Sunday, 4 August 2013

Diahann Carroll, Denzel Washington revive 'A Raisin in the Sun'

Diahann Carroll and Denzel Washington will play mother and son in a Broadway revival of the American classic 'A Raisin in the Sun.' In 1968, Diahann Carroll was the first black woman to star in a non-servant role on TV.

By Mark Kennedy,?Associated Press / August 3, 2013

Actress Diahann Carroll, one of the stars of the new film "Peeples" at the film's premiere in Hollywood May 8, 2013. Carroll will be appearing in the Broadway revival of 'A Raisin in the Sun.'

REUTERS/Fred Prouser

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Tony Award winners Diahann?Carroll and Denzel Washington will play mother and son on Broadway in a spring revival of the classic American play "A Raisin in the Sun," an opportunity that has left him "overjoyed" and her "thrilled."

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"I think it's one of our most original plays and I think that's why it keeps coming back," said Carroll by phone from Los Angeles. Washington, en route to a film set in Boston on Thursday afternoon, agreed: "It's one of those classics."

Previews of Lorraine Hansberry's play begin March 8 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre with an opening night scheduled for April 3. Kenny Leon, who directed Washington on Broadway to a Tony in "Fences," will helm the production.

Both Carroll and Washington confessed that they were somewhat daunted by the prospects of an eight-show week. For Carroll, it's the first time on Broadway in 30 years but "once you're into the flow of it, it becomes a life style." Washington, speaking on the way to the set of "The Equalizer," said theater and film ? with its 14-hour days ? were both tests of endurance.

"While you're sleeping tonight, I'll be running around on the street of Boston so I don't take that lightly," he said. "I don't think eight-shows-a-week is necessarily harder, but the energy I get from the audiences, you don't get that on a film."

Set in the late 1950s in a rundown South Side Chicago apartment, "A Raisin in the Sun" deals with the hopes and disappointments of a black family trying to find a better life in a white neighborhood. It was the first play by a black woman to be produced on Broadway. Hansberry became the youngest American and the first black winner of the New York Drama Critic's Circle Award, in 1959.

Carroll, 78, met Hansberry before the playwright died at age 34 in 1965. "She was extraordinary and I think that's one of the reasons why it is an honor to be asked to be part of this," said Carroll. "She faced everything with such intelligence and grace. She was dying [of cancer] when we met but you would never have known that."

This will be the second Broadway revival of the play. The original Broadway production in 1959 featured Sidney Poitier, Ruby Dee, Claudia McNeil and Diana Sands, all who reunited for a 1961 film adaptation. The last Broadway revival occurred in 2004, starring Diddy, Phylicia Rashad, Sanaa Lathan and Audra McDonald.

The play's central conflict concerns Lena Younger's late husband's insurance money. She wants to use it to move the family out of their cramped tenement apartment and into a house in a white neighborhood on Chicago's South Side. She also wants to pay her daughter's medical school tuition.

But her son, Walter Lee Younger, sees the money as a chance to open a liquor store and be more like the wealthy white men for whom he works as a chauffeur. He wants to make life better for his own son and pregnant wife. "I open and close car doors all day long. I drive a man around in his limousine and I say, 'Yes, sir; no, sir; very good sir,'" he tells his mother in one scene.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/LuUA5E7ks9g/Diahann-Carroll-Denzel-Washington-revive-A-Raisin-in-the-Sun

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Sunday, 21 July 2013

Netflix's Crazily Crappy Cropping, Hands On with Neverwet, And More

Netflix's Crazily Crappy Cropping, Hands On with Neverwet, And More

Welcome to the weekend! We brought snacks! OK, not snacks, but we do have a selection of postical delicacies for you to sample. Try some reasons we're not ready for smartwatches yet, or get a taste of Netflix's crazy cropping. Wash it down with a shot of Neverwet and a Liquidmetal iPhone chaser. Chow time!

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/netflixs-crazily-crappy-cropping-hands-on-with-neverw-846339768

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A California bill to boycott Florida? It's a bad idea.

How many laws has California passed, how many verdicts have its juries reached, how many social movements has it launched that other people in other states consider unjust or vile and would like to punish with a boycott?

That?s one of the questions members of The Times' editorial board asked one another in May 2010 when we were considering whether to weigh in for or against a boycott of Arizona to send a message of protest against SB 1070, our neighboring state?s strict anti-illegal immigration law.

And it?s a question that comes up again now, shortly before the Legislature is to take up Assemblyman Chris Holden?s proposed joint resolution calling for a boycott of Florida over the acquittal of George Zimmerman and -- or -- that state?s ?stand your ground? law.

Boycotts are a tricky business. Sometimes there are few options but to cut off contact, trade and any other connection with a government that has acted offensively or poses a danger; even then, a boycott is problematic. Liberals were angry at President Reagan?s policy of constructive engagement with the apartheid regime in South Africa. Conservatives were unhappy with a succession of presidents? pursuit of d?tente with the Soviet Union. Engage and persuade? Or isolate and punish? In international relations, nations go case by case, step by step.

Within the United States, boycotts are trickier still. What sense does it make, really, to launch an economic war between the states because the people or government of one is unhappy with the people or government of another? It may be that some people gave up avocados and trips to Disneyland or Malibu after voters here adopted Proposition 8, or Proposition 13. Or after juries here acquitted O.J. Simpson, or the officers who beat Rodney King. Or because of our abortion laws. Or any one of numerous slights, injustices or differences of opinion.

But if entire states actually turned their backs on California for every foolish or unfair thing we did, we?d either be pariahs or a population of unthinking, go-along-to-get-along people too scared of boycotts to think for ourselves.

