Our seas have become a plastic graveyard – but can technology turn the tide? – Telegraph.co.uk

A recent study estimated that nine in 10 of the worlds seabirds have pieces of plastic in their guts.

The southern hemisphere, around New Zealand and Australia, is particularly badly affected because of major polluters such as Indonesia and Thailand.

Some albatross and shearwater have been found to have nearly 3,000 pieces of plastic - up to 8 kg - in their stomachs, the equivalent of a human eating 12 pizzas worth of food. It cant be digested, so the birds eventually die through lack of nutrition.

In countries such as Tuvalu, where plastic wastewashes up by the ton onto shores, locals suspect links with fertility problems.

Professor Susan Jobling of Brunel University discovered that most plastics contain hormone-disrupting chemicals. Some 92 per cent of adults in Western countries have plastic and chemicals from plastic production in their systems, and their children have twice as much.

"I hope it will make people really think about how they use plastics and make them wonder, for example, if they really need a plastic drinking straw or a single-use plastic bottle, said Prof Jobling.

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Our seas have become a plastic graveyard - but can technology turn the tide? - Telegraph.co.uk

International Game Technology: A Lottery Bet That’s Paying Off – Barron’s


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International Game Technology: A Lottery Bet That's Paying Off
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The merger between Italian lottery-operator Gtech and gaming specialist International Game Technology, now almost two years old, is proving to be a successful tie-up. International Game Technology IGT 1.3915005641218503% International Game ...

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International Game Technology: A Lottery Bet That's Paying Off - Barron's

Facing State System review, Cal U to emphasize science and technology – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

California University of Pennsylvania says it will boost its emphasis on science and technology, becoming at least the second of Pennsylvania's 14 state-owned universities to announce strategic moves amid a State System of Higher Education review that could portend restructuring those campuses.

Cal U said the announcement is in response to the State System review of its overall organization, operations and funding that was announced last month in Harrisburg. But the school also said the enhanced university emphasis builds on a focus in those fields dating to the 1970s.

The prospect of a State System-wide strategic review gives us an opportunity toproactively define our direction as a university, school president Geraldine Jones said in a statement. Cal U has a strong and distinctive identity that sets it apart from other universities in our region and across Pennsylvania."

"This longstanding special mission in science and technology can guide our way forward as we re-engineer Cal U for a new generation.

She discussed the moves Thursday at the semiannual convocation for Cal U faculty and staff. She discussed benefits of a career-focused approach to arts and sciences, technologies and education and noted demand for an educated workforce equipped with skills in STEM subjects: science, technology, engineering andmath, the university said in a statement.

The long process of redefining our University has just begun, it quoted her as saying. Cal U faculty,staff, alumni and students will be involved in listening sessions and working groups asplans take shape to implement the new focus, she said.

It is time to take our destiny into our own hands.

On Monday, Clarion University said it will rename its Venango College as the College of Health and Human Services, effective July 1, It said the move was intended to reflect "growing demand for the professional programs it offers and to better align the academic programs that exist on all of the university's campuses."

"The name change from Venango College to College of Health and Human Services has been under consideration for months, and is an important step moving forward," said Todd Pfannestiel, interim provost. "It strengthens our credentials within that broad field and further permits us to market more directly to prospective students interested in coming to Clarion to study in those professional disciplines."

The university said the College of Health and Human Services will hold house departments of: communication sciences and disorders; human services, rehabilitation and health and sport sciences; nursing; and justice, law, technology and liberal arts. Classes are offered at Clarion's main and Venango campuses, as well as at the Pittsburgh site and online.

Cal U and Clarion have seen enrollment declines in recent years, as have most of the 14 State System universities.

Bill Schackner: bschackner@post-gazettte.com, 412-263-1977 and on Twitter: @BschacknerPG.

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Facing State System review, Cal U to emphasize science and technology - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

New Ground Technology uses digital graphics on turf – Golf Channel


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New Ground Technology uses digital graphics on turf
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Founder of New Ground Technology, Pete Davis talks about the designs you've seen in outfields around Major League Baseball and how you can expect to start seeing them on golf courses. Related TV Shows: Morning Drive. Tags: Morning Drive, · Golf ...

