10/22/2012

Incentives Proposed For Math, Science Teachers



MANILA (PNA) -- Lawmakers are proposing incentives to enjoin students in mathematics and science to pursue a career in teaching for national development progress.

Rep. Diosdado Macapagal Arroyo (3rd District, Camarines Sur) said there is a need to create and maintain an adequate pool of highly qualified, motivated and globally competitive teachers to enable and strengthen the Philippines in its aim to be at par with the rest of the world.

“To be major players in the global arena, it is of paramount importance to have exceptionally and highly educated students. But without the contribution of our teachers in the molding of the youth, it will be close to impossible to create such an ideal studentry,” Arroyo said.

Arroyo and his mother, Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo (2nd District, Pampanga), filed House Bill 6494 which seeks to develop globally competitive science and mathematics teachers and advance their specialization, sustain interest in this field and encourage them to stay in science and mathematics teaching.

Under the bill, incentives are provided to continually upgrade the competence of those who are already in such fields of teaching as priority in government grants, allowances, study visits, placement, publications and research support, wherever appropriate, to teachers and students who enroll in science or mathematics teaching courses.

Another incentive is waivers from the Professional Regulatory Commission (PRC) to allow new graduates to teach between graduation and taking the Licensure Examination for Teachers (LET).

The measure also grants teachers a higher starting pay than their basic salary; giving rewards to top scorers in the LET as well as giving merit promotions through examinations.

To further encourage non-science and non-mathematics majors, the bill provides for promotions for those who have completed a certification program in science content.

The Arroyos proposed the creation of a Science and Mathematics Teachers Development Fund to finance programs for the continuing improvement of teachers’ skills.

“The passage of this bill will ensure that teaching in the fields of science and mathematics become as competitive as other professions as well as the availability of competent teachers to educate Filipinos for global excellence,” the younger Arroyo said. (PNA)

Sir Alex Ferguson resolves Rio Ferdinand T-shirt dispute

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson says he has resolved his dispute with Rio Ferdinand over the defender's refusal to wear a Kick It Out T-shirt.

Ferguson said he was "embarrassed" after Ferdinand decided not to wear the top in support of the anti-racism group ahead of the 4-2 win over Stoke.

But Ferguson said: "I've spoken to Rio. There is no issue.

"There was a communication problem but it has been resolved."

More than 30 players from eight Premier League clubs chose not to support the annual Kick It Out awareness drive by refusing to wear a campaign T-shirt.

Players including Ferdinand and Reading's Jason Roberts made the gesture to demonstrate against a perceived lack of action about racism.

Ferguson criticised Roberts' decision before the weekend but said he hopes Ferdinand will now express his views in a different way.

The United manager added: "He felt I should have spoken to him on Friday and I didn't anticipate that he'd have a problem wearing the shirt.

"My advice is to him is that I always feel a union is stronger than an individual. It's important he airs his grievances to the right people, to the PFA or the FA.

"As a manager you lay down policy and you don't want that ignored and that's where my anger came from on Saturday. There are no lingering problems and we move on."

Ferguson confirmed that Ferdinand, 33, will be rested for Tuesday's Champions League match against Braga at Old Trafford.

-  BBC.co.uk

Beluga whale 'makes human-like sounds'

Beluga whales are known as "canaries of the sea"
 because of their frequent, high-pitched calls
 
Researchers in the US have been shocked to discover a beluga whale whose vocalisations were remarkably close to human speech.

While dolphins have been taught to mimic the pattern and durations of sounds in human speech, no animal has spontaneously tried such mimicry.

But researchers heard a nine-year-old whale named NOC make sounds octaves below normal, in clipped bursts.

The researchers outline in Current Biology just how NOC did it.

But the first mystery was figuring out where the sound was coming from. The whales are known as "canaries of the sea" for their high-pitched chirps, and while a number of anecdotal reports of whales making human-like speech, none had ever been recorded.

When a diver at the National Marine Mammal Foundation in California surfaced saying, "Who told me to get out?" the researchers there knew they had another example on their hands.

Once they identified NOC as the culprit, they made the first-ever recordings of the behaviour.

They found that vocal bursts averaged about three per second, with pauses reminiscent of human speech. Analysis of the recordings showed that the frequencies within them were spread out into "harmonics" in a way very unlike whales' normal vocalisations and more like those of humans.