Still -- is it impossible to imagine one state having laws or taking actions that are so repulsive that we want our government here to completely disengage? If apartheid was still practiced in some Southern state, for example, wouldn?t we embrace a boycott until the laws there were changed?

Boycotts of the segregated buses in Montgomery, Ala., launched the modern civil rights movement, and were conducted with the full weight of moral authority. But they were conducted not by some neighboring state but by the riders who were directly affected by the unjust and demeaning laws that mandated segregation, not by a sister state looking on from a safe distance.

The Times' editorial board is weighing in Sunday with an editorial opposing Holden?s call for a boycott of Florida. We don?t like that state?s ?stand your ground? law because we believe that it gives too much benefit of the doubt to shooters and not enough to their victims. But a boycott in response seems unfair. First, if the problem to be addressed is the law, why call for the boycott now, in the wake of the verdict, instead of when the law was passed, or when it was first cited in connection with this case?

And second, there are some 20 other states with ?stand your ground? laws that are at least as likely as Florida?s to encourage people to shoot rather than to avoid conflict and killing. Why target Florida?

The answer might be because that?s where Zimmerman needlessly followed, confronted and fatally shot Trayvon Martin. But Zimmerman did not invoke the ?stand your ground? law in his defense. Jury instructions used language from the law, but on that point they were not much different from self-defense instructions used in many states without ?stand your ground? laws, including California.

There is a national dialogue about this killing in particular -- regardless of what the shooter was thinking at the time -- because of race, and because of a history of laws that appear evenhanded on their face but that have been applied unequally against African Americans. The killing and the verdict can result in dialogue, understanding and a continuing effort for equal justice under the law, or they can result merely in a mutual turning of backs -- American against American, state against state. Holden?s proposed boycott resolution, to be introduced when the Legislature returns from vacation Aug. 5, is intended to promote the former, but it seems more likely geared toward the latter.

As for the Arizona boycott, The Times ended up going a different way, calling for Major League Baseball to take the very limited, message-sending step of moving the All-Star Game to another state.

It didn?t work.

ALSO:

Why try George Zimmerman?

Five reasons to stay away from Texas right now

Morrison: 'Fruitvale Station's' Ryan Coogler, the message maker

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/OpinionLa/~3/f8ezv2mSvZk/la-ol-boycott-florida-trayvon-martin-stand-your-ground-20130719,0,507150.story

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Saturday, 20 July 2013

NFL roundup: 49ers acquire CB Wright from Bucs - Yahoo! Sports

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Source: previous.delicious.com --- Friday, July 19, 2013
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers announced Friday that they traded cornerback Eric Wright to the San Francisco 49ers for a conditional draft pick. ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ObrNewswire/~3/8UjOJLZxIDE/nfl-roundup-49ers-acquire-cb-232040702--nfl.html

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Facebook Posts, DNA Typing Help Identify Source of Foodborne Strep Outbreak


Although strep throat, or Group A Streptococcus (GAS) pharyngitis, usually spreads from person to person by droplets, foodborne transmission is possible, as a report published online in Clinical Infectious Diseases found. The most common form of GAS illness is strep throat, but some cases can have more severe consequences.

Among 63 people who consumed food at a Minnesota high school dance team banquet, 18 came down with strep throat less than three days later. When multiple posts soon appeared on the team's Facebook page about ill dance team members and relatives, a parent contacted the state health department.

After interviewing approximately 100 people by telephonethose who attended the banquet, household contacts of attendees, and those who did not attend but ate banquet leftoversand conducting DNA typing of bacterial strains isolated from those who became ill, lead report author Sarah Kemble, MD, and her team of investigators at the Minnesota Department of Health narrowed the possible source of the outbreak to cooked pasta served at the banquet.

The DNA fingerprints of the strep bacteria isolated from the throats of those who became ill matched those of the bacteria identified in the pasta. In addition, one person who became ill and did not attend the banquet, but who ate some of the leftover pasta brought home by family members who did attend, helped confirm how the bacteria was transmitted. This person had a laboratory-confirmed GAS infection that matched the same DNA fingerprint pattern. No one else in the household had symptoms of strep throat, and throat swabs on all the other household members were negative for the bacteria.

"We suspect cooked food was contaminated by respiratory droplets from a person who carried the strep bacteria in the throat when the food was cooling or reheating," Dr. Kemble said. "The food probably was not kept hot or cold enough to stop bacterial growth." Both the parent who prepared the pasta and a child in the same household reported having strep throat three weeks before the banquet."Foodborne illness is not limited to diseases that cause vomiting and diarrhea," Dr. Kemble noted.

The rapid communication possible within a large group using online social media played an important role in bringing this outbreak to the attention of a parent, who then contacted the health department, Dr. Kemble said. A more formalized use of social media for disease surveillance and outbreak investigations may have the potential to benefit public health in some circumstances, the authors noted.

Tips for Reducing the Spread of Foodborne Illness

  • Do not prepare food for others if you are ill, especially if you are experiencing diarrhea, vomiting, or have a respiratory infection and are coughing or sneezing. If you are receiving treatment for an illness, ask your doctor how long you should wait after treatment before preparing food for others.
  • When preparing food in large batches (e.g., for large groups of people), ensure the food is kept hot or cold. Disease-causing bacteria grow best in the "temperature danger zone" of 41 F to 140 F.
  • Use a thermometer to ensure that food items are meeting proper temperature requirements.
  • Educational materials for those cooking for large groups are available from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: http://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/food-safety-education/teach-others/download-materials

Source-Eurekalert

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/LatestGeneralNews/~3/JZogzBpZVco/facebook-posts-dna-typing-help-identify-source-of-foodborne-strep-outbreak-122337-1.htm

