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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Newcastle United deepen gloom for Manchester United and Moyes

Posted: 07 Dec 2013 06:48 AM PST

December 07, 2013

Manchester United goalie David De Gea fails to stop Cabaye's shot, as MU defenders and striker Robin Van Persie (20) look on helplessly. - Reuters pic, December7, 2013.Manchester United goalie David De Gea fails to stop Cabaye's shot, as MU defenders and striker Robin Van Persie (20) look on helplessly. - Reuters pic, December7, 2013.Manchester United's dismal season lurched into crisis today after a 1-0 loss at home to Newcastle United condemned the champions to their fifth defeat of the season.

Yohan Cabaye's goal just after the hour gave Newcastle their first victory at Old Trafford since 1972 and consigned Manchester United to back-to-back home defeats in the league for the first time since May 2002.

Having lost 1-0 to Everton on Wednesday, Manchester United have now lost as many games as they did in the whole of last season's title-winning campaign and David Moyes's side could fall 15 points behind leaders Arsenal before the weekend is out.

Manchester United were without Wayne Rooney through suspension, but they restored Robin van Persie to their starting XI following a four-game absence with a groin strain and saw Phil Jones test visiting goalkeeper Tim Krul with an early shot.

Newcastle's five-man midfield frustrated United though, and it was the visitors who came closest to breaking the deadlock before half-time, with David de Gea thwarting Mathieu Debuchy twice in first-half stoppage time.

Manchester United attacked the game with renewed vigour in the second period, but they saw Krul save from Javier Hernandez and Adnan Januzaj before a header from Patrice Evra hit the post.

Newcastle hit the champions with a sucker-punch in the 61st minute, with Moussa Sissoko galloping down the right flank after winning a duel with Evra before cutting the ball back for Cabaye to sweep home.

Moyes responded by introducing Anderson and Antonio Valencia and handing Wilfried Zaha a league debut from the bench, but despite sporadic late pressure, an equaliser would not come.

Van Persie had a close-range header ruled out for offside and Zaha curled narrowly wide, leaving Newcastle's jubilant fans to taunt Moyes with crowing chants of 'You're getting sacked in the morning!'

The dominant team of the Premier League era, Manchester United remain in ninth place in the table, 12 points below Arsenal, while Newcastle climb to sixth. - AFP, December 7, 2013.

Match-fixing suspects sacked by club

Posted: 07 Dec 2013 06:17 AM PST

December 07, 2013

An English non-league club today announced that it had sacked two of its players after they were charged over match-fixing allegations.

Michael Boateng and Hakeem Adelakun, both 22, were charged this week with conspiracy to defraud contrary to common law following an investigation by Britain's National Crime Agency.

The pair's club, Whitehawk FC, from the southern English coastal town of Brighton, said that the two men had been "dismissed with immediate effect" after an emergency board meeting.

In a statement, the club, which plays in the sixth tier of English football, said: "The club was aware that these two players, namely Michael Boateng and Hakeem Adelakun, were being investigated last week, at which time the club took immediate steps to suspend them pending the outcome of investigation by the police.

"In light of recent decisions by the police and the Crown Prosecution Service, the club can now confirm, after an emergency meeting of the board yesterday, that the two players have been dismissed with immediate effect for bringing the club into disrepute."

Boateng and Adelakun, both of whom hail from south London, are scheduled to appear at Birmingham Magistrates' Court in central England on Wednesday.

They are the third and fourth people to have been charged in connection with an investigation into an alleged international betting syndicate.

Chann Sankaran, a 33-year-old Singapore national, and Krishna Sanjey Ganeshan, a 43-year-old British passport-holder, were remanded in custody until December 13.

Sankaran and Ganeshan, alleged to be members of a Singapore-based betting syndicate, have been accused of conspiring to defraud bookmakers by influencing the course of football matches and placing bets on them between November 1 and 26 this year.

The maximum sentence for the offence is 10 years' imprisonment. – AFP, December 7, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Elton John challenges Russian gay ban from stage

Posted: 07 Dec 2013 06:35 AM PST

December 07, 2013

British pop icon Elton John (pic) escaped serious criticism in Russia today after using a sold-out Moscow concert to challenge a highly contentious law banning the "propaganda of homosexuality" to minors.

The 66-year-old singer is the first Western star known for fighting gay prejudice to tour Russia since it adopted in June a measure making it illegal to explain same sex relationships to children.

The law has already been condemned on Russian stages by superstars such as Lady Gaga and Madonna. Both now face calls from conservative lawmakers and some Orthodox Church leaders to be barred from ever entering the country again.

John – openly gay and in a civil partnership with filmmaker David Furnish since 2005 – performed in Moscow yesterday and is due to play in the heart of the Muslim region of Tatarstan tonight.

He had been urged by some gay rights advocates to cancel the concerts as a form of protest against President Vladimir Putin's 13-year rule.

But John explained ahead of his appearances that he felt that Russia's gay and lesbian couples would feel abandoned if big-name performers did not come for visits and offer them support.

Yesterday's concert in Moscow began with John – settled behind a black grand piano in a theatre popular with Russia's super-rich – reading a monologue in which he called for harmony and inclusion for all.

