Monday, January 3rd, 2011
Stephan: This is the latest on the water war trend. Let me say it again: Water is destiny.
The giggles started when the seventh journalist in a row said that his question was for Egypt’s water and irrigation minister, Mohamed Nasreddin Allam.
The non-Egyptian media gave him a bit of a hammering at last week’s talks in Addis Ababa for the nine countries that the Nile passes through.
Allam bared his teeth when a Kenyan journalist accused him of hiding behind ‘colonial-era treaties
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Sunday, January 2nd, 2011
Stephan: At last an honest non-activist jurist who respects citizen civil rights.
Police in Delaware may soon be unable to use global positioning systems (GPS) to keep tabs on a suspect unless they have a court-signed warrant, thanks to a recent ruling by a superior court judge who cited famed author George Orwell in her decision.
In striking down evidence obtained through warrantless GPS tracking, Delaware Judge Jan R. Jurden wrote that ‘an Orwellian state is now technologically feasible,’ adding that ‘without adequate judicial preservation of privacy, there is nothing to protect our citizens from being tracked 24/7.’
The ruling goes against a federal appeals court’s decision last summer that allowed warrantless tracking by GPS.
Jurden was ruling on the case of Michael D. Holden, who police say was pulled over with 10 lbs. of marijuana in his car last February. Holden was allegedly named by a DEA task force informant in 2009, and in early 2010, without obtaining a warrant, police placed a GPS device on his car, allowing them to follow him whenever he used the vehicle.
Police investigators say they had the GPS on Holden’s car for 20 days when they saw what they believed to be a cash-for-drugs exchange involving Holden in New Jersey. Police stopped him on a bridge crossing into […]
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Sunday, January 2nd, 2011
WASBIR HUSSAIN, - The Huffington Post
Stephan: This is just the beginning.
GAUHATI, India — In this humid, lush region where an important part of the world’s breakfast is born, the evidence of climate change is – literally – a weak tea.
Growers in tropical Assam state, India’s main tea growing region, say rising temperatures have led not only to a drop in production but to subtle, unwelcome changes in the flavor of their brews.
The area in northeastern India is the source of some of the finest black and British-style teas. Assam teas are notable for their heartiness, strength and body, and are often sold as ‘breakfast’ teas.
‘Earlier, we used to get a bright, strong cup. Now it’s not so,’ said L.P. Chaliha, a professional tea taster.
Rajib Barooah, a tea planter in Jorhat, Assam’s main tea growing district, agreed that the potent taste of Assam tea has weakened.
‘We are indeed concerned,’ he said. ‘Assam tea’s strong flavor is its hallmark.’
Tea growers want the Indian government to fund studies to examine the flavor fallout from climate change.
Assam produces nearly 55 percent of the tea crop in India, a nation that accounts for 31 percent of global tea production. But the region’s tea production has dipped significantly, and plantation owners fear it will drop further […]
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Sunday, January 2nd, 2011
STEPHANIE PAPPAS, Senior Writer - LiveScience
Stephan: We are killing ourselves with fat, and obesity is becoming 'normal.' On certain channels of cable television now, such as Hallmark, the people in the commercials, and the people on camera in the programs are increasingly obese. And what is Biggest Loser about?
The path toward obesity starts at a young age – even before babies transition to a solid diet, according to a new study.
Almost one-third of 9-month-olds are obese or overweight, as are 34 percent of 2-year-olds, according to the research, which looked at a nationally representative sample of children born in 2001. The study is one of the first to measure weight in the same group of very young children over time, said lead researcher Brian Moss, a sociologist at Wayne State University in Detroit. The results showed that starting out heavy puts kids on a trajectory to stay that way.
‘If you were overweight at nine months old, it really kind of sets the stage for you to remain overweight at two years,’ Moss told LiveScience.
Tracking obesity
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), childhood obesity has tripled over the last three decades. In 2008, 19.6 percent of kids between the ages of 6 and 11 were obese.
But less is known about obesity rates in very young children. In fact, researchers hesitate to label children that young as ‘obese.’
Recent studies have raised the alarm about particularly large babies, however. One 2009 paper published in the journal Pediatrics found […]
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Sunday, January 2nd, 2011
REEVE HAMILTON and JON MARCUS, - The New York Times/The Texas Tribune/The Hechinger Report
Stephan: Part of what is driving the Teabagger movement is the fear and discomfort arising from America becoming a majority non-white country; from which it follows our educational system is becoming majority nonwhite as well. And, as the multipolar world emerges from the collapse of the bipolar world we have known all our lives this same trend will only become magnified. Notably the younger generations suffer far less from these prejudices.The problem is principally the bias of older white conservatives with those enlarged Amagdylas.
In August, 60 years after the University of Texas admitted its first black student, the school welcomed the first freshman class in which white students were in the minority.
The University of Texas faces pressure to improve graduation rates amid tighter budgets as more minority students enroll.
The Texas Tribune
Expanded coverage of Texas is produced by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit news organization. To join the conversation about this article, go to texastribune.org.
White students, who accounted for 51 percent of U.T.’s freshman class in 2009, made up 48 percent in 2010. Black and Hispanic students represented about 5 percent and 23 percent, respectively, with Asians and other races making up the rest.
The state’s flagship university passed the demographic milestone earlier than some had anticipated, reflecting a similar shift that is rapidly taking place at other top-level educational institutions across the country.
Although the changing demographics of college campuses may be grabbing the headlines, the more compelling issue is how the growing number of minority students presents serious social and academic challenges for financially strapped universities, even as the schools are under pressure to boost graduation rates.
Nationally, 52 percent of Hispanic students and 58 percent of black students are unable to earn a […]
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