Friday, May 31, 2013

Comet ISON is hurtling toward uncertain destiny with Sun

May 30, 2013 ? A new series of images from Gemini Observatory shows Comet C/2012 S1 (ISON) racing toward an uncomfortably close rendezvous with the Sun. In late November the comet could present a stunning sight in the twilight sky and remain easily visible, or even brilliant, into early December of this year.

The time-sequence images, spanning early February through May 2013, show the comet's remarkable activity despite its current great distance from the Sun and Earth. The information gleaned from the series provides vital clues as to the comet's overall behavior and potential to present a spectacular show. However, it's anyone's guess if the comet has the "right stuff" to survive its extremely close brush with the Sun at the end of November and become an early morning spectacle from Earth in early December 2013.

When Gemini obtained this time sequence, the comet ranged between roughly 455-360 million miles (730-580 million kilometers; or 4.9-3.9 astronomical units) from the Sun, or just inside the orbital distance of Jupiter. Each image in the series, taken with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at the Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawai'i, shows the comet in the far red part of the optical spectrum, which emphasizes the comet's dusty material already escaping from what astronomers describe as a "dirty snowball." Note: The final image in the sequence, obtained in early May, consists of three images, including data from other parts of the optical spectrum, to produce a color composite image."

The images show the comet sporting a well-defined parabolic hood in the sunward direction that tapers into a short and stubby tail pointing away from the Sun. These features form when dust and gas escape from the comet's icy nucleus and surround that main body to form a relatively extensive atmosphere called a coma. Solar wind and radiation pressure push the coma's material away from the Sun to form the comet's tail, which we see here at a slight angle (thus its stubby appearance).

Discovered in September 2012 by two Russian amateur astronomers, Comet ISON is likely making its first passage into the inner Solar System from what is called the Oort Cloud, a region deep in the recesses of our Solar System, where comets and icy bodies dwell. Historically, comets making a first go-around the Sun exhibit strong activity as they near the inner Solar System, but they often fizzle as they get closer to the Sun.

Sizing up Comet ISON

Astronomer Karen Meech, at the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy (IfA) in Honolulu, is currently working on preliminary analysis of the new Gemini data (as well as other observations from around the world) and notes that the comet's activity has been decreasing somewhat over the past month.

"Early analysis of our models shows that ISON's brightness through April can be reproduced by outgassing from either carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide. The current decrease may be because this comet is coming close to the Sun for the first time, and a "volatile frosting" of ice may be coming off revealing a less active layer beneath. It is just now getting close enough to the Sun where water will erupt from the nucleus revealing ISON's inner secrets," says Meech.

"Comets may not be completely uniform in their makeup and there may be outbursts of activity as fresh material is uncovered," adds IfA astronomer Jacqueline Keane. "Our team, as well as astronomers from around the world, will be anxiously observing the development of this comet into next year, especially if it gets torn asunder, and reveals its icy interior during its exceptionally close passage to the Sun in late November."

NASA's Swift satellite and the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) have also imaged Comet ISON recently in this region of space. Swift's ultraviolet observations determined that the comet's main body was spewing some 850 tons of dust per second at the beginning of the year, leading astronomers to estimate the comet's nucleus diameter is some 3-4 miles (5-6 kilometers). HST scientists concurred with that size estimate, adding that the comet's coma measures about 3100 miles (5000 km) across.

The comet gets brighter as the outgassing increases and pushes more dust from the surface of the comet. Scientists are using the comet's brightness, along with information about the size of the nucleus and measurements of the production of gas and dust, to understand the composition of the ices that control the activity. Most comets brighten significantly and develop a noticeable tail at about the distance of the asteroid belt (about 3 times the Earth-Sun distance -- between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter) because this is when the warming rays of the Sun can convert the water ice inside the comet into a gas. This comet was bright and active outside the orbit of Jupiter -- when it was twice as far from the Sun. This meant that some gas other than water was controlling the activity.

Meech concludes that Comet ISON "?could still become spectacularly bright as it gets very close to the Sun" but she cautions, "I'd be remiss, if I didn't add that it's still too early to predict what's going to happen with ISON since comets are notoriously unpredictable."

A Close Encounter

On November 28, 2013, Comet ISON will make one of the closest passes ever recorded as a comet grazes the Sun, penetrating our star's million-degree outer atmosphere, called the corona, and moving to within 800,000 miles (1.3 million km) of the Sun's surface. Shortly before that critical passage, the comet may appear bright enough for expert observers using proper care to see it close to the Sun in daylight.

What happens after that no one knows for sure. But if Comet ISON survives that close encounter, the comet may appear in our morning sky before dawn in early December and become one of the greatest comets in the last 50 years or more. Even if the comet completely disintegrates, skywatchers shouldn't lose hope. When Comet C/2011 W3 (Lovejoy) plunged into the Sun's corona in December 2011, its nucleus totally disintegrated into tiny bits of ice and dust, yet it still put on a glorious show after that event.

The question remains, are we in for such a show?

Comet ISON: The View from the North and South

Regardless of whether Comet ISON becomes the "Comet of the Century," as some speculate, it will likely be a nice naked-eye and/or binocular wonder from both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres in the weeks leading up to its close approach with the Sun.

By late October, the comet should be visible through binoculars as a fuzzy glow in the eastern sky before sunrise, in the far southeastern part of the constellation of Leo. By early November, the comet should be a much finer binocular object. It will steadily brighten as it drifts ever faster, night by night, through southern Virgo, passing close to the bright star Spica. It is during the last half of the month that observations will be most important, as the comet edges into Libra and the dawn, where it will brighten to naked-eye visibility and perhaps sport an obvious tail.

The comet reaches perihelion (the closest point in its orbit to the Sun) on November 28th, when it will also attain its maximum brightness, and perhaps be visible in the daytime. If Comet ISON survives perihelion, it will swing around the Sun and appear as both an early morning and early evening object from the Northern Hemisphere. The situation is less favorable from the Southern Hemisphere, as the comet will set before the Sun in the evening and rise with the Sun in the morning.

By December 10th, and given that everything goes well, Comet ISON may be a fine spectacle in the early morning sky as viewed from the Northern Hemisphere. Under dark skies, it may sport a long tail stretching straight up from the eastern horizon, from the constellations of Ophiuchus to Ursa Major. The comet will also be visible in the evening sky during this time but with its tail appearing angled and closer to the horizon.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/s2BF2WQWkTQ/130530111307.htm

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Would-be Chicago backpack bomber gets 23 years

CHICAGO (AP) ? A judge raised the specter of the Boston Marathon on Thursday as he sentenced a young Lebanese immigrant to 23 years in prison for placing a backpack he believed contained a powerful bomb along a bustling city street near the Chicago Cubs' baseball stadium.

Everyone at Sami Samir Hassoun's sentencing in a crowded courtroom in Chicago could not help but think of the bombs that went off a month ago concealed in backpacks on the East Coast, killing three people and wounding hundreds more, U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman said.

"Let's give the elephant in the room a name: It's called the Boston Marathon," he said. "What would have happened had (Hassoun's) bomb been real would have made Boston look like a minor incident."