"You've always embraced me and you have never judged me," John said in reference to a long line of visits to Moscow that began with a groundbreaking concert in 1979.

That Soviet-era performance transformed John into a household name – an impact still felt in Russia to this day.

John was careful not to criticise either Putin or his supporters directly for fast-tracking the measure in the span of a few short weeks.

But neither did he hide his disappointment with the law as a video of the concert showed.

"I am deeply saddened and shocked over the current legislation that is now in place against the (homosexual) community here in Russia," he said to a scattering of applause.

"In my opinion, it is inhumane and it is isolating. Harmony is what makes a happy family and a strong society."

John concluded the speech by dedicating his concert to Vladislav Tornovoi – a 23-year-old Russian whose naked body was dumped in the city of Volgograd after he had been raped with beer bottles and had his skull smashed.

A witness told the police at the time of the May attack that Tornovoi was targeted for being gay.

Russia's gay propaganda ban has turned into a lightning rod of criticism of Putin and what many see as his increasingly authoritarian streak.

Such prominent rights campaigners as the openly gay British actor Stephen Fry have called for a boycott of February's Winter Olympic Games in Sochi while others are urging tourists to avoid Russia until the law is revoked.

Such calls have usually met with tough responses from prominent pro-Kremlin lawmakers and been ridiculed on widely watched state television shows.

But John's speech made barely a ripple in the Russian media and escaped condemnation from the West's usual critics in parliament.

The only visible outrage came from a radical Islamist organisation that urged the authorities of Tatarstan to forbid John from performing tonight in the region's capital of Kazan.

John was expected to repeat his call to end gay prejudice during tonight's performance. – AFP, December 7, 2013.

Jay Z leads with 9 Grammy nominations, but newcomers vie for top honours

Posted: 06 Dec 2013 09:56 PM PST

December 07, 2013

Robin Thicke performs 'Blurred Lines' at The Grammy Nominations Concert Live - Countdown to Music's Biggest Night event at Nokia theatre in Los Angeles yesterday. - Reuters pic, December 7, 2013.Robin Thicke performs 'Blurred Lines' at The Grammy Nominations Concert Live - Countdown to Music's Biggest Night event at Nokia theatre in Los Angeles yesterday. - Reuters pic, December 7, 2013.Rapper Jay Z led all artists with nine Grammy nominations yesterday, but newcomers Lorde, Kendrick Lamar, and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis edged out industry heavyweights for nods in the top categories of the annual music awards.

Jay Z picked up nominations in nine categories across pop and rap, including best pop duo performance for "Suit & Tie" with Justin Timberlake, and best rap album for his July release, "Magna Carta... Holy Grail."

But the 44-year-old Brooklyn, New York-born rapper failed to land solo nods in the top Grammy categories for record, song, and album of the year, scoring only one as a producer on Lamar's "Good Kid, M.A.A.D City" record, nominated in the album of the year category.

Lamar's album will face off against Sara Barielles's "The Blessed Unrest," French electro-dance duo Daft Punk's "Random Access Memories,"Taylor Swift's "Red" and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis' "The Heist" for album of the year.

Seattle rapper-producer duo Macklemore & Ryan Lewis capped their stellar rise over the past year from the independent music scene into mainstream pop with seven nominations, including song of the year for "Same Love," featuring Mary Lambert, and the coveted best new artist category.

"It feels very, very, very surreal. I don't think it's ever going to feel normal... It's something that we never ever thought was possible when we were making this album," Macklemore, whose real name is Ben Haggerty, said backstage.

The duo will be facing off with Lamar, country music singer Kasey Musgraves and British singers James Blake and Ed Sheeran for the best new artist accolade, which has been won by Adele and FUN. in recent years.

California rapper Lamar, 26, also picked up five nominations in the R&B and rap categories. Singer-producer Pharrell scored seven nods, including for album, record and song of the year for his work as a featured artist on Daft Punk's "Random Access Memories" and Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines."

The record of the year category featured five songs that all achieved commercial and chart success this year: "Get Lucky" by Daft Punk, "Radioactive" by alt-rockers Imagine Dragons, "Royals" by Lorde, Bruno Mars' "Locked Out of Heaven" and "Blurred Lines" by Thicke, featuring T.I. and Pharrell.

The Grammy Awards are the music industry's top accolades and are voted on by members of the Recording Academy for more than 80 categories spanning all genres. To be eligible for nominations this year, artists had to release their music between October 1, 2012, and September 30, 2013.

The nominations for the top awards and main categories were announced during an hour-long televised concert yesterday from Los Angeles. The winners will be announced on January 26 at a live televised ceremony in Los Angeles.

For the second year running, male artists dominated the nominees for the 2014 awards, while Lorde, Musgraves and Swift led the female artists with four nominations each.

Lorde, the 17-year-old New Zealand newcomer whose real name is Ella Yelich O'Connor, is notable for writing her own songs, including the hit "Royals," which picked up nods for record and song of the year, as well as best pop solo performance.

"This isn't the kind of thing that happens to people from New Zealand, so it feels good," the singer said backstage.

