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  • Megan Fox In “Pirates Of The Caribbean 4?”


    Megan wants to be a Pirate….

    Now that her tumultuous tenure in the Transformers series is kaput, Megan Fox has her eye on a new bombshell role in another box office-slaying franchise: Fox is in chats to join Oscar nominee Johnny Depp and Academy Award winner Penelope Cruz in the next Pirates of the Caribbean flick.

    Disney chiefs are reportedly on the hunt for an actress to play a sexy mermaid in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides — opening next year — and a newly-unemployed Megan is itching to land the role.

    “Megan is mulling over a number of big movie offers including another sci-fi franchise and a role in the next Pirates of the Caribbean,” an informant at Mouse Headquarters tattled to Britain’s Daily Mirror Wednesday. “She would play a mermaid who charms Captain Jack but she has a dark motive.”

    Former Pirates stars Keira Knightley and Orlando Bloom jumped ship on the series late last year, but teaming up on the silver screen with Johnny Depp is something Megan has always dreamt of, says a snoop.

    “Megan has always loved Johnny and is desperate to work with him. She’s grateful to Transformers for making her name but she’s ready to move on to better and bigger things.”


  • Trail of Oldest Man Made Structure Part I

    This is one of ten articles introducing the ideas developed by Mike Tellinger in part inspired by the work of Zachery Sitchen.  This work specifically predicted the existence of a large urban complex related to gold mining in this region.
    Essentially, the claim made here is that this complex has been found.
    We will all look forward to the present state of the evidence itself.
    A key claim made here is that humanity arose 260,000 years ago.  There is little evidence one way or the other to support commentary except to say that our best dates are at least 70,000 years and that alone opens up the prospect of a much deeper antiquity.  The first 150,000 years need only have been concentrated in South Africa to prevent such evidence arising elsewhere.
    We all mistake published dates as meaning more that merely as the earliest known.
    I look forward to seeing how dating is established.
    Hello Bob

    I have compiled a detailed article about our discoveries. Please enjoy the first of ten.

    Discovering the Oldest Man-made Structures on Earth.


    A 10-part article by Michael Tellinger                                  June 2009

    Part 1 of 10

    Exposing the Lost City of ENKI
    Scholars have told us that the first civilization on Earth emerged between the rivers Tigris and Euphrates in a land called Sumer some 6000 years ago. Recent archaeological findings suggest that the Sumerians may have inherited some of their knowledge and symbolisms from an earlier civilization that emerged many thousands of years earlier in southern Africa – the cradle of humankind. The constant references to southern Africa in the Sumerian texts as a ‘time before time’ leaves very little doubt that this was the case.
    Why have we been so resistant to this information?

    Is it our arrogance?

    Or are we just scared of change?
    The discovery of the oldest statue of the Hawk Head of Horus, about 260,000 years old; petroglyphs of winged disks with a cross, and two pyramids aligned to Adam’s Calendar and the rise of Orion, are forcing us to rewrite human history. Let us cast the dogma of our existing knowledge aside and embrace the new evidence.

    Adam’s Calendar – Should actually  be called ENKI’s calendar. The flagship ruin at the centre of the largest and most mysterious ancient city on Earth.. The Sumerian tablets tell us that this was a special place of observation built by ENKI in the deep ABZU (South Africa) around 260,000 years ago. Before the ADAMU was created.
    When I wrote and released ‘Slave Species of god’ I never realised the kind of impact it would have on people all over the world. I am quite overwhelmed to have received feedback from readers in over 20 countries, describing how it has changed their lives and allowed them to question without fear of being punished by some invisible old man in the sky. But the biggest surprise has been meeting Johan Heine at one of my talks which opened up the floodgates of the next phase of my research.
    When Johan first introduced me to the ancient stone ruins of southern Africa, I had no idea of the incredible discoveries we would make in the year or two that followed. The photographs, artifacts and evidence we have accumulated points unquestionably to a lost and never-before-seen civilization that predates all others – not by just a few hundred years, or a few thousand years… but many thousands of years. These discoveries are so staggering that they will not be easily digested by the mainstream historical and archaeological fraternity, as we have already experienced. It will require a complete paradigm shift in how we view our human history.
    I see myself as a fairly open-minded chap but I will admit that it took me well over a year for the penny to drop, and for me to realize that we are actually dealing with the oldest structures ever built by humans on Earth.
    The main reason for this is that we have been taught that nothing of significance has ever come from southern Africa. That the powerful civilizations all emerged in Samaria and Egypt and other places. We are told that until the settlement of the BANTU people from the north, which was supposed to have started sometime in the 12th century AD, this part of the world was filled by hunter gatherers and so-called Bushmen, who did not make any major contributions in technology or civilization.
    Little did we realize that long before Egypt and long before Sumaria, there was a huge ancient city in what the Sumerian tablets call the ABZU (southern Africa). The lost and the first city of ENKI – the Sumerian deity and creator of humankind who was responsible for cloning the species we call Homo sapiens. ABZU is often incorrectly translated as “HELL” by those who grapple with the true meaning of mythology. This is far from the truth because the ABZU was simply known as the land below the equator, where the gold came from. Sumerian tablets tell us clearly that ENKI established a base in the ABZU (southern Africa). This base grew into a very large ancient city occupied by the early human slaves who toiled in the gold mines.
    We believe we have now discovered this large city he created. At its peak it was larger than modern-day Johannesburg, covering over 20,000 square kilometres. It consists of well over 100,000 stone ruins still today. These were linked by ancient roads and places of work and worship. ENKI controlled his gold mining operations from here and the fortress of Great Zimbabwe was his headquarters. The evidence of gold mining is everywhere in this part of the world and not only do historic records point to this as being the first place that gold was extracted by humans, new scientific research is there to support it.
    Our research has shown that the ancient ruins of South Africa and Zimbabwe go back to around 260,000 years the very first appearance of humans on Earth. I will take you on a journey of discovery as we experienced it over the past 2 years, since late 2007.
    End of part 1.
    Please click here to share my articles with your friends who you know will appreciate them.
    Keep exploring – spread the word.

