their father Richard was climbing the stairs to the apartment on his way back from buying bread for the family when the car bomb struck on Friday afternoon less than 20 meters (yards) away, shaking doors and shattering his home.

He grabbed his bleeding daughter from the arms of her older sister Jozianne and rushed her downstairs.

"As I carried her down the stairs, she was trembling and telling me: 'Please dad rescue me,'" the father told The Associated Press on Monday.

A neighbor helped him carry Jennifer and a soldier then took the girl and whisked her to an ambulance that sped off to the hospital. An AP picture, published in newspapers around the world, showed the girl being carried out with deep head and face wounds and her sneakers soaked red with blood.

"As we were in the ambulance, she was better but losing lots of blood," said her father.

The blast, which hit the Shedids' narrow residential street in Beirut's predominantly Christian neighborhood of Achrafieh, targeted Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, a top intelligence official who was one of the most powerful opponents of Syria in Lebanon. He was killed along with his bodyguard and a female civilian ? a mother of three. It has sparked angry accusations from Syria's opponents in Lebanon that Damascus was behind the bombings.

Jennifer was one of the dozens wounded in the blast.

On Monday, she lay in a hospital with more than 300 stitches in her body, 90 of them in her face and head while and about 50 more on her hands. Her head was shaved and her face was swollen.

Smiling faintly with a monitor behind her showing her heart rate and blood pressure, Jennifer blew kisses to visiting reporters and called out "hi, hi."

Antoine Younan, the doctor leading the team treating Jennifer, showed reporters on Monday a picture of the girl when she arrived at the hospital.

"Her body was riddled with glass wounds," he said. Younan said Jennifer is in stable condition. The veins of her right hands, severely damaged by the glass, are healing and she moved her fingers for the first time on Monday. She underwent operations to remove the glass, repair her veins and stitch her wounds.

Jennifer's 17-year-old sister Jozianne, sitting in the lobby of the hospital, recounted the scene in their home just after the blast struck.

Jennifer was on the floor bleeding while Jozianne said she was thrown by the power of the blast and landed under a China cabinet where she suffered minor injuries. She immediately got up to help her younger sister.

"As I opened my eyes I saw that much of the apartment was turned upside down," she told reporters. "I stood up and started shouting 'Jenny, Jenny' but no one answered. Then I found her next to a couch and covered with debris that fell from the ceiling," said Jozianne, who had a bandage on her left brow from a glass injury.

"I screamed for help but no one answered," said Jozianne, wearing a cross around her neck. "I carried her and kept talking to her. I did not want her to go unconscious. She was holding me saying: 'Help me.'"

Jennifer's mother Nisrin was at work on the other side of the city in the commercial neighborhood of Hamra when she received a message on her phone about an explosion in her neighborhood Achrafieh. She jumped into a taxi, but had to get out about a mile away because cars were kept away from the scene to clear the roads for ambulances.

The cellphone network was overloaded and she could not get through to her husband or children. But she did receive a call from her daughter's school that let her know she had arrived home in her school bus.

She ran toward her apartment.

"I wanted to be with the children so that they would not be afraid," she said.

When she arrived at her street, security forces prevented her from reaching the building because the area was cordoned off for an investigation of the car bomb.

Then she saw something that made her collapse.

"As I looked at the street, I saw Jennifer's shoes covered with blood," Nisrin said. "I bit my tongue and fainted."

She was treated by a paramedic. When she asked him about her daughters, he took her to Jozianne.

"When I saw the blood on Jozianne's clothes, I knew that Jennifer's injuries were serious," Nisrin said. She then received a call from the hospital where Jennifer was being treated and headed over.

A few hours after she arrived, Jennifer was taken out of the operating room and she saw her daughter wearing a green hospital gown.

"I looked at her. My heart broke," the mother told journalists outside the Intensive Care Unit where Jennifer has been since Friday.

Jennifer, a top student in her 5th grade class, loves drawing and taking pictures with the cell phones of her parents and sister. She is no fan of science or math but loves reading and sports.

Her favorite cartoon is Tom and Jerry.

On Sundays, she goes with her Maronite Christian family to church for prayers.

On Monday, Jennifer opened her eyes from the latest operation and started communicating for the first time.

