domingo, 30 de noviembre de 2014

Ferguson officer who shot Michael Brown resigns

Protestors confront police who are standing guard in front of a bar on November 29, 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri.
FERGUSON, Mo. (AP) -- Ferguson officials planned to address the resignation of a white police officer who fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown, a black resident of the St. Louis suburb whose parents on Sunday prepared to attend a church service where civil rights activist the Rev. Al Sharpton was scheduled to preach.
On Monday night, prosecutors announced that a grand jury declined to indict Officer Darren Wilson, stoking racial tensions that led to looting and violence in the predominantly black St. Louis suburb of 20,000 residents, while also leading to weeklong protests nationwide.
Wilson, who had been on administrative leave since the Aug. 9 shooting, resigned Saturday, effective immediately, according to his lawyer, Neil Bruntrager, who declined further comment. An attorney for Brown's family didn't immediately return messages seeking comment.
Wilson, who had been with the Ferguson Police Department for less than three years, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch he decided to step down after the department told him it had received threats of violence if he remained on the force.
"I'm not willing to let someone else get hurt because of me," Wilson told the newspaper Saturday.
Ferguson officials planned to make a statement on Wilson's resignation Sunday, said Stephanie Karr, city attorney for Ferguson. Karr earlier this week said Wilson had been on paid leave pending the outcome of an internal police investigation.
"We were not after Wilson's job," Sharpton, who planned to preach Sunday at the St. Louis church where Brown's funeral was held, added later in a written statement. "We were after Michael Brown's justice."
Brown's parents were set to attend the Sunday service with Sharpton.
On Saturday night, more than 100 protesters gathered near police headquarters, where they were outnumbered by officers, following the news. At least one person was arrested after a brief standoff with officers, while others wearing white masks sat in a nearby street blocking traffic. Another protester burned an American flag. By midnight, only about two dozen protesters remained.
But many seemed unfazed by the resignation. Several merely shrugged their shoulders when asked what they thought, while Rick Campbell flatly said he didn't care about the resignation, noting: "I've been protesting out here since August."
Brown, who was black, was unarmed when Wilson, who is white, fatally shot him in the middle of a Ferguson street, where his body was left for several hours as police investigated and angry onlookers gathered.
Some witnesses have said Brown had his hands up when Wilson shot him. Wilson told the grand jury that he feared for his life when Brown hit him and reached for his gun.
The U.S. Justice Department also is conducting a civil rights investigation into the shooting and a separate investigation of police department practices.
Away from the protests Saturday night, resident Victoria Rutherford said she believed Wilson should have not only resigned, but been convicted of a crime.
"I'm upset. I have a 16-year-old son. It could've been him. I feel that he was absolutely in the wrong," she said.
Another resident, Reed Voorhees, said he hoped Wilson could find similar work "someplace where he would enjoy life, and move on with his life."
In the days after the shooting, tense and sometimes violent protests popped up in and around Ferguson, a predominantly black community patrolled by a mostly white police force. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon called in the National Guard to help.
Following Monday night's announcement that the grand jury would not indict Wilson, at least a dozen commercial buildings were destroyed in Ferguson and neighboring Dellwood, mostly along West Florissant Avenue, not far from where Brown was killed. By Tuesday, Nixon had sent more than 2,200 National Guard members to the Ferguson area to support local law enforcement.
Though protests calmed significantly, more than 100 people have been arrested since Monday, including 16 at a protest Friday night outside the Ferguson police station. Portland, Oregon police said 10 people were arrested Saturday night "after a large group of protesters laid down in the street and refused lawful orders to clear the roadway." The nine adults and one juvenile arrested will face charges that include disorderly conduct.
Demonstrations, which also have been held other U.S. cities, are expected to continue, though a sense of normalcy - or at least a new normal - has begun to settle on the city.
Police earlier Saturday reopened several blocks of West Florissant that had been barricaded off since Tuesday. Although most store windows were still boarded up, many have been decorated or spray-painted with messages saying the stores are open and welcoming shoppers.
Some business owners spent an unseasonably warm day tidying up, hoping customers soon would return.
Tracy Ballard, 44, brought her 7-year-old daughter to a store on West Florissant to buy candy and soda, before a trip to the beautician up the street.
"I feel sad for the business owners," Ballard said. "It's really sad it had to come from this. We just wanted justice. If we'd have had justice, none of this would have happened."
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Associated Press writer Jim Salter contributed to this report from Ferguson, Missouri.
A woman holds an upside-down American flag from a moving vehicle as she takes part in a protest near the Ferguson Police Station in Ferguson, Missouri, November 29, 2014.

