Wednesday 26 June 2013

BERLUSCONI SUPPORTERS STAGE WAR; We are all whores

Silvio Berlusconi was convicted of sex
with an underaged prostitute on
Monday, and while many Italians
celebrated the news, some of his most
fervent supporters are not taking the
decision lying down -- or are they?

The Guardian reports that following
the announcement of the former
prime minister's seven-year prison
sentence and lifetime ban from public
office, a group of pro-Berlusconi
demonstrators rallied in central Rome
on Tuesday under the banner, "Siamo
tutti puttane," or "We are all whores."

According to Italian news agency AKI,
the protesters were led by Giuliano
Ferrara, editor of conservative
newspaper Il Foglio, who denounced
what he perceives as the "puritanical
injustice" of the courts.
"This is a shameful sentence that hurts
Italian justice and lowers it to the level
of that in Afghanistan or Iran," Ferrara
wrote in a front-page editorial in Il
Foglio, according to a translation by
AKI.

The
spectacle included Ferrara applying
lipstick on stage, presumably to
demonstrate his whoredom, and the
on-the-nose song choice of the Rolling
Stone classic, Ruby Tuesday -- a nod to
Karima el-Mahroug, the woman at the
center of the controversy.
In recent months, some of Berlusconi's
supporters have dismissed the
prostitution and coverup case as
merely part of an agenda by his left-
leaning political opponents. Last
month, thousands turned out to an
"Everyone for Silvio" rally in which
Berlusconi condemned the "politicized
magistrates blinded by prejudice and
hatred," the Associated Press reported
at the time.

Berlusconi's critics, however, don't
need to look too far for additional
ammunition against the disgraced
politician. Since entering public office
in 1994, Berlusconi has been sentenced
to 18 years in prison as a result of
different trials, and is currently
embroiled in five additional cases
pending judicial review.

BERLUSCONI SUPPORTERS STAGE WAR; We are all whores

Silvio Berlusconi was convicted of sex
with an underaged prostitute on
Monday, and while many Italians
celebrated the news, some of his most
fervent supporters are not taking the
decision lying down -- or are they?

The Guardian reports that following
the announcement of the former
prime minister's seven-year prison
sentence and lifetime ban from public
office, a group of pro-Berlusconi
demonstrators rallied in central Rome
on Tuesday under the banner, "Siamo
tutti puttane," or "We are all whores."

According to Italian news agency AKI,
the protesters were led by Giuliano
Ferrara, editor of conservative
newspaper Il Foglio, who denounced
what he perceives as the "puritanical
injustice" of the courts.
"This is a shameful sentence that hurts
Italian justice and lowers it to the level
of that in Afghanistan or Iran," Ferrara
wrote in a front-page editorial in Il
Foglio, according to a translation by
AKI.

The
spectacle included Ferrara applying
lipstick on stage, presumably to
demonstrate his whoredom, and the
on-the-nose song choice of the Rolling
Stone classic, Ruby Tuesday -- a nod to
Karima el-Mahroug, the woman at the
center of the controversy.
In recent months, some of Berlusconi's
supporters have dismissed the
prostitution and coverup case as
merely part of an agenda by his left-
leaning political opponents. Last
month, thousands turned out to an
"Everyone for Silvio" rally in which
Berlusconi condemned the "politicized
magistrates blinded by prejudice and
hatred," the Associated Press reported
at the time.

Berlusconi's critics, however, don't
need to look too far for additional
ammunition against the disgraced
politician. Since entering public office
in 1994, Berlusconi has been sentenced
to 18 years in prison as a result of
different trials, and is currently
embroiled in five additional cases
pending judicial review.

Thursday 20 June 2013

SCIENTISTS INVENT 3D BRAIN

Researchers from Germany and Canada,
who collaborated on the ultra-high
resolution brain model, present their
work in the 21 June issue of the journal
Science.

