মঙ্গলবার, ২৫ জুন, ২০১৩

Russian Cosmonauts Begin Spacewalk Outside Space Station

Two Russian cosmonauts ventured outside the International Space Station today (June 24) to begin a six-hour spacewalk to test and upgrade systems on the orbiting lab's exterior.

Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin and his crewmate Alexander Misurkin floated outside to begin their work at 9:32 a.m. EDT (1332 GMT). This is the sixth career spacewalk for Yurchikhin and Misurkin's first. So far, Yurchikhin has logged 31 hours and 52 minutes of spacewalk time.

You can?watch the spacewalk live on SPACE.com?courtesy of NASA TV now. Misurkin is in the blue striped suit and Yurchikhin is in red.?

"I'm excellent," Misurkin said as Yurchikhin joined him outside of the space station. "I'm ready to press on."

The cosmonauts are expected to test automatic docking cables in anticipation of a new Russian module scheduled to arrive at the station later this year. Misurkin and Yurchikhin also plan to install clamps that will hold cables from the station's U.S. side that will power the new module on the Russian portion of the laboratory.

They will also install handholds to aid in future spacewalks, retrieve experiments from the outside of the station and "replace a fluid flow control valve panel on the Zarya module," NASA officials said in a statement.

This is the first spacewalk since two NASA astronauts performed an unplanned emergency excursion to?fix an ammonia leak?on the outside of the space station in May. The spacewalk by Misurkin and Yurchikhin will mark the 169th in support of station care and construction.

The two cosmonauts are living and working on the space station along with NASA's Karen Nyberg and Chris Cassidy, European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano and Russia's Pavel Vinogradov.

The orbiting laboratory is about the size of a five bedroom house with the wingspan of a football field. The $100 billion?International Space Station?was built by five space agencies representing 15 countries. Construction began in 1998 and has been staffed with rotating crews of astronauts continuously since 2000.

Editor's Note: This is an updated version of an?earlier story about the spacewalk .?

Follow Miriam Kramer?@mirikramer?and?Google+. Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebook?and?Google+. Original article on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-cosmonauts-begin-spacewalk-outside-space-station-135316589.html

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সোমবার, ২৪ জুন, ২০১৩

LGBT Community Untapped Market Consumer Brands - Business ...

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Flickr/Brendon Thorne

Rick and Liam wanted recognition of their commitment to each other, so they did what many gay couples are doing these days.

They boarded a plane to New York where marriage between same-sex partners is legal. After hearing about the couple?s plans, the JetBlue crew on their flight showered them with special attention including free drinks and best wishes.

When Rick and Liam realized they lacked a witness for the wedding, one of the flight attendants accompanied the men to city hall to serve in that role, showing up at the nuptials only after stopping to get a special dessert for the occasion. The newly married men penned a heartfelt ?thank you? letter to JetBlue. The airline proudly posted the story on their blog and distributed it to the press.

JetBlue is not alone in its desire to shine a light on its support of its gay consumers. Many brands are waking up to the opportunity that the LGBT market today represents for their business.

Brands from Apple to Budweiser to JCPenney are becoming more interested in gay consumers, with many brands making concerted efforts to target the LGBT market. ?

Why? What is really at stake? Here are just a few numbers surrounding LGBT consumers and the differences in spending power of gay households vs. the American general market:

  • 23% higher median household income1

  • 24% more equity in their homes1

  • 26% of gay men say they will pay more for top quality brands2

  • 30% have taken a major vacation in the past year2

  • 40% bought a new smart phone in the past year2

Estimates put the buying power of the LGBT community at over $800 billion annually. Some marketers are realizing that they may need to adjust their plans to accommodate this segment, or at least make sure that their marketing spending is inclusive of this valuable target. But many brands have been slow to pick up on the impact of the gay and lesbian consumer on their sales. Some are content to let their general market messages do the job of reaching everyone, and see no reason to pay special attention to LGBT consumers.

Are gay consumers? spending habits and brand loyalties really all that different? In some categories, maybe not. But in others, the impact of gay consumer spending is more profound. Here are a few differences between the purchasing habits of gay consumers and everyone else.

Gay Shopping Habits Pay Off For Brands ? Same-sex households spend at rates fairly similar to other households, when it comes to shopping for consumer packaged goods. However, gay and lesbian households make 16% more shopping trips than the average U.S. household ? 173 vs. 149 per year.3 The impact on total spending equates to about 25% more for same-sex households. Male same-sex households are especially likely to spend more frequently, shopping nearly 30% more often than the average household. On average, that?s $2,045 more per year spent on packaged goods in male same-sex households.3 This means that brands have more opportunities to reach LGBT consumers at retail to influence their purchase behaviors and brand preferences.

Gay Consumer Brand Loyalties ? Are the factors that influence the brand selection of gay consumers really that different? They are more likely to pay for quality brands and to influence others as well. When asked if it is worth paying extra for top-of-line or cutting edge products, 26% of gay men agreed, considerably higher than the average American?s answer to that question. And LGBT consumers are a source of word-of-mouth marketing for brands. Gay men (64%) and women (65%) agreed that when they find a brand they like, they are likely to make a point of telling their friends about it. That?s well above the average of all U.S. consumers.2

Gay Consumers and Finances ? Although there is some disagreement about income of gay consumers compared to the average American, most sources indicate LGBT consumers have more disposable income. According to a survey done by Prudential in 2012, gay consumers reported annual household incomes around $61,500, significantly higher than the national median of just over $50,000.1 Gays were more likely to have higher educations, to carry less debt, to have more savings and were less likely to be jobless with an unemployment rate of almost a point below the national percentage. Additionally, LGBT homeowners in the survey had significantly more equity in their homes and were better financially set for retirement.1

But are gay consumers open to brand marketing messages tailored to them? With a constant media-driven debate reminding gay Americans of inequities including workplace discrimination, marriage inequality, and cultural clashes, on an almost daily basis, gays and lesbians are paying attention to brands that appear to be allies.

And even for brands that do not have any plan to market directly to LGBT consumers, the shift in America?s attitudes about the issue is requiring a new sensitivity. Brands from beer to candy bars have found themselves the subjects of consumer or industry criticism when they used ??harmless? jokes in ads that inadvertently seemed to show same-sex relationships in a bad light. And the concerns are not always coming from gay groups. More and more progressive general market consumers are expressing their support of gay issues and holding brands accountable as well.

With billions in spending at stake, it?s more important than ever that brands, even those who have no interest in marketing to gay Americans, become sensitive to these issues. This loyal group of consumers is ready to reward brands that really speak their language.