sábado, 29 de noviembre de 2014

Notice: TV TODAY

TV TODAY



 

SOCCER
6:40 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, Arsenal at West Bromwich
8:55 a.m.
NBCSN — Premier League, Hull City at Manchester United
11:30 a.m.
NBC — Premier League, Chelsea at Sunderland
2 p.m.
NBCSN — MLS, playoffs, conference finals, second leg, New York at New England

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

11 a.m.
ABC — Michigan at Ohio St.
ESPN — South Carolina at Clemson
ESPN2 — Kentucky at Louisville
ESPNEWS — Cincinnati at Temple
ESPNU — Illinois at Northwestern
FSN — North Texas at UTSA
FS1 — West Virginia at Iowa St.
1:30 p.m.
NBC — Grambling St. vs. Southern U., at New Orleans
2:30 p.m.
ABC — Michigan St. at Penn St. or Baylor vs. Texas Tech at Arlington, Texas
CBS — Mississippi St. at Mississippi
ESPN — Florida at Florida St.
ESPN2 — Michigan St. at Penn St. or Baylor vs. Texas Tech at Arlington, Texas
ESPNU — Rutgers at Maryland
FOX — Notre Dame at Southern California
3 p.m.
ESPNEWS — UConn at Memphis
FS1 — Kansas at Kansas St.
6 p.m.
ESPN2 — Pittsbugrh at Miami
ESPNU — Wake Forest at Duke
6:45 p.m.
ESPN — Auburn at Alabama
7:07 p.m.
ABC — Oregon at Oregon St.
9:15 p.m.
ESPN2 — Utah St. at Boise St.
9:30 p.m.
ESPNU — Nevada at UNLV
FS1 — Washington at Washington St.


COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL
6 p.m.
NBCSN — Barclays Center Classic, third place, at New York
8:30 p.m.
NBCSN — Barclays Center Classic, championship, at New York
COLLEGE MEN’S HOCKEY
7 p.m.
MIDCO SN — Nebraska-Omaha at UND
NHL
7 p.m.
FSN — St. Louis at Minnesota
GOLF
7 p.m.
TGC — PGA Tour of Australasia, Australian Open, at Sydney


BOXING
9 p.m.
HBO — Champion Evgeny Gradovich (19-0-0) vs. Jayson Velez (22-0-0), for IBF featherweight title; champion Terence Crawford (24-0-0) vs. Ray Beltran (29-6-1), for WBO lightweight title, at Omaha, Neb.
RADIO TODAY
COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
4 p.m.
KXMR (710 AM) — Minot State at U-Mary
COLLEGE MEN’S BASKETBALL
6 p.m.
KXMR (710 AM) — Minot State at U-Mary
COLLEGE MEN’S HOCKEY
7 p.m.
KFYR (550 AM) — Nebraska-Omaha at UND
NAHL
7:15 p.m.
KLXX (1270 AM) — Minnesota Wilderness at Bobcats
SCHEDULE
SATURDAY
College hockey: Nebraska-Omaha at UND, 7:07 p.m.
NAHL: Minnesota Wilderness at Bobcats, 7:15 p.m.
Men’s basketball: Minot State at U-Mary, 6 p.m.; UND vs. Texas-Pan American at Salt Lake City, Utah, 3 p.m.
Women’s basketball: Minot State at U-Mary, 4 p.m.; UND at Western Illinois, 4:30 p.m.; NDSU vs. TBA at Boca Raton, Fla.
High school boys hockey: Century at West Fargo, 3:15 p.m.; Bismarck at Fargo North, 5:15 p.m.; Mandan at Grand Forks Central, 7:30 p.m.
High school girls hockey: Jamestown at Mandan, 7 p.m.
SUNDAY
Men’s basketball: NDSU at Montana State, 6 p.m.

viernes, 28 de noviembre de 2014

Goosebumps: Explained

 Explained



Got goosebumps? You’re probably cold. This brief article explains the pilomotor reflex, or piloerection, which is what’s behind goosebumps and several other physiological reactions to the cold.