They then rewarded NOC for the speech-like sounds to teach him to make them on command and fitted him with a pressure transducer within his nasal cavity, where sounds are produced, to monitor just what was going on.

They found that he was able to rapidly change the pressure within his nasal cavity to produce the sounds.

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- BBC.co.uk

Brain change link to anti-social behaviour in girls

Brain scans showed significant differences

The brains of teenage girls with behavioural disorders are different to those of their peers, UK researchers have found.

The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry study of 40 girls revealed differences in the structure of areas linked to empathy and emotions.

Previous work has found similar results in boys.

Experts suggest it may be possible to use scans to spot problems early, then offer social or psychological help.

An estimated five in every 100 teenagers in the UK are classed as having a conduct disorder.

It is a psychiatric condition which leads people to behave in aggressive and anti-social ways, and which can increase the risk of mental and physical health problems in adulthood.

Rates have risen significantly among adolescent girls in recent years, while levels in males have remained about the same.

L'Aquila quake: Italy scientists guilty of manslaughter


Six Italian scientists and an ex-government official have been sentenced to six years in prison over the 2009 deadly earthquake in L'Aquila.

A regional court found them guilty of multiple manslaughter.

Prosecutors said the defendants gave a falsely reassuring statement before the quake, while the defence maintained there was no way to predict major quakes.

The 6.3 magnitude quake devastated the city and killed 309 people.

'Alarming' case


It took Judge Marco Billi slightly more than four hours to reach the verdict.

The seven - all members of the National Commission for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks - were judged to have provided "inexact, incomplete and contradictory" information about the danger of the tremors felt ahead of 6 April 2009 quake, Italian media report.

In the closing statement, the prosecution quoted one of its witnesses, whose father died in the earthquake.

It described how Guido Fioravanti had called his mother at about 11pm on the night of the earthquake - straight after the first tremor.

"I remember the fear in her voice. On other occasions they would have fled but that night, with my father, they told themselves what the risk commission had said. And they stayed."

The judge also ordered the defendants to pay court costs and damages.

It was not immediately known if they planned to appeal.

The case has alarmed many in the scientific community, who feel science itself has been put on trial.

More than 5,000 scientists signed an open letter to Italian President Giorgio Napolitano in support of the defendants.

Karl Lagerfeld Criticises French Government In Spanish Marie Claire

It wouldn't be Monday without a good ol' Lagerfeld debacle. As we have previously noted, Karl is known for his critical remarks, and once again, the Kaiser is feeling the pressure, this time directed at French President, François Hollande.

As WWD reports, Karl wrote a piece as the guest editor for Spanish Marie Claire's special twenty-fifth anniversary issue. In the piece, he criticizes the French President and his new Socialist government's high taxes on the wealthy. But while the criticisms are harsh, it's rather his choice of words that has him in hot water, as he uses the word imbécil to describe President Hollande.However, Spanish Maire Claire editor-in-chief Joana Bonet has come to his defence, saying the comments were 'taken out of context,' and that he was referring to the French President's policies rather than the man himself. When Bonet asked if Hollande is against the rich, Lagerfeld replied: 'He’s disastrous. He wants to punish them and, of course, they’re leaving. Nobody is investing. Foreigners don’t want to invest any more in France — and this is not working. Besides, France — apart from fashion, jewellry, perfume and wine — is not competitive...'

While he may not be buying French cars, Karl blamed his lack of Spanish skills on the misinterpretation of terms. And while he disagrees with his new President's policies, Karl maintains Hollande is 'very fun, spiritual and intelligent.' Whatever the meaning behind his word choice, Hollande shouldn't ponder Unkle Karl's interpretation too heavily.

As he wrote in his Maire Claire introduction, 'I don’t care if people I admire criticize me because their opinion is valuable to me. But with those I don’t care about, it makes no difference, good or bad, because I don’t read them.' Well then, it seems we'll have many Lager-isms to come.

Record 22 museums open FREE in Denver’s night at the museums

Borrowing an idea that has been wildly successful in Europe, Denver will host its sixth annual Night at the Museums, an evening where 22 of the city’s top museums will stay open late and open their doors for free. What started in Paris, has now spread across Europe with 3,000 museums participating this year in the European Night of the Museums,” says Richard Scharf, president & CEO of VISIT DENVER, The Convention & Visitors Bureau.