Also nominated with Lorde for song of the year, a songwriters' award, are "Just Give Me a Reason" by Pink and FUN.'s Nate Ruess, Mars' "Locked Out of Heaven," Katy Perry's "Roar" and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis' "Same Love."

Timberlake, 32, who made a return to the musical spotlight this year after a five-year hiatus with the two-part release of "The 20/20 Experience," picked up seven nominations in the pop, R&B and rap categories, but failed to make the top three categories.

His record "The 20/20 Experience - The Complete Experience," one of the year's top-selling sets, earned a best pop album nomination.

Swift, 23, who has won seven Grammys, scored nominations in the country music category, including best country album for "Red."

Texas native Musgraves, 25, nominated for best new artist, will compete with Swift in the country song and album categories.

Notably absent from the nominees were British boy band One Direction, which has topped the Billboard 200 album chart with all three of its albums over the past year, and Grammy-winner Lady Gaga, whose August song "Applause" was eligible and scored chart success, but failed to win over Grammy voters. — Reuters, December 7, 2013.

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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Tech start-ups show little imagination on board gender diversity

Posted: 06 Dec 2013 06:27 PM PST

December 07, 2013

Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop (left), Chairman of the Board Jorma Ollila (centre), and Vice Chairman Dame Marjorie Scardino (right) take part in the 2011 Nokia Annual General Meeting in Helsinki, in this May 3, 2011 file photo. Male-heavy boards dominate in the start-up mecca of Silicon Valley, which prides itself on progressive thinking and putting talent first. - Reuters pic, December 7, 2013.Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop (left), Chairman of the Board Jorma Ollila (centre), and Vice Chairman Dame Marjorie Scardino (right) take part in the 2011 Nokia Annual General Meeting in Helsinki, in this May 3, 2011 file photo. Male-heavy boards dominate in the start-up mecca of Silicon Valley, which prides itself on progressive thinking and putting talent first. - Reuters pic, December 7, 2013.At Pinterest, the online bulletin board service that is valued near $3.8 billion, some 70% of the users are female. But the company's board of directors is 100% male.

Male-heavy boards dominate in the start-up mecca of Silicon Valley, which prides itself on progressive thinking and putting talent first. A Reuters survey of the 10 top venture-backed start-ups, as measured by venture funds raised, shows that six do not have any women on the board, including Pinterest. And none has more than one.

Reuters' s research relied on publicly available data and discussions with start-up executives and board members.

The gender imbalance has been the norm for years despite some recent signs of change. Google, Facebook and Twitter all went public without a woman on the board. They are more diverse now.

Big, established companies, by contrast, frequently have two or more female directors, based on the 10 largest US tech companies by market value. All of the top 20 have at least one.

The dismal record of start-ups when it comes to gender diversity was highlighted last month when Twitter came under fire for its all-male board on the eve of its public offering. On Thursday, the company announced that it had added former Pearson chief Marjorie Scardino to its board.

Entrepreneurs and executives contacted by Reuters did not question the conclusion that there are few women directors at start-ups, but they frequently described it as unintended, and some such as Pinterest say their executive ranks are more balanced.

Start-ups tend to blame the lack of women on their boards on factors such as their youth, their small boards, their single-minded focus on growth to the exclusion of other priorities, and a scarcity of women steeped in technology. They also blame venture capitalists, who are usually male, usually hold the bulk of board seats – and don't want to see their voting power diluted by adding non-investor board members.

Critics counter that entrepreneurs who pride themselves on creativity and innovation simply aren't trying hard enough when it comes to gender diversity.

At Pinterest, the focus is on work, said Chief Executive Ben Silbermann, whose board consists of himself and two male venture capitalists. "It's pretty heads down," he said. If the company expands the board and a qualified woman emerges as a candidate, "we'd be open to it," he added.

"Diversity across all dimensions, including gender, is important to our success," a Pinterest spokesman said. The company's leadership is roughly 40% female, including its heads of design, finance, sales and recruiting, he added.

Public companies think about board diversity all the time – whether it's because they are constantly being scrutinised, or because they face public investor pressure.

"The companies that want to do it will do it. Those who don't will not," said Maria Klawe, president of Harvey Mudd College, a computer scientist and a board member at software giant Microsoft and chipmaker Broadcom. "This stuff doesn't happen by chance."

The issue is not simply one of social equity. A study by the Credit Suisse Research Institute, a bank-funded group, looked at 2,360 public companies and found that over six years, the share price of large-capitalisation companies with at least one woman on the board outperformed companies with no women on their board by 26%.

For small and mid-capitalisation stocks, the outperformance totalled 17%.

The study identified a handful of factors that could explain the better performance, including a healthier mix of leadership skills, better corporate governance, greater understanding of consumer decision-making, and access to a wider pool of talent.

Even though it's now conventional wisdom in Silicon Valley that a lack of women in leadership and technical roles is a big problem, progress has been very slow, especially at the top.

"Meritocracy is the word you hear all the time here. Everyone can get ahead," said Heidi Roizen, a venture capitalist at Draper Fisher Jurvetson and a former software-company founder and Apple executive. "I don't think it's as clean and pure as people think."