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'Glory': Civil War fight by black troops recalled

Re-enactors sit in an encampment at Fort Moultrie on Sullivans Island, S.C., on Thursday, July 18, 2013. The re-enactors gathered to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the famed Civil War attack by the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry in a fight commemorated in the film "Glory." Prayers, a wreath-laying, candlelight and period music are planned to observe the attack on Battery Wagner that debunked the myth that black soldiers could not fight. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)

Re-enactors sit in an encampment at Fort Moultrie on Sullivans Island, S.C., on Thursday, July 18, 2013. The re-enactors gathered to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the famed Civil War attack by the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry in a fight commemorated in the film "Glory." Prayers, a wreath-laying, candlelight and period music are planned to observe the attack on Battery Wagner that debunked the myth that black soldiers could not fight. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)

Walter Sanderson of Upper Marlboro, Md., left, and Louis Carter of Richmond, Va., re-enactors portraying members of the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, sit in an encampment at Fort Moultrie on Sullivans Island, S.C., on Thursday, July 18, 2013. The re-enactors gathered to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the famed Civil War attack by the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry in a fight commemorated in the film "Glory." Prayers, a wreath-laying, candlelight and period music are planned to observe the attack on Battery Wagner that debunked the myth that black soldiers could not fight. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)

SULLIVANS ISLAND, S.C. (AP) ? Dozens of Civil War re-enactors gathered Thursday to commemorate the 150th anniversary of a famed attack by the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry ? a battle in South Carolina that showed the world black soldiers could fight and was chronicled in the movie "Glory."

Re-enactors portraying members of the black Union regiment as well as Confederate counterparts defending Battery Wagner in Charleston Harbor planned to travel Thursday afternoon by boat to Morris Island, site of the battle, to lay a wreath and fire a salute.

Speeches and Civil War period music also were planned on nearby Sullivans Island ? an inhabited barrier island near the harbor entrance ? about the time of the evening attack 150 years ago. Luminaries were to be lit by nightfall in memory of the dead.

The 54th was raised in Boston and of the 600 black troops who bravely charged Battery Wagner, 218 were killed, wounded or captured in fierce fighting. The 54th later served in South Carolina, Georgia and Florida before returning to Massachusetts at war's end.

"This is probably the most significant anniversary of the 150th anniversaries of the Civil War," said Walter Sanderson, a re-enactor from Upper Marlboro, Md. "It was a primary test for African-American troops in a very difficult assault. They proved themselves to be a quality regiment under the most severe duress."

Usually, there are about a dozen black re-enactors who make the trip each year. This year, more than 50 black re-enactors and several dozen Confederate re-enactors were gathering, some from such distant states as California.

"Going out on that island has special meaning today," said Joe McGill, a black Charleston re-enactor who makes the journey every July 18.

The attack was part of an unsuccessful campaign by federal forces to capture Charleston, the city where the Civil War began in 1861 with a bombardment of federally held Fort Sumter. The Confederates would hold Charleston until late in the war, when they abandoned it as Union troops moved across South Carolina further to the west.

While the Battery Wagner attack was unsuccessful, the valor of the black troops dispelled the thought ? common in both the North and the South early in the war ? that blacks could not fight. It also encouraged the enlistment of another 200,000 black troops in the Union army.

"It's just an honor to be here. The 54th proved that black troops could fight in a battle," said Louis Carter of Richmond, Va. He said Battery Wagner and several earlier smaller fights involving black troops "disproved that stereotype that we would run."

Leon Watkins of San Francisco carried the flag in the movie "Glory."

A former Marine, he said "if this hadn't happened here 150 years ago, I wouldn't have been able to help provide the blanket of security we all sleep under."

"Glory" will be shown Friday on an outdoor screen in Marion Square in Charleston. The 1989 film starring Matthew Broderick, Denzel Washington and Morgan Freeman helped bring the story of the 54th Massachusetts to a wider audience.

Scholars and authors gather at the historic Dock Street Theatre on Saturday to discuss the 1863 Charleston campaign. On Sunday, a monument to the fallen at Battery Wagner will be dedicated on Charleston's Battery.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-07-18-54th%20Massachusetts-Anniversary/id-4a663748e05048fa81de2f9d9aa9f59a

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This fungus cell only looks like the 405 freeway

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Mathematicians have created a video of a live fungus, with many millions of nuclei in a single cell.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/_6hH02oN3tw/130718101343.htm

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Instagram pulls page showing hundreds of 15-second Star Wars clips


Instagram video is seeing a lot of alternative use nowadays. After releasing the first Instagram movie trailer of the Steve Jobs biopic ?Jobs?, starring Ashton Kutcher, some madcap reportedly tried to use Instagram video to painstakingly upload hundreds of 15-seconds clips of the cult classic 1970?s flick Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, so that users could watch the movie in its entirety.

Not only was the nerd uploading the entire movie, but Gizmodo reported that the upload was done in reverse chronological order as well. This would ensure that when users loaded the page, they could have properly watched the movie without having to scroll down a very very long page. And the labour of love didn't stop there, because the uploader had framed each individual shot to fit within Instagram's square format.

A fan was uploading hundreds of 15-second clips of Star Wars movie on Instagram video

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The uploader was at this mammoth task since July 1, and the upload had reached the Jawa ambush. The person was also vocal about the effort on Twitter, where tweets show? that the task was achieved by uploading 15-second videos from his smartphone every night after putting his kids to sleep. However, news has now come in that Instagram has pulled the page, probably due to copyright issues. While this is not surprising, it is sad that the platform did not let the uploader at least finish the massive task.