“So many families want to visit a museum together, but between work and school, it’s often hard to find the time,” Scharf said. “By staying open all evening on a Saturday night and offering all our museums for free, we create a special event that’s great for families, or a unique date night, or just a time to get out and see a new museum you have never experienced before,” Scharf said.

Since many of the museums are in clusters, it’s possible to museum-hop all evening. “You can visit the new History Colorado Center, walk across the street to the Denver Art Museum, peek into the new adjacent Clyfford Still Museum, cross the street to the Byers-Evans House Museum, and stroll three blocks to the Molly Brown House, all for free,” Scharf said.

To make it even easier to enjoy the evening, there are free shuttle buses that make a continuous loop, connecting downtown museums to several outlying ones, including the famous Denver Museum of Nature & Science (the fourth largest science museum in the U.S.); the Black American West Museum (where re-enactors will tell the stories of Black cowboys and Buffalo Soldiers); the Denver Botanic Gardens (where a special exhibit of Japanese bamboo sculptures, Kizuna: West Meets East, will be illuminated along with other gardens and fountains); and the Forney Museum of Transportation (where the museum is lit by the headlamps of antique cars and trains).

Other communities in metro Denver have also joined in. The nearby town of Golden will keep their lights on at the Colorado School of Mines Geology Museum, and the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum, among others. At nearby Dinosaur Ridge (the site of the first discovery of dinosaur bones), for a small fee, you can take a tour of dinosaur tracks by flashlight, while the Littleton Museum will open their Living History Farm by lantern light with costumed re-enactors.Many of the museums will have special events. Local band “I Sank Molly Brown” will be rocking at the Molly Brown House Museum to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Titanic sinking. Actors representing Vincent Van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec will be at the Denver Art Museum to promote the Becoming Van Gogh exhibit which opens October 21. (The Becoming Van Gogh exhibit does require paid admission, however discounted tickets will be available during Night at the Museums). Becoming Van Gogh hotel packages with VIP, skip-the-line tickets are also available throughout the duration of the exhibit.

Night at the Museums is part of Denver Arts Week, a 9-day celebration of the arts in The Mile High City, Nov. 2-10. Arts Week begins with Know Your Arts First Friday on Nov. 2, in which dozens of galleries stay open late in seven different Denver neighborhoods – many of them offering bands, artist demonstrations, food trucks and art for a special “Mile High” price. (Denver is exactly 5,280 feet above sea level – one mile high).

Denver Arts Week also includes special ticket prices and other discounts for theatre, symphony, opera and dance performances, and even special hotel deals. The 35th annual Starz Film Festival, the region’s largest celebration of cinema, takes place Nov. 1-11, over the same time period.

The cultural week finishes with a flurry at The Sights and Sounds of Cherry Creek North on Saturday, Nov. 10, a day-long celebration with live music, performing arts, artist exhibitions, art shows and educational activities.

“Arts and culture is a major part of Denver’s brand, and while we market to locals and visitors year-round through our online events calendar, Denver365, Night at the Museums and Denver Arts Week gives a chance to show locals and visitors just how much the arts scene has changed in Denver in recent years,” Scharf said. “It’s also a lot of fun.”

Teen Wolf (TV series)

Teen Wolf is an American television series developed by Jeff Davis for MTV. It is based on the 1985 film of the same name. The show's central character is Scott McCall (Tyler Posey), a high school student and social outcast who is bitten by a werewolf while looking for a dead girl in the woods. Scott attempts to maintain a normal life, keeping the fact of his being a werewolf secret from everyone, with the exception of his best friend "Stiles" Stilinski (Dylan O'Brien), who helps him through the changes in his life and body, and another mysterious werewolf, Derek Hale (Tyler Hoechlin).

Teen Wolf premiered on June 5, 2011, following the 2011 MTV Movie Awards. The second season premiered on June 3, 2012 after 2012 MTV Movie Awards. On July 12th, 2012, Teen Wolf was renewed for a third season which will include 24 episodes and the production location was moved to Los Angeles, California. The series received a generally positive response from critics, earning a score of 61 out of 100 on review site Metacritic.

