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Admissions officers say one of their main goals for the next few years is to recruit students who pay more in tuition, according to a Chronicle of Higher Education survey of 462 top admissions officials at nonprofit universities. Survey respondents said they placed a higher priority on recruiting out-of-state students–who would pay higher tuitions than

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As expected, the Federal Reserve has announced a new program designed to prod the faltering economy into life. The central bank will buy $400 billion worth of longer-term Treasury bills by the end of June 2012, and will sell an equal amount of shorter-term Treasuries. The goal is to encourage borrowing by pushing down longer-term

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Raw Video: Mich. Car Bomb Blast Injures 3

A car bomb caused a powerful explosion on a Michigan street that seriously injured a father and his two sons, who survived the blast and fire that turned their vehicle into a blackened hunk of metal, a federal official said Wednesday. (Sept. 21)

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Troy Davis is scheduled to be murdered by the state of Georgia tonight at 7pm EDT. I say “murdered” rather than “executed” because murder is what it really is. It is the intentional taking of another person’s life by the state. There is no bigger government than this. None. And yet, it is because Georgia is a conservative state that it is more or less assured that a man who may possibly be innocent, around whose guilt there is much doubt, will not receive any mercy from the state. Slate: The Troy Davis case was staged—pure theater. I do not mean “staged” because the case has attracted worldwide attention and high-profile supporters. Nor do I refer here to the drama surrounding the Georgia Board of Pardons, which at the 11th hour denied clemency again this morning, so that Davis faces execution tomorrow—despite powerful evidence of his innocence. By “staged” I mean that the eyewitness evidence at the core of his original criminal trial was, quite literally, staged by the police. The federal court that finally reviewed evidence of Davis’ innocence agreed “this case centers on eyewitness testimony.” Yet that court put to one side the fact that seven of the nine witnesses at the trial have now recanted, and new witnesses have implicated another man. The court did so while failing to carefully examine how eyewitnesses ultimately came to identify Davis as the man who shot a police officer intervening in a fight at a Burger King parking lot. The Troy Davis case—which raises a wide array of flaws in our death penalty system, our post-conviction system, and the politics of criminal justice—is thus also a case about malleability of eyewitness memory and police misconduct. I will personally attest to the fallibility of eyewitness testimony . I had the order of events right, I had one of the players right, but I had the victim wrong. And I had pictures taken in real time! And yet Troy Davis will not get that benefit of the doubt. To review, there is not one iota of physical evidence. Not one. No gunpowder residue on the hands, no ownership of the weapon, nothing. There is confusing, contradictory eyewitness testimony. Troy Davis has volunteered to take a polygraph test before they kill him. I believe it will make no difference. Davis will be executed, because that’s what some people think he deserves. But my original question remains. Do we, as a society, deserve to be stained with the blood of a possibly-innocent man ? What message does it send to choose death over life in prison? And as Rachel Maddow points out in the video at the top, they are going to inject drugs into his system that aren’t even intended for humans. When they do that, we will all be Troy Davis . I believe all capital punishment is wrong. That’s my bias. I do not believe the state should ever have the right to decide which of its citizens lives or dies. When they kill a prisoner in my name, they toss his blood in my face. When they kill a prisoner where there is as much doubt as there is in Troy Davis’ case, they toss it in all our faces. They are calling injustice, justice . My heart goes out to the family of the victim of this crime — the MacPhail family. They lost a loved one, and should be respected. But as one family member to another, I also caution them to realize they will not feel as though justice has been done when they inject Davis and kill him. They will only feel the loss they felt the minute before he was injected. There is no closure. There is only loss. [The AJC has a FAQ about Davis' legal avenues . There are none. The only way this murder will not happen is if prison employees refuse to administer the injection.]

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NYT’s Anti-Israel Reporter Blames ‘Right-Wing’ U.S. for Palestinian Woes

New York Times Middle East reporter Neil MacFarquhar brought his usual anti-Israel slant to his Monday New York Times story on the Palestinians seeking United Nations membership: “ Palestinians Turn To U.N., Where Partition Began .” The Palestinians see the membership application as a last-ditch attempt to preserve the two-state solution in the face of ever-encroaching Israeli settlements, as well as a desperate move to shake up the negotiations that they feel have achieved little after 20 years of American oversight. The question is whether trying to bring the intractable problem back to its international roots will somehow provide the needed jolt to get negotiations moving again. …. Palestinians believe that their position has gradually eroded over the past 20 years, when the United States began monopolizing the negotiations with the 1991 Madrid peace conference. They remain under occupation, the number of Jewish settlers has tripled to around 600,000, and they have far less freedom of movement in the territories ostensibly meant to become their state. MacFarquhar skimmed over the anti-Israel hatred emanating from the United Nations: Lopsided votes against Israel are not new to the United Nations . But this time the Palestinians are hoping they can muster enough weighty support from Europe to overcome right-wing domestic constraints in the United States and Israel that have helped stall negotiations for at least 18 months . So far the Europeans remain divided among themselves, however. MacFarquhar often portrays events in the Middle East from an anti-Israel perspective. In August 2006 he celebrated the “ Disney touch ” of a leader of the anti-Israel terrorist group Hezbollah. He notoriously ranted about “ Bush’s bombs ” going to help Israel on the July 31, 2006 edition of the talk show Charlie Rose: You know, it just — you saw those heart-rendering pictures in Qana yesterday after the Israeli air strike. And every one of the reports on the Arab satellite channels were saying, you know, this is American bombs that killed these children. And you know, I have lived in this region for a really long time, since I was a little boy, really. And if you talk to people my age, I'm in my mid-40s and who grew up in poor countries like Morocco, you know, they will tell you that when they went to school in the mornings, they used to get milk, and they called it Kennedy milk because it was the Americans that sent them milk. And in 40 years, we have gone from Kennedy milk to the Bush administration rushing bombs to this part of the world. And it just erodes and erodes and erodes America's reputation.