Earlier, prosecutor Joel Hammerman held up the ominous-looking but harmless device fashioned from a paint can that Hassoun put in a trash bin near Wrigley Field, placing it in front of the judge. Hassoun was told by undercover FBI agents, the prosecutor said, that it would destroy half the city block and kill dozens of people.

Minutes before the sentence was announced, Hassoun, a 25-year-old one-time Chicago baker and candy-store worker, apologized for what he'd done in a five-minute statement. Crying, he asked the judge if he could address his family and friends, and then turned to look at them on a nearby bench.

"I am sorry for the actions that I made and the shame I brought on you," Hassoun said, struggling to keep his composure. "I promise I will become a better person ... and make it up to you."

His mother sobbed aloud and when Hassoun finished, she said in an audible voice to her son, "I love you!"

Gettleman said he accepted the defense depiction of Hassoun as a uniquely gullible youth and that an informant may have been eager to please his FBI handlers by leading him on ? though the judge said that was no excuse for Hassoun's crime.

During the hearing, prosecutors played secret video recordings of Hassoun during the sting in which he talks about killing people. He explains that one reason to stage the attack along bar-strewn Clark Street is that late-night revelers will be so drunk they wouldn't notice him dropping a bomb into the trash bin.

In another chilling video shown in court, Hassoun smiles and hums a tune to himself on the night of Saturday, Sept. 18, 2010 ? moments before heading off to what he thought would be a major terrorist attack.

"You feel good?" an undercover agent asks.

"Yeah, I'm (doing) great man," Hassoun responds.

In another video, Hassoun rambles incoherently about then-Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley and the need to overthrow him in a revolution.

"When you see Mr. Hassoun on these tapes, all you can think of is that ? this guy is really out to lunch," Gettleman said before turning to look at Hassoun. "I don't know what was going through your mind ? and maybe you didn't know either."

Prosecutors also played a surveillance video of Hassoun, wearing a black hoodie, dropping the device into a trash bin at about 12:20 a.m. on Sept. 19, 2010 ? while people crowded the sidewalk and music blared from area bars. FBI agents arrested him moments later.

As part of an agreement with the government, Hassoun pleaded guilty last year to two explosives counts. In return, he faced a sentencing range of 20 to 30 years, rather than a maximum term of life in prison.

One of Hassoun's attorneys, Alison Siegler, argued in court Thursday that the difference between two decades and three decades behind bars was enormous ? and that a sentence of around 20 years would give Hassoun the chance to start a family, to go to school and see his parents as a free man again.

After court adjourned, Hassoun appeared to express relief as he smiled and hugged his attorney.

Before Thursday's sentencing, Hassoun also apologized in a seven-page letter to Gettleman. He also insisted he's worked hard at becoming a better person, including by doing yoga in jail.

The Beirut-born Hassoun blamed his actions in part on childhood trauma living in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. During civil strife there, Hassoun, then 11, witnessed machete killings from an apartment balcony, he wrote.

His family moved from Lebanon to the U.S. in 2008.

To dampen his lingering emotional pain, he wrote that he drank alcohol "all day, every day" for months before the would-be stadium attack in 2010. He favored whole bottles of Johnnie Walker Black, he wrote.

The defense suggested investigators may have come close to entrapping Hassoun, arguing the informant egged Hassoun on to acquiesce to ever-more ominous-sounding plots.

"(The informant) preyed on Sami's fantasies ... and agents helped make that fantasy come true," another of Hassoun's attorney's, Matthew Madden, told the court Thursday. "If left to his own devices, nobody would ever have heard of Sami Hassoun."

Prone to boasting and eager to impress, Hassoun even made absurd claims he could make a gun out of two pieces of wood and a spring, and a bomb out of baking soda, Madden said.

But so inept was Hassoun, he bought a backpack, walkie-talkies and some batteries agents asked him to buy and the FBI then incorporated it into the dud bomb fashioned at its lab in Quantico, Va., he added.

Prosecutors concede Hassoun did waffle about his plans, allegedly talking about profiting monetarily and then broaching the idea of poisoning Lake Michigan or assassinating Daley.

But prosecutors say Hassoun himself concluded that maximum damage could be inflicted by a blast next to the popular Sluggers World Class Sports Bar, just steps from Wrigley Field.

Undercover agents also repeatedly asked Hassoun if he wanted to back out, telling him there would be no shame in doing so. But he repeatedly declined, saying he wanted to press ahead," Hammerman told the court Thursday.

"It was his understanding that in 15 minutes (after placing the backpack in the bin), there would be death and carnage all over Clark Street," the prosecutor said.

___

Follow Michael Tarm at www.twitter.com/mtarm

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chicago-backpack-bomber-gets-23-years-215440754.html

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AP sources: Obama preparing to name Comey to FBI

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2004 file photo, Deputy Attorney General James Comey gestures during a news conference in Washington. President Barack Obama is preparing to nominate former Bush administration official James Comey to head the FBI, people familiar with the decision said Wednesday, May 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2004 file photo, Deputy Attorney General James Comey gestures during a news conference in Washington. President Barack Obama is preparing to nominate former Bush administration official James Comey to head the FBI, people familiar with the decision said Wednesday, May 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is preparing to nominate former Bush administration official James Comey to head the FBI, people familiar with the decision said Wednesday.

Three people with knowledge of the selection said Obama planned to nominate Comey, who was the No. 2 in President George W. Bush's Justice Department. The three people spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the selection ahead of Obama's announcement, which was not expected immediately.

Comey became a hero to Democratic opponents of Bush's warrantless wiretapping program when Comey refused for a time to reauthorize it. Bush revised the surveillance program when confronted with the threat of resignation by Comey and current FBI Director Robert Mueller, who is stepping down in September.

Comey's selection was first reported by NPR and was not expected to be announced for several days at least. Senate confirmation will be needed.

The change in leadership comes as the FBI and Justice Department are under scrutiny for their handing of several investigations. Obama has ordered a review of FBI investigations into leaks to reporters, including the secret gathering of Associated Press phone records and emails of a Fox News reporter. And there have been questions raised about whether the FBI properly responded to warnings from Russian authorities about a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings. The agency, meanwhile, is conducting a highly-anticipated investigation into the Internal Revenue Service over its handling of conservative groups seeking tax exempt status.

Comey was deputy attorney general in 2005 when he unsuccessfully tried to limit tough interrogation tactics against suspected terrorists. He told then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales that some of the practices were wrong and would damage the department's reputation.

Some Democrats denounced those methods as torture, particularly the use of waterboarding, which produces the same sensation as drowning.

Earlier in his career, Comey served as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, one of the nation's most prominent prosecutorial offices and one at the front lines of terrorism, corporate malfeasance, organized crime and the war on drugs.

As an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia, Comey handled the investigation of the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers housing complex near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, that killed 19 U.S. military personnel.

Comey led the Justice Department's corporate fraud task force and spurred the creation of violent crime impact teams in 20 cities, focusing on crimes committed with guns.