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New Ground Technology uses digital graphics on turf - Golf Channel

Marginal progress for Turkish-backed forces in north Syria – LA Daily News

BEIRUT >> Turkish troops and allied Syrian opposition forces have managed to capture just one-tenth of a north Syrian town from Islamic State militants, a conflict monitoring group said Saturday, despite reaching its outskirts seven weeks ago.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group told the AP that nine-tenths of al-Bab remains under IS control. The Observatory receives its information from a network of contacts inside the war-torn country.

Meanwhile, Irans Supreme National Security Council authorized Russia to fly its fighters over Iranian airspace to support operations in Syria, the states semi-official Tasnim news agency reported.

In August, Iran confirmed that Russia bombers launched airstrikes from near the Iranian city of Hamedan, 280 kilometers (175 miles) southwest of the Iranian capital, Tehran to hit targets in eastern Syria. Iran is a stanch supporter of the Syrian government.

Battlefield reports from Syrian opposition forces corroborated the Observatorys al-Bab review.

The Turkish-backed Ahrar al-Sham militia announced Saturday on Twitter that opposition forces had taken the citys silos and sports complex in its southwestern districts. The coalitions operations room released a video on social media showing its fighters at the gates of the Hikma hospital. Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group also reported the hospitals capture.

But these amount to just marginal advances in the town, where some 100,000 residents lived before the start of the Syrian civil war, six years ago. Al-Bab lies about 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the Turkish border.

Turkey is leading Syrian opposition forces in a broad operation called Euphrates Shield against the Islamic State group and U.S.-backed Kurdish forces northern Syria.

Ankara wants to clear groups it says are terrorists away from its border, while Syrian opposition forces are looking to secure territory before rival government forces arrive from the south.

Turkey is the oppositions chief backer in Syrias multisided civil war. It has deployed troops, tanks and artillery inside the country as part of operation Euphrates Shield.

Turkeys Anadolu news agency began reporting Turkish troop fatalities in al-Bab on Dec. 21. That week, 16 Turkish soldiers were killed in clashes or ambushes by the Islamic State in the town.

Turkeys military announced Saturday the death of another soldier in the fighting in al-Bab. The death brings the total number of Turkish troops killed in the military operation in northern Syria to 65.

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The fighting has exacted a civilian toll as well.

According to the Observatory, 267 civilians have been killed by Euphrates Shield artillery and airstrikes on al-Bab and two satellite villages since Dec. 21.

Turkish aircraft have pounded the town as well.

The IS groups Aamaq news agency reported that Turkish, American and Russian warplanes flew more than 80 sorties over the town on Friday and fired 150 artillery rounds.

The three powers are coordinating their aerial campaigns against the Islamic State group and other al-Qaida-linked factions in northern Syria.

Pro-government forces, meanwhile, backed by Russian airpower, are engaged with IS militants in the village of Tadif, about 1.5 kilometers (1 mile) south of al-Bab.

The Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement Saturday that in the course of the battle in the area of Tadif, government forces destroyed 650 terrorists, two tanks and various vehicles fitted with arms and explosives. The figures could not be independently confirmed.

Associated Press writers James Heintz in Moscow and Amir Vahdat in Tehran, Iran contributed to this report.

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Marginal progress for Turkish-backed forces in north Syria - LA Daily News

Jeremy Lin: Progress but no timetable – NetsDaily

The schedule gets interesting from here on out. The Nets play two more games, Monday and Wednesday, before the All-Star Break, then dont play again until February 24, the day after the trade deadline. The roster we see now may be changed dramatically ... or not at all.

So what about Jeremy Lin? Friday was the fifth anniversary of the high point of Linsanity, his 38-point explosion against the Lakers that had the Garden rocking and put Lin on the cover of Sports Illustrated ... twice.

Nothing, no date or anything, Atkinson replied when asked about a timetable. Hes working out on the court, but no timetable.