"My happiness today is beyond explanation," said her mother Nisrin.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-22-Lebanon-Wounded%20Girl/id-309745b212b74e2186bc94cc3b5d265f

emancipation proclamation april 16 tornadoes mitch hedberg secret service scandal shea weber greystone

Monday, October 22, 2012

The Future of Data Storage Is... Cassette Tape?

While the future of storage on your laptop is undoubtedly solid state, it's more difficult to predict how the huge tranches of data in server farms will be housed in the future. Recent suggestions, though, predict the rebirth of an old technology: the humble casette tape. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/lNyNqPFiDTc/the-future-of-data-storage-is-cassette-tape

islands joe flacco 2013 nissan altima masters par 3 contest google augmented reality glasses wonderlic test texas tornado

Samsung Nexus 10 reported once again in run up to Google event

Android Central

Fresh reports from TheNextWeb today add further weight to a possible Nexus 10 tablet unveiling at Google's Oct. 29 "Playground" event.  The site says the 10-inch device, previously known by its codename "Manta," will pack a 2560x1600 display with an iPad-beating pixel density of 300ppi. TNW reports that the "Manta" tablet will be unveiled alongside the extensively-leaked LG Nexus 4 phone and 32GB Nexus 7 tablet. Naturally, Android 4.2 is expected to run on all these new devices.

We've been hearing similar whispers privately for the past couple of weeks, including some strong evidence suggesting the 10-inch Nexus tablet will indeed sport a super-high resolution 2560x1600 display.

The Nexus 10 will go up against Apple's iPad and Microsoft's new Windows RT-based Surface tablet, which is set to launch later this month.

Source: TNW



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/YQTDH22nFoY/story01.htm

natalie wood van halen annalynne mccord billy the kid neville neville george lucas

Sunday, October 21, 2012

New Release: Delicious: Home Cooking by Valli Little | Boomerang ...


by Clayton Wehner - October 21st, 2012

You won?t find fancy restaurant-style dishes in here ? it?s all about recipes that reflect the sort of food I look to cook at home, whether it?s a midweek meal for the family or something more impressive for the weekend when entertaining friends.??Valli Little

Welcome to the kitchen of one of Australia?s leading food writers.

Legendary?delicious.?magazine?food editor and bestselling author Valli Little shares her favourite recipes to cook at home, plus tips and tricks to turn a family classic into a cover-worthy meal without the fuss.

This collection of 120 new recipes follows Valli?s signature approachable and achievable style, with each dish accompanied by beautiful, full-colour photography. Inspired by world cuisines but irrefutably Australian, each recipe uses easily found ingredients and no fuss methods to ensure 100% success for home cooks.

Seasonal chapters ensure you use fresh ingredients at their best and Valli?s helpful menu plans and ingenious tricks empower home cooks like never before.

Valli Little?is widely regarded as one of Australia?s most exciting food writers. Her passion for food shines through in her recipes, which are imaginative, easy-to-follow and fail-safe. For eleven years Valli has been the food director of?delicious.magazine, and every month she creates new recipes inspired by her travels and love of cooking and entertaining.

Buy the book here?


Connect with the Author:
Clayton Wehner (335 Posts)

Tags: valli little

Source: http://blog.boomerangbooks.com.au/new-release-delicious-home-cooking-by-valli-little/2012/10

roseanne barr margaret sanger paul george eddie long ufc 143 weigh ins micron ceo glenn miller

Police arrest man after goalkeeper attack

Associated Press Sports

updated 12:07 p.m. ET Oct. 21, 2012

GLOUCESTER, England (AP) -Police have arrested a man on suspicion of assaulting former England goalkeeper Chris Kirkland amid a pitch invasion during a second-tier League Championship match.

Kirkland, who plays for Sheffield Wednesday, was shoved in the face and to the ground by one of many Leeds supporters running amok on the field after their team equalized in Friday's Yorkshire derby match at Hillsborough.

Gloucestershire Police say Sunday a 21-year-old man is in custody and the subject of an investigation being led by a police force in Yorkshire.

The man has been named on social media sites.

The Football Association said Saturday an investigation has been launched into the crowd trouble at the game, which also saw bottles being thrown on to the pitch and offensive chanting from both sets of fans.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


advertisement

More newsAFP - Getty Images

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49493582/ns/sports-soccer/

torrey pines nhl all star game 2012 pollyanna samuel adams snowy owl one for the money 10 minute trainer

Painting Helps Greeley Artist With Brain Injury ? CBS Denver

GREELEY, Colo. (AP) ? Even today, decades after he fell off a cliff, Chuck Abrams spends a few minutes a day wriggling the fingers on his left hand.

