Tuesday, May 29, 2012

This Memorial Day, many Vietnam vets, long silent, are finding a voice

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the start of the Vietnam war, and President Obama will pay tribute Monday. It's a sign that, at last, Vietnam vets are being and feeling embraced.?

By Anna Mulrine,?Staff writer / May 28, 2012

Visitors leave flags, flowers, and other mementos underneath the names of loved ones at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington.

Joanne Ciccarello/The Christian Science Monitor/File

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A former helicopter pilot in Vietnam, Mark Nestor had for a decade spearheaded a ceremony during a Memorial Day parade in Gloucester, Mass., for his fellow veterans of the infamous war.

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This year, however, the city decided to skip the stop along its parade route at the modest Vietnam memorial nestled in a corner of the campus of a local high school that saw 11 of its graduates die in the war. ?The argument is based on ?We are one country that has fought many wars,? ? Gloucester Mayor Carolyn Kirk told the hometown newspaper. ?With veterans returned and returning from Desert Storm, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc., the concern was that every war would end up with its own Memorial Day service.?

As the nation commemorates the 50th anniversary of the beginning of the Vietnam war this year, the choice of this particular Memorial Day to cut the Vietnam war memorial from the parade route hit particularly hard, says Mr. Nestor.?

But what happened next was a poignant and surprising show of community support, he adds: The city?s office, Facebook, and Twitter pages were inundated with calls to keep the Vietnam memorial stop along route. ?The outpouring was absolutely astonishing.?

In Washington on Monday, President Obama and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta will take part in a ceremony at the wall to remember the start of the unpopular war, and to pay tribute to the more than 58,000 Americans who died fighting it.?

Indeed, as the half-century commemoration of the war approaches, advocates say that Vietnam veterans across the country are increasingly ? though still gradually and cautiously ? stepping out to accept tributes of gratitude for their service.

?They were so damaged and they were so upset--for years, they didn?t want to remember a very bad experience that we as a country made worse,? Nestor says. ?We?re still trying to bring them back out of obscurity, and in an imperfect way, to say belatedly that we appreciate what you do.?

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Wednesday, May 23, 2012

CAMINO DE SANTIAGO ? of food and drink and beds | Richard ...

Casa Magica, Villatuerta. It?s not five star; the magic is in the charm and the warm welcome.

La Casa Magica in Villatuerta is old. Camino de Santiago pilgrims have been pulling off their boots and hobbling across its rough stone floor for over 500 years.

Now the old albergue is on Facebook and has a website and guest wi-fi.

A bed costs ten euros and breakfast an additional four.

?I?m sorry if we?re a little more expensive than some albergues,? says our hostess Simone. Expensive? 14 euros for B&B?? We?ve paid that much for coffee and a croissant in other countries, and bad coffee at that.

Most people spending a month or so walking to Santiago will be doing it on a budget but this is ridiculous. We?ve never found any travel in Europe as cheap as this.

Of course it?s not luxurious. The dormitory in our albergue in Obanos has about twenty bunk beds, so naturally on any given night three of them are occupied by large snoring Germans.

Rooms in the House of Magic, Villatuerta, are more intimate, but still communal.

Not flash, but hot showers are around the corner and there?s a nice view of the courtyard, with hammocks.

The communal living is a plus for most of us. It means we meet our fellow peregrinos over meals and massages, and can swap travellers? tales and advice.

Ooh, if you want to get to there, I wouldn?t start from here.

Lentils and sausage always taste better than they look. And this is just the starter.


Villatuerta has no Michelin-hatted restaurants. Instead it has the club for old people, with laminex tables and a television playing a Spanish soap opera.

Everybody is welcome, and I don?t need to flash my Australian seniors card, which tells the world, ?The holder is a valued member of our community. Please extend every courtesy and assistance.?

They have a lunchtime ?menu? ? a three course meal with bread, water and bottles of red wine, all for nine euros. Nine euros?? The cheapest house wine in our local Amsterdam cafe is 19 euros a bottle. And this Rioja wine is perfectly acceptable.

Their coffee is good too.

There?s no organised entertainment in Villatuerta, so we watch the local kids playing their version of ?pelota? in the village fronton ? a sort of fives court.

Next morning we eat the hearty four euro breakfast ? bread, coffee, cereal, yoghurt, juice ? shoulder our loads and hike on.

To maintain my credibility as a serious, critical blogger, I should inform my readers that the path of the Camino is not all beautiful?

This is an industrial alcohol factory.

?though there are regularly sights worth stopping for?

The 12th century church in Estella.

?and food worth stopping for too.

An excellent cafe con leche and croissante.

And when we?ve had enough walking, a bus will be along to pick us up.

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Bellagio robbery foiled: Thief loses wig in $155,000 attempted heist

Bellagio robbery that wasn't. Two thieves sprayed a blackjack dealer at the Bellagio casino in Las Vegas with mace and tried to steal $115,000 in casino chips. One was tackled and caught. The other escaped.

By Ken Ritter,?Associated Press / May 23, 2012

The "Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas" sign is seen in Las Vegas, Nevada. A $115,000 robbery of the Bellagio casino failed when one of two thieves was captured.

REUTERS/Las Vegas Sun/Steve Marcus/Files

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A hapless bandit lost his wig, sunglasses and $115,000 worth of casino chips when security wrestled him to the floor during a botched weekend heist at a posh Vegas Strip resort, authorities said Monday.

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Two men attempted to rob the Bellagio on Saturday night by spraying a blackjack dealer and others with a caustic eye-burning chemical, police said.

With the distraction in the air, Michael Q. Belton snatched up nearly two dozen high-value chips and took off for the door, according to a police report.

The man who sprayed the noxious gas escaped, but Belton was tackled to the floor and held until police arrived.

IN PICTURES: Famous art heists

Belton struggled at first, according to the police arrest report, but then suddenly stopped fighting back against casino employees and surrendered.

He dropped 23 red, white and blue chips, valued at $5,000 each, police said.

"How long am I going away for?" Belton asked detectives during a recorded interview following his arrest, according to the report.

Investigators said Belton, of southern California, told them he needed the money because he is unemployed and his grandparents are ill.