So does that mean we have to wait until the All-Star Break and trade deadline pass?

I wouldnt assume anything. Hes progressing. Hes working hard, improving every day, but were not going to put a date or a time on it, said Atkinson.

So we wait. The Nets said he would be out three-to-five weeks in this iteration of his rehab from a hamstring strain. Monday marks three weeks. Lin in interviews with Chinese media has been non-committal other than to say hes not coming back until hes 100 percent.

He is being constantly monitored. He spoke about it on CNBC last week when he was part of the introduction of the Nets jersey ad deal with INFOR, the enterprise software company.

For us, we track our sleep, we track our weight, everything how your muscles feel on a daily basis, he told CNBCs Andrew Ross Sorkin. Everyday, when were practicing or working out, we have these things that we wear that [provide] constant data: how fast youre moving, etc.

The Nets had high hopes for Lin and he had high hopes for himself. But hes now missed 42 games --more than half the season and the chances of even seeing what we missed appear slim. If the roster is revamped, hell be starting over with a new cast. And even if it isnt, he will have to get into basketball shape.

The Nets started 2-3, then 4-5, and there was hope with Lin. TV ratings were on the rise. So were the turnstile numbers that measure how many people actually come to Barclays, not just how many tickets were sold.

But injury put Linsanity II on hold. As Dodger fans yelled at Ebbets Field during the 1940s and 1950s, Wait till next year.

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Jeremy Lin: Progress but no timetable - NetsDaily

Louisville City notes: McCabe making progress – The Courier-Journal

Louisville City FC coach James O'Connor talks about the team's upcoming preseason trip to IMG Academy. Video courtesy of Jonathan Lintner, LCFC

Louisville City FC midfielder Niall McCabe kicks the ball away from Orlando City B midfielder Antonio Rocha as Louisville City takes on Orlando City B at Slugger Field during LouCity's 2-1 loss on Saturday, July 30, 2016.(Photo: David R. Lutman/Special to the CJ)Buy Photo

Louisville City FC midfielder Niall McCabe is nearing aclean bill of health.

McCabe underwent season-ending surgery last September to repair a lefthip labral tearbut according to Louisville City coach James O'Connor, the 26-year-old is recovering at a rapid pace.

"(He's) really good. Hes probably ahead of where we thought he would be," O'Connor said Friday ahead of the team's two-week trip to IMG Academyto kick off preseason training. "He did a 5K run the other night inside 20 minutes which was great, so hes in good (condition). He had a little bit of pain. For us its probably about trying to hold him back a little bit, to be honest, because hes probably going to want to get training all the time. We need to be a little bit careful with him. But again, hes a player that epitomizes what were all about. Great character, great team player, so we're really encouraged to see him looking so strong."

O'Connor added that it will likelybe teamathletic trainer Scott Ritter's decision on whether to hold McCabe out of certain sessions or let him fully participate with the team.

Well need to probably be a little sensible," O'Connor said."FromNialls standpoint he will want to train every day and it will probably be Scott to tell the two of us to go easy. (Niall) gets it. We just need to manage him. Once we get back from Florida, it will probably be a bit easier then."

The Irishman played 21 times in 2016 and scored two goals and four assists, battling through injuries during the season before being shut down in mid-August. McCabe is one of just six remaining players on the team from Louisville City's inaugural season in 2015.

McCabe hasbeen tweeting about his rehab process during the offseason, having chosen to remain in Louisville instead of return home to Ireland.

Fitness levels up to standard

Each returning Louisville City player was given a list of offseason fitness requirements to complete prior to arriving back in Louisville this week, and according to O'Connor, the team passed easily.

"Im really encouraged about how strong they look, and Ive been really pleased with their application in the offseason," O'Connor said."Its been fantastic to see. Really encouraged going into preseason."

O'Connor said that the two-week trip to the IMG Academy is mainly to build the team's fitness base, before delving into tactical and technical work back in Louisville.

Ballard, Spencer join club

Louisville City's invitation-only tryout in January yielded at least two signings so far: Richard Ballard and Luke Spencer.

