minor ‘That’s abysmal’: NYC politicians outraged after NYPD reveals 81 percent of social distancing arrests have been minorities By www.nydailynews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 18:17:31 +0000 According to the NYPD, there have been 374 social distancing-related arrests since COVID-19 restrictions were put in place. Of that number, 304 of the arrests have been of African-American or Hispanic people. Full Article
minor Baseball’s only coronavirus certainty is the destruction of the minor leagues By www.nydailynews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 12:30:00 +0000 About all we do know is that there is almost certainly going to be no minor league baseball at all this year. Full Article
minor Unpaid minor league baseball players struggle to make ends meet during shutdown By www.latimes.com Published On :: Tue, 17 Mar 2020 20:53:16 -0400 For Major League Baseball, the coronavirus hiatus could have the unintended consequence of thrusting the issue of low minor league pay into the spotlight. Full Article
minor Dodgers minor league Connor Joe says he has testicular cancer By www.latimes.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Mar 2020 14:02:31 -0400 Dodgers minor league Connor Joe, 27, said Wednesday he's been diagnosed with testicular cancer, saying he underwent surgery Tuesday and he is recovering. Full Article
minor MLB agrees to pay minor league players a stipend through May By www.latimes.com Published On :: Tue, 31 Mar 2020 12:15:43 -0400 MLB will extend the $400-per-week stipend to minor league players through May 31 or until the beginning of the minor league season, whichever occurs first. Full Article
minor Hot dog! How a Dodgers' minor league team relishes helping in coronavirus crisis By www.latimes.com Published On :: Fri, 3 Apr 2020 08:30:47 -0400 The Dodger Dog is not available at the ballpark right now, but the Dodgers will be distributing hot dogs from their ballpark. Full Article
minor Baseball’s only coronavirus certainty is the destruction of the minor leagues By www.nydailynews.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 12:30:00 +0000 About all we do know is that there is almost certainly going to be no minor league baseball at all this year. Full Article
minor Bargersville police officer involved in Friday crash sustains minor injury By rssfeeds.indystar.com Published On :: Sat, 04 Apr 2020 16:59:24 +0000 A Bargersville police officer and the driver of an SUV were taken to the hospital with minor injuries after a vehicle crash Friday. Full Article
minor Nowhere to Call Home: Ethnic Minorities in China By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 26 Jan 2015 11:15:01 +0000 Members Event 18 February 2015 - 6:00pm to 7:15pm Chatham House, London Transcriptpdf | 147.75 KB Transcript Q&Apdf | 160.08 KB Event participants Jocelyn Ford, Journalist and Filmmaker, Nowhere to Call Home: A Tibetan in BeijingDr Reza Hasmath, Lecturer in Chinese Politics, University of OxfordChair: Rob Gifford, Correspondent, The Economist Jocelyn Ford will share her experiences and insights from documenting the struggles of a widowed Tibetan facing ethnic discrimination in Beijing and gender discrimination in her village. The panel will then have a wider discussion about national identity and the issues facing ethnic minorities in China. This discussion coincides with the UK screening of Nowhere to Call Home: A Tibetan in Beijing and will include clips from the film. Full Article
minor Covid-19: NHS bosses told to assess risk to ethnic minority staff who may be at greater risk By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Monday, May 4, 2020 - 14:16 Full Article
minor Minor earthquake in Portland By jamaica-gleaner.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 13:41:46 -0500 The Earthquake Unit at the University of the West Indies is reporting that a minor quake hit a section of Portland this morning. The unit says the 2.8 quake occurred about 9:13 and had an epicentre near Spring Garden. It had a focal depth of five... Full Article
minor Orioles ink Eric Young Jr. to Minors deal By mlb.mlb.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Feb 2019 15:26:30 EDT The Orioles' crowded outfield mix gained another member on Monday when the team signed veteran Eric Young Jr. to a Minor League contract with an invitation to Spring Training. Full Article
minor Reds add Dietrich on Minor League deal By mlb.mlb.com Published On :: Tue, 19 Feb 2019 19:57:36 EDT Upon the passing of his physical on Tuesday, the Reds signed infielder/outfielder Derek Dietrich to a Minor League contract with an invitation to big league camp for Spring Training. Full Article
minor Covid-19: NHS bosses told to assess risk to ethnic minority staff who may be at greater risk By feeds.bmj.com Published On :: Monday, May 4, 2020 - 14:16 Full Article
minor Lack of Opportunities and Family Pressures Drive Unaccompanied Minor Migration from Albania to Italy By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Tue, 16 Jul 2019 14:38:33 -0400 Faced with a lack of employment opportunities and recurrent poverty, Albanian youth migrate to Italy alone in the hopes of improving their educational prospects or making money for their families. Yet upon arrival, they face many vulnerabilities. While some protections for unaccompanied minors exist in the Italy, the system is greatly fragmented and challenges, including how to return them to Albania, remain persistent. Full Article
