Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Brandon Jay McLaren Lands Role in Jeff Eastin's USA Pilot (omg!)

Brandon Jay McLaren | Photo Credits: Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic.com

The Killing's Brandon Jay McLaren will co-star in the untitled USA pilot from White Collar creator Jeff Eastin, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

McLaren, who played Rosie's doomed teacher on the AMC series, will play Dale Jakes, a quick-tempered U.S. Customs agent.

Gossip Girl's Aaron Tveit to star in USA pilot from White Collar creator

The hour-long drama sticks agents from various federal and local agencies, including the FBI and the LAPD, together in the same undercover house in Southern California. As previously announced, Gossip Girl grad Aaron Tveit will play an FBI agent just out of the academy.

While we have your attention: Any thoughts on The Killing's season finale still rumbling around inside your noggin?

Related Articles on TVGuide.com

  • Gossip Girl's Aaron Tveit to star in USA pilot from White Collar creator

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_brandon_jay_mclaren_lands_role_jeff_eastins_usa233500439/43750980/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/brandon-jay-mclaren-lands-role-jeff-eastins-usa-233500439.html

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Comedian Patrice O'Neal dies, had suffered stroke (AP)

NEW YORK ? Veteran stand-up comic Patrice O'Neal, who gained a wider following through TV and radio and helped roast Charlie Sheen, died Tuesday from complications of a stroke he suffered last month. He was 41.

O'Neal's manager, Jonathan Brandstein, said he died in a New York-area hospital.

"Many of us have lost a close and loved friend; all of us have lost a true comic genius," Brandstein said in a statement.

O'Neal appeared on Conan O'Brien's and David Letterman's TV shows and was a frequent guest on the "Opie & Anthony" radio show on Sirius XM. His performance was a highlight of the Comedy Central roast of Sheen, who had been fired from the hit CBS comedy "Two and a Half Men," in September.

Sheen said in a tweet Tuesday, "The entertainment world as well as the world at large lost a brilliant man."

He added, "Patrice had that rare `light' around him and inside of him. I only knew him for the few days leading up the Roast. Yet I will forever be inspired by his nobility, his grace and his epic talent. My tears today are for the tremendous loss to his true friends and loving family."

Other entertainers also mourned O'Neal on Twitter.

"RIP Patrice O'Neal. You made us laugh til we cried," comedian Sarah Silverman said.

Actor Jay Mohr said, "Just heard. Goodnight brother. Damn. Just ridiculous. Terrible. Beyond sad."

O'Neal had half-hour specials on Showtime and HBO and was the host of "Web Junk 20" on VH1. He appeared in numerous television shows including "Arrested Development," "Chappelle's Show" and "The Office."

O'Neal suffered a stroke on Oct. 19 after battling diabetes. He is survived by his wife, Vondecarlo, his stepdaughter, Aymilyon, his sister, Zinder, and his mother, Georgia.

Brandstein, his manager, said the family wished to thank "all of the fans and friends who have expressed an outpouring of love and support for Patrice these past weeks."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_en_tv/us_obit_o_neal

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peHUB ? Bob Ackerman: It's Time for Government Investing in ...

The American economy is a mess. Growth has been stuck at a tortoise-like pace for years. The unemployment rate continues to hover at nine percent or higher. And faltering research and development threatens not only innovation, but our future.

The good news is there?s a fix for this: The U.S. government simply needs to invest more in research and development, with a particular emphasis on fundamental scientific research. This specialty field is both the seed for innovation and the key to healthy, long-term economic growth.

Why the government and not the private sector? Attractive startups need the opportunity to build advancements in areas like energy, next-generation Internet, secure communications and nanotechnology. This requires patient capital, something the government has and the private for-profit sector doesn?t. While venture capitalists are capable of allocating investment capital when the risk/reward ratio is appropriate, only the government has the resources to support a multi-year, multi-decade commitment in scientific research.

The need for this sort of investment is compelling. The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a Washington-based policy think tank, recently measured ?the rate of change in innovative capacity? over the past decade among the top 40 industrialized nations. Essentially, that?s a look at how countries were preparing themselves to be more innovative in the future - and the U.S. ranked dead last.