1Prudential 2012 Survey of more than 1,000 LGBT respondents

2Community Marketing, Inc., July 2012 survey of 13,000 Gay & Lesbian Americans

3Nielsen, January 2013

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/lgbt-community-untapped-market-consumer-brands-2013-6

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South Africa: Mandela still in critical condition

Police officers stand outside the main entrance of the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Sunday, June 23, 2013. Mandela's health has deteriorated and he is now in critical condition, the South African government said Sunday. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

Police officers stand outside the main entrance of the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Sunday, June 23, 2013. Mandela's health has deteriorated and he is now in critical condition, the South African government said Sunday. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

A print of Nelson Mandela and get-well messages hanged outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Monday, June 24, 2013. Mandela's health has deteriorated and he is now in critical condition, the South African government said. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

A print of Nelson Mandela and get-well messages hanged outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Monday, June 24, 2013. Mandela's health has deteriorated and he is now in critical condition, the South African government said. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

(AP) ? Nelson Mandela's condition in a Pretoria hospital remained critical for a second straight day Monday, said South Africa's president who described the stricken anti-apartheid hero as being "asleep" when he visited Mandela the previous evening

President Jacob Zuma told at least 60 foreign and South African journalists that doctors are doing everything possible to ensure the 94-year-old's wellbeing and comfort on his 17th day in the hospital. The president repeated some of the content of a presidential statement issued on Sunday and refused to give any details about Mandela's condition, saying: "I'm not a doctor."

"Madiba is critical in the hospital, and this is the father of democracy. This is the man who fought and sacrificed his life to stay in prison, the longest-serving prisoner in South Africa. He is one of those who has contributed to democracy," Zuma said, using Mandela's clan name. "All of us in the country should accept the fact that Madiba is now old. As he ages, his health will ... trouble him and I think what we need to do as a country is to pray for him."

Zuma, who in the past has given an overly sunny view of Mandela's health, briefly described his visit to the hospital in the capital and seeing Mandela.

"It was late, he was already asleep," Zuma said. "And we then had a bit of a discussion with the doctors as well as his wife, Graca Machel, and we left."

Asked why none of Mandela's doctors had been made available for a news briefing, presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said an arrangement had been made in consultation with Mandela's family whereby information would be provided through a "single source in an authoritative way."

"We've come to that arrangement on the basis that we need to respect the privacy of the family, we need to adhere to doctor-patient confidentiality," he said.

"You can be assured that what we are saying is based on agreement with the doctors," Maharaj said. Doctors approve the text of announcements on Mandela's health, and believe some media reporting has transgressed professional ethics, he said.

Mandela, who became South Africa's first black president after the end of apartheid in 1994, was hospitalized on June 8 for what the government said was a recurring lung infection. This is his fourth hospitalization since December.

Mandela was jailed for 27 years under white racist rule and was released 23 years ago, in 1990. He then played a leading role in steering the divided country from the apartheid era to an all-race democracy, becoming South Africa's first black president in all-race elections in 1994.

As a result of his sacrifice and peacemaking efforts, he is seen by many around the world as a symbol of reconciliation.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-24-AF-South-Africa-Mandela/id-b6425f0dc2484a018507f820f5f0506f

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Westwood dedicates show to Bradley Manning

MILAN (AP) ? Vivienne Westwood, the British designer known for her eccentric fashion, dedicated her latest menswear collection to Bradley Manning, an American soldier currently on trial in the U.S. for leaking classified material to the website WikiLeaks. He was arrested in May 2010 in Iraq.

During the show for next summer, presented Sunday, the second day of Milan Fashion Week, models walked down the runway wearing a large badge with a picture of the soldier on it, and the word "TRUTH" written at the bottom in bold white letters on a red background.

At the end of the show, the designer herself came out for a runway bow wearing the same badge.

The collection was casual chic with African references, from the striped linen used for a long Kaftan shirt or a summer suit, to baggy pants and breeches, to geometric prints, to toe sandals and flip flops.

The show opened with a series of summer khaki slacks worn over classic shirts, perfect for a toney summer evening.

Absent were the usual Westwood menswear gimmicks such as skirts or high heels. Instead the designer made her runway appearance wearing colored stockings with "climate" written on one leg and "revolution" on the other, showing that truth is not her only battle.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/westwood-dedicates-show-bradley-manning-193924148.html

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রবিবার, ২৩ জুন, ২০১৩

Everything you want to know about Android's new Navigation Drawer

Navigation Drawer

Google's Android developers have delivered a great video all about the new Navigation Drawer

We've talked before about how the Android team is serious about design. They want Android, and the great apps that developers create, to not only work well, but to look good. We noticed this at Google I/O in May, that there was a new (and long-awaited) focus on building applications that look like the belong. Apps with a consistent and elegant user interface, versus the jumble of different design styles and choices of the past. 

It's a big undertaking. You have to account for different screen sizes, devices with or without the recommended button layout, and most of all you need to find a fluid look and feel that works well for the end user. Nobody likes an app that is difficult to use. Google tried to get everyone on-board with the action bar method, and it's a great solution for some things. But sometimes, you need to get dirty and have a list of user choices and options. That's where the new Navigation Drawer concept comes into play.

Grab your phone. Open the YouTube app or Google Play Books app. Swipe your finger to the right on the main screen (view). That's the new Navigation Drawer at work. Google Play Books could probably get away with just an action bar and overflow area (those three dots in the upper right) but the YouTube app has plenty of choices and options that would otherwise be buried three levels deep. The Navigation Drawer seems like a perfect way to present them all to the users -- you and me.

A lot of thought went into this, and luckily the Android developers are willing to share their thoughts about it all. Join Roman Nurik, Jens Nagel and Rich Fulcher after the break for 47 minutes of great information about why, where and when you would want to use the Navigation Drawer. Even if you're never going to design an Android app, it's a great watch and really drives the idea home.

Source: Android Developers YouTube

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/7hk2K-numJE/story01.htm

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Two-dimensional atomically-flat transistors show promise for next generation green electronics

June 21, 2013 ? Researchers at UC Santa Barbara, in collaboration with University of Notre Dame, have recently demonstrated the highest reported drive current on a transistor made of a monolayer of tungsten diselenide (WSe2), a 2-dimensional atomic crystal categorized as a transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD). The discovery is also the first demonstration of an "n-type" WSe2 field-effect-transistor (FET), showing the tremendous potential of this material for future low-power and high-performance integrated circuits.

Monolayer WSe2 is similar to graphene in that it has a hexagonal atomic structure and derives from its layered bulk form in which adjacent layers are held together by relatively weak Van der Waals forces. However, WSe2 has a key advantage over graphene.

"In addition to its atomically smooth surfaces, it has a considerable band gap of 1.6 eV," explained Kaustav Banerjee, professor of electrical and computer engineering and Director of the Nanoelectronics Research Lab at UCSB. Banerjee's research team also includes UCSB researchers Wei Liu, Jiahao Kang, Deblina Sarkar, Yasin Khatami and Professor Debdeep Jena of Notre Dame. Their study was published in the May 2013 issue of Nano Letters.