minor The Disparate Impact of Diabetes on Racial/Ethnic Minority Populations By clinical.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 2012-07-01 Edward A. ChowJul 1, 2012; 30:130-133Diabetes Advocacy Full Article
minor A Proxy War on Minorities? India Crafts Citizenship and Refugee Policies through the Lens of Religion By www.migrationpolicy.org Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 21:34:32 -0400 The Modi government's push for a Citizenship Amendment Act and National Register of Citizens sparked deadly riots and chilled India's 200 million Muslims, who fear being relegated to second-class citizenship—and for some, even statelessness. This article explores actions by Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party, the significance of Bangladeshi illegal immigration as a driver, and what a register of citizens in Assam might mean for India. Full Article
minor The Disparate Impact of Diabetes on Racial/Ethnic Minority Populations By clinical.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 2012-07-01 Edward A. ChowJul 1, 2012; 30:130-133Diabetes Advocacy Full Article
minor Erysipelas and child-bed fever / Thomas C. Minor. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Cincinnati : R. Clarke, 1874. Full Article
minor Rumored 'Powerbeats Pro 2' could be minor update to Powerbeats Pro By appleinsider.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 16:54:51 -0400 A pair of model numbers recently discovered in multiple international regulatory filings hinted at a next-generation Beats headphone, but new information suggests the device may actually be related to an existing product that's already in circulation. Full Article Beats
minor Pakistan minorities commission excludes Ahmadi religious group By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 06:01:00 -0600 CNA Staff, May 9, 2020 / 06:01 am (CNA).- Pakistan’s government has declined to include the Ahmadi religious group in its National Commission for Minorities, drawing attention to the group whose Muslim self-identification is rejected by many Muslims. In a note seen by Reuters, Pakistan’s Ministry of Religious Affairs said Ahmadis should not be included in the commission “given the religious and historical sensitivity of the issue.” Pakistan’s constitution does not recognize the Ahmadis as Muslim. However, Ahmadis consider themselves part of Islam. The movement was founded in 1889 in British-ruled India. They consider their founder Mirza Ghulam Ahmad a “subordinate prophet.” Other Muslims see this as a violation of the tenet that Muhammad was the last prophet. There are about 500,000 Ahmadis in Pakistan and up to 20 million adherents worldwide. Some observers estimate the Ahmadi population in Pakistan is higher, but persecution encourages Ahmadis to hide their identity. Pakistan’s religious freedom record has been a matter of international concern. The 2020 report of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has said Ahmadis continue to face “severe persecution from authorities as well as societal harassment due to their beliefs.” Both government authorities and mobs target their places of worship. In October 2019, the report said, police in Punjab partially demolished a 70-year-old Ahmadiyya mosque. Pakistan’s National Commission for Minorities gives some status, voice, and protections to minorities in a country where over 90% of people identify as Muslim. A Hindu has been nominated to chair the minorities commission, whose members include representatives of Christian, Kalash, Sikh, and Zoroastrian communities. Government officials and the head of Pakistan’s Council of Islamic Ideology also have commission seats. State Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Muhammad Khan, a vocal opponent of including the Ahmadis on the commission, has referred to them as agents of chaos. “If they want to avail constitutional rights they must accept the constitution first,” he told Reuters. “The Pakistani constitution considers them non-Muslims.” Usman Ahmad, an Ahmadi representative, told Reuters it is a “complete myth” that they did not accept the constitution. He added that many people disagree with parts of the constitution but still have rights under it. He said his community is used to exclusion and has never accepted classification as non-Muslim. “We’ve never joined such commissions that require us to accept our non-Muslim status,” he said. Minister of Information Shibli Faraz has said the rights of all people were fully respected in the handling of the commission. “Every country has the sovereign right to make judgments according to its ground realities,” he told Reuters. Khan, the Minister for Parliamentary Affairs, had posted to Twitter, then deleted, a comment “There is only one punishment for insulting the Prophet - chopping off the head.” He said he believed in “legal procedures and court proceedings” for those accused of blasphemy. Twitter told him to delete the post, Reuters reports. Pakistan’s blasphemy laws impose strict punishment on those who desecrate the Quran or who defame or insult Muhammad. Although the government has never executed a person under the blasphemy laws, accusations alone have inspired mob and vigilante violence. The laws, introduced in the 1980s, are reportedly used to settle scores or to persecute religious minorities. While non-Muslims constitute only 3 percent of the Pakistani population, 14 percent of blasphemy cases have been levied against them. Many of those accused of blasphemy are murdered, and advocates of changing the law are also targeted by violence. The Governor of Punjab Salman Taseer was one such critic of the law who was assassinated in