Women board members set an important tone, said Roizen and others, signalling to employees that talented women can succeed in the organisation.

The boys club

That matters especially at a time when skilled technology workers are in high demand, but women are not pursuing tech careers in anywhere near the numbers as men. While women receive 43% of U.S. bachelor's degrees in math and 40% in physical sciences, they receive only around 30% of doctorates in those areas, according to the National Science Foundation. They receive around one-fifth of bachelor's and doctorates in computer sciences.

Only 27% of entrepreneurs are women, says Ross Levine, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who is researching the gender gap in entrepreneurship. Only 20%  of start-ups across industries have one or more female senior-level executives, according to a study of start-ups by Dow Jones VentureSource.

And about 89% of all venture capitalists are male, according to the National Venture Capital Association, directly affecting the lack of women on start-up boards.

"If my investors don't have more women working for them there's not much I can do to get more women on the board," said Dave Goldberg, the chief executive of SurveyMonkey, also one of the 10 startups surveyed by Reuters. Goldberg is married to Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, one of the most successful female executives in Silicon Valley.

One of Goldberg's two independent board members, former VeriSign chief financial officer Dana Evan, is female.

Roizen and other female venture investors say their industry is beginning to change. More women are starting companies, they say, and as some of those companies achieve success that will bolster the number of female VCs, since many VCs cut their teeth as company founders.

"It's been in the last two, three, four years," says Theresia Gouw, a VC at Accel Partners, pointing to examples such as her portfolio company Birchbox, a beauty-products subscription business launched by two women in 2010.

Indeed, a handful of women have achieved celebrity status in the start-up world, including Sandberg, Google's head of ads and commerce Susan Wojcicki and Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer.

High-profile female venture capitalists include Mary Meeker of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, who is on the board of payments-service Square and funding service Lending Club, and Aileen Lee of Cowboy Ventures, who has backed companies such as Dollar Shave Club and Philz Coffee.

If a company doesn't land a female VC on its board in its early years, when most start-up boards consists of the founder and a few key investors, it acquires a built-in chance later: when it weighs going public.

Both New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq board rules, such as building audit committees, generally require bolstering board seats.

Still, many start-ups duck and weave rather than bringing a woman onto the board. Facebook dallied until after its 2011 IPO before appointing Sandberg to the board. Google added two women to its board a year after its 2004 IPO. Now three of Google's 10 directors are women.

Some female directors of start-ups say they are sometimes reluctant to overtly suggest the topic of adding more women for an open board seat. That is because they know it might raise the hackles of existing board members who want to make sure the best person gets the seat, not somebody who was less qualified but female.

"People don't want to just stuff women on these boards," said Ann Winblad, a venture capitalist at Hummer Winblad, who says she tends to suggest women candidates without highlighting their gender as an asset.

Many people, both male and female, assume the woman is the weaker candidate, said Meiko Takayama, founder and chief executive of advocacy organization Advancing Women Executives.

"It's based on unconscious bias," Takayama said. "It's not malicious."

Roizen herself was the subject of a Columbia Business School study that asked students to evaluate her accomplishments - but with half the students seeing her name as "Howard," not "Heidi." The students

seeing her true name thought she seemed selfish, not the type of person they wanted to hire or work for. The students who saw the name "Howard" thought he seemed likeable.

"Cop out"

Many young companies acknowledge the issue, often saying they go out of their way to try to hire from a relatively small pool of technical women. But critics roll their eyes when that qualification comes up.

"I personally think that's a bit of a cop out," said Carol Bartz, the former chief executive of Yahoo and a Cisco board member. "There are all kinds of expertise that you need on a board. And if the entire board is technical then it is not diverse enough."

"They're more comfortable with their VC boys' network and really don't want to rock the boat," she added.

Bartz said that sometimes the companies can make the specifications – or "spec" as it is known in the recruiting industry – for the recruitment of board members so narrow that it automatically eliminates women from the candidate pool.

That spec always sounds the same, said Martha Josephson, Silicon Valley-based partner with recruiting firm Egon Zehnder: someone from the C-suite who has experience running big parts of a company's operations.

Even if existing board members are actively looking for a woman to bolster their ranks, unacknowledged biases can come into play, said investor and former analyst Esther Dyson, whose board seats include genealogy company 23andMe, local-organising network Meetup, and advertising company WPP Group.

"A just-okay guy seems suitable," she said. "But a just-okay woman doesn't quite match the awesome-woman image they have in their heads."

Dyson forms part of a small group of sought-after female board members for start-ups that also includes Evan, the SurveyMonkey board member, and former Macromedia CFO Betsey Nelson, whose board seats include LivingSocial.

"Can you show us a pool that has more than the same names that circulate?" Nelson said she often finds herself asking when the subject arises of ensuring that women win consideration for an open seat.

Evan says she is approached at least 3-4 times a quarter to join a board. – Reuters, December 7, 2013.