"There is growing worldwide interest in these 2D crystals due to the many possibilities they hold for the next generation of integrated electronics, optoelectronics and sensors," commented Professor Pulickel Ajayan, the Anderson Professor of Engineering at Rice University and an authority on nanomaterials. "This result is very impressive and an outcome of the detailed understanding of the physical nature of the contacts to these 2D crystals that the Santa Barbara group has developed."

"Understanding the nature of the metal-TMD interfaces was key to our successful transistor design and demonstration," explained Banerjee. Banerjee's group pioneered a methodology using ab-initio Density Functional Theory (DFT) that established the key criteria needed to evaluate such interfaces leading to the best possible contacts to the monolayer TMDs.

The DFT technique was pioneered by UCSB professor emeritus of physics Dr. Walter Kohn, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1998. "At a recent meeting with Professor Kohn, we discussed how this relatively new class of semiconductors is benefitting from one of his landmark contributions," said Banerjee.

Wei Liu, a post-doctoral researcher in Banerjee's group and co-author of the study, explained, "Guided by the contact evaluation methodology we have developed, our transistors achieved ON currents as high as 210 uA/um, which are the highest reported value of drive current on any monolayer TMD based FET to date." They were also able to achieve mobility of 142 cm2/V.s, which is the highest reported value for any back-gated monolayer TMD FET.

"DFT simulations provide critical insights to the various factors that effectively determine the quality of the interfaces to these 2D materials, which is necessary for achieving low contact resistances." added Jiahao Kang, a PhD student in Banerjee's group and co-author of the study.?

Their research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the California NanoSystems Institute at UC Santa Barbara, and the Materials Research Laboratory at UCSB: an NSF MRSEC.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/technology/~3/aOcqO6ILwgw/130621095713.htm

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Vegetables Respond to a Daily Clock, Even After Harvest

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow. You open the door of your fridge and the light goes on, right? What if the light in your fridge could stay on and be programmed to help your veggies taste better or be more nutritious? Why? Well, it turns out that that head of cabbage on your grocery shelf isn't just sitting there as long as it's not too far after harvesting. Researchers have found that it can still respond to daily cycles of light and darkness and build up its own circadian rhythms, changing its biochemistry to adapt to the daily cycles.

Why is that important? Joining me now is Janet Braam. She is chair and professor of biochemistry and cell biology at Rice University in Houston and one of the authors of a paper published this week on this research in the journal Current Biology. Welcome to the program.

DR. JANET BRAAM: Thank you.

FLATOW: So our veggies are sitting there in the supermarket, and they're doing what?

BRAAM: Well, they are still alive. They are still responding to external stimuli. What we've shown is perhaps surprisingly, they can respond to light-dark cycles and really change their metabolite accumulation to different times of day.

FLATOW: They change their metabolism as the sort of a circadian rhythm for my cabbage?

BRAAM: Right, right. So when the crops are growing in the field, they respond to the light-dark cycles, and they - all plants have a circadian rhythm, so they have patterns of behavior that they control or they - that are under the influence of their circadian clock. And when you harvest vegetables and fruits, these vegetables and fruits really stay very much alive even though they've been removed from the whole plant. But then when we store them under constant conditions like in constant light in the grocery store, their circadian rhythms begin to dampen. And so then they lose the ability to show these rhythmic behaviors.

FLATOW: And when they're doing the rhythmic behaviors, there's got to be a good reason why they're in a behavior; they're doing something.

BRAAM: Right. We know from basic plant biology research that plants have these circadian clocks, and we know that they use them in part to respond or to prepare for seasonal changes. But in addition, we recently found that these circadian clocks are also very important for plant defense against insect attack. So plants are able to turn on their defenses at a time when insects are most likely to seed. So in that way, they can prepare for attack before it actually happens. And this is clearly advantageous. Plants are much more resistant to insects if their clocks are functioning properly.

FLATOW: And when they get - when you put them under the 24-hour harsh light of a grocery stand, you just wrecked that whole circadian rhythm?

BRAAM: Right. The plants are confused. They don't know what time - when it's day and when it's night, and so their circadian rhythms dampen and go away.

FLATOW: And so they may lose that ability to fight off bugs that might land on them?

BRAAM: Yes. Their ability to fight off bugs has certainly decreased when their circadian rhythms are lost.

FLATOW: Do they also, during this cycle, get - put out stuff that makes them more nutritious for us at any one point in that cycle?

BRAAM: Well, what we've shown is that with cabbage, cabbage is related to the research plant that we work on, that research plant makes these particular chemical compounds that send off insects. So the insects don't like to eat the plants...

FLATOW: Right.

BRAAM: ...because these chemicals taste bad or make the insects sick. But these same chemicals that are in our model plants are also in things like cabbages and broccoli, cauliflower. And what we've shown is that those chemicals accumulate with circadian periodicity in these post-harvest vegetables just like they do in our model plant. But in - for us, eating these vegetables like cabbage, those chemical compounds are - have been found to be potent anti-cancer compounds. So they have anti-cancer activities.

FLATOW: You mean like antioxidants, things like that?

BRAAM: Yes. Some of them are antioxidants or they activate antioxidant processes in our cells.

FLATOW: So...

BRAAM: And so - yeah.

FLATOW: Yeah. So I guess, ideally, if you wanted to keep all that going, you would have the lights in the supermarket go on and off for like just mimicking daylight.

BRAAM: Right. So look - yeah.

FLATOW: And when you brought it home, if you put it in the refrigerator, you might do the same thing.

BRAAM: Right. That's one possibility from - that you might make - have a conclusion from our research. So we showed that if you take these post-harvest cabbage and put them under light-dark cycles, these chemical compound cycles - dependent on time of day - and then it might make a difference at what time of day you actually eat your vegetables. You could plan to eat it at the time of day when those chemicals are at their optimal level.

FLATOW: Do you know what time of day that is?

BRAAM: We've only just begun to look at this, right? So we've only used one kind of treatment of 12 hours of light and 12 hours of darkness. And we've only looked at cabbage so far. And under our experimental conditions, we find that these chemicals accumulate most in the day, it may be midday, and they go down at night. And there's about a two-fold difference.

FLATOW: Wow.

BRAAM: But much more would need to be done to know really when the best time of day would be to eat different kinds of vegetables.

FLATOW: OK. So you started with cabbage. Are there any other veggies that look enticing, so to speak, for you to study or sort of similar to a cabbage cycle?

BRAAM: Well, what we did after we found that this result worked with cabbage, we decided to try to see how broad a phenomenon this might be. We started with other leafy vegetables like spinach and lettuce, and we could show that in the lab, we could re-entrain their circadian rhythms also. And then since those worked, we then went back to the grocery store and bought things like zucchini and blueberries and sweet potatoes and carrots. And of all these we could show could perceive these light-dark signals and reactivate their clock and show rhythmic behaviors.

