Monday, October 31, 2011

UFC 137 openers: Nijem, Carmont and Starks are early winners

UFC 137 openers: Nijem, Carmont and Starks are early winners

LAS VEGAS -Ramsey Nijem got caught at the Season 13 "Ultimate Fighter Finale." It happens, but that didn't take away from his status as a solid lightweight prospect.

He rebounded tonight to toy with Danny Downes on his way to a unanimous decision victory, 30-25, 30-26 and 30-27 in bout No. 3 at UFC 137 in the Mandalay Bay Events Center.

Nijem landed pretty much everything he threw on the feet which led to control in the clinch. He scores seven takedowns and each time took Downes' back. Nijem worked 10-plus chokes throughout. Downes didn't provide much opposition overall, but he is nearly impossible to finish. Downes had the snot beat out of him against Jeremy Stephens at that TUF 13 Finale, but wouldn't give up.

Nijem was a bit impatient on most of his choke attempts. He tried many of them without securing Downes' body. Although he did secure a body lock late and Downes still wouldn't give up.

Vera escapes the third round to break losing streak

Brandon Vera is hanging on by a thread. He survived a difficult third round against Eliot Marshall to post a unanimous decision victory, 29-28 on all three cards, in the fourth bout at UFC 137.

Brandon Vera escaped the chopping block earlier this year when it was discovered that Thiago Silva had submitted a false urine sample. Vera was actually released from his contract, but then brought back when the Nevada State Athletic Commission settled the Silva case and put him on suspension.

Carmont rolls past one-dimensional Camozzi

Chris Camozzi's return to the UFC wasn't what he hoped for at UFC 137. An alum of Season 11 of "The Ultimate Fighter," Camozzi was outclassed by Francis Carmont. The Canadian beat up Camozzi on the feet and posted a dominant second round on his way to a unanimous decision victory, 30-26, 30-27, 30-27, in bout No. 2 of the night at UFC 137.

Carmont had to fight off a persistent Camozzi along the cage for most of the first and the beginning of the second. He changed the tone of the fight by landing a pair of flying knees with 2:15 left in the second. Carmont then executed a beautiful slam of Camozzi. With less than 25 seconds left in the round, Carmont landed a big uppercut followed by a left hook that floored Camozzi.

Starks win debut over fellow UFC rookie Jacoby

Clifford Starks came away with the win in his UFC intro, but it was hard to tell what sort of prospect the former Arizona State wrestler will turn out to be. Starks use his grappling skills to score takedowns in each round and rolled to a unanimous decision victory, 30-27 on all three cards.

Starks (8-0) has been fighting since 2009 and still has some work to do on his hands. His most effective punch was a right hand lead, but he looked uncomfortable throwing the jab. Jacoby (6-1) is still a mystery.

Starks deserves some major credit for taking this fight on just eight days notice.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/UFC-137-openers-Nijem-Carmont-and-Starks-are-e?urn=mma-wp8696

lacuna paranormal activity 3 trailer paranormal activity 3 trailer oomph oomph cmj olin kreutz

For Amazing Replica Halloween Costumes, Just Be Shawn Thorsson [Video]

Also, own a 3D printer and some 3D digital modeling software and have some sick design skills. Besides that, not a very difficult costume to pull off. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Ml2C4XBrz_g/for-amazing-replica-halloween-costumes-just-be-shawn-thorsson

the closer ea sports ovarian cancer symptoms angola manny ramirez harvest moon alyssa campanella

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Ashley Biden: Engaged to Howard Krein!


Ashley Biden, daughter of Vice President of the U.S. Joe Biden, is engaged!

To physician Howard Krein!

"Their entire family is thrilled," says a statement from the V.P.'s office.

Ashley Biden, Howard Krein

Ashley Biden, a 30-year-old social worker, and Krein, a physician based in Philadelphia, have been dating for more than a year, according to reports.

A physician specializing in Otalaryngology and Facial and Reconstructive Surgery, Krein popped the question to the love of his life in September.

She is the only child of Vice President Biden and his wife Jill. His two older sons, Beau and Robert, were born to his first wife, Neilia, who passed away.

Congratulations to the whole family!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/ashley-biden-engaged-to-howard-krein/

matt ryan ricky gervais golden globes real housewives of new york justified mildred pierce cam newton emmy awards

Video: Celebrate Halloween with ?spook-tacular? getaways

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054368/vp/45062028#45062028

the island mcdonalds beating dreamcatcher georgia tech big east expansion big east expansion michigan football

Chapter 13 in addition to Auto Insurance: Exactly how do They must ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]This morning I needed the chance to speak to a customer who was simply thinking of recording an instalment Six a bankruptcy proceeding inside Lower Location of Iowa. When dealing with their once a month cost of living, ...

Source: http://www.londonsportscouncil.org/general/chapter-13-in-addition-to-auto-insurance-exactly-how-do-they-must-do-against-each-other/

walking dead season 2 saving private ryan nfl scores nfl scores world series tickets world series tickets nelson cruz

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Longevity's secrets sought in DNA of 100-year-olds (AP)

NEW YORK ? George Eberhardt turned 107 last month, and scientists would love to know how he and other older folks like him made it that far. So he's going to hand over some of his DNA. He's one of 100 centenarians taking part in a project announced Wednesday that will examine some of the oldest citizens with one of the newest scientific tools: whole-genome sequencing, the deciphering of a person's complete collection of DNA.

Scientists think DNA from very old healthy people could offer clues to how they lived so long. And that could one day lead to medicines to help the rest of us stay disease-free longer.

By the time you reach, say, 105, "it's very hard to get there without some genetic advantages," says Dr. Thomas Perls, a geriatrics expert at Boston University.

Perls is helping find centenarians for the Archon Genomics X Prize competition. The X Prize Foundation, best known for a spaceflight competition, is offering $10 million in prize money to researchers who decipher the complete DNA code from 100 people older than 100. The contest will be judged on accuracy, completeness and the speed and cost of sequencing.

The contest is a relaunch of an older competition with a new focus on centenarians, and it's the second sequencing project involving the elderly to be announced this month.

Genome pioneer J. Craig Venter says the centenarian project is just a first step in revealing the genetic secrets of a long and healthy life.