The trends back up this disheartening ranking. Between 1981 and 2005, the share of industrial R&D in the U.S. done by companies with more than 25,000 employees dropped from 70.7% percent to 37.6% percent, according to the National Science Foundation, and it continues to fall. Smaller companies with fewer than 1,000 employees have picked up some of the slack growing from 4.4% to 24.1%), but hardly all of it - and they don?t have the resources to do long-term R&D.

Meanwhile, once-vaunted research laboratories such as Bell Labs and Xerox PARC have disappeared or downscaled, and universities increasingly are favoring sponsored R&D (in many cases with a short-term focus) as opposed to fundamental research.

The U.S. government still does some basic research. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the 16 other national laboratories regularly do very good and important work. The same is true of The National Science Foundation and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which developed the ARPAnet, the forerunner to the Internet.

Overall, though, U.S. government support for R&D ? much of it fundamental scientific research ? has declined by nearly two-thirds since the 1960s. The world, meanwhile, has become much more competitive and other countries have begun to take the lead in scientific research.

Consider the Russian Corporation of Nanotechnologies, which has a $5 billion budget. It develops and co-invests in nanotechnology industry projects with high commercial potential. It also helps build nanotechnology infrastructure, which includes centers of excellence, business incubators and early-stage investment funds. The Singapore government, meanwhile, has significantly increased its expenditures on R&D to three percent of the country?s GDP. This has included the building of the $360 million Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise (CREATE), whose first tenant was the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, MIT?s first overseas research institute.

The creation of The Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland was an especially big blow to America?s lead in high-energy physics research. Today, that device (which is backed by the European Organization for Nuclear Research) is the world?s largest and highest-energy particle accelerator addressing some of the most fundamental questions of physics. What?s maddening is those advances could have ? and should have - been happening in the U.S.

In the early ?90s, construction was underway on a U.S. government-backed Superconducting Super Collider in Texas, which would have been bigger than the Hardron Collider. After an outlay of nearly $2 billion, however, Congress canceled the project in late 1993, due, in part, to cost overruns and the perception that the collapse of the Soviet Union negated the need to prove the supremacy of American science.

Beyond R&D spending, an effective innovation policy also needs to include the support of key foundational technologies, which can be transferred to the private sector for commercialization and applied innovation.

The U.S. government, however, should not make bets on individual companies. In other words, just as it should not create the Nanotechnology Corporation of America, it also should not invest billions to make GM, Ford or Chrysler America?s alternative fuel vehicles champion. Instead, the government needs to invest in key broad technologies, which is an area where creative approaches can work.

In-Q-Tel, for example, is a not-for-profit venture capital firm chartered at the request of the Central Intelligence Agency to build a bridge between the CIA and a new set of technology innovators. Instead of being a gravy train, it?s an organization that requires funded startups to produce.

Portfolio companies have a deadline of 36 months to provide strong, near-term advantages to the intelligence community. So far, more than 165 companies have managed to deliver more than 350 technology solutions. In-Q-Tel also effectively leverages its direct investments by attracting a significant amount of private sector funds - often from traditional top-tier venture capital firms - to co-invest in its portfolio companies. For every $1 In-Q-Tel has invested in a company, the venture capital community has invested more than $9, helping to deliver crucial new capabilities at a lower cost to the government.

In-Q-Tel is clearly a winner ? and long-term scientific research investments by the federal government in more diversified non-intelligence arenas would be an excellent complement.
The benefits of this sort of enhanced long-term commitment to the fundamental science field are multifold. It will lead to life-changing breakthroughs. It will restore America?s innovative nature, making it a more imposing competitor on the global stage. And, as these technologies begin to bloom, it will also provide a nice ROI on taxpayer?s dollars.

Robert R. Ackerman, Jr. (Bob) is the Founder and Managing Director of Allegis Capital. All opinions expressed here are his own. He tweets here and blogs here.


Source: http://www.pehub.com/127238/bob-ackerman-it%E2%80%99s-time-for-government-investing-in-research-again/

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Clinical trial for muscular dystrophy demonstrates safety of customized gene therapy

Clinical trial for muscular dystrophy demonstrates safety of customized gene therapy [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Les Lang
llang@med.unc.edu
919-966-9366
University of North Carolina School of Medicine

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have shown that it is safe to cut and paste together different viruses in an effort to create the ultimate vehicle for gene therapy. In a phase I clinical trial, the investigators found no side effects from using a "chimeric" virus to deliver replacement genes for an essential muscle protein in patients with muscular dystrophy.