FLATOW: Mm-hmm. Now, I'm picturing a big head of cabbage. And, you know, cabbage has lots of leaves on it.

BRAAM: Yes.

FLATOW: Is the light only getting to the outermost leaves, or does it filter into the inner leaves as, you know, does it work on the circadian rhythm on the entire cabbage, and where is the clock located in the cabbage?

(LAUGHTER)

BRAAM: So cabbage is made of a collection of leaves and some of the leaves are on the outside. And I would imagine that under certain circumstances where there's just light shining on the head of cabbage...

FLATOW: Yeah.

BRAAM: ...probably only the outer leaves are perceiving those lights signals. However, the circadian clock can also be sent by - set by temperature changes. And so in the field, if this cabbage is growing, I would imagine both the inner and outer leaves maintain their circadian rhythmicity. But we really haven't looked at any of that yet. So these are just speculation on my part. But in plants, the circadian clock or each individual cell is believed to have a circadian clock. And they all run autonomously or mostly autonomously. And so they all get set in synchrony by these external stimuli.

FLATOW: Yeah. So what you're saying in terms of the fewer, even a gardener or someone who has plants, that it's not healthy for the plant to keep it under the light 24 hours a day. If you want to grow it in your basement or, you know, some place, you got to give them some dark time. You have to give them some circadian rhythm.

BRAAM: Our work with - yeah. Right. Our work would suggest that especially with defense against insects and fungi that circadian periodicity is important to maintain. So keeping a light-dark cycle would be important.

FLATOW: Mm hmm. Don't just keep those grow lights on all the time.

That's right.

(LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: All right. So where do you go from here? What would be your next step?

BRAAM: Well, we're interested in understanding, one, what are all the metabolites or small molecules that are under the control of the circadian clock in these post-harvest vegetables and fruits? So in things like zucchini and carrots and sweet potato, we would expect a different sweet of metabolites to be regulated by the clock. So we'd like to know what those are. And then we'd like to know what kind of conditions could be used to make this a practical - if it turns out that we can really make a difference in nutritional quality then...

FLATOW: Right.

BRAAM: ...we would want to design a simply way to keep the clock running. And we know that plants can respond to just pulses of light in ways that can control or set their clock. And so we'd like to investigate what are the simplest ways that we can use to make this practical.

FLATOW: Well, we wish you good luck, Dr. Braam.

BRAAM: Thank you very much.

FLATOW: Thank you for taking time to be with us today.

BRAAM: Thank you.

FLATOW: Janet Braam is chair and professor of biochemistry and cell biology at Rice University in Houston.

Copyright ? 2013 NPR. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to NPR. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/06/21/194230818/vegetables-respond-to-a-daily-clock-even-after-harvest?ft=1&f=1007

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শনিবার, ২২ জুন, ২০১৩

What the NSA Does With the Data It Isn't Allowed to Keep (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/314283166?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Dusty surprise around giant black hole

June 20, 2013 ? ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer has gathered the most detailed observations ever of the dust around the huge black hole at the centre of an active galaxy. Rather than finding all of the glowing dust in a doughnut-shaped torus around the black hole, as expected, the astronomers find that much of it is located above and below the torus. These observations show that dust is being pushed away from the black hole as a cool wind -- a surprising finding that challenges current theories and tells us how supermassive black holes evolve and interact with their surroundings.

Over the last twenty years, astronomers have found that almost all galaxies have a huge black hole at their centre. Some of these black holes are growing by drawing in matter from their surroundings, creating in the process the most energetic objects in the Universe: active galactic nuclei (AGN). The central regions of these brilliant powerhouses are ringed by doughnuts of cosmic dust [1] dragged from the surrounding space, similar to how water forms a small whirlpool around the plughole of a sink. It was thought that most of the strong infrared radiation coming from AGN originated in these doughnuts.

But new observations of a nearby active galaxy called NGC 3783, harnessing the power of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) at ESO's Paranal Observatory in Chile [2], have given a team of astronomers a surprise. Although the hot dust -- at some 700 to 1000 degrees Celsius -- is indeed in a torus as expected, they found huge amounts of cooler dust above and below this main torus [3].

As Sebastian H?nig (University of California Santa Barbara, USA and Christian-Albrechts-Universit?t zu Kiel, Germany), lead author of the paper presenting the new results, explains, "This is the first time we've been able to combine detailed mid-infrared observations of the cool, room-temperature dust around an AGN with similarly detailed observations of the very hot dust. This also represents the largest set of infrared interferometry for an AGN published yet."

The newly-discovered dust forms a cool wind streaming outwards from the black hole. This wind must play an important role in the complex relationship between the black hole and its environment. The black hole feeds its insatiable appetite from the surrounding material, but the intense radiation this produces also seems to be blowing the material away. It is still unclear how these two processes work together and allow supermassive black holes to grow and evolve within galaxies, but the presence of a dusty wind adds a new piece to this picture.

In order to investigate the central regions of NGC 3783, the astronomers needed to use the combined power of the Unit Telescopes of ESO's Very Large Telescope. Using these units together forms an interferometer that can obtain a resolution equivalent to that of a 130-metre telescope.

Another team member, Gerd Weigelt (Max-Planck-Institut f?r Radioastronomie, Bonn, Germany), explains, "By combining the world-class sensitivity of the large mirrors of the VLT with interferometry we are able to collect enough light to observe faint objects. This lets us study a region as small as the distance from our Sun to its closest neighbouring star, in a galaxy tens of millions of light-years away. No other optical or infrared system in the world is currently capable of this."

These new observations may lead to a paradigm shift in the understanding of AGN. They are direct evidence that dust is being pushed out by the intense radiation. Models of how the dust is distributed and how supermassive black holes grow and evolve must now take into account this newly-discovered effect.

H?nig concludes, "I am now really looking forward to MATISSE, which will allow us to combine all four VLT Unit Telescopes at once and observe simultaneously in the near- and mid-infrared -- giving us much more detailed data." MATISSE a second generation instrument for the VLTI, is currently under construction.

Notes

[1] Cosmic dust consist of silicate and graphite grains -- minerals also abundant on Earth. The soot from a candle is very similar to cosmic graphite dust, although the size of the grains in the soot are ten or more times bigger than typical grain sizes of cosmic graphite grains.

[2] The VLTI is formed from a combination of the four 8.2-metre VLT Unit Telescopes, or the four moveable 1.8-metre VLT Auxiliary Telescopes. It makes use of a technique known as interferometry, in which sophisticated instrumentation combines the light from several telescopes into one observation. Although it usually does not produce actual images, this technique dramatically increases the level of detail that can be measured in the resulting observations, comparable to what a space telescope with a diameter of over 100 metres would measure.