The 15-second Instagram video option seems to be quite a hit among users. While YouTube has always been a platform that most users turn to when they want to upload their content, even larger-sized videos, like movies, can be uploaded onto the Instagram platform in a string of 15-second videos. And from the responses that the Star Wars upload has garnered, it looks like there are a lot of takers for the short-short video platform as well. The cool thing about Instagram video is the number of filters you can add to the video being uploaded, which can make for highly customisable content.

Source: http://tech2.in.com/news/web-services/instagram-pulls-page-showing-hundreds-of-15second-star-wars-clips/908196

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Friday, 19 July 2013

Ticket to Ride (for Android)


Ticket to Ride takes a bland, tedious sounding subject?building a railroad system?and makes it fun and entertaining. As a board game, it's considered a modern classic. Now on Android (and iOS), players from around the world can match their rail-baron skills whenever they like, if they can get past the app's irritating interface.

All Aboard!
In Ticket to Ride you build your rail empire by claiming routes between cities. You score points for each route?the longer the better?and claim them by collecting the appropriate number of colored cards from the sideboard. You score extra points for completing Tickets, lengthy, multi-city routes, and for having the longest continuous route on the board.

As a board game, Ticket to Ride can be an imposing, with tons of little pieces and cards in addition to a lengthy scoring process. The mobile version of the game does away with all the fiddly, tedious parts of the board game and lets you focus on strategy and play.

In this respect, Ticket to Ride shines. The games are fun, surprisingly brief, and frequently challenging. The tension for each round comes from having so many options?from claiming train lines, drawing cards, or drawing tickets?and only being able to choose one action. Once you start playing you can see why this is considered a classic board game.

Ticket to Ride ships with just the classic board, but expansions are available for purchase at several locations in the app.

A lengthy tutorial, comprising an entire game, uses pop-up windows to tell you what to do. I was surprised that although I couldn't turn off the tutorial and finish the game on my own, I could ignore its advice and the tutorial seemed to adapt in turn. Towards the end of the game, with my defeat all but assured, the tutorial started giving me bizarre, bad advice. It also didn't inform me of some game mechanics, like under what circumstances the pool of available cards resets.

Even without the tutorial running, the game isn't always clear about what is happening or what should happen next. Prompts to draw cards are small, displayed at the bottom of the screen, and fade quickly. It's hard to get back into the game up after you've set it aside, since you'll probably forget what you were doing.

Weirdly, the multiplayer controls appear to be split between the lobby (located in the "restaurant" section) and the screen where you begin a game. The iOS version is much simpler and also includes pass-and-play games and LAN games. The multiplayer menus of the Android version were so confusing, I wasn't sure if these features were present.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/4RjpsUZHTu0/0,2817,2421830,00.asp

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Ashampoo FireWall FREE


When Windows XP came out in 2001, it came with something new?a built-in firewall. In Windows Vista and later, the firewall evolved into something even better, but the XP version handled basic tasks well. Ashampoo FireWall FREE, compatible only with XP and Windows 2000, goes beyond that basic firewall, adding program control and a few bonus features, but it seems stuck in the past.

During installation, Ashampoo Firewall leads you through a few initial configuration steps. It offers a choice of Easy mode or Expert mode (more about those later). You can choose to monitor connections within your LAN (enabled by default) or connections local to your computer (disabled by default). And you'll get a chance to select predefined permissions for a handful of very common programs.

The program's flashy orange-themed main window displays firewall statistics and offers quick access to configuration options, logs, and bonus tools. You can review and change any of the settings you made during the install process, and more settings as well. By default the program protects its process against termination. You can take a step further and have it hide its process, so it doesn't even appear in Task Manager. Note, though, that doing so may look "suspicious" to other security programs.

Basic Firewall Tasks
As expected, Ashampoo Firewall stealths all of your PC's ports, so they're not even visible to an outside attacker. In testing, it shrugged off all of my port scans and other Web-based attack tests. This success is strictly a baseline, since Windows Firewall alone can handle that level of protection.

I verified that the firewall process resists termination. Trying to end the process using Task Manager, I just got "Access Denied." I also verified that the firewall can successfully hide its process, causing it to vanish from Task Manager.

The firewall doesn't store its enabled/disabled status in the Registry, so I couldn't turn it off using a Registry tweak. My next step usually involves an attack on the firewall's Windows service, but Ashampoo Firewall doesn't use a service. Instead, it achieves SPI (Stateful Packet Inspection) using a driver. In short, I couldn't disable protection using various techniques that might be employed by a malware coder.

Rudimentary Program Control
At installation, Ashampoo Firewall starts off in Learning Mode, but that phrase doesn't have the same meaning it does for other products. Learning Mode in Outpost Firewall Pro 8 means that every connection is allowed, and the firewall creates a rule to continue allowing each connection it detects. Autolearn mode for TinyWall 2.1 is similar.

Learning Mode for Ashampoo Firewall refers to the fact that it asks you, the user, how to handle unknown programs, and learns from your decisions. Since it only pre-configures permissions for a very few common programs, you'll be answering a lot of popup queries for the first while after installing this product. If you turn off Learning Mode, the firewall will simply block any unknown program, the way TinyWall does by default.

Each popup query reports the IP address and port to which the program is attempting a connection. In Expert mode you can choose whether to allow or block connection with the specified port or with all ports. In Easy mode, choosing to allow the connection always allows all ports. In either case, if you don't check the "Create rule" box you'll be asked the same question next time that program tries to connect.

ZoneAlarm Free Firewall 2013 gets around the problem of popup overload using an immense online database called SmartDefense Advisor. It only queries the user for programs not found in the database, and when it does, there's probably malware involved. TinyWall silently blocks every connection for which no rule exists, but offers several ways you can add an exception for a particular program.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/jd3oXTjTmZk/0,2817,2421814,00.asp

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Deadspin Stephen A.

