viernes, 16 de septiembre de 2011

At Least 29 Protesters Killed in Syria





  BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syrian security forces shot dead 29 people Friday in some of the country’s most restive locales, in yet another round of bloodshed that has led some there to fear Syria’s six-month uprising may be headed toward an even more violent turn.

The crackdown on the revolt in one of the Arab world’s most authoritarian countries has continued unabated, with the United Nations saying government forces have killed more than 2,600 people and diplomats estimating that arrests may number in the tens of thousands. Though Syria’s government stands more isolated than at any time in decades, it has managed to maintain cohesion within the security forces and leadership.
 The deaths occurred in regions that have witnessed some of the largest protests: Homs, in central Syria; Dara’a, a southern town where the uprising began; the suburbs of the capital Damascus; and the outskirts of Hama, Syria’s fourth-largest city, according to the Local Coordination Committees, an activist group. Though recent Fridays in Syria unfailingly witness violence, the toll marked one of the bloodiest in weeks.
Activists also said military campaigns, with tanks and armored vehicles, continued around Hama and in northwest Syria, a rugged region near the Turkish border.
 The Syrian government has cast the unrest as an insurgency, funded from abroad and driven by religious sentiments. In a visit to Moscow this week, Bouthaina Shaaban, an adviser to President Bashar al-Assad, discounted the United Nations’ estimate of deaths, saying 1,400 people had been killed. She said 700 of them were soldiers and 700 insurgents, apparently suggesting no civilians had died in the protests and crackdown.
 But international criticism has mounted, with the United States and European countries demanding that Mr. Assad step down. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, who once counted Mr. Assad as a friend, has signaled growing anger with Syrian rebuffs of Turkey’s pleas to undertake reform. In Tripoli, Libya, where Mr. Erdogan visited Friday as part of a tour of Arab countries, he warned Syrian officials of their fate on Friday.
 “Do not forget this: Those in Syria who inflict repression on the people will not be able to stand on their feet,” he told a cheering crowd in a square in Tripoli.
Later at a news conference, Mr. Erdogan used more explicit language. “Who comes with injustice cannot rule,” he told reporters. “Anyone who sends tanks against his own people cannot rule. He must be held accountable for what he has done.”  Mr. Erdogan made clear that he was referring to Mr. Assad.
  Since they erupted in mid-March, the protests have demonstrated a remarkable resilience, persisting despite one of the region’s most ferocious bouts of repression. Some activists have acknowledged that, given the violence, the demonstrations may have lost some momentum in past weeks, though they don’t see the flagging numbers as decisive.
To many, fear is driving them to continue.
“Protesters are telling authorities that they have the patience of Job,” said Iyad Sharbaji, an activist in Damascus. “They have faith and believe that, if the protests stop, there will be revenge and killings that no one will survive from.”
“That is why people are insisting to continue until the end,” he added.
Across the country, activists, diplomats and analysts have worried that as the toll mounts, and international pressure fails to force concessions from Mr. Assad’s government, protesters may take up arms. There are growing reports that some already have in places like Homs, Syria’s third-largest city, and the outskirts of Damascus.
“The suppression is becoming even more brutal,” said a Syrian activist in the capital who gave her name as Hanan. “My biggest concern is the transformation of this peaceful movement into another form — a violent reaction, for instance.

domingo, 28 de agosto de 2011

Apple’s Board set for bigger role under new regime




New York City, USA (NTN24 Wires) - The departure of Steve Jobs as Apple's CEO is likely to trigger some major changes for the company's board.



Rather than acting as mere advisers to one of the world's great visionary leaders, the board may have to take more control, be less deferential to the new CEO Tim Cook than it was to Jobs, and meet more often.

"Over time that board is going to have to step up to greater responsibility and a more traditional role," said Jim Post, a professor of management at Boston University School of Management.

Jobs, after a lengthy battle with a rare form of pancreatic cancer and other health problems, on Wednesday said he could no longer fulfill his duties at the world's most valuable technology company and handed the CEO reins to his long-time lieutenant Cook.

Initially at least, the board will be chaired by Jobs himself, though there are questions over whether he will be in that position long, or play a major role, given the state of his health.

The creation of a chairman's position is a first step in restructuring the board. Apple was one of the few U.S. companies that lacked a chairman, raising concerns that there was no one to balance the power of the CEO.

The company had defended the lack of a chairman, saying it was in the best interests of the company and shareholders for the CEO to instead interact with two co-lead directors, Art Levinson and Andrea Jung.