He told police he didn't know the man who got away. Bolton told investigators he responded to an Internet posting for a job repossessing cars. But he said when he reached Las Vegas, the man who posted the job ad said he wanted him to help another man rob the Bellagio.

Belton was held Monday on $60,000 bail at the Clark County jail pending an initial court appearance Tuesday on felony robbery, conspiracy and burglary charges. It was not immediately clear whether he had a lawyer.

Officer Jose Hernandez, a department spokesman, said the investigation was ongoing and Belton would not agree to a jail interview.

The suspect who got away apparently did not take any chips as he fled. Police said all chips were recovered, and casino officials say they sustained no financial loss.

Authorities said they were still searching for the second man in the heist, which they said was recorded by casino security cameras. The video was not made public.

No serious injuries were reported.

The last bandit to make off with casino chips from the Bellagio, in December 2010, was sentenced to three to 11 years in state prison for armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. Anthony Michael Carleo wore a motorcycle helmet as he waved a gun and made off with $1.5 million worth of chips. He was arrested trying to redeem a $25,000 chip.

He was sentenced to an additional six to 16 years for another armed robbery at another Las Vegas casino.

He blamed addictions to drugs and gambling.

___

Associated Press writer Michelle Rindels contributed to this report.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

RELATED: Famous art heists

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

ooVoo opens up 12-way chat on Facebook and the iPad, gives other apps a facelift

Image

If there's some video chat corollary to Moore's Law, ooVoo is adhering to it. Almost a year to the day after announcing six-way calls, the company is expanding its offerings to include 12-way chats on both Facebook and ooVoo's iPad app. It would seem that on FB, at least, that means true 12-way, face-to-face conversations -- an obvious one-up to Facebook's native video calling app, which is powered by Skype. On the iPad, however, that 12-way claim comes with a substantial quid pro quo: while you can partake in chat with 12 people at once, you can only view up to four people's streams at a time. Moving on, folks using ooVoo on Android or the iPhone will notice some UI tweaks starting today, while people plugged into the desktop version will be treated to a more drastic overhaul. Rounding out the list of newsy bits, the ability to record and upload video chats to YouTube, Facebook and Twitter is now free. You can get your update on now at ooVoo.com, the Apple App Store or Google Play, and we've got one last screen shot after the break to help illustrate what's on tap.

Continue reading ooVoo opens up 12-way chat on Facebook and the iPad, gives other apps a facelift

ooVoo opens up 12-way chat on Facebook and the iPad, gives other apps a facelift originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 May 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Final advice: Panel against routine prostate test

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Healthy men shouldn't get routine prostate cancer screenings, says updated advice from a government panel that found the PSA blood tests do more harm than good.

Despite strenuous protests from urologists, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is sticking by a contentious proposal it made last fall. A final guideline published Monday says there's little if any evidence that PSA testing saves lives ? while too many men suffer impotence, incontinence, heart attacks, occasionally even death from treatment of tiny tumors that never would have killed them.

The guideline isn't a mandate. The task force stresses that men who want a PSA test still can get one, but only after the doctor explains the uncertainties. That's in part because the panel found PSA testing hasn't been studied adequately in black men and those with prostate cancer in the family, who are at highest risk of the disease.

The Obama administration said Monday that Medicare will continue to pay for PSA screenings, a simple blood test. Other insurers tend to follow Medicare's lead.

"This is important information for the public and men to have, and they should talk with their doctors about the risks and benefits of prostate cancer screening and make the decision that's best for them," said Mark Weber, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services.

The task force advice goes a step further than major health groups including the American Cancer Society, which has long urged that men decide the issue for themselves after being told of PSA's pros and cons. But it's not likely to end an annual ritual for many men 50 and older. After all, the same task force has long urged men over 75 to skip PSA screening, and research suggests almost half of them still get tested.

The controversy will end only with development of better tests ? to finally tell which men's tumors really will threaten their lives, and who will die with prostate cancer rather than from it, said Dr. Virginia Moyer of the Baylor College of Medicine, who heads the task force.

"We have been told for decades to be terrified of cancer and that the only hope is early detection and treatment," she said. The reality: "You don't need to detect all cancers."

"We don't want this to be the answer," Moyer added. "We want to screen for the ones that are going to be aggressive, manage those early ? and leave everyone else alone."

In an editorial published with the guideline in Annals of Internal Medicine, some urologists argue the panel underestimated PSA's value and overestimated its harms.

"What PSA screening offers the men is a substantial opportunity to avoid dying a particularly unpleasant death from prostate cancer," said editorial co-author Dr. William Catalona of Northwestern University, who pioneered the testing.

He spoke Monday from a meeting of the American Urological Association, where doctors debated the guideline's impact. The urology association advises that men be informed of the potential risks and benefits before screening.

But Dr. Otis Brawley, the American Cancer Society's chief medical officer, welcomed the task force's recommendation. He hoped it would help deter mass screenings, where men are given free PSAs at shopping malls and sports arenas without being told of the controversy, screenings that Brawley calls big business when health centers profit from the follow-up care.

"The question is, are we actually curing anybody who needs to be cured right now?" Brawley asked.

Too much PSA, or prostate-specific antigen, in the blood only sometimes signals prostate cancer is brewing. It also can mean a benign enlarged prostate or an infection. Only a biopsy can tell. Most men will get prostate cancer if they live long enough. Some 240,000 U.S. men a year are diagnosed with it, most with slow-growing tumors that carry a very low risk of morphing into the kind that can kill.

To evaluate whether routine screening saves lives, the task force analyzed previous research, focusing in particular on two huge studies in the U.S. and Europe. The panel's conclusion:

?Without screening, about 5 in every 1,000 men die of prostate cancer over 10 years. The European study found PSA testing might prevent one of those deaths, while the U.S. study found no difference.

?Of every 1,000 men screened, two will have a heart attack or stroke from resulting cancer treatment, and 30 to 40 will experience treatment-caused impotence or incontinence.

?Of every 3,000 men screened, one will die from complications of surgery.

Both the U.S. and European studies have flaws, and task force critics argue over which are most believable. And while U.S. death rates from prostate cancer have dropped over 20 years, the cancer society's Brawley says the drop began before PSA testing became widespread. Moreover, the risk of death is the same in Europe and the U.S. even though many more American men are screened, diagnosed and treated, he said.