"The authors pushed the limits of current
technology," said Science's senior editor
Peter Stern about the international
scientific effort. "Such spatial resolution
exceeds that of presently available
reference brains by a factor of 50 in each
of the three spatial dimensions."

The sophisticated modern image
processing methods reveal an
unprecedented look at the very fine
details of the human brain's
microstructure, or cellular level. The
anatomical tool will allow for three-
dimensional cytoarchitectonic mapping of
the human brain and serve as an atlas for
small cellular circuit data, or single layers
or sublayers of the cerebral cortex,
explained the researchers.

Until recently, reference brains did not
probe further than the macroscopic, or
visible, components of the brain. Now,
the BigBrain provides a resolution much
finer than the typical 1 mm resolution
from MRI studies.

The project "has been a tour-de-force to
assemble images of over 7,400 individual
histological sections, each with its own
distortions, rips and tears, into a coherent
3-D volume," said senior author Dr. Alan
Evans, a professor at the Montreal
Neurological Institute at McGill University
in Montreal, Canada. "This dataset allows
for the first time a 3-D exploration of
human cytoarchitectural anatomy."

Thin sections of a 65-year-old human
female brain, which was embedded in
paraffin wax, were cut with a special
large-scale tool called a microtome. Then,
the 20-micrometer thick histological
sections were mounted on slides, stained
to detect cell structures and finally
digitized with a high-resolution flatbed
scanner so researchers could reconstruct
the high-resolution 3-D brain model. It
took approximately 1,000 hours to collect
the data. The resulting images reveal
differences in the laminar pattern
between brain areas.

The new reference brain, which is part of
the European Human Brain Project, serves
as a powerful tool to facilitate
neuroscience research and "redefines
traditional maps from the beginning of
the 20th century," explained lead author
Dr. Katrin Amunts from the Research
Centre Jülich and director of the Cecile
and Oskar Vogt Institute for Brain
Research at the Heinrich Heine University
Düsseldorf in Germany. "The famous
cytoarchitectural atlases of the early
1900's were simplified drawings of a brain
and were based on pure visual analysis of
cellular organization patterns," added Dr.
Amunts.
Because of the sheer volume of this
dataset, the researchers say that there
will be a push by those who want to use
it to develop new and valuable tools for
visualization, data management and
analysis.

"We plan to repeat this process in a
sample of brains so that we can quantify
cytoarchitectural variability," said Dr.
Evans. "We will also integrate this dataset
with high-resolution maps of white
matter connectivity in post-mortem
brains. This will allow us to explore the
relationship between cortical
microanatomy and fiber connectivity,"
said Dr. Amunts.
"We are planning to integrate our
receptor data of the human brain in the
reference frame provided by the
BigBrain," continued senior co-author Dr.
Karl Zilles, who is senior professor of the
Jülich Aachen Research Alliance and
former director of the Cecile and Oskar
Vogt Institute for Brain Research at the
Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf in
Germany. "We will also transfer high-
resolution maps of quantitative data on
the regional and laminar distribution of
native receptor complexes to the
BigBrain. This will allow us to explore the
relationship between cortical
microanatomy and key molecules of
neurotransmission."
The fine-grained anatomical resolution
will allow scientists to gain insights into
the neurobiological basis of cognition,
language, emotions and other processes,
according to the study. The researchers
also stated that they plan to extract
measurements of cortical thickness to
gain insights into understanding aging and
neurodegenerative disorders; create
cortical thickness maps to compare data
from in vivo imaging; integrate gene
expression data from the Allen Institute;
and generate a brain model with a
resolution of 1 micron to capture details
of single cell morphology.
Public access of the BigBrain dataset will
be provided through the CBRAIN Portal
with free registration, stated the
researchers.

WEIRD! A SHEEP EATING PLANT FOUND IN U.K

An exotic "sheep-eating" plant, so-
called because it kills and "eats" sheep,
has bloomed for the first time at the
Royal Horticultural Society's Garden
Wisley in the U.K.