    Michael Tellinger
  • President Obama Chicago trip and Air Force One

    The White House
    Office of Media Affairs
    Below, from the White House….

    For Immediate Release
    May 25, 2010

    NEW DETAILS: President Obama Travel to Chicago, IL

    WASHINGTON – On the evening of Thursday, May 27, President Obama will arrive at O’Hare International Airport. On the morning of May 28, he will depart from O’Hare, spend the day in Louisiana, and then return to O’Hare later that day. On the afternoon of Monday, May 31, 2010, President Obama will depart from O’Hare and return to Washington, D.C.

    All of the arrival and departures of Air Force One at O’Hare are pooled for live television and open to pre-credentialed media.

  • Technical Analysis /13:05 GMT/ (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, USD/JPY) 26.05.2010.

     

    EUR/USD (short term):. The pair should fall to it’s support after a limited rebound. Sell under: 1.2400. TP at 1.2250 and 1.2180. Key levels: 1.2045, 1.2180, 1.2250, 1.2322, 1.2400, 1.2480, 1.2600

    GBP/USD (short term): The pair should fail to break resistance. Sell under 1.4450. TP 1.4330 and 1.4260. Key levels: 1.4150, 1.4260, 1.4330, 1.4402, 1.4450, 1.4530, 1.4635



    EUR/JPY (short term): The pair is likely to break above declining trend line resistance. Buy above 110.40. TP 111.90 and 113.00. Key levels: 107.65, 108.80, 110.40, 111.41, 111.90, 113.00, 114.50

    GBP/JPY (short term): The pair is on the upside. Buy above 129.00. TP 130.50 and 131.50. Key levels: 126.75, 127.70, 129.00, 130.17, 130.50, 131.50, 132.80

    USD/JPY (short term): The pair on the upside. Buy above 89.90. TP 90.55 and 91.00. Key levels: 89.25, 89.55, 89.90, 90.41, 90.55, 91.00, 91.50

    Source: Forexyard

    Related posts:

    1. Technical Analysis /12:10 GMT/ (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY) 25.05.2010.
    2. Technical Analysis /17:20 GMT/ (EUR/USD, EUR/JPY, GBP/USD, GBP/JPY, USD/JPY) 21.04.2010.
    3. Technical Analysis /17:20 GMT/ (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, USD/JPY, AUD/USD/ 12.05.2010.

  • Thirty Two States Borrow to Fund Unemployment Insurance





    As I have posted, the present regime is incapable of taking fruitful steps to turn any of this around. In fact, besides preventing the banking system from simply collapsing and producing an outright depression, nothing is even been attempted yet.
    The actual economy is still tracking the shape of the Great Depression.  A massive loss of employment is not been remedied.  This is mostly because industry itself and the economy remains weak and possibly lacking credit and credit takes a long time to build naturally.
    Again, our best and perhaps only route that can be easily inspired by government action is the housing and mortgage industry through a direct reform of the mortgage laws and the decision to backstop the whole system through the banking system.
    The politicians are all pretending the problem is going away.  That is an interesting experiment and it will be curious to see how it works out.  Recall that Japan has not yet properly recovered from the collapse of 1990 and it is twenty years later.
    My most pressing concern is not the steady increase in unfunded government and private liabilities because the act of creating new cash offsets those problems.  It is the ten mill or so individuals who are presently lacking employment.  Their benefits are disappearing and they are not paying any taxes at all.  Thus tax revenues are shrinking still and no one is addressing it at all.
    There are solutions, but unfortunately,  Barrack Obama looks to be the least able to grasp the options of anyone, just when a president’s leadership is needed.
    FRIDAY, MAY 21, 2010
    EconomicPolicyJournal.com has learned that 32 states have run out funds to make unemployment benefit payments and that the federal government has been supplying these states with funds so that they can make their  payments to the unemployed. In some cases, states have borrowed billions. As of May 20, the total balance outstanding by 32 states (and the Virgin Islands) is $37.8 billion.

    The state of California has borrowed $6.9 billion. Michigan has borrowed $3.9 billion, Illinois $2.2 billion.

    Below is the full list of the 32 states (and the Virgin Islands) that have borrowed from the federal government  to make unemployment payments, and the amounts that remain borrowed as of May 20 . (Numbers in red are billions)
    Alabama      $ 283 million
    Arkansas        330 million
    California        6.9 billion
    Colorado       253 million
    Connecticut    498 million
    Delaware         12 million
    Florida           1.6 billion
    Georgia         416 million
    Idaho            202 million
    Illinois            2.2 billion
    Indiana           1.7 billion
    Kansas           88 million
    Kentucky     795 million
    Maryland     133 million
    Mass.          387 million
    Michigan        3.9 billion
    Minnesota    477 million
    Missouri       722 million
    Nevada        397 million
    New Jersey   1.7 billion
    New York     3.2 billion
    N.C.              2.1 billion
    Ohio             2.3 billion
    Penn.            3.0 billion
    R.I.              225 million
    S.C.            886 million
    S.D.              24 million
    Tennessee     21 million
    Texas           1.0 billion
    Vermont        33 million
    Virginia       346 million
    Virgin Islands 13 million
    Wisconsin     1.4 billion
    Total         $37.8 billion
    Posted by Robert Wenzel at 3:02 PM
  • Did the Queen’s speech deliver on aid commitments?

    Campaigner Ian Sullivan asks, has the first Queen’s speech of the new parliament delivered for poor people?

    We had the election and the people spoke – or said ‘hhhhmmmm, not sure’. Now we’ve entered the brave new world of hung parliaments and coalition. Yesterday was a more familiar moment for British people. We had the cosy reassurance and familiarity of the pomp and regalia of the Queen’s speech and the opening of parliament. I didn’t count the number of jewels in the crown but I couldn’t see any cuts there.

    This was also the big legislative launch of the Dave and Nick show, or Libcon or Conlibs alliance, depending on where you stand. One area that I was particularly looking forward to hearing about was the commitment to legislate on the historic 0.7% of Gross National Income (GNI) commitment that had been made in 1970. We’ve only been waiting on this for 40 years now.