That leadership structure "enhances the board's oversight of and independence from management...and the company's overall corporate governance," Apple had said in a proxy statement in January.


Board’s light touch may change

Yet Apple's corporate governance had raised questions.

"You could ask how much control Jobs has exercised over the board and some would argue that it was quite a lot," said Charles Elson, director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware. "The problem is we just don't know much about Apple, it's pretty opaque."

There were signs that Jobs has at times kept the board in the dark. Over the past two years, for example, board members have confided to friends their concern that Jobs, in his quest for privacy, wasn't being forthcoming with directors about the true condition of his health.

The board doesn't, on the surface at least, appear to have been the most active.

According to executive search firm Spencer Stuart, it met just four times in 2010 -- a year in which the company launched the iPad, and faced growing concerns about Jobs' health, as well as a public relations black eye over antenna issues on the iPhone 4. By comparison, boards in the S&P 500 index overall met an average of 8.6 times.

That may change now that Cook is in charge.

"The board has to be thinking hard about the new responsibilities that they're going to have to step up to," said Post from Boston University. For example, it may be challenged to hang on to Apple's leadership team, which was held together in some part by Jobs' magnetism, Post said.

In Jobs' three health-related absences in recent years, Cook has taken over the helm.

But the 50-year-old Alabama native, a former Compaq executive and an acknowledged master of supply-chain management, remains largely untested in Wall Street's view. He wasn't even on the Apple board before this week -- also unusual for someone who had been the No.2 executive in a company.

Overall, he is being viewed as a safe bet to run Apple's sprawling empire, but it would be difficult to find many people who think Jobs won't be badly missed.



Cook may face tough questions

Cook's biggest test will come after the launch of the products that are in the pipeline for the next year or so -- which are seen as having the Jobs' imprint on them.

If product development slows after that, it will be up to the board to begin asking tough questions of Cook, corporate governance experts said.

The board is not lacking experience. But whether some of its members, mainly CEOs or former CEOs, have much time to commit to their Apple roles is another question.

For example, co-lead director Jung also runs Avon Products Inc, the world's largest direct seller of cosmetics with 40,000 employees, and serves as a director or trustee for other organizations.

Another director, Millard Drexler, is chief executive of retailer J. Crew Group, while director Al Gore, the former U.S. Vice President, serves as partner of venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and chairs another investment management firm.

The board is also smaller than average, with just eight members, up from seven before this week's change, versus an average of 10.7 members for S&P 500 companies, based on the Spencer Stuart data.

Of course, the light touch has not raised many eyebrows while Apple has been prospering -- its shares have risen more than five-fold in the past five years -- but it would be surprising if such an astonishingly smooth ride could continue.

Corporate governance pioneer Robert Monks pointed to Microsoft Corp as an example of how the star quality can dim. Its shares have slipped in the past 10 years even as sales and earnings have climbed.

"There comes a time when the magic isn't there and they become ordinary companies...then you begin to worry about governance," he said.

martes, 23 de agosto de 2011

toxicity

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJmt3dr9XYQ

Bayern sail through, Rossi rescues Villareal


Zurich, Switzerland (NTN24 Wires) - Bayern Munich sailed into the Champion’s League group stages with a 1-0 win at FC Zurich on Tuesday while two goals from Giuseppe Rossi rescued Villarreal in their playoff against Odense.


Danes Odense was one of three teams who failed in their bid to qualify for the first time, along with Wisla Krakow and Malmo.

Polish side Krakow fell at the final qualifying hurdle for the seventh time, losing 3-1 at APOEL Nicosia who scored the decisive goal in the 87th minute to win 3-2 on aggregate.

Dinamo Zagreb of Croatia progressed 4-3 overall despite losing 2-0 to Malmo in Sweden.

Racing Genk, who are without a coach, beat Maccabi Haifa on penalties to become the fifth team in the hat for Friday's draw in Monaco where they will be joined by Europe's elite.

Another five clubs will go through on Wednesday, the pick of the matches being troubled Arsenal's visit to Udinese.

Bayern, who have played in 13 of the last 14 group stages, were haunted by the prospect of failing to qualify in the season their Allianz Arena will host the final in May.

However, their tie with Zurich was little more than a minor inconvenience and they effectively booked their place when Mario Gomez scored in the seventh minute of the second leg at the Letzigrund.


Noisy fans

After that most of the fireworks came off the pitch as Bayern's noisy contingent of fans ignored the stadium announcer and let off firecrackers throughout the game while lightning flashed around the ground on a sticky evening.