The plant, known formally as Puya
chilensis, has been at the garden for
15 years. In that time, it has reached a
height of 10 feet and grown its
signature base of razor-sharp, hook-
shaped spines.

A BBC report, in its native habitat
of Chile, the plant uses the spines to
ensnare sheep and other small
animals. After they starve to death
and decompose, the animals nourish
the plant through the soil, acting as a
gruesome fertilizer.

Speaking of the plant's first-ever
flower, Cara Smith, a horticulturist at
the Garden Wisley attributed the
success to keeping the plant nourished
on a liquid fertilizer. "[F]eeding it on
its natural diet might prove a bit
problematic," she admitted.

Smith added, "Parents coming along
with small children [to see the flower]
don’t need to worry about the plant
devouring their little ones. It’s growing
in the arid section of our Glasshouse
with its deadly spines well out of reach
of both children and sheep alike.”

Sunday 16 June 2013

Puttin Responds to Accusation he Stole a Super Bowl Ring

A spokesman for Vladimir Putin has
emphatically denied that the Russian
president ever stole a Super Bowl ring
from New England Patriots owner
Robert Kraft, days after Kraft
originally made the extraordinary
allegation.

Putin does currently possess the
championship ring made for Kraft
when his Patriots defeated the
Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl
XXXIX. Kraft said in 2005 that he gifted
the ring to Putin when the two met
during a function in St. Petersburg.

"I
decided to give him the ring as a
symbol of the respect and admiration
that I have for the Russian people and
the leadership of President Putin," he
said in a statement.

However, Kraft changed his tune at
Carnegie Hall’s Medal of Excellence
Gala in New York on Thursday night,
recounting his interaction with Putin
as such: “I took out the ring and
showed it to [Putin]... he put it on and
he goes, ‘I can kill someone with this
ring." When Kraft tried to retrieve the
ring, he continued, the Russian
president "put it in his pocket," and
exited the room with a coterie of "KGB
guys."

The George W. Bush White House
dissuaded Kraft from trying to retrieve
the ring, fearing a diplomatic debacle,
Kraft reportedly said.
"What Mr. Kraft is saying now is
weird," said Putin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov. "I was standing 20 centimeters
away from him and Mr. Putin and saw
and heard how Mr. Kraft gave this ring
as a gift."

The ring, which is reportedly worth
upwards of $25,000, was one of three
Kraft has earned with the Patriots to
date.

Google Internet Balloons Offer Remote Areas Web Access

Google is launching Internet-beaming
antennas into the stratosphere aboard
giant, jellyfish-shaped balloons with
the lofty goal of getting the entire
planet online.

Eighteen months in the works, the top-
secret project was announced
Saturday in New Zealand, where up to
50 volunteer households are already
beginning to receive the Internet
briefly on their home computers via
translucent helium balloons that sail
by on the wind 12 miles above Earth.

While the project is still in the very
early testing stages, Google hopes
eventually to launch thousands of the
thin, polyethylene-film inflatables and
bring the Internet to some of the more
remote parts of the globe, narrowing
the digital divide between the 2.2
billion people who are online and the
4.8 billion who aren't.
If successful, the technology might
allow countries to leapfrog the
expense of installing fiber-optic cable,
dramatically increasing Internet usage
in places such as Africa and Southeast
Asia.

"It's a huge moonshot, a really big goal
to go after," said project leader Mike
Cassidy. "The power of the Internet is
probably one of the most
transformative technologies of our
time."
The so-called Project Loon was
developed in the clandestine Google X
lab that also came up with a driverless
car and Google's Web-surfing
eyeglasses.

