Custom Search
Showing newest 25 of 699 posts from October 2008. Show older posts
Showing newest 25 of 699 posts from October 2008. Show older posts

Oct 31, 2008

Google to digitize newspaper articles

Google has begun scanning microfilm from some newspapers' historical archives to make them searchable online, first through Google News and eventually on the newspapers' own Web sites, the company said.

The new program announced Monday expands a two-year-old service that allows Google News users to search the archives of some major U.S. newspapers and magazines that were already available in digital form, including The New York Times, whose global edition is the International Herald Tribune, as well as The Washington Post and Time. Readers will be able to search the archives using keywords and view articles as they appeared originally in print pages.

Under the expanded program, Google will shoulder the cost of digitizing newspaper archives, much as the company does with its book-scanning project. Google angered some book publishers because it had failed to seek permission to scan books that were protected by copyrights. It will obtain permission from newspaper publishers.

Google, based in Mountain View, California, will place advertisements alongside search results and share the revenue with the publishers.

"This is really good for newspapers because we are going to be bringing online an old generation of contributions from journalists, as well as widening the reader base of news archives," said Marissa Mayer, Google's vice president for search products and user experience.

But many newspaper publishers view Google and other search engines as threats to their business. And those that see their archives as a potential source of revenue might not hand them over to Google.

"The concern is that Google, in making all of the past newspaper content available, can greatly commoditize that content, just like news portals have commoditized current news content," said Ken Doctor, an analyst with Outsell, a research company.

Google said it was working with more than 100 newspapers and with partners like Heritage Microfilm and ProQuest, which aggregate historical newspaper archives in microfilm. It has already scanned millions of articles.

Other companies are already working with newspapers to digitize archives and some sell those archives to schools, libraries and other institutions, helping newspapers earn money from their historical content.

The National Digital Newspaper Program, a joint program of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress, is creating a digital archive of historically significant newspapers in the United States from 1836 to 1922. It will be on the Internet; material published before 1923 is no longer protected by copyright.

Newspapers that are participating in the Google program say it is attractive.

Pierre Little, publisher of The Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph, which has been published since 1764 and calls itself "North America's Oldest Newspaper," said many readers visit the newspaper's Web site to look for obituaries and conduct research on their ancestors.

"We could envision that thousands of families would be attracted to our archives to search for people who came over to the New World," Little said. "We hope that will be a financial windfall for us."

Tim Rozgonyi, research editor at The St. Petersburg Times in Florida, said that years ago it had looked at digitizing its archives.

"It appeared to be exceedingly costly," he said. "We wouldn't be talking about digitization if Google had not entered this arena."

The newspaper might be able to generate additional revenue from the digital archives by producing historical booklets or commemorative front pages. But he said that increasing sales was not the primary objective of the digitization program.

"Getting the digitized content available is a wonderful thing for people of this area," he said. "They'll be able to go to our site or Google's and tap into 100 years of history."

Brad Stone contributed reporting.

Read more...

Oct 29, 2008

Pakistan earth quake - 160 dead

A powerful earthquake in southwest Pakistan killed at least 160 people early Wednesday, destroying mud homes and sending survivors screaming into the streets in panic.
At least eight villages were badly hit in the 6.4-magnitude quake, police said, warning that the death toll could climb still higher as rescue workers reached villages in the remote region bordering Afghanistan.
It struck just after 5:00 am (2300 GMT Tuesday) and left scores more people injured, local authorities said.
"Around 160 people have died so far," said Khushal Khan, spokesman for Zamarak Khan, revenue minister of gas-rich Baluchistan province.
Residents in the region around the historic hill town of Ziarat, about 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of the provincial capital Quetta, told him about 6,000 people have been displaced.
"The toll may go up. The dead included 29 members of the same family," Khushal Khan added.
Most of the deaths were in outlying villages, as mud houses were destroyed and the tremors triggered landslides of rocks and boulders while people slept in their beds.
In Quetta, the nearest big town, witnesses said people fled screaming from their homes. Television footage showed many outside in the streets, wrapped up against the early morning chill.
Six people were killed in the nearby district of Pishin, police there said.
Mohammed Sultan, from the town of Sanjawai, told AFP the first tremor shook him awake from his deep sleep shortly before 5:00am, before he felt a larger shockwave about 10 minutes later.
In Ziarat buildings had collapsed and communications had been cut, he said, adding: "The town looks devastated. Parts of it are badly damaged.
"My relatives live in Ziarat but I can't contact them to find out how they are."
The US Geological Survey said the quake struck at 5:09 am and measured 6.2, later revising that magnitude up to 6.4. The Pakistan Meteorological Office put it as 6.5.
The epicentre was located some 70 kilometres north of Quetta in Baluchistan province, about 185 kilometres southeast of the Afghan city of Kandahar, they added.
A Pakistani military spokesman said some 250 troops and two helicopters had been sent from Quetta to Ziarat, while an aerial assessment of the damage was also underway. Immediate medical help was also dispatched.
"The destruction is heavy, people need immediate help and we are providing assistance to the affected people," Colonel Mohammed Babar, who flew over the region, told AFP.
After-shocks were still being felt in the region throughout the morning, the Pakistan Meteorological Office said.
In Kandahar, provincial police chief Mutihullah Khan Qatah said people had felt the quake, "but we don't yet have any reports of casualties or damage to buildings".
Officials were trying to contact their counterparts in outlying areas, he added.
Ziarat is a historic hill resort famed for its juniper forests. It receives visitors from all over Pakistan in summer who come to see the holiday home of the country's founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah.
Most of the casualties were from two villages on the outskirts of the town which were built on steep ground and badly damaged in landslides triggered by the quake, which struck at a depth of 10 kilometres, officials said.
Local government officials said they had asked for paramedics and rescuers.
A 7.6-magnitude earthquake in northwest Pakistan and Kashmir killed 74,000 people and displaced 3.5 million in October 2005.
In 1935 a massive quake killed around 30,000 people in Quetta, which at the time was part of British-ruled India.

Read more...

Sun and surf... but, hey, where is all the sand?

San Juan (Puerto Rico): Sand in the coastal Caribbean beaches is disappearing at alarming rates as thieves feed a local construction boom.
   Caribbean round grains, favoured in creating smooth surfaces for plastering and finishing, are being hauled away by the truckload late at night. On some islands not much bigger than Manhattan, towns and ecologically sensitive areas are now exposed to tidal surges and rough seas.
   In Puerto Rico, thieves once mined the dunes in the northern coastal town of Isabela, said Ernesto Diaz of the department of natural resources. But now they are stealing the beaches of the tiny island of Vieques—52 square miles where the US military only recently halted its controversial bombing practice.
   Among the hardest hit is Grenada, where officials are building a $1.2 million seawall to protect the island. Large sand thefts have exposed north coast towns to rough seas, said Joseph Gilbert, the minister of works and environment.
   One of the region’s largest sand thefts targeted Jamaica, where nearly 100 truckloads were swiped from private property in the northwest, exposing mangroves and a limestone forest to wind and waves.
   Roughly 706,000 cubic feet of sand were taken in July, enough to fill roughly 10 Olympic-sized pools, said Jamaica mines commissioner Clinton Thompson, who suspects government officials were involved.
   On Grenada’s 13-squaremile Carriacou island, population 6,000, the beach is shrinking by 3 linear feet every year from illegal sand mining, Gilbert said. If caught, thieves face light fines and jail time that critics say are unequal to the crime. Grenada, for example, imposes up to $190 in fines, less than the cost of a single load of sand. AP

PARADISE LOST: A sea wall, constructed to prevent erosion caused by large-scale sand theft, is under construction at River Antoine in Grenada as sand in Caribbean disappears at alarming rates

Read more...