"We need 10,000 genomes, not 100, to start to understand the link between genetics, disease and wellness," said Venter, who is co-chairing the X Prize contest.

The 107-year-old Eberhardt of Chester, N.J., played and taught tennis until he was 94. He said he's participating in the X Prize project because he's interested in science and technology. It's not clear his genes will reveal much. Nobody else in his extended family reached 100, and he thinks only a couple reached 90, he said in a telephone interview.

So why does he think he lived so long? He credits 70 years of marriage to his wife, Marie. She in turn cites his "intense interest in so many things" over a lifetime, from building radios as a child to pursuing a career in electronics research.

But scientists believe there's more to it, and they want to use genome sequencing to investigate. Dr. Richard Cawthon of the University of Utah, who is seeking longevity genes by other means, says it may turn up genetic features that protect against multiple diseases or that slow the process of aging in general.

Protective features of a centenarian's DNA can even overcome less-than-ideal lifestyles, says Dr. Nir Barzilai of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. His own study of how centenarians live found that "as a group, they haven't done the right things."

Many in the group he studied were obese or overweight. Many were smokers, and few exercised or followed a vegetarian diet. His oldest participant, who died this month just short of her 110th birthday, smoked for 95 years.

"She had genes that protected her against the environment," Barzilai said. One of her sisters died at 102, and one of her brothers is 105 and still manages a hedge fund.

Earlier this month, Scripps Health of San Diego announced a different genome project involving the elderly. The Scripps Wellderly Study will receive the complete genomes of 1,000 people age 80 and older from a sequencing company.

A complete genome reveals not only genes but also other DNA that's responsible for regulating genes. It's "the full monty," showing DNA elements that are key for illness and health, says Dr. Eric Topol, who heads the Wellderly Study.

Participants in that study have an average age of 87 and range up to 108, and they've never had diabetes, heart disease or cancer, or any neurological disease.

"Why are these people Teflon-coated?" Topol asked. "Why don't they get disease?"

The ability to turn out lots of complete genomes is "the new-new thing" in trying to find out, he said.

"There's been too much emphasis on disorders per se and not enough on the people who are exceptionally healthy," to learn from their genomes, Topol said. "Now we have the powerful tools to do that."

___

Online:

X Prize competition: http://genomics.xprize.org/

Wellderly Study: http://bit.ly/pHFHDj

___

Malcolm Ritter can be followed at http://twitter.com/MalcolmRitter

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_sc/us_med_elderly_dna

chipper jones jordan jefferson paula abdul redsox amazon prime spina bifida new kindle

How Do 'In Time' Stars Make The Most Of Their Time?

We ask Justin Timberlake, Amanda Seyfried and more how they avoid wasting time at the DMV, on a plane and more.
By Kara Warner


Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried in "In Time"
Photo: 20th Century Fox

Hey, Justin Timberlake fans: You can now celebrate your favorite triple threat's return to the big screen via the new sci-fi thriller "In Time." The film is set in the not-so-distant future in a society that lives and dies according to how much time you have and can acquire. In this world, time is literally money, and when your time runs out, you die.

In the spirit of making the most of time, although in not quite as serious a manner as is portrayed in the film, when MTV News caught up with the cast of "In Time," we asked a series of rapid-fire questions pegged to getting the most out of everyday scenarios: "How do you make the most of your time, when ... "

1. On a plane?
"Oh, I like to read or do crossword puzzles," said Vincent Kartheiser, whom "Mad Men" fans will recognize as bad guy Pete Campbell.

"I sleep, normally," Amanda Seyfried said, "but [I like to listen to] audio books or knit."

2. On hold with customer service?
"When the [customer service rep] comes back, I like to completely change voices," Timberlake revealed, changing his voice into a deep, serious baritone. " 'Hey, I'd like to speak to your supervisor,' and then [changing his voice into a high-pitched, younger voice], 'Hey, man, listen, I had a problem,' " he play-acted for us.

"I put [the phone] on speaker and get some work done," Matt Bomer said.

3. God forbid, when the Internet goes down?
"You should read a book," Bomer advised of this worst-case scenario. "Maybe the newspaper, get caught up on current events."

Seyfried told us she's trying to cut down her internet use. "It gets to be time consuming, so when it goes down, you just have to read the newspaper," she said.

4. When waiting at the DMV?
"Power through," Bomer advised of the always long lines at the Department of Motor Vehicles. "Whatever you can get done. Maybe Sudoku?"

"I like to look for the one person who's like, 'I hate this place! I'm never coming back!' " Kartheiser said.

"Google whatever the state legal limit is for blood alcohol concentration, because that's usually why I'm there," Timberlake added with a laugh.

Check out everything we've got on "In Time."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673365/in-time-justin-timberlake-amanda-seyfried.jhtml

chili recipe chili recipe frank gore frank gore brooklyn bridge lady antebellum marques colston

Michelle Obama?s challenge: Stay popular while campaigning (Washington Post)

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/154770357?client_source=feed&format=rss

hank baskett scrimshaw jacoby ellsbury jacoby ellsbury facebook charging pittsburgh steelers act scores

Friday, October 28, 2011

This extinction decimated land species, too

About 252 million years ago, Earth experienced its most devastating extinction in the history of life on our planet. And while scientists have long known that more than 80 percent of ocean-dwelling species disappeared, they have long debated what happened on land.

Now, researchers are reporting that land-dwelling species were equally decimated during the extinction, which ended an era called the Permian period. After the massive wave of devastation swept through, just a few "disaster" species remained, including a handful of large four-legged creatures, a new study found.

Recovery, the study also found, was slow. Animals that survived the near-apocalypse remained on the edge of collapse for the next 8 million years, before the food supply stabilized again.

As we enter what appears to be the Earth?s sixth major extinction event, the new findings emphasize the value of having a wide range of creatures around, and more warnings of the danger of letting too many species disappear.

"When you talk about diversity loss and recovery, it's not something that rebounds in 10 years. It takes millions of years," said Jessica Whiteside, a paleobiologist at Brown University. "This is basically a warning call about the loss of biodiversity. It's something that takes a substantial amount of time to rebound from."