"This trial demonstrates that gene therapy is no longer limited by the viruses we find in nature, and should usher in the next generation of viral delivery systems for human gene transfer," said senior study author R. Jude Samulski, PhD, professor of pharmacology and director of the Gene Therapy Center at UNC. The study appears online in the Nov. 8, 2011 issue of the journal Molecular Therapy.

Through gene therapy, scientists treat diseases by correcting a patient's faulty genes. Most of the time, this approach involves commandeering a natural system for infecting and introducing new genes into cells; thus, the virus. But even though there are lots of relatively innocuous viruses available for this purpose, none of them are perfectly suited for gene therapy.

Rather than rely on nature, Samulski and his colleagues decided to engineer their dream gene therapy virus in the laboratory. First they chose the adeno-associated virus or AAV, a small nonpathogenic virus that most humans are exposed to at some point in life. They then took their favorite attributes from different forms of AAV such as AAV type 1's ability to sneak into muscle, and AAV type 2's safe track record and combined them into one "chimeric" virus. In the first trial of this form of gene therapy, the investigators gave six boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) this new virus. An x-linked inherited disorder, DMD affects one in 4,000 newborn boys.

The virus was engineered to contain the dystrophin gene, which is missing in patients with muscular dystrophy and is the ultimate cause of the disease's progressive muscle weakness. The replacement genes were injected into the bicep in one arm and a placebo was injected into the other arm of each of the patients. The researchers were able to detect the new genes in all of the patients treated with the gene therapy, but no immunological response.

As they move on to the next phase of clinical trials, Samulski says they are carefully considering how best to administer the gene therapy vectors to patients. Delivering enough replacement genes to a therapeutic effect could require larger doses of virus, which in turn could elicit an unwanted immune response. So the researchers are exploring a number of different options, including using a new high pressure technique developed by William J. Powers, MD, professor and chair of neurology at UNC, reported last July in the same journal, to get the virus into muscle at lower doses.

###

Study co-authors from UNC include Dawn E. Bowles, PhD; Scott W.J. McPhee, PhD, MPH; Chengwen Li, PhD; Steven J. Gray, PhD; Jade J. Samulski, Angelique S. Camp, Juan Li, MD; Bing Wang, Paul E. Monahan, MD; Joshua C. Grieger, PhD; and Xiao Xiao, PhD.

The UNC research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Muscular Dystrophy Association and a grant from the Senator Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystropy Cooperative Research Center funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Clinical trial for muscular dystrophy demonstrates safety of customized gene therapy [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Les Lang
llang@med.unc.edu
919-966-9366
University of North Carolina School of Medicine

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. Researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have shown that it is safe to cut and paste together different viruses in an effort to create the ultimate vehicle for gene therapy. In a phase I clinical trial, the investigators found no side effects from using a "chimeric" virus to deliver replacement genes for an essential muscle protein in patients with muscular dystrophy.

"This trial demonstrates that gene therapy is no longer limited by the viruses we find in nature, and should usher in the next generation of viral delivery systems for human gene transfer," said senior study author R. Jude Samulski, PhD, professor of pharmacology and director of the Gene Therapy Center at UNC. The study appears online in the Nov. 8, 2011 issue of the journal Molecular Therapy.

Through gene therapy, scientists treat diseases by correcting a patient's faulty genes. Most of the time, this approach involves commandeering a natural system for infecting and introducing new genes into cells; thus, the virus. But even though there are lots of relatively innocuous viruses available for this purpose, none of them are perfectly suited for gene therapy.

Rather than rely on nature, Samulski and his colleagues decided to engineer their dream gene therapy virus in the laboratory. First they chose the adeno-associated virus or AAV, a small nonpathogenic virus that most humans are exposed to at some point in life. They then took their favorite attributes from different forms of AAV such as AAV type 1's ability to sneak into muscle, and AAV type 2's safe track record and combined them into one "chimeric" virus. In the first trial of this form of gene therapy, the investigators gave six boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) this new virus. An x-linked inherited disorder, DMD affects one in 4,000 newborn boys.

