(CBS, 60 Minutes 6/22/03,7:00pm)
What is America's most valuable import from India? It may very well be brainpower.
Hundreds of thousands of well-educated Indians have come to the U.S. in recent decades - many to work in the computer and software industries. The best and brainiest among them seem to share a common credential: They're graduates of the Indian Institute of Technology, better known as IIT. IIT has seven campuses throughout the country, and as we discovered when we traveled there last year, its students consider themselves the luckiest people in India. Correspondent Lesley Stahl reports on this story which first aired March 2, 2003.
Put Harvard, MIT and Princeton together, and you begin to get an idea of the status of IIT in India. IIT is dedicated to producing world-class chemical, electrical and computer engineers with a curriculum that may be the most rigorous in the world. Just outside the campus gates, the slums, congestion and chaos of Bombay are overwhelming. But inside, it's quiet and uncrowded and, by Indian standards, very well equipped. Getting here is the fervent dream of nearly every student. With a population of over a billion people in India, competition to get into the IITs is ferocious. Last year, 178,000 high school seniors took the entrance exam called the JEE. Just over 3,500 were accepted, or less than two percent. Compare that with Harvard, which accepts about 10 percent of its applicants.
“The IITs probably are the hardest school in the world to get into, to the best of my knowledge,” says Vinod Khosla, who got into IIT about 30 years ago. After graduating, Khosla came to the U.S., co-founded Sun Microsystems and became one of Silicon Valley's most important venture capitalists. He's one of thousands of IIT graduates who have made it big in the U.S. “Microsoft, Intel, PCs, Sun Microsystems -- you name it, I can't imagine a major area where Indian IIT engineers haven't played a leading role,” says Khosla. “And, of course, the American consumer and the American business in the end is the beneficiary of that.” It isn't just high tech. The head of the giant consulting firm McKinsey & Company is an IIT grad. So is the vice chairman of Citigroup and the former CEO of US Airways. Fortune 500 headhunters are always on the lookout for that IIT degree. “They are favored over almost anybody else. If you're a WASP walking in for a job, you wouldn't have as much pre-assigned credibility as you do if you're an engineer from IIT,” says Khosla.
Ninety percent of IIT students are male, and the young men we met in Bombay know they're hot commodities. Plus, the American companies love the kids from IIT. And the students view it as a ticket to another way of life. Em Rahm, one of India's leading journalists, says that because the stakes are so high, a kid starts preparing early. “By 10, you know whether you've made it--you're made for it or not,” he says. But just standing out in school won't be enough. At about 16, students enroll in a prep class where they're drilled for the IIT entrance exam. There are even pre-dawn tutoring classes – before they go to school. “I normally stay up all night and study for my exams,” says one student.
After years of preparation, students reach the day they and their families believe will make or break the future finally arrives. “On the day of the exam, my dad, my mom and my younger brother -- they all accompanied me to the center,” says one student. “I said, 'OK, now you can leave. I'll come home on my own.' But I was literally amazed when I came back out of the center and see my parents and brother still waiting for me outside the center.”
After six hours of testing, there’s an excruciating month-long wait for the results. Results are posted on the Web. And after 10 days, students receive a letter. Top rankers get their photographs in the paper. But the ranking isn't just an ego trip. The top kids get to choose which campus they want and which major. “It's a big deal in India, it is,” says Narayana Murthy, founder of the huge software company Infosys. He’s known as the Bill Gates of India. “It's very easy to lose hope in this country. It's very easy to set your aspirations low in this country. But amidst all this, this competition among high-quality students, this institution of IIT, sets your aspirations much higher.”
Murthy’s own son, who wanted to do computer science at IIT, couldn’t get in. He went to Cornell, instead. Imagine a kid from India using an Ivy League university as a safety school. That's how smart these guys are. “I do know cases where students who couldn't get into computer science at IITs, they have gotten scholarship at MIT, at Princeton, at Caltech,” says Murthy.