  1. More science news from MSNBC Tech & Science

    1. 'Flying Humvee' moves ahead

      Future of Tech: A flying car that's rugged enough for hardcore off-road driving, able to survive small-arms fire, and can quickly take off and land is potentially just a few years shy of reality.

    2. Updated 55 minutes ago 10/27/2011 5:38:59 AM +00:00 Blackbeard's cannon salvaged from shipwreck
    3. Here's why spiders will always find you
    4. Alien abductions may be vivid dreams: study

In a study published last year in the journal Geology, Whiteside found that it took as many as 10 million years for marine species to recover from the Permian-Triassic extinction. To find out what was happening on land during the same period, she and colleague Randall Irmis analyzed close to 8,600 fossils from South Africa and Russia.

When they counted types and numbers of creatures that existed before and after the extinction, they found that nearly 78 percent of terrestrial species disappeared as the Permian period ended. Among the few creatures that remained, they reported in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, was a German-Shepard sized mammal-like animal called Lystrosaurus and a lizard-like creature called Procolophon.

The species that remained faced major challenges. For 8 million years after the extinction event was over, researchers found that there was instability in the ratio of carbon atoms on Earth. That suggests that predator-prey relationships were totally out of whack.

In a healthy ecosystem, the food web looks like a pyramid, with lots of creatures on the bottom rungs being eaten by successively fewer species as you work your way up to the top predators. But after the Permian period ended, there were often just one or two species filling niches that were once occupied by 20 or 30 kinds of animals.

Plants, too, suffered in the same way. And those conditions set up even more species for continued extinctions until the food web finally stabilized again.

Generally, the species that emerge from these periods are the ones that have broader geographic ranges or are less specialized in their needs for food or habitat, according to Arnold Miller, a paleobiologist at the University of Cincinnati.

That kind of insight may help scientists envision which species will dominate the Earth of the future. Our planet is currently experiencing high rates of extinction as a result of global warming, overhunting and habitat destruction.

"One good reason to study and be aware of natural mass extinctions in the past is that they can inform what is going to happen in the present and what might happen in the future," Miller said.

"There is no question that species that have limited ranges today, geographically or environmentally, are more susceptible to extinction and easier to kill," he added. "In the end, we're left with species that are more general and less unique in a lot of respects."

? 2011 Discovery Channel

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45053377/ns/technology_and_science-science/

lamichael james epstein glen campbell harrisburg pa chynna phillips magic cube slaughterhouse

Kevorkian estate to sell disputed paintings

The estate of Dr. Jack Kevorkian says it intends to proceed with plans to auction 17 paintings by the assisted-suicide advocate despite a legal battle over the art's ownership.

Estate attorney Mayer Morganroth said Thursday he expects buyers will bid on the paintings even though the Armenian Library and Museum of America in Watertown, Mass., has refused to turn them over.

Slideshow: Dr. Kevorkian Passes Away (on this page)

The museum says Kevorkian donated the art in 1999. But Morganroth says the paintings were loaned to the museum but always remained Kevorkian's property. Kevorkian used a pint of his own blood on one of the paintings.

  1. More Entertainment stories
    1. Tyler says bathroom fall not drug-related

      Steven Tyler opened up to TODAY's Matt Lauer, saying his tumble was related to food poisoning, not substance abuse.

    2. 'Sister Wives' welcome baby No. 17
    3. Report: Bruce Willis to be a dad again
    4. Exclusive: Taylor Armstrong shares healing
    5. 'Beavis and Butt-head' and ... Snooki?

Both sides have filed lawsuits.

The auction is scheduled for Friday in New York City.

Kevorkian died in June at age 83. He claimed to have assisted in more than 130 deaths.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45063669/ns/today-entertainment/

apple iphone chris christie cnet tampa bay rays netanyahu apple keynote apple keynote

Pakistan communications inconsistent | Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Cross-border radio communications with Pakistan's military collapsed after the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in May and are still not consistent or up to what the U.S. would like to see, a top U.S. general said Thursday.

U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Curtis Scaparrotti, who directs day-to-day military operations in Afghanistan, said officials are trying to re-establish military communications along the border, particularly between Afghan and Pakistani units that are facing each other.

Offering a more detailed accounting of some of the cross-border problems with Islamabad that plagued U.S. and Afghan operations over the spring and summer, Scaparrotti said that Pakistan's Frontier Corps forces at times looked the other way when nearby insurgents fired into Afghanistan.

Pakistani leaders were incensed when U.S. special operations forces crossed the border for the bin Laden raid, seeing it as a violation of their country's sovereignty. Pakistan has also rebuffed increasing pressure from the U.S. to go after insurgents -- particularly the Haqqani network -- who operate in safe havens along the border and launch attacks into Afghanistan.

Describing the border friction, Scaparrotti said that there appeared to be either collaboration between the Frontier Corp troops and the insurgents, or at the very least they deliberately did nothing when insurgents fired rockets or mortars from locations in sight of their combat posts.

But he said there are now signs that things may be starting to improve.

"Since we began our discussions here lately, the Pakistanis have in fact returned fire on several of those points of origin that we've taken fire from now," Scaparrotti said. "That's a positive indicator here in the last month."

Scaparrotti said when he was in Afghanistan a year ago he would routinely run coordinated operations, with the Afghans on one side of the border and the Pakistanis on the other.

"When I came in July, the communication was not, was not open, and there was a good deal of difficulty," he told Pentagon reporters Thursday. "After the bin Laden raid, those routine communications just were not available in most cases. We had a difficult time arranging border flag meetings. We had a difficult time arranging communications back and forth."

Citing a recent meeting with Pakistani officials, he said they are writing up new procedures that would lay out the daily communications expected of each side.

"Right now we're having conversations, and I hope to see that that'll move into action here in the near term," he said.

Asked about the insurgents safe havens in Pakistan, Scaparrotti said they are one of the biggest threats to the U.S. campaign in Afghanistan. But, he said that even if the safe havens remain, he believes the U.S. can meet its objectives to pull combat troops out of Afghanistan by 2014 as long as the Afghans can build a strong, layered defense along the Pakistan border.

He said that would include bolstering the border posts with mobile units that can cover the gaps, and using the conventional police and Army forces to supplement them.