Tech start-ups show little imagination on board gender diversity

Posted: 06 Dec 2013 06:27 PM PST

December 07, 2013

Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop (left), Chairman of the Board Jorma Ollila (centre), and Vice Chairman Dame Marjorie Scardino (right) take part in the 2011 Nokia Annual General Meeting in Helsinki, in this May 3, 2011 file photo. Male-heavy boards dominate in the start-up mecca of Silicon Valley, which prides itself on progressive thinking and putting talent first. - Reuters pic, December 7, 2013.Nokia's Chief Executive Stephen Elop (left), Chairman of the Board Jorma Ollila (centre), and Vice Chairman Dame Marjorie Scardino (right) take part in the 2011 Nokia Annual General Meeting in Helsinki, in this May 3, 2011 file photo. Male-heavy boards dominate in the start-up mecca of Silicon Valley, which prides itself on progressive thinking and putting talent first. - Reuters pic, December 7, 2013.At Pinterest, the online bulletin board service that is valued near $3.8 billion, some 70% of the users are female. But the company's board of directors is 100% male.

Male-heavy boards dominate in the start-up mecca of Silicon Valley, which prides itself on progressive thinking and putting talent first. A Reuters survey of the 10 top venture-backed start-ups, as measured by venture funds raised, shows that six do not have any women on the board, including Pinterest. And none has more than one.

Reuters' s research relied on publicly available data and discussions with start-up executives and board members.

The gender imbalance has been the norm for years despite some recent signs of change. Google, Facebook and Twitter all went public without a woman on the board. They are more diverse now.

Big, established companies, by contrast, frequently have two or more female directors, based on the 10 largest US tech companies by market value. All of the top 20 have at least one.

The dismal record of start-ups when it comes to gender diversity was highlighted last month when Twitter came under fire for its all-male board on the eve of its public offering. On Thursday, the company announced that it had added former Pearson chief Marjorie Scardino to its board.

Entrepreneurs and executives contacted by Reuters did not question the conclusion that there are few women directors at start-ups, but they frequently described it as unintended, and some such as Pinterest say their executive ranks are more balanced.

Start-ups tend to blame the lack of women on their boards on factors such as their youth, their small boards, their single-minded focus on growth to the exclusion of other priorities, and a scarcity of women steeped in technology. They also blame venture capitalists, who are usually male, usually hold the bulk of board seats – and don't want to see their voting power diluted by adding non-investor board members.

Critics counter that entrepreneurs who pride themselves on creativity and innovation simply aren't trying hard enough when it comes to gender diversity.

At Pinterest, the focus is on work, said Chief Executive Ben Silbermann, whose board consists of himself and two male venture capitalists. "It's pretty heads down," he said. If the company expands the board and a qualified woman emerges as a candidate, "we'd be open to it," he added.

"Diversity across all dimensions, including gender, is important to our success," a Pinterest spokesman said. The company's leadership is roughly 40% female, including its heads of design, finance, sales and recruiting, he added.

Public companies think about board diversity all the time – whether it's because they are constantly being scrutinised, or because they face public investor pressure.

"The companies that want to do it will do it. Those who don't will not," said Maria Klawe, president of Harvey Mudd College, a computer scientist and a board member at software giant Microsoft and chipmaker Broadcom. "This stuff doesn't happen by chance."

The issue is not simply one of social equity. A study by the Credit Suisse Research Institute, a bank-funded group, looked at 2,360 public companies and found that over six years, the share price of large-capitalisation companies with at least one woman on the board outperformed companies with no women on their board by 26%.

For small and mid-capitalisation stocks, the outperformance totalled 17%.

The study identified a handful of factors that could explain the better performance, including a healthier mix of leadership skills, better corporate governance, greater understanding of consumer decision-making, and access to a wider pool of talent.

Even though it's now conventional wisdom in Silicon Valley that a lack of women in leadership and technical roles is a big problem, progress has been very slow, especially at the top.

"Meritocracy is the word you hear all the time here. Everyone can get ahead," said Heidi Roizen, a venture capitalist at Draper Fisher Jurvetson and a former software-company founder and Apple executive. "I don't think it's as clean and pure as people think."

Women board members set an important tone, said Roizen and others, signalling to employees that talented women can succeed in the organisation.

The boys club

That matters especially at a time when skilled technology workers are in high demand, but women are not pursuing tech careers in anywhere near the numbers as men. While women receive 43% of U.S. bachelor's degrees in math and 40% in physical sciences, they receive only around 30% of doctorates in those areas, according to the National Science Foundation. They receive around one-fifth of bachelor's and doctorates in computer sciences.

Only 27% of entrepreneurs are women, says Ross Levine, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who is researching the gender gap in entrepreneurship. Only 20%  of start-ups across industries have one or more female senior-level executives, according to a study of start-ups by Dow Jones VentureSource.

And about 89% of all venture capitalists are male, according to the National Venture Capital Association, directly affecting the lack of women on start-up boards.

"If my investors don't have more women working for them there's not much I can do to get more women on the board," said Dave Goldberg, the chief executive of SurveyMonkey, also one of the 10 startups surveyed by Reuters. Goldberg is married to Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, one of the most successful female executives in Silicon Valley.

One of Goldberg's two independent board members, former VeriSign chief financial officer Dana Evan, is female.

