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Posts Tagged ‘ United States ’

Time’s breastfeeding cover is pure front

May 12, 2012

timemomenough 460x276 Times breastfeeding cover is pure front

A very controversial Time magazine cover .breastfeeding…this is the kind of thing the news media needs to put out in order to maintain sales and profit. So are you really that shocked that for the right price anyone will pose in front of a camera simply for the attention and money? Most of us would probably do the same for the right price…

That’s my comment…pass it on..

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com


poweredbyguardianREV Times breastfeeding cover is pure frontThis article titled “Time’s breastfeeding cover is pure front” was written by Victoria Bekiempis, for guardian.co.uk on Friday 11th May 2012 20.19 UTC

When the Time magazine cover for a story on attachment parenting “Are You Mom Enough?” hit the web this week, the reaction ran the full range from troll-friendly to thoughtful. It’s not difficult to see why this headline and design drew so much heat: without even wading into “mommy wars”, compounding Americans’ puritanical discomfort with the body is a cultural taboo over breast-feeding. Recall, for example, the negative reaction to mother mag Babytalk’s breastfeeding cover: 25% of readers polled thought the pic was inappropriate, with some women even calling the image “gross” and shredding the edition.

What also makes for the perfect storm of sales-driving sensationalism: the child in question is three years old and has a model-looking mother, whom some news outlets have inevitably referred to as a “Milf” (from American Pie: “Mom I Would Like to F…”).

Friday, the issue is set to hit newsstands nationwide. While the edition is likely to remain controversial for the obvious issues – that late-stage breastfeeding is/isn’t weird; that child will/will not grow up well-adjusted; and (sadly) that mom pictured is/isn’t hot – the cover is not problematic because it’s polemic. Rather, the way it is presented distracts us from having a meaningful discussion of motherhood and sexuality, which is a discussion we need to have.

We get so caught up in the “weirdness” of the situation that we don’t really address the bigger issue: uneasy Americans flip out whether Mamma Madonna is a goddess or a bitch, and will criticize her if she’s sexed up or completely desexualized. 

Some evidence? Let’s start with Annie Leibovitz-shot Demi Moore Vanity Fair cover. As described by the Los Angeles Times, “It was the photo that spawned all manner of celebrity mom to bare all along with their bellies, among them Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera,” but “at the time, some retailers were so taken aback by the shot that they sold the issue in a brown paper bag as if it were an adult title like Playboy.” Moore said she felt it gave women “permission to feel sexy, attractive when you’re pregnant.” 

But the preg-celeb photo shoots that have followed over the past 20 years, such as the Jessica Simpson’s Elle spread of late, suggest that women still don’t have the permission to celebrate pregnancy or motherhood without charges of indecency.  

Reactions to the frilly lingerie for lactating mothers, as detailed in a New York Times’ article “Nursing Bras That Show Mothers in More than Work Mode” also support this.

There were women who felt that the traditional “matronly” models were sufficient and practical; that the post-partum period was no time to worry about unmentionables’ unattractiveness. There were women who felt bogged down by the demands of motherhood, who wanted to boost their self-esteem with nursing bras and matching thongs. And then, there were women who felt that being a mother in a simple, lingerie-free way was given a bad rap; that they should be thought of as sexual beings even if they’re wearing a white or flesh-toned bra – in the words of one garment maker said: “I love being a mother, but lingerie is not for a mother … It’s for a woman.” As Koa Beck wrote on Mommyish:

“Apparently being a mother is not the same as being woman on the pure basis of undergarment choice. If you’re not wearing a lacy push up bra or matching lingerie set, you’re not a woman to the heads of these bra companies. And motherhood and a fancy balconette bra are just not compatible.”

Adding to the confusion, of course, are the sexless shrew tropes we constantly see on network sitcoms, which send the message that moms are moody but never in the mood, à la Everybody Loves Raymond. Also among the countless, confounding examples in pop culture are the young women of Teen Mom, who sometimes seem more concerned with plastic surgery than their kids. 

The portrayal and perception of motherhood in America is messy, to say the least. Deconstructed, here’s how Time relates to all of this: the cover feels inappropriate not just because of its shock value; instead, the imagery fosters the attitude that breastfeeding is freakish per se, and it then links this notion to society’s complicated, contradictory prescriptions about mothers’ sexuality. 

Some might counter that despite the overt opportunism, this is a liberating, challenging portrayal of breastfeeding. After all, the line of reasoning goes, isn’t the young mother on the cover challenging stereotypes by proudly, publicly defending her choice to breastfeed – while simultaneously embodying a strongly sexual being?

That does not seem to be at play here, though. The Time photo shoot doesn’t set out to challenge taboos so much as exploit them: because it is such an extreme, link-baity example, it prompts a gut reaction based upon what we already believe about appropriate ages for breastfeeding.

Because the “weirdness” element is foregrounded to the exclusion of any other considerations, the Time cover precludes a necessary public debate about the underlying theme: that mothers – be they foxy or frumpy or somewhere in between – should be free to express their sexuality as they so choose, without feeling pressured by shame or constraining stereotypes.

 Times breastfeeding cover is pure front

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US to impose tariff on Chinese solar panels in victory for domestic makers

March 21, 2012

We need more decisions like this one…actions that support American companies to compete and prosper in this challenging economy. The key here is to execute from the top…meaning that our elected officials need to grow a “pair” and back up our American companies…domestic makers….how about small businesses in America? Don’t leave them behind!! Buy products made in the USA.

That’s my comment…pass it on..

Dr Anthony

www.yepod.com 

http://www.yepod.com/?p=39927 


poweredbyguardianREV US to impose tariff on Chinese solar panels in victory for domestic makersThis article titled “US to impose tariff on Chinese solar panels in victory for domestic makers” was written by Suzanne Goldenberg, US environment correspondent, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 20th March 2012 23.39 UTC

The Obama administration, which regularly champions America’s clean energy industry, has delivered modest support for home-grown solar panel makers complaining of unfair competition from China

In a much-anticipated decision, the commerce department on Tuesday said it would impose tariffs of 2.9% to 4.73% on Chinese-made solar panels, after finding the Beijing government was providing illegal subsidies to manufacturers.

The commerce department could impose heavier penalties in May, when it is due to decide whether China is dumping solar panels at prices below their actual cost.

But Tuesday’s move did not suggest the Obama adminstration is willing to risk a trade war with China in support of struggling solar panel manufacturers.

Domestic solar panel makers, who had requested the tariffs, welcomed the decision, saying it had helped expose unfair Chinese trade practices.

“Today’s announcement affirms what US manufacturers have long known: Chinese manufacturers have received unfair and WTO-illegal subsidies,” Steve Ostrenga, an executive who is a member of the Coalition for American Solar Manufacturing, said in a statement. “We look forward to addressing all of China’s unfair trade practices in the solar industry.”

Solar installation companies, whose business relies on Chinese-made panels, expressed relief that the small tariffs would not drive up costs.

“This is a huge victory for the US solar industry and our 100,000 employees,” said Jigar Shah, president of the Coalition for Affordable Solar Energy. “Given all our expectations, this is really good news.”

But there were some suggestions that the Obama administration was sending a mixed message on its support for the renewable energy industry.

Some industry executives had hoped for a greater show of support from the administration – even at the risk of causing a trade rift with China.

Obama, in the White House and on the campaign trail, has regularly held up the renewable energy industry as an example of American innovation – noting that solar power was invented at Bell Labs. But China has now taken the lead, with more than 700 manufacturers of solar panels.

A few of those Chinese companies have acknowledged receiving cheap loans and other government support.

But low-cost solar panels are also helping some sections of America’s clean energy industry.

The energy secretary, Steven Chu, who was grilled on his department’s support for solar power in Congress earlier Tuesday, proudly noted during his testimony that America overtook China in clean energy investment last year.

The US made $56bn in clean energy investment in 2011, overtaking China, which invested $47.4bn. Much of the US investment represented the tail end of the 2009 recovery act funds.

What Chu left unmentioned, however, was that the growth of the US clean energy industry was led by the plummeting costs of Chinese-made solar panels, which brought solar farms closer to the cost of electricity generated from fossil fuels.

American imports of Chinese solar panels have grown exponentially in recent years, from $21.3m in 2005 to $2.65bn last year.

But cheap Chinese solar panels have also put American solar panel makers out of business – and proved a political embarrassment for the Obama adminstration.

The most high profile failure – and the one with the biggest political fallout – was the collapse of Solyndra, which declared bankruptcy after receiving half a billion dollars in department of energy loans.

Another loan recipient, Evergreen Solar, embarrassed the administration by announcing plans to move production from Massachusetts to China because of lower costs. The company ended up going bankrupt.

However, those failures still provided fodder to Republicans in Congress and candidates seeking the party’s nomination to attack Obama for his support for clean energy.

 US to impose tariff on Chinese solar panels in victory for domestic makers

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Sugar: it’s time to get real and regulate

February 13, 2012

Brown Sugar Cubes 005 Sugar: its time to get real and regulate

We all love it…sugar…with it we can make all sorts of delicious treats…cookies,cakes,frostings,pudding,candy,syrup for our pancakes,ice cream,and many other dishes and recipes right out of the pages of betty crocker…but after years of  spooning  sugar down our gullets, our bodies begin rejecting the very thing that has given us so much pleasure. Our inner metabolism begin experiencing adverse reactions from our sugar coated life styles. New cases of diabetes and diabetic related diseases are on the rise in every country.  Take charge of your health today and start cutting back on sugar and calories…live longer..stick to a plan…make the commitment..

That’s my comment…pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com

http://www.yepod.com/?p=32986


poweredbyguardianREV Sugar: its time to get real and regulateThis article titled “Sugar: it’s time to get real and regulate” was written by Jacqueline Windh, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 13th February 2012 16.30 UTC

Last week, a trio of American scientists led by Robert Lustig, professor of clinical paediatrics at the University of California, published an article in the journal Nature, outlining the toxic effects that sugar has on humans and arguing for governmental controls on its sale and distribution. While the authors come short of labelling sugar a “poison” outright, in a 2007 interview with ABC Radio about excess sugar consumption, Lustig said: “We’re being poisoned to death. That’s a very strong statement, but I think we can back it up with very clear scientific evidence.”

That evidence has been growing – particularly in the western world, where consumption of sugar is increasing rapidly. Globally, sugar consumption has tripled in the past 50 years. But, it turns out, the greatest threat to human health is one type of sugar in particular: fructose.

In the US, per-capita consumption of fructose, a common food additive there – mainly in the form of high-fructose corn syrup – has increased more than 100-fold since 1970. Although fructose is not a common added sweetener in the UK and other countries, sucrose is; sucrose contains 50% fructose. Lustig and his co-authors note that last year, the United Nations announced that non-communicable diseases (NCDs) had, for the first time, overtaken infectious diseases in terms of the global health burden. Non-communicable diseases now account for 63% of all deaths, and that total is expected to increase by a further 17% over the next decade.

The scientists cite growing evidence that our increasing consumption of sugar is partly responsible for the growth of NCDs: diseases such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes and the suite of symptoms known as metabolic syndrome. And they argue that, as for substances known to cause NCDs such as tobacco and alcohol, sales and distribution of sugar should be controlled, and products with added sugar should be taxed.

I used to be a sugar addict. And yes, for those who haven’t found out first-hand, sugar is addictive; perhaps not to the same degree as alcohol and tobacco, but a recent study has shown that sugary foods, or even just the expectation of eating sweets, can trick the brain into wanting more. When I decided to cut my sugar consumption 12 or so years ago, I had no idea of the serious health concerns that excess sugar consumption brings. I only wanted to avoid the so-called “empty calories” that sugar provides. I had noticed that eating cookies and desserts was making me feel lethargic.

Sugar, and in particular fructose, affects metabolism. Unlike glucose, fructose can only be metabolised in the liver. Some of its effects on the human body include increasing levels of uric acid, which raise blood pressure; increased fat deposition in the liver; and interference with the insulin receptor in the liver. This inhibits ability of the brain to detect the hormone leptin, which regulates appetite. So beyond the empty calories that fructose provides, eating it makes you want to eat more.

When I started reducing my sugar intake, I had no intention of cutting it out completely. Reducing my consumption was a gradual process, over many years. Sugar had been used as a reward when I was a child, and sweets were still a comfort food for me. But I found that the less of it I ate, the less I craved it. Today, I barely eat sweetened foods at all. If I were to eat what to most North Americans or Europeans is an “average” dessert serving, I would feel sick. Avoiding sugar is no longer an exercise in willpower; I have developed a revulsion for it. I feel that I have brought my body back to its original state. Sugar, in anything other than small quantities, feels like a poison to me.

Illnesses related to dietary choices do not affect only the individuals who become sick; they affect us all, as a society. The US alone spends $150bn on healthcare resources for illness related to metabolic syndrome. Of course, I would like to think that governmental regulation of a food-item such as sugar is not necessary. I do place value on an individual’s right to choose, and on personal responsibility. But in the case of sugar, it’s time to get real. The incidence of preventable diseases such as Type 2 diabetes is increasing and many health authorities have expressed concern that our current youth may be the first generation that does not live as long as their parents.

Most of us have known for some time that excess sugar is not good for us, but education and knowledge are clearly not enough. Regulation is required. This is no longer an issue of personal responsibility, but one of public expenditure and public health.

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 Sugar: its time to get real and regulate

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New York Giants overcome New England Patriots to win Super Bowl

February 6, 2012

Eli Manning New York Gian 007 New York Giants overcome New England Patriots to win Super Bowl

An exciting game…but it was the New York Giants who come out on top to win the Super Bowl…disrupting the New England Patriots hopes..no matter what team you were cheering for…one thing is clear…both teams delivered an exciting and entertaining exhibition of professional football…as it should always be…

That’s my comment…pass it on,

http://www.yepod.com/?p=31664

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com 


poweredbyguardianREV New York Giants overcome New England Patriots to win Super BowlThis article titled “New York Giants overcome New England Patriots to win Super Bowl” was written by Paolo Bandini in Indianapolis, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 6th February 2012 03.38 UTC

Now we can talk about legacies. All week Eli Manning and Tom Coughlin have refused to play along with journalists’ what-ifs and hypothetical scenarios. Would a second Super Bowl triumph in five years be enough to secure both the Giants quarterback and head coach’s future spots in the NFL’s Hall of Fame? We’re not worried about all that. Let’s just play the game.

Well, they did play. For the third time in five years – and the second at a Super Bowl – the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots courtesy of a fourth-quarter comeback, Ahmad Bradshaw giving them the lead with 56 seconds to go on a touchdown he didn’t even mean to score.

With his team trailing by two points and the Giants facing second and goal from the six, Bradshaw knew it might be more dangerous to score and give New England the ball back than to stop short and take time off the clock before allowing his team to kick the field goal that would have still given them a one-point lead. The Patriots’ defence seemed to have had the same thought – parting to allow the back through, and as Bradshaw tried to go down at the one-yard line, his momentum carried him over the line.

No matter. With just one time out left, the Patriots were unable to engineer a response, the game ending on a desperate heave from Tom Brady into the endzone that would fall incomplete. Five years after seeing their perfect season ended by the Giants at Super Bowl XLII in Arizona, the Patriots once again found themselves walking down the tunnel as the confetti fell at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Just as in 2008, the signature moment arrived in the form of a remarkable catch on the final drive. For David Tyree you can substitute Mario Manningham, who showed startling body control as he dived to pull in a 38-yard pass down the left sideline while being hit by the New England safety Patrick Chung. It is a catch that will be replayed and replayed – perhaps only to be rivalled only by the also stunning drop by New England’s Wes Welker on the previous drive.

Then again, the start to this game was not without its surprises. Bookies had variously rated the possibility of the first score of the game being a safety at anywhere upwards of 50-1, but the odds on one arriving in this manner would have been many times higher still.

On the Patriots’ first offensive play of the game, Tom Brady dropped back to pass but quickly found himself under pressure from the Giants’ Justin Tuck. Although he launched the ball downfield before the defensive end could reach him, there were no receivers in the vicinity of the pass. The flag came down immediately for intentional grounding. With Brady standing in the endzone at the point of release, that meant a safety had to be awarded.

If it seemed unthinkable that a quarterback as experienced as Brady would make such an avoidable and costly mistake, then New York’s next score came on the back of an even more costly Patriots penalty. The Patriots linebacker Brandon Spikes looked to have achieved a critical turnover when he recovered a fumble by the Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz at New England’s seven-yard line, only for his team to be penalised for having 12 men on the field. Instead of losing possession, New York got a first and goal at the six.

Two plays later Manning connected with the same receiver for a two-yard score. The Patriots fans at Lucas Oil Stadium had roared their approval as the Giants’ first drive came to an end with two sacks of Manning in three plays, but anyone who paid attention to the Giants’ NFC Championship game win over the San Francisco 49ers – in which Manning was sacked six times and hit 18 – would have known that he can take such punishment better than most. By this point he was nine of nine for 77 yards and the score.

