Saturday, February 4, 2012

UN council meeting Saturday to consider Syria (AP)

UNITED NATIONS ? The U.N. Security Council will meet Saturday morning to take up a much-negotiated resolution on Syria, said a diplomat for a Western nation that sits on the council.

The diplomat spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to be quoted by the press.

The confirmation came after the U.N. announced the meeting to news correspondents, then sent out another email asking reporters to "please disregard until further notice" the earlier announcement. The exact hour of the meeting was unclear.

The move toward a vote came after Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke by telephone with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in an effort to overcome Russian opposition to any statement that explicitly calls for regime change or a military intervention in Syria.

The movement at the U.N. came as Syrian forces used tanks and machine-guns to kill at least 200 people and wound hundreds in Homs in an offensive that appeared to be the bloodiest episode in the nearly 11-month-old uprising, activists said early Saturday. Homs has been one of the main flashpoints of opposition to the regime during the uprising.

The U.S. and its partners have ruled out military action but want the global body to endorse an Arab League plan that calls on Assad to hand power over to Syria's vice president.

Clinton called Lavrov while flying Friday to Munich for a security conference that both are attending, State Department spokesman Mark Toner said.

He said Clinton and Lavrov agreed to have American and Russian diplomats continue work on a Syria resolution and were planning to meet for more talks in the German city over the weekend.

Russia's deputy foreign minister, Gennady Gatilov, said Friday that Moscow could not support the resolution in its current form. But he expressed optimism that an agreement could be reached, according to state news agency RIA Novosti.

Assad's regime has been intensifying an assault against army defectors and protesters. The U.N. said weeks ago that more than 5,400 people have been killed in violence since March. Hundreds more have been killed since that tally was announced.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120204/ap_on_re_us/un_un_syria

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Friday, February 3, 2012

China blocks rights lawyer from meeting Merkel (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? Chinese police blocked a prominent human rights lawyer from attending a Beijing dinner hosted by German leader Angela Merkel, the lawyer said on Friday, the latest example of restrictions on unorthodox views in a sensitive year.

German diplomats from the embassy in Beijing had early on Thursday invited Mo Shaoping to a dinner with Merkel, who is in China on a three-day visit, to discuss the Chinese legal system and issues facing lawyers, Mo told Reuters by telephone.

The incident could focus renewed attention on human rights in China. Merkel told reporters on Thursday she had "a frank dialogue" with Chinese leaders on human rights.

But state security officers told Mo he was not allowed to meet Merkel on Thursday night, citing "orders from leaders above" but without providing any legal evidence, Mo said.

"They said: 'The 18th Party Congress is coming up, we must maintain stability, we can't have different voices present'," Mo said, referring to congress of the ruling Communist Party that convenes late this year.

"I said: 'What does this have to do with me? I'm just an ordinary lawyer'," Mo said.

"On maintaining stability, with just one meeting, will that cause instability? And on different viewpoints, that is restricting the rights of a citizen with regards to freedom of expression," he said.

China's rubber-stamp parliament session meets in early March -- an occasion that is often used as an excuse by the authorities to rein in petitioners, dissidents and rights lawyers.

Since last February, President Hu Jintao has redoubled the urgency of his campaign to strengthen "social management" and pre-empt unrest before he retires from the Communist Party leadership in late 2012 and from the state presidency shortly after that.

Beijing police were not available for comment.

A German official, who declined to be identified, told Reuters on Friday that Mo was "invited, but did not come."

Mo, who has defended many dissidents critical of Communist Party rule, said the other person invited to the dinner, Wu Si, editor in chief of the Chinese magazine "Yanhuang Chunqiu" that is read by many retired officials, was able to attend.

The restrictions on Mo suggests that a crackdown on dissenting views may be stepped up ahead of what could be a tricky leadership transition later in the year, when the party's long-standing focus on fending off political challenges is likely to intensify.

Chinese courts have handed down heavy jail sentences to three dissidents since December for "inciting subversion" or "subversion" -- charges that the government often invokes against people critical of Communist Party rule.

"On several human rights issues, we have, at times, thought China's response is somewhat harsh," Merkel told reporters on Thursday, adding that she stressed the importance of freedom of expression and free access and discourse on the Internet.

"We think having many voices in a society will play a positive role," she said.

Mo said the restrictions on his movements betrayed a "retrograde mentality" on the part of the authorities.

"You can't pull China back, you can't go back to our closed-door policy and say we can't mix with the outside world," he said. "It is unwise."

