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I Am Troy Davis

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Progressive rapper Jasiri X released a new video on September 15, “I Am Troy Davis (T.R.O.Y.),” highlighting the plight of a man who is scheduled to be executed on the 21st by the state of Georgia. While tea party “patriots” are cheering the death penalty at Republican presidential debates, this case highlights the primary problems with the death penalty — the possibility of executing an innocent and the racial disparities in the application of the penalty. It is clear that there is a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of Davis — so much so that one of the jurors in the original case has publicly stated that if she knew then what she knows now, she would’ve voted “not guilty.” Among the key problems with the case: The case against him consisted of witness testimony that was full of inconsistencies. Since then, all but two of the state’s non-police witnesses from the trial have recanted their testimony — and many have sworn in affidavits that police pressured or coerced them into testifying or signing statements. You can learn more about the case at www.TroyAnthonyDavis.org and take action at Color of Change sending a letter to the Georgia Board of Pardons and Parole. Act quickly, the execution is scheduled for next week.

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Serena Williams At Made In Polaroid Charity Auction: Hit Or Miss? (PHOTOS, POLL)

Serena Williams made headlines this week for an unflattering display of hot-headedness, in which she loudly harangued a chair umpire during her U.S. Open finals match… and was fined $2,000 for the “verbal abuse” incident. But last night she had the opportunity to make a more flattering statement — fashion-wise, that is. The 29-year-old tennis star celebrated the conclusion of the U.S. Open as well as New York Fashion Week at the Made In Polaroid Charity Auction, attended by big fashion names such as Patrick Demarchelier, Stefano Tonchi and Brad Goreski as well as Sting. For the occasion Williams let her hair down (or, more accurately, out), showing off the hot pink streak in her curls. She donned a tight blue dress with zebra-stripe detail across the bodice and paired the body-con look with basic black pumps and silver bangles on both wrists. Does the look work for the tennis pro or do Serena’s choices prove unflattering once again? Take a look at the pics below! MORE:

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Reno Air Show Plane Crash: Airplane Crashes Into Stands At National Championship Air Races In Nevada (VIDEO)