The Patriots could manage only a field goal on their next drive, and the Giants looked primed to extend their advantage as they drove back into New England territory. Although the drive stalled at the Patriots’ 41, New York were able to force a quick three and out before setting off on another solid drive.

This time, though, it was their turn to be undone by a penalty – a holding call against the guard Kevin Boothe on third and one costing them a first down at the New England 36. Mario Manningham failed to reel in a long bomb from Manning on the next play, though the Giants might still have assumed theirs was not such a bad position to be in when Steve Weatherford’s subsequent punt was downed at the New England four-yard line.

By that point there were just four minutes left in the half, and Tom Brady had completed just five of eight passes for 49 yards. The Pats’ offence seemed to be suffering the ineffectiveness of their record-breaking tight end Rob Gronkowski, moving without his usual conviction following the high ankle sprain suffered against the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship game.

And yet suddenly they exploded to life, Brady completing his next 10 passes – including a 20-yard strike to Gronkowski – as the Patriots marched up the field for the touchdown that would give them a 10-9 lead at half-time, keeping their opponents off balance by staying in a no-huddle offence for much of the drive.

On third and three from the four, Brady received excellent protection as he waited patiently for Danny Woodhead to find space between two defenders before delivering the ball to him for the score. The drive had officially been 96 yards, but factoring in two further penalties against New England, they had actually gone 108.

The Patriots head coach Bill Belichick had imposed 30-minute breaks in the middle of practice sessions this week in order to simulate the extended half-time break during a Super Bowl – more than twice as long as it would be in a regular season game. The ruse seemed to work as his team raced straight down the field for another score.

Brady had begun this game seeking to equal Joe Montana by winning a fourth Super Bowl, but he surpassed another record set by his childhood idol when he connected with Wes Welker for a five-yard completion to the Giants’ 28 – his 14th consecutive completion. That figure was up to 16 when he delivered a 12-yard strike to Aaron Hernandez in the endzone. Even Chad Ochocinco had got in on the act with a 21-yard reception at the start of the drive.

The Giants responded with a field goal, though even that felt like a victory for New England. A promising drive had died out after the wide receiver Hakeem Nicks took a brutal hit from Patrick Chung – dropping a pass that would have given his team a fresh set of downs near the 10-yard line. Momentum began to turn back, however, as the Patriots went three and out, with Brady leaving the field looking dazed after a sack by Justin Tuck.

New York raced down to the Patriots’ 11-yard line, but after Ahmad Bradshaw twice failed to take advantage of some good blocking, Manning was sacked by Rob Ninkovich and Mark Anderson on third down. Once again the Giants had to settle for three.

Just as a poor decision from Brady cost New England at the start of the game, however, another would do so again here. There were shades of Manning’s miraculous escape and completion to David Tyree, as Brady slipped away from the Giants pass rush 10 yards near the New England 40-yard line and launched the ball downfield in the direction of Gronkowski.

If the match-up looked favourable – the tight end single covered by Chase Blackburn – the pass immediately looked ill-advised: underthrown to a player who had looked below his battling best all game. Blackburn stepped in front to intercept at the Giants’ eight-yard line.

The teams exchanged possessions, a New York drive stalling after they crossed halfway, before the Pats did the same. For New England, though, the missed opportunity was greater. A blown coverage had left Wes Welker wide open as he streaked upfield on second and 11 from the 44, yet when Brady delivered the ball to him, the wide receiver – usually one of the most reliable pair of hands in the entire league – let it slip through his fingers.

With that, the stage was set for the Giants and for Manningham, whose catch arrived on the first play of a drive that began at the New York 12 with three minutes and 46 seconds left to play. And which ended with a quarterback and a head coach one step closer to that Hall of Fame.

 New York Giants overcome New England Patriots to win Super Bowl

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Ben Gazzara obituary

February 4, 2012

Ben Gazzara in 2011 008 Ben Gazzara obituary

We will miss Ben Gazzara….a great actor…thank you for the memories..

Pass it on,

http://www.yepod.com/?p=31340

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com 


poweredbyguardianREV Ben Gazzara obituaryThis article titled “Ben Gazzara obituary” was written by Brian Baxter, for guardian.co.uk on Saturday 4th February 2012 03.42 UTC

Few screen debuts have equalled the searing malevolence of Ben Gazzara’s Iago-inspired Jocko de Paris in The Strange One (1957). The role, which he had created on stage, became forever associated with this intense graduate of New York’s method school of acting.

Gazzara, who has died aged 81, continued his stage career in modern classics including Epitaph for George Dillon and as the humiliated and vengeful George in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? He also achieved popular acclaim through television series – notably Run for Your Life – and in movies for his friend John Cassavetes and other directors including Otto Preminger, Peter Bogdanovich, David Mamet, Todd Solandz and the Coen brothers.

Gazzara was born to Sicilian immigrants and grew up on Manhattan’s lower east side. He began acting at the Madison Square Boy’s Club and made a teenage debut in a TV dramatisation of a short play by Tennessee Williams. After gaining a scholarship to Erwin Piscator’s drama workshop, he eventually moved to the equally legendary Actor’s Studio headed by Lee Strasberg.

His stage debut was in Pennsylvania, then on tour, in Jezebel’s Husband but his career took off when – aged 23 – he created Jocko in Calder Willingham’s adaptation of his own novel End as a Man. When a revised version of the play transferred to the Vanderbilt Theatre, Gazzara received the New York critics’ award as “most promising young actor”.

Its director, Jack Garfein, an assistant to Elia Kazan, took four years to get the movie version financed and in the interim Gazzara gained experience as the original Brick in Williams’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and as the drug-addicted Johnny in A Hatful of Rain, where his darkly handsome features and forceful acting were distinct assets.

Although The Strange One looked overly theatrical, Gazzara’s pared-down performance survived the lumpen direction, revealing a natural screen presence. The sombre work about a duplicitous cadet leader, who manipulates an army camp in the deep south, was not a popular success and Gazzara returned to the stage until cast as the equally venal, though more enigmatic, soldier Lieutenant Manion in Preminger’s courtroom masterpiece Anatomy of a Murder (1959).

These movies were hard acts to follow and Gazzara, who spoke Italian before he learned English, returned to his roots to star opposite Anna Magnani in The Passionate Thief (1960). It was the start of a lifetime affair with Italy, where he was to work and live for many months each year and where he eventually bought a villa in Umbria.

The following year Gazzara married Janice Rule (having divorced his first wife in 1957) and took the role of the idealistic pathologist in The Young Doctors. He then co-starred opposite David Niven in The Captive City, a lacklustre war movie set in Athens. A challenging role as the convicted murderer turned painter John Resko better reflected Gazzara’s ambitions, but Convicts Four was not a hit and he moved into television, first as the detective in Arrest and Trial and then as the dying Paul Bryan in Run For Your Life (1965-68).

Gazzara was one of several stars coaxed into a cameo role in If It’s Tuesday, This Must be Belgium (1969). Fortuitously, another was Cassavetes and, after working on the liberal documentary King: A Filmed Record … Montgomery to Memphis, Gazzara joined Peter Falk and Cassavetes as the eponymous Husbands in the latter’s improvised study of marital discord.

Gazzara took a decidedly less comedic role as the murderous stripclub owner Cosmo Vitelli in Cassavetes’s edgy thriller The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976) and a year later played Manny Victor in the director’s masterpiece Opening Night. After the director’s untimely death, Gazzara appeared in several documentaries about his friend, notably Anything for John (1995), which reflected the admiration felt by his peers for that maverick filmmaker.

Gazzara had established a willingness to work outside the commercial mainstream, specialising in anti-social characters including a plumply brutish Al Capone, but his career wavered between quality and dross, film and television and work in the US, Italy and a few other countries, notching up over 80 movies in the years following his initial collaboration with Cassavetes.

These included the free-spirited Saint Jack (1979) in Peter Bogdanovich’s elegant rendition of Paul Theroux’s novel and – two years later, also for Bogdanovich – a co-starring role opposite Audrey Hepburn in They All Laughed, an underrated but commercially disastrous variation on love’s roundabout.

Following a second divorce Gazzara worked for a decade in Italy, returning to the US only for lucrative TV movies, including A Question of Honour (1982), A Letter to Three Wives and the Aids drama An Early Frost (both 1985), Road House (1989) and Blindsided (1993).

In Europe he portrayed the disillusioned beat poet Charles Bukowski in Tales of Ordinary Madness (1981), was a professor in Il Camorrista (1985) and a less amiable Don in Don Bosco (1988). Although he had directed episodes of Columbo for his friend Peter Falk, he only graduated to the big screen in 1990 with the little-seen Beyond the Ocean, shot in Bali.

Soon after that Italian-financed movie he again concentrated on work in America, averaging five films or TV movies each year, while dividing his time between homes in Umbria, New York City, and Sag Harbor, New York state.

Highlights of this busy period included Mamet’s The Spanish Prisoner (1997), where he played the mysterious Mr Klein; cult success Buffalo ’66; the black comedy The Big Lebowski; and the controversial Happiness (all 1988). He was well cast as a gang leader in Spike Lee’s Summer of Sam and moved to the other side of the fence as a smooth lawyer in the glossy The Thomas Crown Affair (1999).

Dozens of other films were routine and he freely admitted that “these days I turn nothing down in order to maintain a comfortable and happy life with my third and last wife”.

Despite debilitating treatment for throat cancer, in 1999 he published an autobiography and worked steadily for the next decade, notching up over 30 credits, from television series to leading roles in features, many made in Europe, often in his beloved Italy. There he worked in TV, was on location in Calabria for Secret Heart (2003), in Umbria for a brilliant cameo in Christophe Roth and moved to Spain for Schubert, to Belgium for Chez Nico and for the title role in Godbye Michel. In 2008 he took the name role in Looking for Palladin, about a former Hollywood star who hides from fame in Guatemala.

He enjoyed his role as the Vatican’s banker in Holy Money, but most rewarding of the many films were a short, Eve, cleverly directed by Natalie Portman, with Lauren Bacall, and the two films with Gena Rowlands, echoing their John Cassavetes days. He took a supporting cameo to her lead in the superior television movie Hysterical Blindness (2002), and four years later they played a two-hander as part of the portmanteau film Paris, Je t’aime, in a bittersweet episode where, as in later works, a recent stroke affected his speech, though never his courage or professionalism.

Ben Gazzara: born Biagio Anthony Gazzara, 28 August 1930, New York City; died Friday 3 February 2012, New York City.

Married Louise Erickson (1951-1957); Janice Rule (1961-1979); Elke Krivat (1982)

 Ben Gazzara obituary

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Newt Gingrich sets his sights on Florida’s Latino communities

January 26, 2012

Newt Gingrich little hava 007 Newt Gingrich sets his sights on Floridas Latino communities

Politicians will always be politicians…so as it goes, Newt Gingrich is reaching out to the hispanic community to assure a victory in Florida…the hispanic vote will be necessary for Gingrich to win in Florida…the hispanic population has been hit hard during these difficult economic times…Gingrich is hoping that the hispanic community will rally up and send a message to Washington…that it’s time for a change…again..Can Florida be the spring-board Gingrich needs to the White House?

pass it on,

Dr Anthony 


poweredbyguardianREV Newt Gingrich sets his sights on Floridas Latino communitiesThis article titled “Newt Gingrich sets his sights on Florida’s Latino communities” was written by Ewen MacAskill in Miami, for The Guardian on Thursday 26th January 2012 21.32 UTC

Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich made a short stop at the Versailles coffee shop in Miami’s Little Havana recently. It has a reputation for good pastries and strong, sweet, dark Cuban coffee, but Gingrich was not stopping just to sample the fare.

He was there to persuade Cuban hardliners that he has not gone soft on the Castro brothers. If the Versailles clientele are anything to go by, the tactic seems to be working.

Juan Santana, a 53-year-old security guard, born in Cuba but living in exile in Florida since 1974, was among those so taken by Gingrich that he went on to support the candidate at a campaign event this week in Miami.

Santana is about as hardline as it gets, viewing Castro’s Cuba as “satanic communism” and a terrorist entity which he says is working with Iranian intelligence agents. He sports a military-style cap embroidered with the legend “Operation Mongoose Cuban Readiness Force” in a tribute to a CIA operation dating back to the 1960s to overthrow Castro. He was accompanied by about half a dozen others wearing similar caps.

Cuban-Americans remain a powerful political force in southern Florida and Gingrich and his rival Mitt Romney are going all out to court a group that could prove decisive in a tight race. Both were in Miami on Wednesday seeking to win over Cuban-Americans and other Latino voters and both will be back again today, speaking at a major Latino leadership conference. Both are backing up their campaign with Spanish language ads.

Florida’s Latinos account for about 20% of the population, with Cuban-Americans the biggest grouping, followed by those of Puerto Rican and Mexican descent. Of the 368,000 registered Republicans in Miami-Dade county, about 75% are Cuban-Americans and they turn out to vote in large numbers. The man who captures this section of the vote is likely to take the state.

According to the polls, Romney is more likely to be that man. A poll for the Spanish-language channel Univision and ABC on Wednesday gave him a 15-point lead over Gingrich among likely Hispanic voters. But there are signs that Gingrich is closing the gap, and it is the Cuban-Americans who are fuelling that movement.

Little Havana is rundown and seedy now. Many Cubans have moved out to more affluent areas to be replaced by other, poorer Latino groups. But the cigar shops, bars and restaurants remain, as do the anti-Castro monuments and murals.

Gingrich is getting advice from a strategist who helped Marco Rubio, one of the rising stars of the Republican party, to victory in the Senate, and he has tapped into the mood better than Romney. Although he was forced to drop an ad saying Romney was anti-immigrant, Gingrich’s language is much more belligerent towards the Castro brothers than Romney’s. Gingrich has also reversed his previous support for Barack Obama’s easing of the Cuban embargo and is now opposed.

On Wednesday, at a meeting on a university campus in Miami, Gingrich called for a “Cuban spring” and US support for non-military covert action to bring down the Castro brothers.

Santana, who lives in Hialeah, outside Miami, applauded this. A Republican who will be voting in Tuesday’s primary, he likes Romney but prefers Gingrich. “I am going to support Gingrich because I think he will be the best president for America at this time because of the threat of terrorism from Iran, Venezuela and Cuba.”

A cigar tucked in his pocket and on his shirt a Gingrich campaign badge ‘Don’t Believe The Liberal Media’, Santana said he does not believe the resolve of the exiles has weakened. He himself is as staunch as ever.

“Castro has done a lot of damage to Cuba. He has destroyed our values as a Judeo-Christian nation through satanic communism.”

Romney arrived in Florida at the start of the week with a better organisation and more money in place in the state than Gingrich. He has won the endorsement of many Latino Republican politicians.

But he has a huge disadvantage. In order to pander to rightwing white conservatives in the presidential debates, he took a tougher line than Gingrich on illegal immigration. While Gingrich risked alienating those white Republicans by backing what he called a humane approach to illegal immigrants, Romney said he would veto the Dream Act, which offers a route to citizenship for illegal immigrants.

In an interview with Univision, Romney insisted he was not anti-immigrant but pro-immigrant. He even joked about his father being born in Mexico. He could not claim he was Mexican-American, much as he would like to in a Florida primary, he said, as people would see through that as dishonest, but he joked that it would help if Univision was to put that label about.

Romney, with the support of Rubio, forced Gingrich this week to drop an ad saying he was anti-immigrant. The ad might have gone but the sense that Romney, unlike Gingrich, is not sympathetic enough to Latinos lingers on.

Santana, like many other Latinos, wants a route to citizenship for illegal immigrants: “The Dream Act is important. I believe it should be a humane policy. I came as a refugee. As long as they are decent, they should be allowed to stay.”

Academics argue younger people do not share their parents’ and grandparents’ passionate hatred of Castro. There is support among many of the younger generation for Obama’s policy of easing the embargo on Cuba. For many young Cuban-Americans, the overriding concerns are the same as Americans elsewhere: jobs, tuition fees and other economic worries.

Mercedes Chavez, 20, a pre-med biology major at Florida International University and a Republican, has not made up her mind who to vote for but is leaning towards Romney. The top issue for her is education. Chavez, who is of Puerto Rican, Cuban and Mexican descent, said: “Cuba is not an issue. It is not my top priority when it comes to my heritage.”

Another of the younger generation of Latino Republicans, John Partridge, 26, echoes this. Partridge, who is of Puerto Rican descent and is leaning towards Gingrich, feels the economy is what matters. “For my generation Cuba is not as big an issue as it was for the older generation … It has been 50 years.”

But not all Republican students are indifferent to the island lying 100 miles to the south. A student at Florida International University, Hector Lans, 20, a Cuban-American, has not made up his mind who to vote for on Tuesday, but said the economy is his immediate concern. But that does not mean he does not also care about Cuba. “Cuba is about the same for me as the economy,” he said.

