Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan has publicly condemned what he  describes as the "great assassination" of Muammar Gadhafi.
In his first major interview since 
the death of Gadhafi,  Farrakhan says the "Nation of Islam mourns the loss of a great brother  leader," and he personally feels as if he has, "lost a very important  member of my own family."
As President Obama prepared to announce new measures Wednesday to
 help  ease the burden of student loan debt, new figures painted a  demoralizing picture of college costs for students and parents: Average  in-state 
tuition and fees at four-year public colleges rose an additional $631 this fall, or 8.3%, compared with a year ago.
"The states cut budgets, the price goes up, and the (federal) money goes  to that," said Patrick Callan, president of the National Center for  Public Policy and Higher Education. "For 25 years we've been putting  more and more money into financial aid, and tuition keeps going up.  We're on a national treadmill."  
President Obama will pitch a plan today to help ease the 
burden of loans on college students, as a new report shows that higher education is becoming more expensive for many young Americans.
Starting next year, borrowers’ 
student loan  payments will be capped at 10 percent of their discretionary income,  and they could be eligible for forgiveness on the balance of their debt  in 20 years. Under the current plan, loan payments are limited to 15  percent of a borrower’s discretionary income, and their balance is  forgiven after 25 years.
“The students who signed the petition [to the president] and the  students in ‘Occupy Wall Street,’ most of them are students who have  already graduated. Most of them are unemployed and need help,” said Mark  Kantrowitz, publisher of FinAid and a student aid expert. “They are the  ones who brought attention to this issue and most of them are not going  to benefit from this.”
A Dallas-area rapist appears to be preying on members of a national  black sorority, leading the organization to urge alumnae to remove any  trace of their affiliation from cars, clothing and even their 
key chains.
Delta 
Sigma  Theta issued the warning this week, citing four sexual assaults, all  involving black women in their mid-50s to mid-60s. Police say the  assailant indicated during the attacks that he knew personal information  about the victims.
"We believe it's more than just accidental," said Matthew Kosec, deputy police chief in Coppell.
Detectives have not determined exactly how the rapist might be 
learning about the sorority affiliation.
"We just don't know if the suspect is identifying these ladies as  they are out shopping in the area or if it's something more advanced  than that" such as using social networking sites, Corinth police Capt.  Greg Wilkerson said.
A growing number recognize that it will be a crucial skill for competing in the  global marketplace.
In today's economic climate, in which black
 unemployment is in the double digits,  one way to give the next generation of black graduates a competitive  edge is to think outside one's borders -- more globally -- and learn  Mandarin Chinese. Today's black graduates aren't competing only with  their white American counterparts anymore. The landscape has changed  radically in a relatively short span of time. Black graduates must now  compete with their cohorts from places like China.
"Ten to 15 years ago, hardly any African Americans were in China," he told The Root. "We all basically knew each other. The experience literally changed the trajectory of my life."
China's expansion has not always been welcomed by black people. In fact,  on the African continent it has caused some resentment, given the  proliferation of Chinese 
entrepreneurs in some African countries. An 
article in the Guardian,  a newspaper in the United Kingdom, describes a Chinese "invasion" of  Africa, detailing how Chinese entrepreneurs -- some of whom have  remained in African countries illegally beyond their tourist visas --  have bought large plots of land, started import businesses, opened  sprawling restaurants and established other ventures.
"Globalization isn't a buzz word," she said. "It's a reality, and so is the need to gain a global perspective."
We may be a step closer in understanding what causes autism, say  University of Missouri researchers after finding differences between the  facial characteristics of children who have autism and those who don’t.
Kristina  Aldridge, lead author and assistant professor of anatomy at the  University of Missouri, began looking at facial characteristics of  autistic children after another researcher, Judith Miles, professor  emerita in the School of Medicine and the Thompson Center for Autism and  Neurodevelopmental Disorders, mentioned,
“There is just something about  their faces. They are beautiful, but there is just something about  them.”
“Children with other disorders such as Down syndrome and  fetal alcohol syndrome have very distinct facial features. Autism is  much less striking,” she says. “You can’t pick them out in a crowd of  kids, but you can pick them out mathematically.”
SEATTLE -- Car rental firm Hertz 
fired 26 employees at its Sea-Tac Airport location for failing to clock out when they take their prayer breaks. 
The  employees say Hertz is trampling on their right to religious freedom,  but the company says it's merely trying to promote fairness in the  workplace. 
"We feel like we're being punished for what we believe in," said former Hertz employee Ileys Omar. 
Omar  is a Muslim who prays five times a day. In the past, Muslim employees  at Hertz paused for their prayers without clocking out.
A USA TODAY analysis  of Census data found the  Reno area was among 150 nationwide where the share of income going to  the middle class — generally made up of households that make $20,700 to  $99,900 a year — shrank from 2006 to 2010. Metro areas where the middle  class' share of income dropped outnumbered those where it grew by more  than 2-to-1.
"The lower share of income is a way of saying income inequality is growing in the middle," says 
Paul Taylor, executive vice president of the 
Pew Research Center, who has studied the shift. "The vast middle has less of the pie than it had before."
Income  is shifting to the top tier of households, especially those in the top  5%, Taylor says. The top 5% earn more than $181,000 annually.
President Obama unveiled changes to the
 Home Affordable Refinance Program in a campaign stop in Nevada yesterday. A city which has been hit hard by the 
housing crisis.

PHOENIX -- Nearly two weeks after a 5-year-old girl seemingly vanished outside her suburban 
Phoenix home, police were no closer Monday to figuring out what happened to her as her family criticized the investigation.
Jahessye Shockley has been missing since Oct. 11 after police believe she wandered from her 
apartment in Glendale, outside Phoenix, while her mother was running an errand. The girl's three older siblings were the last to see her.
Police have no evidence, suspects or promising leads, but  the case points to a kidnapping because they found no trace of her after  combing a 3-mile radius around her 
home.
"This little girl doesn't just fall off the face of the earth," Glendale police Sgt. Brent Coombs said Monday.