(Additional reporting by Andreas Rinke and Lucy Hornby; Editing by Ken Wills and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120203/wl_nm/us_china_lawyer

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FROM THE FAMILY VIOLENCE BLOG | Family Violence

A new ally joins fight to end teen sex trade
Reposted from the Star Tribune

Women?s Foundation of Minnesota has launched a $4 million campaign to halt trafficking of teen girls.

Terry Williams stood in front of guests at a swank Wayzata home on a recent evening, carrying a message that wasn?t exactly cocktail party fare. Surrounded by lovely furniture and a glowing fireplace, she showed them a gritty film titled ?Minnesota Girls Are Not for Sale.? For the next 45 minutes, a dozen guests sipping wine learned about a new $4 million, five-year campaign to halt sex trafficking of teenage girls.

?Most people are quite shocked that this is happening,? said Williams, of the Women?s Foundation of Minnesota, the campaign?s sponsor.

Such unlikely house parties are taking off across the metro area, as the foundation launches the first philanthropic campaign in Minnesota ? and one of a handful in the nation ? focused on teen sex trafficking.

For the first time, a state foundation has opened its vaults to create a dedicated funding stream for programs against sex trafficking. For the first time, a foundation has spearheaded a public education campaign on trafficking, handed out grants to law enforcement and prosecutors, and collaborated with state players to build a safety net for the victims.

Last week the foundation announced its first grants in Minnesota, which is becoming a national model for combating the teen sex trade.

?We first heard about the problem from some of our youth [program] grantees who were seeing an uptick in this,? said Lee Roper-Batker, foundation CEO. ?Then one day Susan Segal [Minneapolis city attorney] called me into her office and said, ?You?re a woman?s foundation. What are you going to do about this???

The foundation looked at some numbers. It found only 11 foundation grants nationally dedicated to ?sexually exploited youth? from 2003 to 2011. Three were in Minnesota. Teens in the sex trade were no doubt helped by grants addressing runaways, prostitution and domestic violence, the foundation
knew. But there was little targeted directly at vulnerable minor girls.

?I feel like we?re in the same place with trafficking as we were with domestic violence 30 years ago in terms of building awareness, services and the right policies,? said Roper-Batker. ?What?s missing is resources.?

Parties and pimps
The Wayzata house party was held at the home of Katharine Priedeman, a Twin Cities banking executive who is among an unlikely array of wealthy donors, businesspeople, advocates and nonprofit leaders working on the initiative. Her guests had many questions for Williams, a foundation
director.

Aren?t these girls from other countries? asked one guest.

Most aren?t, replied Williams. They are Minnesota girls servicing men in the port of Duluth. Rural girls lured into ?just dancing? at strip clubs during hunting season, and then denied a ride home until they have sex with a few men. Desperate urban runaways. Girls from across the state sold by pimps at the click of the mouse on the Internet.

How many girls are trafficked? asked another guest.

It?s impossible to quantify because it happens underground, said Williams. But police, courts and nonprofits serving teens see it regularly.

The annual Minnesota Student Survey would be an ideal tool for learning the extent of the problem, said Williams. The foundation plans to ask that a trafficking question be included in the survey. It also wants to get trafficking information into high school curriculums.

What?s the biggest need? another woman asked.

Specialized housing for the traumatized girls, Williams said. Minnesota has just two beds dedicated for them. Both are sponsored by Breaking Free, a St. Paul nonprofit serving sex trafficking victims.

Julie, a client at Breaking Free, is among the teens at the heart of the campaign.

The petite young woman wound up in the sex trade after leaving home at age 17, and meeting a dubious ?boyfriend.? She traveled the country with her pimp and other girls, servicing men ? all under the mind-control game played by pimps. She didn?t want her real name used.

Her advice for the campaign?? ?The cops need to be going after the pimps,? she said. ?If it weren?t for buyers, there wouldn?t be prostitution.?
Grants in action Ramsey County Attorney John Choi wants to do that. His office received a $60,000 grant from the foundation last week that will free up a senior county prosecutor to audit about 400 past cases of runaways and prostitution ? where trafficked girls often turn up ? to learn what investigators could do to strengthen their cases against pimps. The goal is to create a state model for prosecutors, he said.

Breaking Free, meanwhile, will use part of its roughly $59,000 grant from the foundation to educate police, court officials, youth workers and others about the dynamics of the teen sex trade. The American Indian Community Housing Organization in Duluth received $65,000 to build a housing- based model, which can be replicated statewide, to support American Indian teens fleein the trade.