Asked about efforts to withdraw 10,000 U.S. troops by the end of the year and another 23,000 next September, Scaparrotti said about a third of those coming out this year will be combat troops, while the remainder will come from support forces at bases and headquarters units.

Source: http://www.wishtv.com/dpps/military/pakistan-communications-inconsistent_3973709

peter schiff vlad the impaler last minute halloween costumes matt holliday puss in boots project runway winner project runway winner

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Health Tip: Gaining Weight During Pregnancy (HealthDay)

(HealthDay News) -- It's healthy and normal to gain weight during pregnancy -- up to a point.

The womenshealth.gov website offers these guidelines for how many pounds you should expect to gain while you're pregnant:

  • Women who were at a normal weight before pregnancy should expect to gain 25 to 30 pounds.
  • Women who were underweight before pregnancy should gain 28 to 40 pounds.
  • Women who were overweight before pregnancy should gain 15 to 25 pounds.
  • Women who were obese before pregnancy should gain 11 to 20 pounds.

The site advises checking with your doctor to learn an amount of weight gain that's safe for you.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111026/hl_hsn/healthtipgainingweightduringpregnancy

daylight savings 2011 jennifer nicole lee jennifer nicole lee pumpkin seeds tebow chris harris peter schiff

Future 'comb on a chip': Compact frequency comb could go places

ScienceDaily (Oct. 26, 2011) ? Laser frequency combs -- extraordinarily precise tools for measuring frequencies (or colors) of light -- have helped propel advances in timekeeping, trace gas detection and related physics research to new heights in the past decade. While typical lasers operate at only a single or handful of frequencies, laser frequency combs operate simultaneously at many frequencies, approaching a million for some combs. These combs have very fine, evenly spaced "teeth," each a specific frequency, which can be used like hash marks on a ruler to measure the light emitted by lasers, atoms, stars or other objects. But frequency combs are usually bulky, delicate lab instruments -- about the size of a typical suitcase -- and challenging to operate, which limits their use.

Now, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed a compact laser frequency comb, a step toward user-friendly and ultimately chip-based combs that could enable new applications in astronomical searches for Earth-like planets, high-capacity telecommunications, and -- if other components are miniaturized as well -- portable versions of the most advanced atomic clocks. Large frequency combs are best known as the "gears" in today's room-sized versions of these clocks.

NIST's prototype micro-comb consists of a low-power semiconductor laser about the size of a shoebox and a high-quality optical cavity just 2 millimeters wide. A miniature laser like those in DVD players might be substituted in the future to squeeze the whole comb apparatus onto a microchip.

Compact frequency combs have been developed recently by a number of other research groups, but NIST's is the first to use a cavity made of fused silica, or quartz, the most common optical material. This means it could be integrated easily with other optical and photonic components, lead author Scott Papp says.

A full-size frequency comb uses a high-power, ultrafast laser. By contrast, the new compact version relies on a low-power laser and the cavity's unusual properties. The cavity is designed to limit light dispersion and confine the light in a small space to enhance intensity and optical interactions. The infrared laser light travels in a loop inside the cavity, generating a train of very short pulses and a spectrum of additional shades of infrared light. The small cavity, with no moving parts, offers insight into basic processes of frequency combs, which are difficult to observe in large versions.

Among its desirable features, NIST's compact comb has wide spacing between the teeth -- 10 to 100 times wider than that found in typical larger combs. This spacing allows scientists to more easily measure and manipulate the teeth. Of particular interest to project leader Scott Diddams, the widely spaced teeth can be individually read by astronomical instruments. Portable frequency combs can thus be used as ultrastable frequency references in the search for Earth-like planets orbiting distant stars. Portable frequency combs can also have many other important applications. For example, because a frequency comb can simultaneously generate hundreds of telecommunication channels from a single low-power source, a micro-comb might eventually replace individual lasers now used for each channel in fiber-optic telecommunications.

"We hope this is just the beginning and look forward to bigger and better developments," Diddams says. "In the short term we want to learn if this new type of comb can one day replace ultrafast laser-based combs used with NIST's best atomic clocks. And if not, its small size will likely lead to other opportunities."

The research was supported in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:

Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. S.B. Papp, S.A. Diddams. Spectral and temporal characterization of a fused-quartz microresonator optical frequency comb. Physical Review A, Forthcoming

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111026162655.htm

chynna phillips magic cube slaughterhouse cypher last man standing gary johnson gary johnson

Student loan forgiveness and more: 5 ways Obama wants to ease student debt (The Christian Science Monitor)

Student loan forgiveness and more: 5 ways Obama wants to ease student debt - Yahoo! News Skip to navigation ? Skip to content ? The Christian Science Monitor By Stacy Teicher Khadaroo Stacy Teicher Khadaroo ? Wed?Oct?26, 2:25?pm?ET Follow Yahoo! News on , become a fan on Facebook
  • '; Y.one("#yn-title").insert(slideshow_code,'after'); Y.one("div.photo-big").setStyle("display","none"); break; } } }); });

  • '; Y.all("div.yn-story-content p").item(snippets[videoId][i][1]).insert(video_code,'after'); break; } } } }); });
  • '; Y.all("div.yn-story-content p").item(embed_after_paragraph_number).insert(slideshow_code, 'after'); break; } } } }); });
  • ' Y.one("#yn-featured").insert(facebookCode,'before'); } }); });
  • Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/education/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20111026/ts_csm/417918

    empire state building amazing grace wtc united 93 united 93 loose change pearl harbor

    Sponsored By:

    We were unable to forward you to the advertisement you clicked on.

    The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

    • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
      • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
      • Click the Privacy tab
      • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
        ?
    • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
      • Open Internet Explorer
      • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
      • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
      • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
      • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

    Source: http://ads.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=a031bb51a031f34fef7356ccb2dfe7cc&p=4

    kenyon martin kenyon martin lizard lick towing jenny mccarthy megatron richard simmons war of 1812

    Wednesday, October 26, 2011

    Dayton, Ohio, welcomes immigrants as policy point (AP)

    DAYTON, Ohio ? On the same afternoon thousands of Hispanics in Alabama took the day off to protest the state's strict new immigration law, Mexican-born Francisco Mejia was ringing up diners' bills and handing containers piled with carnitas to drive-thru customers on the east side of Dayton.