By SCOTT SONNER and MARTIN GRIFFITH, The Associated Press RENO, Nev. (AP) — As thousands watched in horror, a World War II-era fighter plane competing in a Nevada event described as a car race in the sky suddenly pitched upward, rolled and did a nose-dive toward the crowded grandstand. The plane, flown by a 74-year-old veteran Hollywood stunt pilot, then slammed into the concrete in a section of VIP box seats and blew to pieces in front the pilot’s family and a tight-knit group of friends who attend the annual event in Reno. “It absolutely disintegrated,” said Tim O’Brien of Grass Valley Calif., who attends the races every year. “I’ve never seen anything like that before.” Three people were killed and more than 50 injured amid a horrific scene strewn with smoking debris. Authorities say it appears a mechanical failure with the P-51 Mustang – a class of fighter plane that can fly in excess of 500 mph – was to blame. Some credit the pilot, Jimmy Leeward, with preventing the crash from being far more deadly. Leeward was among those killed. “If he wouldn’t have pulled up, he would have taken out the entire bleacher section,” said Tim Linville, 48, of Reno, who watched the race with his two daughters. Left in its wake were bloodied bodies spread across the area as people tended to the victims and ambulances rushed to the scene. Video of the aftermath shows a man with his leg severed at the knee. The National Championship Air Races have been deadly before. Two pilots died at the event in 1994. And organizers softened two of the curves pilots negotiate after two more pilots crashed into nearby neighborhoods in 1998 and 1999. In 2007 and 2008, four pilots were killed at the races, prompting local school officials to consider barring student field trips to the event. Planes at the yearly event fly wingtip-to-wingtip as low as 50 feet off the sagebrush at speeds sometimes surpassing 500 mph. Pilots follow an oval path around pylons, with distances and speeds depending on the class of aircraft. Mike Houghton, president and CEO of Reno Air Races, said at a news conference hours after the crash that there appeared to be a “problem with the aircraft that caused it to go out of control.” He did not elaborate. He said the rest of the races have been canceled as the National Transportation Safety Board investigates. “The way I see it, if he did do something about this, he saved hundreds if not thousands of lives because he was able to veer that plane back toward the tarmac,” said Johnny Norman, who was at the show. O’Brien, who is chairman of an air show in his hometown in California, was photographing Friday’s races when the crash occurred. He said the P-51 Mustang was racing six other planes, and was in the process of moving from third place into second, when it pitched violently upward, rolled and then headed straight down. From the photos he took, O’Brien said it looked like a piece of the plane’s tail called a “trim tab” had fallen off. He believes that’s what caused the plane’s sudden climb. When the aircraft hit the ground, there was a “big explosion but no fire,” O’Brien said. “The propeller (was) spinning very fast, and there was a lot of mass coming down all at once,” he said. It was a “very violent impact.” Afterward, a number of people were standing around, and “all we could do was hug each other,” he said. Maureen Higgins of Alabama, who has been coming to the air races for 16 years, said the pilot was on his third lap when he lost control. “Obviously he had no control. He was wobbling. He went upside down and then he headed straight for us, straight at the grandstand.” She was sitting about 30 yards away from the crash and watched in horror as the man in front of her started bleeding after debris hit him in the head. “I saw body parts and gore like you wouldn’t believe it. I’m talking an arm, a leg,” Higgins said “The alive people were missing body parts. I am not kidding you. It was gore. Unbelievable gore.” Renown Regional Medical Center spokeswoman Kathy Carter confirmed that two others besides the pilot died, but did not provide their identities. Stephanie Kruse, a spokeswoman for the Regional Emergency Medical Service Authority, told The Associated Press that emergency crews took a total of 56 injury victims to three hospitals. She said they also observed a number of people being transported by private vehicle, and those people were not included in the count. Kruse said of the total 56, at the time of transport, 15 were considered in critical condition, 13 were serious condition with potentially life-threatening injuries and 28 were non-serious or non-life threatening. “This is a very large incident, probably one of the largest this community has seen in decades,” Kruse told The Associated Press. “The community is pulling together to try to deal with the scope of it. The hospitals have certainly geared up and staffed up to deal with it.” Gov. Brian Sandoval noted at a news conference that area hospitals were in need of blood in the wake of the crash, and he encouraged people to donate. Among the dead was Leeward, of Ocala, Fla., a veteran airman and movie stunt pilot who named his P-51 Mustang fighter plane the “Galloping Ghost,” according to Houghton said. Officials earlier said Leeward was 80. Leeward, the owner of the Leeward Air Ranch Racing Team, was a well-known racing pilot. His website says he has flown more than 120 races and served as a stunt pilot for numerous movies, including “Amelia” and “Cloud Dancer.” In an interview with the Ocala (Fla.) Star-Banner last year, he described how he has flown 250 types of planes and has a particular fondness for the P-51, which came into the war relatively late and was used as a long-range bomber escort over Europe. Among the famous pilots of the hot new fighter was WWII double ace Chuck Yeager. “They’re more fun. More speed, more challenge. Speed, speed and more speed,” Leeward said. Leeward talked about racing strategy in an interview Thursday with LiveAirShow TV while standing in front of his plane. “Right now I think we’ve calculated out, we’re as fast as anybody in the field, or maybe even a little faster,” he said. “But uh, to start with, we didn’t really want to show our hand until about Saturday or Sunday. We’ve been playing poker since last Monday. And uh so, it’s ready, we’re ready to show a couple more cards, so we’ll see on Friday what happens, and on Saturday we’ll probably go ahead and play our third ace, and on Sunday we’ll do our fourth ace.” Houghton described Leeward as a good friend. “Everybody knows him. It’s a tight-knit family. He’s been here for a long, long time,” Houghton said. He also said Leeward was a “very qualified, very experienced pilot” who was in good medical condition. He suggested Leeward would have made every effort to avoid casualties on the ground if he knew he was going to crash. “If it was in Jimmy’s power, he would have done everything he possibly could,” Houghton said. The National Championship Air Races draws thousands of people to Reno every September to watch various military and civilian planes race. The FAA and air race organizers spend months preparing for air races as they develop a plan involving pilot qualification, training and testing along with a layout for the course. The FAA inspects pilots’ practice runs and brief pilots on the route maneuvers and emergency procedures. Sen. Harry Reid, Rep. Mark Amodei and other officials issued statements Friday saying they were shocked and saddened by the crash. “My thoughts are with the families of those who have lost their lives and with those who were wounded in this horrific tragedy,” Reid said. “I am so grateful to our first responders for their swift action and will continue to monitor this situation as it develops.” ___ Associated Press writers Cristina Silva and Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas contributed to this report.

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Arian Foster is once again our lead story, and then we’ll talk about everyone else. Let’s hope this doesn’t become the Foster on Friday Wrap for 16 full weeks. Houston’s star tailback did something in all three practice days and seems likely to play at Miami, though Gary Kubiak isn’t sure Foster will receive his normal 60 snaps . The hamstring probably isn’t 100 percent yet. My guess is that …

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Arian Foster is once again our lead story, and then we’ll talk about everyone else. Let’s hope this doesn’t become the Foster on Friday Wrap for 16 full weeks. Houston’s star tailback did something in all three practice days and seems likely to play at Miami, though Gary Kubiak isn’t sure Foster will receive his normal 60 snaps . The hamstring probably isn’t 100 percent yet. My guess is that …

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Reno Nevada

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Reno Nevada

Plane crashes into crowd at Reno air show .w Spectators describe Reno air show crash. Plane crash Reno air show 39 Admitted to Area Hospitals After Ai. anthonyfergenII says: reno nevada http://t.co/JuIlidtG 3 dead, 56 hurt in terrible Reno , Nevada , air show crash !