Ballard, a midfielder/forward who joins after completing his redshirt senior season at Indiana, is a Louisville native and graduate of duPont Manual High School. Spencer is a Cincinnati native who starred as a forward at Xavier and was drafted in the 2013 MLS SuperDraft before successive knee injuries kept him off the field until 2016, when he signed withFC Cincinnati in its inaugural season.

The two players were both on the team's radar prior to the tryout.

"We first saw Richard back in our first year he scored against us at IU," O'Connor said."He had a strike from the edge of the box. Obviously with him being from Louisville he was someone that Id always monitored and watched. He did great at the individual tryouts, showed great athleticism and can strike a ball. Good attitude and team player.

Luke caught the eye last year when we were at IMG. He was someone we were aware of and we spoke to a lot of people who are with him and he came in and showed great character and attitude, and worked very hard in the invitational tryout. Hes something different to Cameron (Lancaster) and (Ilija Ilic)which I think is important. Were delighted to be able to sign both of the guys."

LouCity releases 2017 schedule LouCity to open season vs. Saint Louis LouCity commits to city with plan for stadium LouCity announces radio deal with iHeart Radio Sullivan | Rising costs a concern for LouCity FC Irish midfielder signs with LouCity FC LouCity signs 'sleeper' from arena league Q&A: John Neace on future of LouCity FC LouCity signs 'Speedy' midfielder

After four seasons as a midfielder, Indiana coach Todd Yeagley inserted Ballard into the starting lineup as a forward in 2016. Ballard scored four goals and set up two helpers last season, and adds more versatility to the Louisville City squad.

"Ive spoken to (IU coach) Todd (Yeagley)a lot about Richard, and with Richard hes got such great pace that the temptation is to play him up top. But he can play out wide and in a number of positions. When you have the pace he has and you can strike a ball like he can, you want him close to goal. But well see."

Team enjoys day out at paintball course

Before hitting the field ahead of the 2017 season, Louisville City got their adrenaline pumping in a different arena.

On Thursday, the team visited a local paintball course, enjoying a chance to bond as a team. Of course, as the coach, O'Connor was the favorite target of many of his players. "(It was) pretty painful to be honest," O'Connor joked.

O'Connor said the idea came at the end of last season from University of Louisville grad Paolo DelPiccolo.

"It was great," O'Connor said."I think for the new players to meet some of the older guys and to see them all together and have a bit of fun was great. For us it was a really important exercise and something were glad we did.

Trialists traveling to Florida

Louisville City will bring a pair of unsigned players with the team to Florida.

O'Connor confirmed that the team will take two unsigned goalkeepers to battle for the third and final goalkeeper position at the club. O'Connor did not disclose the identities of the players.

"We will sign a thirdgoalkeeper," O'Connor said."We experienced last year with Greg (Ranjitsingh) getting called up to have to call Scott (Goodwin) back, and its something we wanted this year to have an in-house third goalkeeper just in case that situation arises. Theres twolads that will come down with us and well see how play.

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Louisville City notes: McCabe making progress - The Courier-Journal

ATA: States show mixed progress with telemedicine | Healthcare Dive – Healthcare Dive

Dive Brief:

Telemedicine has helped states increased access to care. Hospitals with telemedicine providers have also been able to reduce readmissions. Of the consumers recently surveyed by American well, 21%would switch primary care providers if they needed to in order to gain access to telehealthservices.Telemedicine services are becoming an expectation of consumers," Sarah Sossong,director of the Center for Telehealthat Massachusetts General Hospital, told Healthcare Dive.Sossongoffers seven different steps providers can take to set up a telemedicine practice, starting with aligning the approach to telemedicine adoption with a specific strategy.

Since the ATA's initial analysis in 2014, 10 states and D.C.have enacted telemedicine parity laws, bringing the total to 24.Telemedicine adoption and usage scores for Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Rhode Island, Utah and West Virginia rose this year, compared with 2015, with Connecticut and Rhode Island going from F to B, according to the ATA.States rating an A include Hawaii, Maine, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia.