    His family's Taqueria Mixteca is thriving on a street pockmarked with rundown buildings and vacant storefronts. It gets packed with a diverse lunchtime clientele of Hispanic laborers, white men in suits and other customers, white and black. "Business is very good," Mejia said, smiling broadly between orders.

    It's the kind of success story that leaders in Dayton think offers hope for an entire city. It has adopted a plan not only to encourage immigrants to come and feel welcome here, but also to use them to help pull out of an economic tailspin.

    Dayton officials, who adopted the "Welcome Dayton" plan unanimously Oct. 5, say they aren't condoning illegal immigration; those who come here illicitly will continue to be subject to U.S. laws.

    While states including Alabama, Georgia and Arizona, as well as some cities, have passed laws in recent years cracking down on illegal immigrants, Dayton officials say they will leave that to federal authorities and focus instead on how to attract and assimilate those who come legally.

    Other cities, including nearby Columbus and Indianapolis, have programs to help immigrants get government and community help, but Dayton's effort has a broader, and more urgent, feel.

    Mayor Gary Leitzell told the city commission before the vote that immigrants bring "new ideas, new perspectives and new talent to our workforce. ... To reverse the decades-long trend of economic decline in this city, we need to think globally."

    Hard-hit for years by the struggles of U.S. manufacturing, particularly in the auto industry, the recession pounded Dayton, which as the Wright Brother's hometown calls itself "the birthplace of aviation."

    Thousands of jobs were lost with the crippling 2009 exodus to Georgia of NCR (formerly National Cash Register), one of Dayton's signature corporations, after 125 years, and by the 2008 shutdown of a General Motors plant in suburban Moraine.

    Dayton's unemployment is nearly 11 percent, 2 percent higher than the national average, while population has fallen below 142,000, down 15 percent from 2000. Meanwhile, the city's official foreign-born population rose 57 percent, to 5,102, from 2000 to 2010, according to census figures.

    City leaders aiming to turn Dayton around started examining the immigrant population: Indian doctors in hospitals; foreign-born professors and graduate students at the region's universities; and owners of new small businesses such as a Turkish family's New York Pizzeria on the city's east side and Hispanic-run car lots, repair shops and small markets. They say immigrants have revitalized some rundown housing, moving into and fixing up what had been vacant homes.

    "This area has been in a terrible recession, but it would be even worse without them," said Theo Majka, a University of Dayton sociology professor who, with his sociologist wife Linda Majka, has studied and advocated for Dayton's immigrants. "Here we have this underutilized resource."

    Dayton officials say their plan still needs funding and volunteers to help put it in place; they hope by the end of the year. Its key tenets include increasing information and access to government, social services and housing issues; language education and help with identification cards, and grants and marketing help for immigrant entrepreneurs to help build the East Third Street section.

    "We will be more diverse, we will grow, we will have more restaurants, more small businesses," said Tom Wahlrab, the city's human relations council director, who helped lead the plan's development.

    Besides thousands of Hispanics, there are communities in Dayton of Iraqi refugees, Vietnamese and other Asians, Africans from several countries, and Russians and Turks who, officials say, are already living here quietly and industriously.

    "Immigrants are hard workers with a propensity to create jobs, and this will invigorate the economy," said Festus Nyiwo, an attorney in his home country of Nigeria who has been a small-business entrepreneur since coming to Dayton about eight years ago.

    Around the country, the bad economy has helped inspire new laws targeting illegal immigrants, seen as taking scarce jobs and overburdening schools, police and services.

    In Alabama, a new law allows police to detain indefinitely those suspected of being in the country illegally and requires schools to check new students' status; some farms and businesses say they're losing workers because of it. Georgia and Arizona also added tough restrictions.

    The immigration debate continues in Hazleton, Pa., where officials five years ago passed a law aimed at driving out illegal immigrants they blamed for drugs, violent crime and overwhelming schools and hospitals. The measure has since been tied up in court challenges.

    Dorothy Balser, manager of refugee resettlement services for Catholic Social Services, said that finding jobs can be a struggle, but that refugees have generally been able to fit into the Dayton community. She thinks the Welcome Dayton plan will have a "natural positive effect" on those already here without causing a significant rise in numbers immediately.

    Dayton's schools say they're helping 525 students learn English, up from 420 less than two years ago. About half are native Spanish-speakers; the rest are a mix of Turkish, Arabic, Swahili and more. They're ready to accept more.

    "We already are currently experiencing many students from many nationalities living in Dayton. That is a reality," said Jill Moberly, a spokeswoman for Dayton Public Schools.

    Opponents fear it will encourage illegal immigration and give preferences to immigrants.

    "If Dayton wants to help build its economy by letting people know that illegal immigrants are welcome, that's their prerogative," said Steve Salvi, founder of Ohio Jobs & Justice PAC, an advocacy group that focuses on illegal immigration. "But when they accept a plan that clearly has the purpose of including those people, that's a problem for everyone."

    Roy Barber, who owns Roy's Lock Shop on East Third Street, says he's been in business for 30 years and doesn't like the city's plan.

    "Nobody ever talked to me," he said. "Why not help us?"

    Barber said most of the neighborhood's Hispanic immigrants work hard and cause no problems. But he predicts Welcome Dayton will bring more illegal immigrants.

    "You see people out on the street and you know they're illegal," he said.

    Rich Lober, 50, a lifelong Dayton resident, said Mexican and other immigrants have helped East Third.

    "I like the idea of rejuvenating this neighborhood," Lober said. But he said Dayton should look to draw back former residents.

    "I'd like to see a `Welcome Back.' They should include American citizens, too," Lober said.

    Black resident David Dewberry told city officials it's important not to neglect predominantly black neighborhoods, where residents might wonder where their welcome plan is.

    "Rightfully so, there are some lifelong residents who are disenchanted," he said.

    At Taqueria Mixteca, Mejia's mother and restaurant manager, Marta Guzman, believes Welcome Dayton will help relieve stereotypes.

    "I know there are some (immigrants) who are causing crime and problems," said Guzman, who has lived in the United States for three decades, legalized through the 1986 amnesty program.

    "I have struggled a lot in this country, working two jobs, raising three children" as a single mother, she said. "Most of us are here to work hard and to live the American dream."