"We need to do a better job of using PSA wisely," said Dr. Scott Eggener, a University of Chicago prostate cancer specialist who was disappointed the task force went so far. "Most people would agree that a well-informed, young, healthy patient should have the opportunity to talk about it with their physician."

But he's studying a way beyond the screen-or-not controversy: Having men with small, low-risk tumors postpone treatment in favor of "active surveillance," keeping close watch on their tumors and treating only if they grow. More than 100,000 men a year are candidates, concluded a recent meeting at the National Institutes of Health.

That approach could "maximize the benefits of screening," Eggener said.

___

Online:

Task force information: http://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/recommendations.htm

Journal's patient summary: http://bit.ly/LbhSxH

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Monday, May 21, 2012

Academic and Creative Writing Journal Vikram Karve: ONE ...

My Favourite Short Stories Revisited Part 60

ONE EVENING ON THE DECCAN QUEEN

From my Creative Writing Archives:

Here is one of my earliest stories - from the days I used to travel often from Mumbai to Pune by the?Deccan?Queen. ?I wrote a few years about 10 years ago. Do tell me if you like it

Have you ever seen a handsome strapping young man reading a Mills & Boon Romance? And that too so blatantly in front of so many people in a crowded railway compartment? I did. On the?Deccan?Queen. Yes, on the Deccan Queen ? my favourite train that takes you from Mumbai to Pune every evening. And back from Pune to Mumbai in the morning. Let me tell you about it. But first I?ll tell you about myself. My name is Priya. I am twelve years old and I?m a pretty girl. I love train journeys and I have travelled a lot, especially on the Mumbai Pune route. But this was the first time I was travelling alone. So my loving father, who dotes on me since I am the only thing he has in this world, was very very anxious and worried. My father had come to see me off at Mumbai?s magnificent CST Railway Terminus. He seemed uneasy and kept on saying the same things again and again, ?Priya, take care. Don?t get down at any station. It?s only a three-hour journey. She?ll come to pick you up at Pune. I?ve told her your coach and seat number. And I?ve told uncle here to look after you.? ?Uncle? was a young man of about twenty-five on the seat next to mine. He was very handsome, well-groomed, smartly dressed in a light blue T-shirt and trendy Jeans. 25...? Maybe slightly older ? but certainly not 30...! ?He had a smart elegant beard. A proper well-kept full-grown beard, not the repulsive dirty-looking horrible two-day designer stubble young men sport nowadays. They think the filthy hideous stubble on their face looks fashionable, but let me tell you it looks sick and makes me feel like puking. But this guy had a gorgeous beard ? it suited his face perfectly and made him look very handsome and manly. ?Don?t you worry, sir,? he said to my father, ?she?ll be delivered safe and sound.? He gave me a friendly smile. I liked him and felt happy to have him as a companion. And of course, I had the window seat in case he turned out to be a bore. Now my father was talking to the train-conductor, probably telling him the same things to look after me and all that. I felt embarrassed but I didn?t say anything for I knew my father loved me very much and genuinely cared for me. After all, as I told you, we have no one else in this world except each other. I felt worried about him too. That?s why when he kissed me on the cheek just before the train started, I whispered in his ear, ?Papa, don?t drink too much.? I knew how much he hated to be lonely, and now I wouldn?t be there to look after him, to take care of him, to mother him! I looked at my watch. Ten minutes past five. Right on the dot. Soon the mighty Deccan Queen was speeding towards Pune. We would be there by dinner-time. I looked at ?uncle? ? just a sideways glance. But he did not notice me as he had already buried himself in the pages of the Mumbai Mid-Day newspaper. I took out my iPod from my bag, adjusted the earphones in my ears and looked at him again. He was still buried in his newspaper, totally oblivious of the world around him. I pressed my earphones tighter and tried to hear the music from my iPod, pretended to ignore him, made pretence of trying to look out of the tinted-glass window of the air-conditioned chair car. But my eyes kept wandering, trying to steal a glance at him when I thought he wouldn?t notice, but secretly hoping he would notice me and say something, talk to me. But he remained glued to his newspaper as if I just did not exist! How mean and snobbish? It seemed he had no manners! I hated him and decided to ignore him. After some time the young man next to me folded his newspaper and kept it in the rack in front of him. Then he pulled out his bag from below his seat, opened the zip, took out a book from his bag and kept it on his knees in front of him. It was a ?Mills & Boon? romance! I smiled to myself. This young man seemed to be quite an interesting character. Young men in their twenties don?t read Mills & Boon. Or do they? You tell me. Anyway, he opened the Mills & Boon and started reading intently. I know it is bad manners to disturb someone who is reading, but I was so curious to know more about him that I just could not resist. I shut the iPod, pulled earphones out of my ears, and said, ?Hello, uncle. I?m Priya.? ?Oh yes! I know. Priya. Age 12.? ?How??? I asked surprised. ?I read the reservation chart,? he said. ?No. No. Papa must have told you my name,? I said. ?But he didn?t tell me your age, young lady,? he smiled mischievously and said, ?Whenever I begin a train journey I always find out who my fellow-passengers are.? ?You a detective or something?? ?No, No!? he said smiling, ?I?m a Shippie. A Chief Officer in the Merchant Navy.? He held out his hand, "Girish Joshi. And don?t call me uncle. Call me Girish ? just Girish.? We shook hands. His grip was firm and strong. Robust. Reassuring. Redoubtable. Just like he looked. The Mills & Boon paperback fell off. He picked it up and put it back on his knees. It really seemed funny ? a solid macho man like him reading a mushy Mills and Boon romance. ?You been to Pune before?? he asked me. ?Oh yes,? I said. ?We lived in Pune before we came to Mumbai.? ?Then you can help me out,? he said. ?Do you know a place called Vaishali? It is a famous restaurant, I think.? ?You don?t know Vaishali?? I asked surprised. ?No,? he said. ?It?s the first time I?m going to Pune. But she told me it was a famous place and I would find it easily. That?s what she told me!? ?The person I have an appointment with. 10 o?clock tomorrow morning. She promised she would be there.? ?Yes,? he said. ?She told me that the Dosa at Vaishali is even better than the one at Shompen.? ?It?s the best restaurant in Port Blair. That?s where we met for the first time.? ?Port Blair! That?s where you met her, is it?? I asked. This was getting very interesting. ?Yes. Last Year. We were sailing from?Singapore?to Mumbai