“When I finished IIT Delhi and went to Carnegie Mellon for my master's, I thought I was cruising all the way through Carnegie Mellon
because it was so easy, relative to the education I had gotten at IIT Delhi,” says Khosla.
Students act like entrepreneurs the whole time they're at IIT. They run everything in the dorms, which might be mistaken for cell blocks if not for all the Pentium 4 PCs. They organize the sports themselves. They even hire the chefs and pick the food in the mess halls. And unlike so many other institutions in India, they all know they're here because they deserve to be here. “There is no corruption. It's a pure meritocracy,” says Murthy.
IIT may also be one of the best educational bargains in the world. It costs a family just about $700 a year for room, board and tuition. That's less than 20 percent of the true cost since the Indian government subsidizes all the rest. While some IIT grads stay and have helped build India's flourishing high-tech sector, almost two-thirds--up to 2,000 people--leave every year, most for the U.S.
“Some people would say you're subsidizing factories, which produce largely for the higher end of the American employment market,” says Rahm. “You don't have to be crudely nationalistic to raise this question. There's a need here. There's a demand here, and these guys are simply not available.” How many of them ever come back? “Very small percentage, but my view is that we also have to work harder here to make it attractive for them to come back,” says Murthy. And Murthy is doing his part. His software company, Infosys, hires about 150 IIT graduates every year to stay and work in India. He says the brain-drain doesn't worry him. “Some of these people who have reached the higher echelons in the corporate world in the U.S., you know, they have persuaded their corporations to start operations in India, whether it's Texas Instruments, whether it's General Electric, whether it's Citibank,” says Murthy.
“I have no question that India now is benefiting significantly from the cycling of knowledge, the back and forth, no question about it,” says Khosla. And individual IIT grads are sending lots of money back home, too, but the U.S. still gets the better end of the bargain. “How many jobs have entrepreneurs, Indian entrepreneurs, in Silicon Valley created over the last 15, 20 years? Hundreds of thousands, I would
guess,” says Khosla. “For America to be able to pick off this human capital, these well-trained engineers with great minds, it's a great deal.”
this quote from John Templeton:
"The total debt of America is now $31 trillion. That is three times the GNP of the U.S. That is unprecedented in a major nation. No nation has ever had such a big debt as America has, and it's bigger than it was at the peak of the stock market boom. Think of the dangers involved. Almost everyone has a home mortgage, and some are 89% of the value of the home [and yes, some are more]. If home prices start down, there will be bankruptcies, and in bankruptcy, houses are sold at lower prices, pushing home prices down further."
The Fed set off an equity raid that has Americans deeper in debt than at any time in history. The only way out IMHO is inflation.
In recent months, efforts to recall Governor Gray Davis from office have drawn attention to the recall process in California. The recall is the power of the voters to remove elected officers before their terms expire. It was added to the state constitution in 1911, along with the initiative and referendum and other changes resulting from the Progressive movement.
Recall elections combine features of both a ballot measure and a candidate election. A question of recalling an elected official is placed on the ballot by filing petitions containing the signatures of the required number of registered voters. For a statewide officer, this is 12 percent of the number who last voted for the office, or in this case 897,158 signatures, based on the approximately 7.5 million who voted in the November 2002 gubernatorial election. As in other cases where signatures are gathered, such as to qualify initiatives for the ballot, more than the minimum number of signatures are obtained to allow for ineligible ones. The goal of recall proponents is likely to be roughly 1.2 to 1.3 million.
Proponents of the recall have 160 days for circulating petitions. Every 30 days, county elections officials certify the number of qualified signatures they have received to that point. Once the Secretary of State certifies that sufficient signatures have been obtained, a special election is set to take place within 60 to 80 days. However, if a regularly scheduled statewide election will take place within 180 days of certification, the recall election can be consolidated with it.
Thus, if enough signatures are certified for the recall of the governor by September 3, 2003, a special election must be called for a date in the fall of 2003. If signatures for a recall election are certified after that date, the election would be consolidated with the March 2, 2004 statewide primary election. Accounting for the time required for the certification process, recall proponents believe they must turn in signatures by July 16, 2003 to ensure a fall 2003 special election.