The act makes him smile. He appreciates it more now. There was a time when he didn?t know if he?d be able to use those fingers again.

That seems hard to believe now, if you look around the Family of Christ Presbyterian Church, which is showing the latest exhibit of his oil paintings through Oct. 23. Those paintings are just the beginning. There are stacks in his garage and his apartment, and he rents a storage unit to keep the rest. He has so many that the owner recently asked him if he wanted more storage space. That?s partly the reason for the show: He needs to sell a few before someone puts him on the next edition of ?Hoarders.?

At one time, after that fall, Abrams could not use his hands. He woke up from a two-month coma with a brain injury that at the time, he said, reduced him to the mind of a child.

He was 18 and on a track scholarship at the University of Cincinnati when he hiked to the top of a hill with a few friends. Abrams loved wide, expansive views, and he crawled out on a cliff to get a better look. He fell 90 feet. Abrams, who was a high jumper, remembers tucking and rolling, as if he had just cleared the bar.

Doctors didn?t know then what they know now about brain injuries, and they sent him to a psych ward. Abrams wanted to draw, as many children do, and his father, Leo, got him some materials. He drew Mickey Mouse, bringing his father to tears.

Today he is once again an adult, and you may not realize he has any kind of a brain injury at first. He laughs frequently and makes others laugh even more, and he is an articulate speaker, even if his stories occasionally drift away into the ether when he can?t remember the next line. He laughs when that happens, too. He?s learned to laugh at many of the frustrating parts of his injury.

?If you can?t laugh at all the crap I?ve been through,? Abrams said, ?then you?d probably go crazy.?

See? He?s funny. He won?t laugh, however, at gentle reassurances. Many of us forget things, like our car keys, a guest says.

?People are well-meaning, but they?re almost insulting when they say something like that,? he said. ?It makes light of this condition. I?ve been through a lot because of it.?

Abrams, after all, has a serious condition far more serious than misplacing his car keys, though he does that, too. Doctors call it ?organizational deficit.? Abrams, to be blunt, could not function through his daily life without the help of the Greeley Center for Independence?s Stephens Brain Injury Campus. Workers there organize his life for him. They scatter reminders throughout his apartment, like a tray that dings when he needs to take his medicine, and make him a list of things he needs to accomplish that day or week. Abrams loyally follows those lists because, if he does, they represent freedom. He can live independently if he does, even if he can?t work.

Doctors compared his brain injury to someone with Alzheimer?s, though his condition won?t deteriorate. His father died from the disease, and as Leo struggled with it, he told Abrams he could finally relate to his son. The two were as close as they ever were in life before Leo died.

Abrams loved art as a boy and showed some talent before he went to the University of Cincinnati, so doctors, at a loss at what to do with him, sent him back to the college as a part of his therapy and put him in a drawing class. He was drawing close to stick figures in a college-level course, but he got better, and after moving back to New York to live with his family, he enrolled at Cooper Union, where he got an arts degree in 1974.

He moved to Colorado to be with a girl, and they got married. They eventually divorced but had two children, and today Abrams is a grandfather. He moved to Greeley a decade ago because his neurologist works here. He wanted to live in Boulder. Boulder has those wide, expansive views that he always loved. But now he?s thankful he found his way to Greeley.

The Center for Independence is home, he said, and allows him to be a leader: He considers himself a voice for those with brain injuries because he?s one of the fortunate few who can speak about it. Though his painting style is more traditional, the center doesn?t even mind that Abrams splatters his walls with paint, just like Jackson Pollack, when he?s in a creative mood.

?They listen to me,? Abrams said. ?I?m comfortable there.?

He?s in a creative mood a lot. He paints every day, sometimes for several hours a day, sometimes into the middle of the night. His family sends him checks to cover his painting expenses, including a brother who gives him $350 a month just for art supplies. He would give his paintings away ? as he said, he needs to get rid of a few ? but he?s selling them at the show to help cover the costs of making them.

Painting helped him regain the use of his hands. Now can wriggle the fingers on his left hand to a blur. He appreciates that more now. But he appreciates painting the most.

He was an artist before the fall off that cliff. After that injury, he lost what he calls the ?sixth sense.? Artists, and athletes as well, call it being ?in the zone,? when you get so lost in your creativity that the world around you, and its distractions, fade to black.