[3] The hotter dust was mapped using the AMBER VLTI instrument at near-infrared wavelengths and the newer observations reported here used the MIDI instrument at wavelengths between 8 and 13 microns in the mid-infrared.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/a50idejqDD0/130620071438.htm

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শুক্রবার, ২১ জুন, ২০১৩

'Independence Day' Sequel Scheduled For 2015 Release

by Nakiya Morgan Nineteen years after the first film's release, "Independence Day 2" is definitely happening. On Thursday, Twentieth Century Fox announced that the sequel to the blockbuster film "Independence Day" will make its big screen debut in 2015. The 1996 classic, ?Independence Day? starring Will Smith, Bill Pullman and Jeff Goldblum set the tone [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/06/21/independence-day-sequel-scheduled-for-2015-release/

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Unlock NYC's Architectural Gems With This Foursquare Scavenger Hunt

Unlock NYC's Architectural Gems With This Foursquare Scavenger Hunt

New Yorkers rarely have time to stop and look up at the city around them, but the Museum of Modern Art is pushing us to do just that with a city-wide scavenger hunt that challenges players to explore the city's architectural landmarks.

To play the game, watch for MoMA's daily clue posted to its Foursquare and Facebook pages, which will point you towards a lesser-known building in the city. If you check in on Foursquare, you get $5 off admission at MoMA. Here's today's clue:

This 48-story building, designed by Harrison Abramovitz & Harris, opened in 1959 and marked the expansion of an existing center.

Can you guess? Here's a picture:

Unlock NYC's Architectural Gems With This Foursquare Scavenger Hunt

Image via Flickr

Give up? The answer is the McGraw-Hill Building. Located at 1221 Avenue of the Americas, it's one of a trio of buildings designed by Wallace Harrison, and known as the XYZ Buildings, that were constructed as a part of the expansion of Rockefeller Center in the late 60s. The one you're looking at is the Y. See, we're all learning something and we're not even hunting yet!

The impetus for the scavenger hunt (besides the discount) is two exhibits currently on display at MoMA?one focuses on Henri Labrouste and the other, on Le Corbusier. Both of these men influenced (and were influenced by) American architecture?especially in New York City, where Le Corbusier made his mark with the UN Building in 1948.

Among some of the places you'll see on MoMA's tour? Grand Central Station, the Macy's at Herald Square, the Williamsburg Bridge, and tons of other spots from parks to places of worship to homes. But don't let me ruin the hunt before you figure out the clues for yourself! [MoMA]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/unlock-nycs-architectural-gems-with-this-foursquare-sc-514342899

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Samsung announces five new colors of the Galaxy S4

Galaxy S4 Colors

Step up your style with new color options of the Galaxy S4

We're taking a look at what Samsung has to offer at its Premiere 2013 event live in London, and the manufacturer has just rolled out five new colors of the Galaxy S4. As you can see above, the new colors available are Blue Arctic, Purple Mirage, red Aurora, Brown Autumn and Pink Twilight (yay, pink!).

The colors are matte or pastel rather than glossy, and keep the same shiny plastic on the edges of the device. No specifics just yet on the availability of these colors, but you can expect to see at least a few of them hit your carrier of choice soon.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/iNdripNopQ8/story01.htm

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২০ জুন, ২০১৩

Rob Ford vows to campaign on privatizing garbage pick-up across city

Trash1
Garbage pick-up by unionized City of Toronto employees could be a thing of the past if Mayor Rob Ford wins the next election. (Michael Peake/Toronto Sun files)

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TORONTO?-?

Toronto could be contracting out all its trash collection if Mayor Rob Ford wins the next election.

Ford vowed Wednesday he will be campaigning next year on contracting out garbage pick-up east of Yonge St. ? the half of the city still collected by unionized city employees.

A report to the public works committee Wednesday found double the average number complaints per week in the first quarter of the year in areas of the city collected by unionized city employees compared to areas where collection has been contracted out.

Ford ? who successfully got council to privatize more of the city?s trash collection ? applauded the numbers.

?I think it?s great. Obviously the number of complaints went down in the private sector,? Ford said. ?No offence to in-house (collection). In-house is improving their service too. It?s a good comparison. But eventually I want to see all the garbage contracted out in the city.?

Although he?s floated the idea before, Ford committed to making the issue part of his 2014 election campaign.

?People want to see that too,? he said.

CUPE Local 416 vice-president Dave Hewitt questioned the complaint numbers in the report.

?I don?t think it?s correct,? Hewitt said, adding the union is studying the data around the complaints.

Jim Harnum, the city?s general manager of solid waste management, said he trusts the numbers.

?Absolutely, the numbers are right out of our 311 database,? Harnum said. ?We don?t have control of those numbers ? it is going directly to those operators (at 311) and they?re compiling those numbers and giving us those numbers.?

Councillor Gord Perks saif if Ford?s campaigning to contract out garbage collection, he?ll be campaigning against him.

?I think all the advice we?ve gotten from city staff is that would be a terrible idea,? Perks said. ?City staff have said that if it all goes into private hands we lose our ability to hold the private contractors to any kind of standard and to keep the price down.?

Source: http://www.torontosun.com/2013/06/19/rob-ford-vows-to-campaign-on-privatizing-garbage-pick-up-across-city

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বুধবার, ১৯ জুন, ২০১৩

Primary Care Physician:Community Family Practice with OB, Barrow ...

Arctic Slope Native Association Limited

P.O. Box 29 ? Barrow, Alaska 99723

JOB VACANCY ANNOUNCEMENT: Primary Care Physician with OB see details below

Opening Date: Ongoing Closing Date: Until Filled

Position: Physician Reports to: Clinical Director

Salary/Wage: $180,000-$194,688/yr DOE Department: Physician Services

Hours: Variable Location: Samuel Simmonds

Memorial Hospital

Brief Summary:

Provide a wide range of health care services to neonate, infant, pediatric, adolescent, adult and

geriatric patients in accordance with the ethics and code of the American Medical Association

and regulations promulgated by the Alaska State Medical Board.

Qualifications:

1. State Of Alaska license to practice medicine as a Doctor of Medicine (M.D) or Doctor of

Osteopathy (D.O).

2. Minimum of three (3) years residency with board eligibility, board certification preferred.

3. Current DEA.

4. Current BLS ACLS, PALS, and NRP Certification.

5. ATLS, ALSO certification preferred.

Desired Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:

Requisite knowledge, skills and abilities to provide primary care and treatment to patients of all

age groups with widely divergent medical problems.

Requisite knowledge, skills and abilities to provide care and treatment to patients of all ages in

need of emergent care due to trauma or life-threatening conditions.

Requisite knowledge, skills and abilities to provide prenatal care, deliver babies and provide

postpartum care to mothers and infants.

Working knowledge of medical ethics and laws applicable to the practice of medicine.

Ability to inspire confidence and to treat patients and fellow hospital employees with

consideration and compassion.