Before 1994, the only question at the recall election was whether the official should be recalled; if the recall was approved by a majority of the voters, a subsequent election was held to elect a successor. However, in November 1994 the law was amended to consolidate those two elections. Now the question of the recall and a list of candidates to succeed the official appear on the same ballot.
Candidates must file nomination papers and a declaration of candidacy 59 days prior to the election. For governor, a filing fee of $3,500 and 65 valid signatures of registered voters of the same party as the candidate are required. Candidates not affiliated with a party may submit 65 valid signatures of registered voters of any party affiliation. Candidates may apply for a fee waver by submitting additional signatures.
If the recall succeeds, the candidate with the largest number of votes is elected to the office and takes office the following day.There are no party primaries to select candidates, and no provision for a runoff if no candidate receives a majority of the vote. There is no limit on the number of candidates who can run. If there are a number of candidates running, the winner could be elected with a relatively low percentage of the vote.The proponents' statement of reasons for recall and the response, if any, filed by the official whose recall is sought are printed on the recall petitions and on the sample ballots mailed to voters.
According to a Fair Political Practices Commission fact sheet, the recall part of the election would be classified as a ballot measure, for which there are no contribution limits under the state Political Reform Act. Thus, the contribution limits of Proposition 34 would not apply either to the proponents of the recall measure or to the elected official who is the target of the recall. However, Proposition 34 contribution limits would apply to the campaigns of the candidates running to succeed the recalled official. As with other elections in California, all candidates and campaign committees have reporting and disclosure obligations under the Political Reform Act.
If a special statewide recall election is called, the cost to taxpayers is estimated at $25-35 million. If the elected official is not recalled, his or her campaign expenses are reimbursed by the state. This potential cost to taxpayers is unknown.
(ABC News,Aug. 11) ‘Total Disbelief’
Penis Removal Just Latest In Series of Surgical Mistakes, But Patients Can Protect Themselves
— After 67-year-old Hurshell Ralls went into surgery for bladder cancer, he came out of surgery missing more than he ever expected. His penis and testicles were gone.
"My wife had to hold my hand in the bed there. And she said 'Honey it's over. They got all the cancer.' And she waited a few minutes and then said 'But they had to remove your penis.' And I was one mad dude, you know," Ralls said on ABCNEWS' Good Morning America.
Ralls, a mechanic, says doctors never warned him or his wife that amputation of the penis and testicles might have been part of surgery before he went in for the procedure in November 1999. Ralls filed a negligence lawsuit against the Clinics of North Texas in Wichita Falls, and the doctors who operated on him. The civil case is set for trial Aug. 25.
"It was never even discussed. And I felt like he ought to have at least told us that this might be a possibility so that we could have talked it over even before he was admitted to the hospital," said Thelma Ralls, his wife. In a February deposition, Ralls' doctor said that he determined the cancer had spread to the penis while he was removing Ralls' bladder. Doctors did not send a tissue sample to the lab until after the surgery. A Dallas doctor who examined cell slides later found that Ralls did not have penile cancer.
マリナーズのイチローの活躍が野球の試合そのものを面白くしている。投げて良し、打って良し、走って良しと三拍子揃った選手にはちょっとやそっとではお目にかかれない。そのため年棒がヤンキーズの松井よりかなり低いのは気になる。
2003 Salary Ichiro: $4,697,000/Matsui: $6,000,000
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ESPN2: SEA@OAK Sep20Sun., 4:05 PM ET
By Tony Gwynn
Special to ESPN Insider
When August began, Ichiro Suzuki was leading the American League in hitting, but now he isn't even in the top 10. He was a leading candidate for the MVP, but not anymore.
In August, Ichiro batted .242, and his slump has deepened in September, when he's hit .212. Not surprisingly, Ichiro's troubles at the plate have corresponded with the troubles of the Seattle Mariners in the standings. Seattle once had a comfortable lead in the AL West, but that lead evaporated long ago. The Mariners now find themselves looking up at both the torrid Oakland Athletics (in the division) and the Boston Red Sox (in the wild-card race).