Roizen and other female venture investors say their industry is beginning to change. More women are starting companies, they say, and as some of those companies achieve success that will bolster the number of female VCs, since many VCs cut their teeth as company founders.

"It's been in the last two, three, four years," says Theresia Gouw, a VC at Accel Partners, pointing to examples such as her portfolio company Birchbox, a beauty-products subscription business launched by two women in 2010.

Indeed, a handful of women have achieved celebrity status in the start-up world, including Sandberg, Google's head of ads and commerce Susan Wojcicki and Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer.

High-profile female venture capitalists include Mary Meeker of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, who is on the board of payments-service Square and funding service Lending Club, and Aileen Lee of Cowboy Ventures, who has backed companies such as Dollar Shave Club and Philz Coffee.

If a company doesn't land a female VC on its board in its early years, when most start-up boards consists of the founder and a few key investors, it acquires a built-in chance later: when it weighs going public.

Both New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq board rules, such as building audit committees, generally require bolstering board seats.

Still, many start-ups duck and weave rather than bringing a woman onto the board. Facebook dallied until after its 2011 IPO before appointing Sandberg to the board. Google added two women to its board a year after its 2004 IPO. Now three of Google's 10 directors are women.

Some female directors of start-ups say they are sometimes reluctant to overtly suggest the topic of adding more women for an open board seat. That is because they know it might raise the hackles of existing board members who want to make sure the best person gets the seat, not somebody who was less qualified but female.

"People don't want to just stuff women on these boards," said Ann Winblad, a venture capitalist at Hummer Winblad, who says she tends to suggest women candidates without highlighting their gender as an asset.

Many people, both male and female, assume the woman is the weaker candidate, said Meiko Takayama, founder and chief executive of advocacy organization Advancing Women Executives.

"It's based on unconscious bias," Takayama said. "It's not malicious."

Roizen herself was the subject of a Columbia Business School study that asked students to evaluate her accomplishments - but with half the students seeing her name as "Howard," not "Heidi." The students

seeing her true name thought she seemed selfish, not the type of person they wanted to hire or work for. The students who saw the name "Howard" thought he seemed likeable.

"Cop out"

Many young companies acknowledge the issue, often saying they go out of their way to try to hire from a relatively small pool of technical women. But critics roll their eyes when that qualification comes up.

"I personally think that's a bit of a cop out," said Carol Bartz, the former chief executive of Yahoo and a Cisco board member. "There are all kinds of expertise that you need on a board. And if the entire board is technical then it is not diverse enough."

"They're more comfortable with their VC boys' network and really don't want to rock the boat," she added.

Bartz said that sometimes the companies can make the specifications – or "spec" as it is known in the recruiting industry – for the recruitment of board members so narrow that it automatically eliminates women from the candidate pool.

That spec always sounds the same, said Martha Josephson, Silicon Valley-based partner with recruiting firm Egon Zehnder: someone from the C-suite who has experience running big parts of a company's operations.

Even if existing board members are actively looking for a woman to bolster their ranks, unacknowledged biases can come into play, said investor and former analyst Esther Dyson, whose board seats include genealogy company 23andMe, local-organising network Meetup, and advertising company WPP Group.

"A just-okay guy seems suitable," she said. "But a just-okay woman doesn't quite match the awesome-woman image they have in their heads."

Dyson forms part of a small group of sought-after female board members for start-ups that also includes Evan, the SurveyMonkey board member, and former Macromedia CFO Betsey Nelson, whose board seats include LivingSocial.

"Can you show us a pool that has more than the same names that circulate?" Nelson said she often finds herself asking when the subject arises of ensuring that women win consideration for an open seat.

Evan says she is approached at least 3-4 times a quarter to join a board. – Reuters, December 7, 2013.

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A super striker in an average team in a beautiful league

Posted: 06 Dec 2013 03:08 PM PST

December 07, 2013

As a player, Shebby Singh won everything there was to win in Malaysia football, and represented the country on the international stage.

Whoever drew up the recent midweek fixtures before the beginning of the season surely has to be applauded. The clever selection of Crystal Palace at home to West Ham United on Tuesday night was to get the game out of the way so we could enjoy the "football" come Wednesday night.

Surely enough, Wednesday night did not disappoint!

The outrageous half volley from the outrageous Luis Suarez came after the outrageous Nicklas Bendtner had headed one in (yes, Bendtner) from two yards for the Arsenal. The best striker in the world is in the Premier League. No arguments whatsoever.

I am talking about Luis Suarez, by the way.

The man on a mission, single-handedly gunning to annihilate and embarrass all or any defender in the world, without the supporting cast available to Sergio Aguero or Cristiano Ronaldo.

Imagine the damage he could cause being played in by David Silva instead of Jordan Henderson, or with Isco and Xabi Alonso instead of Joe Allen and the evergreen Steven Gerrard.

The next mission in line for Suarez is welcoming West Ham United at Anfield; expect the Uruguayan to continue his greatness but maybe not with another four. The two James's, Collins and Tomkins must already be feeling the breeze of Suarez ghosting past them.

The Old Trafford faithful, Alex Ferguson included, must have felt warm in their hearts that their team had played with a lot of heart. It was a battling performance. Every player gave his all. All Manchester United need from now is a little guile and flair.