 Newt Gingrich sets his sights on Floridas Latino communities

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Iowa caucus results make Mitt Romney the man to beat

January 4, 2012

Republican presidential c 007 Iowa caucus results make Mitt Romney the man to beat

Sure Mitt Rommey won the Iowa caucus but Rick Santorum was only 8 votes behind…so we can almost say it was a tie….but a win is a win for many. It’s still a long way to the White House…so expect to see the politicians use everything in their arsenal to get your vote…the best is yet to come…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardianREV Iowa caucus results make Mitt Romney the man to beatThis article titled “Iowa caucus results make Mitt Romney the man to beat” was written by Martin Kettle, for The Guardian on Wednesday 4th January 2012 13.29 UTC

In most presidential election years, by the dawn of the day after the Iowa caucuses, the White House hopefuls are mostly already on the stump in the snows of New Hampshire, cranking up their campaigns for the primary a week later in the state whose motto is Live Free Or Die.

That’s true in January 2012, just as it was in January 2008. This time around, the frontrunners Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul are all either in or on their way to New Hampshire for the 10 January Republican primary. As ever, winning in New Hampshire, a small state in which campaigning will be intense for the next seven days, can make or break a presidential run.

Yet it was already clear from the early dynamics of the 2012 Republican race – and it is even more clear after the result in Iowa yesterday – that New Hampshire may not be as decisive this year as it was in 2008, when John McCain brushed aside Mitt Romney’s well-financed campaign to top the poll and establish a momentum in the race to the nominating convention he never really lost.

Paradoxically, that’s because Romney is looking much harder to beat in New Hampshire in 2012 than he was in 2008. The polls put him at approaching 50% of the vote there, making him an all-but-certain victor next week. But Romney, as Iowa proved, is not loved by his increasingly red meat conservative party. This means, in turn, the best windows of opportunity for his chief challengers are likely to come in the crucial two primaries later in the month – in South Carolina on 21 January and in Florida 10 days after that – rather than in the north-east next week.

These two southern states, South Carolina relatively small and highly conservative; Florida large and more heterogeneous both demographically and politically, look likely to offer a much more crucial proving ground for the men who want to challenge Barack Obama in November.

Both of these states offer bigger opportunities to whichever of the competing “Anyone but Romney” candidates can generate enough excitement, raise enough money and get enough votes in the ballot boxes to mount the most effective challenge against the former Massachusetts governor.

That will be much easier for Santorum, Gingrich and the others than it will be in New Hampshire, though they have to fight hard there nevertheless to maintain credibility going into South Carolina. But you could almost say now that a Romney win in New Hampshire is such a given, that the real battle is already taking place in the two southern states.

That’s because the Republican party has not warmed to Romney any more than it did four years ago. Romney did well in Iowa this week. Coming first by eight votes is a lot better than being beaten by any margin. But three-quarters of Iowa Republicans voted for his opponents, and there is no way Romney’s narrow win gives him anything approaching hegemony in the contest. He is both too strong and too weak.

But which of his opponents stands to profit from Romney’s inability to fire up the Republican activists and voters? The obvious answer from Iowa is Rick Santorum, who pushed him so close in the cornfields. Santorum is a high-profile social conservative, one reason why he has ousted from his Pennsylvania US senate seat in 2008. But so is Gingrich of Georgia, who until recently was very much the man to beat in South Carolina. His campaign has faltered badly recently, but he is a man who knows how to ride the political roller-coaster. And don’t forget Paul, who has promised to stay in the race and who commands a devoted following.

In the end, the suspicion is that none has the strength to brush the others aside decisively enough to stop Romney. All of them together, though, have the strength to sap Romney’s credibility. The 2012 Republican race, in other words, looks strangely like the 2008 one, when the Anyone but McCains fought each other to a draw, allowing the Arizona senator to close his grip on the nomination. Four years ago, Mitt Romney was one of the also-rans. This time he is now the man to beat.

 Iowa caucus results make Mitt Romney the man to beat

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Supermassive black holes are largest ever discovered

December 8, 2011

Black hole 007 Supermassive black holes are largest ever discovered

Most of us have the concept of what a black hole in the universe is…Star trek,Star-Gate,and other science fiction programs have descibed black holes as something to avoid at all costs. So be careful in the near future not to park your spaceship in the vicinity of a black hole…it may not be there after your dinner stroll of the galaxy.

http://www.yepod.com/?p=21717

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Dr Anthony

Yepod.com   


poweredbyguardian Supermassive black holes are largest ever discoveredThis article titled “Supermassive black holes are largest ever discovered” was written by Alok Jha, science correspondent, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 5th December 2011 20.42 UTC

Astronomers have located the two biggest black holes ever found, each one billions of times more massive than our sun. Observations of these supermassive cosmic objects will give scientists clues on how black holes and galaxies form and evolve, especially in the earliest parts of the universe.

The galaxy NGC 3842, around 320m light years from Earth in the constellation of Leo, has a black hole at its centre with a mass of around 9.7bn suns. An even bigger black hole with a mass of around 21bn suns exists at the heart of galaxy NGC 4889, the brightest galaxy in the Coma cluster, around 336m light years from Earth.

These two newly-discovered supermassive black holes were found by analysing data from the Hubble Space Telescope and two of the biggest ground-based telescopes in the world, the Gemini North and Keck 2 facilities in Hawaii. The work, led by Douglas O Richstone of the department of astronomy at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, is published this week in Nature.

Until now, the biggest recorded black hole was the one at the centre of the giant elliptical galaxy Messier 87, measuring 6.3bn suns.

Black holes are a one-way ticket to mystery, a place where known physics seems to break down and the space we all familiar with becomes supremely strange. They begin as massive stars (at least six times the mass of our sun) and, after billions of years of shining they collapse in on themselves into a singularity, a point smaller than the full-stop at the end of this sentence.

Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity predicts that, if matter is compressed into a small enough space, the resulting gravity gets so strong that nothing nearby can escape the pull. The boundary of the region where the gravity of a collapsed star beats every other force around is called the event horizon. Pass this point, and there is no coming back, not even for particles of light.

Observational work from the past few decades has shown that supermassive black holes are likely to be at the centre of all big galaxies, determining how these structures are formed and how they will evolve over time.

Michele Cappellari, an astrophysicist at the University of Oxford who was not involved with the discovery, wrote in an accompanying article in Nature that the discovery of the supermassive black holes would help provide clues to the formation of such big objects.

There are two ideas for how such massive black holes could form. One theory suggests that a smaller black hole simply absorbs lots of gas from a surrounding spiral galaxy until it gets to its size. Another theory suggests that supermassive black holes can form by the merger of two lenticular galaxies (which are intermediate in shape between elliptical and spiral) that have black holes at their centres. The result is a spherical galaxy with a coalesced supermassive black hole in the centre.

Scientists have worked out that the mass of supermassive black holes studied so far is closely related to the amount of random motion (known as the velocity dispersion) of the stars in the central parts of the galaxies that surround them.

“Interestingly, the two newly measured supermassive black holes are more massive than would be predicted from their velocity dispersion,” Cappellari wrote. “This suggests that, unlike their smaller counterparts, these black holes did not grow most of their mass by gas accretion but instead grew by the ‘dry’ merging of gas-poor galaxies.”

 Supermassive black holes are largest ever discovered

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American horror theatre: ‘A hand slams into my neck and wrenches me through the darkness’

December 4, 2011

Blackout actress 007 American horror theatre: A hand slams into my neck and wrenches me through the darkness

Ok..so you want to be scared…for many it’s an adrenalin rush to be frighten…now you can pay for it..the details to this new amusement are covered in the article below…to be part of “Blackout” you will need to take a trip to New York City…hell just going to New York City is scary enough for me!

http://www.yepod.com/?p=21572

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

100 yepod logo size American horror theatre: A hand slams into my neck and wrenches me through the darkness   


poweredbyguardian American horror theatre: A hand slams into my neck and wrenches me through the darknessThis article titled “American horror theatre: ‘A hand slams into my neck and wrenches me through the darkness’” was written by Hermione Hoby, for The Observer on Sunday 4th December 2011 00.05 UTC

My wrists are tied, I’m in total darkness and a man very close to my face is shouting: “Get on your knees, bitch!”

I do what he says. It’s when he puts a cold, wet hood over my head, tips my head back and pours water into my face that I start hyperventilating. The cloth clings to my mouth and nose and panic sends my heart hammering and my lungs heaving.

“Scream, bitch!” roars the voice. “Scream louder! You’re not fucking getting out of here until you scream as loud as I want!”

This, I will tell my friends, is how I spent my Monday night: on my knees, being waterboarded and having paid $60 for the displeasure.

This is Blackout, a sold-out attraction deemed the most terrifying of the United States’s estimated 3,000 Haunted Houses, which make up an industry thought to be worth an extraordinary $500m.

This year, for example, New Yorkers could opt for the shlocky – such as Blood Manor with its 37 gallons of fake blood per night; or the artsy, including the Steampunk Haunted House in the hipster-heavy Lower East Side; or, indeed, just the confoundingly expensive: Nightmare, which bills itself as “America’s #1 Haunted House” and is now in its seventh year, offering “Super VIP” tickets for an alarming $100. Clearly, the opportunity to feel terror without danger is irresistible for a lot of Americans willing to part with a lot of cash.

The hottest ticket though, thanks to its infamy, is Blackout, which the New York Times deemed “the extreme theatre event of the year”. But “theatre” seems too genteel a word and Haunted House – with its suggestions of shonky pop-up ghouls – a misleading term for an experience that’s more Abu Ghraib than Scooby Doo. Adult-only visitors must navigate the space alone and in complete darkness, being terrorised and abused in a series of psycho-sexual horror scenarios. Unlike Abu Ghraib, there’s a safety word to shout if things get too much and its organisers boast that around 20% of visitors use it each night. So why would someone pay around £50 to experience something so extraordinarily unpleasant?

“Audiences want to know if they can make it all the way through without calling ‘Safety’,” says Josh Randall, the show’s co-creator. “The fear they experience in that time gives them a rush and makes them feel more alive.”

There have been similar ventures in Britain before, such as Punchdrunk’s 2009 show It Felt Like a Kiss, in which audiences were chased by a masked, chainsaw-wielding actor, but it’s in the Halloween-mad States that the phenomenon of the Haunted House has really taken hold. Like any good subculture, it has its mass conventions – Pennsylvania’s HauntCon, Ohio’s Midwest Haunters Convention – its endless websites and chat-forums and, of course, its droves of horror-happy nerds.

Adam Irlander, 24, is one such nerd. At 6pm on a Monday evening I find a line of men in their 30s, mostly dressed in dark shades of fleece, queuing outside the blacked-out storefront in midtown Manhattan. Adam is at the front of the queue, wearing a T-shirt that bears a phallic, plastic monster erupting from the chest. It wobbles a little when he talks.

“I’m a fanatic,” he says. “I go to three or four houses a night.”

A night? I screech.

“A night,” he confirms flatly. “I drive for up to three or four hours to go to a haunted house. I’ve been to New York, Delaware, Connecticut…”

This is his second visit to the Blackout Haunted House which, he says, “just doesn’t compare. It’s one of the best”.

I’m scared, I say.

“You should be,” he chuckles. His neighbour in the queue trumps him by revealing this is his third visit. Adam and the third-visit-nerd fold their arms with the hard-boiled air of true connoisseurs and begin to trade assessments: “You done Times Scare? The Penitentiary?”

I’m too frightened to listen to a nerd-off. Desperate for a shred of reassurance, I interrupt them and say I’m not keen on the idea of strangers shoving me around. Adam laughs. “Well,” he says, walking his fingers through the air, “you better turn right round and walk out of here!”

But I don’t. Inside, two young guys are seated at a desk in front of a huge black curtain. They’re dispatching waiver forms, a document which reminds me that I am signing up for the following: “Graphic scenes of simulated extreme horror, adult sexual content, tight spaces, darkness, fog, strobe-light effects, exposure to water, physical contact, and crawling.”

Every so often we hear a bellowed, “Get the fuck out of my house!” and a victim is spat out of a tunnel, shaking, panting and bewildered. Some laugh nervously. Most just look plain traumatised. Eventually, Adam and I witness the third-visit-nerd being expelled.

“Dude!” he says, breathless and eyes shining as he shakes his head. “I nearly couldn’t hang in there! I nearly bailed!”

And then Adam is beckoned behind the black curtain. He gives me a little wave: “I would wait around for ya, but I got other haunted houses to get to tonight!”

I have never before wanted to cling to a man with a plastic monster protruding from his chest, but at this moment Adam is the only thing between me and whatever lies behind that black curtain. He ducks behind it and I lose the feeling in my legs.

By the time I step inside I’m ready to throw up. I decide to consider every moment that I don’t wail “Safety!” a triumph. A torch is shone into my face and a voice snarls: “DON’T. FUCKING. MOVE.”

And then the light goes. The darkness seems to get thicker. I stand in complete silence. Am I meant to do something? I can feel presences moving around me, but I could be imagining them. Something feathery inserts itself with sickening slowness into my left ear. Then a huge hand slams into the side of my neck and wrenches me, half-running, half-stumbling, through the darkness. Over the next 25 minutes I lose count of how many walls I am slammed up against, how many bodies press against me and how many mouths pant or suck or roar abuse at my ears. The water-boarding element is terrifying, but so too is crawling through small tunnels with unseen fingers grabbing at your ankles, or waiting alone in the darkness for more rough hands to seize you.

And then there are the plain ridiculous parts. In a Germaine Greer-esque flourish, a lady in a nightie pulls me into her padded cell and orders me to remove and suck her tampon. The gross-out section continues with a naked man in a toilet vile enough to make the one in Trainspotting look like a Glade PlugIn ad. He slams the cubicle door in my face and from behind it come extravagant sounds of bodily expulsion. Then he pulls me inside and demands that I fish a key out of the full toilet bowl.

“Do it!” he screams. I roll up my sleeve with an involuntary whimper. It’s a very convincing texture. I gag a little bit.

“Say, ‘I love it!’” he shrieks as he presses his paunchy nakedness against my leg. I oblige. “Say it’s the best sex you’ve ever had!”

I mutter obediently. Then he shoves me out of his toilet lair screeching, “That wasn’t sex, that was fishing a key out of shit, you sick fuck!”

Finally, I’m being grabbed from behind and someone is running me down a black tunnel, shouting those blessed words: “Get the fuck out of my house!”

My throat hurts from screaming, my vision’s scrambled from all the torch glare, I’m weak and shaking and aching, but I’m ridiculously proud I made it through and coursing with relief and elation to be back in the normal, well-lit, world of mid-town Manhattan.

The next day I experience something even stranger than all the depraved weirdness of those 25 minutes. It’s the creeping realisation that I really, really want to go back and do it all over again.

 

 American horror theatre: A hand slams into my neck and wrenches me through the darkness

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Mars rover Curiosity poised for Nasa’s ‘most ambitious’ mission to planet

November 27, 2011

Mars Science Laboratory R 007 Mars rover Curiosity poised for Nasas most ambitious mission to planet 

Rover…Rover…come on over….wow..Mars is so far from us! Imagine..we may be living on the planet in the near future and reaching even further into space. What mysteries and surprises are waiting for us out there? Is there intelligent life on another planet? Will they be friendly? There are many questions still to be answered. The most exciting part of this entire event is the journey…Good Luck Curiosity!

http://www.yepod.com/?p=20220

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony 


poweredbyguardian Mars rover Curiosity poised for Nasas most ambitious mission to planetThis article titled “Mars rover Curiosity poised for Nasa’s ‘most ambitious’ mission to planet” was written by Richard Luscombe, Cape Canaveral, for The Guardian on Thursday 24th November 2011 14.39 UTC

A vehicle the size of a small 4×4,is about to embark on a one-way 350m-mile trip costing $2.5bn to explore one of the solar system’s most intriguing destinations.

On Saturday, Nasa is dueto launch its Curiosity rover on what is the most ambitious mission yet to the red planet.

After years of delays and cost overruns, the US space agency believes the Mars Science Laboratory will provide vital scientific information and unprecedented knowledge of the planet’s hostile terrain.

First among the 23-month mission’s objectives is to see whether there is life on Mars, or, in Nasa’s words, “to assess whether the landing area has ever had, or still has, environmental conditions favourable to microbial life”.

Calling Mars the “Bermuda Triangle of the solar system; it’s the death planet”, Colleen Hartman, Nasa’s assistant associate director, reminded reporters at a pre-launch briefing that the US was the only nation to have landed robotic explorers on the planet and driven them around.

“Now we’re set to do it again,” she stated, before enthusing about the little vehicle which will emerge from the space pod as it nears the planet’s surface. “This rover is really a rover on steroids. It’s an order of magnitude more capable than anything we have ever launched to any planet. It will go longer, it will discover more than we could possibly imagine.”

Nasa temporarily surrendered its human spaceflight capability in July with the retirement of its shuttle fleet after 30 years, so has a lot riding on this mission. No doubt with dismay, it looked on as the Phobos-Grunt Martian probe launched earlier this month by Russia’s space agency was unable to leave Earth’s orbit due to a thruster malfunction.