Comey was at the center of one of the Bush administration's great controversies ? an episode that focused attention on the administration's controversial tactics in the war on terror.

In stunning testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2007, Comey said he thought Bush's no-warrant wiretapping program was so questionable that Comey refused for a time to reauthorize it, leading to a standoff with White House officials at the bedside of ailing Attorney General John Ashcroft.

Comey said he refused to recertify the program because Ashcroft had reservations about its legality.

Senior government officials had expressed concerns about whether the National Security Agency, which administered the warrantless eavesdropping program, had the proper oversight in place. Other concerns included whether any president possessed the legal and constitutional authority to authorize the program as it was carried out at the time.

The White House, Comey said, recertified the program without the Justice Department's signoff, allowing it to operate for about three weeks without concurrence on whether it was legal. Comey, Ashcroft, Mueller and other Justice Department officials at one point considered resigning, Comey said.

"I couldn't stay if the administration was going to engage in conduct that the Department of Justice had said had no legal basis," Comey told the Senate panel.

A day after the March 10, 2004, incident at Ashcroft's hospital bedside, Bush ordered changes to the program to accommodate the department's concerns. Ashcroft signed the presidential order to recertify the program about three weeks later.

The dramatic hospital confrontation involved Comey, who was the acting attorney general during Ashcroft's absence, and a White House team that included Bush's then-counsel, Alberto Gonzales, and White House chief of staff Andy Card, Comey said. Gonzales later succeeded Ashcroft as attorney general.

Comey testified that when he refused to certify the program, Gonzales and Card headed to Ashcroft's sick bed in the intensive care unit at George Washington University Hospital.

When Gonzales appealed to Ashcroft, the ailing attorney general lifted his head off the pillow and in straightforward terms described his views of the program, Comey said. Then he pointed out that Comey, not Ashcroft, held the powers of the attorney general at that moment.

Gonzales and Card then left the hospital room, Comey said.

"I was angry," Comey told the panel. "I thought I had just witnessed an effort to take advantage of a very sick man who did not have the powers of the attorney general."

___

Associated Press Writer Pete Yost contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at https://twitter.com/nedrapickler

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-29-US-Obama-FBI/id-905944ca5f2747cf94a536571e6d8721

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Failed Long-Shot Presidential Candidates Like Michele Bachmann Tend to Disappear

Do you remember Jim Gilmore? Probably not. Failed dark-horse presidential candidates don?t usually make much of an imprint on the nation?s memory. But that doesn?t mean they ceased to exist the day they leave a race. So, what exactly happens to someone?like Rep. Michele Bachmann?once they leave the back corner of the national stage? A lot of the time, their whole political career unfurls, or they seek more-lucrative careers in the private sector. See below for recent examples:

?

Former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore answers questions on his blog after formally announcing his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination in 2007 in Des Moines, Iowa.?(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Jim Gilmore

Who? Former governor of Virginia who ran in the 2008 Republican primaries.

Highlight of his campaign: Announcing his candidacy via webcast. "This is going to be something unique in American politics and something I think is the wave of the future, which is the chance to talk directly to the people as we develop the campaign through the Internet," Gilmore told The Washington Post at the time. While he was right about the power of Internet outreach, he was vastly wrong about his prospects for the executive.

Lowlight: Coining the term "Rudy McRomney" to describe Rudy Giuliani, John McCain, and Mitt Romney, the Republican front-runners.

What happened to him: After backing out of the presidential race, Gilmore decided to run for the Senate in Virginia. He lost to Mark Warner, 65 percent to 34 percent.


(AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Chris Dodd

Who??Senior senator from Connecticut who ran in the 2008 Democratic primaries.

Highlight of his campaign:?Appearing on the Daily Show, and comparing the presidential race to then-relevant TV show American Idol.

Lowlight: Receiving 0 percent of the vote in the Iowa Caucus.

What happened to him: He?s not doing all that bad, actually. In 2011 he left the Senate to become the chief lobbyist at the Motion Picture Association of America, effectively increasing his salary eightfold.


Republican presidential hopeful Bob Dornan?announces it is 12:01 p.m. and time to announce his presidential bid at the birthplace of the Republican Party in Exeter, N.H., in 1995.?(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Bob Dornan

Who??Actor-turned-congressman from California who ran in the 1996 Republican primary. (He once punched a fellow congressman on the House floor.)

Highlight of his campaign: Insisting on showing a photo of a grandchild during a television debate.

Lowlight: This didn?t happen during his run for presidency, but in 1986, as a House member, he did call a Soviet television commentator a ?disloyal, betraying little Jew who sits there on television claiming that he is somehow or other a newsman.'' He apologized, saying it was inelegant phrasing, but that type of talk tends to stick with a person.

What happened to him: After failing in the presidential bid, he lost his congressional seat to a Democrat, Loretta Sanchez. He said she won because of votes from undocumented residents. He tried again for Congress in 1998 and 2004.


Republican presidential hopeful Alan Keyes, a conservative commentator, gestures during the Des Moines Register Republican presidential debate in Johnston, Iowa, in 2007. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)?

Alan Keyes

Who??A Reagan-era ambassador to the United Nations who ran for president in 1996, 2000, and 2008. We?ll focus on the 2008 run here.

Highlight of his campaign: Interrupting a debate moderator for not calling on him enough to answer questions, saying, ?Excuse me, do I have to raise my hand to get a question??

Lowlight: Winning four delegates for the nominating convention. (Hey, it?s better than zero.)

What happened to him: He parted with the Republican Party in April 2008, after losing the nomination. He later joined the ?birther? movement, filing a lawsuit challenging Barack Obama's citizenship.


Former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson starts his New Hampshire campaign for president at a house party in Manchester, N.H., in April 2007. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)?

Tommy Thompson

Who??The 42nd governor from Wisconsin serving from 1987 to 2001, and Republican presidential candidate in 2008.

Highlight of his campaign: In a campaign marked by gaffes and low expectations, he had few?highlights. He did win a little-known straw poll at the Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. But, he came in sixth at the Ames Straw Poll, and shortly thereafter dropped out.

Lowlight: In a 2007 presidential debate, moderator Chris Matthews asked Thompson whether a private employer should have the right to fire a worker for being gay. Thompson responded saying that it should be ?left up to the individual business.? He called back to CNN a day later to say that he hadn?t heard the question correctly and that no, there should not be discrimination in the workplace.

What happened to him: Thompson was the Republican nominee in 2012 for the Wisconsin Senate seat, but he lost to Tammy Baldwin.


Republican president candidate Arlen Specter, R-Pa., signs autographs during a campaign visit in Exeter, N.H., in 1995.?(AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Arlen Specter

Who??Senator from Pennsylvania for 30 years, mostly as a Republican, but finished as a Democrat.

Highlight of his campaign: Though not expected to win, Specter made a splash with his presidential announcement speech, in which he criticized the far right of his party. Example: ?When Ralph Reed says a pro-choice Republican isn't qualified to be our president--I say the Republican Party will not be blackmailed. I and millions of other pro-choice Republicans--will not be disenfranchised.?