Truth be told, Roberto Martinez has brought more enjoyment to Everton than David Moyes ever attempted to during his 11-year tenure at Goodison Park. I personally have not enjoyed Everton this much since I played against them at the Merdeka Stadium back in 1989. But that was a team which had been champions twice in the late 1980s.

Bryan Oviedo's strike was such a joyous occasion that the lovable legend Martin Tyler went a tad over the top in describing him as the "Costa Toffee".

At least Manchester United have Adnan Januzaj, the kid whose maturity belies his tender age. Not since Cristiano Ronaldo has there been a winger so exciting and mature at Old Trafford. This lithe magician would not look out of place in a Barcelona shirt.
Up next, Newcastle United were dismantled in Wales by Michael Laudrup's Swansea City. Never saw that demolition coming but Alan Pardew will surely convince his Magpies that Old Trafford is a fortress no more.

The story of the Saints though is going to be a tearjerker. Undone by Chelsea and outpunched by Aston Villa, Southampton come up against Manchester City - a team that has not travelled well this season but came good at the Hawthorns, hence will now feel that the away jinx has been broken. But, do not write off the Saints. This clash is a must watch for the football purists.

There is Light at the end of the tunnel. The Stadium of Light did light up on three occasions but individual quality forced a Hazardous outcome.

Gus Poyet will know it is certainly a weekend where it could all come together for the Black Cats. After all, it is only Tottenham Hotspur coming to visit.

Take nothing away from Andre Villas-Boas though, as a battling three points at Fulham is like having a pacemaker put in, but the North East will provide a sterner test for AVB's men. Just like Chelsea, Spurs have to make sure their individual quality shines through albeit in a tight unit.

The biggest game of the weekend pits two of the best teams in England, on form and quality, with the stage set at The Emirates. The visit of Roberto Martinez used to be welcomed but Senor Martinez has more bullets in his pistolero.

A far cry from Wigan Athletic, this man can allow himself a half glass of wine.

Keep the champagne though, there is a long way to go yet this season but the journey certainly looks smoother and more thrilling than previous years.

A good weekend ahead and certainly so, as this season, the beautiful game has finally gotten going on the shores of England. – December 7, 2013.

This week's English Premier League fixtures:

Saturday

8.45pm

Manchester United vs Newcastle United

11pm

Crystal Palace vs Cardiff City

Liverpool vs West Ham United

Southampton vs Manchester City

Stoke City vs Chelsea

West Bromwich Albion vs Norwich City

Sunday

1.30am

Sunderland vs Tottenham Hotspur

9.30pm

Fulham vs Aston Villa

Midnight

Arsenal vs Everton

Tuesday

4am

Swansea City vs Hull City.

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

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PM umum bantuan RM500 kepada setiap keluarga mangsa banjir

Posted: 07 Dec 2013 02:47 AM PST

December 07, 2013

Seorang mangsa banjir merenung nasibnya di rumahnya selepas pulang dari pusat pemindahan apabila banjir surut. Gambar The Malaysian Insider oleh Afif Abd Halim, 7 Disember, 2013.Seorang mangsa banjir merenung nasibnya di rumahnya selepas pulang dari pusat pemindahan apabila banjir surut. Gambar The Malaysian Insider oleh Afif Abd Halim, 7 Disember, 2013.Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Najib Razak hari ini mengumumkan bantuan kewangan RM500 diberikan kepada setiap keluarga yang terlibat dengan musibah banjir.

"Sebagai tanda keprihatinan kerajaan, saya faham bila kena banjir sebab saya ahli Parlimen (Pekan) kawasan yang selalu kena banjir. Saya tahu susah payah, penderitaan mereka.

"Sebagai tanda kasih dan prihatin kerajaan maka saya nak umumkan pembayaran RM500 kepada setiap keluarga yang terlibat banjir," katanya dalam ucapan penangguhan Perhimpunan Agung Umno 2013 di Pusat Dagangan Dunia Putra di Kuala Lumpur, hari ini.

Najib, yang juga Menteri Kewangan, turut menyarankan semua bank di negara ini untuk membenarkan mangsa banjir menangguhkan sementara bayaran balik pinjaman mereka.

"Saya mengalu-alukan cadangan malah langkah pertama dan dibuat oleh Malayan Banking supaya (bayaran balik) hutang bank bagi mangsa banjir ditangguhkan sementara. 

"Saya sebagai Menteri Kewangan sarankan semua bank mengikut langkah menangguhkan bayaran balik untuk sementara waktu," katanya.

Presiden Umno itu melahirkan rasa simpati kepada rakyat Malaysia yang berdepan dengan masalah banjir khususnya di negeri-negeri di Pantai Timur Semenanjung.

"Timbalan perdana menteri dah turun melawat dan sebagai pengerusi jawatankuasa banjir negara mengeluarkan arahan yang tegas kepada semua jabatan, agensi kerajaan bantu mangsa banjir dengan bersungguh-sungguh," katanya.

Banjir yang melanda Pahang, Terengganu, Johor dan Kelantan membabitkan puluhan ribu mangsa terpaksa dipindahkan.