Deadspin Stephen A. Smith Gossip: James Dolan Wanted To Trade Iman Shumpert | Jalopnik Ludacris Still Drives His ?93 Acura From Before He Was Famous | io9 Why do we nitpick superhero movies so damn much? | Kotaku Doom With Iron Sights Feels Really, Really Weird

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Thursday, 18 July 2013

Myanmar President Thein Sein, left, meets with British Prime Minister David Came...

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Morsi was ousted because 'political decision-making began stumbling,' Egypt general says

Ahmed Fouad / Egyptian Presidency via EPA

Egypt's interim President Adli Mansour (right) meets with General Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi in Cairo on July 6.

CAIRO -- Facing unrelenting pressure from Muslim Brotherhood protesters, Egypt's military chief sought to justify his decision to remove Mohmmed Morsi from office, saying Sunday in a televised speech that the Islamist leader had violated his popular mandate and antagonized state institutions.

The comments by Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi ? his first since the president's ouster nearly two weeks ago ? came as the designated interim prime minister pushed ahead with talks to form a new Cabinet this week.

Reform advocate Mohamed ElBaradei was sworn in as Egypt's interim vice president for international relations on Sunday. The move reinforces the role of liberals in the new leadership who are strongly opposed to the Brotherhood.

Several secular-minded candidates also have been approached to lead the foreign, finance, culture, information and other key ministries. Nabil Fahmy, who served as Egypt's former ambassador to the United States for over a decade under Hosni Mubarak, was tapped to be foreign minister, according to state media.

The United States sent its No. 2 diplomat in the State Department, William Burns, to Cairo to meet with interim government officials as well as civil society and business leaders during his two-day visit. Burns is the first high-level American official to visit since Morsi's ouster.

Many in the international community fear the ouster of Morsi, Egypt's first democratically elected president, would undermine Egypt's transition to democracy.

The State Department said Burns would underscore U.S. support for the Egyptian people and a transition leading to an inclusive, democratically elected civilian government. The United States has called for Morsi's release. Since his ouster, Morsi has been held incommunicado at an undisclosed location.

Mohamed Abd El Ghany / Reuters

Days of massive protests and a military ultimatum forced the country's first democratically elected president from office.

El-Sissi said the armed forces acted to remove Morsi on July 3 according to the will of the people as the country was sliding toward deeper polarization and more violence. The Islamist leader was the first democratically chosen leader after a narrow victory in elections last year.

"The armed forces sincerely accepted the choice of the people, but then political decision-making began stumbling," el-Sissi said. "The armed forces remained committed to what it considered the legitimacy of the ballot box, even though that very legitimacy began to do as it pleased and in a way that contradicted the basis and the origin of this legitimacy."

Morsi's election came after months of turmoil following the 2011 revolution that removed autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak from office, in a rocky transition that was marred by persistent protests, political disagreements and an economy teetering on bankruptcy.

His supporters say the military staged a coup in a bid to undermine the rising influence of Islamists, and thousands have camped out for days near a mosque in eastern Cairo to demand he be reinstated. The Muslim Brotherhood, which propelled Morsi to power, has called for massive protests Monday to escalate pressure on the military. Some Muslim Brotherhood leaders have called for el-Sissi to be removed, and put on trial accusing him of treason.

Brotherhood spokesman Gehad el-Haddad responded to el-Sissi's remarks, saying that the military had no right to act on behalf of the people of Egypt except through "orders of their elected commander in chief," meaning Morsi. In comments posted on Twitter, he said the military also has no right to decide which protest is worthy enough to represent the people.

Morsi was ousted by the military after four days of protests by millions of his opponents.

Speaking to an auditorium filled with military officers, el-Sissi said the armed forces could no longer stand on the sidelines as millions of Egyptians took to the streets to call for the Islamist leader to step down over allegations he was abusing his power.

El-Sissi appealed to all parties, in an apparent nod to Morsi's supporters, to participate in the new transition, saying it is overseen by an unbiased leader and will restore the right of people to choose.

But continuing its crackdown on the Brotherhood leadership, Egypt's new chief prosecutor ordered frozen the assets of Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohammed Badie and at least 13 other senior members of the group pending investigations into deadly violence outside the organization's headquarters in Cairo and the Republic Guard forces club.

Meanwhile, the military-backed government pressed forward with its transition plan. ElBaradei, a 71-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner, was sworn in as vice president for international relations, although his exact mandate was not clear. The former head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog based in Vienna, returned home to assume a role in the anti-Mubarak uprising and became one of the most visible leaders in the badly fractured Egyptian liberal and secular opposition to Morsi's government.

Violence in the aftermath of Morsi's ouster peaked a week ago Monday when the military opened fire on Brotherhood supporters who were holding a sit-in outside the Republican Guard forces club, leading to hours of clashes. More than 50 protesters were killed and hundreds wounded. The Brotherhood claimed the military opened fire on protesters, while the army says it was responding to Morsi supporters trying to storm the Republican Guard building.

Human Rights Watch said it appeared that "the military and police used unnecessary force" and that prosecutors have investigated only Brotherhood supporters and leaders for their alleged roles in the clashes, but not security forces.

"It is not clear from the footage which side used live ammunition first," according to HRW's statement Sunday, which added that "what is clear... is that the army responded with lethal force that far exceeded any apparent threat to the lives of military personnel."

The Associated Press

Related:

This story was originally published on

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Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Trade-offs between food security and climate change mitigation explored

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Improving agricultural productivity could help cut greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture, shows new research. But, sustainable farming methods are key.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/bKE8Am8czkE/130716120017.htm

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India bids farewell to state-run telegram service after 163 years. Stop.