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No Doubt Delays Album

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No Doubt Delays Album

No Doubt Delays Album Release naxeer_gwandou says: “@ nollywood_buzz : #celebritynews No Doubt Delays Album Release http://t.co/EI1sYhIb “

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John Mayer

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John Mayer

John Mayer St. Patrick’s Day by Iván Olaya Nico – Waiting on the World to Change Neon John Mayer (Cover) ulayusuf says: Half of my heart- John Mayer ft Taylor Swift

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ViviTouch haptic technology hands-on: electroactive polymer giving a ‘high definition feel’

Haptic feedback isn’t exactly something that’d blow people’s mind these days, with most mobile devices and gaming controllers already packing a little vibrator to spice up one’s gaming experience. While these motors do the job just fine for delivering the sensation of large engines and explosions, their monotonic performance and relatively high minimum output threshold means they can’t reproduce finer vibration. For instance, you wouldn’t be able to feel a guitar string fade away after a strum, nor would you feel the finer end of a spring recoil. This is where Bayer MaterialScience’s ViviTouch — previously dubbed Reflex — tries to fill the void. For those who aren’t familiar, the magic behind ViviTouch is its electroactive polymer (or EAP in short) — imagine a thin sheet that consists of two electrode layers sandwiching a dielectric elastomer film, and when a voltage is applied, the two attracting electrodes compress the entire sheet. This slim, low-powered ViviTouch actuator module can be placed underneath an inertial mass (usually a battery) on a tray, thus amplifying the haptic feedback produced by the host device’s audio signal between 50Hz and 300Hz (with a 5ms response time). Gallery: ViviTouch haptic technology hands-on Continue reading ViviTouch haptic technology hands-on: electroactive polymer giving a ‘high definition feel’ ViviTouch haptic technology hands-on: electroactive polymer giving a ‘high definition feel’ originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 10:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Blackburn Rovers 4-3 Arsenal | Premier League match report

Blackburn Rovers ended up delivering on Chris Samba’s promise to make Arsenal’s life a living hell, something of a surprise given that for almost an hour the visitors looked to have only the weather to worry about. Arsenal twice took the lead here and should never have lost so heavily, yet once again they contributed to their own downfall to the extent that the supposedly unhappy Blackburn fans were speculating before the end that this could be another 8-2. The soggiest Saturday of the season so far all but washed away the protest march against Steve Kean before kick-off. A few hundred bedraggled supporters made their point as they were escorted to the ground by police, and perhaps even succeeded in showing the depth of their feeling by braving a downpour, though there was little sign of dissent inside the ground, and even on the concourses home fans were debating with each other whether Kean deserved more loyalty. When a clever ball forward by Alex Song split a statuesque Rovers defence to allow Gervinho to claim his first league goal for Arsenal after only 10 minutes there were still no dissatisfied rumblings from the terraces, and to their credit Blackburn managed to give their fans something to cheer about by getting back on terms midway through the first half. This time it was Yakubu Ayegbeni’s turn to score a first goal for his new club, and though the former Everton striker was slightly fortunate to be in the right place for Junior Hoilett as he wandered back from an offside position, there was nothing wrong with the deft single touch that stranded Wojciech Szczesny. Players were beginning to lose their footing at this point as rain hammered down from a still-darkening sky, though Arsenal produced some of their brightest football and could have scored through Andrey Arshavin and Gervinho in addition to the goal from Mikel Arteta that restored their lead by the interval. Another first-time scorer for a new club, all Arteta had to do was crash the ball home from near the penalty spot after Aaron Ramsey’s shrewd run and perfect square ball had created the opportunity. So Arsenal had little to excuse what befell them at the start of the second half, especially as their inability to defend set pieces reached ludicrous new heights when Song turned Rubén Rochina’s free-kick past his own goalkeeper under no particular pressure. Now trying to weather two storms at once, with the Rovers fans noisily backing their side. Arsenal simply went from bad to worse. Another set piece led to another goal for Yakubu, standing level on the six-yard line to get the crucial last touch to Steven Nzonzi’s low cross after collecting a corner at the back of the area, then almost laughably Arsenal contributed a second own goal. There was not a lot Laurent Koscielny could do to avoid diverting the ball into his own net once Szczesny had failed to cut out Martin Olsson’s firmly struck cutback from the byline, but the way Yakubu, of all people, had sent Olsson skipping down the right to easily evade Johan Djourou’s rushed challenge and allow the substitute to do as he pleased with the whole of the Arsenal half to run at will give Arsène Wenger sleepless nights. Paul Robinson made a couple of good saves before Marouane Chamakh’s well-taken goal five minutes from time gave the scoreline some respectability from Arsenal’s point of view and a better indication of the balance of the game, though conceding four goals to Blackburn is almost as bad as shipping eight at Old Trafford. That’s not to take anything away from a spirited and energetic Blackburn performance. This always promised to be a day for Kean to remember, and amid incredible scenes the end, after Per Mertesacker had headed over and Robin van Persie struck a shot at Robinson with stoppage time chances to claim a point, it was. Premier League 2011-12 Blackburn Rovers Arsenal Premier League Paul Wilson guardian.co.uk

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