    Since all three main party leaders promised to introduce this piece of legislation as part of their manifestos, I was excitedly waiting to hear the news of how and when it would happen. I was hoping that they’d get on with it, get it through parliament and onto the books. No more “promises”, “commitments”, “ambitions”, “hopes” or “dreams”. Basically, I was listening out for some cold, hard timetables and some boring official type language that pointed to imminent action. I didn’t hear it.

    The good news is that the government didn’t backtrack and scrap our aid commitments. In an age of austerity (cuts to you and me) we have to be thankful for that. They did reaffirm the promise to reach the 0.7% of GDP figure by 2013. This was also put out on the Department for International Development website, and it forms part of the coalition agreement between the two parties. Compared to most rich nations, the UK is in a good position.

    But the point is that legislating for 0.7% was what we were sold throughout the election. Today was a great chance to follow through on this promise and show the world that we are serious about tackling poverty. What a great message of global leadership this would have sent out ahead of the G8 and the UN Millennium Development Goals Summit later this year.

    In the last ten years, international aid has achieved some pretty incredible results. We’ve seen millions more people on life saving HIV and AIDS anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs) and 32 million extra children in school. But there’s still more to be done.

    We’ve been waiting for 40 years for the government to keep the promises they’ve made, and after today we’ll have to wait longer yet for it definitely to be in the bag.

    There’s a lot to be pleased about when it comes to government aid commitments, but we can’t ease up the pressure until we see it sat in the statute books and in the budgets.

    Take action and tell the government, “Don’t Drop the Ball on Aid”.

  • Woman named Zoe Renault files lawsuit against Renault for using Zoe name

    Renault Zoe

    Here is something that will make you wonder “What are the chances of something like this happening?” French automaker Renault SpA, has been threatened with a lawsuit, lest the change the name of their electric car, the Renault Zoe. The person who is threatening the suit? A 23 year old French woman by the name of Zoe Renault.

    “I could not bear to hear: ‘Zoe’s broken down’ or ‘We need to get Zoe overhauled’,” she told Le Parisien newspaper. Quiet frankly, we find it amusing.

    Renault had chosen the name ‘Zoe’ because it means ‘life’ in Greek. A spokesman from the company said that Zoe was not a ‘definitive choice’ for the automaker. Heck, we’d be honored to have a car named after us.

    The Renault Zoe is scheduled for market launch in 2012.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: AutoCar


  • Commence wonderment

    Ah, Harvard lore. It can be befuddling if you don’t know the history behind these age-old Commencement conventions.

    Salvete omnes!
    That’s “Hello, everyone!” in Latin, in case you didn’t know.

    And during Morning Exercises, when degrees are conferred and Tercentenary Theatre is overtaken by thousands of guests, that greeting will be shouted, ushering in two graduating seniors and one graduate student to offer orations in one of Harvard’s oldest traditions.

    But just who are these speech-givers, and how did they get here?

    In April, Harvard’s Commencement Office holds an open speech-writing competition for graduating seniors. Long ago, these orations were given in Greek, Latin, or Hebrew, and were mainly thesis defenses. But times have changed, and students now address current issues and events, or speak of lessons learned from their years at Harvard — all in just five minutes (and only one speech is in Latin).

    Final auditions involve a live reading in front of an audience and take place in late April. A panel of professors, deans, and other officials measures each candidate; after all, these are the only speeches delivered during the Morning Exercises ceremony, and they have to be good.

    Fun fact: Only graduating seniors are given translations of the Latin speech. So unless you’re versed in the ancient language, you’re out of luck. Here are the scheduled orators:

    Mary Anne Marks, Latin oration

    Mary Anne Marks (Photo by John Chase | Harvard Staff Photographer)

    Queens, N.Y., native Mary Anne Marks is a classics and English joint concentrator who fell in love with the Latin language by studying Cicero’s Catilinarian Orations. “The links between Latin and Romance languages are fascinating, and, at the same time, Latin has the ability to say things in ways that are not available to Romance languages or to English,” said Marks. “I mused about ideas for the speech for weeks before setting pen to paper, and, once I’d picked a topic, I consulted with friends and acquaintances from various departments to make sure it spoke to their experiences at Harvard.” In the fall, Marks is headed to Ann Arbor, Mich., to enter a community of Catholic teaching nuns called the Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, where after three years of classes in the convent on theological and ecclesiastical topics, she’ll attain a teaching certificate at a local university and teach in Catholic schools. “I’ve always thought about being a nun but came to Harvard planning to go to graduate school and perhaps also do some other things before entering,” she recalled. “I decided in January of last year to enter right after college, but a master’s or Ph.D. is still a possibility. One of the exciting things about being a nun is that one never knows what the future holds!”

    Chiamaka Nwakeze, undergraduate oration

    Chiamaka Nwakeze (Photo by John Chase | Harvard Staff Photographer)

    After writing six speeches, neurobiology concentrator Chiamaka Nwakeze decided on “the one.” “Applying for the orations competition challenged me to distill four years at Harvard into a four-minute speech,” Nwakeze said, “and speaking at graduation will be an additional challenge.” But she’s ready. Nwakeze cites her Nigerian parents’ “immigrant work ethic,” which “significantly shaped who I am,” she said. Over her four years, she has been the vice president of programming for the Harvard Premedical Society, co-editor in chief of the student-run journal Harvard Brain, business chair of the National Symposium for the Advancement of Women in Science (where she helped to raise more than $10,000 for its conference), and a public speaking and writing tutor at the Harvard Allston Education Portal. Next, this New Rochelle, N.Y., native is off to Yale to work as a research lab assistant for biochemist Arthur Horwich, and plans to enroll in a M.D./Ph.D. program thereafter.