Plot:  The series revolves around social outcast Scott McCall, a young lacrosse-playing student at Beacon Hills High. Scott's life drastically changes when he is bitten by a werewolf, which in turn transforms him into one of these mythical creatures. He must henceforth learn to balance his problematic new identity with his day to day teenage life. The following characters are instrumental to his struggle: Stiles, his best friend; Allison, his girlfriend, who comes from a family that partakes in werewolf hunting; and Derek, a mysterious werewolf. Throughout the show, he strives both to keep his loved ones safe and maintain the relationships and secrets he shares with each person around him. The theme of "finding your place" is a prevalent undertone that is mirrored by the pack mentality of the werewolves.

Bollywood movie mogul Yash Chopra dies at 80

MUMBAI, India (AP) — Bollywood movie mogul Yash Chopra, whose classic love tales made him the Indian film industry's "King of Romance," has died after contracting dengue fever. He was 80.

Chopra's earliest major hits included the 1975 action film "Deewar" ("Wall") and the romance "Kabhi Kabhie — Love is Life" in 1976, both of which helped establish Amitabh Bachchan as Bollywood's biggest star. The popular 1989 film "Chandni" ("Moonlight") had Chopra's signature touches: romance, music and a European setting.

He also directed "Dil To Pagal Hai" (The Heart Is Mad), "Lamhe" ("Moments") and "Veer-Zaara," which won the popular award at the International Indian Film Academy and the Golden Lotus award at India's National Film Awards. His final film, "Jab Tak Hai Jaan" ("As Long As I Am Alive"), is scheduled for release across India next month.

Chopra died Sunday in Mumbai's Lilavati Hospital. In addition to dengue, he suffered kidney ailments, according to Dr. Prakash Jiyavani.

"He passed away due to dengue and multiple organ failure," the Press Trust of India quoted a hospital spokesman, Sudhir, as saying. The spokesman uses only one name.

Chopra started his film career in the 1950s under the tutelage of his elder brother, late filmmaker B.R. Chopra. He founded his own studio Yash Raj Films and launched it with "Daag: A Poem of Love" in 1973, which won him one of his four Filmfare Awards for best director.

He is survived by his wife and two sons. Elder son Aditya Chopra is a successful film director, and Uday Chopra runs the international branch of the family's production house.

Headline Oct23,2012/


''ONE PROFESSOR YOU ARE SURE TO MEET IN HEAVEN!''




Professor Cobb used to love appearing around campus in various disguises! Just hear it in his own words, ''Yes. I first did it on a parents weekend. I walked into my class and sat down. We all waited for the Teacher to show up. After a few minutes I expressed impatience that the Teacher was late, stood up and began to remove layers.

I took off my hat, I took off my wig, I took off my mustache, I took off my jacket,my shoes, my pants, and under all of that I had on my three-piece suit!!

I then announced that things were not always what they appeared to be. ''That was the main theme of the course.''

The Students loved their Professor even though they found him odd. And Professor Cobb thought, ''I don't mind being considered odd.
I wanted my students to say to themselves,
Here is a man with his own vision of Excellence, peculiar as it may be, and he is consistent in trying to fill it in everything he does, even in the way he dresses.''

So when the Professor is posed with the question, ''In Literature, do you identify with the guys who wear black hats or the guys who wear white hats?'' He turns pensive and philosophic: ''The black hats. They are much more interesting. The guys in the white hats have a whole list of qualifications, including that they can not be too bright; they have got to be pious and virtuous.And Lucifer is a lot more interesting than.....whoever.

The difference between darkness and blackness, well, that is the ultimate game: to be opposed to all of that out there. I am not saying I act this out. But it's the appeal of the outsider, of the misfit,of the outcast, of the person who,probably futilely, is trying to overthrow order.

Like Lucifer, rising up, taking a look at those stars and saying, ''Damn it.''

So, a good question is, does he work within a system at the University?

''Sure,'' says the Professor, ''but I play with it all the time.'' Hahaha! Great work, Sir!

Professor David Cobb is a great Teacher, but he is also a soldier with a black belt in both judo and karate, a painter, an aesthete and pretty good country ballplayer to boot. So how does he reconcile all of these people.