Ichiro makes the Mariners go. When he struggles, it's far more difficult for other guys in the lineup -- like Bret Boone, John Olerud and Edgar Martinez -- to produce. When Ichiro gets on base from his leadoff spot, he disrupts the opponent's focus with his speed on the basepaths. When he doesn't get on base, well ... you can see the results.
他国の追従を許さない科学技術力の国アメリカ。学歴社会を支える日本の教育と科学に寄与するアメリカの教育の違いが如実に現れている。もし仮にノーベル賞が日本のものだとしたら、その受賞者は東大出身に占められるだろう。「世界が一流と認める」賞を与える国はやはり日本ではありえない。
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Bush Meets With 6 U.S. Nobel Recipients (Nov17,2003 AP)
WASHINGTON - Six U.S. citizens who received a Nobel Prize this year in chemistry, physics, medicine and economics were recognized by President Bush (news - web sites) on Monday during a visit to the Oval Office. The six Americans who met with Bush after receiving the awards last month from the Royal Academy of Sciences were: _Peter Agre of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and Roderick MacKinnon, with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at The Rockefeller University in New York, for studies of tiny transportation tunnels in cell walls, work that illuminates diseases of the heart, kidneys and nervous system. _Alexei A. Abrikosov, a Russian and American citizen based at the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois; and Anthony J. Leggett, a British and American citizen based at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who received the physics prize. _Paul C. Lauterbur at the University of Illinois was a co-winner of the medicine prize. _Robert F. Engle, who shared the Nobel in economics with Clive W.J. Granger. The two were colleagues for decades at the University of California at San Diego.
Since the first Nobel Prizes were awarded in 1901, 277 of the 661 winners — or 42 percent — have been Americans.
アメリカンフットボールの醍醐味を十分に味わせてくれる名勝負をテレビ中継で満喫。スーパーボールのチャンピオンを目指し、プレイオフが行われているが、昨日1月10日ラムの本拠地セントルイスでラムとキャロライナ・パンサー戦があった。第1と第2クワォーターは見逃し、第3クワォーターから観戦。最終クワォーターに入ってもラムは冴えない。ここまでずっとパンサーのデフェンスに押され、ラムはなかなか得点できない。12対23で11点の差をつけられ、試合終了まで3分を残すまでになって、敗戦確実ムード一色。ラムのファンとしてはさっさと諦めてチャンネルを変え気分転換したほうが良さそうである。ところがである。ラムに攻撃権があり、エースのラニングバッグ・マーシャル・フォークがサックされそうになったクワォーターバック・バルガーから投げられた苦肉の送球をアクロバットキャッチし、ミドルフィールドまでボールを運ぶ。観客は沸き、ラムチームが勢いずく。クワォーターバックがファークにボールを集め、数回のトライの後フォークがゴールに走りこみ待望の6得点。そこから2点のエキストラポイントを決めて、3点差に詰め寄る。でも残された時間は数分。そこで成功率の高くないワンサイドキックを試み、何と相手に攻撃権を与えずして、攻撃権を奪い取る。ワイドレシーバーの果敢なキャッチにより、数回の試みでフィールド圏にボールを持ち込む。ゲーム終了にあと数セカンドと迫る。キッカーが期待どおり、フィールドゴールを決めてとうとう同点になり、正規の試合終了。観衆が沸き返る。最初に何点でもいいから得点したチームが勝つオーバータイムに入っても、目を全く離せないシーソーゲームを展開。パンサーがコイントスで最初に攻撃権をえて、やっとのことでフィールドゴール圏にボールを持ち込み、あとはキッカー次第。この試合ですでに数回フィールドゴールを決めているので、期待は高い。40ヤードからキッカーが蹴ったボールは完璧。ゴールポストのど真ん中を割って入る。