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Professor Resigns After Students Complain She Never Taught

"Who says college students never go to class? For one George Washington University course, it was the professor who didn’t show up.
Now, professor Venetia Orcutt is resigning from her position as chair of GWU’s physician assistant department following repeated complaints that she never showed up to teach her two courses.
Orcutt didn’t let her bad attendance affect her students’ grades, though — she gave all students enrolled in her “Evidence Based Medicine” courses As in 2010.
The course is required for all pre-med students, who (thankfully, considering they could operate on us someday) were angry about not not receiving proper instruction in spite of the high letter grades.
GWU has awarded Orcutt’s students credit for taking the class and is also giving them refunds."
in Time
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Will Adele Do A Full Recovery After Throat Surgery?

"After only two albums, could Adele’s career have already been on the line?
There must have been considerable worrying surrounding the vocal ability of the 23-year-old British singer-songwriting sensation as she went under the knife, receiving scheduled surgery on her throat.
The good news for all concerned is that she’s expected to make a full recovery from sinister-sounding “vocal cord microsurgery.” The Grammy winner had the procedure at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, performed by Dr. Steven Zeitels, head of the Voice Center, who has previously operated on Steven Tyler.
The operation should stop recurrent bleeding and prevent possible rupture from a benign polyp. And that will come as a relief, considering that in October she had to scrap her remaining concert dates and appearances for the rest of the year. ”If I continue to pick up everything before I have properly conquered these problems and nipped them in the bud, I will be totally and utterly f___,” she said on her blog recently. “Singing is literally my life, it’s my hobby, my love, my freedom and now my job.”
Adele had already told fans that she’s given up smoking and drinking to save her voice. If cursing remains her only vice, it will hopefully mean that we can continue to enjoy her more soulful words on record and in person."

in Time
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Woman Burns Down House After Facebook Un-Friending


"A recent house fire at the Iowa home of Jim and Nikki Rasmussen has been traced to an unlikely source: an un-friending on Facebook.
According to the Des Moines Register, the Rasmussen family homestead went up in smoke  in the early morning hours of Oct. 27. The fire department suspected arson and when the family was asked by investigators if anyone would want to harm the family. Both husband and wife agreed there was only one suspect: Jen Harris. Detectives have since arrested Jennifer Christine Harris, 30, of Des Moines, on a charge of first-degree arson.
The friendship of Nikki Rasmussen and Harris apparently hit a rough patch while the former friends were planning a party via Facebook. When the big event went bust with many declined e-vites, Harris allegedly held Rasmussen accountable, and according to news reports, posted some unsavory items on her Facebook wall. In this modern age, Rasmussen exacted her revenge with a few clicks of the mouse and de-friended Harris. This affront was too much for Harris who took her anger offline and allegedly torched the family’s garage, melting the siding clean off the home.
The Associated Press says that the fire destroyed a detached garage and damaged the home of the Rasmussens, but caused no injuries. Harris is being held in the Polk County Jail on $100,000 bond."
in Time

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Apple Will Reboot Entire Product Lineup Next Year

"I'm not sure this is actually newsworthy, but here it is anyway: Apple will overhaul its full product line over the course of 2012, including the iPad, iMac, iPhone and MacBook Air. That, according to a "source in the upstream supply chain" confabbing with DigiTimes. I know, it's basically like shouting "Revelation! Computer manufacturer will do what it usually does!" and expecting people's heads to spin.

But alright: Look for Apple's next iPad sometime in early 2012 (as long rumored), perhaps in March 2012, though it may simply be an update to the iPad 2 (as the iPhone 4S was to the iPhone 4), e.g. thinner with better battery life. A true third-gen iPad may not launch until 2012's second half. As for next-gen iPhone and iMac models, DigiTimes' source says to expect those in the second half of 2012.

As noted, an iPad update in early 2012's been rumored for months, while a new iPhone in 2012's second half is kind of a no-brainer—the iPhone 4S just debuted a few weeks ago, after all. The iMac hasn't been design-updated since the shift to a unibody aluminum frame in October 2009, but it undergoes routine parts refreshes, including processors, video cards and support for new connectivity features like Thunderbolt. It's unclear what overhauling the iMac family would entail. In any case, most of this scuttlebutt falls into could've-guessed-that-anyway space based on conventional product cycles.

The one semi-intriguing takeaway: Apple's supposed to be finalizing order quantities for the next iPad's insides in December, which appears to jibe with what a Susquehanna Financial analyst was saying middle of last month—that Apple was ramping up fourth quarter iPad production with plans to produce as many as one million next-gen iPads yet this year.
Make that two million, according to DigiTimes' source, which says parts inventory for Apple's next-gen iPad should be enough to produce that number of units by 2011's close. (...)"

in Time
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New Digital Book Library Service on Amazon.com

"Online retailer Amazon.com said Kindle owners with an Amazon Prime membership will now get access to the company's new digital book library service.
Kindle owners with the Prime membership can choose from thousands of books to borrow for free on a Kindle device, including more than 100 current and former New York Times bestsellers, as frequently as a book a month, the company said.
Amazon Prime costs $79 a year in the United States and gives members free two-day shipping along with free access to almost 13,000 TV shows and movies from the company's internet streaming service."

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Students Score Modestly Better in Math, While Reading Stays the Same

"Scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) released today show that while students have made slight gains in math in the past two years, performance in reading remains largely unchanged.

These findings come courtesy of Education Department's National Center for Educational Statistics, which administers the NAEP — often referred to as the Nation's Report Card, as it is the largest nationally representative measure of student achievement in the U.S. — every two years as a way to provide a snapshot of student performance in math and reading. This year, 422,000 fourth graders and 343,000 eighth graders took the exams between January and March.
The good news is students in both fourth and eighth grades earned the highest scores ever recorded on the national math exam, which has been administered since 1990. Fourth graders scored an average score of 241 (on a 0-500 point scale), a one-point increase from 2009 and a 28-point increase from 1990. Eighth graders showed similar gains, with an average score of 284, up one point from 2009 and 21 points from 1990.

But despite modest gains in math over the last two decades, average reading scores on the national reading exam, which has been administered since 1992, have barely budged. This year, eighth graders scored an average of 265 points, a one-point increase from 2009 and only a five-point increase from 1992. In the fourth grade, scores were even worse. Average reading scores among fourth graders have been stuck at 221 since 2007, a mere four points above where they were in 1992. In a prepared statement, David Driscoll, chair of the National Assessment Governing Board, which develops the exam, called the fourth grade reading scores "deeply disappointing."

"The modest increases in NAEP scores are a reason for concern as much as optimism,” Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said in a statement. “It's clear that achievement is not accelerating fast enough for our nation's children to compete."

One big area of concern is how few students have achieved proficiency in either area. Barely more than one-third of students in both grades are proficient or higher in reading, while in math 40% of fourth grade students and 35% of eighth graders scored at proficient levels or higher. (...)"

in Time
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Married after 6 months, divorced after 3

"Someone will have to inform President Obama.

Kim Kardashian is filing for divorce from Kris Humphries, her husband of less than three months. The news comes after their fairy-tale wedding was broadcasted by E!, the network that airs Keeping Up with the Kardashians and its spin-off shows.

Kardashian, 30, has hired celebrity lawyer Laura Wasser and will cite "irreconcilable differences," TMZ reports. The separation date will be listed as Oct. 31, 2011.

The divorce is a surprise mostly because of its speed; the couple got engaged after only six months of dating, and Kardashian had recently described her marriage as "not ideal." 

This was Kardashian's second marriage, and the first for basketball player Humphries, 26."

in Time

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