Saddam’s palace of bling on sale

Iraq: A super-yacht built in secret for Saddam Hussein and put on sale by the Iraqi government last week is so outdated a shrine to the dictator’s love of gold, marble and mahogany that brokers say it will need an overhaul costing at least as much again as its £20m asking price.
   The yacht, Basra Breeze, has Arabesque arches, dark wood carvings, deep pile carpets in lurid colours, rugs woven with views of holy cities, and gold taps. Workers at the Danish shipyard where it was built had to sign secrecy agreements before its launch in 1981 to ensure the Iraqi people never learnt about their ruler’s extravagant tastes.
   Outside, there is a helipad for discreet arrivals and departures, but inside the decor is a monument to 1980s bad taste.
   Blue carpets clash with a salmon pink canopy in the master bedroom. The colour schemes in other bedrooms are so loud that it is difficult to imagine sleeping in them. There is no gym, a luxury considered de rigueur for today’s super-rich.
   The yacht came on the market after a court battle that pitched the Iraqi government against a Cayman Islands firm part owned by King Abdullah of Jordan. The firm claimed he had been given the yacht by Saddam, who was hanged in December 2006. Since there were no documents to prove this, the Iraqi government won it back.
   Basra Breeze was anchored off the millionaires’ resort of St-Jean-Cap-Ferrat in the south of France during the legal battle but is now believed to be somewhere off the Greek coast.
   In the past few days brokers from Monaco to the Isle of Man have been sounding out possible buyers. “It would be naive to assume the market is unaffected by the economic climate, although the upper end of the yacht business is still robust,” said one broker. Saddam is said never to have stayed on his floating gin palace. Fearing a coup once he became president in 1979, he rarely left Iraq for any length of time.
   Saddam’s obsession with his health is indicated by the yacht’s layout: there are two doctors’ surgeries and a mini-operating theatre. Also in evidence is his paranoia about security. Basra Breeze has a secret passage running her entire 272ft length that would have allowed him to escape to a fast patrol boat kept on board in case of trouble. SUNDAY TIMES

Read more...

Muslim wives can hit hubbies

Cairo: Sunni Islam’s highest authority has approved a woman’s right to fight back if her husband uses violence against her, Egypt’s Al-Masry al-Youm newspaper reported on Monday.
   The declaration by Sheikh Abdel Hamid al-Atrash, who heads Al-Azhar University’s committee for fatwas or religious rulings, comes after similar rulings by religious leaders in Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
   “A wife has the legitimate right to hit her husband in order to defend herself,” Atrash was quoted as saying.
   “Everyone has the right to defend themselves, whether they are a man or a woman... because all human beings are equal before god,” he said in the paper.
   Over the last few days, Saudi Sheikh Abdel Mohsen al-Abyakan stressed the fact that a wife should resort to “the same kind of violence” as her husband used against her, whether it be with a leather strap or a wire cable, the paper said.
   Prominent Turkish Muslim preacher and writer Fethullah Gulen went one step further and ruled that a woman should return the violence with interest.
   “She should give back two blows for each one received,” the paper quoted him as saying on Monday.
   Rights groups quoted by Amnesty International say that 35% of Egyptian women killed each year die as a result of domestic violence. AFP 

Read more...

17-yr-old Pak girl mauled by dogs in ‘honour killing’

Karachi: A Pakistani man says his 17-year-old daughter was mauled by dogs and shot to death in front of him over a land dispute disguised as a socalled “honour killing.”
   Female senators staged a walkout from the federal parliament on Monday to press for action on better protection for women after a national newspaper published details of Tasleem Solangi’s death.
   “How long will women be buried alive and made to face hungry dogs? Women are not given their rights,” opposition lawmaker Semi Siddiqui said.
   Ibrahim Solangi, 28, has been in custody ever since Taslim’s death in March and is awaiting trial on murder charges, said Pir Mohammad Shah, the police chief of the Khairpur Mirs district in southern Pakistan. Taslim’s husband was also her first cousin.
   Human rights groups say hundreds of women are killed by male relatives every year in Pakistan for alleged infidelity or other perceived slights to the family name, and activists say many cases go unreported.
   In August, a Pakistani lawmaker drew fierce criticism after describing a case in which five women were allegedly buried alive for trying to choose their husbands as the product of “centuries-old traditions” that he would defend.
   As in that case, the allegations surrounding the death of Tasleem Solangi remain unproven till now.
   Speaking to reporters in Karachi on Monday, Taslim’s father said he was locked up in his home and forced to watch from a window as dogs chased her and then mauled her when she fell down exhausted. She then was shot, he said. AP

Read more...

After I win... er, make that, if I am elected

Mesilla (New Mexico): Senator Barack Obama and senator John McCain have been ever vigilant in recent days for signs of an unseemly affliction in the realm of presidential medicine: January Fever.
   Both candidates have slipped a few times into the “when I’m president” construction in campaign speeches, but usually are careful to use the cautionary “if I’m president” refrain.
   “If I am elected president,” McCain said at a rally here on Saturday, drawing out his “if” like inviting an interruption. A flurry of “when you’re presidents!” arose from the crowd, segueing into applause.
   “If I am president,” Obama said at a rally last week in Leesburg, Virginia, which also triggered near-instantaneous cries of “when” from the crowd. But Obama was having none of it, or at least pretending not to have any of it. “No, no, no,” Obama demurred, half-heartedly motioning silence to the “whenners” with his hands. “I’m superstitious. I don’t like counting those chickens before they’re hatched.”
   The whole “chickenshatched” thing has become a recurring theme on the trail in recent days. For Obama’s campaign, the concern is that an expectation of victory—burnished by his solid lead in the polls—could make his supporters complacent on Election Day. There is also the danger that his campaign’s confidence could spill into the unseemly danger-zone of cockiness.
   America does love a winner, but it most certainly does not love an early-celebrating one. Sports fan analogy: Few spectacles are more satisfying than seeing a football player strutting towards the end-zone, only to be tackled out of nowhere at the one-yard line, provoking a humiliating fumble.
   As such, McCain has spent significant stump time in recent days trying to portray Obama as the political equivalent of the strutting football player. McCain regularly mentions the “planning already under way” between Obama, senate majority leader Harry Reid and House speaker Nancy Pelosi to assume their hammerlock on the government come January. In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Sunday, McCain accused Obama of already “measuring the drapes,” of the White House, something he has charged repeatedly.
   It is not surprising then that Obama’s campaign is especially touchy about suggestions of early chicken-counting.
   In his remarks, Obama cautioned giddy fans against complacency, urging them to work, work, work. The crowd jeered McCain. “You don’t have to boo,” Obama said, “You just have to vote.” In states like New Mexico that allow early voting, Obama likes to ask how many people in the crowd have already cast their ballots. When hands shoot up, Obama will look up and nod for a few seconds, as if he’s counting hands, or chickens. NYT NEWS SERVICE

HUMBLE JUMBLE: John McCain on Monday told supporters, ‘The pundits have written us off, just like they’ve done before’ 

Read more...