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Troy Davis is hours from death, but he’s not giving up. The Georgia death row inmate, who claims he was wrongly convicted of killing a police officer in 1989, wants to take a polygraph test. “Mr. Davis believes he is innocent and he wants to show it,” his lawyer said…

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A powerful typhoon made landfall in Japan today, bringing winds of up to 100 miles per hour and causing floods that have killed at least five people . Typhoon Roke is on course to hit Japan’s tsunami-ravaged northeastern coast, and flooding there may cause radioactive water from the Fukushima plant to…

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After more than two years in an Iranian prison, American hikers Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal could be freed at any moment. Their lawyer said this morning they would be released within hours, after a vacationing judge returned and the second signature needed to free them on $1 million bail…

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Scientists track falling satellite expected to hit Earth this week

Nasa estimates the odds of someone being struck by a falling part of the spacecraft at one in 3,200 The world’s major space agencies, armed forces and security officials have come together to monitor the heavens for a bus-sized spacecraft that will fall to Earth this week. In an event prompted by the rule that what goes up must come down, the defunct satellite will plummet through the atmosphere, burn and break apart, and scatter hunks of steel, aluminium and titanium over a distance of hundreds of miles. Much of Nasa’s nearly six-tonne Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) will disintegrate as it hurtles through the atmosphere, but the space agency anticipates that 26 potentially hazardous parts, weighing a total of 532kg, could remain intact and impact on the surface. The debris will spread over an estimated 500 miles. Among the parts expected to survive the fiery re-entry are four titanium fuel tanks, four steel flywheel rims and an aluminium structure that alone weighs 158kg. Depending on their size and shape, the components will strike at speeds of between 55mph (90kph) and 240mph (385kph). Radar stations around the world, including RAF Fylingdales in north Yorkshire, are tracking the object and expect it to re-enter the atmosphere between Thursday and Saturday, but there is little chance of predicting with any accuracy where the debris will fall. An update from Nasa on Wednesday said the satellite was 120 miles above the Earth and due to impact on Friday US time. The agency will issue further updates 24 hours before re-entry, then at 12, six and two hours before re-entry . The spacecraft’s orbit puts a great swathe of the planet in its path between the latitudes of 57 degrees north and south. Mainland Britain lies between 50 and 60 degrees North. The satellite spends more time at higher latitudes, so there is a slightly higher risk in those regions. Most likely by far is that the remains of the satellite will drop into the ocean, or be strewn across one of the planet’s most desolate regions, such as Siberia, the Australian outback or the Canadian tundra. Noting that safety was its top priority, Nasa declared the odds of someone being struck by a falling part of the spacecraft at one in 3,200. There are no confirmed injuries from man-made space debris and no record of significant property damage from a falling satellite. “Most of the Earth’s surface is covered by water or is uninhabited, so nobody tends to even see this kind of debris when it does land,” Hugh Lewis, a space debris expert at Southampton University , told the Guardian. “Those pieces that do survive re-entry have slowed down a lot, but they are still travelling quite fast. Because of their size, they would do significant damage if they hit a structure or a person, but the chances of that happening are remote,” he added. When Nasa’s Skylab fell to Earth in 1979, the space agency put the risk of personal injury at 1 in 152, with the odds of the defunct space station striking a city much higher. The partially-controlled Skylab missed its expected impact site in South Africa and crash-landed in Australia. An organisation of major space agencies known as the Inter-agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC) takes a lead role in monitoring threats from falling space junk and is running back-to-back simulations to work out when, and roughly where, the spacecraft’s remains will impact. If the IADC or the Ministry of Defence, via RAF Fylingdales, found that the UK was at risk, they would inform the Cabinet Office civil contingencies committee , which is responsible for alerting the emergency services. “There is a limit to what you can do in response, because you cannot give categorical information on where something is going to land. It would be irresponsible to order an evacuation, because you would put more people at risk than would ever be in danger from falling space debris,” said Richard Crowther, a space surveillance expert at the UK Space Agency . “Fortunately, we are a small target compared with other landmasses.” Predicting where the debris will land is difficult for two main reasons. Unpredictable rises in the sun’s activity warm the atmosphere and make it expand, which causes the spacecraft to experience more drag and re-enter more quickly. Another problem comes from uncertainties in the tracking of how the spacecraft disintegrates, which means that even just a few hours before impact, the region at risk will cover several thousand kilometres. Under an international treaty, governments are obliged to return any parts of the satellite that are found to the owner, in this case Nasa. The space agency urged anyone who suspected they had found debris from the spacecraft not to touch it and inform the local police. The satellite was launched in 1991 aboard the space shuttle Discovery and decommissioned in 2005. Wherever the spacecraft lands, it will give the relevant authorities valuable experience ahead of a potentially more dangerous event in early November, when the German Rosat satellite re-enters at 28,000kph . The German space agency, DLR, said up to 30 pieces of the spacecraft might survive re-entry, with a combined mass of more than one-and-a-half tonnes. Satellites Space Nasa Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