Swiss Super League runners-up Zurich were lively but rarely threatening while Bayern forward Franck Ribery was given the freedom of the pitch.

Bayern, though, will be concerned they did not take advantage of the many openings created by the France playmaker's trickery.

"It's a shame the goal came so early," said Zurich coach Urs Fischer. "We saw the difference between domestic and international football."

Villarreal, facing a 1-0 first leg deficit against Odense, struggled to break the deadlock until Rossi struck twice in 16 minutes in the second half.

The Italian, linked with Juventus in the close season, got in front of his marker to open the scoring five minutes after halftime and then rifled in a brilliant volley in the 66th minute. Carlos Marchena added the third goal.

Brazilian Ailton netted twice as APOEL produced more heartbreak for Wisla who had a 1-0 lead from the first leg.

Ailton's second goal came in the 87th minute just as the Poles appeared set to end their jinx.

Dinamo, national champions for the last six seasons, took a 4-1 lead to Malmo but were made to suffer after Sime Vrsaljko was sent off in the 50th minute.

Wilton Figueiredo put Malmo ahead from a 69th-minute free kick. Pontus Jansson then scored to set up a tense finale and the visitors held on thanks to some fine saves from goalkeeper Ivan Kelava.

Genk beat Israelis Maccabi 4-1 on penalties, after winning the second leg 2-1 to record a 3-3 aggregate draw.

The Belgians were playing under stand-in coach Pierre Denier after Frank Vercauteren quit following last week's first leg.

PROBLEMS OF ADOLESCENCE IN PRESENT


 
The main problems of adolescence are:
 

1) Missing values.2) lack ideals.3) lack role models.4) Lack of current interest.5) Lack interest in the problems of the country.6) Lack interest in solutions to these problems.7) lack interest in history.8) Lack education.

 
1 .-Values ​​in adolescence, as well as other things are an issue. While it is true that there are values, not the ones who should be present and that should encourage educators (parents and teachers in gral.). The current values ​​are among others:Leisure: Nobody wants to try but everyone wants. Which has many activities and is interested in them is a "gil" and that does nothing and no activity is motivated by a "boss."Ignorance (incredibly enough): Relations with the previous point we can say that it is not interested in anything is, each passing day, more ignorant. Then you are not interested in anything you do not learn anything, which learns nothing knows nothing, who knows nothing is ignorant, and ignorance is, as I said, a "capo".Stupidity (which is not the same as ignorance): Someone may be very smart academically but also be a very stupid person. How is this possible? While someone may be very learned can be swayed by the wrong values. Example: A young man who does not take any matter to perform in December but said that teachers would have liked to see him fail. Were exempted one of the best averages but does not strive to improve and apply their learning to actual reality. Or the worst case of all, who looks to pass as they leave school are the most important problems if their football team won the last date or if you can fight with the neighbor who you think it looked bad the other day .Machismo (applied to both sexes): To claim that he can fight harder and break things outside is a popular model is truly worrying. The one who can disrespect adults and their peers in a more "original" and insulting is going to be the leader of their group and this is a typical culture of our country.The ignorance: One who can speak worse, with the minimum amount of words, grammatical errors, which makes fun of reading a book that entertains, or rather hear that Johan Sebastian Bach and Ludwig van Beethoven instead of cumbia slum is a typical teenager of today, and that's scary.
 
In short: to be a teenager today popular and "normal" we must be lazy, ignorant, stupid, inconsiderate, hostile, violent and uneducated.

 
2 .-Ideals are resulting values. With the correct person is oriented towards the right ideals and knows how to defend them. But if a person, to cite a common example, called himself a supporter of socialist ideas because the Communist guerrilla Che Guevara and Maradona was said that Che is the true hero of Argentina, forgetting Jose de San Martin, who freed us from Spanish empire and did not forget our brothers Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Latin American or that despite the many wrong things and educated the people of Argentina made sure that future generations have access to free public education ...without detracting from the merits of these claims of Ernesto "Che" Guevara, or even worse, but reveres Che is against communism, should be concerned about the timeliness of the teenage generation and future generations because of the inconsistency that is affecting you.
 
As a teenager I intend to take me and my fellow basic ideals: freedom, justice, education, culture, democracy, etc.. But I urge not to flag it or detract from the ideals of others.