The Prof smiles that all knowing smile and says:

My favourite lines of poetry are from Walt Whitman:

''Do I contradict myself?
Very well then I contradict myself,
I am large, I contain multitudes!"

Good night & God Bless!

Universidad de Chile places first in national university rankings

Universidad de Chile has become the best university in Chile due to its extensive economic research and a change in the ranking system research methods.


It surpassed Universidad Católica in this year’s University Quality rankings released Friday by América Economía. Of the 59 universities in Chile, the two placed first and second, respectively, above Universidad de Concepción in third and Universidad de Santiago de Chile in fourth place.


U de Chile excelled in the research index, publishing more academic papers indexed by the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) than U Católica. In four years, U de Chile published 6,134 papers while U Católica published 4,554.

This factor carried U de Chile to the top spot after the ranking system was changed to the university’s advantage, allowing the research index category to carry greater weight. Last year the research index counted for 10 percent of the universities overall score. This year that number was raised to 15 percent.

Universidad de Concepción also moved up in the 2012 rankings, surpassing Universidad de Santiago and moving from fourth to third place. According to América Economía, U de Santiago is struggling to attract students with University Selection Test (PSU) scores over 600-700 of 850 possible points. This, however, might be circumstantial, as U de Santiago recently launched seven new undergraduate programs, a factor that typically lowers a university’s rankings early on.

As usual, the top of the national rankings were dominated by “traditional” universities. The only non-traditional name to breach the top ten, once again, was Universidad Adolfo Ibañez, in ninth place.

By Emily Green (green@santiagotimes.cl)
Copyright 2012 - The Santiago Times

8 Ontario girls arrested in high school bullying case



Eight teenage girls at a high school in London, Ont., have been arrested in connection with a bullying incident involving another student, police say.

Const. Dennis Rivest of the London Police Service said the eight girls were arrested Thursday.

Police said an investigation revealed that the victim had been the target of physical and emotional bullying, and cyberbullying.


The arrested girls face charges of criminal harassment.

Police said information about the bullying came from individuals who came forward in person and through an anonymous reporting web portal, called "South Cares," which is on the London South Collegiate website.

Bill Tucker, director of education at Thames Valley District School Board, said they had 70,000 community members take a pledge last year to end bullying.


"We know that the research says if an individual intervenes in bullying behaviour, we can stop bullying behaviour within seconds ...in 50 per cent of cases," he said.

Tucker added that school boards know they need help to end bullying, especially cyberbullying.

"It is such a complex, intricate challenge for school boards that we went to community and said, 'We need your help.'"

"If we can change behaviours about drinking and driving, if we change behaviours and attitudes around smoking, why can we not change behaviours and attitudes around bullying."

-  CBC News 


Deadly Earthquake Linked To Human Activity, Study Finds


MADRID (AP) — Farmers drilling ever deeper wells over decades to water their crops likely contributed to a deadly earthquake in southern Spain last year, a new study suggests. The findings may add to concerns about the effects of new energy extraction and waste disposal technologies.

Nine people died and nearly 300 were injured when an unusually shallow magnitude-5.1 quake hit the town of Lorca on May 11, 2011. It was the country's worst quake in more than 50 years, causing millions of euros in damage to a region with an already fragile economy.

Using satellite images, scientists from Canada, Italy and Spain found the quake ruptured a fault running near a basin that had been weakened by 50 years of groundwater extraction in the area.

During this period, the water table dropped by 250 meters (274 yards) as farmers bored ever deeper wells to help produce the fruit, vegetables and meat that are exported from Lorca to the rest of Europe. In other words, the industry that propped up the local economy in southern Spain may have undermined the very ground on which Lorca is built.

The researchers noted that even without the strain caused by water extraction, a quake would likely have occurred at some point.

But the extra stress of pumping vast amounts of water from a nearby aquifer may have been enough to trigger a quake at that particular time and place, said lead researcher Pablo J. Gonzalez of the University of Western Ontario, Canada.

Miguel de las Doblas Lavigne, a geologist with Spain's National Natural Science Museum who has worked on the same theory but was not involved in the study, said the Lorca quake was in the cards.

Sea Piracy Worldwide Falls To Lowest Level Since 2008



Sea piracy worldwide fell to its lowest level since 2008 over the first nine months of this year as navies and shipping companies cracked down on attacks off the coast of Somalia, an international maritime watchdog said Monday.