Ability to work effectively in cross-cultural environment.

To Apply Please fill out the form, submit your CV and reference ?Barrow? in the subject line

Source: http://www.alaskaphysicianjobs.net/primary-care-physician-wanted-for-community-family-practice-with-ob-barrow-alaska/

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Herbal extract boosts fruit fly lifespan by nearly 25 percent

June 18, 2013 ? The herbal extract of a yellow-flowered mountain plant long used for stress relief was found to increase the lifespan of fruit fly populations by an average of 24 percent, according to UC Irvine researchers.

But it's how Rhodiola rosea, also known as golden root, did this that grabbed the attention of study leaders Mahtab Jafari and Sam Schriner. They discovered that Rhodiola works in a manner completely unrelated to dietary restriction and affects different molecular pathways.

This is significant, said Jafari, associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences, because dietary restriction is considered the most robust method of improving lifespan in laboratory animals, and scientists have been scrambling to identify compounds that can mimic its effects.

"We found that Rhodiola actually increases lifespan on top of that of dietary restriction," Jafari said. "It demonstrates that Rhodiola can act even in individuals who are already long-lived and healthy. This is quite unlike resveratrol, which appears to only act in overfed or unhealthy individuals."

The researchers proved this by putting flies on a calorie-restricted diet. It has been shown that flies live longer when the amount of yeast they consume is decreased. Jafari and Schriner expected that if Rhodiola functioned in the same manner as dietary restriction, it would not work in these flies. But it did. They also tested Rhodiola in flies in which the molecular pathways of dietary restriction had been genetically inactivated. It still worked.

Not only did Rhodiola improve lifespan an average of 24 percent in both sexes and multiple strains of flies, but it also delayed the loss of physical performance in flies as they aged and even extended the lives of old flies. Jafari's group previously had shown that the extract decreased the natural production of reactive oxygen species molecules in the fly mitochondria and protected both flies and cultured human cells against oxidative stress.

Jafari and Schriner, an assistant project scientist in Jafari's laboratory, are not claiming that Rhodiola supplements will enable humans to live longer, but their discovery is enhancing scientific understanding of how supplements believed to promote longevity actually work in the body.

Rhodiola has already shown possible health benefits in humans, such as decreasing fatigue, anxiety and depression; boosting mood, memory and stamina; and preventing altitude sickness. Grown in cold climates at high elevations, the herb has been used for centuries by Scandinavians and Russians to reduce stress. It's also thought to have antioxidant properties.

Jafari's research group is currently exploring the plant's potential to kill cancer cells, improve Alzheimer's disease and help stem cells grow.

Rhodiola is readily available online and in health food stores. Jafari, though, has analyzed several commercial products and found them to not contain sufficient amounts of the reputed active compounds -- such as rosavin and salidroside -- that characterize high-quality products.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/AhqPHvYGpj8/130618125112.htm

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Kanye West Ran Yeezus Like Apple Inc., Cyhi The Prynce Says

'The bible just wasn't wrote by Jesus,' Cyhi tells MTV News about Kanye's collective creative process for Yeezus.
By Rob Markman

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1709282/kanye-west-yeezus-steve-jobs-apple.jhtml

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FBI offers reward for information on 2008 Times Square bomber

The FBI and the New York City Police Department announced on Tuesday an award of up to $65,000 for information leading to the identification and arrest of the suspect or suspects behind the unsolved 2008 bombing of the U.S. Armed Forces Recruiting Station in Times Square.

Additionally, the FBI released videos of the key suspect and a photo of the explosive device used in the bombing. In the footage the suspect appears to be working alone, but the FBI, in its press release announcing the reward, noted that ?he or she may have had a lookout or surveillance team of as many as five other individuals in Times Square at the time of the attack."

On March 6, 2008, the unknown individual placed a small bomb in front of the U.S. Armed Forces Recruiting Station in Times Square. Security videos from the area show the bomber fleeing the scene on a bicycle, which was later recovered in a dumpster some seven blocks away near Madison Avenue and 38th Street.

?Someone, somewhere knows something about a bomber who?s still on the run,? said FBI Assistant Director in Charge George Venizelos in the release. ?Today, we?re asking for the public?s assistance in finding those responsible and encouraging the public to look at these photos and video, which could be the key to breaking the case.?

According to the FBI, the suspect may be connected to two other bombings in New York City: one in front of the British Consulate in 2005 and another at the Mexican Consulate in 2007. With both bombings, the devices were delivered by an individual on a bicycle and detonated early in the morning.

The investigation is being conducted by the FBI?s Joint Terrorism Task Force in Manhattan, which includes FBI agents, NYPD detectives, and members of other local, state and federal agencies. The FBI asks for anyone with information on the three bombings to call 212-384-1000.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/fbi-offers-65-000-reward-information-2008-times-174308202.html

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Gadhafi's children likely violated UN travel ban

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? A son and daughter of former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi moved from Algeria to Oman in apparent violation of a U.N. travel ban, the committee monitoring U.N. sanctions against Libya said Tuesday.

Rwanda's U.N. Ambassador Eugene Richard Gasana, who chairs the committee, told the Security Council that Algeria's U.N. Mission confirmed on June 5 that Aisha Gadhafi and Mohammed Gadhafi had relocated to Oman along with other family members.

Aisha Gadhafi, a lawyer in her mid-30s, and Mohammed Gadhafi, in his early 40s, have been on the U.N. sanctions blacklist since early 2011, subject to an asset freeze and travel ban. Both fled to Algeria after Gadhafi was ousted later that year.

Gasana said the sanctions committee has directed its panel of experts to investigate their move to Oman, which was not authorized by the U.N. under its exemption procedures.

Britain's U.N. Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant, the current Security Council president, said an interim report from the panel of experts is expected next month addressing the issue of the two Gadhafi children's travels.

Libya's Foreign Minister Mohamed Abdelaziz told reporters in Doha, Qatar in late March that Oman had granted asylum to Gadhafi's widow, Safiya, and other family members.

Aisha Gadhafi helped in the defense of Saddam Hussein, Iraq's toppled dictator, in the trial that led to his hanging. She had been a goodwill ambassador for the U.N. Development Program, but the U.N. ended its agreement with her as Moammar Gadhafi cracked down on anti-government protesters. She gave birth on the border as the family members fled to Algeria. While in Algeria, she spoke several times to Arab media and denounced Libya's new government. In November, she called on Libyans in an interview with a Syrian TV station to overthrow their new rulers.

Mohammed Gadhafi is the only child of Gadhafi and his first wife, Fatiha. He was Libya's Olympic chief and was involved in the country's telecommunications industry. The rebels reported capturing him after they moved into Tripoli, but soon after they said he had escaped from house arrest.