The gaps analysis on physician practice standards and licensure shows a growing move away from restrictive requirements that limit telemedicine. For instance, state medical boards are developing regulations and guidance specifically for telemedicine versus in-person medical care.Texas, which found itself embroiled in a lawsuit with telehealth provider Teladoc over a statewide ban on prescribing controlled substances via telemedicine, continues to score worst in the nationthe only state with a composite grade of C.

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Brendan Kelly on politics, nihilism, and the benefit of intimate shows – BeatRoute Magazine

By Stepan Soroka

VANCOUVER February is not the ideal time to tour Western Canada. Freezing temperatures, excessive snowfall and remote mountain passes are enough to deter most musicians from travelling through our part of the world. But Brendan Kelly, frontman of the seminal midwestern punk band The Lawrence Arms, sees this as an advantage, counterintuitive as it may seem. When I go up there people havent had any shows for a while. He says over the pone from his Chicago home. Im not Chuck Ragan or Dallas Green. Im a fairly obscure musician and it allows me to have a crowd of people that are excited and enthusiastic. Im very grateful for that.

Whether you agree or not with Kellys claims of obscurity, his body of work is certainly voluminous and includes six full-lengths with The Lawrence Arms, two albums and an EP with supergroup The Falcon (which features Alkaline Trios Dan Adriano on bass), a full-length with The Wandering Birds, and more. When asked what he enjoys about performing acoustically, as opposed to the above mentioned projects, Kelly replies that an acoustic performance allows him to have a deeper personal connection with the audience. I can reengineer and reimagine the songs in a way that is more emotionally resonant, the singer-songwriter says. He also laments that there is no one else to blame when mistakes are made.

When you succeed it is unbelievably rewarding. But when you fail, there is nowhere to look but in the mirror, Kelly says about solo performances. With a band, you can let the mistakes roll off your back. Mistakes do happen, and sometimes they are beyond the performers control. When asked about his worst performance, Kelly tells me about a Lawrence Arms show where someone dosed his drink and he spent the entire show face-down on the stage while my bandmates tried to work through the set. At a solo show, there would not be much to work through.

While we chat, the conversation invariably turns to the subject of US politics. The debacle occurring in Kellys home country is simply too loud to ignore. Let me put it this way. Kelly begins, when asked if it is possible to have a worse president than the one currently in office. You know how everyone talks about going back in time to kill Hitler as a baby? Nobody went back in time and killed Hitler. Nobody went back in time and killed Donald Trump. So you gotta figure that the babies these time travellers did kill were much worse.

Its this kind of grim but undeniably amusing humour that has given Kelly a voice outside of punk rock, even if the people hearing it have no idea about where it is coming from. Kelly curates a Twitter account called Nihilist Arbys, which he calls a parody of corporate cluelessness. With over 260,000 followers, Kellys fake Arbys account far surpasses the fast food chains actual online following. Started as a dumb joke that he did not expect anyone to pay attention to, Nihilist Arbys recurring themes include drugs (and running out of them), loneliness, and the general futility of everything. I may be more like the fictional narrator than I would like to admit. Kelly adds.

People in music, journalism, the arts we take this dumb shit that we do way more seriously than it is, Kelly says. It is not important at all. What is important is running water. People not being blown up. The soundtrack to all of that is secondary. While it is hard to argue with that, it is safe to say that anyone reading this far values the art that Kelly and musicians in general gift to the rest of the world. Its been eight or nine years since Ive played in Vancouver and Im really looking forward to going back, says Kelly. Anyone who has even the most remote interest in what Ive been up to, please come, because it could be another nine years.

Brendan Kelly plays The Cobalt on Saturday, February 11th with Ben Sir and Chase Brenneman.

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Brendan Kelly on politics, nihilism, and the benefit of intimate shows - BeatRoute Magazine

Black Wave review: From hedonism to the apocalypse – Irish Times

American LGBT writer Michelle Tea takes a leap from memoir to something a tad more explosive

Themes of identity, sexuality and addiction loom large as Tea attempts to write through her demons.