Smart phones and texting are taking the place of the telegram.

By Ryan Lenora Brown,?Correspondent / July 15, 2013

Shubha Singh prepares to send a telegram on the last day of the 163-year-old service, in Allahabad, India, Sunday, July 14, 2013.

Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP

Enlarge

It was a scene that India hadn?t witnessed for decades: lines stretching around the block, hundreds deep, of customers waiting to send a telegram.

Skip to next paragraph Ryan Lenora Brown

Correspondent

Ryan Brown edits the Africa Monitor blog and contributes to the national and international news desks of the Monitor. She is a former Fulbright fellow to South Africa and holds a degree in history from Duke University.?

Recent posts

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But as the state-run telecommunications company prepared to shutter its telegram service Sunday, thousands queued up at the country?s 75 telegram offices for a final chance to send one of the old-school missives.

Telegrams in India, as elsewhere, have long been on a backslide into obscurity, crowded out of the market by a flood of digital communications devices. In its last year of life, the state telegram service sent out only about 5,000 messages per day ? 1.8 million a year ? down from a peak of 60 million in 1985, according to The Christian Science Monitor.?

"We were incurring losses of over $23 million a year because SMS and smartphones have rendered this service redundant," Shamim Akhtar, general manager of BSNL's telegram services, told the Monitor. ??

Still, particularities of Indian culture and history helped the increasingly outdated service cling to life in the country, Time reports.?

In India, the telegram has owed its curious resilience to the two distinct advantages it has over rival technologies: it is already there, and it works, bearing messages rapidly across the country in places where telephone or Internet access is either nonexistent or erratic. For these reasons, it has retained a place in the country?s official life. India?s legendarily change-averse bureaucrats still use telegrams out of habit. Lawyers and courts use them to create written records in judicial proceedings. The army uses them occasionally to communicate with troops at remote stations. A handful of private customers use them too.

For 163 years, telegrams ferried some of India?s most important political messages ? helping the British squash an anti-colonial uprising in 1857 and carrying the news of Pakistan?s invasion of Kashmir to London in 1947. But they have also been the purveyor of far less historic news. Telegrams historically brought notice of births and deaths to far flung family members, and they are still frequently used by eloping couples to inform their families that they have run away for love.

"They inform their parents that they are married, and fearing violence from the family, inform the police and the National Human Rights Commission," said R.D. Ram, a telegram operator in New Delhi, in an interview with the Monitor.

The demise of India?s state-run service comes seven years after Western Union ended its telegram service in the United States. But even as the telecom giants bow out of telegraphy, a number of private services have stepped in to fill the ? admittedly small ? gap.?

Canadian company International Telegram (iTelegram), which began sending telegrams in the US after the Western Union closure, announced on its website this week that it has begun a private telegram service in India as well.

Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. (BSNL), the Indian state-owned telecommunications company, has decommissioned its telegram services as of July 2013.?
?
Does this mean the end of telegrams in India? Or, as some news outlets have reported, the end of telegrams everywhere? No?.

Customers wishing to place a telegram order to India, or from India to other countries, can do so through the iTelegram web site. Service is available to over 200 countries. And yes, happily that includes India!

For many Indians, however, the closing of the government telegram service still heralds the end of an era.

"Soon this will all be history,? said one Indian, who stood in line to send a telegram on Sunday, in an interview with CBS News. ?Our last telegrams will become collector's items."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/QJuDgXQn8Fs/India-bids-farewell-to-state-run-telegram-service-after-163-years.-Stop

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Stocks open mixed on Wall Street; Coca-Cola drops

NEW YORK (AP) ? Coca-Cola held back the stock market in early trading Tuesday after the world's largest beverage maker posted second-quarter earnings that disappointed investors.

Coke fell $1.14, or 2.8 percent, to $39.90 after the company said it sold less soda in its home market of North America.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down nine points, less than one percent, to 15,474 as of 10:24 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time. The Standard & Poor's 500 index down a point at 1,680. The Nasdaq composite was little changed at 3,606.

Coke's results were partly offset by better results from Johnson & Johnson. The giant health care company rose after its second-quarter profit more than doubled thanks to higher sales of medicines and medical devices. The stock rose 67 cents, or 0.7 percent, to $91.03.

"Earnings are taking the lead at this point in time," said Brad Sorensen, Charles Schwab's director of market and sector research. "So far it's been decent, but nothing to get excited about."

The stock market is back at record levels following a brief slump in June, when the S&P 500 logged its first monthly decline since October on concern that the Federal Reserve would ease back on its economic stimulus too quickly. The S&P 500 gained for eight straight trading sessions through Monday, its longest winning streak since January.

In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note was unchanged from 2.54 percent Monday.

In commodities trading, the price of crude oil was little changed at $106.24 a barrel and gold rose $9 to $1,292 an ounce.

The dollar fell against the euro and the Japanese yen.

Among other stocks making big moves:

? Cintas Corp., a supplier of uniforms, fell $1.72, or 3.6 percent, to $46.16 after the company said late Monday that its fiscal fourth-quarter net income rose 9 percent, but it gave a tepid outlook for the current year due in part to the health care overhaul law.

? Heidrick & Struggles International dropped $2.91, or 16 percent, to $14.95 after the executive search firm said it is longer pursuing a sale of its business and that its CEO is stepping down.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stocks-open-mixed-wall-street-coca-cola-drops-143421274.html

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Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Crop Circles Made by Military Satellites

Crop Circles Made by Military Satellites

I (the author of the web-site "www.pastpresentfuture.info"), have been visiting some crop circles in the UK, and I took some samples of
vegetation and dead insects with me.