January 2011. Just months later, in March 2011, Shahbaz Bhatti, the first Federal Minister For Minorities Affairs and the only Christian in Pakistan’s cabinet, was assassinated by extremists who characterized him as a blasphemer. Bhatti had criticized the law and defended Asia Bibi, a Catholic woman sentenced to death by hanging in 2010 for blasphemy. Bibi spent nine years on death row, but left Pakistan for Canada in 2019 at the age of 53 after her death sentence was overturned in October 2018. The verdict and her subsequent release from prison sparked protests from Islamic hardliners who support strong blasphemy laws. In Punjab last year, a mob attacked a Christian community after a mosque broadcast over loudspeaker a claim that the Christians had insulted Islam. In another incident in Karachi, false blasphemy accusations against four Christian women prompted mob violence that forced nearly 200 Christian families to flee their homes, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said. The situation in Pakistan has attention from some prominent Catholics. In a Jan. 21, 2020 letter written on behalf of Philadelphia’s Pakistani Catholic community, then-Archbishop of Philadelphia Charles J. Chaput encouraged Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan to shape a culture of religious freedom The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom’s latest annual report said religious freedom conditions in Pakistan continued to deteriorate last year, citing “The systematic enforcement of blasphemy and anti-Ahmadiyya laws, and authorities’ failure to address forced conversions of religious minorities—including Hindus, Christians, and Sikhs—to Islam.” The bipartisan federal commission advises the U.S. government on policy. Its report recommended that the U.S. government name Pakistan a country of particular concern for “systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.” In December 2018, for the first time, the U.S. State Department designated Pakistan a “Country of Particular Concern.” The designation, which can trigger sanctions under U.S. law, had been recommended by the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom in 2017 and 2018. The latest commission report recommended that Pakistan be re-designated a “Country of Particular Concern,” given “systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.” Full Article Asia - Pacific
minor Pakistan minorities commission excludes Ahmadi religious group By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 06:01:00 -0600 CNA Staff, May 9, 2020 / 06:01 am (CNA).- Pakistan’s government has declined to include the Ahmadi religious group in its National Commission for Minorities, drawing attention to the group whose Muslim self-identification is rejected by many Muslims. In a note seen by Reuters, Pakistan’s Ministry of Religious Affairs said Ahmadis should not be included in the commission “given the religious and historical sensitivity of the issue.” Pakistan’s constitution does not recognize the Ahmadis as Muslim. However, Ahmadis consider themselves part of Islam. The movement was founded in 1889 in British-ruled India. They consider their founder Mirza Ghulam Ahmad a “subordinate prophet.” Other Muslims see this as a violation of the tenet that Muhammad was the last prophet. There are about 500,000 Ahmadis in Pakistan and up to 20 million adherents worldwide. Some observers estimate the Ahmadi population in Pakistan is higher, but persecution encourages Ahmadis to hide their identity. Pakistan’s religious freedom record has been a matter of international concern. The 2020 report of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has said Ahmadis continue to face “severe persecution from authorities as well as societal harassment due to their beliefs.” Both government authorities and mobs target their places of worship. In October 2019, the report said, police in Punjab partially demolished a 70-year-old Ahmadiyya mosque. Pakistan’s National Commission for Minorities gives some status, voice, and protections to minorities in a country where over 90% of people identify as Muslim. A Hindu has been nominated to chair the minorities commission, whose members include representatives of Christian, Kalash, Sikh, and Zoroastrian communities. Government officials and the head of Pakistan’s Council of Islamic Ideology also have commission seats. State Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Muhammad Khan, a vocal opponent of including the Ahmadis on the commission, has referred to them as agents of chaos. “If they want to avail constitutional rights they must accept the constitution first,” he told Reuters. “The Pakistani constitution considers them non-Muslims.” Usman Ahmad, an Ahmadi representative, told Reuters it is a “complete myth” that they did not accept the constitution. He added that many people disagree with parts of the constitution but still have rights under it. He said his community is used to exclusion and has never accepted classification as non-Muslim. “We’ve never joined such commissions that require us to accept our non-Muslim status,” he said. Minister of Information Shibli Faraz has said the rights of all people were fully respected in the handling of the commission. “Every country has the sovereign right to make judgments according to its ground realities,” he told Reuters. Khan, the Minister for Parliamentary Affairs, had posted to Twitter, then deleted, a comment “There is only one punishment for insulting the Prophet - chopping off the head.” He said he believed in “legal procedures and court