The International Maritime Bureau said 233 attacks were recorded worldwide in the first nine months of this year, down from 352 in the same period last year. The bureau's piracy reporting arm, which is based in Kuala Lumpur, said 24 vessels were hijacked worldwide between January and September 2012, with 458 crew members taken hostage and six killed.

The numbers fell because attacks off Somalia's coast plummeted during that same period, from 199 last year to 70 this year. The bureau said only one Somali attack was reported in the entire third quarter of 2012.

Piracy soared in 2009 because of attacks off largely lawless Somalia, where pirates became more daring and desperate. Since then, pirates have been deterred by international navies, and by ships taking their own security measures, such as hiring armed guards.

- AP

Prehistoric Flamingo Nest, Eggs Discovered In Spain


A fossil’s bird nest has been discovered in limestone block in the Ebro Basin in northeastern Spain holding 5 eggs. After research scientist believes that this nest and eggs belongs to an ancient flamingo some 18 million years ago.
Scientist believes that this nest was left alone and sunk into a not too much deep salty lake before being covered in mud and fossilizing during the early Miocene.
After the scanning of eggshell fragments in laboratory some microscopic features resembling with the modern age flamingo's eggs were revealed however the type of nest is different from today’s flamingo's nest as modern flamingos make muddy volcano-shaped nests with a single, large egg in each, but this ancient nest was made from  flamingo’s wings and leaves and holds several eggs. The researchers said that the nest actually looks more like those of modern grebes, diving birds that build floating platform nests, which typically hold three to eight eggs and are anchored to the bottom of a lake with aquatic plants.
This new fossil then might indicate that the grebe-style nest is ancestral to this group of birds and that, over time, modern flamingos diverged, developing their volcano-shaped nests.

World's Largest & Most expensive Yacht Eclipse...!



Owned by 44-year-old Russian billionaire, Roman Abramovich, the yacht features two helicopter pads, 24 guest cabins, two swimming pools, several hot tubs and a disco hall. It is also equipped with three launch boats and a mini- submarine that is capable of submerging to 50 meters Approximately 70 crew members are needed to operate the yacht. The Eclipse is the longest private yacht in the world at an amazing 164 meters.

EuroChocolate 2012 festival held in downtown Perugia, central Italy


Sculptors of Italy carved a giant cube of Perugina black chocolate during the EuroChocolate 2012 festival in downtown Perugia, central Italy, Oct. 21, 2012. Offering a variety of activities including chocolate art displays, chocolate tastings, street performances, and chocolate sculpting, the annual festival draws nearly one million foreign tourists and Italian natives each year since 1993.

21 Ways Rich People Think Differently Than Average People

Steve Siebold, author of “How Rich People Think”, spent nearly three decades interviewing millionaires around the world to find out what separates them from everyone else. It had little to do with money itself, he told Business Insider. It was about their mentality. ” (The middle class) tells people to be happy with what they have,” he said. “And on the whole, most people are steeped in fear when it comes to money.”




1. Average people think MONEY is the root of all evil. Rich people believe POVERTY is the root of all evil.

“The average person has been brainwashed to believe rich people are lucky or dishonest,” Siebold writes. That’s why there’s a certain shame that comes along with “getting rich” in lower-income communities. ”The world class knows that while having money doesn't guarantee happiness, it does make your life easier and more enjoyable.”


2.  Average people think selfishness is a vice. Rich people think selfishness is a virtue.

“The rich go out there and try to make themselves happy. They don’t try to pretend to save the world,” Siebold told Business Insider. The problem is that middle class people see that as a negative––and it’s keeping them poor, he writes. “If you’re not taking care of you, you’re not in a position to help anyone else. You can’t give what you don’t have.”


3. Average people have a lottery mentality. Rich people have an action mentality.


“While the masses are waiting to pick the right numbers and praying for prosperity, the great ones are solving problems,” Siebold writes. “The hero [middle class people] are waiting for may be God, government, their boss or their spouse. It’s the average person’s level of thinking that breeds this approach to life and living while the clock keeps ticking away.”


4. Average people think the road to riches is paved with formal education. Rich people believe in acquiring specific knowledge.