    Jimmy Tingle, graduate oration

    Jimmy Tingle (Photo by Stephanie Mitchell | Harvard Staff Photographer)

    “I never in a million years thought I would be speaking at Harvard Commencement,” said Jimmy Tingle, entertainer, Cambridge native, and now Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) graduate. Tingle, who already boasts a successful career as a comedian, began thinking about going back to school in 2007 when his Davis Square (Somerville, Mass.) enterprise, Jimmy Tingle’s Off Broadway Theater, closed. “I wanted to do something completely different and evaluate my life and career,” he recalled. Before studying public administration at HKS, Tingle was often featured in film and television and was even a commentator for “60 Minutes.” Social and political themes are common in Tingle’s routines, and he plans to continue to write, perform, pursue more work on radio and TV, and “explore how I can better use entertainment to effect social change.” Yet, after all his accomplishments, Tingle still can’t believe his luck in landing one of the biggest gigs of all: Harvard Commencement. He joked: “Looking over the list of distinguished Commencement speakers, Tingle does have a nice ring to it. Only in America! Only at Harvard!”

    Uncommon throne
    There’s nothing truer than Harvard loving a good ritual. But a three-legged chair? Stranger things have happened here.

    Purchased by Harvard President Edward Holyoke, who served from 1737 to 1769, the famed seat now rests in the Fogg Art Museum, where it’s removed at Commencement for Harvard’s president to repose in. But the chair’s unique look matches its precarious origin and history.

    Furniture historians wager that this unusual Jacobean chair — a “three-square turned chair” — was made either in England or Wales between 1550 and 1600. Not even Holyoke knew the facts and was stumped when visitors wondered about it.

    But this President’s Chair was not always tucked away for special occasions. Old reports suggest it resided in one of Harvard’s libraries, and gave young men the right to kiss any lady he was showing around, and who happened to sit in it.

    Few will argue the strange regal quality of the chair, but its usage was intended for something far less romantic than royalty and making out. Its true destiny was as a domestic piece of furniture. That’s right, just your average, everyday, humble chair. Who would’ve thought?

    Ticket to ride
    Harvard Commencement begins with the cry, “Sheriff, pray give us order!”

    That would be a call to the Middlesex and Suffolk county sheriffs, who will be wearing handsome top hats, morning coats, and striped pants with swords and scabbards at the belt. And they’ll be riding white horses.

    Pounding his staff three times, the Middlesex sheriff will signal the start of Commencement, decreeing, “This meeting will be in order.”

    As lore has it, the sheriffs were originally invited during the 17th century to control unruly or drunk students and alumni by horseback. Today, smartly dressed sheriffs continue fêting Commencement atop those noble alabaster steeds — with a few bumps in their road.

    In 1970, Middlesex County Sheriff John J. Buckley announced he would not attend Commencement because he refused to wear the traditional required dress. In the 1930s, something similar occurred when two Massachusetts governors chided Harvard for its dress code. Later, Gov. Paul Dever outraged officials by arriving in a tuxedo and straw hat.

    Another year, Gov. James Michael Curley appeared in silk stockings, knee britches, a powdered wig, and a three-cornered hat with flowing plume. When officials objected to his overwrought attire, Curley procured his copy of the Statutes of the Massachusetts Bay Colony — which had a dress code of its own — and proclaimed that he was the only person in attendance who was properly dressed.

    Speak easy
    Highlights of Commencement include those sometimes famous, sometimes groundbreaking, but ultimately unforgettable, speechmakers. There are two speakers: one for Class Day, one for Afternoon Exercises.

    The Senior Class Committee has invited Class Day speakers since 1968, when Coretta Scott King delivered an inaugural address, taking the place of her husband, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who had been assassinated two months earlier. She told the crowd: “Your generation must speak out with righteous indignation against the forces which are seeking to destroy us.”

    Past speakers have been as varied as last year’s Matt Lauer, co-anchor of NBC’s “Today,” to former President Bill Clinton, comedian Conan O’Brien ’85, singer and activist Bono, baseball legend Hank Aaron, charitable leader Mother Teresa, television anchorman Walter Cronkite, and comedian Rodney Dangerfield, to today’s speaker, journalist and chief international correspondent for CNN Christiane Amanpour.

    The speaker for Afternoon Exercises is determined by the University president and the president of the Harvard Alumni Association, who undergo cloak-and-dagger negotiations for months and keep their selection veiled until February, when an official announcement is made. This year’s speaker is former Supreme Court Justice David Souter ’61, LL.B. ’66.

    Honorands are also kept confidential until Commencement Day — though that didn’t stop the German media. In 1964, news of West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard’s honorary degree spread through German news outlets, eventually reaching Harvard when a Crimson reporter wrote about it.

    All members of the University community are invited to propose candidates for honorary degrees. Nominations are sent to a committee composed of the Corporation, the Board of Overseers, and senior faculty members.

    Did you know that Benjamin Franklin received the first honorary degree in 1753? Or that more than 2,000 honorary degrees were conferred before one was granted to a woman? That went to Helen Keller, Radcliffe Class of 1904.

    Honorands must receive their degrees in person.

    It was a very good year
    Though Harvard College was established in 1636, the first graduating class took six years to complete its studies.

    Held in 1642, the foundational Commencement graduated just nine men in a Harvard Yard ceremony. It was considered a festival for six nearby towns, and comprised a weekend of feasting, merrymaking, and, of course, drinking. Many officials and residents came from afar to take in the pageantry.

    Yet in the 17th century, the month of celebration was not in May or June, but in September, a time when most graduates began careers as clergymen or teachers.

    Though dubbed “the oldest continuous springtime festival in North America,” there have been breaks in Commencement’s line.

    In fact, it has been canceled nine times, for reasons varying from smallpox to the Revolutionary War. Heavy rains forced Commencement indoors to Sanders Theatre in 1968, marking the first indoor exercises since 1922. However, today’s Commencement reliably takes place al fresco at Tercentenary Theatre — rain or shine.

    Bells du jour
    When Morning Exercises are over, bells across Cambridge will ring for 15 minutes. No, it’s not a fire drill or citywide warning — just another well-oiled practice.