Obama goes all out to paint red states blue

St David’s (Pennsylvania):
Barack Obama says there’s no red America or blue America, just one big united country. But not when it comes to getting elected.
   Gunning for the 270 electoral votes the Democrat needs to win the White House, Obama is almost exclusively targeting tossup red states, the label for ones that trend Republican. Any one of them might tip him to victory. Combined, they could give him a dominant win.
   Meanwhile, ahead in the polls, Obama spends little time at all defending Democratic blue states except for one—
Pennsylvania—where Republican John Mc-Cain is pushing hard.
   The political math explains Obama’s plans on Tuesday, just one week shy of the election. Obama was to begin with a rally in the Philadelphia suburb of Chester. The event amounts to a bookend to his cross-state appearance on Monday in Pittsburgh, when he pledged to cut taxes for the middle class and help the factory worker as much as the company owner.
   Obama then heads again to Virginia, which is offering up political intrigue this year. Obama is vying to become the first Democrat for president to win the state in 44 years. The Illinois senator was staging a rally at James Madison University in Harrisonburg and then another one at night in Norfolk on his ninth trip to Virginia since he clinched the Democratic Party’s nomination in June.
   McCain and his running mate, Sarah Palin, are campaigning aggressively in Virginia, too. The transformation of the Washington-savvy northern Virginia region, coupled with distaste for an unpopular president, no longer makes the commonwealth reflexively Republican.
   In Montana, Obama has been sticking with it to the end. McCain, confident of winning the state and its three electoral votes, is virtually ignoring it, although the Republican National Committee will begin airing ads in Montana for the first time on Wednesday.
Obama’s campaign didn’t back off when the state appeared to be a shoo-in for John McCain in September. And now McCain’s lead appears to be in doubt. A recent Montana State University-Billings poll showed the race withA in the margin of error, with Obama at 44% and McCain at 40% among likely voters, and 10% undecided.
   Obama’s rise may be less about his appeal and more about dissatisfaction with Mc-Cain among independent-minded voters. The Democratic presidential hopeful was the beneficiary of support for Constitution Party candidate Ron Paul. Paul is not campaigning—he even asked to be taken off the ballot—but some supporters still say they will support him over McCain.
   Obama’s campaign now exudes an air of calm and confidence. He plans to plug for votes in North Carolina, Florida and Missouri in the coming days.
   Like Virginia, all of them went for Bush in 2004. AP


Read more...

NEXT GOP PREZ PICK Sarah Palin?

Sarah Palin may soon be free. Soon, she may not have the millstone of John McCain around her neck. And she can begin her race for president in 2012.
   Some are already talking about it, according to a report on Politico.com. If John Mc-Cain loses next week, Sarah Palin “has absolutely earned a right to run in 2012,” said Greg Mueller, who was a senior aide in the presidential campaigns of Pat Buchanan and Steve Forbes. Mueller said Palin has given conservatives “hope” and “something to believe in.”
   And even if the McCain-Palin ticket does win—and Mueller says it could—“if Mc-Cain decides to serve for just one term, Sarah Palin as the economic populist and traditional American values candidates will be very appealing by the time we get to 2012.”
   It is clear that while trying to bond with voters, McCain and Palin have not managed to bond with each other. Perhaps, it is not surprising. They barely know one another.
   When McCain appeared on the Late Show With David Letterman on October 16, he praised Palin but went out of his way to point out how little he knew about her before he chose her as his running mate. “I knew her reputation. I didn’t know her well at all.”
   The discomfort between the two can be palpable. Chuck Todd, the NBC News political director, was in the room when Brian Williams interviewed Palin and McCain recently. “There was a tenseness,” Todd told Politico. “When you see the two of them together, the chemistry is just not there. You do wonder, is John McCain starting to blame her for things? Is she blaming him?”
   But here’s the difference: If McCain loses, he doesn’t get to run again, but Palin does. All that negative stuff about her? Charging Alaska taxpayers a per diem allowance for 300 nights she spent at home, flying her kids at state expense to events they were not invited to, accepting expensive clothes from the Republican National
Committee and abusing her office as governor?
   Not only will all that have faded by 2012, Palin already has her defence ready: Some of these accusations are part of a double standard that is applied to women and not to men. She says Hillary Clinton ran into the same problem.
   Palin told Jill Zuckman of the Chicago Tribune recently, “Do you remember the conversations that took place about her—say, superficial things that they don’t talk about with men, like her wardrobe and her hairstyles, all of that, that’s a bit of that double standard. Certainly there’s a double standard.”
   If she runs in 2012, Palin will run to shatter the glass ceiling. By then, Americans may have shown they are willing to vote for an African-American for president, but how about a woman?
   Mueller thinks Palin would make a strong candidate. There certainly will be others like Mitt Romney, Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty and Mississippi governor Haley Barbour jockeying for the job. But Mueller told Politico, while some conservative intellectuals have deserted and derided Palin, the Republican base likes her and could stick with her.
   “She would run in 2012 as the populist, conservative reformer that she was originally introduced to the country as,” Mueller said.
   “If Obama wins, you will see him moving the country to a sort of Euro-socialism. That will fail, and she can target an economic-populist message to the country.”
   Mueller continues to argue that Palin could run a more convincing campaign on traditional conservative issues in 2012 than McCain has in 2008. AGENCIES

Read more...

Men prefer women in red

Washington: Planning for a romantic dinner with the man of your dreams? Well, don’t forget to wear something in red, for the colour will sure make him drool all over you, according to a new study.
   In their study, Professor Andrew Elliot and Dr Daniela Niesta of the University of Rochester, New York, have said that men find women in red more sexually attractive, confirming it really is the colour of romance.
   The researchers also speculated that the attraction towards red could be an evolutionary trait too. Noting the genetic similarity of humans to higher primates, Elliot said scientists have shown that certain male primates are especially attracted to females of their species displaying red. “It could be this very deep, biologically based automatic tendency to respond to red as an attraction cue given our evolutionary heritage,” ABC Online quoted Elliot as saying.
   In the study, men were shown pictures of women and asked to rate how pretty they were, how much they would like to kiss them and how much the men would like to have sex with them. They were then shown a woman, with some of the pictures bordered in red and some bordered in white, grey or green. The men rated a woman as more attractive if she was framed in red, than when bordered by another colour.
   They pointed out that the colour red only altered men’s attractiveness and not likability, intelligence or kindness —only attractiveness. ANI

Read more...