The Mars adventure’s centrepiece is the six-wheel Mars Curiosity rover, three metres in length, twice as long and five times as heavy as Nasa’s twin rovers Spirit and Opportunity that this year ended eight-year missions.

Curiosity is scheduled to land on 6 August 2012 and spend one Martian year, or 98 Earth weeks, exploring the planet, travelling up to 200 metres a day. A mast-mounted camera will enable controllers on Earth to survey territory, decide on a destination and a route and navigate the vehicle’s way forward.

Although based on previous rovers, Curiosity has scientific instruments which are 10 times more powerful. It is the first which is able to drill, scoop and lift rocks and soil samples onboard for analysis, and it also has a powerful laser to vaporise rocks or other material from up to 7 metres away, so that a spectrometer can identifythe makeup.

A high-definition camera can resolve details finer than a human hair on rock, soil and possibe ice samples, a radiation detector essential to plan any future human mission, and a hydrogen detector that can probe up to 1 metre below the surface, seeking water as ice or encased in minerals.

Scientists selected the landing site, Gale crater, from a shortlist of 30 because they believe it has deposits left by water-carrying sediments, and also that a nearby mountain is rich in minerals which form in water. The rover will descend by parachute attached to a “sky crane” before being slowed by thrusters as it approaches the surface. It is then lowered from the crane in a harness: a novel landing method.

Tomorrow’s launch at 10.02am local time in Florida (3.02pm GMT) aboard an Atlas V has concerned some observers; the rocket has a nuclear element in its payload, a 4.8kg plutonium-238 dioxide batterywhich will power Curiosity on Mars.

Nasa rates the risk of a plutonium leak at one in 420 in the event of a launch accident, and says that 95% of fallout will be limited to the Canaveral base environment.

Scientists from Canada, Russia and Spain have contributed to the mission.

“Nasa is partnering more closely with international collaborators … in preparation for one day sending humans to Mars,” Dr Hartman said, adding mischievously: “I dearly hope I’ll still be alive to watch when that astronaut steps down the rung and puts her boot in the red regolith of Mars.”

Martian mission

Nasa’s exploration of Mars aims to find out whether life ever arose on the planet, to characterise its climate and geology, and prepare the way for human visits. The Mars Science Laboratory has eight specific tasks that will help answer some of these questions and broaden scientists’ knowledge of the planet:

• analyse and make an inventory of the organic carbon compounds on Mars.

• Record the chemical building blocks of life on the planet, including carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulphur.

• Look for signs of biological processes at work, either now or in the past.

• Study the chemical, isotopic and mineralogical makeup of the Martian surface and the rocks and soil just beneath.

• Work out how its rocks and soils formed and what shaped them over time.

• Investigate how the Martian atmosphere evolved over the past 4bn years.

• Map where water and carbon dioxide appear, as solid, liquid or gas, and determine their cycles on the planet.

• Measure radiation levels on the planet’s surface, such as that from galactic cosmic radiation and streams of protons from the sun.

This article was amended on 24 November 2011. The original suggested that the rovers Spirit and Opportunity had both been abandoned. This has been corrected.

 

 Mars rover Curiosity poised for Nasas most ambitious mission to planet

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Large dinosaurs migrated huge distances, say scientists

October 27, 2011

The sauropod dinosaur Cam 009 Large dinosaurs migrated huge distances, say scientists

Imagine the size of these creatures when they once roamed the planet, some were feared and others admired by primitive man. But could large species have continued to thrived on such a small planet? Would have man evolved differently if the dinosaurs co-existed? As we now know, the world of the dinosaurs was an intriguing period as we continue to find more evidence through forensic science.

http://www.yepod.com/?p=16709

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony    

 

 


poweredbyguardian Large dinosaurs migrated huge distances, say scientistsThis article titled “Large dinosaurs migrated huge distances, say scientists” was written by Ian Sample, science correspondent, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 26th October 2011 17.00 UTC

The largest dinosaurs to walk the Earth may have embarked on seasonal migrations that covered hundreds of kilometres when local watering holes dried up and food became scarce.

Evidence that giant sauropods set off on epic journeys came to light when scientists examined fossilised teeth recovered from the remains of beasts unearthed in Wyoming and Utah in the US.

The analysis of 32 teeth belonging to two species of Camarasaurus, among the most common sauropods found in North America, suggests the creatures migrated during hot, dry summers, from their usual habitats on flood plains in search of food and water in surrounding uplands.

Some return journeys required the dinosaurs to cover distances of around 300 kilometres (190 miles) in each direction. The long-necked herbivores measured 20 metres from nose to tail in adulthood and weighed around 18 tonnes.

The arduous treks pushed the lumbering animals to their limit, and some appear to have died soon after returning to their lowland homes, before the rainy season brought fresh water to parched soils and vegetation flourished once more.

Understanding the ranges and seasonal movements of the animals will help scientists piece together the role of migrations on Jurassic ecology and any bearing this had on the evolution of gigantism among dinosaurs.

“The question of how sauropods got to be so big is one that is still being actively studied. There’s evidence that some of the reason is that they didn’t have the dental morphology to chew their food, so in order to get enough energy their guts got bigger, and they did more processing in their stomachs,” said Henry Fricke, head of geology at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, who led the study which is published in Nature.

“Migration could come into the story of gigantism as a feedback process. Once they started to get big, it would be easier for them to migrate and get more food more consistently, which would help them to grow even more,” he added. Moving long distances gets more energetically efficient the bigger strides a creature can take, so it would be highly inefficient for a mouse, for example, but much more efficient for a large dinosaur.

Fricke’s team attempted to reconstruct camarasaur migrations by measuring oxygen isotopes (variants of particular elements that have different numbers of neutrons in their nucleus) in their teeth. The work relied on the fact that ratios of two oxygen isotopes differ markedly in the waters of streams and lakes, depending on local environmental conditions, such as how high and arid the landscape was at the time.

The dinosaurs kept an unwitting record of these oxygen isotopes as they roamed the land, because the oxygen in the water they drank became incorporated into successive layers of enamel as their teeth developed.

Most of the teeth, from remains collected at Thermopolis in Wyoming and Dinosaur National Monument in Utah, were worn and retained only a month or two of enamel growth, but others were in far better condition with up to four or five months of enamel still intact.

The scientists analysed oxygen isotopes in the dinosaurs’ teeth and compared them with ancient soil samples from their lowland habitats and bordering uplands. From this, they pieced together the dinosaurs’ movements over several months of their lives, concluding that the beasts made seasonal migrations to the uplands. Studies of one tooth suggest the dinosaur left its lowland habitat to find food and water in the highlands and returned home within five to six months.

“What was up in the highlands food-wise we don’t know, the land is weathered away, but the conditions may not have been as hot and dry, and it may even have rained more continuously at the higher elevations,” Fricke said.

“This is a neat example of how we can bring geochemical methods to bear on an issue, how we can learn something about dinosaur behaviour that we can’t learn from looking at the morphology of the fossils themselves,” he added.

 

 Large dinosaurs migrated huge distances, say scientists

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Steve Jobs honoured by Silicon Valley

October 16, 2011

Steve Jobs honoured by Si 007 Steve Jobs honoured by Silicon Valley

What’s next now that Steve Jobs is no longer with us? Who will be the one to follow into the future? How will his passing impact this industry? We are left with many questions…

http://www.yepod.com/?p=15231

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony      


poweredbyguardian Steve Jobs honoured by Silicon ValleyThis article titled “Steve Jobs honoured by Silicon Valley” was written by Ed Pilkington in New York, for The Guardian on Sunday 16th October 2011 21.39 UTC

Some of Silicon Valley’s top executives were set to gather at Stanford university on Sunday evening to celebrate the life and genius of the Apple founder Steve Jobs.

Fittingly perhaps for a memorial of a man who was notoriously secretive, the precise location of the event and its guest list is under wraps. It is being billed as strictly private, with no public or media coverage welcome.

Last week Jobs had a small private funeral following his death on 5 October, aged 56, from pancreatic cancer. On Wednesday morning, another private event will be held at Apple’s Cupertino headquarters for the company’s employees to pay their respects to their deceased leader.

Despite the primarily private nature of the commemorations, Jobs’s many admirers and fans have been able to express their sentiments through an outpouring of messages and cards to Apple stores and the company’s website.

In California, the governor Jerry Brown declared Saturday “Steve Jobs Day”. In a proclamation, he said: “It is fitting that we mark this day to honour his life and achievements as a uniquely Californian visionary. He epitomised the spirit of a state that an eager world watches to see what will come next.”

Security around the Stanford commemoration has been so tight that scarcely any details have yet emerged. Reuters reported that the president of one of Apple’s bitterest rivals, Samsung Electronics, Lee Jae-yong, would be among the attendants.

Samsung and Apple are fighting for supremacy in the smartphone and tablet markets.

 

 Steve Jobs honoured by Silicon Valley

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Starbucks concerned world coffee supply is threatened by climate change

October 14, 2011

Starbucks in New York 007 Starbucks concerned world coffee supply is threatened by climate change

Climate change to affect the taste of my coffee?… Now I am listening…that’s right ..now Starbucks, the coffee giant  is chanting climate change issues…well to be perfectly clear…Starbucks has always been in favor of research concerning global food demand and conservation. Hey…it makes for good conversation or you can just ponder over the issue while drinking your next Starbucks cafe latte…no sugar please..

http://www.yepod.com/?p=14896

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony  


poweredbyguardian Starbucks concerned world coffee supply is threatened by climate changeThis article titled “Starbucks concerned world coffee supply is threatened by climate change” was written by Suzanne Goldenberg, US environment correspondent, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 13th October 2011 20.17 UTC

Forget about super-sizing into the trenta a few years from now: Starbucks is warning of a threat to world coffee supply because of climate change.

In a telephone interview with the Guardian, Jim Hanna, the company’s sustainability director, said its farmers were already seeing the effects of a changing climate, with severe hurricanes and more resistant bugs reducing crop yields.

The company is now preparing for the possibility of a serious threat to global supplies. “What we are really seeing as a company as we look 10, 20, 30 years down the road – if conditions continue as they are – is a potentially significant risk to our supply chain, which is the Arabica coffee bean,” Hanna said.

It was the second warning in less than a month of a threat to a food item many people can’t live without.

New research from the International Centre for Tropical Agriculture warned it would be too hot to grow chocolate in much of the Ivory Coast and Ghana, the world’s main producers, by 2050.

Hanna is to travel to Washington on Friday to brief members of Congress on climate change and coffee at an event sponsored by the Union of Concerned Scientists.

The coffee giant is part of a business coalition that has been trying to push Congress and the Obama administration to act on climate change – without success, as Hanna acknowledged.

The coalition, including companies like Gap, are next month launching a new campaign – showcasing their own action against climate change – ahead of the release of a landmark science report from the UN’s IPCC.

Hanna told the Guardian the company’s suppliers, who are mainly in Central America, were already experiencing changing rainfall patterns and more severe pest infestations.

Even well-established farms were seeing a drop in crop yield, and that could well discourage growers from cultivating coffee in the future, further constricting supply, he said. “Even in very well established coffee plantations and farms, we are hearing more and more stories of impacts.”

These include: more severe hurricanes, mudslides and erosion, variation in dry and rainy seasons.

Hanna said the company was working with local producers to try to cushion them from future changes.

“If we sit by and wait until the impacts of climate change are so severe that is impacting our supply chain then that puts us at a greater risk,” he said. “From a business perspective we really need to address this now, and to look five, 10, and 20 years down the road.”

 

 Starbucks concerned world coffee supply is threatened by climate change

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Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito cleared of murder

October 3, 2011

Amanda Knox found not guilty? A real surprise and outcome for one of the most watched murdered trial of the year. Was justice served? This verdict will no doubt have people discussing its details for years to come. Already offers of a movie deal are knocking at their doors and what about the murdered victim’s family?  How are they reacting to the new verdict…I suppose they are experiencing a deeper loss…re-living the emotions of losing their child…again…

http://www.yepod.com/?p=13841

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony


poweredbyguardian Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito cleared of murderThis article titled “Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito cleared of murder” was written by John Hooper and Tom Kington in Perugia, for The Guardian on Monday 3rd October 2011 21.19 UTC

There were scenes of delight inside and protests outside an Italian courtroom after judges upheld the appeal by the American student, Amanda Knox, against a 26-year sentence for killing her British flatmate, Meredith Kercher. The judges also overturned a 25-year sentence imposed on her Italian former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito.

A sobbing and stumbling Knox was hustled from the courtroom by police officers as members of her family embraced and wept. Sollecito hugged his lead counsel, Giulia Bongiorno. Across the courtroom, the prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini, stood alone while Stephanie Kercher, the victim’s sister, consoled her mother, Arline.

Outside, several hundred mainly young people had been gathering since late afternoon. As news of the verdict swept through the crowd, whistles erupted and then a chant went up of “Vergogna. Vergogna” – “Disgrace. Disgrace.”

As defence lawyers emerged from the courthouse, they were greeted with roars of disapproval from the mob, interspersed with the odd cheer.

One of Knox’s lawyers, Carlo Dalla Vedova, said his client would be released from prison immediately and spend the night with her family at a guesthouse outside Perugia. She is expected to leave for her home city of Seattle on Tuesday.

The first person to reach her after the verdict was announced was Dalla Vedova’s junior, Maria del Grosso. “She was terror-struck”, Del Grosso said. “If I had not held her, she would have fallen.”

The judges confirmed Knox’s conviction for slandering her former employer, Diya “Patrick” Lumumba, whom she initially accused of the murder, and increased her sentence from one to three years. But since she has already spent four years in jail, Knox was able to walk free.

The tension in court as the verdict was delivered exploded into gasps when the presiding judge, Claudio Pratillo Hellmann, began by declaring that the American student’s appeal had been rejected, before adding that the rejection only applied to the slander charge.

Hellmann, who has a distinctively metallic voice, read out the verdict in the vaulted and frescoed 14th-century courtroom that has been the scene of an appeal swept by emotion, high tension and furious dispute.

The two professional and six lay judges reached their decision after 11 hours of deliberation having earlier heard final pleas from the two appellants. Moments after the verdict was announced Knox’s sister Deanna Knox gave a brief statement outside court. “We’re thankful that Amanda’s nightmare is over,” she said. “She has suffered for four years for a crime that she did not commit.”

Deanna paid tribute to her sister’s legal team. “Not only did they defend her brilliantly, but they also loved her. We are thankful for all the support we have received from all over the world – people who took the time to research the case and could see that Amanda and Raffaele were innocent. And last, we are thankful to the court for having the courage to look for the truth and to overturn this conviction.”

Francesco Sollecito, Raffaele Sollecito’s father said he had “allowed himself some tears”. Of Meredith Kercher, he said: “We will remember her with affection. I would have liked to talk to her relatives as well, as they have lost a daughter in a very cruel way. “But tonight, they [the court] have given me back my son.”

Earlier, in her final statement to the court, Knox, her voice quavering and never far from breaking down, said: “I want to go home, to my life. I don’t want to be deprived of my life, my future for something I have not done.”

Though the judges did not immediately disclose their reasoning, they are likely to have been heavily influenced by the report of experts appointed by the court to review the forensic evidence. In June, the independent experts decided that two pillars of the prosecution case were not reliably founded.

One was a trace of Sollecito’s DNA on Meredith Kercher’s bra clasp, which was found more than six weeks after the discovery of her body, and which the young Italian’s lawyer implied last week might have been planted. The experts said the DNA could have got there by contamination. The second key item of evidence was a kitchen knife, bearing Sollecito’s and Knox’s DNA, that the prosecution claimed was used to slash Kercher’s throat. The experts said a third sample of DNA was not necessarily that of the victim.

The Kerchers’ legal representative had earlier said the family would accept the ruling of the appeal court, as they had accepted that at the original trial. But speaking at a press conference in a Perugia hotel, they said the “brutal death” of the British student had been overlooked.

“I think Meredith has been hugely forgotten,” said Kercher’s sister, Stephanie, sitting alongside Kercher’s mother Arline and brother Lyle.

“It is very hard to find forgiveness at this time,” said Lyle Kercher. “Four years is a very long time but on the other hand it is still raw.

Within 90 days, the judges must submit their written verdict and the various parties will then have 45 days in which to take the case to Italy’s highest appeals court, the court of cassation. Under Italian law, the prosecution can lodge an appeal in the same way as the defence.

But it was expected that Knox would leave immediately for the US, and if the court of cassation were to reinstate the decision of the lower court, the authorities would have to seek her extradition.

The prosecutor who oversaw the inquiry, Giuliano Mignini, hinted more than once before the outcome that he might not seek a further ruling.

The defence argument was, from the beginning that the murder was committed during a break-in by a third person, Rudy Guede from the Ivory Coast. Guede has also been convicted, but is serving a lighter, 16-year sentence after opting for a fast-track trial.

 Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito cleared of murder

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Scientists behind the wasabi fire alarm win Ig Nobel prize

September 30, 2011

Wasabi 007 Scientists behind the wasabi fire alarm win Ig Nobel prize

Spoof on the Nobel prize sounds like a fun time…honoring those with some very strange but entertaining research. For example an fire alarm system that sprays a mist of wasabi into the air…wow…now that could reanimate the dead…but I prefer to use wasabi the old natural way…with sushi…

http://www.yepod.com/?p=13432

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony


poweredbyguardian Scientists behind the wasabi fire alarm win Ig Nobel prizeThis article titled “Scientists behind the wasabi fire alarm win Ig Nobel prize” was written by Alok Jha, science correspondent, for The Guardian on Thursday 29th September 2011 23.30 UTC

How do you wake a deaf person in the middle of the night if there’s a fire? Squirt a cloud of wasabi at them, of course. For the Japanese researchers who came up with the horseradish-based alarm system, it was a lifesaving piece of work, but on Thursday night they entered the history books with the award of the Ig Nobel prize for chemistry.

Their research was one of 10 areas celebrated at the 21st Ig Nobel prizes at Harvard University. The awards, a spoof on the Nobel prizes, which will be announced next week, honour achievements that “first make people laugh, and then make them think”.

Other winners included researchers who looked at whether people make better decisions when they have a strong urge to urinate, whether yawning is contagious in tortoises, and an analysis of why people sigh.

The Japanese scientists and engineers who came up with the 50,000-yen (£400) wasabi alarm tried hundreds of odours, including rotten eggs, before settling on the Japanese condiment – a favourite of sushi lovers. Its active ingredient, allyl isothiocyanate, acts as an irritant in the nose that works even when someone is asleep. “That’s why [people] can wake up after inhalation of air-diluted wasabi,” said Makoto Imai of the department of psychiatry at Shiga University of Medical Science, one of the team that won this year’s Ig Nobel for chemistry.

Mirjam Tuk of the University of Twente, winner of the 2011 Ig Nobel for medicine, investigated how well we make decisions when faced with painful or stressful situations, such as a powerful need to urinate. She found that people who are better at resisting the urge to urinate are also better at controlling their impulses on cognitive tasks. For example, her subjects were stronger-willed when it came to resisting a small reward promised for tomorrow, in order to receive a bigger reward further in the future.

Tuk’s work is part of a bigger question examining self-control. She shared her award with a team of American scientists that included Professor Peter Snyder, a neurologist at Brown University. “We did not expect this honour, but we are pleased by it,” he said. “We are most pleased because the goal of the awards is to nurture and increase interest in science by the public (particularly for students). It is important to show that science can be fun and entertaining, as well as important.”

Karl Teigen of the University of Oslo, winner of this year’s Ig Nobel in psychology, was celebrated for a paper that considered the question: why do we sigh? He wanted to give his students a project that would teach them about the research method. “We decided to choose a theme where we could do original work, and it turned out – to our surprise – that in psychology there were no empirical studies on sighs and sighing.”

They discovered that most people believe others’ sighs are a sign of sadness or disappointment. But they reported that their own feeling when they sighed was more often resignation. How did Teigen react to the award? “Surprise. Embarrassment. Amusement. A sneaking pride. And then, of course, I sighed.”

Academic research is often seen as trivial when viewed from the outside, he added. “It must be allowed to make fun of scientists, because they have a lot of fun themselves.”

Dr Anna Wilkinson of the University of Lincoln, winner of the 2011 Ig Nobel in physiology, spent six months training a red-footed tortoise called Alexandra to yawn on command. She then used the trained tortoise to work out whether other tortoises would yawn whenever Alexandra did.

Contagious yawning is common in humans and scientists think it might be controlled by empathy, since it requires an understanding of the emotional state of another individual to “catch” a yawn.

“With tortoises we’ve found evidence of social learning, fantastic spatial cognition and brilliant visual perception, so we wanted to know what else can they do,” said Wilkinson. “I thought it would be really interesting to test one of these high-level hypotheses with a species which, it is very clear, do not possess empathy.”

Her tortoises, however, showed no evidence of contagious yawning. The result lends weight to the idea that the behaviour is indeed controlled by higher-level cognitive mechanisms.

Other winners included a team of French and Dutch researchers who were given the physics Ig Nobel for studying why discus throwers become dizzy whereas hammer throwers do not. The world’s doomsayers – including Harold Camping – who have predicted the end of the world on various dates were collectively awarded the mathematics Ig Nobel “for teaching the world to be careful when making mathematical assumptions and calculations”.

Almost all the winners turned up to collect their awards and make 60-second speeches at the ceremony in Boston. They were handed their trophies by real-life Nobel laureates including Prof Roy Glauber (physics, 2005), Prof Dudley Herschbach (chemistry, 1986) and Prof Louis Ignarro (physiology or medicine, 1998).

Ignarro was himself given away in a competition to win a date with a Nobel laureate.

Marc Abrahams, the editor of the Annals of Improbable Research, a regular Guardian writer and the founder of the prizes, ended the ceremony with his customary congratulations: “If you didn’t win an Ig Nobel prize tonight – and especially if you did – better luck next year.”

2011 Ig Nobel prizewinners

Physiology
Anna Wilkinson, Natalie Sebanz, Isabella Mandl and Ludwig Huber for their study ““No evidence of contagious yawning in the red-footed tortoise Geochelone carbonaria“.

Chemistry
Makoto Imai, Naoki Urushihata, Hideki Tanemura, Yukinobu Tajima, Hideaki Goto, Koichiro Mizoguchi and Junichi Murakami for determining the ideal density of airborne wasabi (pungent horseradish) to awaken sleeping people in case of a fire or other emergency, and for applying this knowledge to invent the wasabi alarm.

Medicine
Mirjam Tuk, Debra Trampe and Luk Warlop, and jointly to Matthew Lewis, Peter Snyder, Robert Feldman, Robert Pietrzak, David Darby and Paul Maruff for demonstrating that people make better decisions about some kinds of things – but worse decisions about other kinds of things – when they have a strong urge to urinate.

Psychology
Karl Halvor Teigen of the University of Oslo, Norway, for trying to understand why, in everyday life, people sigh.

Literature
John Perry of Stanford University for his Theory of Structured Procrastination, which states: “To be a high achiever, always work on something important, using it as a way to avoid doing something that’s even more important.”

Biology
Daryll Gwynne and David Rentz for discovering that certain kinds of beetle mate with certain kinds of Australian beer bottle.

Physics
Philippe Perrin, Cyril Perrot, Dominique Deviterne, Bruno Ragaru and Herman Kingma for trying to determine why discus throwers become dizzy, and why hammer throwers don’t, in their paper “Dizziness in discus throwers is related to motion sickness generated while spinning”.

Mathematics
Dorothy Martin of the USA (who predicted the world would end in 1954), Pat Robertson of the USA (who predicted the world would end in 1982), Elizabeth Clare Prophet of the USA (who predicted the world would end in 1990), Lee Jang Rim of Korea (who predicted the world would end in 1992), Shoko Asahara of Japan (who predicted the world would end in 1997), Credonia Mwerinde of Uganda (who predicted the world would end in 1999), and Harold Camping of the USA (who predicted the world would end on 6 September 1994 and later predicted that the world will end on 21 October 2011), for teaching the world to be careful when making mathematical assumptions and calculations.

Peace
Arturas Zuokas, the mayor of Vilnius, Lithuania, for demonstrating that the problem of illegally parked luxury cars can be solved by running over them with a tank.

Public safety
John Senders of the University of Toronto, Canada, for conducting a series of safety experiments in which a person drives an automobile on a major highway while a visor repeatedly flaps down over his face, blinding him.

 Scientists behind the wasabi fire alarm win Ig Nobel prize

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Daryl Hannah arrested at protest

August 31, 2011

US actress Daryl Hannah s 007 Daryl Hannah arrested at protest

You have freedom of speech in America…but it always seems you can still get arrested for it…or should we say quietly removed from the streets. Daryl Hannah arrested? You go girl…tell them what’s on your mind… still I like her style and courage to stand up for what she believes in …instead of standing home or sitting in a bar …drinking and complaining about how America is going down the toilet…Are we still Americans?

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

 


poweredbyguardian Daryl Hannah arrested at protestThis article titled “Daryl Hannah arrested at protest” was written by Ben Quinn and agencies, for The Guardian on Tuesday 30th August 2011 20.34 UTC

Actor Daryl Hannah has been arrested in front of the White House along with other environmental protesters who oppose a planned oil pipeline from Canada to the US Gulf Coast.

The sit-in on Tuesday involved dozens of activists campaigning against the Keystone XL pipeline which would go through six states to refineries in Texas.

Before she was arrested, Hannah said the protesters want to be free from dependence on fossil fuels and that she hoped Barack Obama will not give way to oil lobbyists.

The actor sat down on the pavement near the White House and refused orders from US Park Police to move.

TransCanada, a major energy corporation, says on its website that the $13bn (£7.98bn) Keystone pipeline system will play an important role in linking a secure and growing supply of Canadian crude oil with the largest refining markets in the US, “significantly improving North American security supply”.

Hannah, who made her name in films of the1980s such as Blade Runner, Splash, Roxanne, Wall Street and Steel Magnolias, has been arrested in the past for environmental causes.

She and Nasa climate scientist James Hansen were among 31 people arrested in June 2009 as they protested against mountaintop removal mining in southern West Virginia.

On that occasion, all were released after being charged with impeding traffic and obstructing an officer after they blocked a road near a Massey Energy subsidiary’s coal processing plant.

Police forcibly removed her from a tree in Los Angeles in 2006 as she was trying to prevent the demolition of a community farm which had become a cause celebre among other Hollywood figures.

 

 Daryl Hannah arrested at protest Daryl Hannah arrested at protest

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Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scripts

August 14, 2011

US actor Matt Damon found 007 Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scripts

Sure why not? He has the ability and the passion that Americans are looking for…he says what is on his mind without sugar coating it…Americans look for someone they can relate to and they see that in Matt Damon…he is still a person you want to have on your side on the campaign road…good job Matt…say it without hesistation..

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcom2Logo1 150x150 Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scripts   


poweredbyguardian Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scriptsThis article titled “Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scripts” was written by Paul Harris in New York, for The Observer on Saturday 13th August 2011 23.06 UTC

Even in the increasingly wild world of American politics, it seemed an especially crazy idea: Matt Damon for president? After all, the handsome actor, whose boyish good looks belie the fact that he has just turned 40, is still best known for his early role in Good Will Hunting, where he played a working-class Bostonian.

Since then, he has won plaudits in Hollywood for solid work in films ranging from action flicks to Invictus, which told the story of post-apartheid South Africa’s rugby World Cup triumph.

So why is Damon’s name being mentioned in the context of the 2012 race for the White House and a possible liberal challenge to Barack Obama? The simple answer is to blame leftwing firebrand Michael Moore.

Moore, in a discussion with the liberal politics blog Firedoglake, raised the issue as he talked about his frustration with Obama, who many American leftists see as ignoring them while compromising with the Republican party. Moore called Damon’s political stances in recent years courageous and urged him to run, despite there being no hint from the actor himself that he would care to. In a nod to the acting past of two-time Republican President Ronald Reagan, Moore said: “The Republicans have certainly shown the way that when you run someone who is popular, you win. Sometimes even when you run an actor, you win.”

The suggestion quickly spread across the media, generating a lot of chuckles as well as predictable outrage from conservative pundits. But the suggestion showed two things that are not so easily dismissed. First, quietly and with impressive charm, Damon has emerged as an eloquent and fierce spokesman for a slice of liberal America. On everything from the Iraq war to education policy, he has been happy to take a stand and, rather than praise the president, he has come out publicly to say Obama has “mishandled his mandate”.

Second, it showed that America, more than any country in the world, has a fluid boundary between the worlds of entertainment and politics.

From Reagan to Clint Eastwood, Sonny Bono to Arnold Schwarzenegger and Al Franken and many more, the list of US actors and performers turned politicians is lengthy and even distinguished. “The kind of character that pursues an acting career in America is often the same kind of character that pursues a political career. You have to stand up and make people like you and be good on TV,” said Professor Robert Thompson, a popular culture expert at Syracuse University. So, Matt Damon for president? In 2012, almost certainly not. But one day? You never know.

Damon is certainly no shallow celebrity, long on good looks but short on brains. The Massachusetts native may have chosen Hollywood as a career, but he is not an actor picking causes with carefully staged press conferences on subjects that no one could dislike, such as stopping African famine.

Instead, Damon has lent his high profile name to the distinctly unfashionable cause of the Working Families Party. The WFP is an obscure leftwing political party that exists as a sort of pressure group in New York state on Democrats and leftists in order to pursue progressive ideals. Attaching your name to the WFP is about as far from trendy as any Hollywood celebrity could get. Yet Damon has been a passionate advocate for the party, appearing in a 2010 campaign video for them in which he urged New Yorkers to shun the Democrats and vote for the WFP as a genuine leftwing alternative.

Damon has won the hearts of many liberals by criticising Obama over policy issues, and standing up for teachers. Speaking at a recent Save Our Schools march in Washington, DC, he angrily denied a reporter’s suggestion that teachers were cosseted. “A teacher wants to teach. I mean, why else would you take a shitty salary, and really long hours, and do that job, unless you really love to do it?” he fumed. A video of the encounter went viral, with Damon being hailed a hero by teachers’ groups.

Damon, like Sean Penn with Haiti and George Clooney with Darfur, is one of the few big names who can genuinely say they are activists, not just celebrity brands attached to a good cause. He founded the H2O Africa Foundation, which later became Water.org and which aims to bring clean water to disadvantaged people. He has been involved with Darfur. “Matt Damon seems like a real person on these things. He’s running that whole water issue. That actually takes up a lot of his time,” said Richard Laermer, a celebrity expert and author of the book 2011: Trendspotting. On a host of issues Damon has eloquently and publicly spoken on subjects dear to liberal hearts. He has slammed the recent debt-ceiling deal struck by Obama and the Republicans and called for rich people like himself to be taxed more. He has spoken against the Iraq war.

Perhaps one should not be surprised; Damon is highly educated. Though he eventually dropped out to pursue an acting career, he went to Harvard, where he studied English. His mother – who introduced him at the teachers’ rally – is an education professor.

But, experts say, Hollywood has given him what is needed most: name recognition. “An actor has a precious thing in politics. People know who they are and they will pay attention when someone puts a microphone in front of them,” said Syracuse’s Thompson.

Indeed, that power can make a political career out of the unlikeliest of raw material. Look at how former pro wrestler Jesse Ventura became governor of Minnesota, or how comedian Franken became a senator from the same state and – perhaps most bizarre of all – how Schwarzenegger went from playing a killer robot from the future to being governor of California and responsible for one of the biggest economies on Earth.

The road between Hollywood and politics has also produced notable successes. Franken, a former stalwart of Saturday Night Live, has won plaudits for his seriousness as a politician. Schwarzenegger was seen as a joke when first elected, but he easily won a second term and became known for cutting-edge environmental policies. Most successful was Reagan, who went from a B-movie actor to being one of the most influential Republican presidents of the 20th century. Indeed, while most stars who dabble in public life are seen as “Hollywood liberals”, some of the most successful, such as Reagan and Schwarzenegger, have been conservatives.

But the road to political power is not always easy for an actor. On the liberal side of the aisle, Warren Beatty was mentioned as someone who might run for president but never did. And among Republicans, the name of Fred Thompson stands as a salutary lesson in the limits of power. Few people have blurred the lines between acting and politics as much as Thompson, who combined his acting career with becoming a senator from Tennessee. He has played a US president on TV but when he ran for the Republican nomination in real life in 2008, his attempt was a disaster.

So, while Americans are tolerant of actors who want to be politicians, they do not write them a blank cheque. “Celebrity can be a blessing or a curse. You are able to get people to listen to you, but you need to have something they want to hear,” said Robert Thompson.

 Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scripts Matt Damon for president? In US politics, they have seen crazier scripts

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What’s so great about winning, anyway?

July 27, 2011

chicagocubs 460x276 Whats so great about winning, anyway?

Do you love to watch baseball? I do…especially if your hometown team has not won a game in weeks…the excitement in the air when my team finally wins…rejoicing that come from behind victory…nothing is more satisfying….well almost nothing….and how about eating a hotdog and drinking a beer while the batter knocks one out into right field..the nostalgia returns just like “ A field of Dreams” or your childhood memories…the sound of fans reacting to a questionable call from the referee…a third strikeout in a row…a player stealing home plate … sharing  moments with your family and friends…the great American pass-time can never be replaced..our heroes will never fade into the dark…no that can never happen to American baseball…..winning or not…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Whats so great about winning, anyway?This article titled “What’s so great about winning, anyway?” was written by Clancy Sigal, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 26th July 2011 19.30 UTC

This is town full of losers and, baby, I was born to win.

“Thunder Road”, by Bruce Springsteen

Mrs Thatcher was fond of saying, “Any man who, beyond the age of 26, finds himself on a bus can count himself a failure.” A loser, in other words. Since I spent most of my 30 years in London hopping on and off red Routemaster buses, and also count myself a rabid Chicago Cubs baseball team fan, and, when in England, root for Premier League worst-ever West Ham and Notts County, I fit Mrs Thatcher’s idea of what US high school kids ridicule as a no-hoper.