    At 11:30 a.m., for the 21st consecutive year, bells will ring from the Memorial Church tower, Lowell House, the Harvard Business School, Christ Church Cambridge, the Harvard Divinity School in Andover Hall, the Church of the New Jerusalem, First Church Congregational, First Parish Unitarian Universalist, St. Paul Roman Catholic Church, St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church, University Lutheran Church, Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church, North Prospect United Church of Christ, and St. Anthony’s Church.

    For exiting graduates, the bells offer a reverent, jubilant sound, a festive marker for a treasured turning point.

  • Super Disc Advance





    Good old Titanium Oxide is coming through again.  This puts the next generation of optical storage three orders of magnitude superior to present capacity.  We will be able to put thousands of movies on a disc, or more likely, begin real development of holography as an active movie making method.
    I suspect we are still a bit short there but not so far away either that we cannot begin developing tools.
    This use of TiO2 assures us that product cost will be generally low as we stop using rare earths named for just that feature.
    Japanese team finds material that could make super disc
    by Staff Writers

    Tokyo (AFP) May 24, 2010

    A Japanese research team has found a material that could be used to make a low-price super disc with data storage capacity thousands of times greater than a DVD, the lead scientist said Monday.

    The material transforms from a black-colour metal state that conducts electricity into a brown semiconductor when hit by light, according to Shin-ichi Ohkoshi, chemistry professor at the University of Tokyo.

    The material, a new crystal form of titanium oxide, can switch back and forth between the metal and semiconductor states at room temperature when exposed to light, creating an effective on-off function for data storage.

    It is “promising as a material for a next-generation optical storage device,” Ohkoshi told AFP by telephone.

    A material that changes colour with light can be used in storage devices as colours reflect light differently to contain different information.

    His team has succeeded in creating the material in particles measuring five-to-20 nanometres (a five-billionth to 20-billionth of a metre) in diameter.

    If the smallest particle is used, the new disc could hold more than 1,000 times as much information as a Blu-ray disc, provided that matching data-writing and reading equipment are developed.

    A single-layer Blu-ray disc can hold five times as much data as a conventional DVD.

    Titanium oxide’s market price is about one-hundredth of the rare element — germanium-antimony-tellurium — that is currently used in rewritable Blu-ray discs and DVDs, Ohkoshi said.

    “You don’t have to worry about procuring rare metals. Titanium oxide is cheap and safe, already being used in many products ranging from face powder to white paint,” the professor said.

    Ohkoshi said it was not known when a disc with the material would be manufactured and put to practical use, adding that he would start talks with private-sector companies for commercialisation.

    The study was published in the advance online edition of the British magazine Nature Chemistry.
  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, May 26, 2010. In California

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    May 25, 2010
    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 2010

    In the morning, the President will tour Solyndra, Inc., a solar panel manufacturing facility in Fremont, California. There will be travel pool coverage of the tour. The President will then deliver remarks to workers on jobs and the economy. The President’s remarks are open press.

    Following his remarks, the President will return to Washington, D.C. The President’s arrival on the South Lawn in open press.

    Also tomorrow, Solicitor General Elena Kagan will travel to Capitol Hill to meet separately with Senator Tom Udall, Senator Merkley, Senator Mark Udall and Senator Cantwell.

    In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: ABC
    Print: Washington Times
    Radio: VOA

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: ABC
    Print: Politico

    PDT

    9:35AM THE PRESIDENT tours Solyndra, Inc
    Fremont, California
    Pooled Press

    10:20AM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks on the economy
    Solyndra, Inc
    Open Press

    11:15AM THE PRESIDENT departs San Francisco, California en route Andrews Air Force Base
    San Francisco International Airport
    Open Press

    EDT

    5:30PM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    6:55PM THE PRESIDENT arrives Andrews Air Force Base
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool

    7:10PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at the White House
    South Lawn
    Open Press (Pre-set 6:10PM – Final Gather 6:40PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    Briefing Schedule

    Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton will gaggle aboard Air Force One

    ###

  • Liza Minnelli Clothing Line “The Liza Collection For HSN”


    Start updating the “Achievements” section of your resume, Liza!

    Life is still a cabaret for Liza Minnelli, who isn’t afraid to rock something flowing, metallic, and see-through at the ripe old age of 64! The screen and theater legend has signed on to create a line of avant garde designs for the Home Shopping Network (HSN).

    The singing/dancing star is teaming up with the interactive retailer to design The Liza Collection, which will include sequined garments inspired by her own campy wardrobe, HSN announced this week.

    “My life has provided me the ability to amass a wonderful wardrobe designed by fashion’s brightest stars. I am excited to work with HSN in launching The Liza Collection and to have the opportunity to share my favorite looks with millions of women who want to look fabulous and feel their very best.”

    Speaking of Liza’s favorite looks, she was as vibrant as ever on the red carpet for the New York premiere of Sex In The City 2 this week. Minnelli gave onlookers an eyeful with her semi-see-through jumpsuit, flashing her bra and her badass dancer’s legs.

    Fashion blogs are calling this a “Don’t” – bu it’s Liza! Nothing is snazzy enough!

    The Liza Collection will debut June 30.


  • Japan could be geothermal energy leader

    AFP has a report on geothermal energy potential in Japan – Japan could be geothermal energy leader: US expert.

    A prominent US environmentalist said Wednesday Japan should focus on developing geothermal energy, saying the volcanic island-nation could become the global leader in the field.

    “Japan could make geothermal energy the centre of its new energy economy just as the US or China will make wind the centre of theirs,” Lester Brown, president of the US-based Earth Policy Institute, told a news conference.

    “There are no leaders in the world today in this field. There is no industrial country in the world that now has a well established geothermal industry” Brown said at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan.

    Japan, located at the crossroads of four tectonic plates and on what is known as the “Pacific Ring of Fire” and dotted with volcanoes, is one of the world’s most quake-prone countries.

    If Japan can launch full development of geothermal energy technology, “it would not only lower carbon emissions in Japan, but it would also give Japanese industry the potential for playing a leading role in developing the world’s geothermal energy resources.” he said.