One man’s trash is another’s power plant

Kearny (New Jersey): Standing atop the 400-acre 1-E landfill, you get a panoramic view of the Meadowlands sports complex to the north and the New York City skyline to the east. You’re also standing on a critical part of New Jersey’s, and the nation’s, energy future.
   Decades’ worth of household trash, construction waste and assorted refuse buried in the landfill are providing electricity to thousands of homes.
   “It’s like you’re buying back your own garbage, but in a different form,” said Tom Marturano, director of solid waste and natural resources for the New Jersey Meadowlands Commission, which owns and operates the site.
   The Kearny site is among 21 landfills in New Jersey where methane gas produced by decomposing garbage is used as fuel to generate electricity, according to the state Board of Public Utilities. That is almost as many as in the state of Texas and more than the combined number in Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Across the US, the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) counts 455 landfills that use their methane to generate electricity and has targeted more than 500 others as potential candidates through its Landfill Methane Outreach Program.
   One of New Jersey’s leading environmentalists envisions the state’s landfills someday making more use of the sites by installing wind and solar power to supplement methane. “We see landfills as potential New Age energy plants because you can combine all three and create a steady source of power — and not everybody wants a windmill in their backyard,” said Jeff Tittel, executive director of the New Jersey chapter of the Sierra Club.
   Marturano cautioned that adding wind farms might take awhile because landfill surfaces are constantly shifting, but the Meadowlands Commission already has plans to install 20 acres of solar panels on the southern side of the 1-E landfill.
   Gov Jon Corzine’s Energy Master Plan touts landfill methane gas as one of the key renewable energy sources that the state hopes will combine to supply 30% of New Jersey’s electricity by 2020. According to the plan, New Jerseyans produce 6.7 pounds of trash per day, 50% more than the national average.
   While wind and solar power are in their relative infancy in New Jersey—Corzine recently announced the state’s first offshore wind power project—landfills in the state have been collecting methane gas and using it as fuel to generate electricity for more than two decades.
   Mike Winka, director of the Board of Public Utilities’ clean energy office, said new landfills in New Jersey are required to be designed to accommodate methane gas collection.
   Existing landfills can produce methane long after they’ve been shut down. For example, the freshest garbage in the Kingsland landfill dates to 1987, according to Marturano. That means the half-eaten Big Mac you threw away near the end of the Reagan administration may be helping to light your neighbour’s home today.
   Marturano estimates the 1-E landfill can keep collecting methane for 20 more years or so. He said the energy produced by the four landfills in the Meadowlands district powers about 25,000 homes.
   The Edgeboro landfill in East Brunswick, operated by the Middlesex County Utilities Authority, has been collecting methane since 2001 and currently generates about 13 megawatts of electricity, enough for about 13,000 homes for a year, according to Public Service Electric and Gas, the state’s largest utility.
   Methane gas is produced by micro-organisms that feed on organic matter in trash. The bacteria are not picky eaters and have adapted to feasting on wood, cardboard or plastic if food waste isn’t available. Long tubes with perforated bases are drilled down into a landfill to collect the gas, which then is used as fuel to drive generators. Inactive landfills like 1-E are capped, usually with a plastic or rubber covering that prevents excess gas from escaping.
   “It’s evolution on a fast track,” Marturano said, adding, “People used to think of the landfills as wasted space. But we’re turning them from the juvenile delinquents of the district into productive members of society.” AP

GOLD MINE: Many landfills in the US are converting methane gas produced by decomposing trash into electricity 

Read more...

King Solomon’s mines discovered

Washington: The fictional King Solomon’s Mines held a treasure of gold and diamonds, but archaeologists say the real mines may have supplied the ancient king with copper.
   Researchers led by Thomas Levy of the University of California, San Diego, and Mohammad Najjar of Jordan’s Friends of Archaeology, discovered a copper-production center in southern Jordan that dates to the 10th century B.C., the time of Solomon’s reign.
   The discovery occurred at Khirbat en-Nahas, which means “ruins of copper” in Arabic. Located south of the Dead Sea, the region was known in the Old Testament as Edom. By Solomon’s time, it had become a vassal state, paying tribute to Jerusalem.
   Research at the site in the 1970s and 1980s indicated that metalworking began there in the 7th century BC, long after Solomon. But Levy and Najjar dug deeper and were able to date materials such as seeds and sticks to the 10th century BC.
   The evidence makes it at least two centuries older than was thought. The new date means that the mine was almost certainly active during the time of the biblical Jewish kings David and Solomon.
   Scientists who conducted the excavations are now working to establish whether the kings controlled the copper mine at this time.
   “We can’t believe everything ancient writings tell us,” Levy said in a statement. “But this research represents a confluence between the archaeological and scientific data and the Bible.” The find will reopen the debate about how much of the Old Testament is myth and how much is history.
   Their findings are reported in Tuesday’s issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. ANI

Archaeologists claim to have found copper mines that date back to the time of King Solomon in the region that was a part of his kingdom. The find will reopen the debate about how much of the Old Testament is myth and how much is history 

Read more...

More American women cheating on spouses

If you cheated on your spouse, would you admit it to a researcher? That question is one of the biggest challenges in the scientific study of marriage, and it helps explain why different studies produce different estimates of infidelity rates.
   Surveys conducted in person are likely to underestimate the real rate of adultery, because people are reluctant to admit such behaviour not just to their spouses but to anyone.
   But a handful of new studies suggest surprising changes in the marital landscape. Infidelity appears to be on the rise, particularly among older men and young couples in the US. Notably, women appear to be closing the adultery gap: younger women appear to be cheating on their spouses nearly as often as men.
   The most consistent data on infidelity come from the General Social Survey, which has used a national representative sample to track the opinions and social behaviours of Americans since 1972.
   The survey data show that in any given year, about 10% of married people—12% of men and 7% of women — say they have had sex outside their marriage.
   But detailed analysis of the data from 1991 to 2006 show some surprising shifts. University of Washington researchers have found that the lifetime rate of infidelity for men over 60 increased to 28% in 2006, up from 20% in 1991. For women over 60, the increase is more striking: to 15%, up from 5%in 1991.The researchers also see big changes in relatively new marriages. About 20% of men and 15%of women under 35 say they have ever been unfaithful, up from about 15% and 12%respectively.
   Theories vary about why more people appear to be cheating. Among older people, a host of newer drugs and treatments are making it easier to be sexual, and in some cases unfaithful.
   In younger couples, the increasing availability of pornography on the internet, which has been shown to affect sexual attitudes and perceptions of “normal” behaviour, may be playing a role in rising infidelity. But it is the apparent change in women’s fidelity that has sparked the most interest among relationship researchers. It is not entirely clear if the historical gap between men and women is real or if women have just been more likely to lie about it.
   “Is it that men are bragging about it and women are lying to everybody including themselves?” Dr Fisher asked. “Men want to think women don’t cheat, and women want men to think they don’t cheat, and therefore the sexes have been playing a little psychological game with each other.”
   The fidelity gap may be explained more by cultural pressures than any real difference in sex drives between men and women. Men with multiple partners typically are viewed as virile, while women are considered promiscuous.
   And historically, women have been isolated on farms or at home with children, giving them fewer opportunities to be unfaithful. But today, married women are more likely to spend late hours at the office and travel on business. And even for women who stay home, cell phones, e-mail and instant messaging appear to be allowing them to form more intimate relationships, marriage therapists say.
   Dr Frank Pittman, an Atlanta psychiatrist who specializes in family crisis and couples therapy, says he has noticed more women talking about affairs centered on “electronic” contact. NYT NEWS SERVICE

Read more...

Miss Earth 2008

THE HEAT IS ON: Eighty-five beauties from around the world declare their personal environmental campaigns at this year’s Miss Earth beauty pageant being held in Manila, Philippines. (Clockwise from above) Pantaloons Femina Miss India Earth 2008 Tanvi Vyas, 22, particiaptes in the swimsuit round on Tuesday; Andrea Leon of Ecuador; (left to right) Miss China Zhou Yingkun, Miss Macau Qian Wei Na and Miss Thailand Piya Porn Deejing 

Read more...

Now, just scroll in thin air to control a mobile

London: The Apple iPhone’s sexy touchscreen with its multi-touch commands has been a huge hit, but such screens can only get so small before clunky fingers get in the way. So Microsoft is extending the concept of the touchscreen beyond the edges of the phone itself.
   The company’s researchers have developed a system called SideSight that can allow a cell phone user to control a handset placed on a table by wiggling his/her fingers in the space around it. The technology was unveiled last week at the User Interface in Software and Technology symposium in California.
   Alex Butler, a researcher from the Sensors and Devices Group at Microsoft Research Cambridge in the UK, has revealed that the system derives its exceptional ability from infrared sensors that can pick up the movement of fingers up to 10 centimetres away. “The big advantage of our prototype is the finger does not block any of the screen space,” New Scientist magazine quoted Butler as saying.
   While making a demonstration about the new system, Butler used his index finger as a mouse and controlled the onscreen cursor of a modified HTC Touch cellphone by tracing a path along the table to the right of the phone. A tap from his left index finger registered as a mouse click.
   Butler said the settings could be modified so that the right hand could use a stylus to interact directly with the screen, while the left finger would scroll the text up and down. By coordinating fingers on either side, the user can drag, rotate and change the size of images on the display. ANI 

Read more...