proceedings” for those accused of blasphemy. Twitter told him to delete the post, Reuters reports. Pakistan’s blasphemy laws impose strict punishment on those who desecrate the Quran or who defame or insult Muhammad. Although the government has never executed a person under the blasphemy laws, accusations alone have inspired mob and vigilante violence. The laws, introduced in the 1980s, are reportedly used to settle scores or to persecute religious minorities. While non-Muslims constitute only 3 percent of the Pakistani population, 14 percent of blasphemy cases have been levied against them. Many of those accused of blasphemy are murdered, and advocates of changing the law are also targeted by violence. The Governor of Punjab Salman Taseer was one such critic of the law who was assassinated in January 2011. Just months later, in March 2011, Shahbaz Bhatti, the first Federal Minister For Minorities Affairs and the only Christian in Pakistan’s cabinet, was assassinated by extremists who characterized him as a blasphemer. Bhatti had criticized the law and defended Asia Bibi, a Catholic woman sentenced to death by hanging in 2010 for blasphemy. Bibi spent nine years on death row, but left Pakistan for Canada in 2019 at the age of 53 after her death sentence was overturned in October 2018. The verdict and her subsequent release from prison sparked protests from Islamic hardliners who support strong blasphemy laws. In Punjab last year, a mob attacked a Christian community after a mosque broadcast over loudspeaker a claim that the Christians had insulted Islam. In another incident in Karachi, false blasphemy accusations against four Christian women prompted mob violence that forced nearly 200 Christian families to flee their homes, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said. The situation in Pakistan has attention from some prominent Catholics. In a Jan. 21, 2020 letter written on behalf of Philadelphia’s Pakistani Catholic community, then-Archbishop of Philadelphia Charles J. Chaput encouraged Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan to shape a culture of religious freedom The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom’s latest annual report said religious freedom conditions in Pakistan continued to deteriorate last year, citing “The systematic enforcement of blasphemy and anti-Ahmadiyya laws, and authorities’ failure to address forced conversions of religious minorities—including Hindus, Christians, and Sikhs—to Islam.” The bipartisan federal commission advises the U.S. government on policy. Its report recommended that the U.S. government name Pakistan a country of particular concern for “systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.” In December 2018, for the first time, the U.S. State Department designated Pakistan a “Country of Particular Concern.” The designation, which can trigger sanctions under U.S. law, had been recommended by the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom in 2017 and 2018. The latest commission report recommended that Pakistan be re-designated a “Country of Particular Concern,” given “systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.” Full Article Asia - Pacific
minor Media for minority languages By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 17:41:50 +0000 Graphic designers, translators and distributors from 130 organisations meet to develop media for minority languages in Eurasia. Full Article
minor Early Childhood Family Intervention and Long-term Obesity Prevention Among High-risk Minority Youth By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2012-02-06T00:06:32-08:00 The evidence base for obesity prevention is extremely limited. Although minority youth are at higher risk of obesity, and early childhood is a critical period for prevention, only 1 program has demonstrated sustained effects on obesity in young minority children.Among youth at high risk for obesity based on income, minority status, and child behavior problems, early intervention that promotes effective parenting led to meaningful differences in obesity in preadolescence. Early family intervention is an innovative and promising approach. (Read the full article) Full Article
minor Physical Activity During School in Urban Minority Kindergarten and First-Grade Students By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2012-12-03T00:07:45-08:00 Physical inactivity is one of the major modifiable factors contributing to the growing national epidemic of childhood obesity. There is lack of literature on pedometer-determined physical activity (PA) during the school day in US minority kindergarten and first-grade students.This is the first study to assess school-day PA in US urban minority kindergarten and first-grade students. Higher grade level, participation in physical education class, and outdoor recess were found to be independent predictors of PA. (Read the full article) Full Article
minor Nurse and Physician Agreement in the Assessment of Minor Blunt Head Trauma By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2013-08-26T00:07:49-07:00 Effective implementation of Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network head trauma rules depends on their early application. As the registered nurse (RN) is often the first to evaluate children with blunt head trauma, initial RN assessments will be an important component of this strategy.We demonstrated fair to moderate agreement between RN and physician providers in the application of the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network head trauma rules. Effective implementation strategies may require physician verification of RN predictor assessments before computed tomography decision-making. (Read the full article) Full Article