and docked en-route at Port Blair for some emergency repairs. It was just a short stay of four days.? I love to talk to someone who loves to talk. And this was like a fairy tale. It was getting exciting and I wanted to ask him so many things. Who was she? What was her name? Was it love at first sight? What happened? About the Mills & Boon on his lap? But before I could speak, he suddenly said,? Hey! Why am I telling you all this? It?s supposed to be secret.? ?It?s okay,? I said. ?I won?t tell anyone.? ?Now you tell me about yourself, Priya. Why are you going to Pune?? he asked. ?To see my new mother,? I blurted out, without thinking. And then like a stupid fool I told him everything. I knew I was making a mistake but he was so easy to talk to that my words just came tumbling out... my mother?s sudden death... my father sinking into depression? his drinking problem? everyone advising him to remarry? his refusal? just for my sake? and then this proposal and my father insisting that I see her first and we like each other. Everything ? I told him everything; and it made me feel good. ?You mean your father hasn?t even met her?? Girish asked. ?No. He hasn?t? we haven't even seen her. Papa has only spoken to her on the phone. Some relatives and friends of Papa are arranging the whole thing,? I said. ?Papa?s worried. He loves me so much. He wants me to like her first.? I could not speak any longer. Tears had welled up in my eyes. For some time there was silence. I felt very embarrassed at having told everything to a complete stranger. But strangely after telling him everything I felt good too. I wiped my tears and nose with my handkerchief and said, ?I am sorry, uncle.? ?Uncle? Hey come on. I?m not that old. Call me Girish. I told you, didn?t I? And don?t worry. Everything will work out.? ?For you too,? I said. ?I hope so,? he said. I am making it to this appointment with great difficulty ? I made it almost by a hair?s breadth. I signed off my ship in?Perth?yesterday evening and managed to reach Mumbai just a few hours ago. And here I am on this train to Pune. She told me if I didn?t keep my appointment with her tomorrow, she?d go ahead and marry someone else.? ?So romantic,? I said. ?Just like in the movie ?? ?An Affair to Remember?? ?No. Some Hindi Movie? I don?t remember the name,? I said. ?You must be dying to meet her, isn?t it?? ?Of course I?m dying to meet her,? he said. ?It?s been almost an year since we said goodbye to each other at Port Blair. While parting we promised each other that we would meet tomorrow ? the 21st of May this year at 10 a.m. at Vaishali restaurant in Pune.? ?Why the 21st of May?? ?We met for the first time on the 21st of May last year. And yes, it?s her birthday too! Quite a coincidence, isn't it?? ?But you must have kept in touch ? emailed ? surely spoken on the phone.? ?No. She didn?t give me her address. I searched for her on the net, the networking sites too. No luck. She was in Port Blair on a holiday. And me? Well I?ve been sailing since. She said if I really loved her I would come.?? He paused, picked up the Mills & Boon romance book from his lap and said, ?The only thing she gave me was this.? ?No. You are too small for Mills & Boon.? He kept the book in the plastic book-rack in front of his seat, turned to me and said, ?Hey, Priya. Why don?t you come to Vaishali tomorrow at ten? We?ll celebrate her birthday together and have some yummy snacks. And then I?ll propose to her. If she agrees, we all we go some other place to celebrate and have a hearty Lunch.? ?But you haven?t even told me her name.? ?You?ll find out tomorrow,? he said, ?and suppose she doesn?t come, I?ll be heartbroken. Then you can console me. But I?m sure she will be there at Vaishali waiting for me. She promised. Whatever her decision, she said she won?t ditch me. She?ll definitely be there for our rendezvous.? I looked out of the tinted-glass window. The sun was about to set. Outside it was getting dark. Inside it was cold. The Deccan Queen slowed down. It was Karjat, the station in the foothills just before the mighty?Sahyadri?Mountains?. I turned to Girish and said, ?Let?s get down. You get yummy batata-vadas here.? We strolled on the platform eating the delicious batata-vadas with the lip-smacking chutney, and suddenly Girish said, ?I?m nervous. I hope everything works out well.? ?Me too,? I said. ?Papa needs someone. But he?s so worried for me? I wonder whether I?ll like her or not. And she too must like me.? ?Of course, she will like you. You will like each other. I?m sure things will be fine. Everything will work out for the better, for you, and also for me. Why don?t you bring her also to Vaishali tomorrow morning along with you? And we will all celebrate together!? he said. ?Okay. If I like her, I?ll bring her with me.? ?I will,? I said. ?Like a?kabab-me-haddi.? We laughed and got inside the train. Pushed by three banker engines the Deccan Queen began its climb up the steep?Western Ghats?. ?Hi, Girish!? an excited voice spoke from above. I looked up. Another young bearded man. But this was a boisterous type. ?Oh, Hi Sanjiv. What are you doing here?? Girish said getting up form his seat. ?Going to Lonavala,? the man named Sanjiv answered. ?I?ve bought a cottage in Lonavala. A sort of farmhouse. Why don?t you come and see it?? ?No, No,? Girish said, ?I?ve got an important appointment in Pune.? ?Tomorrow morning. At ten.? ?And where are you going to spend the night?? ?I don?t know. Maybe some hotel or someplace.? ?Why don?t you spend the night with me in my bungalow in Lonavala? I?ve got a bottle of Single Malt and we?ve got so much to talk. If you want we can go out someplace. Come on let?s enjoy the evening together. I?ll drop you first thing in the morning in time for your appointment. It?s only an hour?s drive to Pune. In any case I have to go to Pune tomorrow to meet some relatives. I?ll drop wherever you want ? don?t say no.? I could sense that Girish wanted to go, so I said, ?It?s okay. I?ll manage. She is definitely coming to pick me up.? Sanjiv looked at me in a curious manner, so Girish said, ?This is Priya, my co-passenger. I promised her father I?d deliver her safely to Pune.? ?Hi, young lady,? Sanjiv said. ?Girish and I are batchmates and shipmates. We?re meeting after a long time.? I knew that both of them were dying to talk to each other and have a good time, so I said to Girish, ?You get down at Lonavala. I promise I?ll look after myself. I?ve got my mobile with me and I?ve got her number also. I?ll ring up my Papa the moment I reach Pune.? I insisted that I would be okay, and egged on by Sanjiv, a hesitant Girish got down at Lonavala, but not before we exchanged each other?s mobile numbers and he requested the lady across the aisle to look after me. It was only after the train left Lonavala on its final leg to Pune that I noticed that Girish had forgotten to take his ?Mills and Boon? romance paperback. I took out the book from the rack and opened it. On the first page was written in beautiful cursive handwriting: In remembrance of the lovely time we had together in Port Blair. PS ? Remember, there is a thin line between pity and love.