Perdana Menteri juga bergegas ke Pahang untuk meninjau lebih dekat masalah rakyat susulan banjir, selepas merasmikan Perhimpunan Agung Umno pada Khamis. - Bernama, 7 Disember, 2013.

Pentaksiran berasaskan sekolah dijangka lebih berkesan menjelang April 2014

Posted: 07 Dec 2013 02:19 AM PST

December 07, 2013
Latest Update: December 07, 2013 06:43 pm

Sistem Pentaksiran Berasaskan Sekolah (PBS) dijangka dilaksanakan secara lebih berkesan pada April tahun depan bagi mengelak ia menjadi bebanan kepada guru.

Timbalan Perdana Menteri, Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin, berkata kerajaan memberi jaminan bahawa sistem itu akan ditambah baik dan diperbaiki dengan kadar segera.

"Yang jadi masalah bukan dasar tetapi pelaksanaannya yang menjadi bebanan kepada guru, saya ingin memberi jaminan bahawa perkara ini akan kita atasi dengan sebaiknya," katanya ketika menggulung perbahasan pada hari terakhir Perhimpunan Agung Umno 2013 di Pusat Dagangan Dunia Putra (PWTC) di Kuala Lumpur, hari ini.

Muhyiddin yang juga Menteri Pendidikan mengarahkan kementerian supaya memperbaiki akses kepada sistem itu bagi guru mengisi prestasi murid tanpa sebarang masalah.

Sistem itu yang merupakan transformasi daripada berfokuskan peperiksaan kepada sistem pentaksiran pendidikan yang lebih holistik, didakwa membebankan guru ekoran sering tergendala menyebabkan data pelajar terpaksa dimasukkan pada lewat malam.

Bagi memperkasa pendidikan Islam, Muhyiddin berkata, buat permulaan, modul pendidikan Islam Ulul Albab akan diperluaskan di sebuah sekolah agama terpilih di setiap negeri tahun depan.

"Pada masa ini ada empat sekolah agama bantuan kerajaan di Terengganu yang melaksanakan modul ini. Menerusi modul ini, selain mempelajari mata pelajaran biasa, ia juga dapat disasarkan untuk khatam hafazan (Al-Quran) sebelum tamat SPM dan ini sebahagian besar yang dituntut masyarakat Islam di negara kita," katanya.

Beliau berkata, program yang berasaskan prinsip quranik, ensiklopedik dan ijtihad itu diharap dapat membentuk pelajar yang bukan sahaja cemerlang pencapaian akademiknya, tetapi juga cemerlang penghayatan agama Islamnya.

Selain bercadang mewujudkan kolej komuniti Islam, kolej komuniti sedia ada juga akan diperluaskan peranannya dengan mengintegrasikan program latihan yang ditawarkan kolej itu dengan pendidikan Islam sepanjang hayat.

"Setakat hari ini sudah wujud 85 kolej komuniti dan program berkaitan pendidikan Islam akan kita masukkan ke dalam program latihan di kolej berkenaan," katanya.

"Saranan saya ialah supaya pendidikan Islam sepanjang hayat dijadikan dasar utama untuk menyebarluaskan pengetahuan ilmu kefahaman kita tentang Islam," katanya.

Mengenai Perbadanan Tabung Pendidikan Tinggi Nasional (PTPTN) yang perlu ditambahbaik, beliau berkata, kementerian akan memperhalusi kaedah pembayaran balik pinjaman termasuk dasar pinjaman boleh ubah.

"Ada yang mencadangkan kita perlu mengkajinya dan tidak semestinya mahasiswa yang mendapat Ijazah kelas pertama sahaja yang layak diberi insentif pemotongan atau biasiswa.

"Tetapi juga pencapaian pelajar Bumiputera lain boleh diambil kira sebagai satu cara bagi galakan kepada mereka, perkara ini akan kita perhalusi dan teliti dan kita akan umumkan tidak lama lagi," katanya.

Dalam pada itu, beliau turut menyarankan agar Biro-biro Pendidikan Umno di semua bahagian mengambil peranan utama untuk terlibat secara langsung dalam Pelan Pembangunan Pendidikan Malaysia (PPPM) 2013-2025 dan menterjemahkannya di seluruh peringkat akar umbi.

"Ini kerana tiada seorang pun anggota kita yang terkecuali daripada mendapat kesan dan faedah daripada PPPM," katanya.

Beliau berkata, kerajaan juga tidak akan berdolak dalih malah akan terus melaksanakan segala perakuan yang dibuat di dalam pelan itu walaupun ada pihak yang mempertikaikan pelaksanaannya.

"Saya selaku Menteri Pendidikan yang diberi amanah, tidak akan berdolak dalih dan akan terus melaksanakan PPPM tidak kira suara datang daripada mana-mana pihak sekalipun.

"Ini kerana tujuan dan matlamat yang digariskan dalam pelan ini adalah untuk mengangkat martabat masyarakat Malaysia ke tahap lebih tinggi menerusi sistem pendidikan negara kita," katanya. - Bernama, 7 Disember, 2013.

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