ラムの負けが決まったと思ったのも束の間、パンサーチームは主審から時間遅れの反則をとられ、5ヤードバックのぺナルティーで再トライ。結局45ヤードからのフィールドゴールになり、ボールは右にわずかに外れ失敗。観客はまたまた大いに沸く。今度はラムに攻撃権が移り、数回のファーストダウンを決め、フィールドゴール圏に持ち込む。距離は53ヤード、その距離だと60パーセントの成功率を誇るキッカーだけに、自信がある。観客が息を飲む中、キッカーの蹴ったボールはゴールのど真ん中に直進。ラムの勝利だと思うや、なんとワンヤード足らずでゴールに届かず。今度はパンサー側が両手を上げて喜ぶ。第2オーバータイムになると、攻撃権を奪い返したパンサーは、今まで見せなかったラムのデフェンスにてこずり、ボールがなかなか前に進まない。パンサーのクウォーターバックを重要な場面で数回サック。パンサーはサードダウンからのコンバージョンに失敗、パントでラムに攻撃権を渡す。ラムチームはワイドレシーバーの活躍で、数回のファーストダウン決め、ミドルフィールドまで攻撃を進める。あと10数ヤード進めばキッカーのフィールドゴール安全圏に入る。ところが何とクウォーターバックが投げたボールが、相手のアクロバットキャッチによってインターセプトされる。またまたパンサーに攻撃権が移る。ラム・デフェンスのもうひとふんばり。だがその祈りも叶わず、相手クウォーターバックの投げたボールはワイドレシーバーに上手く捕球され、タックルをかわし、一気にゴールまで駆け抜ける。ラムの負けである。ラムを応援していたので結果は残念。でも試合そのものは後半から全く目を離せない最高のゲーム。観戦した数多くのアメリカフットボールゲームの中でも、屈指のエキサイティングなゲームだった。 (This game was one of the wildest, most thrilling finishes in NFL history, and sent the sellout crowd home in stunned silence at the Rams' first playoff loss in the deafening dome.)
I came across an article about a ranking of the universities in US. There are a lot of rankings around universities, but that one took my attention because it was written from an Asian American's standing point. I hope it would be your good reference for selecting the right school to go in for further education in USA.
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25 Great Asian American Universities (www.goldsea.com/AAU/25/25.html)
Asian Americans are the biggest minority in nearly every top 50 national university in the United States. In five they are either an outright majority or a plurality. In two dozen more, Asians comprise 20% or more of the student body. For Asian American students who like the society and support of an extensive on-campus Asian community, the number and concentration of Asians is a key factor in choosing a college. For many Asian Americans, college may be the one and only time in their lives when they can enjoy the experience of being a member of a racial majority. It's an experience that often produces a radical change in perspective and self-image, even future career choices.
This list is intended as a guide for those students whose experiences have taught them that race does matter in American society and that a community's racial composition can influence one's position, status and sense of well-being.
In arriving at the rankings we considered prestige, academic standard, quality of life on campus and environs, and the ambience as well as the concentration of Asians in the undergraduate student body. We also considered the many comments offered by our readers. This list isn't exhaustive (we had trouble narrowing it down to the top 25) but we hope it will serve as a starting point in the search for your ideal Asian American University!