    Brown noted that demand for the technology will grow in other geothermal-rich countries located on tectonic faultlines such as Indonesia and the Philippines in Asia as well as Chile, Peru and Colombia in South America.

    “This is an opportunity for Japan to move to the centre stage in an area where it is richly endowed,” he added.

    Japan makes use of hot springs as a resource for tourism, but geothermal energy only accounts for 0.3 percent of its energy mix, and the country relies heavily on imports of oil and other resources.

    Kiwis (and Icelanders) might find Lester’s claim that no industrial country has an established geothermal industry a bit insulting. The NZ Herald has a report on their latest power station to open – Geothermal power station opens early.

    Contact Energy’s $100 million geothermal power station Tauhara One, near Taupo, has been finished three weeks ahead of schedule.

    Contact managing director David Baldwin today said the 23-megawatt (MW) station, which would provide enough baseload renewable energy for about 23,000 homes, was also finished under budget. …

    Contact is seeking consents for a 250MW Tauhara Two geothermal power station through a board of inquiry process and advancing development of its consented 220MW Te Mihi power station.


  • North Korea Cuts Ties to South Korea

    North Korea Cuts Ties to South Korea
    North Korea has announced it will sever all ties with South Korea, the country’s official KCNA news agency said on Tuesday. The country’s government also said its troops were bracing for war as tensions spiked over the sinking of a South Korean warship in late March.

  • Self-violating

    Self-violating
    You would think at a minimum the regulators of theses lax agency’s could at least handle cleaning up a mess.

    (Brown pelican being treated – photo via IBRRC at Flickr)

    The response of the Obama Administration to BP’s attempt to turn oil into oilade has been, to say the least, underwhelming. I know the guy isn’t Red Black Adair but is it too much too ask to be “whelmed” occasionally?

    But one thing is pretty clear about where this all starts, a lot of Republicans hate governing as much as they love loving themselves. In a report that covers the period 2000 to 2008 (who was President most of that time? Oh yeah, Dick Cheney) a pattern develops.

    Staff members at an agency that oversees offshore drilling accepted tickets to sports events, lunches and other gifts from oil and gas companies and used government computers to view pornography, according to an Interior Department report alleging a culture of cronyism between regulators and the industry.

    Rubbing one out, instead of regulating, was not unknown of course.

    …a new government report reveals that some high-level regulators have spent more time looking at porn than policing Wall Street…the report says most of these cases began in 2008, just as the financial system began to collapse.

    I now shudder more to think what is actually in the minutes of Dick Cheney’s Energy Task Force, in addition to what I have been shuddering over.

  • Alleged Chicago Torturer’s Overdue Day in Court

    Alleged Chicago Torturer’s Overdue Day in Court
    Abu Ghraib has nothing over Chicago. Forty years ago, Jon Burge returned from Vietnam, joined the Chicago Police Department and allegedly began torturing people. By Amy Goodman

    Abu Ghraib has nothing over Chicago. Forty years ago, Jon Burge returned from Vietnam, joined the Chicago Police Department and allegedly began torturing people.

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  • Crystal Bowersox dazzles on “American Idol” 2010

    Crystal Bowersox dazzles on "American Idol" 2010Bowersox Crystal on Tuesday imposed a nervous Lee DeWyze in finale of “American Idol” 2010, stealing the hearts of judges and giving way to a bitter end to the season’s highest rated television show in America.

    Bowersox, 24, a rasta-style single mother from Ohio, whose energy had missed in recent weeks, was the clear favorite of the judges in the fight for the title of “American Idol” 2010 after his set of three songs .

    But the winner will be revealed on Wednesday night after million telephone votes and text messages from around the country will be recounted.

    “You took this song and performed it with absolute precision,” said the usually abrasive Simon Cowell after she offered a version of the classic 1990s “Black Velvet.”

    DeWyze, 24, was regarded as the most likely contender to win in the television show and his victory had been predicted by Cowell before Tuesday’s final performances in front of 7,000 fans.

    But the blues singer and guitarist, who last year worked at a paint store in Chicago, seemed to have lost some confidence with which Bowersox eclipsed last week.

    “I would have expected a lot more passion and excitement. That was a kiss on the cheek, when I wanted a kiss on the lips,” Cowell said, referring to the first attempt DeWyze, “The Boxer.”

    The night did not improve for DeWyze, Kara DioGuardi felt like he “was beaten a bit” by the success of U2’s “Beautiful Day.”

    In a major change for “American Idol,” the original ballad is usually revealed in the final competition was replaced this year by two different versions of existing tracks: “Beautiful Day” to DeWyze and “Up to the Mountain” to Bowersox.

    Bowersox plays guitar, piano and harmonica and was considered one of the favorites for the title after almost flawless presentations throughout the season.

    Bowersox and DeWyze are the last two on the career of nearly 100,000 aspiring pop music stars who attended a hearing last summer in the United States for the singing competition on Fox.

    In his ninth season, “Idol” remains the most-watched U.S. television show, but has suffered a small decline in its audience, which fell 9 percent this year.

    In recent weeks, nearly 20 million viewers have tuned the program nears its end, compared to 30 million in 2006.

    The winner will be announced at the end of the final two hours on Wednesday, getting a recording contract and the opportunity to launch a career worthy of a Grammy as did former “Idols” Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood.

    Wednesday’s final will also mark the departure of the controversial British judge Simon Cowell, who announced his retirement in January to launch its own talent show “The X Factor” on Fox in the fall of 2011.

    So far, they have not announced a replacement for Cowell.

    Related posts:

    1. Who won American Idol 2010?
    2. Simon Cowell: Goodbye American Idol
    3. Judges Pick Songs for American Idol’s Top Three

  • How They Passed Health Care: The Final Installment

    How They Passed Health Care: The Final Installment
    Nancy Pelosi was in the Old Executive Office Building when one of her advisers gave her a message: Obama wanted her next door, in the…

    HUFFPOST HILL – MAY 25, 2010
    Lawmakers turned their attention to the Gulf today: Robert Menendez had the uncanny idea that companies which get reckless with crude should pay for the…

    Suzanne E. Spaulding: Saving the DNI from Extinction
    Before any prospective nominee for DNI agrees to take the job, he or she should get a firm commitment from the President to provide the political backing for budget and personnel authority lacking in the legislative charter.