    Will the new policy bring more immigrants? Mejia smiled again.

    "We're already hearing that there are some Mexicans who are planning to come here from Alabama," he said.

    ___

    Contributing to this report were Associated Press reporters Lisa Cornwell in Cincinnati, Michael Rubinkam in Allentown, Pa.; Jacques Billeaud in Phoenix and Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala.

    ___

    Contact this reporter at http://www.twitter.com/dansewell.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_us/us_welcome_immigrants

    patriots jets patriots jets wes welker the music man the music man new england patriots eagles

    Sprint getting the Samsung Transform Ultra, too

    Samsung Transform  Ultra

    Sprint dropped word this morning that in addition to its Boost Mobile cousins, it also will be carrying the Samsung Transform Ultra. Specs, as you'll recall, include:

    Productivity

    • 3.5” HVGA touch screen with full QWERTY keyboard
    • 1GHz processor
    • Android 2.3 with Sprint ID customizable user interface
    • Sprint 3G (EVDO Rev. A) network
    • Dual Cameras- 3 MP camera and VGA front facing camera
    • Sprint ID, a user-friendly means of customizing Android content on mobile phones. Allows users to instantly download ID packs that deliver a predefined experience, including applications, widgets, ringtones and wallpapers, all at once.
    • Android Market™ – browse and download thousands of free and paid apps from around the world
    • WiFi and GPS capable
    • MP3 Player with MicroSD card slot (supports up to 32GB)
    • Stereo Bluetooth® Wireless technology
    • Processor: 1 GHz Qualcomm MSM8655
    • Dimensions: 4.57 x 2.40 x 0.55 inches; 4.9 ounces
    • Display: HVGA 480 x 320 pixels
    • RAM/ROM: 512MB/2GB
    • 1500 mAh Li-ION inner cell battery with up to 7 hours1 continuous talk time

    Pricing and availability weren't immediately announced.


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/d0aUMu8X_9c/sprint-getting-samsung-transform-ultra-too

    steven jackson steven jackson iheartradio iheartradio rosh hashanah recipes rosh hashanah recipes ufc135

    Tuesday, October 25, 2011

    Two-week-old baby rescued two days after Turkey quake (Reuters)

    ERCIS, Turkey (Reuters) ? Rescuers pulled a two-week-old baby girl alive from the arms of her mother, who had also survived but was still trapped in the rubble of their apartment on Tuesday, two days after a powerful earthquake in southeast Turkey.

    The mother was clutching the infant to her chest when rescuers reached them, and they were working to bring her out, as well as a grandmother, who was also still alive.

    "I am so excited. What can I say. Let God help them," the child's other grandmother, Sevim Yigit, told Reuters, eyes brimming with tears of joy beneath her headscarf.

    As she spoke, a rescuer leaned forward to reassure her: "We're going to get them out soon."

    There was no word on the father, who had also been in the building when it fell.

    The grandmother said the baby, named Azra, was born two weeks ago.

    The large crowd gathered at the scene applauded when a rescuer emerged cradling the baby in his arms. Relieved relatives pressed forward as she was taken to an ambulance.

    "We have been waiting for almost 48 hours," said a teenaged boy cousin, whose mother was also missing. "I hope my mother and aunt will be rescued as well."

    The family had been trapped since the apartment block, several stories high collapsed when the 7.2 magnitude quake stuck early on Sunday afternoon.

    One side of the building was reduced to a pile of broken concrete masonry and mangled metal, while the other side was leaning, only propped up by a crane so that the rescue operation could continue more safely.

    The official toll from Sunday's quake rose to 366 on Tuesday, but many people were still missing under the rubble in towns and villages at the northeast end of Lake Van, Turkey's largest lake, near the border with Iran.

    More buildings collapsed in Ercis, a town of 100,000 people, than elsewhere.

    (Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111025/wl_nm/us_turkey_quake_baby

    ghost whisperer ghost whisperer wozniacki wozniacki niger chf temperature

    There Are 10 Million People in China Using iPhones on 2G [IPhone]

    Like a premature bird with stunted wings, the original iPhone's 2G suckiness was a real sore spot in smartphone history. The hardware was great, yeah, but the speed sucked. And yet, 10 million Chinese iPhone owners still ride EDGE. Blech. More »


    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/HEbFoaIG4BQ/there-are-10-million-people-in-china-using-iphones-on-2g

    joan baez gravitas steve jobs and bill gates steve jobs quotes pancreatic cancer symptoms apple stock aspergers

    Gaza abductor says Israeli soldier treated well (AP)

    GAZA CITY, Gaza City ? A leader of the Palestinian militant group that captured the Israeli soldier swapped this week for more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners said Saturday that the soldier was treated well during his captivity.

    Zuhair Al-Qaisi of the Popular Resistance Committees told The Associated Press that Gilad Schalit was given sufficient food and allowed to watch Hebrew-language TV.

    Schalit was notably gaunt, pale and exhausted when he was freed. His father says his son is suffering from malnutrition, the effects of isolation and lack of exposure to sun and also wounds sustained during his capture that had not been treated properly. Noam Schalit also said his son "endured harsh things" in his more than five years of captivity in Gaza.

    Al-Qaisi dismissed the accusations, saying that Schalit was provided food that "fits him as a Jew," by which he appeared to mean kosher food.

    "The way Schalit looked when he was released proved that he was treated well," said Al-Qaisi. "He used to watch the news through the television and through watching some of the channels in Hebrew."

    Since his return Schalit has been meeting family and friends, and taking walks and bicycle rides around his home in Mitzpe Hila, a small village in northern Israel. Well-wishers from across the country have flocked to the tiny community to catch a glimpse of the soldier who became a national figure while in captivity.

    But many Israelis were also critical of the steep price Israel had to pay for his freedom. Schalit was freed Tuesday for 1,027 Palestinian prisoners, many of whom had been convicted of involvement in deadly attacks on Israeli civilians.