RANK Name/Location No. of Asian Undergrads Asian Percentage of Undergrads
Popular Majors Standards/Prestige Ambience/Quality of Life
1 UC Berkeley
Berkeley, CA 8,500 42% molecular bio, econ, English Highest Superb
2 UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 9,200 40% psych, econ, sociology Highest Superb
3 Stanford
Palo Alto, CA 1,600 25% econ, bio, English Highest Superb
4 MIT
Cambridge, MA 1,200 28% engr, comp sci, bio Highest Very Good
5 Harvard
Cambridge, MA 1,270 19% econ, poli sci, bio Highest Very Good
6 UC San Diego
La Jolla, CA 5,600 35% biochem, psych, bio Very High Superb
7 Yale
New Haven, CT 930 17% hist, econ, bio Highest Good
8 UC Irvine
Irvine, CA 8,400 58% bio, psych, soc Very High Superb
9 Columbia
New York, NY 1,050 16% comm, edu, engr Highest Very Good
10 UC Davis
Davis, CA 7,000 36% psych, bio, biochem Very High Very Good
11 Princeton
Princeton, NJ 700 15% econ, hist, poli sci Highest Very Good
14 USC
Los Angeles, CA 3,700 25% bus mgmt, visual arts, comm High Very Good
13 Cornell
Ithaca, NY 2,340 17% engr, econ, bio Very High Good
14 UC Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, CA 2,900 17% business, soc, comm Very High Superb
15 Univ of Penn
Philadelphia, PA 2,000 21% finance, econ, psych Very High Good
16 Carnegie Mellon
Pittsburg, PA 1,120 22% engr, business, comp sci Very High Good
17 NYU
New York, NY 2,900 18% bus mgmt, thtr arts, film High Very Good
18 Johns Hopkins
Baltimore, MD 830 21% engr, bio, inter rel Very High Very Good
19 Wellesley
Wellesley, MA 560 25% soc sci, hist, psych Highest Very Good
20 Univ of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 3,000 13% engr, psych, English Very High Good
21 Duke
Durham, NC 900 14% bio, econ, psych Highest Good
22 Univ of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA 1,400 11% bus mgmt, egnr, psych Highest Good
23 UC Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz, CA 1,480 15% bio, psych, foreign lang High Very Good
24 Univ of Washington
Seattle, WA 5,000 23% bus mgmt, psych, Eng lit High Superb
25 Univ of Texas
Austin, TX 5,300 16% bus mgmt, egnr, bio High Good
Here are the ranking of the best colleges 2006 in USA.
I believe the most American tend to agree with that.
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America's Best Colleges 2006 by USNews
1 Harvard University (MA)
1 Princeton University (NJ)
3 Yale University (CT)
4 University of Pennsylvania
5 Duke University (NC)
5 Stanford University (CA)
7 California Institute of Technology
7 Massachusetts Inst. of Technology
9 Columbia University (NY)
9 Dartmouth College (NH)
11 Washington University in St. Louis
12 Northwestern University (IL)
13 Cornell University (NY)
13 Johns Hopkins University (MD)
15 Brown University (RI)
15 University of Chicago
17 Rice University (TX)
18 University of Notre Dame (IN)
18 Vanderbilt University (TN)
20 Emory University (GA)
20 University of California – Berkeley *
22 Carnegie Mellon University (PA)
23 Georgetown University (DC)
23 University of Virginia *
25 Univ. of California – Los Angeles *
25 University of Michigan – Ann Arbor *
27 Tufts University (MA)
27 U. of North Carolina – Chapel Hill *
27 Wake Forest University (NC)
30 Univ. of Southern California
31 College of William and Mary (VA)*
32 Lehigh University (PA)
32 Univ. of California – San Diego *
34 Brandeis University (MA)
34 University of Rochester (NY)
34 Univ. of Wisconsin – Madison *
37 Case Western Reserve Univ. (OH)
37 Georgia Institute of Technology *
37 New York University
40 Boston College
40 University of California – Irvine *
42 U. of Illinois – Urbana - Champaign *
43 Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst. (NY)