Now, an artificial heart that also beats

London: Scientists have created what they claim is the world’s first artificial heart that beats. A European team, led by French cardiac surgeon Alain Carpentier, has unveiled the fully implantable heart that can respond instantly to changes in blood pressure and adapt the heartbeat rate accordingly. It’s the result of 15 years of research.
   “If you showed the electrocardiogram to a cardiologist, he would say ‘that’s a human heart’. Well no, it isn’t—it’s a prosthesis,’’ Prof Carpentier was quoted as saying. AGENCIES

An artificial heart that beats like real one



Scientists Develop World’s First Entirely Prosthetic Heart That Will Be Ready For Human Trials By 2011


London: Scientists have created what they claim is the world’s first artificial heart that beats exactly like the real thing.
   A European team, led by French cardiac surgeon Alain Carpentier, has unveiled the fully implantable heart that can respond instantly to changes in blood pressure and adapt the heart beat rate accordingly.
   “If you showed the electrocardiogram to a cardiologist he would say ‘that’s a human heart’. Well no, it isn’t: it’s a prosthesis,” Prof Carpentier was quoted by British newspaper The Daily Telegraph as saying.
   Carpentier, the Head of Research on cardiac grafts and prostheses at Georges Pompidou Hospital in Paris, and his team have come up with the artificial heart after 15 years of research.
   In particular, he used his expertise as a world authority in artificial heart valves to overcome the problem of blood clots—the main stumbling block in other attempts to build an artificial heart.
   He did this by using specially sterilised “bioprosthetic” pig cartilage and by replicating the exact same blood flow—or hemodynamics—of the human heart that reduce blood clot risks.
   “The aim of this heart is to allow patients to go from an impossible life where they can do just a few steps from their bed to an armchair to a normal social life. They will even be able to run—although naturally not a marathon,” he said.
   The new heart is covered with specially treated tissue to avoid rejection by the body’s immune system. Weighing around a kilo, the only external part of the man-made organ is its battery having a five-hour charge life.
   Carmat, the company founded by Carpentier and Europe’s aerospace and defence giant EADS, thought claimed that the battery could last for between five and 16 hours after which it would have to be recharged to prevent the artificial heart stopping. Carmat now need approval from the French authorities before pushing ahead with clinical trials.
   Carpentier said the new heart was necessary given the chronic shortage of heart donors and growing heart patient waiting lists. “I couldn’t stand seeing young, active people dying aged 40 from massive heart attacks,” he said.
   Heart experts though have warned that it is still early days as previous attempts to create a fully artificial heart had failed during human testing.
   The BBC news website quoted Peter Weissberg of the British Heart Foundation as saying, “This is the latest attempt to engineer an artificial heart... Despite their early promise in laboratory experiments most versions so far have not performed as well as predicted when tried in patients—they either fail to do the job properly or, more commonly, cause debilitating side effects like infections or blood clots. Only properly conducted clinical trials will establish whether this version will live up to the claims made by its manufacturers.” PTI

The new heart is covered in specially treated tissue to avoid blood clots and rejection by the body's immune system

The heart can respond instantly to changes in blood pressure and flow and adapt the rate at which it beats accordingly


Weighing around a kilo, the only external part of the man-made organ is its battery

The battery has a five-hour charge life

READY BY 2011: The prototype of an artificial heart


MADE TO ORDER: The prototype of a fully implantable artificial heart 

Read more...

Ceding the centre

Washington: There are two major political parties in America, but there are at least three major political tendencies. The first is orthodox liberalism, a belief in using government to maximise equality. The second is free-market conservatism, the belief in limiting government to maximise freedom.
   But there is a third tendency, which floats between. It is for using limited but energetic government to enhance social mobility. This tendency began with Alexander Hamilton, who created a vibrant national economy so more people could rise and succeed. It matured with Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War Republicans, who created the Land Grant College Act and the Homestead Act to give people the tools to pursue their ambitions. It continued with Theodore Roosevelt, who busted the trusts to give more Americans a square deal.
   Members of this tradition have one foot in the conservatism of Edmund Burke. They understand how little we know or can know and how much we should rely on tradition, prudence and habit. They have an awareness of sin, of the importance of traditional virtues and stable institutions. They understand that we are not freefloating individuals but are embedded in thick social organisms.
   But members of this tradition also have a foot in the landscape of America, and share its optimism and its Lincolnian faith in personal transformation. Hamilton didn’t seek wealth for its own sake, but as a way to enhance the country’s greatness and serve the unique cause America represents in the world. Members of this tradition are Americanised Burkeans, or to put it another way, progressive conservatives.
   This tendency thrived in American life for a century and a half, but it went into hibernation during the 20th century because it sat crossways to that era’s great debate — the one between socialism and its enemies. But many of us hoped this Hamilton-to-Bull Moose tradition would be reborn in John McCain’s campaign.
   McCain shares the progressive conservative instinct. He has shown his sympathy with the striving immigrant and his disgust with the colluding corporatist. He has an untiring reform impulse and a devotion to national service and American exceptionalism. His campaign seemed the perfect vehicle to explain how this old approach applied to a new century with new problems.
   In modernising this old tradition, some of us hoped McCain would take sides in the debate now dividing the GOP. Some Republicans believe the GOP went astray by abandoning its tax-cutting, antigovernment principles. They want a return to Reagan (or at least the Reagan of their imaginations). Some of us hoped that by reforming his party, which has grown so unpopular, McCain could prove that he could reform the country.
   But McCain never took sides in this debate and never articulated a governing philosophy. His campaign’s tactics varied promiscuously, but they were all about how to present McCain, not about how to describe the state of country or the needs of the voter. The Hamiltonian-Bull Moose tendency is the great, moderate strain in American politics. In some sense this whole campaign was a contest to see which party could reach out from its base and occupy that centrist ground. The Democratic Party did that.
   McCain and Republicans stayed within their lines. There was a lot of talk about earmarks. There was a good health-care plan that was never fully explained. And there was Sarah Palin, who represents the old resentments and the narrow appeal of conventional Republicanism.
   As a result, Democrats now control the middle. Self-declared moderates now favour Barack Obama by 59 to 30, according to the New York Times/CBS News poll. McCain would be an outstanding president. In government, he has almost always had an instinct for the right cause. He has become an experienced legislative craftsman. He is stalwart against the country’s foes and cooperative with its friends. But he never escaped the straitjacket of a party that is ailing and a conservatism that is behind the times. And that’s what makes the final weeks of this campaign so unspeakably sad. — NYTNS 

Read more...

In the wilds of Wales

AS a rationalist, I have never believed in ghosts, but a couple of recent incidents have forced me to reconsider my views. After spending the last weekend at Kim’s lovely Net House on the outskirts of Hay-onWye, we went off to Bala in Wales where we had borrowed a remote cottage from Tom Stacy. Tom is a writer and publisher, and is a very old friend. He is also one of the hardiest men I know, going off to swim in the Serpentine lake on winter mornings.

His cottage was built in the 17th century, but has circular stones in its foundations that were cut some three thousand years ago. Nearby is an old Roman road that the legions used to fight their way into the Llewyn Peninsula. Going up the drive, our car got stuck in the mud that had been caused by days of rain. But we forgot about this once the log fire was roaring in the huge fireplace. The walls are a yard thick, and the cottage gets very cold. Tom has a Spartan lifestyle, and this is reflected in his cottage that would not be awarded any stars for luxury.