Lowlight: By attacking the Far Right, Specter foreshadowed the type of dissatisfaction that would cause him to become a Democrat in 2009 after 44 years as an elected Republican.

What happened to him: Specter?s political career lasted for a long time after his presidential run, winning Senate elections in 2006 and 2010. Due to complications from non-Hodgkins lymphoma, he died in October 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/failed-long-shot-presidential-candidates-michele-bachmann-tend-130937801.html

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Is Venezuela's opposition TV channel bowing to government pressure?

A spate of journalist firings and resignations at the traditionally opposition station Globovisi?n has some worried that the opposition has lost its voice in the media landscape.

By Hugo P?rez Hern?iz,?WOLA, David Smilde,?WOLA / May 30, 2013

Screens are seen at the master room of Venezuela's opposition TV station Glob?vision in Caracas, Tuesday.

Jorge Silva/Reuters

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??David Smilde is the moderator of WOLA's blog:?Venezuelan Politics and Human Rights.?The views expressed are the author's own.

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What originally appeared as a visible but subtle change of direction at Venezuelan television station Glovovisi?n has in the last two weeks become a raucous turning point with multiple journalists being fired or resigning. The turmoil leaves Globovisi?n?s role as an opposition outlet in doubt and appears to represent a new extension of the Venezuelan government?s control over broadcast media.

Following Guillermo Zuloaga?s announcement in March that he had agreed in principle to the sale of Globovisi?n it was finally acquired at the beginning of May by a business group rumored to have ties with the Government.

The announcement of the hiring of journalists Vladimir Villegas and Leopoldo Castillo as station directors generated considerable optimism about the new Globovisi?n and its independence. However on May 13, after a meeting with the new owners, Mr. Villegas surprisingly announced on Twitter that he would not be accepting the position after all. He commented that ?we didn?t reach agreement on programming nor on what my competencies would be.??

One of the new owners, Juan Domingo Cordero, declared on May 16 that there had been disagreements in the meeting with Villegas over the general direction the business should follow, but he assured that there would be no changes in the channel and that all the journalists would keep their jobs: ?All the news anchors are staying, there won't be any changes here.?

However events have unfolded quite differently.

On May 22, President Nicol?s Maduro met with two of the new owners of the Channel, Ra?l Corr?n and Gustavo Perdomo, in Miraflores. The meeting was qualified by the business men as ?cordial? and they declared that they had told President Maduro that Globovisi?n would contribute to ?the decrease in the levels of violence in the country.? Information Minister Jorge Arreaza, also present in the meeting, revealed that Maduro had insisted on the need for ?generating television content with transcendent values for the future of the children and the need to struggle against fascism, which is a threat to society in any part of the world.?

Only two days after that meeting with the government, Globovisi?n confirmed rumors that Ismael Garc?a (opposition National Assembly representative and responsible for making public the Mario Silva audio) would leave his morning opinion program ?Al? Venezuela.? The program will still be aired with co-host Delvalle Canel?n but without Mr. Garc?a. The statement explained that the policy of the channel was not to air programs hosted by candidates for political office, and since Garc?a would be a candidate for Mayor of Caracas in the upcoming municipal elections, the channel had asked him to leave the program. In Venezuela it is common for elected leaders and candidates for office to simultaneously work as broadcast journalists.

The next day the channel also announced that the popular late night host of the show ?Good Night,? Francisco Bautista ?Kiko,? would leave Globovisi?n. On the same night of the 26th Henrique Capriles tweeted several times about Globovisi?n. He expressed solidarity with the workers of the channel and claimed that the new owners had given express orders not to provide live coverage of his speeches and declarations.

On Monday the 27th, news anchor Pedro Luis Flores, and ?Buenas Noches? cohost Carla Angola announced they had quit Globovisi?n in solidarity with Kiko. The Globovisi?n web page announced the reporters where leaving the channel on ?the best of terms.? That same day Globovisi?n published a statement on its web page reaffirming that the exit of Garc?a had been on friendly terms and that Kiko had made misinformed declarations on the matter. The statement denies the existence of a ?list of professionals? that will be fired, and ends with the assertion that ?media outlets are not political parties.?

That same afternoon, reporter Leopoldo Castillo (popular host of the show ?Al? Ciudadano? and now temporary director of Globovisi?n), in a statement aired by Globovisi?n declared that there had been misunderstandings recently and that he would do everything in his power to keep the channel?s personnel ?united,? but if that was not possible, he would simply leave. He also asked his fellow reporters to ?not respond emotionally? and impulsively. He added that if he discovered recent events in the channel where part of a ?systematic policy, which up to date I have not uncovered, you can be sure that I will speak out.? (The video can be seen here.)

That same night Kiko declared to CNN en Espa?ol that his meeting with the new owners of the channel had been ?very aggressive?, and that they had ?used the same arguments that the oficialismo [government] uses to attack me. They told me that the channel had been used as a political party and was responsible for what had happened in the country. They told me that I used slander and that I made fun of people.? He also denounced that the day Ismael Garc?a had made public the Mario Silva audio, in several occasions they had tried to take it off the air ?and then that night at news hour, when that information was given, the reporter that wrote the note said that it had been edited. They took out the parts where Diosdado Cabello was named.?

In a press conference, Kiko reiterated that the new board of directors is exercising censorship in line with the Government. He also declared that during his last meeting with the new directors, they had offered to buy the name of the show ?Buenas Noches,? which Kiko owns, but that he had refused.

On Tuesday May 28?Maduro declared that the problem with Globovisi?n is not disagreements over a supposed change of editorial line but a fight between different factions of the ?right? for control of the channel: ?They are dealing with a huge problem among themselves?In the end they are the ones that are destroying the TV channel that the fascist right used to poison the country: Globovisi?n.?

The Globovisi?n official twitter account has suffered an ?unfollow? campaign by opposition followers unhappy with what they perceive is a change in the editorial line of the channel. According to Noticias 24, the account had 2,732,394 followers on Sunday 26th. At the time of writing this post the account has 2,349,779 followers.

? ?David Smilde is the moderator of WOLA's blog:?Venezuelan Politics and Human Rights.?

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of Latin America bloggers. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/TKDyx1V_Suk/Is-Venezuela-s-opposition-TV-channel-bowing-to-government-pressure

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Busbud, The Kayak For Intercity Bus Travel, Raises $1M Round Led By iNovia Capital And Real Ventures

busbud_logoCanadian startup Busbud, which bills itself as the "Kayak for intercity bus travel," today announced that it has raised a first $1 million funding round led by iNovia Capital and Real Ventures. Peter Kern, an Expedia board member and managing partner of private equity firm InterMedia Partners, as well as Luxury Retreats CEO Joe Poulin also participated in this round. iNovia Capital's David Nault and Real Venture's JS Cournoyer will join Busbud's board.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/hdiksvxq69I/

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Women donate less to charity than men in some contexts

May 28, 2013 ? Given the chance, women are more likely than men to opt out of a request to give a charitable donation, a group of economists have found.