Who can blame the snotty high schoolers? After all, the Cubs seem almost theologically hexed. I love them, but they’ve not won a so-called World Series in 102 years – the longest drought in American sports history.

I come truly alive only in the 162-game baseball season, from February spring training to the lovely days of autumn in October. That’s when hope and misery so intermingle as to be almost the same stupid emotion. I start my morning with the box scores on the sports pages, and if the Cubs have lost, which is almost always, I go through the rest of the day in a kind of masochistic depression verging on grim satisfaction that the baseball gods indeed continue to reign in hell.

Baseball as “America’s game”, though still vastly profitable via TV franchises, ticket scalping and concessions, has long been supplanted by the more concussive (in all senses) pro football and hoop basketball. Increasingly, fans prefer smash-and-grab blood on the gridiron and floorboards to the balletic longeurs of baseball – to judge by declining attendances. The “endless game of repeated summers”, in the words of poet Donald Hall, is seen as fusty and uncool.

I’m hip to baseball’s dark and seamy side, the surliness of many players, the cheating and intentional “headhunting” by pitchers, signal-stealing by managers and steroid-pumping by ageing players, idiotic free agency trades and sliding into catchers and second basemen spikes high in the manner of the sadistic Ty Cobb. I’ve read my Ring Lardner, Bernard Malamud and confessional memoirs by Jason Giambi and Jim Bouton. Baseball reality is no “Field of Dreams”. So what? Thus it has always been, since rounders in Tudor times and the first American baseball in the 1840s. Nobody’s perfect in this perfect game on a perfect turf-and-grass diamond – especially when played in an older stadium like Chicago’s Wrigley Field with its walls ivy-covered like an Oxford college. Is there anything as beautiful, outside an art gallery, of a perfectly executed double play: Starlin Castro to Blake DeWitt to Carlos Peña?

Baseball owners have traditionally been mean bastards. But compared to yesteryear’s carnival showman Bill Veeck (Cleveland Indians), the tyrannical Charlie Comiskey (Chicago White Sox) and civic saboteurs like Walter O’Malley (Brooklyn and LA Dodgers), today’s owners are amoral Godzillas in the same rogues’ gallery as the geniuses at Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and Countrywide Finance who crashed our economic system – capitalism run amok. The owners’ looting of the public treasury to build privately-owned, skybox-littered, ugly stadiums, their names sold to corporate sponsors (BankOne, Minute Maid, Enron!), tells the whole story.

Since relocating to Los Angeles, I’ve tried hard to transfer my allegiance to the Dodgers, if only because, back in Brooklyn, they were the first pro team to break the colour bar by hiring the sensational Jackie Robinson. But I didn’t really take to Dodger Blue – until recently, when Frank and Jamie McCourt, the now-divorcing, raging-at-each-other, husband-and-wife, criminally extravagant co-owners hired Vladimir Schpunt, a 71-year-old, Boston-based Russian seer, at a six-figure annual salary, to beam UFO-like mental vibrations 3,000 miles across the country to the bad luck team. And they say musical comedy is dead.

Now that the once-great Dodgers are at the bottom of the National League table, and they must pay female-hormone-ingesting slugger Manny Ramirez $21m for not playing baseball, and the bankrupt owners can’t meet their payroll – except that Jamie McCourt still pays her hair stylist $10,000 a month (no misprint) – they’re touching my heart almost as deeply as the luckless and losing Cubs.

I’m not sure when “you’re a loser” became part of our vocabulary. It’s basically an adolescent trope (see TV’s Glee, Gossip Girl, Freaks and Geeks, etc) although I have run into professional women in their twenties and thirties – graduate students of mine – who candidly admitted they hack into a potential date’s credit rating before going out with him. “You don’t want to waste time with a loser,” is how they put it.

“Losing” was unheard of during the Great Depression because, in a tsunami of mass unemployment and real starvation, everyone outside Park Avenue was a loser. People did turn on each other in families and marriages, blaming whoever for losing their job or pissing away the rent money. (My unemployed father’s outlet was cards.) But back then, the losers fought back, in riots, strikes, protest songs, sitdowns and, above all, mass organisation. Today, with union cards exchanged for credit cards, and unemployment back on a staggering scale, and a liberal Obama administration on the side of the $15,000 skybox suites rather than the $19 bleacher seats, fightback is scattered and unfocused.

It’s ridiculous for a grown person to put so much heart into a losing – or, for that matter, any – sports team. There’s so much sentimentality and nostalgia involved. But it’s a way back into childhood, of staying in touch with the self one left behind in the race to keep up with the winners.

 Whats so great about winning, anyway? Whats so great about winning, anyway?

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The Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz dies aged 94

July 13, 2011

Sherwood Schwartz 007 The Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz dies aged 94

Growing up I enjoyed watching the episodes of “Gilligan’s Island” and the “Brady Bunch”. Sherwood Schwartz leaves a legacy of fine entertainment and we are thankful for his contributions to television. 

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian The Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz dies aged 94This article titled “The Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz dies aged 94″ was written by Vicky Frost and agencies, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 13th July 2011 11.19 UTC

Sherwood Schwartz, the creator of television shows The Brady Bunch and Gilligan’s Island, has died at the age of 94.

Sherwood, who was still producing television in his 90s, started out writing jokes for Bob Hope’s radio show. Gilligan’s Island was first broadcast by CBS in 1964, featuring seven travellers marooned on a deserted Pacific island.

Critics did not fall for its humour – but audiences loved its comedy. The show ran until 1967, and was later revived as a cartoon, several TV films and, in 2004, a reality series The Real Gilligan’s Island, in which Schwartz was involved.

His nephew, Douglas Schwartz, said Schwartz had been working on a big-screen version of Gilligan’s Island. “Sherwood is an American classic, creating Brady Bunch and Gilligan’s Island, iconic shows that are still popular today,” he said.

His uncle was a “second father,” and a mentor who guided him through show business said Douglas Schwartz, who created Baywatch.

Schwartz launched The Brady Bunch – a story about a widow with three daughters who married a widower with three sons – in 1969. The show ran for five years and spawned a number of spin offs, as well as a hit 1995 film starring Shelley Long and Gary Cole.

“I think writers have become hypnotised by the number of jokes on the page at the expense of character,” Schwartz said in an interview with the Associated Press in 2000.

“If a show is good, if it’s written well, you should be able to erase the names of the characters saying the lines and still be able to know who said it. If you can’t do that, the show will fail.”

Schwartz grew up in Brooklyn, studied for a biological science degree, and landed a gig writing for Bob Hope when still in college via his brother, Al.

 

 The Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz dies aged 94

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Al-Qaida could use hidden ‘belly bombs’ to attack passenger planes, US warns

July 6, 2011

Ibrahim Hassan al Asiri 007 Al Qaida could use hidden belly bombs to attack passenger planes, US warns

I am getting ready to board my airplane…….I guess reading this article about Al-Qaida isn’t going to make anyone feel secure about flying…these fanatics are now hiding bombs inside their bodies..should we be surprise? Of course not…they are determined to continue this war on Americans…I firmly believe we must continue pressuring them into nothing less than total surrender.

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Al Qaida could use hidden belly bombs to attack passenger planes, US warnsThis article titled “Al-Qaida could use hidden ‘belly bombs’ to attack passenger planes, US warns” was written by Dominic Rushe in New York, for The Guardian on Wednesday 6th July 2011 20.03 UTC

American officials have warned airlines that they believe al-Qaida is developing “belly bombs” to beat airport security and allow suicide bombers to launch terror attacks on board passenger planes.

The department of homeland security has sent a bulletin to airline executives saying it has identified a potential threat from terrorists who could “surgically implant explosives or explosive components in humans”.

Although many airports use advanced imaging technology that can “see” through people’s clothing, the technology might not pick up a bomb which is hidden inside a body.

“Due to the significant advances in global aviation security in recent years, terrorist groups have repeatedly and publicly indicated interest in pursuing ways to further conceal explosives,” said Kawika Riley, spokesman for the department’s transport security administration.

“As a precaution, passengers flying from international locations to US destinations may notice additional security measures.”

Experts say the explosives could be implanted in abdomens, buttocks and breasts allowing suicide bombers to pass undetected through airport body scanners. Explosive compounds such as pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN) could be implanted, then the person’s wounds allowed to heal, making the material difficult to detect. On board the plane, the material could be detonated by injection.

US officials have been on high alert for terror attacks since US forces killed al-Qaida’s leader, Osama bin Laden in May. They say there is no intelligence about a plot, but US and international carriers are being urged to consider the threat.

The bombs are thought to be a particular risk in Europe and the Middle East where full body scanners are not as widely used as they are in the US.

Authorities told ABC News that these “belly bombs” were thought to be the work of 28-year-old Ibrahim Asiri, who became a high-profile target for the US after his failed attempt to hide bombs in printer cartridges being moved from Yemen to Chicago.

He was also believed to be behind the attempted bombing of Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on 25 December 2009 by the “underwear bomber”, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.

The Nigerian had a pouch of PETN in his underwear. He tried injecting the pouch with a chemical to create a detonation but he set his clothes on fire instead and was overpowered by passengers.

Research conducted by the BBC after the underwear bombing suggests that Abdulmutallab would have failed to damage the plane’s fuselage even if the bomb had gone off.

The BBC documentary claimed that the blast would only have been strong enough to kill the bomber and the person who was sitting next to him.

Al-Qaida terrorists are known to have hidden explosives inside their bodies for suicide bombings. In August 2009 Asiri’s brother, Abdullah Hassan, died trying to kill Saudi Arabia’s deputy interior minister with a bomb hidden in his anal passage.

 Al Qaida could use hidden belly bombs to attack passenger planes, US warns

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Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession

July 6, 2011

Willie Nelson  007 Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession

Isn’t that a lot of marijuana on Willie’s table…the issue of legalizing marijuana continues to be an issue getting front page news…especially when celebrities are routinely being caught with it ….more than their share…

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possessionThis article titled “Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession” was written by Sean Michaels, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 6th July 2011 11.53 UTC

Willie Nelson’s bag of marijuana just won’t go away. A Texas judge has said she won’t accept a plea deal relating to Nelson’s drug bust in 2010, rejecting a proposal that would have had the country singer pay a fine of less than $1,000. “If Willie Nelson gets off with nothing, I’m not going to be part of it,” judge Becky Dean-Walker told the New York Times.

Nelson was caught with marijuana during a 26 November traffic stop in Sierra Blanca, Texas. Although the singer faced up to six months in jail, a sympathetic prosecutor proposed he could be let off for just $378 (£236) and joked about a court-room performance of Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain. “You bet your ass I ain’t gonna be mean to Willie Nelson,” Hudspeth county attorney Kit Bramblett told the Big Bend Sentinel. Judge Dean-Walker later intervened, calling this “a joke that got out of hand”. At the time, she seemed lenient, with reports that Nelson could simply pay a $500 fine, plus court costs, by post. But Dean-Walker now insists she was misunderstood. “[Bramblett] has made a habit of speaking with the press before anything has been resolved,” she explained.

Bramblett, Dean-Walker claims, is trying to go easy on “his favourite singer”. Whereas agents originally recorded that they found six ounces of marijuana on Nelson’s tour bus, Bramblett said the actual figure was about three ounces, plus “containers and paraphernalia”. The prosecutor allegedly asked Dean-Walker to reduce Nelson’s charge to a class C misdemeanor, which she refused to do. “If you’re not going to do it for the guy in the corner, why do it for a celebrity?” she said.

Bramblett and Nelson have yet to respond to Dean-Walker’s decision, but the judge doesn’t seem to be in a hurry. “At no point,” she said, “do I have to let [Nelson] off.”

 Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession

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Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruption

June 28, 2011

Rod Blagojevich 007 Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruptions

Another politician crashes and burns with the latest guilty verdict of former Illinois govenor Rod Blagojevich. I personally met Rod Blagojevich years ago at a political function and he seemed like a decent guy trying to do the right thing for the people of Illinois. I am sure many are not happy with this verdict and many that are…

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruptionThis article titled “Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruption” was written by Dominic Rushe in New York, for The Guardian on Monday 27th June 2011 21.43 UTC

Rod Blagojevich, the former governor of Illinois and one-time presidential aspirant, has been found guilty of trying to sell president Barack Obama’s old Senate seat.

After 10 days of deliberation, a Chicago jury found Blagojevich guilty on 17 counts , including fraud, attempted extortion and bribery. He was acquitted of another bribery charge, and the jury was undecided on charges of attempted extortion.

An earlier trial had ended in a deadlock. Blagojevich, 54, is the son of a steel worker from Serbia. He trained as a lawyer and married into one of Chicago’s most politically connected families, rising rapidly to become a star of the local Democratic party. Former aides say he once saw himself as a presidential contender.

Two years ago Blagojevich was arrested on corruption charges following an investigation — codenamed Operation Board Games — launched just months after he took office.

Under Illinois state law the governor was required to name a senator to replace Obama after his election to the presidency in November 2008. Tipped off about his plans, federal agents recorded hundreds of hours of expletive-filled tapes in which Blagojevich discussed what he wanted in exchange for the seat.

The governor, commonly known as Blago, was recorded on tape saying Obama’s former senate seat was “a valuable thing – you don’t just give it away for nothing.” He said that unless he got “something real good” he would take the seat himself.

The recordings also led to the charges of swapping state funds for campaign donations and attempting to intimidate the Chicago Tribune into sacking writers who had criticised him.

Blagojevich said that his intention was to use the seat as leverage to pass legislation that would have benefited the residents of Illinois and not himself.

A father of two, he now faces up to 20 years in jail.

Blagojevich is the second consecutive Illinois governor to be convicted of corruption, and the fourth governor jailed in recent history. Former governor George Ryan is currently serving a six-and-a-half-year sentence. A University of Illinois study calculated that corruption in politics costs the state 0m (£188m) a year.

 Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruption Rod Blagojevich, former Illinois governor, found guilty of corruption

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Peter Falk obituary

June 25, 2011

US Actor Peter Falk dies  007 Peter Falk obituary

I say good-bye to another “Kid from the Bronx” …I enjoyed watching his television series “Columbo”….he was destined to cast this character…he also went on to have a productive life in the film industry..there will never again be another Peter Falk…

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Peter Falk obituaryThis article titled “Peter Falk obituary” was written by Brian Baxter, for The Guardian on Sunday 26th June 2011 17.18 UTC

Show-business history records that the American actor Peter Falk, who has died aged 83, made his stage debut the year before he left high school, presciently cast as a detective. Despite the 17-year-old’s fleeting success, he had no thoughts of pursuing acting as a career – if only because tough kids from t

Afghanistan withdrawal: Barack Obama says 33,000 troops will leave next year

June 23, 2011

US president Barack Obama 007 Afghanistan withdrawal: Barack Obama says 33,000 troops will leave next year

I don’t know if its time to begin withdrawal of our troops from Afghanistan. I will be the first to say bring our soldiers back home…but what if our job is not done and hostility grows back up in our absence. Are the Afghan sercurity forces equipped to handle the resistance from al-Qaida and the Taliban?  I am not a military strategist but there is one constant in war, our enemies will not rest….they will take the withdrawal as an opportunity to reorganize and strengthen their position. Is it time to leave Afghanistan and allow its people to defend themselves without America on their side?

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Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Afghanistan withdrawal: Barack Obama says 33,000 troops will leave next yearThis article titled “Afghanistan withdrawal: Barack Obama says 33,000 troops will leave next year” was written by Ewen MacAskill in Washington, Patrick Wintour, for The Guardian on Thursday 23rd June 2011 00.40 UTC

Barack Obama has begun the long retreat from Afghanistan in a televised statement to the US, declaring success against al-Qaida and the Taliban and the withdrawal of about a third of US forces next year.

Obama said 33,000 US troops would be withdrawn by the summer of 2012 or by September at the latest. The first 5,000 would return next month and another 5,000 by the end of the year.

The president said that when he ordered the 33,000 extra troops to Afghanistan in 2009 they had a clear mission: to refocus on al-Qaida; reverse the Taliban’s momentum; and train Afghan security forces to defend their own country. “Tonight, I can tell you that we are fulfilling that commitment,” he said, adding: “We are meeting our goals.”

He was careful to avoid repeating George Bush’s ill-fated prediction on Iraq in 2003 of “mission accomplished”. He settled instead for: “We have put al-Qaida on a path to defeat.”

Obama claimed al-Qaida was under more pressure than at any time since the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington. Half of their leadership has been killed, along with its leader Osama bin Laden. “This was a victory for all who have served since 9/11,” he said.

He addressed criticism that the US should not be spending billions on wars overseas while the country is struggling economically at home and promised to shift from foreign to domestic issues. “America, it is time to focus on nation building here at home,” he said.