As we settled down, the lady wife began looking for her book. She had been reading Patrick French’s recent biography of V.S. Naipaul, and although all three of us hunted for it, we just could not find it. As this is a fairly hefty tome, we could not have overlooked it, and I was sure I had carried it out of the car. After an hour or so, I went to the ground-floor loo, and there was the book, propped up against the floor next to the toilet door. It was in such an obvious place that we could not possibly have overlooked it.

Throughout the evening, Kim’s dog Puppy kept staring towards one corner of the living room, something she doesn’t do normally. After dinner, we went off to bed. As I read in bed, I heard a soft thud of something falling nearby. I looked around, and there was the case of my reading glasses on the floor. This object had been on the bedside table, and I had not moved, so there was no logical reason for it to have fallen. Odd, I thought.

The next morning, we went off to explore the Llewyn Peninsula, a place the lady wife and I had spent a few weeks in over the years. It’s wild, beautiful countryside, with ancient churches and steep hills covered with heather. While there are very few people, thousands of sheep and cattle graze on the hillsides and in pastures. You are never far from the sea, and we had a long walk on the beach where Puppy and our Puffin raced around, delighted to be in the open.

The next day, it was grey and wet, and we decided not to spend time driving up to Snowdonia, the highest mountain in Wales. Instead we went to a valley in Powys where there is an eighth century church. Legend has it that the local prince was hunting a hare that took refuge behind a girl who was praying in a grove. When a huntsman raised his bugle to alert the others, he found he could not blow it. The prince was so impressed by the girl’s piety that he gave her the valley. Here, she built the church that stands to this day, while her bones rest in a tomb in the ancient building.

That evening we returned to Tom’s place for the night. When we were there a day earlier, Kim and the lady wife had been discussing the absence of any tea towels in the kitchen. This made the task of drying the washed dishes difficult, but they put it down to Tom’s eccentric ways. When we entered the kitchen, there was a stack of these towels sitting on the table where we had eaten two meals without seeing them. While all these odd, trite incidents happened around us, none of us sensed any malice. Later, when she rang Tom to thank him, the lady wife told him about our experience, and asked him if he had felt anything over the years. He laughed, and said in his usual elliptical way that the cottage was located on a very old site where there had been continuous human habitation for three thousand years. In any case, he had become used to whatever presence there was in the cottage, and it had become accustomed to him.

Talking of ghosts (not that I be lieve in them!), there is a major exhibition of the works of Francis Bacon on at the Tate Britain. Bacon was one of the most influential painters of the last century, and the show was packed. His figures and faces have a haunted, tortured expression that were far more disturbing than any Welsh spirits. Large canvases with convoluted figures and contorted faces dominated the walls. Critics have seen in them the alienation and agony of individuals coping in a disorienting world, bereft of the crutches of faith. The loneliness and angst of modern life haunts Bacon’s subjects as he distorts their faces into soundless screams, their mouths gaping in pain and terror. After an hour of this horror show, give me ghosts any time… Luckily, there was some light relief as we emerged into the main passage of the Tate. An artist called Martin Creed had a live happening going on that consisted of a runner hurtling down the length of the hallway at full tilt every thirty seconds. So as you watched, young men and women in shorts, T-shirts and joggers would charge down the sixty-metre length of the space “as if their lives depended on it”, according to the panel on the wall. Clearly, after a few sprints, boredom reduced the speed of the participants. But it was fun, nevertheless, especially after the unrelieved bleakness of the Bacon show.

Finally, news from the ever-active atheists in the UK: with support from Richard Dawkins, they have collected a hundred thousand pounds for placing a message on London buses that will read: “God probably does not exist. So stop worrying and enjoy life.”

Read more...

Decline in depth of Arctic winter sea

LONDON: The thickness of sea ice in the Arctic dramatically declined last winter for the first time since records began in the early 1990s.

The research by British scientists shows a significant loss in the thickness of the northern ice cap after the record loss of ice in the summer of 2007, although the weather was not abnormally warm.

The findings, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, raise the possibility that the loss of the Arctic sea ice could accelerate, because as the ice recedes the water temperature rises.

This summer the sea ice recorded its second-lowest extent after the record low of 2007, again despite relatively cool air temperatures.

However, Katharine Giles of the Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling at University College London, who led the study, said it was too soon to say whether the downward trend would continue and lead to summer sea ice disappearing even faster than forecast. “It’s dangerous to extrapolate out because colder weather would mean the ice could recover again,” said Giles. “This data will help climate modellers to validate their models and make them more accurate.” The study, part-funded by the Natural Environment Research Council and the European Union, found the thickness of sea ice in the Arctic was almost unchanged in the five winters from 2002-6, but then declined 10 per cent, or 26cm, last winter. In parts of the western Arctic, where the greatest loss was recorded the previous summer, the loss was nearly double the average.

But Vicky Pope, the British Met Office’s leading adviser to the UK government on climate change, warned: “There’s clearly a decline over the last 30 years and we can detect a human signal in that, but the change in the last couple of years could be due to natural fluctuations in the weather.” Other causes of sea ice changes could include ocean currents and wind piling up ice, making it important to measure both thickness and extent to calculate total volume, said Giles.— Dawn/Guardian News Service

Read more...

The Republicans’ dirty secret — torture

SO what will be left of the Republican Party after next week’s US election? The answer lies in the sands of Florida, where the sunshine-state Republicans have nominated an unrepentant torturer as their candidate for Congress. They view his readiness to torture an innocent Iraqi not as a source of shame, but as his prime qualification for office. This is American conservatism in the dying days of Bush – and it points out the direction that Sarah Palin would like to take it in 2012.

In August 2003, Colonel Allen West – commanding a US unit in Baghdad – heard a rumour that one of the Iraqi policeman he was working with was a secret insurgent. He ordered his officers to go and seize Yehiya Hamoodi, a thin, bespectacled 31-year-old, from his home. They dragged him into a Humvee, beat him, and then handcuffed, shackled and blindfolded him. In a dank interrogation room, they told him he had better start talking.

Perplexed and terrified, Yehiya explained he didn’t know what they were talking about: why was he here? So West was called in. He told Yehiya he was going to be killed. While his men beat him again, he explained he had one last chance to save his life – by talking.

Yehiya protested: I am innocent! What are you talking about? So West took him outside, had him pinned down, and began to shoot. First he fired into the air. Then he ordered his men to ram Yehiya’s head into a barrel used for cleaning weapons – and fired right next to his head. Then he be gan to count down from five. Finally Yehiya began to scream out names – any name he could think of, just to make it stop.

The men he named were seized and roughed up in turn. No evidence was found of any plot, and after another 45 days of terror, Yehiya was released. Today, he is severely traumatised, and collapses when he sees a Humvee approaching. The story only came to light after one of West’s soldiers began to protest against these practices. West was fined $5,000, and now concedes grudgingly: “It’s possible I was wrong about Mr Hamoodi.” But he says he would do it again, and again, and again.

West has even taken to joking about it, gaining applause for telling Republican audiences: “It wasn’t torture. Seeing Rosie O’Donnell naked would be torture.” But the 1994 Convention Against Torture, to which the US is a signatory, is explicit: “Threat of imminent death” is the third form of torture it outlaws. There are reams of studies showing it can traumatise a person for life.

Yet the Republican Party has rallied to the defence of this torturer, and of torture in general. The Bush administration has ordered the simulated drowning of “high-value” suspects, and set up secret black ops sites across the world where it is practised. After Afghan detainees were hanged from the ceiling and beaten to death, the officers responsible were merely given a “letter of reprimand”.