The issue of which gender is more generous has been debated for years. A new field experiment conducted by scholars at the University of Chicago and University of California, Berkeley shows that when it's easy to avoid making a donation, such as not responding to a door-to-door solicitor, women are less likely than men to give.

The results of the study are published in the article, "The Importance of Being Marginal: Gender Differences in Generosity," in the May issue of the American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings.

The study tested people's motivations to give, whether they responded to social pressure or from an attitude of altruism, said John List, a UChicago economist and expert of philanthropy.

In the study, researchers visited neighborhoods to raise money for a local children's hospital and an out-of-state environmental organization. In one part of the study, visits were unannounced. In two other parts of the study, people received fliers -- either announcing the solicitation the following day or giving people an opportunity to opt-out of the request for funds.

"The simple flier lowers the share of people answering the door, relative to the people who did not have warning of the visit, but it does not affect the share of people giving," said List, the Homer J. Livingston Professor in Economics.

"The opt-out option lowers both the share of people answering the door and the share of individuals giving," he said. The drop in women's giving largely drives this change, List explained.

About three percent of women and men gave money when the visit was unannounced. When allowed to opt-out, men's giving dropped slightly, while women's giving fell to about half of the level of previous giving.

When the scholars looked over other data in the study to determine gender-specific altruism distributions, they found that women were more likely at the margin of giving to a charitable cause, and therefore more likely to opt-out if they had a chance.

"We need more study on this issue, but it could be that women are more sensitive to social cues than are men, and that is why they are more likely to give in situations where they don't have an easy way to avoid a donation, such as when they are asked for a donation face-to-face," List said.

The researchers also considered the impact of people's apprehension, particularly among women, to opening the door to a stranger, List said. "We found that in an unannounced visit, women are just as likely to open the door and give as men," he said. If security were a particularly strong concern among women, the gender differences would have appeared among the people who were contacted unannounced, he said.

Other authors of the study are Stefano DellaVigna and Ulrike Malmendier, both professors of economics at the University of California, Berkeley; and Gautam Rao, a graduate student in economics at the University of California, Berkeley.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/consumer_behavior/~3/ZKGSk2QfPGA/130528160955.htm

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Human scabs serve as inspiration for new bandage to speed healing

Human scabs serve as inspiration for new bandage to speed healing [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-May-2013
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Contact: Michael Bernstein
m_bernstein@acs.org
202-872-6042
American Chemical Society

Human scabs have become the model for development of an advanced wound dressing material that shows promise for speeding the healing process, scientists are reporting. Their study appears in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

Shutao Wang and colleagues explain that scabs are a perfect natural dressing material for wounds. In addition to preventing further bleeding, scabs protect against infection and recruit the new cells needed for healing. Existing bandages and other dressings for wounds generally are intended to prevent bleeding and infections. Wang's team set out to develop a new generation of wound dressings that reduce the risk of infections while speeding the healing process.

They describe how research on the surface structure of natural scabs served as inspiration for developing a "cytophilic" wound dressing material. It attracts new cells needed for healing. The material mimics the underside of scabs, where tiny fibers are arranged in the same direction like velvet or a cat's fur. Wang's team spun fibers of polyurethane the common durable and flexible plastic into the same pattern. In laboratory experiments, the human cells involved in healing quickly attached to the membrane and lined up like those in actual scabs. The scientists conclude that this membrane "is of great potential in fabricating dressing materials for rapid wound healing, as well as other biomaterials, such as membrane for capturing circulating tumor cells, bone growth and constructing neural networks."

###

The authors acknowledge funding from the National Research Fund for Fundamental Key Projects, the National Natural Science Foundation, the Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation.

The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more than 163,000 members, ACS is the world's largest scientific society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical Society, contact newsroom@acs.org.

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Human scabs serve as inspiration for new bandage to speed healing [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Michael Bernstein
m_bernstein@acs.org
202-872-6042
American Chemical Society

Human scabs have become the model for development of an advanced wound dressing material that shows promise for speeding the healing process, scientists are reporting. Their study appears in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

Shutao Wang and colleagues explain that scabs are a perfect natural dressing material for wounds. In addition to preventing further bleeding, scabs protect against infection and recruit the new cells needed for healing. Existing bandages and other dressings for wounds generally are intended to prevent bleeding and infections. Wang's team set out to develop a new generation of wound dressings that reduce the risk of infections while speeding the healing process.

They describe how research on the surface structure of natural scabs served as inspiration for developing a "cytophilic" wound dressing material. It attracts new cells needed for healing. The material mimics the underside of scabs, where tiny fibers are arranged in the same direction like velvet or a cat's fur. Wang's team spun fibers of polyurethane the common durable and flexible plastic into the same pattern. In laboratory experiments, the human cells involved in healing quickly attached to the membrane and lined up like those in actual scabs. The scientists conclude that this membrane "is of great potential in fabricating dressing materials for rapid wound healing, as well as other biomaterials, such as membrane for capturing circulating tumor cells, bone growth and constructing neural networks."

###

The authors acknowledge funding from the National Research Fund for Fundamental Key Projects, the National Natural Science Foundation, the Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation.

The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more than 163,000 members, ACS is the world's largest scientific society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical Society, contact newsroom@acs.org.

Follow us: Twitter Facebook


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/acs-hss052913.php

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Nation honors veterans on Memorial Day

U.S. President Barack Obama (R) stands for the national anthem with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff U.S. Army General Martin Dempsey (L) and U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel (C) as he takes ... more?U.S. President Barack Obama (R) stands for the national anthem with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff U.S. Army General Martin Dempsey (L) and U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel (C) as he takes the stage for remarks at the Memorial Day observances at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, May 27, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS MILITARY) less?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lightbox/nation-honors-memorial-day-slideshow/

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

9 TV shows to watch this summer

TV

14 hours ago

Image: "Dexter," "Breaking Bad," "AGT," "Futurama"

Showtime / AMC / NBC / Comedy Ce

Jennifer Carpenter on "Dexter," Bryan Cranston on "Breaking Bad," Howard Stern on "America's Got Talent" and Leela on "Futurama."

The sun is shining. The birds are chirping. The thermostat is rising. And the TV is on.

Yes, it really is. That's because unlike the days of yore, summer television now is jam-packed with fantastic offerings so viewers can enjoy the AC from the comfort of their couches. And we're not talking about just a few quality shows available once or twice a week -- there's something for everyone every single night, and then some.

The list of all the shows with summer premiere dates -- from returning favorites to newbies -- is quite daunting, so we've taken the liberty of picking out some of the most promising. Now go set your DVRs.

'Arrested Development'
Premiered May 26 on Netflix

Some call it one of the greatest sitcoms ever made. Everyone else? Well, maybe they never watched "Arrested Development" because, frankly, it's tough to argue with that hype. After a seven-year hiatus, the cult-favorite series returned Sunday. Finally fans can find out the latest on the gloriously dysfunctional Bluth bunch. Is Lucille still subsiding on vodka tonics? Is everyone's favorite "never nude" still never nude? And just what tricks does Gob have up his sleeves now? (Please be pennies!) The long wait is over.