The virus was engineered to contain the dystrophin gene, which is missing in patients with muscular dystrophy and is the ultimate cause of the disease's progressive muscle weakness. The replacement genes were injected into the bicep in one arm and a placebo was injected into the other arm of each of the patients. The researchers were able to detect the new genes in all of the patients treated with the gene therapy, but no immunological response.

As they move on to the next phase of clinical trials, Samulski says they are carefully considering how best to administer the gene therapy vectors to patients. Delivering enough replacement genes to a therapeutic effect could require larger doses of virus, which in turn could elicit an unwanted immune response. So the researchers are exploring a number of different options, including using a new high pressure technique developed by William J. Powers, MD, professor and chair of neurology at UNC, reported last July in the same journal, to get the virus into muscle at lower doses.

###

Study co-authors from UNC include Dawn E. Bowles, PhD; Scott W.J. McPhee, PhD, MPH; Chengwen Li, PhD; Steven J. Gray, PhD; Jade J. Samulski, Angelique S. Camp, Juan Li, MD; Bing Wang, Paul E. Monahan, MD; Joshua C. Grieger, PhD; and Xiao Xiao, PhD.

The UNC research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Muscular Dystrophy Association and a grant from the Senator Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystropy Cooperative Research Center funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/uonc-ctf113011.php

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U.N. Climate Conference 2011 To Deal With Carbon Reductions

DURBAN, South Africa -- The U.N.'s top climate official said she expects governments to make a long-delayed decision on whether industrial countries should make further commitments to reduce emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gases.

Amid fresh warnings of climate-related disasters in the future, delegates from about 190 countries were gathering in Durban for a two-week conference beginning Monday. They hope to break deadlocks on how to curb emissions of carbon dioxide and other pollutants.

Christiana Figueres, head of the U.N. climate secretariat, said Sunday the stakes for the negotiations are high, underscored by new scientific studies.

Under discussion was "nothing short of the most compelling energy, industrial, behavioral revolution that humanity has ever seen," she said.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu, a hero of the movement that ended apartheid in South Africa, led a rally at a rugby stadium later Sunday urging negotiators to be more ambitious during what were expected to be difficult talks. Unseasonably cold, windy weather kept the crowd to a few hundred spectators.

Tutu, dressed in ecumenical purple robes, he said the struggle to end the racist regime in his homeland is now followed by a fight against "another huge enemy, and no country can fight this particular enemy on its own."

He chided countries that have been reluctant to renew pledges to cut carbon emissions. Whether rich or poor, "we have only one home. This is the only home we have," he said. "For your own sakes, you who are rich, we are inviting you: Come on the side of right."

In Rome, Pope Benedict XVI ? sometimes called the "green pope" for his outspokenness on environmental issues ? also called for the delegates in Durban to heed the needs of the world's poor.

"I hope that all members of the international community agree on a responsible and credible response to this worrisome and complex phenomenon, taking into account the needs of the poorest and future generations," he said during his traditional Sunday blessing from his studio overlooking St. Peter's Square.

Hopes were scrapped for an overall treaty governing global carbon emissions after the collapse of talks at a climate summit in Copenhagen two years ago. The "big bang" approach has been replaced by incremental efforts to build new institutions to help shift the global economy from carbon-intensive energy generation, industries and transportation to more climate-friendly technologies.

But an underlying division between rich and poor countries on the future of the 1997 Kyoto Protocol has stymied the negotiators.

Figueres said she hoped for a decision on extending emission reduction commitments under the Kyoto accord, which has been postponed for two years. Previous commitments expire next year.

"It's a tall order for governments to face this," but they show no interest in yet another delay, she said.

High on the conference agenda is the management of a fund scaling up over the next eight years to $100 billion annually to help poor countries cope with changing climate conditions.

Questions remain how the money will be governed and distributed, but more immediately, how those funds can be generated from new sources beyond established development channels from the West.

Ideas on the table include a carbon surcharge on international shipping and on air tickets, and a levy on international financial transactions ? sometimes called a Robin Hood tax.

A committee of 40 countries worked for the past year on drawing up a plan to administer the Green Climate Fund, but agreement on the final paper was blocked by the United States and Saudi Arabia, and the final contentious issues will have to be thrashed out in Durban.

Todd Stern, the chief U.S. delegate, said the negotiations had been too rushed.