43 Tulane University (LA)
45 Univ. of California – Santa Barbara *
45 University of Washington *
45 Yeshiva University (NY)
48 Pennsylvania State U. – University Park *
48 University of California – Davis *
50 Syracuse University (NY)
50 University of Florida *
52 University of Texas – Austin *
53 George Washington University (DC)
53 Worcester Polytechnic Inst. (MA)
55 Pepperdine University (CA)
55 Univ. of Maryland – College Park *
55 University of Miami (FL)
58 University of Georgia *
58 University of Pittsburgh *
60 Boston University
60 Ohio State University – Columbus *
60 Purdue Univ. – West Lafayette (IN)*
60 Rutgers – New Brunswick (NJ)*
60 Texas A&M Univ. – College Station *
60 University of Iowa *
66 Miami University – Oxford (OH)*
66 University of Delaware *
68 Fordham University (NY)
68 Univ. of California – Santa Cruz *
68 University of Connecticut *
71 Brigham Young Univ. – Provo (UT)
71 Southern Methodist University (TX)
71 Stevens Institute of Technology (NJ)
74 Indiana University – Bloomington *
74 Michigan State University *
74 SUNY – Binghamton *
74 Univ. of Minnesota – Twin Cities *
78 Baylor University (TX)
78 Clemson University (SC)*
78 North Carolina State U. – Raleigh *
78 St. Louis University
78 University of Colorado – Boulder *
78 Virginia Tech *
84 Clark University (MA) * denotes a public school.
85 American University (DC)
85 Auburn University (AL)*
85 Iowa State University *
85 Marquette University (WI)
85 Univ. of California – Riverside *
85 University of Denver
85 Univ. of Missouri – Columbia *
85 University of Tennessee *
93 Howard University (DC)
93 SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry *
93 University of Tulsa (OK)
93 University of Vermont *
97 Illinois Institute of Technology
97 SUNY – Stony Brook *
97 Texas Christian University
97 University of Arizona *
97 University of Kansas *
97 Univ. of Nebraska – Lincoln *
97 University of New Hampshire *
104 University of Alabama *
104 University of Dayton (OH)
104 Univ. of Massachusetts – Amherst *
104 University of San Diego
104 University of the Pacific (CA)
109 Drexel University (PA)
109 Florida State University *
109 Ohio University *
109 University of Missouri – Rolla *
109 University of Oklahoma *
109 Univ. of South Carolina – Columbia *
115 Loyola University Chicago
115 Northeastern University (MA)
115 University at Buffalo – SUNY *
115 University of Oregon *
115 University of San Francisco
120 Catholic University of America (DC)
120 Colorado State University *
120 University of Kentucky *
120 University of Utah *
120 Washington State University *
Conspiracy theories make for interesting novels when the storyline is not so absurd that it can grasp our attention. 'The Manchurian Candidate' and 'Seven Days in May' are examples of plausible chains of events that captures the reader's imagination at best-seller level. 'What if' has always been the solid grist of fiction.
Get yourself something cool to drink, find a relaxing position, but before you continue, visualize the television photos of two jet airliners smashing into the Twin Towers in lower Manhattan and remind yourself this cowardly act of Muslim terror was planned for eight years.
How long did it take Islam and their oil money to find a candidate for President of the United States ? As long as it took them to place a Senator from Illinois and Minnesota ? The same amount of time to create a large Muslim enclave in Detroit ? The time it took them to build over 2,000 mosques in America ? The same amount of time required to place radical wahabbist clerics in our military and prisons as 'chaplains'?
Find a candidate who can get away with lying about their father being a 'freedom fighter' when he was actually part of the most corrupt and violent government in Kenya 's history. Find a candidate with close ties to The Nation of Islam and the violent Muslim overthrow in Africa , a candidate who is educated among white infidel Americans but hides his bitterness and anger behind a superficial toothy smile.
Find a candidate who changes his American name of Barry to the Muslim name of Barak Hussein Obama, and dares anyone to question his true ties under the banner of 'racism'. Nurture this candidate in an atmosphere of anti-white American teaching and surround him with Islamic teachers. Provide him with a bitter, racist, anti-white, anti-American wife, and supply him with Muslim middle east connections and Islamic monies.
Allow him to be clever enough to get away with his anti-white rhetoric and proclaim he will give $834 billion taxpayer dollars to the Muslim controlled United Nations for use in Africa . Install your candidate in an atmosphere of deception because questioning him on any issue involving Africa or Islam would be seen as 'bigoted racism'; two words too powerful to allow the citizenry to be informed of facts.
Allow your candidate to employ several black racist Nation of Islam Louis Farrakhan followers as members of his Illinois Senatorial and campaign staffs.