The new HBO series, The Newsroommade some news itself when it debuted because of a scene in the first episode that shows the protagonist anchorman, played by Jeff Daniels, deliver a biting soliloquy on American decline. A YouTube video of the scene, which bills itself as the “most honest three and a half minutes of television ever,” has garnered more than one million Internet hits.

In short, Daniels, sitting on a panel, is asked by an earnest young woman why America is the greatest country in the world. After a tirade of statistics to rebut the poor woman, Daniels’ character concludes: “The first step in solving any problem is to recognize there is one. America is not the greatest country in the world anymore.”

It’s no wonder that the YouTube alone has generated a million views. The soliloquy is bipartisan and strikes a chord with many Americans concerned about the contrast between their youthful vision of America’s greatness and its present day economic malaise. Many Americans may agree with President Obama’s statement, “I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism.”
While I believe that Americans share a sense of pride, nationalism and love for their country, they may not necessarily think about it every second of the day. I think we are an exceptional country and I am eternally thankful that I was lucky enough to be born here and express my passion about the greatness of this nation.
I disagree fully with the often-misstated statistics that suggest we are just another declining country. The statistics quoted are sheer bull.

Take for example the statistics that justified the passage of the Obamacare. These statistics suggest that the American healthcare system is worse off than other countries because of poor infant mortality and longevity rates. While this may be true, those statistics have nothing to do with our healthcare system and everything to do with our lifestyle. Eating right and exercising daily are what improve these rates, not government mandated healthcare. But when it comes to treating and curing life-threatening diseases, America is the best in the world proved in part by the fact that most of the world’s wealthy travel here for treatment.
Critics of American exceptionalism next attack our education system, calling it a complete failure. Yes, the numbers are scary if you look at overall math and science scores compared to many other countries. But consider two facts. First, we have a diverse and extremely large population, and the highlighted statistics are often average scores that mask the huge number of high achievers. Our pre-college education system has challenges, yet citizens of other nations increasingly want their children educated in the United States. More, we have some of the world’s best universities, and we see Chinese government officials strive to send their children to U.S. schools at increasingly younger ages. Indeed, China sends 160,000 of their youth to American schools. Second, it’s not the basics or rote learning that makes an American education valuable: it’s the culture of innovation that we imbue. We may not be the best at basics, but we are phenomenal at teaching students to challenge the status quo. Our First Amendment, our immigrant and diverse culture, our “can-do” attitude and our entrepreneurial spirit come together to produce a nation of innovators.
We lead the world in Internet innovation, music, movies, biotech and many other technological fields that require out-of-the-box thinking. From Apple to DreamWorks Studios, from Amazon to Zynga, we are the world’s innovators. As I travel the world and speak about these issues I am increasingly aware that the government of virtually every other country in the world wants their citizens to be as innovative as Americans.
We certainly have problems, and we must address them. Our politicians and even our voters are failing to deal with the big issues. We focus on meaningless political squabbles as the cost and reality of rapidly growing entitlements threaten to send us into an economic tailspin. We are living today rather than investing for tomorrow. And we are raising youth who may not understand the values that we once shared as a nation.
However, I am passionate that our nation was, still is and can remain the best in world. We not only owe it to our children to act to preserve our greatness, but we must also honor those who have served and risked their life and limb in our Armed Forces to preserve our nation and its freedoms.
We are a beacon for the world. Our challenge is not to lament our decline or even celebrate our exceptionalism; it is to come together with true leadership that can unite us as we sacrifice to preserve and expand our greatness.