“Many world-class performers have little formal education, and have amassed their wealth through the acquisition and subsequent sale of specific knowledge,” he writes. “Meanwhile, the masses are convinced that master’s degrees and doctorates are the way to wealth, mostly because they are trapped in the linear line of thought that holds them back from higher levels of consciousness…The wealthy aren’t interested in the means, only the end.”


5.Average people long for the good old days. Rich people dream of the future.

“Self-made millionaires get rich because they’re willing to bet on themselves and project their dreams, goals and ideas into an unknown future,” Siebold writes. “People who believe their best days are behind them rarely get rich, and often struggle with unhappiness and depression.”


6. Average people see money through the eyes of emotion. Rich people think about money logically.

“An ordinarily smart, well-educated and otherwise successful person can be instantly transformed into a fear-based, scarcity driven thinker whose greatest financial aspiration is to retire comfortably,” he writes. “The world class sees money for what it is and what it’s not, through the eyes of logic. The great ones know money is a critical tool that presents options and opportunities.”



7. Average people earn money doing things they don’t love. Rich people follow their passion.

“To the average person, it looks like the rich are working all the time,” Siebold says. “But one of the smartest strategies of the world class is doing what they love and finding a way to get paid for it.”On the other hand, middle class take jobs they don’t enjoy “because they need the money and they’ve been trained in school and conditioned by society to live in a linear thinking world that equates earning money with physical or mental effort.”


8. Average people set low expectations so they’re never disappointed. Rich people are up for the challenge.

“Psychologists and other mental health experts often advise people to set low expectations for their life to ensure they are not disappointed,” Siebold writes. “No one would ever strike it rich and live their dreams without huge expectations.”



9. Average people believe you have to DO something to get rich. Rich people believe you have to BE something to get rich.
“That’s why people like Donald Trump go from millionaire to nine billion dollars in debt and come back richer than ever,” he writes. “While the masses are fixated on the doing and the immediate results of their actions, the great ones are learning and growing from every experience, whether it’s a success or a failure, knowing their true reward is becoming a human success machine that eventually produces outstanding results.”


10. Average people believe you need money to make money. Rich people use other people’s money.

Linear thought might tell people to make money in order to earn more, but Siebold says the rich aren’t afraid to fund their future from other people’s pockets.
“Rich people know not being solvent enough to personally afford something is not relevant. The real question is, ‘Is this worth buying, investing in, or pursuing?’” he writes.



11. Average people believe the markets are driven by logic and strategy. Rich people know they’re driven by emotion and greed.
Investing successfully in the stock market isn’t just about a fancy math formula. “The rich know that the primary emotions that drive financial markets are fear and greed, and they factor this into all trades and trends they observe,” Siebold writes. ”This knowledge of human nature and its overlapping impact on trading give them strategic advantage in building greater wealth through leverage.”



12. Average people live beyond their means. Rich people live below theirs.


“Here’s how to live below your means and tap into the secret wealthy people have used for centuries: Get rich so you can afford to,” he writes. ”The rich live below their means, not because they’re so savvy, but because they make so much money that they can afford to live like royalty while still having a king’s ransom socked away for the future.”


13. Average people teach their children how to survive. Rich people teach their kids to get rich.

Rich parents teach their kids from an early age about the world of “haves” and “have-nots,” Siebold says. Even he admits many people have argued that he’s supporting the idea of elitism. He disagrees. ”[People] say parents are teaching their kids to look down on the masses because they’re poor. This isn’t true,” he writes. “What they’re teaching their kids is to see the world through the eyes of objective reality––the way society really is.” If children understand wealth early on, they’ll be more likely to strive for it later in life.


14. Average people let money stress them out. Rich people find peace of mind in wealth.

The reason wealthy people earn more wealth is that they’re not afraid to admit that money can solve most problems, Siebold says. ”[The middle class] sees money as a never-ending necessary evil that must be endured as part of life. The world class sees money as the great liberator, and with enough of it, they are able to purchase financial peace of mind.”


15. Average people would rather be entertained than educated. Rich people would rather be educated than entertained.

While the rich don’t put much stock in furthering wealth through formal education, they appreciate the power of learning long after college is over, Siebold says. ”Walk into a wealthy person’s home and one of the first things you’ll see is an extensive library of books they’ve used to educate themselves on how to become more successful,” he writes. ”The middle class reads novels, tabloids and entertainment magazines.”