As I looked at the message something started happening within me.?

Snehal??

Same Shenal??

It couldn?t be??

Snehal. A loving person. That?s what the name Snehal means. Maybe it was just a coincidence. Is Snehal a common name? Maybe. It's possible. Maybe there are many Snehals in Pune. The Deccan Queen is rushing towards Pune. There will be a Snehal waiting for me at Pune Railway Station. A Snehal I am going to meet for the fisrt time. The Snehal my father wants to be my new mother.

And do you know, what is the first thing I am going to ask her??

I am going to ask her which is the best restaurant in Port Blair.?

And whatever her answer, I am going to take her to Vaishali restaurant on?Fergusson College Road?at ten o?clock tomorrow morning. And I am dying to see the expression on her face, and Girish's too, when they see each other at the rendezvous. I will not return the Mills & Boon romance book to Girish. I will keep it for myself. I want to read it on my journey back from Pune to Mumbai by the Deccan Queen. And then I'll tell my Papa everything about the delightful journey on the Deccan Queen.?

? vikram karve., all rights reserved.

??

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Lauren Snow From Interstate / TrailersPlus Blog?3 Great Reasons ...

May 20th, 2012 by admin1 Leave a reply ?

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Sunday, May 20, 2012

Italian museum sets its art on fire to protest lack of government funding

Contending that it would be 'destroyed anyway' because there is no money for preservation work, the Casoria Contemporary Art Museum is burning a piece of its contemporary art collection every day.

By Giulia Lasagni,?Contributor / May 11, 2012

Antonio Manfredi (l.) director of the Casoria Contemporary Art Museum, and Italian artist Rosaria Matarese burn one of Matarese's creations in front of the museum, near Naples, Italy, Wednesday, April 18. Manfredi is burning paintings to protest a shortage of funds. Italy's museums have been strapped for funds for decades, but art world officials say the economic crisis has aggravated the plight.

Franco Castano/AP

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Is a ?Fahrenheit 451?-style fire the solution for Italy?s increasingly debt-ridden museums??

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Perhaps not, but it?s certainly a powerful wakeup call to a government and populace busier worrying about the euro crisis and unemployment statistics.

So says Antonio Manfredi, the director of the Casoria Contemporary Art Museum (CAM), which is located in a small town near Naples, Italy. A little less than a month ago, Mr. Manfredi started to burn the gallery?s collection piece by piece, saying that he didn't have the funds for upkeep. ?Our artworks will end up being destroyed anyway, since institutions are not sustaining us,? he told?Italian daily Corriere della Sera before starting the protest.?

The first to go?was ?Promenade,? a canvas by French artist Severine Bourguignon, who approved of the protest and followed it on Skype. ?I hope that this action will help the Italian government reconsider CAM's situation,? she wrote?in The Guardian. ?Without funds, CAM will be closed and its collection will effectively cease to exist.?

Bourguignon?s piece was followed by many others, as meticulously recorded on CAM?s Facebook page.

Some contended?that the protest is only the provocative performance of an attention-seeking artist ? Manfredi is himself a painter, sculptor, and photographer?? and that because CAM is not technically a public museum, the government doesn't have to support it (although most private museums also receive some funding from the Ministry of Culture).?

But there is no doubt that Italy?s culture sector has been hit hard by cuts because of the economic crisis.?The Italian daily Republica reported?that between 2010 and 2011 the Ministry of Culture?s funding saw a 14.5 percent decrease, dropping from 1.7 million ($2.2 million) to 1.5 million euros.

Despite its world-class cultural wealth, Italy invests in the culture sector less than other countries. According to a government report, in 2010 the Ministry of Culture received only 0.21 percent of the country?s budget (compared, for instance, to 1 percent in France). It?s no surprise then that several prestigious institutions are going through a rough time.?

MAXXI, Rome?s contemporary museum, which opened only two years ago, has predicted losses of 11 million euros for 2012 through 2014. Naples?s and Parlermo?s contemporary art museums are also in deep financial trouble.

In the meantime, some organizations representing workers in the culture sector are protesting against low wages and the lack of adequate benefits. In a letter recently published in Corriere della Sera, they stressed the importance of what they do, which they say goes well beyond the workplace. ?We produce intangible but necessary goods on a daily basis: intelligence, relations, social welfare,? they wrote.

Investing in culture is also the recipe called for by renowned writer Dacia Maraini, who in a recent trip to the United States was surprised by the interest Americans still have in Italian culture and history. ?Shouldn?t we focus obstinately on what we can do best instead of competing with China in producing cheap jeans?? Maraini recently wrote in Corriere della Sera.