West’s “toughness” is fawned over; one leading conservative magazine has even named him its Man of the Year. And Sarah Palin, the Party’s darling, mocks Barack Obama’s opposition to torture. She complains: “Al Qaeda terrorists still plot to inflict catastrophic harm on America [and] he’s worried that someone won’t read them their rights.” Palin is fond of saying that she “won’t blink when it comes to terror”, but if you don’t blink, your corneas dry out, and you go blind.

At first, the rise of John McCain looked like a repudiation of torture. McCain was tortured by the Viet Cong for three years, and the beatings were so vicious that even today he can’t raise his arms to brush his own hair. For a time, he was a loud, proud opponent of torture – but then he caved. In February 2008, he voted to allow the CIA to be excluded from the ban on torture – when he knows the CIA who are the prime American torturers today.

Then, when the Supreme Court ruled that Guantanamo detainees have basic habeas corpus rights, McCain called it “one of the worst decisions in the history of the country.” If McCain will compromise on this, he will compromise on anything. He has tried to flip-flop back, saying he would ban torture after all, but if he tried now, he would face mass rebellion from his own party and Vice-President. It is unthinkable he would permit war crimes tribunals of the Party colleagues who ordered this torture.

The advocates of torture love to wheel out the ticking bomb scenario served up every week on 24. But think about what it requires. You have to (a) be certain you have captured a bomber in the very brief window between him planting a bomb and it blowing up, yet (b) have no idea where the bomb is. This has never happened, anywhere in the world, ever.

No: what happens in reality is Yehiya Hamoodi. You get a man you kinda-sorta suspect; you torture him; and you get junk intelligence leading you up wrong paths. What would you confess to if I put a gun to your head and started counting down from five?Once you start to torture it doesn’t just stay in the neat mindexperiments favoured by philosophers. After the Israeli supreme court approved torture in very limited circumstances, soldiers were soon torturing two thirds of the Palestinians they held captive. Professor David Luban explains: “Escalation is the rule, not the aberration. Abu Ghraib is the fully predictable image of what a torture culture looks like.” There are no recorded instances of getting useable intelligence from torture – but even if in some freak instance after you have tortured a thousand Yahiyas you finally did, would it outweigh the damage of handing Al Qaeda a thousand new recruits, vindicating Bin Laden’s hate-talk and breaching the most basic moral codes?

The gap between the Republican and Democratic Parties is too narrow, but on this issue it is hefty. The Republicans have curdled into the Party of Torture, bullying their torturevictim nominee into backing their barbarism, and proudly picking a torturer as their candidate for Congress. That sound of screaming from inside the Palindrome isn’t just from fawning Republicans – it’s from men like Yehiya.—Dawn/The Independent News Service

Read more...

Raphael masterpiece returns after decade

FLORENCE: After 10 years of painstaking study and restoration that tested both cutting edge technology and human patience, one of the greatest masterpieces of the Italian Renaissance is returning to the public.

Raphael’s “Madonna of the Goldfinch” is a survivor.

The 107cm-by-77cm oil-onwood, showing the Madonna with two children caressing a goldfinch, has outlived everything from the collapse of a house in 1547 that shattered it to the ravages of time and the mistakes of past interventions.

The result of the restoration is stunning. Centuries of brown film and grime are gone. The Madonna’s cheeks are pink.

Her robes are deep red and blue and one can almost hear the cascade of a stream in the background Tuscan countryside.

“This patient gave us the most shivers and the most sleepless nights,” said Marco Ciatti, head of the department of paintings at Florence’s Opificio Delle Pietre Dure, one of Italy’s most prestigious state-run art restoration labs.

“We spent two whole years studying it before deciding whether to go ahead because with the damage it suffered in the past – which was clearly visible in the x-rays – a restoration attempt could go wrong,” he said.

X-rays, CAT scans, reflective infra-red photography, lasers, men and women in white coats, microscopes, latex gloves – it sounds like the stuff of hospitals and in many ways it is.

But the Opificio is no ER. It has everything but the pressures of time. It is a place of slow healing.

“In the past we decided not to restore something because the risks of damaging or altering the original were too great,” said Ciatti, 53. “We see ourselves as a doctor who treats the patient as a whole rather than concentrating on a specific illness.” Raphael, who lived from 1483 to 1520, painted the panel in about 1506 as a gift for the marriage of Lorenzo Nasi, a rich wool merchant.

Two children Known in Italian as the “Madonna del Cardellino”, it shows the Virgin with two children symbolising the young Christ and John the Baptist. The goldfinch is a symbol of Christ’s future passion because the bird feeds among thorns.

When the Nasi house collapsed in 1547, the work shattered into 17 pieces. Ridolfo di Ghirlandaio, a Raphael contemporary, used nails to join the pieces and paint to hide fractures.

It later became part of the collection of Florence’s powerful Medici family, who commissioned several interventions aimed primarily at covering traces of the fissures.

For the past 10 years, Patrizia Riitano, 52, has been living, breathing, dreaming and touching Raphael. It has been her right eye that has been scrutinising him and her right hand that has been cleaning and retouching him.

“I am just a technician,” the chief restorer of the project said with humility. “But, yes, I think I probably know this painting almost better than Raphael. He looked at it, sure, but all these years I have been looking at it with a microscope”.

She lifted the painting out of a wooden box with the confidence of someone who has done it many times – like a mechanic changing a tyre – but then gently positioned it at the centre of an easel with the love of a mother adjusting her child’s scarf on a winter day.

“To think of it, I have spent more time with him than with my daughter,” said Riitano, a 30year veteran of restoration.

Earlier restorers covered cracks and painted outwards, painting over Raphael’s brushstrokes. She instead removed the coverings and painted inwards to reveal more Raphael.

She mostly stopped when she reached the original transparent varnish that Raphael put over the painting after he finished, so Riitano knew that everything below that was his. Some traces of time and travail were kept to maintain overall equilibrium.

‘Maybe an sms’ “I wonder if he is satisfied. I hope so. Perhaps he’ll send me a message from the beyond, maybe an SMS,” she said.

Next month, the painting goes on display in Florence’s Palazzo Medici in an exhibition on the restoration. Then it will return to its long-time home in room 26 of the Uffizi Gallery.

“We will celebrate it like the return of our prodigal daughter,” said Antonio Natali, the head of the Uffizi.

While Riitano was the main restorer, the massive undertaking was a multi-disciplinary team effort involving about 50 people, including wood specialists and photography technicians.

Wood experts decided that large nails holding together parts of the painting should stay because removing them would do more harm than good and small, deteriorating nails should go.

“It was a very long process. We had to decide if to remove, what to remove, when to remove,” said Riitano.

Ciatti, the head of the paintings department, said that, as rewarding at the project was, the real joy was sharing innovative techniques and scientific discoveries.

“We are also a research and teaching centre. Every restoration, whether the artist was a giant or not, is part of a greater effort to help future restorers. We publish everything we do,” he said.—Reuters

TOP

Read more...

Syria seen pursuing engagement despite American raid

BEIRUT: A US raid in Syria has irritated Damascus, but is unlikely to deflect its drive to escape international isolation and engage with Washington after next week’s US presidential election.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem did not hide his exasperation with President George W. Bush after Sunday’s attack by helicopter-borne commandos near the Iraqi border.

“This administration is ignorant, I will not waste my time with this administration,” Moualem told Reuters in London.

A US official, who refused to be named, said the raid had killed Abu Ghadiya, a militant who smuggled foreign fighters into Iraq. Syria says the Americans killed eight civilians.