Google would not say how much it is
investing in the project or how much
customers will be charged when it is
up and running.
The first person to get Google Balloon
Internet access this week was Charles
Nimmo, a farmer and entrepreneur in
the small town of Leeston who signed
up for the experiment. Technicians
attached a bright red, basketball-size
receiver resembling a giant Google
map pin to the outside of his home.
In a successful preliminary test,
Nimmo received the Internet for about
15 minutes before the 49-foot-wide
transmitting balloon he was relying on
floated out of range. The first thing he
did was check the weather forecast
because he wanted to find out if it was
a good time for "crutching" his sheep,
or removing the wool around their
rear ends.
Nimmo is among the many rural folk,
even in developed countries, who can't
get broadband access. After ditching
his dial-up four years ago in favor of
satellite Internet service, he has gotten
stuck with bills that sometimes exceed
$1,000 a month.
"It's been weird," Nimmo said of the
Google Balloon Internet experience.
"But it's been exciting to be part of
something new."
In recent years, military and
aeronautical researchers have used
tethered balloons to beam Internet
signals back to bases on Earth.

Google's balloons would be untethered
and out of sight, strung out in a line
around the globe. They would ride the
winds around the world while Google
ground controllers adjusted their
altitude to keep them moving along the
desired route.
Ground stations about 60 miles apart
would bounce Internet signals up to
the balloons. The signals would hop
backward from one balloon to the next
to keep people continuously
connected. Solar panels attached to
the inflatables would generate
electricity to power the Internet circuit
boards, radios and antennas, as well as
the onboard flight-control equipment.

Each balloon would provide Internet
service for an area twice the size of
New York City, or about 780 square
miles, and because of their high
altitude, rugged terrain is not a
problem. The balloons could even
beam the Internet into Afghanistan's
steep and winding Khyber Pass.
"Whole segments of the population
would reap enormous benefits, from
social inclusion to educational and
economic opportunities," said DePauw
University media studies professor
Kevin Howley.
Once in place, the light but durable
balloons wouldn't interfere with
aviation because they fly twice as high
as airplanes and well below satellites,
said Richard DeVaul, an MIT-trained
scientist who founded Project Loon
and helped develop Google Glass,
eyeglasses with a tiny, voice controlled
computer display.

In the U.S., however, Google would
have to notify the Federal Aviation
Administration when the balloons are
on their way up or down. The
company is talking with regulators in
other countries about meeting their
requirements.
The Internet signals travel in the
unlicensed spectrum, which means
Google doesn't have to go through the
onerous regulatory processes required
for Internet providers using wireless
communications networks or satellites.
At this stage, the company is putting a
few dozen balloons up over New
Zealand and then bringing them down
after a short period. Later this year,
Google hopes to have as many as 300
of them circling the globe continuously
along the 40th parallel, on a path that
takes them over New Zealand,
Australia, Chile and Argentina.
Covering the whole world would
require thousands of the balloons. No
timetable has been set for that.

Google chose New Zealand in part
because of its remoteness. Some
Christchurch residents were cut off
from the Internet for weeks after a
2011 earthquake that killed 185
people. Google said balloon access
could help places suffering natural
disasters get back online quickly.
"The potential of a system that can
restore connectivity within hours of a
crisis hitting is tremendously exciting,"
said Imogen Wall at the U.N. Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs, although she warned that the
service must be robust. "If the service
fails in a crisis, then lives are lost."
Temple University communications
professor Patrick Murphy warned of
mixed consequences, pointing to China
and Brazil as places where Internet
service promoted democratic
principles but also contributed to a
surge in consumerism that has
resulted in environmental and health
problems.
"The nutritional and medical
information, farming techniques,
democratic principles those are the
wonderful parts of it," he said. "But
you also have everyone wanting to
drive a car, eat a steak, drink a Coke."
Already the world's largest advertising
network, Google stands to expand its
own empire by bringing the Internet
to more corners of the Earth. More
users means more potential Google
searchers, which in turn translates
into more chances for the company to
display ads.
Richard Bennett, a fellow with the
nonprofit Information Technology and
Innovation Foundation, was skeptical
of the project, noting that smartphones
are increasingly being used in
developing countries.
"I'm really glad that Google is doing
this kind of speculative research," he
said. "But it remains to be seen how
practical any of these things are."
Before heading to New Zealand,
Google spent a few months secretly
launching two to five flights a week in
California's Central Valley.
"People were calling in reports about
UFOs," DeVaul said.
___