"I am pretty confident that we're going to be able to work these things out," he told reporters last week, without naming the problematic issues.

But Figueres said the future of the Kyoto accord, which calls on 37 wealthy nations to reduce carbon emissions 5 percent below 1990 levels by the end of next year, is the most difficult political issue that nations face.

"If it were easy we would have done it years ago," she said.

Poor countries want the industrial nations to commit to more cuts for a second period, saying the protocol is the only legal instrument ever adopted to control carbon and other gases that trap the Earth's heat.

But the wealthy countries, with growing consensus, say they cannot carry the burden alone, and want rapidly developing countries like China, India, Brazil and South Africa to join their own legally binding regime to slow their emissions growth and move toward low-carbon economies.

"We need to protect the Kyoto Protocol as the bedrock of the global climate regime," Tim Gore, the climate strategist for the aid agency Oxfam International, told The Associated Press.

In the weeks preceding the conference delegates have been bombarded by new research and scientific reports predicting grim consequences for failing to act.

The U.N. weather agency reported last week that greenhouse gases have reached record-level concentrations in the atmosphere since the start of the industrial era in 1750. New figures for 2010 from the World Meteorological Organization show that carbon dioxide levels are now at 389 parts per million, up from about 280 ppm 250 years ago.

This week the weather agency is due to report on global temperatures for 2011, which are expected to show a continuing long-term trend of global warming. The Geneva-based agency said last year that 2010 was the hottest year in the books.

Oxfam released a report Monday showing that extreme weather events, which scientists say are related to global warming, are driving up food prices and putting an impossible burden on people living on the margins.

In the last 18 months, Russia lost 13.3 million acres of crops, or about 17 percent of its production, due to a months-long heat wave. Drought in the Horn of Africa has killed 60 percent of Ethiopia's cattle and 40 percent of its sheep. Floods in September have raised the price of rice by 25 percent in Thailand and 30 percent in Vietnam, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.

The Nobel prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said "unprecedented extreme weather" caused by global warming will become increasingly frequent and make some places unlivable.

___

Nicole Winfield contributed to this report from Rome.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/27/un-climate-conference-2011_n_1115500.html

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Business owners say small business Saturday a success ...

HORRY COUNTY, SC (WMBF) Some locals saved their money and avoided Black Friday shopping to shop during Small Business Saturday. As a result, some businesses say the sales broke records, and they plan to put all the money they made right back into our economy here at home.

Nancy Mikers at Curtains N Things said her family's business saw double the traffic they normally have on a Saturday. And Mikers is hopeful that will stimulate Conway's economy.

Mikers said,"Most of the people who work here are local so they are able to spend money in our restaurants and other shops here which I try to do to shop local myself and stay in the Conway area as much as possible."

Some small business owners like Amanda Madore who owns Gems by Amanda say it is all part of a larger effort to help each other out. Madore said, " We are trying to make money, but it's hard to get business so if all help out it works for us all."

Some customers like Barbara Dees did not shop on Black Friday to save money for shopping local. "I want to give back to local stores and retailers. I know they are hurting with the way the economy is."

Shoppers like Barbara who do price comparisons between local stores and big box chains say there's not a huge difference in the prices. "Locally for clothing, household goods...I think very competitive."

Some have other reasons for buying local. "A lot of handmade things are more unique than going to a store and buying something because you will have something different from everyone else."

Some stores did not have the final totals from the sales over the past couple of days, but they say they are hoping the good amount of business will continue throughout the holiday season.

Copyright 2011 WMBF News. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.wmbfnews.com/story/16128218/small-business-owners-say-shop-local-saturday-a-success

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Romney the 1st GOP candidate to plant flag in Fla. (The Arizona Republic)

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Gunshot killed man found in Craigslist case (AP)

CALDWELL, Ohio ? Authorities say preliminary findings show a body found by authorities investigating Ohio's Craigslist case is a man who was shot in the head.

The coroner's office in southeast Ohio's Noble County issued a statement Tuesday saying it had identified the body found Friday as John Doe. Officials say they suspect his name is Ralph Geiger but didn't explain the basis for that.

Police believe two other deaths are linked to what they've described as a robbery scheme involving a bogus Craigslist ad for a job on a farm. The county sheriff is under a gag order and has not said whether the body discovered Friday is connected with the case.