He doesn?t remember when his sixth sense returned. But he?s feels lucky that when he now paints, he does so with joy.

- By DAN ENGLAND, The Tribune

(? Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Source: http://denver.cbslocal.com/2012/10/20/painting-helps-greeley-artist-with-brain-injury/

michigan football michigan football askew blue moon eddie murphy ann romney marco rubio

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Half-baked education at schools without playgrounds ? The Punch ...

Half-built: Akute Community High School, Akute, Ogun State.

More and more schools are being established in the country without playgrounds and recreational facilities. Some of the schools, many of which were set up in the past decade, are located in residential buildings and other structures like shopping complexes with tiled premises, ALLWELL OKPI and SAMUEL AWOYINFA report

Education is a multi-task phenomenon. It involves the use of the brain, mind and body for holistic development of a child. But most schools these days ignore the physical element of education.

These types of schools come in different shapes and sizes. Some of them lack facilities, and the school fees they charge are low; others are rich schools with big structures and charge expensive fees. One major problem they share is the fact that though they are government-approved, they do not have facilities for extra-curricular facilities like sports and other aspects of physical education that should give pupils a rounded academic experience or development.

In developed countries, being involved in sports from primary school to secondary school can be the leeway to acquiring university education, what with the numerous sports-related scholarships that pupils who excel in sports can enjoy.

But Nigerian children seem to have been robbed of this opportunity, as most schools our correspondents visited only have concrete ?fields? where pupils engage in semblance of sporting activities that are better done on natural fields.

Psychologists and teachers say this trend, which implies that pupils spend most of their time in the classroom with little or no playtime, puts the nation at risk of having more physically unfit and poorly educated workforce in the future.

A psychologist and lecturer at the Department of Educational Foundations at the University of Lagos, Dr. Sola Aletan, argued that it is unhealthy to confine children in classrooms all day without giving them opportunity to play.?

He said, ?Education is about raising children morally, socially, academically, and physically. But today, that physical aspect has been eroded, so you find the kids confined in their classrooms from morning till evening when they go home. It is an unhealthy situation. I don?t blame the school proprietors or proprietresses for these lapses. I blame government for allowing this to thrive.

?When you look at people that made it in the area of sports, you will discover that they attended a primary or secondary school where their sporting talents were discovered early. If you look at our national team players, you will discover that they went to schools where they had playgrounds.?

This much can be seen in the examples of three former Nigerian football superstars ? Messrs Godwin Odiye, Stephen Keshi and Paul Okoku ? who, recently, decided to rehabilitate the sporting facilities in their alma mater.

The three athletes had attended St. Paul?s Catholic Nursery and Primary School, Ebute Meta, Lagos, where track and field events, as well as football were part and parcel of learning.

The players were, however, shocked to discover that decades after they had left, builings had taken over the fields where they played football and did other sporting events.

For the footballers whose future professional success was carved out of the little events they participated in as pupils in the school, it was unacceptable for their alma mater to be without a football pitch, among other sporting facilities they enjoyed in their growing-up years.

Okoku lamented: ?I am not happy. First of all, look at the pitch where we played, they have three buildings erected on the field that produced us.

?The field is occupied by classrooms, so where do you have the space for the kids to display their talents? My disappointment is that we have forgotten that to have an educational environment, we need to have a sporting environment too, because both of them go hand in hand.?

Aletan couldn?t agree more, as he said that academic and physical exercises have a lot in common.

He explained, ?When the body is exercised, the individual will be alert, awake, stronger and ready to learn. But when they are just in the class, they eat, drink, and sleep; they get tired easily; only that these children cannot voice out all these things to their teachers. But it can affect them; they will look somehow tired and dull, and it is because their bodies have not been sufficiently exercised.?

The psychologist said the situation of many children was complicated largely because of the lifestyle of their parents who keep them busy with after-school home coaching when they should be engaged in profitable extra-curricular activities. ?All of these prevent children from expressing themselves physically, confining them to just studies and watching television,? he said.

While listing the immediate and short-term effects of loss of playtime in early school days, Aletan said these included obesity, restlessness and inability to concentrate due to large amount of unspent energy; and on the long run, the dwindling performance of the nation in different sports.

He also said that people who did not have the opportunity to play as children are less likely to exercise regularly as adults. Consequently, they will be prone to illness.