The Minnesota Family Partnership received funds to educate legislators about the need for funds for housing and other services. It also will work to expand the Safe Harbors Law, passed last year, which requires law enforcement to treat sexually exploited youths under 16 as victims in need of protection, not criminals. The goal is to raise the age covered under the law to 18.

Dave Ellis, who oversees the new Minnesota Alliance Against Violence for the Greater Twin Cities United Way, has been involved in the foundation?s efforts. Like the Women?s Foundation, Ellis said trafficking victims are showing up in United Way programs serving youths, runaways and more.

?Someone needs to call it out,? said Ellis. ?But it?s one cog in the whole discussion of family violence, part of a machine that is moving in a direction that no one wants.?

For the staff of the Women?s Foundation, entering the seedy world of the sex trade has been an eye-opener. They?ve created files on ?Pimps? and ?Strip Clubs.? They get e-mail notices when pimps who are trafficking teens are busted.

And they?ve become adept at checking out prostituted girls on? backpage.com, the controversial Village Voice Media website that is a major source of trafficking. The media company operates 13 newspapers nationwide, including City Pages.

With a few clicks of the mouse, Roper-Batker pulls up ads with seductive photos and phone numbers for girls who can land at a man?s door ?faster than a pizza.?
?How can this be legal?? she asked. ?Our time to change is now.?

Source: http://unitedfrontmn.org/family-violence/2012/02/01/from-the-family-violence-blog-8/

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Zacks Releases Four Powerful ''Buy'' Stocks: Celestica, Honeywell ...

For Immediate Release

Chicago, IL ? February 1, 2012 ? Four free stock picks are being made available today on Zacks.com. The industry?s leading independent research firm highlights one Zacks #1 Rank Strong Buy or a Zacks #2 Rank Buy stock for each of the four main styles of investing: Aggressive Growth, Growth & Income, Momentum, and Value.

The four highlighted picks are: Celestica Inc. ( CLS), Honeywell ( HON), Lululemon (LULU) and Ashland ( ASH).

Today, Zacks is promoting its ''Buy'' stock recommendations. Four daily picks are offered free. http://at.zacks.com/?id=88

From 1988 through the present ? a period that included serious corrections and recessions ? the Zacks #1 Rank Stocks have nearly tripled the market with a fully documented average gain of +28% per year.

Here is a summary of today's selected stocks that are now highly rated by Zacks:??????????

Aggressive Growth ? Celestica Inc. ( CLS)
Celestica Inc. has a solid outlook for 2012 and 2013 and is a Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy).

Zacks Guide to Aggressive Growth Investing (free!) - http://at.zacks.com/?id=4309

Growth & Income ? Honeywell ( HON)
Estimates have been rising for Honeywell after the company delivered its 10th consecutive positive earnings surprise.

Zacks Guide to Growth & Income Investing (free!) - http://at.zacks.com/?id=4310

Momentum ? Lululemon (LULU)
Sometimes the strongest companies are not the ones you would suspect; at least not at first.? Who would have believed that a high-end yoga clothing store would have a market cap of 7 billion and earnings growth of 50%?

Zacks Guide to Momentum Investing (free!): ?http://at.zacks.com/?id=4311

Value ? Ashland ( ASH)
The chemical industry is still hanging tough in 2012 despite the cloudy Eurozone and China outlook. Ashland Inc. recently blew by the Zacks Consensus Estimate for Q1. Yet this Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) is still a value stock with a forward P/E of just 11.3.

Zacks Guide to Value Investing (free!) - ?http://at.zacks.com/?id=4312

How to Regularly Access Top Zacks Rank Picks for Free - http://at.zacks.com/?id=7154

Underlying the four free stock picks is a simple truth that first appeared in a Financial Analysts Journal article published in 1979. Leonard Zacks, a Ph.D. from M.I.T. found that "earnings estimate revisions are the most powerful force impacting stock prices." ?Zacks #1 Rank is awarded to a stock when analysts sharply upgrade their estimates of what the company will earn.

Today, Zacks is promoting its stock recommendations by offering four daily picks free to those who register here: http://at.zacks.com/?id=7155

About Zacks

Zacks.com is a property of Zacks Investment Research, Inc., which was formed in 1978 by Len Zacks. The company continually processes stock reports issued by 3,000 analysts from 150 brokerage firms.? It monitors more than 200,000 earnings estimates, looking for changes.