Thursday 13 June 2013

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CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER TO MEET QUEEN

—Prime Minister Stephen
Harper will meet next week with
Queen Elizabeth II and the leaders of
Britain, France and Ireland but
probably won’t be able to use his trip
to Europe to ink Canada’s long-sought
trade deal with the European Union.

Besides an audience with the Queen,
Harper’s June 11-18 trip will be
highlighted by a rare opportunity to
address the British Parliament next
Thursday while in London. Harper is
expected to talk about the close ties
and shared challenges of Canada and
Britain.

The trip includes high-level meetings
in London, Paris and Dublin — capped
by the Group of Eight summit in Lough
Erne, Northern Ireland.
Harper had hoped the trip would
provide an opportunity to sign the
Canada-EU free-trade agreement. But
after four years of talks, negotiators
are still haggling over how to open up
agricultural trade, government
procurement and investment dealings.
As a result, it is unlikely that Harper
can announce an agreement during
the visit.
“We’re not there yet,” Andrew
MacDougall, the prime minister’s
spokesperson, said in a briefing Friday
for reporters in advance of Harper’s
trip.

MacDougall said Canada won’t
sign the free-trade pact until it
achieves a good deal for Canadians.
But he said Harper will probably use
his upcoming discussions to press
European leaders to reach a deal,
which is crucial to the Conservatives’
export-expansion strategy.
One of the focuses of the G8 summit
hosted by British Prime Minister David
Cameron will be what governments
can do to fight tax evasion and
promote greater corporate and
government transparency.
MacDougall said Harper’s contribution
to the discussion of government
transparency will not be hampered by
the tumult in Ottawa over former
Conservative MP Brent Rathgeber’s
decision to quit the Tory caucus.
Rathgeber quit Thursday because of
the Conservative party’s efforts to
water down Rathgeber’s legislation to
make federal officials’ salaries public.
“I don’t think that will be an issue at
all” at the G8 meeting, MacDougall told
reporters.

Besides trade, Harper’s talks with
other leaders are expected to focus on
the economy.
Leaders at the G8 are also expected to
discuss what to do about the
deteriorating situation in Syria,
terrorism, instability in Mali and
responses to Iran and North Korea,
which are both widely believed to be
building nuclear weapons.
In addition to Canada, the G8 includes
France, Britain, Germany, the United
States, Italy, Japan and Russia.
In Paris, Harper will meet with French
President Francois Hollande and Prime
Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault. In Dublin,
Harper sits down with Irish Taoiseach
Enda Kenny and president Michael
Higgins.
Besides talks with Cameron in London,
Harper will deliver a speech to the
British Parliament, the first Canadian
leader to do so since former prime
minister William Lyon Mackenzie King
in 1944.

Federal government officials briefing
reporters said Harper’s visit is not
expected to be disrupted by work
stoppages by Canadian diplomats in
Europe —part of a global action over
pay scales by members of the
Professional Association of Foreign
Service Officers.

Wednesday 12 June 2013

OBAMA MOTORCADE ACCIDENT

Two Miami police
officers were injured Wednesday while
participating in President Barack
Obama's motorcade in Florida, police
said.

Neither of the injuries was life-
threatening.
The Miami Police Department said Sgt.
Rufus Devane III, 42, and Sgt. Santiago
Cruz, 49, were traveling on Interstate
95 when they were involved in a crash
while approaching an onramp. A
preliminary investigation indicated an
abandoned vehicle on the shoulder of
the road may have contributed to the
crash, though the investigation is not
complete, police said.The two officers
were brought to a local hospital, where
tests were under way to determine the
severity of their injuries, police said.
Both officers have been with the
department for about two decades.