According to Dr. Samson Babatunde, lecturer at the Department of Human Kinetics and Health Education, University of Lagos, lack of exercise has adverse effects on the academic performance of young pupils and students.

He said, ?Exercise and sports are chemical erasers that can assist in reorganising the pent-up tension in a person. When you exercise, you become refreshed and when you engage in other activities, whether mental work or any other activities, you will be focused and you will perform well. It is therefore very unfortunate that these days, pupils don?t have the opportunity to engage in sports and exercise.?

He also noted that the inclusion of sports and other physical exercises as part of the school?s curriculum is the reason teens in the U.S. and some parts of Europe develop huge and healthy bodies, and as a result, they do not fall ill easily.

He said, ?If we also give our children opportunities to engage in physical activities right from the primary school, we will discover that they will grow well, too, and they will be healthy.?

The Human Kinetics lecturer said physical education and sports are ?complimentary education,? meaning that whatever field of study a person takes to, his or her education is not complete unless physical education is added to it.

He explained, ?It has been found out that students who are allowed to participate well in physical education are academically better than others who do not. There are physiological reasons for that. If you exercise well, your circulatory system will work well. This circulatory system will disperse the necessary nutrients to every part of the body, including the brain, which we use for academics.?

Babatunde also said exercise had psychological effects on pupils. According to him, when a teacher allows the pupils who are tired as a result of being in class for hours to engage in recreational activities, they will return, more psychologically ready to learn.

Other benefits of sports in schools as highlighted by Babatunde include uniting the pupils, teaching them team work and making them disciplined.

He said, ?If you allow them to participate in sporting activities, if they want to excel, they will have to abide by the rules and regulations of the game. That means you are training them to be ethical and disciplined, as well as to imbibe the ability to take turns and allow other people to take their own turn, which is essential in any society.

?Secondly, someone who is engaged in team sports cannot be selfish because we know that the success of a team is dependent on how cohesive that team is; then you must cooperate with other people. And thirdly, if properly planned, sports can foster unity amongst the students, because in the field, students are able to interact with one another, and from there, permanent friendships are built.?

The argument, most time, is that though public schools are better in terms of giving pupils ample playtime because most of them have spaces big enough for at least a football pitch, in terms of sporting facilities, some private schools are a lot better academically.??

Hallmark Nursery and Primary Schools, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos, is one of such with mini football pitch, sandy area for toddlers and other facilities like swings and merry-go-rounds.

The proprietress of the school, Mrs. Meg Nwobia, said extra-curricular activities are as important as mathematics or English language, and should be treated as a subject in schools.

She said, ?I remember that when we were in primary school, it was a normal thing for a school to have a football field and spaces for other games. We used to look forward to going out for breaks to play. Then, we had short breaks and long breaks. After playing for about 40 minutes, you were exhausted and in the next one hour you couldn?t tell the teacher that you wanted to go to the toilet, because you would have done that.

?It helps the kids to sit down and concentrate. Play is like a subject on its own. So, the way you plan mathematics, English and social studies and you put them on the timetable, that is how you should plan play. It is an integral part of the child?s learning,? she said.

According to Nwobia, play is particularly important for toddlers in pre-school, as all they really want to do is to play. She said between ages one and three years old, they were not really interested in academics.

Expressing her disappointment with the unhealthy trend, Nwobia said, ?I really wonder how children cope in schools that do not have playgrounds, as they sit down from 8a.m till evening. And I wonder how they get approval to run schools without playgrounds.?

According to Mrs. Nkechi Arinze, a parent, it does not matter what other facilities a school has, it is wrong for it to exist without a playground.

She said, ?It?s really annoying that schools these days neglect playtime. Children need to play, otherwise, they cannot learn well. And some of these schools are very expensive. I know one of such schools in Lekki whose tuition is in hundreds of thousands of naira, yet it has no playground.?

Mr. Sunday Olayiwola, administration officer at the Royal Masters Schools, Central Business District, Alausa, Ikeja, another school with adequate playground and recreational facilities, said playtime was the best avenue for pupils to interact.

Olayiwola, who looks after the school?s playground, among other facilities, and often assists the pupils at the playground, said children discussed a lot of things when they were playing, including what their parents did at home.

?This is because they are not able to let it out in the classroom. They also use the playtime to practise some things they had learnt in class or the ideas they have, like building sand castles and making shoes with sand,? he said.