minor Let Minority-Serving Colleges Be a Model for Teacher Prep, Report Says By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Mar 2019 00:00:00 +0000 Teacher-preparation programs need to better prepare teachers, and especially white teachers, to serve students and communities of colors more effectively, the report says. Full Article Teacherpreparation
minor Entrepreneurship and innovation minor graduates record number of students By news.psu.edu Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 10:08 -0400 The intercollege minor in entrepreneurship and innovation (ENTI) continues to spread its influence as it graduates its largest number of students this spring with 153 across eight clusters. Full Article
minor Pandemic may revive Islamic State and hurt Iraq’s minorities, say NGOs By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 12:00:00 -0600 Rome Newsroom, Apr 22, 2020 / 12:00 pm (CNA).- For Iraqi Christian and Yazidi communities still recovering from the destruction wreaked by the Islamic State, the coronavirus poses significant risks, NGOs have said in a joint statement. “The public health system in Sinjar and the wider Nineveh Governorate was decimated by ISIS during its brutal occupation and genocidal campaign in Iraq, beginning in 2014,” the letter stated. “An impending humanitarian and security disaster looms large in Iraq. … There is a significant attendant threat to global security if ISIS uses this opportunity to regroup and return, but it does not have to be this way. Iraqi authorities and the United Nations must act now,” it continued. Twenty-five NGOs working in northern Iraq issued a joint statement April 16 calling on the World Health Organization to undertake an assessment mission in the area, where testing has been limited, and urging Iraqi authorities to prevent the Islamic State from regrouping. Signed by the Iraqi Christian Relief Council, Free Yezidi Foundation, Genocide Alert, and the Religious Freedom Institute, the statement described how the pandemic is exacerbating existing security, humanitarian, and health risks among displaced and rebuilding Iraqi minority communities. It highlighted, in particular, the global risk of a potential resurgence of the Islamic State. Security threat “COVID-19 and the precipitous drop in oil prices have caused the Iraqi economy to collapse, leaving a dangerous security vacuum for ISIS to exploit. Indeed, the resultant political turmoil and social strife recall the very conditions that earlier incarnations of ISIS and its supporters capitalized on during its initial surge almost a decade ago,” it stated. “According to International Crisis Group, ISIS in its weekly newsletter Al-Naba called on its fighters to attack and weaken its enemies while they are distracted by the pandemic,” it added. U.S. military officials have expressed concern that the Islamic State could use adverse conditions to its advantage in it recruitment efforts. “COVID-19 has also hastened the departure of some coalition forces from Iraq, weakening counter-terrorism operations, while some ISIS detainees have recently escaped prison in Syria,” the letter stated. On March 30, Islamic State fighters imprisoned in northwestern Syria revolted. The rioting prisoners took over one wing of the prison before Kurdish forces intervened. “There is an urgent need for reform in the civilian security sector, in order to integrate regional militias into a unified Federal Police that upholds the rule of law and protects all citizens, regardless of religion or clan affiliation,” the letter said. Health infrastructure needs The economic strain has also hindered Iraqi minorities’ efforts to rebuild their communities, including medical infrastructure needs. “Many Yazidis (Ezidis/Yezidis) want to return to Sinjar, but security, reconstruction and basic services are still lacking to allow a dignified return. There are currently only two hospitals and just one ventilator to assist the current population of around 160,000 people in the region,” the NGOs’ statement explained. Iraq’s healthcare system, which has suffered for decades from the effects of sanctions and war, currently faces a critical shortage of doctors and medicine, according to a Reuters investigation. Hospitals in Iraq are already overcrowded and doctors overworked, while the healthcare situation is slightly better in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region of Iraq, which has its own health ministry. There have been at least 1,600 cases of COVID-19 documented in Iraq, which is under pressure to reopen its border with Iran, which has had more than 85,000 confirmed coronavirus cases, according to Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center. Humanitarian workers have also had trouble reaching those in need due to movement restrictions, and have raised concerns about the risk of an outbreak in internally displaced persons (IDP) camps. Social distancing is very difficult in these high-density IDP camps in Iraq, where 1.8 million people remain displaced due to insecurity and reconstruction needs, according to the UN. The 25 NGOs called for the government of Iraq and the United Nations to provide testing capacity in the IDP camps in Sinjar, Tel Afar and the Nineveh Plains. “At present, it is impossible to apprehend the extent of the spread of the virus because no testing for the disease is taking place in the camps, while restrictions