Obama's motorcade was returning to
Miami's international airport after two
Democratic fundraisers the president
held Wednesday evening in Miami
Beach, Fla. Obama's itinerary wasn't
affected. Obama left Miami on a
return flight to Washington ahead of
schedule.

The White House and U.S. Secret
Service had no immediate comment.
This isn't the first time Obama's
motorcade has been involved in an
accident in Florida. In September
2012, Bruce St. Laurent of the Jupiter,
Fla. police department was struck and
killed by a pickup truck in West Palm
Beach, Fla., where Obama was
traveling for a campaign stop.

Tuesday 11 June 2013

Warren Buffett Welcomes Hillary Clinton To Twitter, Pressures Her To Run In 2016

The Oracle of Omaha doesn’t just
welcome anybody to Twitter. Then
again, Hillary Clinton is not your
average tweeter.

Hours after the former Secretary of
State joined Twitter, Warren Buffett
sent a tweet welcoming her to the
social media site, complete with his
usual charm:
For the curious, “#45” is very likely a
subtle suggestion that Clinton run for
president in 2016. (Winning would
make her the country’s forty-fifth
president.) This was only Buffett's
third tweet.

Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
and one of the richest people in the
world, previously expressed his hope
that Clinton would run for president in
an interview with CNN last November.
"I hope it's Hillary Clinton," Buffett
said at the time. "I like what she
believes in. I think she's
extraordinarily able and energetic for
that matter in pushing those beliefs. I
don't see how you could have anybody
better qualified."

As of late May, Clinton would easily
beat both former Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush (R) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) if
she ran for president, according to a
poll by Quinnipiac University.
By the way, Clinton's first tweet was
pretty good:

Sunday 9 June 2013

MANDELA STILL SUFFERING FROM RECURRING LUNG INFECTION

Former South African
President Nelson Mandela was receiving
medical treatment for a lung infection on
Sunday after spending a second night in a
hospital.

There was no official update on 94-year-
old Mandela's condition, described in a
government statement on Saturday as
"serious but stable."
The office of President Jacob Zuma had
said that Mandela was taken to a Pretoria
hospital after his condition deteriorated
at around 1:30 a.m. on Saturday. It
described the lung infection as recurring.

The anti-apartheid leader has now been
taken to a hospital four times since
December, with the last discharge coming
on April 6 after doctors diagnosed him
with pneumonia and drained fluid from
his lung area.
Worshippers at a Sunday church service in
the Johannesburg township of Soweto
prayed for the recovery of Mandela, who
was freed in 1990 after 27 years as a
prisoner of white racist rule and won
election to the presidency in all-race
elections in 1994.
At the Regina Mundi church in Soweto,
Father Sebastian Rousso said Mandela,
seen by many as a symbol of
reconciliation, played a key role "not only
for ourselves as South Africans, but for
the world."

Welcome Tempa, a construction worker,
said he prayed daily for Mandela, who
retired from public life years ago and had
been receiving medical care at his
Johannesburg home until his latest
transfer to a hospital.
"When I was still a kid, we used to pray
for him," said Tempa, who is 63 years old.

On April 29, state television broadcast
footage of a visit by Zuma and other
leaders of the ruling African National
Congress to Mandela's home. Zuma said
at the time that Mandela was in good
shape, but the footage - the first public
images of Mandela in nearly a year
showed him silent and unresponsive,
even when Zuma tried to hold his hand.

The Nobel Peace Prize laureate has been
particularly vulnerable to respiratory
problems since contracting tuberculosis
during his long imprisonment. The bulk of
that period was spent on Robben Island,
an outpost off the coast of Cape Town
where Mandela and other prisoners spent
part of the time toiling in a stone quarry