?According to Adeoshun Olabisi, who heads the Public Relations and Services Department of the school, playtime is one of the best times for the kids to learn. The smart teachers could use the opportunity to teach the children languages, how to count and identify colours, among other things.

He said, ?A teacher can also use the opportunity to identify the weaknesses and strengths of the children ? whether the child is shy, dull or aggressive. A teacher can also identify children who have problem walking or talking, and many other things.?

Students of Zumratul Islamiyah Primary School II, which shares a compound with Akute Community High School, Akute, in Ifo Local Government Area of Ogun State, is one of the numerous government-owned schools without sporting facilities. In fact, the entire compound was flooded when our correspondent visited on Thursday.

Worse still, the secondary school pupils learn under a ramshackle shed made of roughly assembled wooden planks and corrugated roofing sheets. The contraption was divided into about three classes, with a teacher for each of the classes. The environment was rowdy, with no clear distinction between one class and the other.

Both the head teacher of the primary school and the principal of the secondary school, who refused to disclose their identities, said the state government was aware of their predicament.

?The governor himself has been here, with the commissioner for education, so the problem here is known to them, and we believe something is being done about it,? they said.

Talking about what goes for a playground in the school, the head teacher of the primary school merely pointed to a barren land within the premises.

There was a project signboard which signified that the contract for the rehabilitation of the high school had been awarded by the State Universal Basic Education Board.

Ogun State Commissioner for Education, Mr. Segun Odubela, did not pick his call when our correspondent called him on Wednesday, neither did he respond to a text message sent to him.

Again, efforts to speak with the Lagos State Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye, was unsuccessful. The Public Relations Officer of the ministry, Mr. Lanre Bajulaiye, said she was away on a two-week official engagement.

Bajulaiye said he was not competent to speak on the issue either. However, a reliable source in the ministry who pleaded anonymity noted that if the state government insisted on inspecting the private nursery and primary schools and even secondary schools in the state, almost 60 per cent of them would be shut down.

The source explained that there were some schools which, apart from not having playgrounds, were not schools in the real sense, but ?pigsties.?

?If you look around, there are some schools built with planks, some are situated in the same building housing either a church or a mosque. They use the same space for both religious worship and school.

?And when we close down such schools, the owners will run to the media or their political godfathers to complain that the state government is wicked. But they won?t tell you that they have flouted the guidelines on the establishment of nursery or primary school. That is the dilemma we are in,? the source said.??

Meanwhile, anyone who wants to run a private nursery or primary school or both in Lagos State must meet specified guidelines, as prepared by the state?s ministry of education. (See Below)

Guidelines for private nursery/primary schools in Lagos State

  • The minimum land requirement for a nursery school shall be standard two plots of land
  • The dimensions of each classroom shall not be less than 8.36 metres by 6.80 metres.
  • There must be a master plan of the school, which must indicate clearly the location of the classrooms: a minimum of three classrooms. In addition, there shall be a library, sick bay, head teacher?s office, staff room, eight water closet toilets and administrative offices
  • There shall be open spaces on the premises of the school for playground (sand-filled) and such as shall be approved as adequate for this purpose
  • The school shall provide adequate toys, recreation facilities such as swing, balls, etc.
  • The building and premises shall be certified as suitable by the Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development
  • An adequately equipped sick bay, manned by a qualified nurse, shall be maintained and affiliated to a government-approved hospital close to the school
  • The facilities and infrastructure shall be certified as adequate by the ministry before approval is granted

?

Private primary school

  • The minimum land requirement shall be standard one plot of land
  • There must be a master plan of the school, which must indicate clearly the location of the classrooms (minimum of six).
  • There shall be open spaces on the premises of the school as playground, which should be approved as adequate for this purpose
  • The school shall provide sports and games equipment for its pupils
  • The building and premises shall be certified as suitable by the Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development
  • A fully equipped sick bay/first aid room shall be maintained at all times, with a trained nurse in attendance and affiliated to a nearby government-approved hospital
  • Provision shall be made for regular water supply and at least eight water closet toilets
  • Schools shall provide adequate fire-fighting and other emergency equipment in all buildings (such as fire extinguishers) and should keep them functional at all times

?

Source: http://www.punchng.com/feature/half-baked-education-at-schools-without-playgrounds/

marie colvin cm punk cm punk lint buenos aires train crash argentina train crash nancy pelosi