    Kelley Beaucar Vlahos: Rand Paul Drinks Tea, Turns Into Hawk?
    Paul knew he needed the extraordinary muscle of the Tea Party to win the primary. Going forward, will his non-interventionist impulses prevail, or will the Tea Party demand certain reciprocities for its help in winning the seat?

  • Does “Reagan conservative” Hannity think Reagan should have been impeached for reported job offer?

    Does “Reagan conservative” Hannity think Reagan should have been impeached for reported job offer?

    Sean Hannity has baselessly claimed that an alleged job offer by the Obama administration to Rep. Joe Sestak would constitute a “de facto bribe” and “an impeachable offense.” However, the administration of Hannity’s political hero, Ronald Reagan, reportedly made a similar offer to a candidate.

    Hannity baselessly suggests Sestak job claims constitute “high crimes and misdemeanors” for Obama

    Hannity: “De facto bribe” to Sestak is “an impeachable offense.” Hannity asked Fox News political analyst Dick Morris, “This, at a minimum, we’re talking about a congressman offered a high-ranking job, this is a de facto bribe, no?” Morris replied, “It is,” later adding that the offer might be “a high crime and misdemeanor.” Hannity then asked: “That would be — in other words — an impeachable offense.” Morris replied, “Absolutely.” [Fox News’ Hannity, 5/24/10]

    Hannity invokes Nixon resignation, asks if “Sestak scandal” could “drive [Obama] out of the White House.” After airing footage of President Nixon saying, “I will resign from the presidency at noon tomorrow,” Hannity asked, “If the Sestak scandal spins out of control, could it drive the Anointed One out of the White House?” [Fox News’ Hannity, 5/25/10]

    Hannity to Jay Sekulow: “High crimes and misdemeanors?” Hannity said that “if Joe Sestak is telling the truth that one of the president’s advisers did offer him a job, many have suggested that a senior administration official, and maybe even the president himself, is guilty of a crime.” Hannity then interviewed conservative legal analyst Jay Sekulow and Reagan administration deputy assistant attorney general Victoria Toensing, both of whom agreed that a crime was committed. During the interview, Hannity asked Sekulow, “High crimes and misdemeanors, Jay?” Sekulow replied that “Article 2, Section 4 of the Constitution” — the section dealing with impeachment — “is there for a reason.” [Fox News’ Hannity, 5/25/10]

    Hannity: “So Rahm Emanuel would risk going to jail to fall on the sword for the president?” After Toensing speculated that whoever supposedly offered Sestak a job would “fall on his or her sword” rather than put President Obama in legal “trouble,” Hannity asked, “Hypothetically, if it was Rahm Emanuel, does he risk potential criminal charges?” Toensing and Sekulow agreed that he would. Hannity then asked, “So Rahm Emanuel would risk going to jail to fall on the sword for the president?” [Fox News’ Hannity, 5/25/10]

    “Reagan conservative” Hannity ignores Reagan administration’s reported offer of job for candidate to step down

    Hannity identifies himself as a “Reagan conservative.” A chapter in Hannity’s book, Conservative Victory, is titled “Why I’m a Reagan Conservative.” In that chapter, Hannity writes:

    Today, I believe we’re facing a crossroads in America’s future — a choice between, on the one hand, a disastrous path of socialism at home and weakness on the world stage, and on the other, free-market capitalism, moral authority, and steadfast security. In the upcoming elections, we will choose our path. And before we do, I believe we must remind ourselves of the example set by the most successful president in modern times — Ronald Reagan. [Page 134]

    Reagan adviser reportedly offered CA senator a job with the administration “if he decided not to seek re-election.” A November 25, 1981, Associated Press article reported that President Reagan’s political adviser Ed Rollins planned to offer then-California Sen. S.I. Hayakawa a job in the administration in exchange for not seeking re-election. From the AP article (accessed from the Nexis database):

    Sen. S.I. Hayakawa on Wednesday spurned a Reagan administration suggestion that if he drops out of the crowded Republican Senate primary race in California, President Reagan would find him a job.

    “I’m not interested,” said the 75-year-old Hayakawa.

    “I do not want to be an ambassador, and I do not want an administration post.”

    […]

    In an interview earlier this week, Ed Rollins, who will become the president’s chief political adviser in January, said Hayakawa would be offered an administration post if he decided not to seek re-election. No offer has been made directly to Hayakawa, Rollins said.

    Similarly, Hayakawa said in a statement, “I have not contacted the White House in regard to any administration or ambassadorial post, and they have not been in contact with me.”

    AP: “Ethics attorneys in Washington said such offers are common.” A February 19 Associated Press article reported: “Ethics attorneys in Washington said such offers are common. Melanie Sloan, director of the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, described it as ‘politics as usual.’ “

    Wash. Post: “This would hardly be the first administration” to offer a job to “clear the field.” A May 25 Washington Post editorial critical of the Obama administration’s response stated: “At the same time, of course, political considerations play a role in political appointments. This would hardly be the first administration to use appointments to try to clear the field for a favored candidate.”

    Legal experts dispute claims that a crime was committed

    Bush ethics lawyer calls claim that a job offer is a bribe “difficult to support.” In a post on the Legal Ethics Forum blog, former Bush administration chief ethics lawyer Richard Painter wrote: “The allegation that the job offer was somehow a ‘bribe’ in return for Sestak not running in the primary is difficult to support.” Painter also wrote:

    The job offer may have been a way of getting Sestak out of Specter’s way, but this also is nothing new. Many candidates for top Administration appointments are politically active in the President’s political party. Many are candidates or are considering candidacy in primaries. White House political operatives don’t like contentious fights in their own party primaries and sometimes suggest jobs in the Administration for persons who otherwise would be contenders. For the White House, this is usually a “win-win” situation, giving the Administration politically savvy appointees in the Executive Branch and fewer contentious primaries for the Legislative Branch. This may not be best for voters who have less choice as a result, and Sestak thus should be commended for saying “no”. The job offer, however, is hardly a “bribe” when it is one of two alternatives that are mutually exclusive.