'The Killing'
Premieres Sunday, June 2 on AMC

?What is dead may never die.? Oh, wait! Wrong show! But the saying fits the AMC drama. The show was canceled after its second season, but the decision was reversed in January. The story will pick up a year after the season two finale (yes, Rosie?s killer was finally revealed, and Linden quit her job), with Holder working on a case that appears to have ties to an old investigation Linden had worked on.

'America's Got Talent'
Premieres Tuesday, June 4 on NBC

Dog acts and sword swallowers and jugglers -- oh my! "America's Got Talent" stands out in a reality TV landscape packed with singing competitions. Sure, singers can and do make a big impression on "AGT," but so do ventriloquists and, well, other oddities. Last season, judge Howard Stern gave viewers a new reason to watch. This time around? With Mel B and Heidi Klum added to the mix, the panel might just upstage the on-stage talent.

'True Blood'
Premieres Sunday, June 16 on HBO

Forget sunshine, lemonade and beach days! It's time to bring on the vampires, shifters and were-things. For fans of the show, "True Blood" is the real highlight of summer. And this summer, the Bon Temps-based action promises to get bloodier and broodier than ever before. Last season's big baddie -- the spiritual remains of goddess-like proto-vamp Lilith -- was reborn when Bill drank the last bit of holy blood. Now Billith is the one Sookie and pals will have to reckon with.

'Futurama'
Premieres Wednesday, June 19 on Comedy Central

Created by "The Simpsons" mastermind, Matt Groening, "Futurama" never enjoyed the megahit status of its sibling series. Instead, the animated sci-fi show relied on a devoted band of fans and loads of critical acclaim to keep it on the air. It survived one cancellation and a network switcheroo already, but, barring another small-screen miracle, the laughs will come to an end soon. That's reason enough to be sure to catch the next adventures of Fry, Leela and the finest drunk robot this side of the Andromeda Galaxy.

'Under the Dome'
Premieres Monday, June 24 on CBS

Is your ideal beach read a Stephen King novel? Then you?re in luck. The horror writer?s bestseller ?Under the Dome? is coming to your television screen this summer. The 13-episode drama explores how the inhabitants of a small town cope after a dome is suddenly lowered over their burg, cutting them off from the rest of the world. The show stars ?Breaking Bad?s? Dean Norris, ?Twilight?s? Rachel Lefevre, Mike Vogel and more.

'Dexter'
Premieres Sunday, June 30 on Showtime

This is it, ?Dexter? fans, the end of the vigilante killer?s saga on the small screen, and it looks like the final season?s going to be a doozy. Deb?s goes into self-destruct mode after offing LaGuerta in the season seven finale, which could spell trouble for everyone?s favorite good bad guy. Then there?s also the little issue of one Dr. Evelyn Vogel, an expert on the brains of psychopaths, who steps in to help the police capture the latest serial killer -- and maybe Dexter himself. On top of all that, Dex?s love, the deadly Hannah McKay, will be back. Will he be able to make it through the summer alive and free? Tune in and see!

'Here Comes Honey Boo Boo'
Premieres July 17 on TLC

They're baaa-aaack! Or at least they will be soon. Honey Boo Boo, Mama June, Sugar Bear and the rest of the redneckognizin' gang from McIntyre, Ga., return to TV this summer for a whole new season of sketti making, diet tips and, of course, plenty of beautimous vajiggle jaggle. As a bonus this time around, in addition to all of that, fans will finally get to see Sugar Bear put on ring on it -- in what may or may not be a legally binding wedding ceremony.

'Breaking Bad'
Premieres Sunday, Aug. 11 on AMC

Prepare yourself for some major withdrawal, because everyone?s favorite chemistry teacher turned meth kingpin is hanging up his hat after these last eight episodes for the second half of season five. Last viewers saw, Walt had seemingly quit the business, but it may have been too late. While taking care of some personal business in the bathroom, brother-in-law Hank figures out that Heisenberg is none other than Walt, setting up what will likely be an epic showdown as the drama ends its critically acclaimed run.

Also worth checking out this summer:

  • "The Bachelorette," May 27 on ABC
  • "Big Brother," June 26 on CBS
  • "Drop Dead Diva," June 23 on Lifetime
  • "Falling Skies," June 9 on TNT
  • "Get Out Alive With Bear Grylls," July 8 on NBC
  • "Hot in Cleveland," June 19 on TVLand
  • "Mistresses," June 3 on ABC
  • "The Newsroom," July 14 on HBO
  • "The Real Housewives of New Jersey," June 2 on Bravo
  • "Toddlers & Tiaras" June 5 on TLC
  • "Web Therapy," July 23 on Showtime

Which summer show are you most excited for?

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/9-tv-shows-watch-summer-6C10042732

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AP Exclusive: Rise of al-Qaida Saharan terrorist

(AP) ? After years of trying to discipline him, the leaders of al-Qaida's North African branch sent one final letter to their most difficult employee. In page after scathing page, they described how he didn't answer his phone when they called, failed to turn in his expense reports, ignored meetings and refused time and again to carry out orders.

Most of all, they claimed he had failed to carry out a single spectacular operation, despite the resources at his disposal.

The employee, international terrorist Moktar Belmoktar, responded the way talented employees with bruised egos have in corporations the world over: He quit and formed his own competing group. And within months, he carried out two lethal operations that killed 101 people in all: one of the largest hostage-takings in history at a BP-operated gas plant in Algeria in January, and simultaneous bombings at a military base and a French uranium mine in Niger just last week.

The al-Qaida letter, found by The Associated Press inside a building formerly occupied by their fighters in Mali, is an intimate window into the ascent of an extremely ambitious terrorist leader, who split off from regional command because he wanted to be directly in touch with al-Qaida central. It's a glimpse into both the inner workings of a highly structured terrorist organization that requires its commanders to file monthly expense reports, and the internal dissent that led to his rise. And it foreshadows a terrorism landscape where charismatic jihadists can carry out attacks directly in al-Qaida's name, regardless of whether they are under its command.

Rudolph Atallah, the former head of counterterrorism for Africa at the Pentagon and one of three experts who authenticated the 10-page letter dated Oct. 3, said it helps explain what happened in Algeria and Niger, both attacks that Belmoktar claimed credit for on jihadist forums.

"He's sending a message directly north to his former bosses in Algeria saying, 'I'm a jihadi. I deserve to be separate from you.' And he's also sending a message to al-Qaida, saying, 'See, those bozos in the north are incompetent. You can talk to me directly.' And in these attacks, he drew a lot of attention to himself," says Atallah, who recently testified before Congress on Belmoktar's tactics.

Born in northern Algeria, the 40-something Belmoktar, who is known in Pentagon circles by his initials MBM, traveled to Afghanistan at the age of 19, according to his online biography. He claims he lost an eye in battle and trained in al-Qaida's camps, forging ties that would allow him two decades later to split off from its regional chapter.

Over the years, there have been numerous reports of Belmoktar being sidelined or expelled by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. The letter recovered in Timbuktu, one of thousands of pages of internal documents in Arabic found by the AP earlier this year, shows he stayed loyal to al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, until last year, and traces the history of their difficult relationship.