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Can a professor follow the Gospels and still maintain standards? (Unqualified Offerings)

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Obama wants new banking rules put in place soon

President Barack Obama waves as he walks from the White House in Washington, Friday, May 18, 2012, to board Marine One, as he travels to Camp David for the G8 Summit. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama waves as he walks from the White House in Washington, Friday, May 18, 2012, to board Marine One, as he travels to Camp David for the G8 Summit. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Pedestrians walk past JPMorgan Chase headquarters in New York, Wednesday, May 16, 2012. U.S. House Republican Rep. Shelly Moore Capito, chairman of the House Financial Services subcommittee, on Wednesday said that the $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase raises critical questions about how banks control their risks. But Republican lawmakers rejected calls from Democrats for stricter oversight of Wall Street. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Pedestrians walk past JPMorgan Chase headquarters in New York, Wednesday, May 16, 2012. U.S. House Republican Rep. Shelly Moore Capito, chairman of the House Financial Services subcommittee, on Wednesday said that the $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase raises critical questions about how banks control their risks. But Republican lawmakers rejected calls from Democrats for stricter oversight of Wall Street. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Protestors stand outside the gate of JPMorgan Chase after the annual stockholders meeting held Tuesday, May 15, 2012, in Tampa, Fla. CEO Jamie Dimon kept his job after he disclosed a $2 billion trading loss by the bank. (AP Photo/Scott Iskowitz)

A JPMorgan office building is shown, Monday, May 14, 2012, in New York. JPMorgan Chase, the largest bank in the United States, said Thursday that it lost $2 billion in the past six weeks in a trading portfolio designed to hedge against risks the company takes with its own money. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama says the big trading loss at JPMorgan Chase shows the need to finally put in place banking rules he signed into law two years ago. He also is calling on Congress to stop trying to weaken the regulations.

The $2 billion loss has renewed calls by Democratic lawmakers for tougher rules on major financial institutions.

"Without Wall Street reform, we could have found ourselves with the taxpayers once again on the hook for Wall Street's mistakes," Obama said in his weekly media address Saturday. He added: "We've got to finish the job of implementing this reform and putting these rules in place."

Obama promoted rules that would require big banks or financial institutions to have more cash on hand to cover losses and that would take away big bonuses and paydays from failed CEOs.

The president said financial institutions that "aren't cheating customers or making risky bets that could damage the whole economy" have nothing to fear from reforms.

"Yes, it discourages big banks and financial institutions from making risky bets with taxpayer-insured money. And it encourages them to do things that actually help the economy ? like extending loans to entrepreneurs with good ideas, to middle-class families who want to buy a home, to students who want to pursue higher education," he said.

Though Congress passed the tougher oversight of the financial sector in 2010, the law gave bank regulators time to write the new rules.

One focus of the financial oversight overhaul is a provision that restricts banks' ability to trade for their own profit, a practice known as proprietary trading. It is named for Paul Volcker, a former Federal Reserve chairman. But a draft of the rule has failed to satisfy either banks, which says it would disrupt some of their core functions, or advocates of stronger regulation who say it would have prevented JPMorgan's loss.

In the Republican's weekly address, Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson faulted what he called a "do-nothing Senate" under Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada for the frustrations he said he has felt in his 16 months in Congress.

Noting that the Senate hasn't passed a budget in three years, Johnson said House Republicans have fulfilled their responsibilities by passing a budget but that Senate Democrats have not fulfilled theirs.

This past week, the Senate rejected by a 99-0 vote a budget that Republicans offered up based on an Obama proposal in February. Four other budget plans also were voted down.

___

Online:

Obama address: www.whitehouse.gov

GOP address: www.youtube.com/gopweeklyaddress

Associated Press

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Video: A cell's first steps: Building a model to explain how cells grow

Friday, May 18, 2012

A collaboration between Lehigh University physicists and University of Miami biologists addresses an important fundamental question in basic cell biology: How do living cells figure out when and where to grow?

The teams of Assistant Professor Dimitrios Vavylonis and Associate Professor Fulvia Verde discovered that protein Cdc42 oscillates throughout yeast cells, precipitating a ballet of proteins that change its polarity. By changing polarity, Cdc42 regulates shape, structure and function in yeast cells, starting the growth process by clustering in an area of the cellular membrane. The oscillatory mechanism they found may be a general strategy among all self-organizing biological systems, not just simple yeast.

"The research is fundamental because it provides science with an important answer to how a living cell controls its growth process," said Vavylonis. "Knowing how this particular protein controls growth could in the long run affect the search for drugs to control cell growth for tissue regeneration, organ development, and explain how neurons extend in different directions."

This work indicates how Cdc42 activates bipolar growth only once a minimal cell length has been achieved. At that point, Cdc42 begins to oscillate back and forth through the cell, as the two tips compete for it. Using fluorescent markers to tag each of the many proteins involved, researchers observed the Cdc42 protein oscillate from side to side within a cell, switching sides about every five minutes. The fluctuations provide an adaptable mechanism for cells to control their size and structure in the fast-changing environment within.

The study, Oscillatory Dynamics of Cdc42 GTPase In The Control of Polarized Growth, appears today in the journal Science.

The findings demonstrate just part of the complex process of cell growth and differentiation, but mark how advanced the science of biophysics has become. Only recently has the clear imaging and monitoring of protein activity become possible at the minute sizes and shortened time scales of individual cell maturation.

"Up until now, no one has ever seen the way this protein oscillates back and forth throughout the cell," said Tyler Drake, a Lehigh graduate student and co-author of the paper. "Looking at a simple system like yeast may allow us to understand the principles behind growth in other cells."


This video shows active Cdc42 oscillating through yeast cells.Credit: University of Miami Miller School of Medicine

The Lehigh team developed the mathematical model of this phenomenon by analyzing cell data collected by Maitreyi Das and Fulvia Verde at the University of Miami. Drake and Vavylonis used a Lehigh Class of 1968 Junior Faculty Fellowship and a Sigma Xi grant to visit the University, where they began to test their mathematical theory. According to the model, changes in abundance or activity of Cdc42, or of its regulators, can shift the system to more asymmetric or symmetric states. The model's conclusions were supported by biological observations of the Miami team, who genetically manipulated regulators of the protein and realized they could change cell shape and growth symmetry by adjusting Cdc42.

Vavylonis's research has for years explored the way the cellular cytoskeleton organizes and functions. In collaboration with biologists and computer scientists, his team uses physics to study, analyze, and model the physical properties of these adaptive biological materials.

###

Lehigh University: http://www.lehigh.edu

Thanks to Lehigh University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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NYT: Silicon Valley riches kept on the down low

Wealth is here if you know where to find it.

Fabulous home theaters are tucked into the basements of plain suburban houses. Bespoke jeans that start at $1,200 can be detected only by a tiny red logo on the button. The hand-painted Italian bicycles that flash across Silicon Valley on Saturday mornings have become the new Ferrari ? and only the cognoscenti could imagine that they cost more than $20,000.