Book Title: Black Wave

ISBN-13: 978-1-908276-90-2

Author: Michelle Tea

Publisher: And Other Stories

Guideline Price: 10.0

For two decades the feminist and queer counter-culture writer Michelle Tea has documented her experiences in a variety of forms from memoir to essay to feature length films. While she is widely published in America, her new novel Black Wave is her first book for the UK and Ireland. Readers familiar with Teas writing will know to expect an intense and astute portrait of lives on the fringes. Themes of identity, sexuality and addiction loom large as Tea attempts to write through her demons.

This new book is a Generation X queer womans version of late 1990s San Francisco. A metaliterary novel with flashes of mysticism, it is an inventive and challenging read. Its 27-year-old protagonist Michelle Leduski wears no flowers in her hair. Bohemian living is fast disappearing under the gentrification of the city by the dot com millionaires. Even Michelles beloved Mission district is losing its edge. The Chameleon has closed, good cocaine is hard to come by, rents have soared. As she documents her drug-fuelled adventures around Valencia Street and its environs, Michelle seems like the last girl at the party. And as the city cleans itself up, Michelle is spiralling downward.

Her hedonism makes for an exhilarating first half, told with a third person omniscience that sardonically reflects on the mess. First to go is Michelles stable girlfriend Andy: Sometimes Michelle felt resentful toward Andy for being so moderate, for sipping some ridiculous fake drink like a daiquiri while Michelle got hammered on shots and cocaine. Beguiled at an open mic event by an 18-year-old poet, Michelle finds herself taking ever more risks for her highs, which end, unsurprisingly, at heroin.

As a published author, our narrator is adept at describing her experiences: Heroin was love, the generic of love, what you got if you couldnt afford the original. In a scene that will stay with readers, Michelle hits rock bottom after a binge, vomits on the street outside her apartment while she callously dismisses Andy, then trudges back up the dingy stairwell with years of grime sticking to her feet.

As with her acclaimed memoir writing, including Rent Girl, Valencia, and How to Grow Up, Tea paints a gritty picture of queer living. Fictional Michelle is from a working class family of two gay women her mothers Kym and Wendy and lives the penniless existence of a frustrated artist who dreams one day of saving a thousand dollars. Having already written a memoir on her life to date, Michelle finds she has little left to say and also worries about her invasion of privacy of her family and friends. Tea uses her background as a memoirist to bring Michelles character and writing difficulties to life. The first half of Black Wave reads like a lightly fictionalised autobiography with a fascinating look at a subculture.

Meditations on the femme and butch aesthetics are interesting and often funny. Elsewhere, the plight of gay teenagers is to the fore: To be a butch girl in high school, to be better at masculinity than all the men around you, and to be punished for it! Michelle ties her life decisions to her sexuality and struggles to find her identity: Being cast out of society early on made you see civilisation for the farce it was, a theatre of cruelty you were free to drop out of. Instead of playing along, you became a fuckup.

But this fuckup knows she has to grow up. Fearing that she has become an aging and hysterical femme who could not handle her cocaine, and realising her addiction to alcohol and drugs, Michelle heads south to her gay brother Kyle in LA, determined to clean up her act before the new millennium.

As luck would have it, her new life is to be a short one. The end of the world is fast approaching, which sees the novel take a mind-bending shift into the world of apocalyptic fiction. Time destabilises in an alternative America of poisoned mists, exploding planes and mass suicides, brought on by the alienation of modern life. It is a hugely inventive twist that takes the road-to-recovery storyline and literally smashes it to pieces. Dream synchronicity with perfectly matched lovers, bioluminescence and sex with Matt Dillon all feature as Michelles sobriety quietly takes effect in the background.

There is the sense that to escape from the world of San Francisco, everything as she knows it must end. At the start of Black Wave, Michelle was a poet, a writer, the author of a small book published by a small press that revealed family secrets, exposed her love life, and glamorized her recreational drug intake. By the novels end, the glamour of her former life has given way to a hard won peace that will see her through to the end of days.