But US and other Nato military chiefs fear that the president is taking a gamble with the scale of early drawdown, ignoring the advice of US and Nato commanders who warned that withdrawal of anything more than a few thousand in the coming months could endanger substantial gains made over the winter in the battle against the Taliban.

US and Nato commanders argued that they could handle the withdrawal of about 5,000, mainly support staff. But 10,000 this year would create logistical problems and interfere with the summer “fighting season”, they warned.

The decision is a setback for the US commander in Afghanistan, General David Petraeus, who urged only a minimal withdrawal, as did defence secretary Robert Gates, who retires next week. Petraeus, who is to return to Washington as head of the CIA, refused to endorse Obama’s decision, according to administration officials quoted by the New York Times.

If there are military setbacks over the coming year, Obama will be open to accusations that he was overly hasty and that he put politics ahead of security.

Military commanders wanted the number of combat troops held at near to maximum to confront Taliban forces mounting summer offensives this year and next.

Although 30,000 US troops are scheduled to be withdrawn, 70,000 will remain in the country. All US combat troops are scheduled to leave by the end of 2014 but a core of trainers and other troops will remain beyond that date. A Nato conference on Afghanistan will be held in Chicago next year.

The withdrawal, which comes against a backdrop of rising US public weariness with the longest war in American history, could form part of Obama’s pitch in the 2012 White House election campaign.

The president phoned leaders in Afghanistan, Pakistan, France, Germany and Britain to inform them of his decision. David Cameron is expected to make announcements on substantial UK troop withdrawals at the beginning of July.

It is likely to represent the biggest troop withdrawal since British forces left Iraq but precise numbers have yet to be reached.

In their phone call, Cameron and Obama agreed that good progress was being made by the Afghan army in strengthening security and would be able to manage more of the country on their own. Senior British officials have been in Washington working through the details of the withdrawal with the Americans. Britain has about 9,500 troops in Afghanistan. Other international forces have another 40,000, bringing the total international force to about 150,000.

Downing Street said last night: “The prime minister fully agreed with the president’s assessment, noting the good progress being made on security transition. The prime minister and president agreed that in due course the progress on transition would make it possible to sustain pressure on the insurgency while allowing a progressive reduction in [troop] levels.

“The prime minister reaffirmed that UK forces will no longer be in a combat role in Afghanistan by 2015 and that decisions on the scale and timing of reductions over the intervening period would be based on conditions on the ground.”

One White House official said that there had been no terrorist threat emanating from Afghanistan for the last seven or eight years and the main threat had been from Pakistan. The US and its Nato allies had been able to degrade the ability of al-Qaida to recruit, train and carry out operations and had killed many of its leaders in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The US assessment may turn out to be over-optimistic, given the Taliban’s ability in the past to mount surprise attacks, the corruption in the Afghanistan government, the shakiness of Afghan army and police forces, and the double-games played by the Pakistan intelligence services.

John Boehner, the Republican leader in the House, speaking before the announcement, expressed caution about a “precipitous withdrawal”.

Downing Street accepted that the UK and US assessment of the threat posed by Afghanistan to security in the west is similar. The prime minister’s spokesman was adamant yesterday that Cameron’s assertion that UK combat operations would end in Afghanistan in 2015 was a deadline that would not be breached. That leaves open the possibility of UK troops remaining to train and mentor Afghan forces.

Cameron’s relatively inflexible position is not supported by the Conservative chairman of the defence select committee James Arbuthnot.

Arbuthnot said unless there was greater clarity about what UK troops would remain and the degree “of nuance and flexibility, then Britain runs the risk of destabilising local people who won’t be sure whether the coalition is going to desert them”. He added: “If we stick to a completely arbitrary date and withdraw whatever the conditions then that would be a serious betrayal not only of our people but of the Afghan people”.

Obama’s speech came as William Hague, the foreign secretary, held talks today with the Afghan president Hamid Karzai in Kabul and visited UK troops in Helmand. In an effort to underline Arab support for the military operation, he was accompanied by his counterpart from the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahyan.

Speaking in the capital, Hague said the UK’s involvement in Afghanistan would continue for “many years” after the withdrawal of combat troops.

 Afghanistan withdrawal: Barack Obama says 33,000 troops will leave next year Afghanistan withdrawal: Barack Obama says 33,000 troops will leave next year

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New York must pass the same-sex marriage bill

June 22, 2011

Same sex weddings 007 New York must pass the same sex marriage bill

Our world is still hesistant to change, but if enough people support and pursue an idea long enough, then change is inevitable. Same-sex marriages are getting their voices heard on capital hill. 

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardianREV New York must pass the same sex marriage billThis article titled “New York must pass the same-sex marriage bill” was written by Hadley Freeman, for The Guardian on Tuesday 21st June 2011 19.00 UTC

Along with prizes for everyone and a determined lack of embarrassment that the mascot for an all-girls institution was a beaver, educational documentaries were a mainstay of my schooling in New York City. These documentaries were particularly favoured when we had reached those eternally popular subjects for history students, of school age and beyond: slavery and the Holocaust. They always featured the same ingredients: black-and-white news clips of American people and politicians voicing opinions that were par for the course in the day (“Negros should never own property”, “You can’t trust a Jew”, etc), included to make us, cosseted liberal schoolchildren that we were, gasp. Be grateful you were born now, and not in the unenlightened past, these documentaries cooed. Right?

But in 2011 America, it all too often feels like we are living in a history class documentary. One day, footage of American politicians – from George W Bush to Michele Bachmann – proudly stating their abhorrence of gay marriage as though bigotry was a qualification for political office will sound as shocking as Richard Nixon grouching that “Jews are disloyal”, as retro as the sexual harassment of secretaries in smoky meeting rooms in Mad Men. But that day, it hardly needs stating, is not yet here.

There are some subjects that should be discussed in shades of grey, with acknowledgement of subtleties and cultural differences. Same-sex marriage is not one of those. There is a right answer.

For the past 10 days, the question of whether same-sex marriages will, at last, be legally recognised in New York has been hotly debated. The New York state assembly approved the marriage equality bill, for the fourth time, last week and it is now up to the New York Senate. Two Republican senators, James S Alesi and Roy J McDonald, said that they would vote for the bill and McDonald’s explanation behind his vote proved that he is one hell of a Republican to have on side: “Well, fuck it. I don’t care what you think. I’m trying to do the right thing. I’m tired of Republican-Democrat politics. They can take the job and shove it.”

But, as of writing, it is still undecided, and New York governor Andrew Cuomo is having to negotiate with an intractable religious-tinged right and, as President Obama learned in the first years of his presidency, that is not a group of people willing to compromise.

New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan has been vociferous in his homophobia, claiming last week that gay marriage is “a violation of what we consider the natural law that’s embedded in every man and woman.” His breathtaking blindness to the thought that most people would consider the paedophilia that the Catholic church covered up for so long to be far more of “a violation of the natural law” than legally recognising two adults desiring to make a commitment to one another is indicative of many of the problems within that church. (Incidentally, last week US Roman Catholic bishops voted 187 to 5 to make only the most token of changes to the church’s current policies on the sexual abuse of children, claiming they are sufficiently “effective”, despite tragic evidence to the contrary.)

An idealist I may be but religion should be about providing a sense of inclusiveness and reassurance, not an easy excuse for bigotry, and for anyone in New York, of all places, to use religion as an excuse to cause others misery is unconscionable. The upcoming 10th anniversary of 9/11 should act as a clear reminder, were a reminder necessary.

Yes, the Bible does state that marriage should be between a man and a woman, but the Bible contains a lot of teachings, many of which have been notably cherry-picked out for reasons ranging from practicality to distaste. Polyester, for example, is biblically banned (“You shall not . . . wear a garment upon you of two kinds of material mixed together,” Leviticus 19:19), as are tattoos (“You shall not… make any tattoo marks on yourselves: I am the Lord,” Leviticus 19:28.) Now, I happen to agree with both of those edicts but the point is, much in the Bible turns out to be conveniently negotiable in the modern world.

Moreover, religion has been used in the past as justification for racism, sexism and antisemitism. It still is in some countries, but those are not countries that the US generally wishes to emulate. (In fact, we generally use that as an excuse to bomb them, but that’s another story.)

If New York passes this bill, it will be the sixth and most populated American state to recognise gay marriage. If it doesn’t, I will experience a similar trajectory of feeling to the one I had when George W Bush was re-elected: shock, anger, shame, disenfranchisement, bafflement at how a place that I thought represented one thing betrayed its values.

Progress is not just about what products Steve Jobs grandly unveils this year in California, or how many Twitter followers one has. It is about attaining mental and moral enlightenment.

Our grandparents saw, if not the end of antisemitism then at least an end of it being an acceptable part of mainstream discourse. Our parents saw the beginning of that same moral tide turn against racism and sexism. Now is the time for homophobic legislation and talk to be seen for what it is: as shocking as racism, as unforgivable as antisemitism. If a film director can be banned from Cannes for making a stupid joke about Hitler and a fashion designer can lose his job for drunkenly blathering about Nazism, then politicians and religious leaders who strive to ensure gay people live lives of inequality should face measures far more stringent.

There is no grey area here. This is a black and white documentary.

 New York must pass the same sex marriage bill

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Hugh Hefner takes to Twitter to announce jilting

June 15, 2011

Hugh Hefner with his fian 007 Hugh Hefner takes to Twitter to announce jilting

Hey….what happen? The wedding is off? I am sure Crystal had second thoughts about getting hitched with Hugh…money can’t cover up the fact that the age difference is a huge generation gap and it would be reasonable to think there will be problems ahead….Don’t worry Hugh…there are plenty of fish in the sea…

Your friend,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardianREV Hugh Hefner takes to Twitter to announce jiltingThis article titled “Hugh Hefner takes to Twitter to announce jilting” was written by Toby Manhire, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 15th June 2011 03.28 UTC

On Christmas Day 2010, Playboy founder Hugh Hefner logged on to Twitter to announce his engagement to Crystal Harris. “When I gave Crystal the ring, she burst into tears,” he enthused. “This is the happiest Christmas weekend in memory.”

Six months on, and just days before the couple, aged 85 and 25 respectively, were to exchange vows, Hefner had less happy news for his 639,000 followers. “The wedding is off,” he tweeted on Tuesday afternoon. “Crystal has had a change of heart.”

Harris, a former Playboy Playmate of the Month, also went online to confirm that she would not, after all, become Hefner’s third wife. “After much deep reflection and thought I have decided to end my engagement with Hef,” she wrote on her personal (and not-so-safe-for-work) website. “I have the utmost respect for Hef and wish him the best going forward. I hope the media will give each of us the privacy we deserve during this time.”

Hefner, again on Twitter, denied suggestions there had been an angry argument: “The TMZ report that Crystal & I ‘had a nasty argument’, prompting her to call off the wedding, is untrue. There were no arguments.”

As sympathy tweets flowed in from his followers, Hefner issued a number of other messages on the microblogging site. “The breakup is a heart breaker, but better now than after the marriage,” he later tweeted. And: “Since we’re not getting married on Saturday, I’ve scheduled a movie: Runaway Bride. Seems appropriate.”

Hefner also retweeted, without comment, a remark by follower @LinzLuvs. It read: “Omg @CrystalHarris left @hughhefner the day her single came out on iTunes. Coincidence? I think not.”

 Hugh Hefner takes to Twitter to announce jilting

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Anthony Weiner’s wife Huma Abedin reportedly pregnant

June 9, 2011

Huma Abedin and Anthony W 007 Anthony Weiners wife Huma Abedin reportedly pregnant

This guy is going to need a miracle to pull out of the troubles he is in…good luck with that! Don’t post embarassing pictures of yourself on the internet! A lesson for everyone…Weiner’s problems are just beginning..starting with Huma…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com   


poweredbyguardianREV Anthony Weiners wife Huma Abedin reportedly pregnantThis article titled “Anthony Weiner’s wife Huma Abedin reportedly pregnant” was written by Ed Pilkington in New York, for The Guardian on Thursday 9th June 2011 00.08 UTC

Huma Abedin, the wife of the Democratic congressman Anthony Weiner, who is currently engulfed in a cringe-inducing scandal over sexually suggestive images of himself he sent over the internet, is reportedly pregnant with her first baby.

According to the New York Times, the couple have told family and intimate friends that Abedin is pregnant.

The news comes out just two days after Weiner, a rising star within the Democratic party, made a grovelling televised apology in which he admitted he had sent semi-clad photographs of himself to at least six different women, some of which had occurred after his marriage.

The politician at first denied he had sent via Twitter a photograph of himself in his underpants. For a week he claimed that his account had been breached by a hacker.

Even within a party sadly accustomed to sex scandals – the Democratic governor of New York Eliot Spitzer was forced to resign after it was revealed that he enlisted the services of prostitutes and the former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards is currently facing charges that he used campaign money to hush up an affair – the Weiner scandal has been excruciatingly embarrassing in its detail.

Yet the New York representative has doggedly refused to resign. He is currently engaging in a round of calls apologising to top Democratic figures in an attempt to save his political career.

Abedin is herself a prominent figure in Democratic politics. She has been a close aide to Hillary Clinton since the 2008 presidential nomination race and she continues to work for the secretary of state. As news of the pregnancy broke, the two women were in the air bound for north Africa on an official visit.

 Anthony Weiners wife Huma Abedin reportedly pregnant

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The MIT factor: celebrating 150 years of maverick genius

May 18, 2011

A physics class at MIT in 007 The MIT factor: celebrating 150 years of maverick genius

MIT guiding us and still shaping brilliant minds for the world…wow…150 years and still going strong…keep the discoveries coming…..

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com   


poweredbyguardianREV The MIT factor: celebrating 150 years of maverick geniusThis article titled “The MIT factor: celebrating 150 years of maverick genius” was written by Ed Pilkington, for The Guardian on Tuesday 17th May 2011 23.05 UTC

Yo-Yo Ma’s cello may not be the obvious starting point for a journey into one of the world’s great universities. But, as you quickly realise when you step inside the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), there’s precious little about the place that is obvious.

The cello is resting in a corner of MIT’s celebrated media lab, a hub of techy creativity. There’s a British red telephone kiosk standing in the middle of one of its laboratories, while another room is signposted: “Lego learning lab – Lifelong kindergarten.”

The cello is part of the Opera of the Future lab run by the infectiously energetic Tod Machover. A renaissance man for the 21st – or perhaps 22nd – century, Machover is a composer, inventor and teacher rolled into one. He sweeps into the office 10 minutes late, which is odd because his watch is permanently set 20 minutes ahead in a patently vain effort to be punctual. Then, with the urgency of the White Rabbit, he rushes me across the room to show me the cello. It looks like any other electric classical instrument, with a solid wood body and jack socket. But it is much more. Machover calls it a “hyperinstrument”, a sort of thinking machine that allows Ma and his cello to interact with one another and make music together.

“The aim is to build an instrument worthy of a great musician like Yo-Yo Ma that can understand what he is trying to do and respond to it,” Machover says. The cello has numerous sensors across its body, fret and along the bow. By measuring the pressure, speed and angle of the virtuoso’s performance it can interpret his mood and engage with it, producing extraordinary new sounds. The virtuoso cellist frequently performs on the instrument as he tours around the world.

When Machover was developing the instrument, he found that the sound it made was distorted by Ma’s hand as it absorbed electric current flowing from the bow. Machover had a eureka moment. What if you reversed that? What if you channelled the electricity flowing from the performer’s body and turned it into music?

Armed with that new idea, Machover designed an interactive system for Prince that the rock star deployed on stage at Wembley Stadium a few years ago, conjuring up haunting sounds through touch and gesture. Later, two of Machover’s students at the media lab had the idea of devising an interactive game out of the technology. They went on to set up a company called Harmonix, based just down the road from MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts, from which they developed Rock Band and Guitar Hero.

From Ma’s cello, via Prince, to one of the most popular video games ever invented. And all stemming from Machover’s passion for pushing at the boundaries of the existing world to extend and unleash human potential. That’s not a bad description of MIT as a whole. This maverick community, on the other side of the Charles River from Boston, brings highly gifted, highly motivated individuals together from a vast range of disciplines but united by a common desire: to leap into the dark and reach for the unknown.

The result of that single unifying ambition is visible all around us. For the past 150 years, MIT has been leading us into the future. The discoveries of its teachers and students have become the warp and weft of modernity, the stuff of daily life that we now all take for granted. The telephone, electromagnets, radars, high-speed photography, office photocopiers, cancer treatments, pocket calculators, computers, the internet, the decoding of the human genome, lasers, space travel . . . the list of innovations that involved essential contributions from MIT and its faculty goes on and on.

And with that drive into modernity MIT has played no small part in building western, and particularly US, global dominance. Its explosive innovations have helped to secure America’s military and cultural supremacy, and with it the country’s status as the world’s sole superpower.