of movement impede the work of humanitarian actors who provide basic essentials such as food, water and medicine,” they stated. Psychological risk for trauma survivors Genocide survivors with trauma also face increased personal risk of psychological harm amid isolation imposed by coronavirus measures. As in much of the world, authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan have ordered people to stay home, imposed a curfew, and have closed places of worship, schools, restaurants, and most businesses. “Another alarming corollary of the COVID-19 pandemic in Iraq is the psychological impact on at-risk communities, including Yazidis, Turkmen and Christians, such as Assyrians,” it said. This is a particular concern for the Yazidi communities in which thousands of women were victims of sexual violence by the Islamic State. “Prior to the outbreak, Médecins Sans Frontières reported on a debilitating mental health crisis among Yazidis in Iraq, including a rising number of suicides,” it stated. Suicides in this community have already been reported since social distancing measures were put into place, the NGOs reported. They called on the World Health Organization to address this “acute mental health crisis.” In their appeal to the WHO and Iraqi government, the NGOs insisted that the stakes were high: “COVID-19 is a pandemic the likes of which we have not seen before. Survivors of genocide and other mass atrocity crimes are now waiting for this silent death to pass through the camps and their homes, unable to fight back.” Full Article Middle East - Africa
minor Minor Gas Leak In LPG Container Of Goods Train At Bhopal: Rail Official By www.ndtv.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 19:30:46 +0530 Gas leak was detected on a goods train transporting LPG on Saturday at Bhopal railway station in Madhya Pradesh, a Railways official said. Full Article Bhopal
minor Minor planet named after Bengaluru student; here’s how names of planets are decided By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2017-06-17T02:35:00+05:30 A minor planet has been named after a Bengaluru student. What are the rules behind such nomenclature? Full Article World News
minor Father bought property in minor son's nam By www.lawyersclubindia.com Published On :: Hi My father bought property in the name of 3 minor sons . it was a agricultural land. my father paid for the land. We were 5 7 and 11 years old respectively. Now after 20 years my father wants to sell the property because of financial problem. all 3 children are now adult but elder brother is refusiing to sell his share in property. Younger 2 child has already signed for sale but elder brother is refusing to sign because of issues with father. What can be done in this case? does my father have right to sell the property and how Full Article
minor SSH Sniffer Attack Poses Minor Risk By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Tue, 18 Nov 2008 08:25:29 GMT Full Article ssh
minor [Ticker] Only 59 minors relocated from Greece By euobserver.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 07:16:20 +0200 A plan to relocate, from Greece, 1,600 unaccompanied minors seeking asylum to other member states have so far netted 59 transfers. Twelve minors have been sent to Luxembourg and 47 to Germany. The European Commission says Portugal and Slovenia are next to take some in. They hope to relocate the remaining minors over the next few months. Full Article
minor RAMADAN: REPS MINORITY CAUCUS CALLS FOR PRAYERS, LOVE By blanknewsonline.wordpress.com Published On :: Sat, 25 Apr 2020 08:19:25 +0000 -Blank NEWS Online ( NIGERIA): The Minority Caucus of the House of Representatives has called on Nigerians to use the holy month of Ramadan to pray for the divine intervention […] Full Article Breaking News News Religion
minor Eversheds Sutherland have advised the management team shareholders on the sale of a minority stake in Waterlogic By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-05-07 Eversheds Sutherland have advised the management team shareholders on the sale of a significant minority stake in Waterlogic, a UK-based designer, manufacturer, distributor and service provider of purified water dispensers, to four strong instituti... Full Article
minor Minorities body violation of SC verdict, says Rabbani By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 04:38:49 +0500 ISLAMABAD: Former Senate chairman Mian Raza Rabbani on Friday said that the National Council for Minorities nominated through a notification after a considerable delay was illegal because it had been formed in violation of a judgement announced by the then Chief Justice of Pakistan Tasaduq Hussain Jilani on June 19, 2014. “The said act of violating the judgement of the Supreme Court is condemned,” the PPP leader said in a statement. Mr Rabbani said that the Supreme Court’s judgement had come in the wake of a bomb blast in a Peshawar church in 2013 which left over a hundred members of the Christian community dead. In a suo motu case, the then Chief Justice of Pakistan, in paragraph 37(iv) of the judgement, had ordered the setting up of the National Council for Minorities to monitor practical realisation of the rights and safeguards of members of minority communities provided in the 1973 Constitution. The council was supposed to be mandated to frame policy recommendations for safeguarding and protecting minorities’ rights by the federal and provincial governments. The judgement clearly mentioned eight steps that the governments were to take, including (i) reservation of quota in