The letter, signed by the group's 14-member Shura Council, or governing body, describes its relationship with Belmoktar as "a bleeding wound," and criticizes his proposal to resign and start his own group.

"Your letter ... contained some amount of backbiting, name-calling and sneering," they write. "We refrained from wading into this battle in the past out of a hope that the crooked could be straightened by the easiest and softest means. ... But the wound continued to bleed, and in fact increasingly bled, until your last letter arrived, ending any hope of stanching the wound and healing it."

They go on to compare their group to a towering mountain before raging storms and pounding waves, and say Belmoktar's plan "threatens to fragment the being of the organization and tear it apart limb by limb."

They then begin enumerating their complaints against Belmoktar in 30 successive bullet points.

"Abu Abbas is not willing to follow anyone," they add, referring to him by his nom de guerre, Khaled Abu Abbas. "He is only willing to be followed and obeyed."

First and foremost, they quibble over the amount of money raised by the 2008 kidnapping of Canadian diplomat Robert Fowler, the highest-ranking United Nations official in Niger, and his colleague. Belmoktar's men held both for four months, and in a book he later published, Fowler said he did not know if a ransom was paid.

The letter says they referred the case to al-Qaida central to force concessions in the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan, a plan stymied when Belmoktar struck his own deal for 700,000 euros (about $900,000) for both men. That's far below the $3 million per hostage that European governments were normally paying, according to global intelligence unit Stratfor.

"Rather than walking alongside us in the plan we outlined, he managed the case as he liked," they write indignantly. "Here we must ask, who handled this important abduction poorly? ... Does it come from the unilateral behavior along the lines of our brother Abu Abbas, which produced a blatant inadequacy: Trading the weightiest case (Canadian diplomats!!) for the most meager price (700,000 euros)!!"

The complaint reflects how al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, initially considered one of the group's weaker wings, rose to prominence by bankrolling its operation with an estimated $89 million raised by kidnapping-for-ransom foreign aid workers and tourists. No less than Osama bin Laden endorsed their business model, according to documents retrieved in the terror leader's hideout in Pakistan.

The letter also confirms for the first time that payments from European governments went directly toward buying arms to carry out attacks against Western targets, as long speculated by experts. The council chides Belmoktar for not following this practice.

"(The chapter) gave Abu Abbas a considerable amount of money to buy military material, despite its own great need for money at the time. ... Abu Abbas didn't participate in stepping up to buy weapons," the letter says. "So whose performance deserves to be called poor in this case, I wonder?"

The list of slights is long: He would not take their phone calls. He refused to send administrative and financial reports. He ignored a meeting in Timbuktu, calling it "useless." He even ordered his men to refuse to meet with al-Qaida emissaries. And he aired the organization's dirty laundry in online jihadist forums, even while refusing to communicate with the chapter via the Internet, claiming it was insecure.

Sounding like managers in any company, the Shura leaders accuse Belmoktar of not being able to get along with his peers. They charge that he recently went to Libya without permission from the chapter, which had assigned the "Libya dossier" to a rival commander called Abou Zeid. And they complain that the last unit they sent Belmoktar for backup in the Sahara spent a full three years trying to contact him before giving up.

"Why do the successive emirs of the region only have difficulties with you? You in particular every time? Or are all of them wrong and brother Khaled is right?" they charge.

The letter reveals the rifts not only between Belmoktar and his superiors, but also the distance between the local chapter and al-Qaida central. The local leaders were infuriated that Belmoktar was essentially going over their heads, saying that even AQIM has had few interactions with the mother brand in Pakistan and Afghanistan, a region they refer to by the ancient name of Khorasan.

"The great obstacles between us and the central leadership are not unknown to you. ... For example, since we vowed our allegiance, up until this very day, we have only gotten from our emirs in Khorasan just a few messages, from the two sheiks, bin Laden (God rest his soul) and Ayman (al-Zawahri)," they write. "All this, despite our multiple letters to them."

Belmoktar's ambition comes through clearly not only in the bitter responses of his bosses, but also in his own words: "Despite great financial resources ... our works were limited to the routine of abductions, which the mujahedeen got bored with."

In another quote, he calls bin Laden and al-Zawahri "the leaders of the Islamic nation, not the leaders of an organization alone. We love them and we were convinced by their program. ... So it's even more now that we are swords in their hands."

To which AQIM replies with more than a hint of sarcasm: "Very lovely words. ... Do you consider it loyalty to them to revolt against their emirs and threaten to tear apart the organization?"

Belmoktar's defection was a long time in the making, and dates back to his time as a commander of Algeria's Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, or GSPC. When the Iraq war started in 2003, his ambition created friction between younger Algerian fighters like himself, who wanted to join the global jihad, and an older generation whose only goal was to create an Islamic state in Algeria, according to Islamic scholar Mathieu Guidere, a professor at the University of Toulouse.

The younger faction won, but Belmoktar felt slighted because his contemporary, Abdelmalek Droukdel, was named emir of the GSPC, instead of him.

Soon after, the group petitioned to join al-Qaida. The terror network announced a "blessed union" on the anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks in 2006.

Both Belmoktar and Droukdel wrote "candidacy letters" to bin Laden asking to be emir, according to Guidere's book on the subject. Again, Droukdel won.

Frustrated, Belmoktar drifted farther south. He set up in the ungoverned dunes of neighboring Mali, took a Malian wife and tapped into the smuggling routes that crisscrossed the Sahara, amassing arms and fiercely loyal fighters who called themselves, "The Masked Brigade."

His fighters killed more than a dozen soldiers at a military garrison in Mauritania in 2005 and gunned down four French tourists there in 2007. On multiple occasions Belmoktar was declared dead, including most recently in March, and each time, he re-emerged to strike again.

The sharpest blow in the council's letter may have been the accusation that, despite this history of terrorism, Belmoktar and his unit had not pulled off any attack worthy of mention in the Sahara.

"Any observer of the armed actions (carried out) in the Sahara will clearly notice the failure of The Masked Brigade to carry out spectacular operations, despite the region's vast possibilities ? there are plenty of mujahedeen, funding is available, weapons are widespread and strategic targets are within reach," the letter says. "Your brigade did not achieve a single spectacular operation targeting the crusader alliance."

In December, just weeks after receiving the letter, Belmoktar declared in a recorded message that he was leaving the al-Qaida chapter to form his own group. He baptized it, "Those Who Sign in Blood."

With that name, he announced his global ambition. "Those Who Sign in Blood" was also the name of an Algerian extremist unit that hijacked an Air France flight leaving Algiers in 1994. Though their goal to fly the plane into the Eiffel Tower in Paris was thwarted, the unit foreshadowed the terrorist vision that led to the fall of the Twin Towers in New York.

On Jan. 11, French warplanes began bombarding northern Mali, the start of a now 5-month-old offensive to flush out the jihadists, including Belmoktar's brigade. Five days later, suicide bombers took more than 600 hostages in Ain Amenas in far eastern Algeria and killed 37, all but one foreigners, including American, French and British nationals. Belmoktar claimed responsibility in a triumphant recording.