 
3 .-Role models that  adopted teens are football players (not detract from the profession, sport or players, just my opinion that seek fame and fortune the easy way is what motivates young people to idolize football players), or groups of slum cumbia apologists of drugs and crime, or bands flying the rebel without cause and without foundation, or bands who have no other goal but to sell records and are absent from all kind of ideologies of any kind that lead adolescents to live in an uncertain world, oblivious to the cruel reality that affects the world today, or characters that are now participants in a scandal, and so on.Any model that relates the effort, labor, justice, peace, etc.. are forgotten by the youth. This is explained by the lack of values ​​and ideals.

 
4 .-The current interest denotes citizenshipRelating this to the above are the main problem of our country. Adolescents with access to education subtract interest and importance to the real current problems such as hunger, injustice, immorality, and so on. unbridled fun and prioritized, lack of control, lack of responsibilities and excesses of all kinds.

 
5/6.-If there is interest in current problems, there is no real interest in finding solutions. This is the case in our country, we can have fun while the other problems disappear. That is the concept that brought our country to the current situation and will be the cause of world destruction, and that while we have fun with beer, marijuana and women, those with real power is the power responsible for ensuring poorer the rest of the planet making uneducated and "fun" until one day the possibilities to have fun away and that's where we put the hue and cry and blame the politicians inefficient because we can not even eat.

 
7 .-If you do not know history, we can not know the errors of mankind. So we can not avoid making the same mistakes our ancestors. A quick glance through history we find situations that would swear have lived, to give an accessible example: when people in power were a lot of money the government laws favoring the rich, and when in government laws were kings favored the nobility, if however in both cases the laws forget the working class (Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth century). At present, if in power are people a lot of money (and you can not talk about government, because they do not represent the real power) laws favor the people in power and harms the working class working as true slaves (this is not very far from reality), and no monarch in power is the law favors people with economic power ....

 
8 .-"Teenagers today are a rude ... "As they say some of our neighbors and acquaintances ... but, unlike what they think these ladies are not because they are insulted, that's ignorance. They are rude because they are not interested in the 7 points above. They are rude because they are not interested in improving as people or improve the world. And they are rude because nobody was in charge of educating them properly.

 
Final conclusion: Today's teens have no solution? No, we are simply lost and need to find a way. Is that what way? The road is a concern but not despair about the current problems. Education, culture, respect and responsibility are very important factors to begin addressing the current problems. These factors should be proportional to the age of adolescents. Is God a way to find the way?Yes, all religions agree that God, Allah, Buddha, Jehovah, etc.. are the source of all good things on the ground then fulfilling God's will be doing good to the planet. But do not expect divine intervention in the problems because we're taking a big disappointment. God is not the solution to the problems, but his will, which should be the will of all men, because after all, who can not come to love the progress of humanity?
            
Today's teens have the same capacity as adolescents fifty years ago, and we have scientific advances that make our lives easier. The problem is orientation. We are confused, and guilt is not just ours. We can say, "is a rude" if we educated you are. If humanity destroys itself is not the fault of future generations, but those who have power at the expense of the oppressed classes, and make sure to take away the possibility of changing condition in the future because the greed and not invade want to lose the power they already have, instead, want to increase their power at the expense of us all current and future generations.

 
Julian E. Berg, 16, student of the College of Our Lady of Mercy, San Nicolas, Argentina

domingo, 21 de agosto de 2011

HOME

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lbSOLBMUvIE

Brazil wins the FIFA U-20 World Cup championship in Bogota




Reuter


After opening the scoring in the fifth minute, Oscar struck a second half equalizer that sent the match to extra-time after full-time saw the teams deadlocked at 2-2.
Oscar got the winner in the 111th minute, lofting a ball from the right that arched over Portugal keeper Mika and gave Brazil a fifth under-20 World Cup title after their runner-up finish two years ago.
Although Brazil started the favorites over a Portuguese team seeking a third under-20 crown, the match was tightly contested throughout.
Oscar broke through in the fifth with a free kick into the corner that caught Mika napping. It was the first goal surrendered by Portugal in the tournament.
Nelson Oliveira set up Portugal's equalizer with a cross that Alex fired home in the ninth.
And Oliveira put Portugal ahead in the 59th, breaking free on the right and running past a defender to beat Brazil keeper Gabriel with a sharply angled shot.
Brazil's equalizer came in the 78th minute when Mika blocked a shot by Dudu, only for Oscar to turn and slot the ball home.
The result avenged the result of the 1991 final, when Portugal beat Brazil on penalties.
Earlier Saturday, Mexico beat France 3-1 in the third-place playoff.
Ulises Davila, Jorge Enriquez and Edson Rivera scored for Mexico after Alexandre Lacazette put France ahead in the eighth minute.