    Painter: “[D]ifficult to envision applying” bribery statute to Sestak job offer. In a subsequent blog post replying to a call by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) for a special prosecutor to be appointed to investigate possible criminal charges, Painter wrote: “The Administration probably should provide the information needed to clarify what happened, but the bribery statute citied by Congressman Issa is, for reasons explained in my previous post, difficult to envision applying to this situation.”

    CREW executive director: “I don’t see the crime.” CNSNews.com reported that Sloan, a former federal prosecutor, commented of the allegations: “I don’t see the crime.” From the March 24 CNS article:

    “People offer members of Congress things all the time,” Melanie Sloan, a former federal prosecutor and now the executive director of the liberal government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), told CNSNews.com. “I don’t think there is any issue. I don’t see the crime.”

    […]

    If it is true, such a trade would be an indictment of the system, Sloan of CREW said, but not likely illegal.

    “A quid pro quo has to offer something of value in exchange for something,” Sloan said. “If you agree not to run for the Senate and we’ll make you secretary of the Navy — that offers no monetary value. It’s just the unseemly side of politics.”

    Wash. Post: “[E]thics laws do not seem designed for this circumstance.” In a May 25 editorial, The Washington Post stated: “Would it be illegal? Mr. Specter said so, but ethics laws do not seem designed for this circumstance. Ordinarily, bribery takes place in the opposite direction: Government officials aren’t usually the ones offering something of value. Other statutes prohibit officials from using their power to interfere in an election, or to, directly or indirectly, promise a job as ‘reward for any political activity.’ But these have been understood to prevent official coercion, not criminalize horse-trading.” The editorial continued:

    Still, the White House position that everyone should just trust it and go away is unacceptable from any administration; it is especially hypocritical coming from this one. “I’m not going to get further into what the conversations were,” Mr. Gibbs said Sunday. “People that have looked into them assure me that they weren’t inappropriate in any way.” This response would hardly have satisfied those who were upset during the previous administration about the firing of U.S. attorneys. If there was nothing improper, why not all that sunlight Mr. Obama promised?

    TPM: “[E]xperts seem to agree that there’s no legal wrongdoing — and very little scandal here.” Talking Points Memo’s Zachary Roth reported in a May 25 post that “several experts tell TPMmuckraker this is much ado about nothing.” Roth went on to report:

    That may be fair as far as it goes — the White House certainly hasn’t been falling all over itself to be up front about what happened. But the experts seem to agree that there’s no legal wrongdoing — and very little scandal here.

    “People horse trade politically all the time,” Stan Brand, a prominent Washington criminal defense lawyer told TPMmuckraker. “So I don’t put much stock in this, and I don’t think its gonna go anywhere.”

    Even those who used to prosecute public corruption cases agree. “Talk about criminalizing the political process!” said Peter Zeidenberg, a former federal prosecutor with the Justice Department’s Public Integrity unit. “It would be horrible precedent if what really truly is political horsetrading were viewed in the criminal context of: is this a corrupt bribe?”

    And Melanie Sloan, a former federal prosecutor who as the head of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington isn’t known for going on easy public corruption, concurred. “There is no bribery case here,” she said. “No statute has ever been used to prosecute anybody for bribery in circumstances like this.”

    Sloan added that Issa’s move was more about politics. “It’s not at all about whether there was actual criminal wrongdoing,” she said. “It’s about how to go after Sestak.”

  • Cheryl Cole Files Divorce – Ashley Cole’s World Cup Participation In Doubt

    A few months back, announcing separation, International footballer Ashley Cole and pop star wife, Cheryl announced that they are filing a divorce. Almost three years of marriage which ended sadly, the Girls Aloud singer wasn’t satisfied neither happy with her marriage. Both the couple called it quits and were ready to start a new life. The couple had been recently classed as one of the most high-profile couples in UK.

    A spokeswoman, revealing not much told:

    ”I can confirm they are getting divorced.”

    Reason for the split were due to the footballer’s stories appearing day after day. Much had been revealed over his affairs and links to ladies around, which certainly got the temperature running high on Cheryl’s side. Cheryl had even released a solo single which was an instant hit over her ongoing marital problems. The song called ‘Fight For This Love’ topped the British charts released last year.

    No’money’ factor will be brought forward in the break-up, Cheryl confirms as she files the divorce. She wanted things to end swiftly before Ashley Cole starred in the first potential Football World Cup match in South Africa on June 12.

    Ashley Cole’s mistresses included:

    • Aimee Watson
    • Alexandra Taylor
    • Sonia Wild
    • Vicki Gough
    • Ann Corbitt

    Related posts:

    1. Cheryl Cole Is FHM’s Sexiest Woman
    2. Cheryl Cole: The Sexiest Woman in the World!
    3. Sandra Bullock Files For Divorce

  • Man Who Killed Arkansas Police Officers Had Anti-Government Views (VIDEO)

    Man Who Killed Arkansas Police Officers Had Anti-Government Views (VIDEO)
    On Thursday, two police officers pulled over a white van in West Memphis, Arkansas, for a traffic stop, and the driver opened fire with an AK-47, killing the officers, according to police. The driver of the van was Jerry Kane,…

    Even CREW Says Sestak’s Claim Of Job Offer Is No Scandal
    Republicans have been launching a full-court press to trumpet the claim by Rep. Joe Sestak (D-PA) that the White House offered him a job in exchange for dropping out of the Democratic primary race for the U.S. Senate, in an effort to clear the field for its favored candidate, Sen. Arlen Specter (D-PA). One GOP lawmaker has called for a criminal probe, alleging possible illegal conduct. But several experts tell TPMmuckraker this is much ado about nothing.


    White HouseJoe SestakArlen SpecterRepublicanUnited States Senate