Their brother, Seif al-Islam, the first child by Gadhafi's marriage to second wife Safiya, was the only sibling captured. Once the face of reform in Libya, he led his father's drive to emerge from pariah status and was considered his heir apparent. Revolutionary forces found him deep in Libya's southern desert a month after his father was killed in October 2011 and took him to the mountain city of Zintan, where he remains in their custody.

The Netherlands-based International Criminal Court has charged Seif al-Islam Gadhafi with crimes against humanity. Libyan authorities are appealing the international court's right to try him, saying that he should face justice at home, but the court says Tripoli cannot give him a fair trial.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gadhafis-children-likely-violated-un-travel-ban-191546803.html

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China: A Patent Rise in Innovation? | Legal Language Services

China?s patent office received more patent applications than any other country?s in 2011, according to The Economist. It?s tempting to attribute this upward trend to increased innovation in the Chinese economy; however, there are other contributing factors.

Ten years ago, most patent applications in China were filed by US and European inventors. This is no longer the case: 2011 saw an increasing number of patent applications filed in China by Chinese nationals. What does this increase mean?

The rise in patent applications leads to increased demand for patent translationChina?s Increase in Patent Applicants: A Closer Look

In America and Europe, foreigners lodge approximately half of patent applications filed. In China, patent applications by locals now constitute three-quarters of total applications (see the adjacent chart, from The Economist).

It?s tempting to ascribe this growth in local patent applications to increased innovation by a rising Chinese entrepreneurial class ? however, there are grounds for skepticism.

In China, government subsidies provide significant incentives for people to file patent applications.

Furthermore, Chinese patent offices tend to treat patent applications more leniently ? and approve a greater proportion of overall applications ? than their international counterparts.

Patenting Abroad: A Useful Metric

The UN?s World Intellectual Property Office has recently released figures that suggest the apparent spurt in Chinese innovation may be illusory: Very few Chinese inventors seek to patent their ideas abroad.

Between 2005 and 2009 fewer than 5% of Chinese inventors sought to patent abroad. Compare this with the US, where the figure was 27%, and Europe, where it was more than 40%.

Measuring a patent?s value is fraught with difficulty ? however, genuine inventors tend to seek a patent in multiple markets, because there?s a strong economic incentive to patent genuine innovations. If you?re seeking to file a patent abroad, you can find out more about essential translation requirements here.

Of course, the number of patents filed abroad is an imperfect metric to gauge patent value; however, it stems from an appealing intuition: if an invention is genuinely groundbreaking, with significant commercial application, then inventors will want their technology protected in as many potential markets as possible.

Legal Language Services is also well-equipped to assist with all aspects of international litigation that may arise from patent disputes.


Source: http://www.legallanguage.com/legal-articles/china-patents-innovation/

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সোমবার, ১৭ জুন, ২০১৩

Oregon wildfires controlled, but Colorado wildfires only 45 percent contained

Oregon wildfires have been stemmed by better weather and more fire crews, but the Colorado wildfires are still raging. The Colorado wildfires already have destroyed nearly 500 homes.

By P. Solomon Banda,?Associated Press / June 15, 2013

El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa gives a containment update on the Black Forest Fire near Colorado Springs, Colorado, on June 15. Rain and calmer winds helped firefighters tame Colorado's most destructive wildfire on record. Fire managers expect it will take nearly another week to fully corral the blaze, but rain showers and a successful night on the fire lines mark a 'turning point,' says Maketa.

Mark Leffingwell / Reuters

Enlarge

PORTLAND, Ore. and COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.

Wildfire update: Oregon's wildfires have slowed, thanks to better weather and more firefighters, while Colorado firefighters "are getting the upper hand" on the most destructive?wildfire?in state history.

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Colorado officials are beginning to see the grim landscape the?wildfire?has left behind, says?El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa.

In some areas, it looks "like a nuclear bomb went off," said Sherrif Maketa, making it difficult for officials know what used to be homes or other structures.

The fire that exploded Tuesday outside of Colorado Springs has destroyed nearly 500 homes and killed 2 people.?

In Oregon, crews have a handle on the Malheur County?fires?that were caused by lightning and driven by two days of windy weather, said?Mark Wilkening, a spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, on Thursday. He gave credit to the arrival of more firefighters and equipment on Wednesday, shifting and calming winds, and spotty rain.

In Oregon, containment lines have been drawn around more than 60 percent of the fire area.

In Colorado, containment is at 45 percent, and most mandatory evacuation orders have been lifted.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/So7gmtpdJfU/Oregon-wildfires-controlled-but-Colorado-wildfires-only-45-percent-contained

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For Belfast, keeping peace means a city of walls

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) ? When President Obama comes to Belfast, he's expected to praise a country at peace and call for walls that separate Irish Catholics and British Protestants to come tumbling down.

Barely a 10-minute walk from where the U.S. leader is speaking Monday, those walls have kept growing in size and number throughout two decades of slow-blooming peace. Residents today on both sides of so-called "peace lines" ? barricades of brick, steel and barbed wire that divide neighborhoods, roads and even one Belfast playground ? insist the physical divisions must stay to keep violence at bay.

Belfast's first peace lines took shape in the opening salvos of Northern Ireland's conflict in 1969, when impoverished parts of the city suffered an explosion of sectarian mayhem and most Catholics living in chiefly Protestant areas were forced to flee. The British Army, deployed as peacekeepers, erected the first makeshift barricades and naively predicted the barriers would be taken down in months.

Instead, the soldiers' role supporting the mostly Protestant police soon inspired the rise of a ruthless new outlawed group, the Provisional Irish Republican Army, committed to forcing Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom and into the Republic of Ireland.

For all the unlikely triumphs of Northern Ireland diplomacy since the U.S.-brokered 1998 Good Friday peace deal ? a Catholic-Protestant government, troop withdrawals, police reform, and disarmament of the IRA and outlawed Protestant groups responsible for most of the 3,700 death toll ? tearing down Belfast's nearly 100 "peace lines" still seems too dangerous a step to take.

"I'd love to see that wall taken down and I could say hi to my neighbors, but it isn't going to happen. There'd be cold-blooded murder and I'd have to move out," said Donna Turley, 48, smoking a cigarette at her patio table in the Short Strand, the sole Irish Catholic enclave in otherwise Protestant east Belfast.

Right behind Turley's backyard refuge towers a 50-foot (15-meter) wall. It starts as brick, transitions into fences of corrugated iron, and is topped by more steel mesh fence. Each layer marks the history of communal riots like the growth rings of a tree. Higher still, two batteries of rotating police surveillance cameras monitor Turley and her Catholic neighbors, as well as the Protestant strangers living, audibly but invisibly, on the far side.

"It's terrible looking. But I wouldn't feel safe if it wasn't there. I couldn't imagine that wall being torn down. Nobody here can," said Tammy Currie, 21, who is Turley's nearest Protestant neighbor, standing in her own small cement patio backed by the wall. Her 3-year-old son jumps on a trampoline that a few months ago had to be cleared of shattered beer bottles thrown from the other side.