Two people are in custody, including a 16-year-old boy charged with attempted murder on Nov. 18. Additional charges filed Nov. 22 include aggravated murder and complicity to aggravated murder.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

An Ohio teenager charged with attempted murder in a scheme authorities say lured Craigslist job-seekers into lethal robberies is not a monster, but a "scared little boy," his mother says.

The 16-year-old high school student from Akron was questioned by the FBI and arrested Nov. 16 after a South Carolina man said he answered the ad seeking a farm hand, was shot in the arm and escaped from the woods of southeastern Ohio.

A judge in Noble County, 90 miles south of Akron, is expected to decide Tuesday afternoon whether the boy will be tried as an adult.

The Noble County prosecutor has asked that the boy be transferred to an adult court. The Associated Press generally does not identify juvenile suspects and is not naming the teenager or his mother.

Meanwhile, a 52-year-old man said to have acted as a mentor to the teen remains in jail on unrelated prostitution charges.

Richard Beasley's mother says her son would take the teen to church almost weekly, go fishing, play video games and involve him in volunteer work.

The teenager's mother paints another picture of Beasley ? that of a man who threatened her son and who once said that he knew where the teen lived and that "I know where your mother lives."

Police believe two deaths are connected to the Craigslist scam but haven't said whether another body found Friday is linked to it. A fourth man who said he answered the same ad survived a shooting, while a fifth man says he interviewed with Beasley for the fake job as a farm hand but decided not to take it.

"Richard was always a very giving person," Beasley's mother, Carol Beasley, has said. "He reached out and helped a lot of people."

Messages were left with Beasley's attorney seeking comment.

Beasley has a criminal record dating to the 1980s. He was convicted in Texas of burglary and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle in 1985, sentenced to a 40-year prison sentence and placed on parole for 34 years in 1989. Previous charges in Ohio include aggravated menacing, tampering with evidence, possession of criminal tools and illegal cultivation of marijuana, court records show.

Following Beasley's return to Akron in 2003, he ran a halfway house, helped deliver food to the poor and vouched for fellow offenders, telling judges they had changed their ways, the Akron Beacon Journal reported over the weekend.

Police say the halfway house was a front for prostitution, the newspaper reported, and Beasley was awaiting trial on prostitution and drug charges when authorities took him into custody this month.

The teen appears to be placing blame on Beasley, his attorney told the newspaper.

Beasley's mother has said that her son had taken the boy to The Chapel, an Akron megachurch, since he was 7 or 8 years old, according to WEWS-TV of Cleveland, and that they did volunteer work together, such as delivering food to the needy.

"The most I can say is, this is just a big shock to us," Carol Beasley has said. "I pray it's some other person and not him."

A church spokeswoman said Beasley had no involvement with youth activities at the church and that while his mother had long attended services, Beasley showed up only sporadically.

Beasley was not sanctioned through The Chapel, Tammy Kennedy, the executive assistant to the senior and executive pastors of The Chapel, told ABC News.

The events leading to the arrest of Beasley and the teen began Nov. 6, when a South Carolina man who answered the ad was shot in Noble County before escaping, hiding in the woods for hours and then hiking to a farmhouse in the dark, police say. The body of Norfolk, Va., resident David Pauley, 51, was found the following week.

Timothy Kern, 47, of Massillon, was found buried Friday near an Akron-area shopping mall. He had been shot in the head. A third body was found Friday not far from where Pauley's was buried in a hand-dug grave.

The farm advertised on Craigslist does not exist; the remote Noble County area where Pauley's body and one other were found is property owned by a coal company and often leased to hunters.

The teenager, a junior at Stow Munroe City Schools about 40 miles southeast of Cleveland, was questioned at school Nov. 16, then arrested at home that day, school spokeswoman Jacquie Mazziotta said Monday.

He has been warned he will face trial as an adult and could face more than 40 years in prison, his mother told The Associated Press in a phone interview Monday from her home in the Akron area.

She stopped short of saying he provided the tip that led to the discovery of the Akron-area body but said he "has told everything he knows."

"He's a scared little boy," she said.

___

Sheeran reported from Cleveland.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_re_us/us_craigslist_jobseekers_killed

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James Murdoch re-elected chair of BSkyB

LONDON (AP) ? James Murdoch has been re-elected as the chairman of broadcaster BSkyB at the company's annual meeting.