At home, with my microscope I have been carefully observing the tissues
of the plants and of the insects. In order to find out how their state
could be reproduced, I put some healthy plants and insects in a
modified microwave oven combined with a laser burner (yes, I am truly
sorry for this rude experiment) and I examined the tissues under the
microscope.

Comparing the tissues, that I took from the crop circles in the UK with
that I took from my microwave oven, bought me to an interesting
conclusion : they look highly similar.

In other words, the cropcircles have been produced by microwave laser
technology. This technology is used by the military.

Microwave laser games


As you know, with lasers it is possible to cut
(fashion, dentist, etc.), bend and melt (industrial), and so forth, at great precision and from large distance. Microwave laser technology, or better, maser
technology, is used at a military satellite in order to "shoot" maser
beams at precisely computed locations on our planet.

This kind of satellite is aimed to destoy anyhting at any time at any
location under any atmospheric circumstances. Such satellite is not
publicly known, i.e. kept secret, of course, and is responsible for
several "unresolved" airplane crashes.

Yes my dear visitor, maser satellites are flying right over you and you
are not safe. It is all in the game of cover-up, misusing the belief of
mankind that extra-terrestials are having an artistic party overnight.
Well, not so, as the militaries are playing around with masers, using
computers to design nice patterns and to guide the maser beams.

In the early 1970's I started playing with mainfame computers to
produce nice mathematical patterns. And sure I was not the only one. It
is a common hobbyism. Nothing to do with galactic federations and Alien
prophecies or symbols of universal wisdom.

Now, back to my microscopic investigation : in both cases (from the UK
by artistic militaries and from my microwave & laser burner) the
tissues of the plants showed tiny particles of near-crystallized dust
that were melted / bonded with the tissue. Both the plants and the
insects were literally cooked. This effect can only be reached by
masers.

Aiming a computer guided maser at high altitude towards a crop field,
in about 15 seconds a large complex pattern can be projected and
"cooked in", using rotating maserbeams (it would be quite unfortunate
if you would be moving under the beam at such moment)


Weapon used as toy?

http://i829.photobucket.com/albums/zz213/asterlife_2007/CropCircleAlienwithBinaryDisc.jpg

This is how crop circles are made, with a computer guided maser
satellite, by bored artistic militaries. Period.

Oh, and the light flashes ? Well, simple, because of the
electromagnetic field that is caused by the maser, the energy release
is perceived as a flash of light. Sure they leave traces of energy in
the plants, commonly incorrectly interpreted as spiritual energies of
some sort. I have been into this research myself when I was studying
all that stuff for my graduation.

By the way, if indeed Aliens have been around for thousands of years,
how come that only since a few years cropcircles have been reported ?
Since a few years, however, we do have star wars satellites - made by
us - orbiting planet Earth. Once again, crop circles are NOT made by
Aliens or UFOs, but simply by a maser satellite, programmed by a bunch
of geeks. Keep it simple.

=====
===========================
Mr. Jorge "George" Anthony Paniagua
615-A? Jefferson Street
Stayton, Oregon? 97383-1929


via Sherry Shriner @ http://www.sherryshriner.com/crop-circles.htm What Do Satellite Weapons & Crop Circles Have in Common?

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiYlnpQahVuEJf-4Xw25t86e8-l4Pg5-dmZ0H8_kh8s8GIb7_u_nx0I0ZhIqjW9O9UdPh9ui23foQY1jLB9-OAY2m4MkW3XQ4mMQBPx0lJTKRMMTTZpOVbSAX76mHJ0YGF0squqod50KkS0/s1600/cropcircleeeevallll.jpg

I am always amazed any time I hear about Crop Circles?on the Internet, TV, or even the Newspaper. What I believe is the obvious cause of the mystery is never discussed. Why? Is this intentional?

As everyone knows, Crop Circles are geometric designs that appear in farmers? wheat fields, often overnight. Initially restricted to the English countryside, Crop Circles are now found around the world. A couple of British gentleman admitted to hoaxing Crop Circles in the late 70s, using a foot board and a few feet of rope, but the complexity is increasing. The general questions are: Why? How? And by whom?

I have seen many proposed answers including:

  • Supernatural or?Spiritual, including ghosts
  • The Mowing Devil (Myth)
  • Aliens (Attempting to communicate)
  • Man-made (Ground-based)
  • Man-made (Air-based)
  • Man-made (Space-based)

As a contributor to GravitySailor, I am?committed to reason and common sense. So I see an obvious but often overlooked ?answer. First, Crop Circles must be made from somewhere above the field; whether it be a tall ladder or scaffolding, helicopter, balloon, blimp, or airplane. Or, if you think as a GravitySailor, why not from space? Because of the complexities and geometric precision of the current designs, I believe a single answer is reasonable?they are man-made and projected from a satellite. A satellite provides the perfect platform with the required downward view,?stability, and?precision?while remaining out of sight.
Maybe we are implicating a space weapon or ?low power laser device?but most likely a maser (molecular amplification by stimulated emission radiation). A maser uses?Microwaves?together with an added slice of the electromagnetic spectrum, but a directed microwave beam is enough for conceptualization. electromagnetic radiation travels at the speed of light, and the satellite would be somewhere in Low Earth Orbit (300-1200 miles), so it would take a few minutes to generate the most complex design.

How did I arrive at this conclusion? ?Simple, by applying reason to eliminate the other options. First, the supernatural, spiritual or so-called extra-dimensional plane, ?has no place in fact-based science. The ?Mowing Devil? may be similarly discarded, although this myth may have provided the original impetus to create crop circles. Perhaps Aliens draw crop circles, but if they posses the technology to travel light years to visit us, I doubt their communications limit them to drawing cryptic geometric designs in the grass. As for the ground-based man-made option, groups have attempted this, but it takes too long and is too difficult to create a super complex design overnight, especially with the current precision. Witnesses would see any air-based approach, unless the hoaxers possessed a Klingon ?cloaking device? that makes them invisible. ?This analysis leaves only one reasonable answer, a spaced based device?a satellite!