As the school marks its 150th anniversary this month, it seems the US has never needed MIT’s help more than it does today. The voices of the nay-sayers are in the ascendancy, questioning the US’s ability to reinvent itself, to heal its wounded economy and sustain its leadership in the face of a burgeoning China. Questions too, are increasingly being asked about the ability of science and technology to address the world’s problems, as optimism about the future slides into doubt. “There is a profound cynicism around the role of science that is debilitating for those in the enterprise, and devastating for this country,” says MIT’s president, Susan Hockfield. “If we can’t figure out how to make technological innovation the path to the future, then America is not going to have invented the future, some other country will have.”

She fears the US is increasingly suffering from what she calls a deficit of ambition. While 85% of MIT students are studying science and engineering, in the US as a whole the proportion is just 15%. That leaves the world’s creative powerhouse vulnerable. “If you travel to Asia, to Shanghai or Bangalore, you feel the pulse of people racing to a future they are going to invent. You feel that rarely any more in the US.”

Which makes MIT’s mission all the more essential. “MIT has an enormous responsibility right now,” Hockfield says. “We feel that deeply. It needs to be a beacon of inspiration around the power of science and technology to create a brighter future for the world.”

No pressure, then.

From the moment MIT was founded by William Barton Rogers in 1861 it was clear what it was not. It was not like the other school up the river. While Harvard stuck to the English model of an Oxbridge classical education, with its emphasis on Latin and Greek as befitted the landed aristocracy, MIT would look to the German system of learning based on research and hands-on experimentation, championing meritocracy and industry where Harvard preferred the privileges of birth. Knowledge was at a premium, yes, but it had to be useful.

This gritty, down-to-earth quality, in keeping with the industrialisation that was spreading through the US at the time, was enshrined in the school motto, Mens et Manus – Mind and Hand – as well as its logo, which showed a gowned scholar standing beside an ironmonger bearing a hammer and anvil. That symbiosis of intellect and craftsmanship still suffuses the institute’s classrooms, where students are not so much taught as engaged and inspired. There is a famous film of one of MIT’s star professors, the physicist Walter Lewin, demonstrating the relationship between an oscillating metal ball and mass. Halfway through the experiment he climbs on to the ball and starts swinging himself around the lecture theatre in a huge oscillating arch as though he were appearing in Spider-Man on Broadway.

When Emily Dunne, an 18-year-old mechanical engineering student from Bermuda, was taking a course in differential equations recently, she was startled when her professor started singing in the middle of the lecture. “He was trying to show us how to understand overtones. It was kind of weird, but then everyone here is a little quirky,” she says.

Mind and Hand applies too to MIT’s belief that theory and practice go together; neither is superior to the other, and the two are stronger when combined. That conviction is as strongly held by the lowliest student as it is by its Nobel laureates (there have been 50 of them).

Take Christopher Merrill, 21, a third-year undergraduate in computer science. He is spending most of his time on a competition set in his robotics class. The contest is to see which student can most effectively programme a robot to build a house out of blocks in under 10 minutes. Merrill says he could have gone for the easiest route – designing a simple robot that would build the house quickly. But he wanted to try to master an area of robotics that remains unconquered – adaptability, the ability of the robot to rethink its plans as the environment around it changes, as would a human. “I like to take on things that have never been done before rather than to work in an iterative way just making small steps forward,” he explains. “It’s much more exciting to go out into the unknown.”

Merrill is already planning the start-up he wants to set up when he graduates in a year’s time. He has an idea for a new type of contact lens that would augment reality by allowing consumers to see additional visual information. He is fearful that he might be just too late in taking his concept to market, as he has heard that a Silicon Valley firm is already developing similar technology. As such, he might become one of many MIT graduates who go on to form companies that fail.

Alternatively, he might become one of those who go on to succeed, in spectacular fashion. And there are many of them. A survey of living MIT alumni found that they have formed 25,800 companies, employing more than three million people including about a quarter of the workforce of Silicon Valley. Those firms between them generate global revenues of about .9tn (£1.2tn) a year. If MIT was a country, it would have the 11th highest GDP of any nation in the world.

Ed Roberts, MIT’s professor of technological innovation and entrepreneurship, says such figures belie the fact that the institute is actually quite small, with just 10,000 students and about 1,000 faculty. “That’s not big. But when all those people sign up to a mission to forward entrepreneurship, you have a dramatically bigger impact. In MIT, people are encouraged not just to think bold, but to do it boldly.

“If you come up with a brilliant idea, that’s OK. If you win a Nobel prize for your research, that’s fine. But if you take that idea and apply it and make something transformative happen, then in MIT that’s deeply admired.”

Inevitably, perhaps, there is a nerdy quality to the place that is reflected in one of its much cherished traditions – the student “hack”. Hack is a misleading word here, as it is less to do with cracking into computers than with hi-tech high-jinks. “Prank” is a better description.

In the student canteen you can see two of the most famous MIT hacks preserved for prosperity – a police car that was balanced on top of the institute’s great dome, and a functioning fire hydrant that was erected in one of the lobbies. The latter hack, dating from 1991, was a wry comment on a former president’s remark that “getting an education from MIT is like taking a drink from a fire hose”. Then there is the Baker House Piano Drop, an annual institution ever since students first dropped a stand-up piano from a sixth-storey dormitory in 1972, then measured the impact that it made when it crashed on the pavement below.

Wacky, perhaps. Geeky, certainly. But also extraordinarily difficult technically and requiring great imagination and ingenuity. MIT in a nutshell.

The current president offers two other important clues to MIT’s success as a cauldron of innovation. The first is meritocracy. Hockfield is MIT’s first female president, which is significant for an institution that since the 1990s has been battling against its own in-built discrimination against women. Women still make up only 21% of the faculty. But the gender balance of its students is almost 50:50, and about 40% of its staff members were born outside the US, underlying how MIT remains a huge magnet for talented individuals around the world. “It’s one thing to talk about fostering creativity, but unless you strive for a true meritocracy you are driving away the best people, and what would be the point of that?” Hockfield says.

MIT delights in taking brilliant minds in vastly diverse disciplines and flinging them together. You can see that in its sparkling new David Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, which brings scientists, engineers and clinicians under one roof. Or in its Energy Initiative, which acts as a bridge for MIT’s combined firepower across all its five schools, channelling huge resources into the search for a solution to global warming. It works to improve the efficiency of existing energy sources, including nuclear power as it has its own nuclear reactor, a lesser-known fact that MIT prefers not to brag about. It is also forging ahead with alternative energies from solar to wind and geothermal, and has recently developed the use of viruses to synthesise batteries that could prove crucial in the advancement of electric cars.

Before my tour of MIT ends I am given a taste of what this astonishing abundance of riches means in practice. In the space of half an hour I enjoy the company – in the flesh and spacially – of three of the towering figures of the modern age.

I begin by dragging Tim Berners-Lee away from his computer screen to talk to me about how he ended up here. The Briton who invented the world wide web is part of the global brain drain to MIT. He created the web by linking hypertext with the internet in 1989 while he was at Cern in Geneva, but then felt he had no option but to cross the Atlantic. “There were a couple of reasons I had to come – one was because the web spread much faster in America than it did in Europe and the other was because there was no MIT over there.”

What is it about MIT that Europe could not offer him?

“It’s not just another university, it has this pre-eminent reputation and that in turn sets up a self-fulfilling prophecy: as soon as it becomes seen as the cool place to go for technology, then people will head there as I did. Even though I spend my time with my head buried in the details of web technology, or travelling the world, the nice thing is that when I do walk the corridors I bump into people who are working in other fields that are fascinating, and that keeps me intellectually alive.”

Berners-Lee offers to take me to my next appointment, and in so doing makes his point about MIT’s self-fulfilling prophecy even more eloquently. We walk along the squiggly corridors of MIT’s Stata Centre, which was designed by Frank Gehry. It is a classic Gehry structure, formed from undulating polished steel and tumbling blocks of brushed aluminium that reminds Berners-Lee, he tells me, of the higgledy-piggledy Italian village one of his relatives grew up in. After negotiating a maze of passageways Berners-Lee delivers me at the door of Noam Chomsky. It sums up this wild place: the inventor of the web leads me through the work of a titan of modern architecture to one of the world’s foremost linguists and anti-war activists.

Chomsky is in a hurry. On the night of our meeting he will appear on stage alongside the Kronos Quartet at the world premiere of a new piece of music dedicated to him. The composer? Tod Machover, he of the Yo-Yo Ma cello.

I put it to Chomsky that it’s a revealing paradox that he, as a leading critic of the US’s overweening military might, has been based, since the 1950s, at an institution that was centrally involved in erecting the burgeoning military-industrial complex he so incisively opposes. After all, MIT has long been a leader in military research and development, receiving huge sums in grants from the Pentagon. It was core to America’s prosecution of the cold war, developing ever more sophisticated guidance systems for ballistic missiles trained on Moscow.

“What people don’t understand is that the role of the Pentagon,” Chomsky says, “to a large extent was developing the technology of the future. There were some odd things about it. This building was also one of the centres of the antiwar resistance, and it was right in there, 100% funded by the Pentagon. But they didn’t care.”

What does that tell us about MIT?

“I was just left alone to my own devices. Other people took days off to run their businesses; I went off as an antiwar activist. But no one ever objected. MIT is a very free and open place.”

 The MIT factor: celebrating 150 years of maverick genius

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Osama bin Laden’s final moments: America changes its story

May 3, 2011

John Brennan 007 Osama bin Ladens final moments: America changes its story

Sure…the story about how the operation went down will change several times…how many times …I don’t know…they will be doubt about this story for many months to come. Anyway…Osama bin Laden is gone for sure..

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com  


poweredbyguardianREV Osama bin Ladens final moments: America changes its storyThis article titled “Osama bin Laden’s final moments: America changes its story” was written by Ewen MacAskill in Washington, for The Guardian on Tuesday 3rd May 2011 22.36 UTC

The account of what happened in Osama bin Laden’s final hideaway was succinct and clear when Barack Obama delivered it on Sunday, but it has become more confused in the days since, with conflicting and inaccurate accounts from the White House.

Bin Laden, according to a briefing on Monday, used his wife as a human shield and she was killed. By Tuesday, the White House reversed that: she had not been used as a human shield and she was not dead. The other point of discrepancy was the initial briefings that stated Bin Laden resisted and was killed in a “firefight”, which suggests he had been armed. The White House insisted he had resisted, without saying how, but said he had no gun.

Did the Obama administration deliberately suggest he had hidden behind his wife as part of an attempt to portray him as a cowardly figure? Did it want to suggest he was armed to avoid criticism that US forces shot dead an unarmed man? Was it just part of the fog of war, with a clear account only available when those engaged in the mission are fully debriefed?

The problem for the White House is that damage has already been done, with these discrepancies opening the way for, at the very least, future conspiracy theorists.

Obama, in his late-night statement to the White House, kept it short and simple, telling how a small team launched the operation at the compound. “After a firefight, they killed Osama bin Laden and took custody of his body.”

Later on Sunday evening, senior US officials offered more details: “In addition to Osama bin Laden, three adult males were killed in the raid. We believe two were the couriers and the third was Bin Laden’s adult son. There were several women and children at the compound. One woman was killed when she was used as a shield by a male combatant. Two other women were injured.” No inconsistencies there.

The Pentagon briefed on Monday and one of the officials, who had been speaking on an anonymous basis, suggested for the first time that Bin Laden had used a woman as a human shield. “He and some other male combatants on the target appeared to use – certainly did use – women as shields,” the official said.

Contradictions began to surface when John Brennan, the White House counter-terrorism adviser and former senior CIA official, told journalists on Monday that Bin Laden “was engaged in a firefight with those that entered the area of the house he was in. And whether or not he got off any rounds, I quite frankly don’t know”. The phrase “engaged in firefight” suggests that Bin Laden was armed and firing back, which now turns out not to have been the case.

Brennan said Bin Laden had been “hiding behind women who were put in front of him as a shield”. Asked if the human shield had been Bin Laden’s wife or his son’s wife, Brennan said: “Bin Laden’s wife.”

But on Tuesday, the White House spokesman, Jay Carney, opened with a statement that ran through events again and explained that Bin Laden’s wife, who was in the room with the al-Qaida leader, had rushed one of the US troops and was shot in the leg but not killed.

Carney added a crucial detail. “Bin Laden was then shot and killed. He was not armed,” Carney disclosed. Asked how he had resisted if he had no gun, Carney declined to specify but said resistance does not require a gun.

 Osama bin Ladens final moments: America changes its story

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Elizabeth Taylor: The life, the looks, the movies, the smarts, the talent

March 24, 2011

Elizabeth Taylor in Cleop 007 Elizabeth Taylor: The life, the looks, the movies, the smarts, the talent

As a child, I grew up watching a lot of great actors and actresses, among them was Elizabeth Taylor. I never had the pleasure of meeting her in person and now she’s gone. What I read about her through the years was that she was a classy lady…but not too classy as to be friends with people from all walks of life. Friends knew that they always had her support through the good and hard times. Her contributions will continue to impact on worthy causes and our memories will comfort us in her absence…good-bye Ms. Talyor and thank you.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardianREV Elizabeth Taylor: The life, the looks, the movies, the smarts, the talentThis article titled “Elizabeth Taylor: The life, the looks, the movies, the smarts, the talent” was written by Hadley Freeman, for The Guardian on Thursday 24th March 2011 04.00 UTC

The Cleopatra costume will, surely, dominate the news reports but with all respect to the Egyptian queen, Liz was bigger than that.

Elizabeth Taylor evokes more images than the number of husbands she had. She was the breathtakingly beautiful child who – unlike her near contemporary, Judy Garland – seemed to slip into adulthood unscarred by her precocious professional success; the sultry dramatic actress; the compulsive bride, who went through husbands like fashion trends; the scarlet woman who broke up America’s sweethearts, Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds; the female half of what can very legitimately be described as the greatest love affair of the 20th century; the most beautiful woman in the world; front-page stalwart of the National Enquirer; star of some of the best movies of her era; star of some of the worst celebrity perfume adverts; the gay rights campaigner; the defender of Michael Jackson. Next to Taylor, Marilyn Monroe looks monochrome and monotone.

Even towards the end of her life, Taylor, despite near incapacitation, still not only understood the increasingly ridiculous celebrity world, but proved that – to paraphrase a quote from her most photographed role – age could not wither her. She was one of the most mature users of Twitter and her Twitter feed was so Tayloresque as to be nigh-on parodic, mixing passionate defences of Jackson with shout-outs to reality TV android Kim Kardashian and the occasional – and necessary – denials that she had re-re-re-re-re-re-re-re-remarried (“Jason is my dearest friend!” she tweeted last year, at the age of 78, with an understandable giggle).

Those born in the 40s will probably remember her as the wife of Richard Burton and the actor who radiated sex without ever being as coarsely upfront with her assets as, say, Monroe or Jane Russell. Those born in the 70s will have the slightly less erotic image of Taylor as the wife of the unforgettably named Larry Fortensky, sporting makeup, jewellery and hair that makes Russell Brand today look a bit low-key. Yet she was equally famous to those born in either decade, and this is not just because of her ever fluid image but her fearlessness at breaking social mores.

Her close friendships with gay actors – most notably Rock Hudson and Montgomery Clift – showed her to be more open-minded than most in an age when homosexuality was career-threatening. Taylor did more than pretty much anyone in her era by helping to remove the stigma of both homosexuality and, tragically, Aids by her loyalty to Hudson when he was dying from the disease.

Just as scandalous in its way was Taylor’s relationship with Burton. Both were married when they met and neither made any attempt to hide not just their love for one another but their lust. Now divorce is as common among actors as undeserved Oscars but Taylor and Burton still look red-blooded next to today’s anaemic Hello! wedding spreads. The publication last year of Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and the Marriage of the Century, by Sam Kashner and Nancy Schoenberger, truly puts to shame today’s pretenders, not least with its inclusion of Burton’s love letters to Taylor. But there was one letter even Taylor, the consummate celebrity, couldn’t share with the public: the last one Burton wrote to her just before his death in 1984, saying he wanted to come home, and Taylor was home. That letter remained where it has ever since she received it: in her dressing table drawer, next to her bed.

Carrie Fisher compares her mother, Debbie Reynolds, and her father, Eddie Fisher, to Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston, with Taylor – who made Fisher her husband number four – playing the Angelina Jolie role. It is a smart riff, neatly evoking the media hysteria that accompanied Fisher and Taylor’s affair while he was still with Reynolds and the ensuing marriage (and, inevitably, divorce – there was no way little Fisher could ever compete with the mountain of machismo that was Richard Burton).

But the real joke is the comparison between Jolie and Taylor. Jolie’s fame rests entirely on her personal life, which can be summed up as “married Rachel from Friends’ husband, fond of adopting”. As Jolie has amply proved, one doesn’t need to be a good actor, or even appear in any good films, to be an A-list celebrity these days: one just needs to be thin and have a fondness for being photographed. Taylor had the life, the looks, the movies, the smarts and the talent, and she – unlike Jolie – looked as if she not only enjoyed the occasional plate of pasta but my God, to watch her eat it would have been an experience in itself. As they say in Hollywood, it’s the films that got small.

 Elizabeth Taylor: The life, the looks, the movies, the smarts, the talent

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