Then, when changes are discovered, they?re applied to help assign more than 4,400 stocks into five Zacks Rank categories: #1 Strong Buy, #2 Buy, #3 Hold, #4 Sell, and #5 Strong Sell. This proprietary stock-picking system continues to outperform the market by a nearly 3-to-1 margin. ?

More Free Stock Picks

Each weekday, new Zacks #1 Rank or Zacks #2 Rank stock picks are released on the free email newsletter, Profit from the Pros. Investors are invited to register for their free subscription here: http://at.zacks.com/?id=91

Follow us on Twitter:? http://twitter.com/zacksresearch

Join us on Facebook:? http://www.facebook.com/ZacksInvestmentResearch

Zacks Investment Research is under common control with affiliated entities (including a broker-dealer and an investment adviser), which may engage in transactions involving the foregoing securities for the clients of such affiliates.

Disclaimer: Past performance does not guarantee future results. Investors should always research companies and securities before making any investments. Nothing herein should be construed as an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any security.

Media Contact
Zacks Investment Research
800-767-3771 ext. 9339
support@zacks.com
http://www.zacks.com

Visit http://www.zacks.com/performance for information about the performance numbers displayed in this press release.

Read the full analyst report on CLS

Read the full analyst report on HON

Read the full analyst report on LULU

Read the full analyst report on ASH

Source: http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/68844/Zacks+Releases+Four+Powerful+''Buy''+Stocks%3A+Celestica,+Honeywell,+Lululemon+and+Ashland

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Let's Help LeVar Burton Get @ReadingRainbow Where It Belongs [Twitter]

LeVar Burton needs our help. The former host of classic educational series and childhood TV staple Reading Rainbow is trying to acquire the Twitter handle @ReadingRainbow. However his efforts have been to no avail. The name's been bogarted by an unknown party and left to rot for over three years. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Cz9OGu67kzE/lets-help-levar-burton-get-readingrainbow-where-it-belongs

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5 things to watch in Florida (Politico)

TAMPA, Fla. ? After a 10-day, post-South Carolina slog characterized by relentless attacks on Newt Gingrich from Mitt Romney?s forces, Florida on Tuesday will vote in its 2012 Republican presidential primary.

With Romney and his associated super PAC outspending the Gingrich teams by a nearly five-to-one margin and blanketing the state airwaves with a barrage of negative TV ads, Gingrich never found his footing here, careening from one message to another without ever gaining traction.

Continue Reading

Here are POLITICO?s five things to watch from Florida as the polls close, at 7 p.m. local time in both the Eastern and Central Time Zones:

1) Mitt?s margin

Gingrich needs a close race more than Romney needs a blowout victory.

For the former House speaker, finishing a respectable second means he can explain away a loss by arguing that he was outspent and out-organized by a superior Romney organization that was already in place and with a 2008 run under its belt.

If Romney wins by a lot ? say, 12 points or more ? it?s likely to negate Gingrich?s victory in South Carolina, making that win about as useful a yardstick as Rick Santorum?s Iowa caucus triumph. And without any more scheduled debates until Feb. 22 in Arizona ? an event which Romney has not committed to attend ? Gingrich will be more reliant than ever on super PAC money to get him through to Super Tuesday.

All the available polling evidence suggests a comfortable Romney victory, the size of which will have a bearing on perceptions of Gingrich?s durability.

A Romney campaign adviser said Monday that Romney?s goal in Florida remains a six-to-eight point spread ? which tracks exactly with the final Public Policy Polling difference in the state ? with a double-digit victory being ?more than we had ever expected.?

At his campaign?s final event Monday at The Villages, Romney paid Gingrich the ultimate insult: After a day of wicked Gingrich attacks, Romney ignored him altogether.

2) Newt and women

The Romney campaign?s last hope in South Carolina was a big margin over Gingrich among women, but that turned out to be wishful thinking: Gingrich swept to victory across almost all significant demographic categories.

Gingrich skillfully shut down the issue of his ex-wife Marianne?s grievances during the CNN debate in Charleston, but the story may play differently among a Florida GOP electorate that is larger and more diverse than in South Carolina.

The good news for Gingrich is the story of his two divorces and his second wife?s allegations that he demanded an ?open marriage? didn?t come up in the Florida debates or campaign.

But even though the Romney campaign has stayed away from the divorce story, Romney and his campaign haven?t been subtle about highlighting the Romney family.