It was no accident that he chose Ain Amenas, Guidere said. The area is in the home province of Abou Zeid, Belmoktar's longtime rival who commanded a different Saharan brigade and was always in step with the Algeria-based emirate.

"It's a punch in the gut," Guidere said. "It's saying, 'You've never been able to do anything even in your native region. Watch me. I'll carry out the biggest hostage operation ever in that very region. ... Ain Amenas is the illustration of his ability to do a quality operation, when he is under no authority other than his own, when he doesn't have to turn in expense reports or answer to anybody."

As if to turn the knife even further, last week Belmoktar also claimed responsibility for a May 23 attack at a French-owned uranium mine in Arlit, Niger. It was in Arlit in 2011 that Abou Zeid carried out his boldest operation and seized seven foreign hostages, including four French nationals who are still in the hands of AQIM.

In an apparent attempt to raise the stakes, Belmoktar's men slipped past a truck entering the mine and detonated explosives inside. More than 100 miles to the south, a different unit of fighters under his command killed 24 soldiers at a military camp, with help from another local al-Qaida off-shoot, called the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa.

Jean-Paul Rouiller, the director of the Geneva Center for Training and Analysis of Terrorism, compared the escalation in attacks to a quarrel between a man and a woman in which each tries to have the last word. "They accused him of not doing something," Rouiller said. "His response is, 'I'll show you what I can do.'"

Belmoktar might have seen a certain justice in the coverage of the last week's attack in Niger in the leading French daily, Le Monde. Among the adjectives used to describe the event: "Spectacular."

___

Rukmini Callimachi, AP's West Africa bureau chief, reported this article in Dakar, Senegal and Timbuktu, Mali. Lee Keath, AP's Mideast enterprise editor in Cairo, translated the Arabic letter into English. The letter can be found in Arabic and English at:

http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/_pdfs/al-qaida-belmoktar-letter-english.pdf

http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/_pdfs/al-qaida-belmoktar-letter.pdf

___

Callimachi can be reached at www.twitter.com/rcallimachi

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-28-Al-Qaida%20Papers-Prima%20Donna%20Terrorist/id-d9a9637f3e5b4749a44d2e44ffd6de83

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Report: New controversy at scandal-scarred Rutgers

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) ? The woman hired to clean up Rutgers' scandal-scarred athletic program quit as Tennessee's women's volleyball coach 16 years ago after her players submitted a letter complaining she ruled through humiliation, fear and emotional abuse, The Star-Ledger reported Saturday night on its website.

"The mental cruelty that we as a team have suffered is unbearable," the players wrote about Julie Hermann, hired May 15 as Rutgers' athletic director after serving as the No. 2 athletic administrator at Louisville.

In the letter submitted by all 15 team members, the players said Hermann called them "whores, alcoholics and learning disabled" and they wrote: "It has been unanimously decided that this is an irreconcilable issue." The players told The Star-Ledger that Hermann absorbed the words and said: "I choose not to coach you guys."

The 49-year-old Hermann, set to take over the Rutgers' program June 17, told The Star-Ledger she didn't remember the letter. The newspaper said when it was read to her by phone Wednesday, she replied, "Wow."

Hermann, the first woman to head Rutgers' athletic program and one of three female ADs at the 124 schools that make up college football's top tier, has promised a restart for the program following the ouster of its men's basketball coach and the resignation of other officials.

She is set to replace Tim Pernetti, who quit last month after the firing of basketball coach Mike Rice. Practice videos surfaced of Rice shoving and throwing basketballs at players and yelling gay slurs at them.

"No one on the coaching staff doesn't believe that we need to be an open book, that we will no longer have any practice, anywhere at any time, that anybody couldn't walk into and be pleased about what's going on in that environment. It is a new day. It is already fixed," Hermann said at her introductory news conference.

At that news conference, Hermann was questioned about a 1997 jury verdict that awarded $150,000 to a former Tennessee assistant coach who said Hermann fired her because she became pregnant.

Rutgers' problems started in December when Rice was suspended three games and fined $75,000 by the school after a video of his conduct at practices was given to Pernetti by Eric Murdock, a former assistant coach. The video showed numerous clips of Rice firing basketballs at players, hitting them in the back, legs, feet and shoulders. It also showed him grabbing players by their jerseys and yanking them around the court. Rice can also be heard yelling obscenities and using anti-gay slurs.

The controversy went public in April when ESPN aired the videos and Rutgers President Robert Barchi admitted he didn't view the video in the fall. Rice was fired and Pernetti, assistant coach Jimmy Martelli and interim senior vice president and university counsel John Wolf resigned.

After a series of interviews with many of the former Tennessee players about Hermann, The Star-Ledger said:

"Their accounts depict a coach who thought nothing of demeaning them, who would ridicule and laugh at them over their weight and their performances, sometimes forcing players to do 100 sideline pushups during games, who punished them after losses by making them wear their workout clothes inside out in public or not allowing them to shower or eat, and who pitted them against one another, cutting down particular players with the whole team watching, and through gossip.

"Several women said playing for Hermann had driven them into depression and counseling, and that her conduct had sullied the experience of playing Division I volleyball."

The Star-Ledger asked Hermann about the players' lingering grievances.

"I never heard any of this, never name-calling them or anything like that whatsoever," she told the newspaper. "None of this is familiar to me."

Rutgers will join the Big Ten in 2014.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/report-controversy-scandal-scarred-rutgers-053603413.html

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Listen To Music Through Your Cheekbones While You Swim Laps

It's hard to listen to music while you're swimming because even waterproof earbuds that actually stay on try to conduct sound through air to reach your eardrums, and there's not a lot of air underwater. The FINIS Neptune works on this issue by sending sound waves straight into your face. Total bombardment. In a good way.

The Neptune speakers rest on your cheek and make the bone vibrate so that the vibrations can be relayed to your cochlea, allowing you to hear music. The process is called "bone conduction," and is also used by some marine mammals. Since the music is going straight into your head, you don't have to deal with anything in your ears while you're trying to swim.

The Neptune is an updated version of FINIS's years-old SwiMP3, which had 128MB of memory and sold for $180. Now at 4GB, the Neptune costs $160. A quick PSA, though: Just because you feel the music in your bones, does not mean you should engage in any type of swim-singing or swim-dancing unless you are totally sure no one is watching. Use the sick beats to motivate your workout, not to make you the subject of unfortunate Vines. [Werd]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/listen-to-music-through-your-cheekbones-while-you-swim-509940269

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Ticketea Raises $4 Million To Beat Ticketmaster And Eventbrite At The Spanish Box Office

50421v3-max-250x250Spanish startup Ticketea, the leading DIY ticketing platform in Spain, has raised $4 million in a Series B round of funding. The investment is being led by newly-established Spanish VC Seaya Ventures, and will be used by the company to consolidate its position in Spain through new m-commerce products, as well as for international expansion with a specific focus on emerging markets. Latin America is name-checked, which makes sense given Ticketea's Spanish roots.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/SV4TAh7X9Vo/

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