16. Average people think rich people are snobs. Rich people just want to surround themselves with like-minded people.


The negative money mentality poisoning the middle class is what keeps the rich hanging out with the rich, he says. ”[Rich people] can’t afford the messages of doom and gloom,” he writes. “This is often misinterpreted by the masses as snobbery. Labeling the world class as snobs is another way the middle class finds to feel better bout themselves and their chosen path of mediocrity.”



17. Average people focus on saving. Rich people focus on earning.

Siebold theorizes that the wealthy focus on what they’ll gain by taking risks, rather than how to save what they have. ”The masses are so focused on clipping coupons and living frugally they miss major opportunities,” he writes. ”Even in the midst of a cash flow crisis, the rich reject the nickle and dime thinking of the masses. They are the masters of focusing their mental energy where it belongs: on the big money.”


18. Average people play it safe with money. Rich people know when to take risks.

“Leverage is the watchword of the rich,” Siebold writes. ”Every investor loses money on occasion, but the world class knows no matter what happens, they will aways be able to earn more.”


19. Average people love to be comfortable. Rich people find comfort in uncertainty.

For the most part, it takes guts to take the risks necessary to make it as a millionaire––a challenge most middle class thinkers aren’t comfortable living with. ”Physical, psychological, and emotional comfort is the primary goal of the middle class mindset,” Siebold writes. World class thinkers learn early on that becoming a millionaire isn’t easy and the need for comfort can be devastating. They learn to be comfortable while operating in a state of ongoing uncertainty.”


20. Average people never make the connection between money and health. Rich people know money can save your life.

While the middle class squabbles over the virtues of Obamacare and their company’s health plan, the super wealthy are enrolled in a super elite “boutique medical care” association, Siebold says. ”They pay a substantial yearly membership fee that guarantees them 24-hour access to a private physician who only serves a small group of members,” he writes. ”Some wealthy neighborhoods have implemented this strategy and even require the physician to live in the neighborhood.”



21. Average people believe they must choose between a great family and being rich. Rich people know you can have it all.
The idea the wealth must come at the expense of family time is nothing but a “cop-out”, Siebold says. ”The masses have been brainwashed to believe it’s an either/or equation,” he writes. “The rich know you can have anything you want if you approach the challenge with a mindset rooted in love and abundance.”








Pakistan XI sweep series

No. 11 Nantie Hayward's 16-ball 42 wasn't enough to
prevent defeat for the International World XI

Even a stunning 16-ball 42 from last man Nantie Hayward wasn't enough to prevent International World XI from sliding to a six-wicket defeat against Pakistan All Star XI in the second Twenty20 match in Karachi.

For the second day in a row, the International XI's batting failed to run up a substantial score. They had slid to an embarrassing 85 for 9 in the 16th over, and were only taken to the respectability of 142 due to Hayward swinging four sixes and three fours in the final stretch of the innings. They were also helped by the fact that the home side decided to give part-timers Asad Shafiq and Imran Nazir the ball for the final overs; the two were caned for 56 runs in four overs.

Before the tenth-wicket stand, they had been little of note from the International XI's batting. Sanath Jayasuriya bagged a duck as seven of the top nine were dismissed in single figures. The difference between the two teams was evident just from the first over of each innings: International XI were 3 for 1, while Pakistan XI were 18 for 0, including sixes from Nazir off the first two deliveries.

Nazir and Shahzaib Hasan pummelled the new-ball bowlers to put the home side on course for a comfortable victory. In the first seven overs, the pair smashed seven sixes and eight fours, motoring along to 87 for 0. Though International XI struck three times in the next three overs, it didn't affect the chase too much, with Shafiq calmly taking the home side to victory, with more than three overs still to go.

© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Wozniacki beats Stosur to win Kremlin Cup final


(Reuters) - Denmark's Caroline Wozniacki claimed her 20th career title by beating top seed Samantha Stosur 6-2 4-6 7-5 in a thrilling Kremlin Cup tennis final on Sunday.

The third-seeded Dane trailed Stosur 1-3 in the third set but recovered her poise to draw level, then broke the Australian in the 12th game to clinch her second title of the season after winning the Korea Open last month.