Protesters had called for Murdoch to resign as a director of BSkyB at its session Tuesday because of his links to the phone hacking scandal at News Corp., which owns 39 percent of the company.

The company says Murdoch won the support of 81.24 percent of shareholder votes, while 18.76 percent voted against him.

Murdoch has been grilled by British lawmakers about phone hacking at the now-closed News of the World newspaper.

An effort to oust him from the News Corp. board fell short last month with 35 percent of the vote at the company's annual meeting.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

LONDON (AP) ? Protesters are calling for James Murdoch to resign as chairman of satellite broadcaster BSkyB at the company's annual meeting over his links to the phone hacking scandal at News Corp.

Campaigning group Avaaz says it plans to lobby outside the meeting in central London Tuesday.

Murdoch has been grilled by British lawmakers about phone hacking at the now-closed News of the World newspaper. An effort to oust him from the News Corp. board fell short last month with 35 percent of the vote at the company's annual meeting.

Pensions and Investment Research Consultants ? a corporate governance lobby group ? says Murdoch is closely associated with the phone hacking scandal and damages the public reputation of BSkyB.

Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. controls 39 percent of BSkyB.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-29-EU-Britain-BSkyB/id-b5cb9429e90140709bc5f77eb1029692

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PM defies calls for rollback of FDI in retail sector (Reuters)

NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? Fighting-off demands for a U-turn on allowing foreign investment in supermarkets, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Tuesday that the policy would bring jobs and technology to farmers.

"I am confident that foreign direct investment in retail will help to bring modern technology in the farm sector, less wastage and more jobs," he said at a rally.

Opposition parties and Singh's own political allies are demanding a rollback of the reform allowing foreign supermarket giants to enter the country's $450 billion retail market.

Parliament is in deadlock over the issue, clouding the outlook for an ambitious agenda of legislation, including an anti-corruption bill and another on food subsidies for the poor.

(Reporting By Manoj Kumar; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/india_nm/india607833

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Voting extends into 2nd day in Congo (AP)

KINSHASA, Congo ? Voting in Congo was extended into Tuesday after the first day of elections was marred by the late delivery of voting materials, errors on the ballot papers and by pockets of violence.

Country experts had urged the government to postpone Monday's presidential and legislative election, arguing that a delayed election was better than a botched one. Congo is in a race against the clock, though, because the five-year term of President Joseph Kabila expires next week, and the country could face unrest if he is seen as staying past his constitutional mandate.

Anger began to boil over in opposition strongholds in the capital where voters waited since dawn for ballots to be delivered.

The spokesman of the election commission, Matthieu Mpita, announced late Monday that the election would be extended into a second day.

"Voters at polling stations that never received ballots and which have not yet opened should await the delivery of the materials," he said. "Voters that are at sites where ballots ran out and where the vote had to be interrupted for whatever reason are asked to stay calm and await further instructions."

Pockets of violence were reported throughout the country. Five people were killed in the southeastern town of Lubumbashi on Monday after gunmen opened fire on a truck carrying ballots and on a polling center.

The head of the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Congo, Roger Meece, told reporters that he had received reports of at least two polling stations being set on fire in the Kananga province.

In the capital, Kinshasa, poll workers ran out of the school where they were counting ballots late Monday after police fired tear gas to disperse the angry voters outside. The precinct had run out of ballots and had called for more to be delivered, said the president of one of the polling stations inside the school, Jean-Felix Dikamba.

The ballots were delivered in an unmarked car and when the poll workers tried to unload the material, a mob rushed the car, accusing the poll workers of delivering pre-marked ballots.

The dirt street outside the school was littered with shredded ballots, torn up by angry voters who were eventually dispersed by police lobbing tear gas.

Congo's territory straddles an area the size of the United States east of the Mississippi ? over 1.4 million square miles, much of it covered by rain forest. The vast forest in the country's east is still inhabited by militias and rebel groups responsible for period attacks on villages and the systematic rape of local women.

The vote is the second since the end of Congo's last war and the first to be organized by the government instead of the international community. The election was supposed to mark another step toward peace, but if the results are not accepted by the population, especially the country's fractured opposition, analysts fear it could drag Congo back into conflict.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_re_af/af_congo_election

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