    Of the hundreds of prisoners released in the first part of the two stage swap, many have called for more violence and abductions.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians

    lost in space yahoo sports halloween costumes steven jackson steven jackson iheartradio iheartradio

    Video: The Trading Week Ahead

    Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45013743#45013743

    nexus prime new iphone new iphone tmobile iphone van jones van jones dark energy

    Monday, October 24, 2011

    Word Of The Day: 'Warmist' (talking-points-memo)

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

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/152024761?client_source=feed&format=rss

    lion king 3d the lion king 3d the lion king 3d missoni maker faire the hub the hub

    Cards, Rangers looking for hits in World Series

    St. Louis Caridinals' Albert Pujols smiles as he jokes with teammates during batting practice at baseball's World Series Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 in Arlington, Texas. The Texas Rangers are scheduled to play the Cardinals in Game 3 on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    St. Louis Caridinals' Albert Pujols smiles as he jokes with teammates during batting practice at baseball's World Series Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 in Arlington, Texas. The Texas Rangers are scheduled to play the Cardinals in Game 3 on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    Texas Rangers' Josh Hamilton hits a RBI sacrifice fly ball against the St. Louis Cardinals during the ninth inning of Game 2 of baseball's World Series Thursday, Oct. 20, 2011, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

    St. Louis Cardinals' Lance Berkman stretches at the start of practice Friday, Oct. 21, 2011, in Arlington, Texas. The Cardinals will play the Texas Rangers in Game 3 of baseball's World Series on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    Texas Rangers' Adrian Beltre shows off his ripped batting glove to teammates after taking a few swings during practice Friday, Oct. 21, 2011, in Arlington, Texas. The Rangers are scheduled to play the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 3 of baseball's World Series on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    Texas Rangers' Michael Young takes batting practice Friday, Oct. 21, 2011, in Arlington, Texas. The Rangers are scheduled to play the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 3 of baseball's World Series on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

    (AP) ? Nelson Cruz, Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton got plenty of hits to put their teams into the World Series.

    Now that they're here, the big-bopping trio has become a virtual zero. A combined 1 for 19, held to a mere single by Cruz.

    The rest of the St. Louis Cardinals and Texas Rangers haven't done much better while splitting the first two games.

    So far, a total of just eight runs. The last time there were fewer through the opening two games at a Series? Try 1950, when Joe DiMaggio and the New York Yankees combined with Philadelphia for four.

    "A lot of people thought this was going to be an offensive World Series," Texas shortstop Elvis Andrus observed before Friday's workout.

    Blame the slump on a few factors: raw weather at Busch Stadium, good pitching and, perhaps most significantly, hitters facing arms they've never seen before.

    Both teams have flailed away at the plate, chasing sliders and curves that bounced, shattering bats and seeming to guess wrong on what pitches were coming next.

    "We need to give good at-bats and get deeper and quit swinging at balls out of the strike zone," Mike Napoli said.

    Napoli has hit the lone home run of the Series. He connected off Chris Carpenter, but maybe he had an edge ? Napoli had been 3 for 3 lifetime against the Cardinals ace going into Game 1.

    The hitting woes are a repeat for the Rangers. They batted .190 last season when they lost the World Series in five games to San Francisco.

    "Those Giants pitchers, they were awfully good," Texas manager Ron Washington said. "When a pitcher is on, you just don't have any offense. It's a testament to the first two games in this Series."

    Fresh off their two-run rally in the ninth inning and a 2-1 win in Game 2, the Rangers start Matt Harrison on Saturday night at Rangers Ballpark. Kyle Lohse will pitch for the Cardinals.

    "It's a tough place to pitch, especially when you see those flags blowing in. It usually means that jet stream is going to right-center," Lohse said. "I think everyone in the league knows that."

    Each team adds a designated hitter, with the AL rule in effect at Texas. Cardinals manager Tony La Russa will make Lance Berkman the DH and put Allen Craig ? already with a pair of key pinch-hit RBI singles ? in right field.

    The Rangers will likely use Michael Young at DH, move Napoli to first base and put Yorvit Torrealba at catcher.

    At this point, it might take more than a wind tunnel to help the hitters.

    Texas is batting only .186, St. Louis is stuck at .203. Hamilton and Pujols are hitless, and Cruz has been held to a mere single after tearing through the AL championship series.

    On Friday, Cruz gave the Hall of Fame the bat he used to hit a grand slam in the ALCS. It was cracked ? maybe Texas and St. Louis need new timber, too.

    It seemed fitting that when Texas scored those two runs Thursday night to even the Series, both crossed on sacrifice flies.

    Each team has scored four runs overall. Back in 1983, Baltimore and Philadelphia also combined for eight through two games ? it's more than 60 years since the total was lower than this October.

    "I think honestly we got out of our approach a little bit, maybe a little over aggressive trying to create things that necessarily weren't there," said Ian Kinsler, whose bloop single and daring steal keyed the Texas comeback. "If we can just relax and play our style of baseball, let the game come to us, we'll be all right."

    Rangers outfielder David Murphy hopes it plays out that way, eventually.

    "It's the World Series. We're going to face a guy tomorrow that most of us have never faced, if at all. Game 4 is a little different because Edwin Jackson has been in the American League enough to where most of us have probably faced him," he said.

    "I feel like just watching the first two games, offensively, it's just a matter of who is going to make adjustments on the fly. We're facing their guys that we've never before and it's the same thing on their side. The pitching performances have been good, but we have confidence in our offense to put up runs, as well," he said.

    So does Texas hitting coach Scott Coolbaugh. He was promoted from the Triple-A job when Thad Bosley was fired two months into his first year with the team.

    Coolbaugh watched Young swing through strike three from Jaime Garcia in Game 2, then saw Adrian Beltre wave at a couple of low off-speed deliveries.

    "I think it was evident that some of our guys were seeing someone for the first time," Coolbaugh said. "You can watch all the video you want and read all the scouting reports. But when you step into that batter's box, it all looks different."

    Coolbaugh, however, was not surprised when the Rangers put together better at-bats in the ninth against Jason Motte and the St. Louis bullpen.

    "That was two days in a row that we were seeing their relievers. The more we see them, the better off we'll be," he said.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-22-BBO-World-Series/id-2132f56a928845ca9c91b97a2faab85d

    diana nyad vikings bears packers cleveland browns michael vick patriots heather locklear

    Galileo sat-nav rides into orbit

    The Soyuz rocket carrying the first two satellites lifts off from the base in French Guiana

    Europe's first satellite-navigation spacecraft have been sent into orbit.