The assault, in a remote area where strong tribal groups straddle the border, was the first known to have been mounted by US forces into Syria since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

It occurred even though the former US commander there, General David Petraeus, said this month the flow of foreign fighters from Syria to Sunni insurgents, including Al Qaeda in Iraq, had fallen to 10 or 20 a month from a peak of 160.

“It’s a one-off operation,” said Timur Goksel, a former spokesman for UN peacekeeping forces in Lebanon and now an academic. “The Syrians won’t react militarily and it won’t have a major impact on any future US engagement with Syria.” The raid followed US attacks on suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda militants in Pakistan’s tribal areas that underline the Bush administration’s readiness to strike at designated enemies beyond the borders of war theatres like Iraq and Afghanistan.

But Arab analysts suggested this might only become a pattern if Republican candidate John McCain defeats his Democrat rival Barack Obama in the race for the White House.

“It might be an effort to sabotage an Obama administration,” Hilal Khashan, political science professor at the American University of Beirut, said of the Syria raid. “One would expect an outgoing US president not to do anything so drastic.” Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Endowment’s Middle East Centre in Beirut, saw the strike as a US message of tough ness to the Syrians, but said it would not throw them off course.

“The Syrians have positioned themselves where they want to be,” he said, adding that Damascus was seeking better ties with Washington and was clearly hoping for an Obama presidency.

Against the grain The raid seemed to run counter to previous signals that the White House was rethinking its attempts to isolate Syria – a US official said this month the policy was under scrutiny.

Some European leaders have already abandoned the effort.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana have both visited Syria recently.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice herself met Moualem at the United Nations last month, their third meeting in 18 months. Moualem called the talks an “introduction to dialogue”.

Rice’s staff said they were an attempt to push Syria to change its behaviour in several areas – ties with Iran, border security with Iraq, harbouring Palestinian militant groups such as Hamas, as well as the slow pace of human rights reform.

Syria gained some favour with the West by cooperating in a deal to enable the election of a new president in Lebanon in May and by deciding to forge diplomatic ties with the neighbour it had dominated militarily for nearly three decades.

It remains an ally of Iran and anti-Israeli groups like Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas, but its indirect talks with Israel over the past year show interest in a peace deal that would require solid, sustained US support to pull off.

The Bush administration has shown no enthusiasm for the Turkish-brokered Syrian-Israeli dialogue. No shift towards direct negotiations is expected before a new US president takes office and an Israeli election next year.

Syria, unmoved by US sanctions, has often signalled its desire for good relations with Washington, a prize for Damascus perhaps second only to recovering the Golan Heights from Israel.

One obstacle could be a UN tribunal set up after the 2005 assassination of Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, which could seek to prosecute Syrian officials, setting the stage for a diplomatic standoff.

Obama, unlike McCain, has backed dialogue with Syria, saying this could help stabilise the region and better secure Israel.—Reuters

Read more...

Plot to murder Obama: two suspects held

ST DAVID’S (Pennsylvania), Oct 28: Two white supremacists have been arrested for threatening to kill Barack Obama in a chilling twist revealed by officials as the race for the White House headed for its final seven days.

Daniel Cowart, 20, and Paul Schlesselman, 18, were arrested last week in Tennessee for possession of firearms, threats against a candidate running for president and conspiring to rob a gun store, the Department of Justice said.

The men began “discussing going on a ‘killing spree’ that included killing 88 people and beheading 14 African Americans,” Brian Weaks, an agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives told a Memphis court on Monday.

“They further stated that their final act of violence would be to attempt to kill/assassinate presidential candidate Barack Obama,” he added, as the two men appeared before the federal court.

The case is likely to heighten fears for Democrat candidate Obama’s safety as he bids to defeat Republican opponent John McCain to become the first black US president in history in next Tuesday’s elections.—AFP

Read more...

Obama wins! proclaims New Mexico bi-monthly

NEW YORK, Oct 28: A newspaper in Santa Fe, New Mexico, has decided to make a giant ‘leap of faith’ by proclaiming “Obama Wins” in its October-November issue which hit the newsstand on Tuesday.

The New Mexico Sun News reminds one of the “Dewey Beats Truman” headline in the Chicago Sun newspaper 60 years ago which proved to be wrong.

(In that hotly contested elections Republican Thomas Dewey lost to Democratic nominee Harry Truman) According to CNN, the Sun News is a bi-monthly newspaper and its Oct 26-Nov 8 issue had to hit the streets, and the newsstands, before the election. So the editors decided to make a leap of faith and declare Democrat Barack Obama the winner.

In an article explaining their choice, the editors wrote: “When it comes to calling the winner of a presidential election, everyone wants to be first. The New Mexico Sun News hereby claims that achievement.”In its tonguein-cheek style, the article went on to note the newspaper had a goal of reaching one million readers with each edition, but prints just 10,000 copies of each of its issues.

So, “each copy must be read by 100 different and distinct people. This places an enormous burden on our intrepid readers. However, it is a burden that we must insist you carry. So, please, read quickly, care for the physical condition of the paper and pass it on to your next chosen reader”.

The liberal leaning alternative newspaper ended by imploring its readers to get out and vote, “even if we did spoil the ending for you”.


Read more...

Indonesia’s sultan eyes presidency

YOGYAKARTA (Indonesia), Oct 28: The Sultan of Yogyakarta, a revered Indonesian royal who has long harboured political ambitions, told an audience of thousands made up of princes and commoners that he would run for president next year.

Sri Sultan Hamengkubuwono X, whom many Javanese regard as semi-divine, said he would address widespread unemployment and poverty if he won the election against incumbent Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

“Fulfilling the call of the mother country, I am ready to be the president in 2009,” the sultan, 62, told a crowd of about 200,000 who braved the rain to gather in Yogyakarta's main square to hear him speak, applauding enthusiastically.

Hamengkubuwono, who is also governor of Yogyakarta, is not the first Indonesian royal to dabble in politics.

Some of his royal counterparts from the various kratons, or palaces, in Bali and elsewhere have joined political parties.

Some of his ancestors famously resisted the Dutch colonial powers, while his father served as vice president under the late president Suharto.

The royal family's support for independence from the Dutch helped to cement their popularity in Java, home to more than 58 per cent of Indonesia's total population.

More recently, in 1998, the sultan's call for national unity at the height of Indonesia's political and economic crisis helped his political credentials. He remains popular in Java, the island with the most political clout.

But Hamengkubuwono may struggle to beat Yudhoyono, the current front-runner. A recent opinion poll put Yudhoyono's support at 32 per cent, ahead of former president Megawati Sukarnoputri's 24 per cent.

The sultan had the support of about 4 per cent, slightly behind Wiranto, Suharto's former army chief.

Born Bendoro Raden Mas Herjuno Darpito, the sultan inherited the title of “beholder of the universe” in 1989 on the death of his father, who famously used to sneak out of the palace in disguise to mingle and talk to ordinary people in the market.The current sultan loves golf and is pro-business, but he still rules as a demigod over Yogyakarta, which is renowned for its art, culture, and large student population, and where palace staff traditionally walk in a crouching position in his presence.—Reuters

Read more...

About Newspaper Articles

Newspaper articles are the best source to know about current events in the world. Seeing that newspaperArticles.com provides paper articles from worlds leading newspapers and magazines on one place . The website is updated daily and carries a vast number of old and new online newspaper articles. All the hot topics of the world like kids newspaper articles, science newspaper articles, global warming newspaper articles, funny newspaper articles archive and many more are discussed here .You can also leave your comments here. Send us your suggestions and articles on webmaster @ paperarticles . com

Newspaper Articles