Both families rent state-subsidized homes provided by the Northern Ireland Housing Executive, which is responsible for making their homes as safe as possible from the risk of further rioting. That means both have triple-layered Perspex windows that are foggy-looking and unbreakable, and metal-tiled roofs that can't be set on fire.

It was a lesson hard learned. The Protestants of Cluan Place and the Catholics of Clandeboye Drive used to be able to look, from upper floors, into each other's back yards until 2002, when militants on both sides sought to drive each other out with homemade grenades, Molotov cocktails and even acid-filled bottles. An IRA gunman shot five Protestants, none fatally, while standing atop what was then only a brick wall. Most homes in the area were burned, abandoned and rebuilt, and British Army engineers doubled the height of the wall in 2003. Nobody's been shot there since, even though both sides continue to host illegal paramilitary groups billing themselves as community defenders.

This stretch of wall connects with other security lines that date back to the early days of the modern Northern Ireland conflict in 1970, when IRA men in Short Strand shot to death three Protestants allegedly involved in attacking the district's lone Catholic church. To make it less of an eyesore, Belfast City Council has funded imaginative art works all along that stretch, but it still leaves Short Strand looking a bit like Fort Apache.

Last month, the Catholic and Protestant leaders of Northern Ireland's unity government announced a bold but detail-free plan to dismantle all peace lines by 2023. British Prime Minister David Cameron formally backed the goal Friday. Obama is expected to do the same Monday.

The politician working closest to the Cluan-Clandeboye wall, Michael Copeland, says both G-8 leaders are out of touch.

"Removing the walls would be a catastrophic decision," said Copeland, a former British soldier and a Protestant member of the Northern Ireland Assembly, who keeps his office just around the corner from Cluan Place.

"The biggest walls to be addressed are in the minds of the people. And what people in here remember is being shot at, being bombed, having their street burned," Copeland said while sitting on a Cluan Place bench outside one resident's home. He knows everyone living in all 23 homes on the Protestant side and, in fact, helped get many of them get their housing assignment.

"The walls will come down when the people who live in the shadow of these walls, and look to those walls for a sense of security, can feel secure without them. Memories will have to fade. It will take another generation at least," he said.

The two sides mark their cultural divide in ways petty and profound. Each morning, two sets of children depart in different directions, wearing different uniforms, as Catholics head for their own church-run schools, the Protestants for state-run ones. At night, the two sides usually order fast-food deliveries from their own areas, fearful that someone from "the other side" might spit in their food. They use separate taxi companies and favor different newspapers.

Short Strand's community association has erected house numbers bearing each family's name in Gaelic, the little-used native tongue of Ireland that is loathed by most Protestants.

Reflecting their anxiety that the faster-growing Catholic community wants to push them out, the Protestants of Cluan Place have painted the gable end of one house with a mural featuring a massive Union Jack and a list of attacks on their street since 2002. "Still loyalist, always British, no surrender," it says.

The house opposite Currie's, belonging to an aunt, has a dog strutting about sporting a Union Jack collar, and Ulster loyalist music blaring loudly enough from a stereo to carry to Catholic ears beyond the wall.

Across the divide, 56-year-old Maggie McDowell cocks an ear at the sectarian tune. "Och, him again," she said, identifying her Protestant neighbor not by a name or face she's never known, but by his musical taste. Unlike most living on both sides of this wall, she was here for the 2002 rioting ? and credits the wall's extension with ensuring no repeat.

She and her husband, James, keep a collection of the most interesting objects that have crashed into their house or back garden, including one smooth stone used as a doorstop. He points out holes in their home's brick wall marking strikes from past violence. Golf balls, a favored weapon for both sides, she collects by the bucket to give every so often to her golf-enthusiast brother.

When asked if she'd like the wall to come down, Maggie McDowell said, "It's a terrible thing to say, but I wish they could make it higher."

___

Online:

Maps and data of Belfast peace lines, http://bit.ly/11odl3w

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/belfast-keeping-peace-means-city-walls-005438147.html

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Iran stock market climbs for 2nd day after vote

A supporter of Iranian presidential candidate Hasan Rowhani holds up his poster while celebrating Rowhani's victory, in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, June 15, 2013. Wild celebrations broke out on Tehran streets that were battlefields four years ago as reformist-backed Rowhani capped a stunning surge to claim Iran's presidency on Saturday, throwing open the political order after relentless crackdowns by hard-liners to consolidate and safeguard their grip on power. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

A supporter of Iranian presidential candidate Hasan Rowhani holds up his poster while celebrating Rowhani's victory, in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, June 15, 2013. Wild celebrations broke out on Tehran streets that were battlefields four years ago as reformist-backed Rowhani capped a stunning surge to claim Iran's presidency on Saturday, throwing open the political order after relentless crackdowns by hard-liners to consolidate and safeguard their grip on power. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

A supporter of Iranian presidential candidate Hasan Rowhani holds up a poster of Green Movement leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, who was a candidate in 2009 and is currently under house arrest, while celebrating Rowhani's victory, in Tehran, Iran, Saturday, June 15, 2013. Wild celebrations broke out on Tehran streets that were battlefields four years ago as reformist-backed Rowhani capped a stunning surge to claim Iran's presidency on Saturday, throwing open the political order after relentless crackdowns by hard-liners to consolidate and safeguard their grip on power. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

(AP) ? Iran's stock exchange on Sunday climbed for the second continuous day following the surprise election of a reformist-backed president.

The morning's rise came after a night of a celebration in Tehran, as the announcement of Hasan Rowhani's victory sent tens of thousands of jubilant supporters into the streets. Cars honked and blared music ranging from patriotic songs to the Lambada.

Riot police, who were frequently deployed on Tehran streets in the run-up to Friday's vote, were conspicuous in their absence. State TV showed footage of the celebrations and rebroadcast a speech he made after his victory was announced Saturday, asserting Iran's readiness to improve its ties with the world.

"Now, there is an opportunity in the international scene for those who support democracy to speak to this great nation through respectful and fair language while admitting its rights," Rowhani said.

Sanctions imposed on Iran by West over its suspect nuclear program have devastated the economy. The West suspects Iran is pursuing weapons technology, a charge Iran denies.

The website of the Tehran Stock Exchange said the market jumped 837 points by mid-morning Sunday, reaching 47,460 from its Saturday close of 46,623, almost a 1.8 percent increase.

On Saturday the stock exchange index improved by 2 percent while Iran's national currency, the rial, strengthened by 9 percent against the U.S. dollar.

Foreign currency shops Sunday traded each U.S. dollar for 34,200 rials compared to 36,300 rials Thursday, the eve of the election.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-16-Iran/id-855d42705da3444bbd803ab7f070dd21

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