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, in particular, has been an aggressive surrogate for Romney in pushing his pristine family story ? she hasn?t needed to overtly compare it to the Gingrich history to make her point.

Even Romney?s wife, Ann, who typically offers relatively apolitical but loving introductions of her husband, opened his first event in the state in Ormond Beach last weekend with a reminder of their family life.

?I want to remind you where we know our riches are,? she said. ?Our riches are with our families. It is the American way, and I am proud of my husband and I am proud of all the accomplishments he?s made in his life.?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories0112_72191_html/44361668/SIG=11man2kgu/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/0112/72191.html

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Testosterone makes us less cooperative and more egocentric

ScienceDaily (Jan. 31, 2012) ? Testosterone makes us overvalue our own opinions at the expense of cooperation, research from the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at UCL (University College London) has found. The findings may have implications for how group decisions are affected by dominant individuals.

Problem solving in groups can provide benefits over individual decisions as we are able to share our information and expertise. However, there is a tension between cooperation and self-orientated behaviour: although groups might benefit from a collective intelligence, collaborating too closely can lead to an uncritical groupthink, ending in decisions that are bad for all.

Attempts to understand the biological mechanisms behind group decision making have tended to focus on the factors that promote cooperation, and research has shown that people given a boost of the hormone oxytocin tend to be cooperative. Now, in a study recently published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, researchers have shown that the hormone testosterone has the opposite effect -- it makes people act less cooperatively and more egocentrically.

Dr Nick Wright and colleagues at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at UCL carried out a series of tests using 17 pairs of female volunteers* who had previously never met. The test took place over two days, spaced a week apart. On one of the days, both volunteers in each pair were given a testosterone supplement; on the other day, they were given a placebo.

During the experiment, both women sat in the same room and viewed their own screen. Both individuals saw exactly the same thing. First, in each trial they were shown two images, one of which contained a high-contrast target -- and their job was to decide individually which image contained the target.

If their individual choices agreed, they received feedback and moved on to the next trial. However, if they disagreed, they were asked to collaborate and discuss with their partner to reach a joint decision. One of the pair then input this joint decision.

The researchers found that, as expected, cooperation enabled the group to perform much better than the individuals alone when individuals had received only the placebo. But, when given a testosterone supplement, the benefit of cooperation was markedly reduced. In fact, higher levels of testosterone were associated with individuals behaving egocentrically and deciding in favour of their own selection over their partner's.

"When we are making decisions in groups, we tread a fine line between cooperation and self-interest: too much cooperation and we may never get our way, but if we are too self-orientated, we are likely to ignore people who have real insight," explains Dr Wright.

"Our behaviour seems to be moderated by our hormones -- we already know that oxytocin can make us more cooperative, but if this were the only hormone acting on our decision-making in groups, this would make our decisions very skewed. We have shown that, in fact, testosterone also affects our decisions, by making us more egotistical.

"Most of the time, this allows us to seek the best solution to a problem, but sometimes, too much testosterone can help blind us to other people's views. This can be very significant when we are talking about a dominant individual trying to assert his or her opinion in, say, a jury."

Testosterone is implicated in a variety of social behaviours. For example, in chimpanzees, levels of testosterone rise ahead of a confrontation or a fight. In female prisoners, studies have found that higher levels of testosterone correlate with increased antisocial behaviour and higher aggression. Researchers believe that such findings reflect a more general role for testosterone in increasing the motivation to dominate others and increase egocentricity.

Commenting on the findings, Dr John Williams, Head of Neuroscience and Mental Health at the Trust, said: "Cooperating with others has obvious advantages for sharing skills and experience, but we know it doesn't always work, particularly if one alpha male or alpha female dominates the decision making. This result helps us understand at a hormonal level the factors that can disrupt our attempts to work together."

The Wellcome Trust funded this study.

*Testosterone is naturally secreted in men and women, and testosterone levels are correlated with important behaviours (e.g. antisocial behaviour) in both men and women. For the size of dose given experimentally, in women this markedly increases their testosterone from its low baseline level. In men, however, the situation is more complicated: men already have high baseline levels of testosterone, so giving such doses will decrease their own production of testosterone, a feedback effect that will act to offset the increase caused by the treatment itself. The researchers therefore used female subjects because giving standard experimental doses causes a straightforward and well-characterised increase in their testosterone levels.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wellcome Trust.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Wright ND et al. Testosterone disrupts human collaboration by increasing egocentric choices. Proc Roy Soc B, 2012

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120131210259.htm

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