services, (ii) a special police force to protect places of worship, (iii) steps to discourage hate speeches, and (iv) revision of school curriculum to promote cultural and religious tolerance. The PPP leader said that none of the steps had been taken so far by the governments. He said that the federal government had, after the approval of the cabinet, constituted the council through a notification and the body had become controversial even before its birth and as a result the religious affairs ministry had to amend its summary. The PPP leader said that the council should be constituted through an act of parliament. Mr Rabbani said that the importance given to safeguarding the rights of the minorities in the country was evident from the fact that the white colour portion of the national flag represented minorities and in over 20 Articles of the Constitution, 1973, the rights of minorities had been guaranteed. Published in Dawn, May 9th, 2020 Full Article Pakistan
minor Health Tip: Promptly Treat a Minor Burn By www.medicinenet.com Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 00:00:00 PDT Title: Health Tip: Promptly Treat a Minor BurnCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/28/2015 12:00:00 AMLast Editorial Review: 4/28/2015 12:00:00 AM Full Article
minor Why Are Minorities Hardest Hit By COVID-19? By www.webmd.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 14:55:45 EST The new coronavirus is disproportionately striking minority populations—particularly urban blacks and Navajo Indians living on their reservation. Experts say social and economic factors that predate the COVID-19 crisis may help explain why. Full Article
minor Asking for Identification and Retail Tobacco Sales to Minors By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T01:00:46-07:00 BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: A previous single-county study found that retail stores usually asked young-looking tobacco customers to show proof-of-age identification, but a large proportion of illegal tobacco sales to minors occurred after the customers had shown identification proving they were too young to purchase tobacco. We sought to investigate these findings on a larger scale. METHODS: We obtained state reports for federal fiscal years 2017 and 2018 from a federal agency that tracks tobacco sales to supervised minors conducting compliance checks in retail stores. We used descriptive and multivariable logistic regression methods to determine (1) how often stores in 17 states requested identifications, (2) what proportion of violations occurred after identification requests, and (3) if violation rates differed when minors were required versus forbidden to carry identification. RESULTS: Stores asked minors for identification in 79.6% (95% confidence interval: 79.3%–80.8%) of compliance checks (N = 17 276). Violations after identification requests constituted 22.8% (95% confidence interval: 20.0%–25.6%; interstate range, 1.7%–66.2%) of all violations and were nearly 3 times as likely when minors were required to carry identification in compliance checks. Violations were 42% more likely when minors asked for a vaping product versus cigarettes. CONCLUSIONS: Stores that sell tobacco to underage customers are more likely to be detected and penalized when youth inspectors carry identification during undercover tobacco sales compliance checks. The new age-21 tobacco sales requirement presents an opportunity to require identifications be carried and address other long-standing weaknesses in compliance-check protocols to help combat the current adolescent vaping epidemic. Full Article
minor A minor population of macrophage-tropic HIV-1 variants is identified in recrudescing viremia following analytic treatment interruption [Microbiology] By www.pnas.org Published On :: 2020-05-05T10:31:24-07:00 HIV-1 persists in cellular reservoirs that can reignite viremia if antiretroviral therapy (ART) is interrupted. Therefore, insight into the nature of those reservoirs may be revealed from the composition of recrudescing viremia following treatment cessation. A minor population of macrophage-tropic (M-tropic) viruses was identified in a library of recombinant viruses... Full Article
minor Levothyroxine prescribing and laboratory test use after a minor change in reference range for thyroid-stimulating hormone [Research] By www.cmaj.ca Published On :: 2020-05-03T21:05:14-07:00 BACKGROUND: Prescribing of levothyroxine and rates of thyroid function testing may be sensitive to minor changes in the upper limit of the reference range for thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) that increase the proportion of abnormal results. We evaluated the population-level change in levothyroxine prescribing and TSH testing after a minor planned decrease in the upper limit of the reference range for TSH in a large urban centre with a single medical laboratory. METHODS: Using provincial administrative data, we compared predicted volumes of TSH tests with actual TSH test volumes before and after a planned change in the TSH reference range. We also determined the number of new levothyroxine prescriptions for previously untreated patients and the rate of changes to the prescribed dose for those on previously stable, long-term levothyroxine therapy before and after the change in the TSH reference range. RESULTS: Before the change in the TSH reference range, actual and predicted monthly volumes of TSH testing followed an identical course. After the change, actual test volumes exceeded predicted test volumes by 7.