Even at Facebook, ground zero for the nouveau tech riche, peer pressure dictates that consumption be kept on the down low.

?The message here is, ?Keep shipping product,? ? said a Facebook executive who requested anonymity while discussing internal matters. ?If someone buys a fancy car and posts a picture of it, they get ridiculed and berated.?

The company disclosed on Thursday that on the eve of its stock market debut it was inviting employees to a hackathon, or marathon programming session, bringing new meaning to the term overnight millionaire. The event is more likely to be fueled by Red Bull than Dom P?rignon.

Make no mistake. In this, Silicon Valley?s gilded age, money is chasing money. Lucrative salaries and stock options are dangled to recruit or hold onto engineers. The shares of established companies like Apple have soared. And Facebook itself has turned to Wall Street for a vast infusion of fresh funds.

But here in one of the richest corners of the country, the tech elite display an ambivalent, sometimes contradictory approach to wealth. Money, as one scholar of the Valley described it, is treated as a measuring stick, gauging the power of the companies that entrepreneurs have built, rather than a thing to display.

?They use it as a way of keeping score ? how disruptive can you be in reordering the market,? said Ted Zoller, a senior fellow at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and a scholar of entrepreneurship.

Money, of course, still matters deeply to this crowd. ?It is a means to do more, to make more money and ultimately build more,? Mr. Zoller said.

The one money matter that most Internet millionaires talk about openly is what start-ups they are investing in next. Expect many more such investments from Facebook executives. Indeed, that might be where the biggest chunk of their new wealth will go.

Off the corporate campuses and out of public view, it seems, there is little anxiety about spending. Friends of Facebook employees say that they have talked about buying houses, of course, but also planes ? a seaplane even ? and works by popular artists like Banksy, whose pieces can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars. Just do not expect them to post about any of that on their Facebook pages.

To understand the contradictions of moneymaking in the Valley, it is instructive to look at another landmark public offering: Google in the summer of 2004. Just before it went public, a senior manager holding a baseball bat lectured a roomful of Google employees: Anyone who dared show up to work in a flashy sports car would soon find its windows shattered. The story is part of Valley lore. But it is also well known that the company?s three top executives have a collection of eight private jets, parked in a NASA hangar.

Some tech celebrities, of course, are known for being flashy. Both Lawrence J. Ellison, chief executive of Oracle, and Sean Parker, an early Facebook executive, have storied, lavish lifestyles. But there are many more who stick with the conceit of understatement. Jack Dorsey, a co-founder of Twitter, favors $1,200 bespoke jeans from a designer called 3x1, with the subtle button logo. And Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook?s chief operating officer, is building a house in exclusive Menlo Park ? much of it underground, hidden from view.

Zuckerberg sets the tone
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook?s chief executive, sets the tone at the company with his trademark rumpled hoodies that display no obvious brand name. He spent $7 million on a large but nondescript home in Palo Alto, a suburb so expensive that even a small, no-frills house easily goes for $1.5 million these days.

In a letter to would-be shareholders when the company filed to go public, Mr. Zuckerberg summed up his corporate philosophy this way: ?Simply put, we don?t build services to make money; we make money to build better services.?

Although he has not articulated it with an office memo or a baseball bat, it is understood, say Facebook employees and their friends, that Mr. Zuckerberg would find it uncool for one of his underlings to drive a Lamborghini to the office.

?It?s almost an unspoken rule: spend your money, but do it privately,? said one person who knows Mr. Zuckerberg and others at Facebook socially but did not want to be named before the offering.

Andrew Rachleff, a former venture capitalist turned wealth manager, estimates that the Facebook offering will create somewhere around 1,000 millionaires, most of whom will make something in the $2 million to $5 million range. Much of the money he has gathered so far for his company, called Wealthfront, is from young techies at firms like Google, LinkedIn and Facebook, which ahead of its public offering has allowed employees to sell shares on secondary markets.

Mr. Rachleff?s aim is to reach out to that Valley demographic ? young, good at math, uncomfortable with professional money managers ? and make their money grow. He has already run into one glitch: ?They all hate that word, ?wealth.? If there was one thing I?d change, it would be our name.? (The company?s previous name, Ka-ching, as in the sound of an old-fashioned cash register, seems to have been just as ill-chosen.)

The two counties that make up Silicon Valley have some of the highest concentrations of wealth in the country, and the share of wealthy households is growing, according to the census. Nearly 14 percent of all households in Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties earn more than $200,000 a year, just below the 16 percent of households in Manhattan.

Still, one of the parlor games here is the effort by many to distinguish themselves from the much maligned coterie of bankers and other members of the 1 percent in places like New York and Boston. Wingtips and silk ties are rare. Cycling and kite-boarding are preferred over golf.

Bill Gurley, a venture capitalist in Menlo Park, tells what happened when he began working as a Wall Street analyst in Manhattan in 1993, fresh out of business school. A colleague turned his tie over to check the label. ?My first day at work,? Mr. Gurley recalled, ?I was told to replace all my ties with Herm?s and never to wear brown shoes again.?

He did not heed the advice. Nor did he last long on Wall Street. He is a partner now at Benchmark Capital, which recently profited handsomely from Facebook?s $1 billion acquisition of Instagram.

This story, "Reticent Rich: Preferred Style in Silicon Valley," originally appeared in The New York Times.

Copyright ? 2012 The New York Times

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Blind Chinese activist leaves Beijing for U.S.

BEIJING (Reuters) - China allowed a blind legal activist, Chen Guangcheng, to leave a hospital in Beijing on Saturday and board a plane bound for the United States, a move that could signal the end of a diplomatic standoff between the two countries.

Chen's escape from house arrest in northeastern China last month and subsequent stay in the U.S. embassy caused huge embarrassment for China and led to a diplomatic rift while U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was visiting Beijing for talks to improve ties between the world's two biggest economies.

The U.S. State Department said he was en route to the United States, along with his wife and two children. He boarded a United Airlines flight bound for Newark.

China's Foreign Ministry limited its commentary to an acknowledgement that Chen had left the country.