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Scientists track falling satellite expected to hit Earth this week

Nasa estimates the odds of someone being struck by a falling part of the spacecraft at one in 3,200 The world’s major space agencies, armed forces and security officials have come together to monitor the heavens for a bus-sized spacecraft that will fall to Earth this week. In an event prompted by the rule that what goes up must come down, the defunct satellite will plummet through the atmosphere, burn and break apart, and scatter hunks of steel, aluminium and titanium over a distance of hundreds of miles. Much of Nasa’s nearly six-tonne Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) will disintegrate as it hurtles through the atmosphere, but the space agency anticipates that 26 potentially hazardous parts, weighing a total of 532kg, could remain intact and impact on the surface. The debris will spread over an estimated 500 miles. Among the parts expected to survive the fiery re-entry are four titanium fuel tanks, four steel flywheel rims and an aluminium structure that alone weighs 158kg. Depending on their size and shape, the components will strike at speeds of between 55mph (90kph) and 240mph (385kph). Radar stations around the world, including RAF Fylingdales in north Yorkshire, are tracking the object and expect it to re-enter the atmosphere between Thursday and Saturday, but there is little chance of predicting with any accuracy where the debris will fall. An update from Nasa on Wednesday said the satellite was 120 miles above the Earth and due to impact on Friday US time. The agency will issue further updates 24 hours before re-entry, then at 12, six and two hours before re-entry . The spacecraft’s orbit puts a great swathe of the planet in its path between the latitudes of 57 degrees north and south. Mainland Britain lies between 50 and 60 degrees North. The satellite spends more time at higher latitudes, so there is a slightly higher risk in those regions. Most likely by far is that the remains of the satellite will drop into the ocean, or be strewn across one of the planet’s most desolate regions, such as Siberia, the Australian outback or the Canadian tundra. Noting that safety was its top priority, Nasa declared the odds of someone being struck by a falling part of the spacecraft at one in 3,200. There are no confirmed injuries from man-made space debris and no record of significant property damage from a falling satellite. “Most of the Earth’s surface is covered by water or is uninhabited, so nobody tends to even see this kind of debris when it does land,” Hugh Lewis, a space debris expert at Southampton University , told the Guardian. “Those pieces that do survive re-entry have slowed down a lot, but they are still travelling quite fast. Because of their size, they would do significant damage if they hit a structure or a person, but the chances of that happening are remote,” he added. When Nasa’s Skylab fell to Earth in 1979, the space agency put the risk of personal injury at 1 in 152, with the odds of the defunct space station striking a city much higher. The partially-controlled Skylab missed its expected impact site in South Africa and crash-landed in Australia. An organisation of major space agencies known as the Inter-agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC) takes a lead role in monitoring threats from falling space junk and is running back-to-back simulations to work out when, and roughly where, the spacecraft’s remains will impact. If the IADC or the Ministry of Defence, via RAF Fylingdales, found that the UK was at risk, they would inform the Cabinet Office civil contingencies committee , which is responsible for alerting the emergency services. “There is a limit to what you can do in response, because you cannot give categorical information on where something is going to land. It would be irresponsible to order an evacuation, because you would put more people at risk than would ever be in danger from falling space debris,” said Richard Crowther, a space surveillance expert at the UK Space Agency . “Fortunately, we are a small target compared with other landmasses.” Predicting where the debris will land is difficult for two main reasons. Unpredictable rises in the sun’s activity warm the atmosphere and make it expand, which causes the spacecraft to experience more drag and re-enter more quickly. Another problem comes from uncertainties in the tracking of how the spacecraft disintegrates, which means that even just a few hours before impact, the region at risk will cover several thousand kilometres. Under an international treaty, governments are obliged to return any parts of the satellite that are found to the owner, in this case Nasa. The space agency urged anyone who suspected they had found debris from the spacecraft not to touch it and inform the local police. The satellite was launched in 1991 aboard the space shuttle Discovery and decommissioned in 2005. Wherever the spacecraft lands, it will give the relevant authorities valuable experience ahead of a potentially more dangerous event in early November, when the German Rosat satellite re-enters at 28,000kph . The German space agency, DLR, said up to 30 pieces of the spacecraft might survive re-entry, with a combined mass of more than one-and-a-half tonnes. Satellites Space Nasa Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

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