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 5.3%–9.3%) or about 3000 to 5000 extra tests per month. The proportion of patients with newly "abnormal" TSH results almost tripled, from 3.3% (95% CI 3.2%–3.4%) to 9.1% (95% CI 9.0%–9.2%). The rate of new levothyroxine prescriptions increased from 3.24 (95% CI 3.15–3.33) per 1000 population in 2013 to 4.06 (95% CI 3.96–4.15) per 1000 population in 2014. Among patients with preexisting stable levothyroxine therapy, there was a significant increase in the number of dose escalations (p < 0.001) and a total increase of 500 new prescriptions per month. INTERPRETATION: Our findings suggest that clinicians may have responded to mildly elevated TSH results with new or increased levothyroxine prescriptions and more TSH testing. Knowledge translation efforts may be useful to accompany minor changes in reference ranges. Full Article
minor [PERSPECTIVES] Discouraging Elective Genetic Testing of Minors: A Norm under Siege in a New Era of Genomic Medicine By perspectivesinmedicine.cshlp.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T06:30:15-07:00 Consistently, the field of genetic counseling has advocated that parents be advised to defer elective genetic testing of minors until adulthood to prevent a range of potential harms, including stigma, discrimination, and the loss of the child's ability to decide for him- or herself as an adult. However, consensus around the policy of "defer-when-possible" obscures the extent to which this norm is currently under siege. Increasingly, routine use of full or partial genome sequencing challenges our ability to control what is discovered in childhood or, when applied in a prenatal context, even before birth. The expansion of consumer-initiated genetic testing services challenges our ability to restrict what is available to minors. As the barriers to access crumble, medical professionals should proceed with caution, bearing in mind potential risks and continuing to assess the impact of genetic testing on this vulnerable population. Full Article
minor An unequal society means covid-19 is hitting ethnic minorities harder By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 21 Apr 2020 17:17:34 +0000 People from an ethnic minority are disproportionately affected by covid-19. Researchers say the reasons are rooted in existing social and healthcare inequalities Full Article
minor Ethnic minorities at greater risk of virus death, says study By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-01T09:40:12Z People from black and ethnic minorities appear to be at greater risk of dying from coronavirus, according to a study of patients at three London hospitals. Full Article
minor NYPD reveals 80% of social distancing arrests have been minorities... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:37Z NYPD reveals 80% of social distancing arrests have been minorities... (Top headline, 9th story, link) Related stories:RECORD 103,415,000 NOT IN LABOR FORCE...20.5 MILLION JOBS VANISH IN APRIL...UNDERCOUNTED!'The government is failing us'...Trump's 2020 Jobs Bet Unravels...Dems introduce bill to give $2,000 monthly payments to most Americans...Federal Debt Tops $25 Trillion for First Time; Jumped $1 Trillion in Just 28 Days!Docs show top WH officials buried CDC report...Pandemic has widened racial and political divisions...Post-Outbreak Crime Surge?Armed With Swabs, Covid Hunters Stalk Their Prey...Fight Over Death Toll Opens Grim New Front in Election Battle...Anxious About Virus, Older Voters Grow More Wary of Trump...Florida nursing home fatalities spike dramatically...U.S. DEATHS: 77,313...WORLD SICK MAP...AMERICA SICK MAP... Full Article
minor Mexican Man Sentenced to 24 Years for Sex Trafficking of Minors and Transportation for the Purpose of Commercial Sex By www.justice.gov Published On :: Mon, 6 Apr 2009 18:15:55 EDT Jorge Flores-Rojas, 44, an undocumented Mexican national, was sentenced to 24 years in prison by Chief Judge Robert J. Conrad, Jr. in Charlotte, N.C., for two counts of sex trafficking of minors and one count of interstate transportation of an adult for purposes of commercial sex. Flores-Rojas pled guilty to the charges on Oct. 7, 2008. Full Article OPA Press Releases
minor Deputy Attorney General David Ogden's Address at the American Bar Association Section of Litigation 2009 Annual Conference John Minor Wisdom Public Service and Professionalism Awards Luncheon By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2009 17:11:18 EDT "To ensure that the Department holds itself to the highest standards during discovery -- as in every stage of litigation -- in our criminal cases, and also in our civil litigation, we have taken both short-term and long-term action." Full Article Speech
minor Texas Man Pleads Guilty to Travel with Intent to Engage in Sexual Conduct with a Minor, Possession of Child Pornography By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 5 May 2009 16:11:30 EDT Patrick Cochran, 47, of Lake Jackson, Texas, pleaded guilty today to one count of travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct with a minor, and one count of possession of child pornography. Full Article OPA Press Releases
minor Texas Man Sentenced to 76 Months in Prison for Travel with Intent to Engage in Sex with Minors By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 22 Sep 2009 09:30:22 EDT Patrick Cochran, 47, of Lake Jackson, Texas, was sentenced late on Monday in Phoenix to 76 months in prison for travel with intent to engage in sex with minors and possession of child pornography. Full Article OPA Press Releases