    The two Galileo satellites were launched by a Russian Soyuz rocket from its new base in French Guiana at 07:30 local time (10:30 GMT; 11:30 BST).

    The European Commission (EC) is investing billions of euros in its own version of the American GPS system.

    It expects Galileo to bring significant returns to EU nations in the form of new businesses that can exploit precise space-borne timing and location data.

    The Soyuz mission was a long one - it took three hours and 49 minutes to get the satellite pair into their correct orbit 23,222km above the Earth.

    "Galileo is at the heart of our new industrial policy," EC Vice-President Antonio Tajani said once the separation confirmation had come through. "We must commit very strongly to Galileo. We need this; this not entertainment. This is necessary for the competitiveness of our European Union in the world."

    Mr Tajani then announced the industrial competition to procure 6-8 more satellites over and above the 18 already contracted.

    Working together

    The two spacecraft launched on Friday are pathfinders for the Galileo system as a whole.

    Together with another pair of satellites to be lofted next year, they will prove that Galileo works as designed, from the spacecraft in the sky to all the control and management operations on the ground.

    Continue reading the main story

    GALILEO UNDER CONSTRUCTION

    • A project of the European Commission and the European Space Agency
    • Some 30 satellites are likely to be launched in batches in the coming years
    • Galileo will work alongside the US GPS and the Russian Glonass sat-nav systems
    • Europe's full system promises real-time positioning down to a metre or less
    • It should deepen and extend high-value markets already initiated by GPS
    • Some say economies are over-reliant on GPS; Galileo ought to make sat-nav more robust

    "This phase is called in-orbit validation - IOV," said Javier Benedicto, the Galileo project manager at the European Space Agency (Esa), the EC's technical agent on the project.

    "The intention is to test and verify the various system functionalities and the ultimate system performance," he told BBC News.

    Deployment of the full Galileo system is likely to take most of the decade.

    Sat-nav users themselves will not immediately see any benefits from Galileo, however. That will have to wait until a navigation signal is switched on, and it is likely to be 2015 before there are enough spacecraft in orbit for Galileo to start to show its true capability.

    Compared with the Americans' current version of GPS, Galileo carries more precise atomic clocks - the heart of any sat-nav system.

    In theory, the data transmitted by Galileo should therefore be significantly better than its US counterpart. Whereas a position fixed by the publicly available GPS signal might have an error of about 10m, Galileo's designers promise metre-scale accuracy when full deployment is achieved.

    But the plan is to make the different systems interoperable, meaning the biggest, most obvious benefit to users will simply be the fact that they can see more satellites in the sky at any one time.

    So, as the decade progresses and the number of spacecraft in orbit increases, the performance of all sat-nav devices should improve. Fixes ought to be faster and more reliable, even in testing environments such as big cities where tall buildings will often obscure a receiver's view of a transmitting spacecraft.

    1. A large antenna will transmit signals to users on the ground
    2. Distress signals are picked up by a search and rescue antenna
    3. Another antenna receives information on the status of Galileo
    4. The spacecraft is controlled from the ground via telecommands
    5. Sensors make sure the satellite is always pointing at Earth
    6. Further sensors keep an eye on where the Sun is in the sky
    7. A laser retroreflector can determine the satellite's exact height
    8. Radiators expel excess heat to protect electronics from overheating

    Galileo was famously called the "Common Agricultural Policy in the sky" by one British politician infuriated by the price of the project.

    It is presently running about a decade behind schedule, and it will cost in excess of five billion euros to put the full constellation (27 satellites and three spares) in orbit before 2020. Ongoing running costs, including the renewal of worn out spacecraft, are estimated to be about 800 million euros a year.

    But the EC maintains this expenditure will be dwarfed by the economic returns of having improved sat-nav.

    Few people perhaps recognise the full extent of GPS usage today. Sat-nav is not just about drivers trying to find their way on unfamiliar roads - banks employ GPS time to stamp global financial transactions; and telecommunications and computer networks are synchronised on the "ticks" of the satellites' atomic clocks.

    Indeed, Britain's Royal Academy of Engineering issued a report earlier in the year that said the UK economy had become dangerously over-reliant on satellite-navigation signals, and that too many applications had little or no back-up were these signals to go down.

    In that sense, having a second system that is separate but compatible with the US GPS network should make applications more robust.

    "Nevertheless, like GPS, the Galileo signal is transmitted from over 10,000 miles above the Earth's surface, and Galileo therefore shares many of the vulnerabilities that the academy described in its recent report," said lead author, Dr Martyn Thomas.

    "The report recommended investment in a high-power, terrestrial, low-frequency alternative to GPS and Galileo. The best candidate remains the enhanced Loran system, eLoran, that has been researched and developed in the UK by the General Lighthouse Authorities."

    Pad beauty

    Galileo should have three services available by mid-decade: one that is open and free to anyone with compatible receiver equipment; another that is encrypted and for use by law enforcement and other government agencies; and a third application dedicated to search and rescue (SAR).

    This last service would enable sailors in distress, for example, to transmit their position and receive an acknowledgement that help is on its way.

    The technology for SAR on Galileo was supposed to be being provided by China until late technical and political disagreements prompted the EC to look for alternative sourcing. As a consequence, the first two spacecraft will fly with dummy SAR payloads.

    Friday's launch was doubly significant because it marked the first time a Russian Soyuz rocket had launched from Western territory.

    A new spaceport costing half a billion euros has been fashioned for the rocket in French Guiana's jungle landscape.

    "Some people say it is a beautiful launch pad. I don't know about that, but it is certainly very impressive," Jean-Marc Astorg, who led the Soyuz in French Guiana project for the French space agency (Cnes), told BBC News.

    1. Like Baikonur, Sinnamary has a large flame bowl under the pad
    2. A key difference is the mobile gantry, withdrawn prior to launch
    3. Soyuz receives a big boost by launching closer to the equator
    4. Rockets are brought to the pad along a 700m-long rail line
    5. The segments of a Soyuz are assembled in the MIK building
    6. Launch control is just 1km from the pad, in a secure bunker
    7. Other buildings on the 120ha site include propellant storage areas

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-15372540

    netflix stock coptic church steve bartman columbus day columbus day mark davis bank holidays