"Chen Guangcheng is a Chinese citizen. China's relevant departments have handled the procedures for exiting the country in accordance with the law," the ministry said in a faxed statement to Reuters.

New York University said in a statement on Saturday that Chen would study as a fellow at its School of Law.

"I am very happy to receive the news that Chen Guangcheng is on his way to the U.S. I look forward ... to working with him on his course of study," said Jerome Cohen, co-director of the U.S.-Asia Law Institute at New York University School of Law.

State news agency Xinhua said earlier that Chen had applied to study in the United States under legal procedures. The Foreign Ministry said this month that Chen could apply to study abroad, a move seen as a way of easing Sino-U.S. tensions on human rights.

Chen's friend, Jiang Tianyong, cited the activist, one of China's most prominent dissidents, as saying that he and his family obtained their passports at the airport hours before he was due to board a flight.

"I'm obviously very happy," Jiang said. "When he boards the plane, he can finally say: 'I'm free'. At the same time, I feel a sense of regret because such a large country like China can't even tolerate a citizen like him to exist here."

A statement by State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland struck a conciliatory note, saying Washington was "looking forward" to Chen's arrival.

"We also express our appreciation for the manner in which we were able to resolve this matter and to support Mr. Chen's desire to study in the U.S. and pursue his goals," it said.

U.S. President Barack Obama's administration had feared a standoff over Chen's fate could sour already strained ties with China and generate criticism of Obama's policies. Beijing has accused Washington of meddling in its affairs in the case.

Chen's abrupt departure for the airport came nearly three weeks after he arrived at the Chaoyang Hospital from the U.S. embassy, where he had taken refuge after an escape from 19 months under house arrest in his home village.

Chen, 40, who taught himself law, was a leading advocate of the rights defense movement. He gained prominence by campaigning for farmers and disabled citizens and exposing forced abortions.

He was jailed for a little more than four years from 2006 on what he and his supporters say were trumped-up charges designed to end his rights advocacy.

He had accused Shandong officials in 2005 of forcing women to have late-term abortions and sterilizations to comply with strict family-planning policies. Authorities moved against him with charges of whipping up a crowd that disrupted traffic and damaged property.

Formally released in 2010, he remained under house arrest in his home village, which officials turned into a fortress of walls, security cameras and guards in plainclothes guards.

POLICE AT THE AIRPORT

United Airlines flight UA 88 departed around 5.50 p.m. (0950 GMT), with police officers and plainclothes officers following passengers down the mobile corridor leading to the plane's door.

The cabin crew waited for passengers to take their seats before closing the curtain to the front section, where the business class seats were located, a Reuters witness said.

Chen had earlier told Reuters he was at the airport along with his wife, two children and hospital staff and he believed he would be put on a flight to the United States.

Two police cars were stationed below the walkway to the plane, and about 10 security officials in plainclothes circulated around the airport.

Passengers at the gate to Chen's flight appeared not to know that he would be on the same flight.

"If our country is a body, his plight is like a sickness that in the future will help the body to protect and strengthen itself," said Xi Jingwen, who was awaiting to board a flight to the United States, when asked about Chen Guangcheng.

Chen's confinement, his escape and the furor that ensued have made him part of China's dissident folklore: a blind prisoner outfoxing Communist Party controls in an echo of the man who stood down an army tank near Tiananmen Square in 1989.

The Chen case comes at a tricky time for China, which is engaged in a leadership change. The carefully choreographed transition has already been knocked out of step by the downfall of ambitious senior Communist Party official Bo Xilai in a scandal linked to the apparent murder of a British businessman.

On a number of occasions in recent years, authorities have relented to diplomatic pressure and allowed high-profile dissidents to leave China, knowing that its most vocal critics are effectively neutralized once they leave and are without support of friends.

At times, Beijing has appeared to use these deals as bargaining chips in broader diplomatic negotiations or to blunt criticism of its human rights record.

Chen's supporters, however, welcomed his departure, saying he had indicated that he would like to return to China.

"I even told him ... that he has to do a repeat of him scaling walls. If not, we wouldn't be able to believe it," Nanjing-based activist He Peirong said of her earlier conversation with Chen. She was one of six activists who drove Chen from Shandong to Beijing after his escape.

Phelim Kine, senior Asia researcher at New York-based Human Rights Watch, said "getting Chen Guangcheng and his family on a plane is the easiest part of this saga.

"The harder, longer term part is ensuring his right under international law to return to China when he sees fit," Kine said in an emailed statement.

Kine urged Western countries to ensure that Chen's relatives, friends and supporters secured due protection.

The U.S. embassy had earlier thought it had stuck a deal to allow Chen to stay in China without retribution, but that fell apart as Chen grew worried about his family's safety. He changed his mind about staying and asked to travel to the United States.

Human rights are a big factor in relations between China and the United States, even though Washington needs China's help on issues such as Iran, North Korea, Sudan and the global economy.

The village of Dongshigu, where Chen's mother and other relatives remain, is still under lockdown.

Chen's nephew, Chen Kegui, was denied his family's choice of lawyers on Friday to defend a charge of "intentional homicide", the latest in a series of moves to deny him legal representation, and underscores the hardline stance taken against the blind dissident's family.

(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley and Michael Martina in BEIJING, Arshad Mohammed in WASHINGTON, and Michelle Nichols in NEW YORK; Editing by Ron Popeski and Paul Simao)

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Flat-front dive housing for GoPro cameras available now, ready for your Memorial Day diving trip

Dive housing for GoPro cameras available now, ready for your Memorial Day diving trip

Anyone looking to capture their next deep-sea adventure in high-definition video is in luck, because GoPro's new dive housing is now available to buy at its online store. We got a peek at this one during NAB 2012 a few weeks ago and were told its flat lens should cut down on vignetting and blurring. Compatible with all of its HD Hero family, the casing will set you back $50 and also up for grabs in the bricks-and-mortar likes of Best Buy, Sports Chalet and several specialist sports stores. All that remains is to recall where we left that robot submarine.

Continue reading Flat-front dive housing for GoPro cameras available now, ready for your Memorial Day diving trip

Flat-front dive housing for GoPro cameras available now, ready for your Memorial Day diving trip originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 May 2012 19:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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