Now imagine you were a member of the scientific or military team designing and testing a satellite-based maser projection platform. ?First, it would be fun to run tests and calibrate your maser by drawing complex geometric shapes in wheat fields. ?Second, the designs could easily be created on any laptop, and you would likely see a picture of your creation in the Press the next day. These engineers enjoy creating a mystery while hiding behind the old crop circle myth, and this approach provides a great tool for measuring the effectiveness, precision, and accuracy of the maser. Someone recently drew a pixelated face of an Alien, which I interpret as a clear jab at the conspiracy theorists. The engineers are simply having a little fun at the public?s expense, while content to?hide behind a myth. ?This is the most rational explanation.?

From Gravity Sailor @ http://gravitysailor.com/science-technology/crop-circles-satellites/

Crop Circles

??

????

Translation by George Hoskins

[Crop circles] have been observed mainly in the south of England (Hampshire, Wiltshire?) since the 60s, and more recently all over the world. To the present day their number has been estimated to at least 5,000 [LP98].

In the beginning it was a question of ears of wheat found flattened down to ground level in the form of a circle. Since then the phenomenon has become considerably complex and diversified. Nowadays the patterns found in fields are large up to some hundreds of metres in size, and complex geometric shapes (see an example fig.?5-a) completed in a very short time such as less than half a minute [PDCA89 p.?156 and LP98]. Many hypotheses have been examined, including that of extraterrestrials because UFOs have often been observed in the vicinity [PDCA89 p.?17, 35, 38, 63, 68, 84, 89 and 98], sometimes casting a luminous ray towards the ground [p. 115].

Fig.?5-a: Beckampton (Wiltshire) 8th August 1998
Flattened down wheat is in white.
Tractor tracks due to crop spraying can be seen.
Drawing diameter is ~50 metres.


It is likely that these geometric designs are due to the firing of an aerial military microwave cannon, piloted by computer. The arguments supporting this view are as follows:

Why Microwaves:



Research by Dr Levengood (of BLT Research Team), an American biophysicist, corroborated by the analyses of Ken Larsen, a British biologist, has shown that the way in which the stalks (wheat, rapeseed?) are flattened without being broken or damaged [p.?25?] is typical of a UHF microwave effect. Thus one can see stalks of rapeseed curving at 90 degrees, the flowers of which are still intact, although those same rapeseed stalks break easily when one attempts to bend them over by hand [p.?151]. The new position taken up by the plant becomes fixed. It continues to grow horizontally [p.?3 and 158] and breaks if one tries to return it to the upright position [p.?140].

?


Phenomena of electromagnetic origin have been observed at the locations: irregular compass behaviour [p.?172], disturbance of electrical apparatus [p.?44, 60 and 172-173], disturbance of radio frequencies, luminous flashes [p.?34, 52, 65 and 95], cracking sounds [p.?52, 63, 66 and 172-173], animals obviously unwell [p.?65 and 81], dowsing effects [p.?177-178], etc. Numerous positive effects (spontaneous cures, feelings of peace?) or negative effects (temporary paralysis, mental confusion, loss of memory, terror?) have also been observed in humans [LP98]. Let us remember that certain effects could also be explained by a reaction of fertilisers or pesticides subjected to microwave radiation, a reaction which could release toxic gases [LP98, who mentions organic phosphates]. The appearances of luminous flashes and the cracking sounds are not inevitably objective phenomena and they could be only feelings induced in the brain of the witness by an electromagnetic field. Albert Budden gives an example of such magnetophosphenes: "If the brain of the subject is exposed to an [alternating] magnetic field whose frequency varies from 10 to 100?Hz and whose power varies from 200 to 1,000?G, the subject will see flashes of light [...] in the top left corner of his visual field." [AB98 p.?59-60, citing research by L.?Ruttan, M.?Persinger and S.?Koren].

?


The investigator Busty Taylor showed that samples of plants or ground taken in a crop circle could be attracted by a simple magnet [AB98 p.?50-51]. That could be explained by the fact that the ferromagnetic particles present in the dust of the atmosphere were bound with the site of the circle, after or during its creation. Some of these particles have been scrutinised under microscope. They seemed to have melted when touching the soil or the plants to create a fine cracked glaze.

?


A bird was found within one particular formation and its body appeared literally to have exploded, as if it had been cooked alive in a microwave oven. In other formations some dried out hedgehogs were discovered [LP98]. Also wheat grains are dehydrated and crunchy. They are less conductive according to work by Dr Levengood.

?


Microwave laser technology appeared during the 50s and has been improving in keeping with the increasing complexity of the crop circles. Is it a mere coincidence?

?


More than 50% of the circles observed in England have appeared during cloudy or rainy weather: the cloud cover would allow the origin of the microwave firing to be hidden. Microwaves are able to pass through clouds and act through falling rain, and they are perhaps less damaging to plants when it is raining.

?


Certain patterns suggest the use of a rotating beam with variable diameter according to the circles in question [PDCA89 p.?156], which might correspond to either the natural or deliberate dispersion of a maser beam, fired from a high altitude. The diameter is estimated to be less than 30?centimetres at a distance of 20?kilometres.
Why by Computer
The geometric designs observed today are typical of those one can see on computers: 3D designs, fractal designs? Certain patterns are, mathematically speaking, pretty complex (fig.?5-b).