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Black Wave review: From hedonism to the apocalypse - Irish Times

‘Dream Boat’: Love Comes In All Shapes And Sizes In This Candid Berlinale Documentary Set On A Gay Cruise Ship – moviepilot.com

To outsiders, gay cruises are often seen as the pinnacle of hedonism within the community. After all, is there anything more gratifying than the idea of spending a week partying with hundreds of other gay men, all horny and ready to get down?

In his new feature length documentary, Dream Boat, director Tristan Ferland Milewski breaks down this stereotype through a frank yet surprisingly moving exploration of cruise life, telling unique stories that fly in the face of what one may expect. Of course, sex and alcohol play a role, but that's not the only reason why hordes of men fork out hard-earned money to take #gay cruises.

The protagonists who feature in Dream Boat represent a true array of different cultures and identities, including;

Each of these men cite different reasons for joining the 'Dream Boat', but ultimately, they're all striving to find their own identity, whether they define themselves through love with another or love for themselves.

Amidst the numerous and admittedly impressive bulge and ass shots that Milewski hones in on, Dream Boat takes time to introduce us to each of the main 'characters' in full, allowing them to feel comfortable enough to share their own personal struggles derived from living as gay men.

"My family didn't tolerate me."

Whether it's through specific cultural pressures or rejection from their families, each of the men who star in Dream Boat have a painful story to tell, humanising them far beyond the stereotypical hedonists that are often perceived to frequent gay cruises.

One particularly poignant conversation reveals a cruise attendee's fear of coming out to his mother, arguing that no pain would be greater than knowing that she could be alive somewhere in the world, refusing to converse with her son ever again.

Over the course of seven nights, the 'Dream Boat' holds increasingly more extravagant parties that become the focal point of Milewski's film. Tight close-ups of faces touching and bodies grinding reveal the euphoric allure of these trips in sumptuous detail, but there's more going on here than just an explosion of chiseled abs.

On the surface, casual sex is rife as made evident by the sea of used condoms left in the aftermath of one particularly raucous party. However, talk in the cabins focuses far more on the pursuit of love and the difficulties that gay men in particular face in this search.

"I think nobody wants to be lonely."

At one point, Dipankar explains how members of the gay community can be shallow and judgemental towards one another, claiming that only those with attractive bodies can succeed in love. Conversely though, and rather depressingly, Marek reveals that despite sculpting his muscles in a bid for attention, he finds it almost impossible to meet men who like him for who he is. Instead, the majority of would be partners would rather spend time counting his abs than getting to know him better as a person.

However, that doesn't mean audiences will drown in Dream Boat's tale of woe. If anything, Milewski's documentary is actually a rather uplifting affair, soaring on waves of joy and ecstasy. Judge the men who attend these cruises all you want because they don't care. Instead, Dream Boat takes great delight in exploring how each of these protagonists rise above their loneliness or insecurities, living their lives to the full.

Whether you're watching the men take part in a high heel race or dress up in drag as Sia, there are more than enough moments of levity here to remind us that people can only be truly happy once they embrace their own identities, regardless of how difficult that can be at times.

See also:

Like any community, the gay men who party on the Dream Boat have their fair share of positive and negative experiences, but Milewski's camera commendably takes the time to portray each of the protagonists with a frank honesty, one that is refreshingly free of judgement or pretence.

If you're excited to see Dream Boat, then you may also enjoy the work of Canadian director Xavier Dolan:

Ultimately, love is love. Anyone who wishes to be reminded of this beautiful fact in all its glory need look no further than Milewski's stunning documentary. Climb aboard for a film that openly explores issues of #LGBT identity and love through a wonderfully colorful and exultant microcosm of the gay community.

Check out the world premiere of Dream Boat as part of the official selection for Section Panorama Dokumente at the Berlinale And if you can't make it, watch out for the film's theatrical release this summer instead!

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'Dream Boat': Love Comes In All Shapes And Sizes In This Candid Berlinale Documentary Set On A Gay Cruise Ship - moviepilot.com

Fragile Lives: A Heart Surgeon’s Stories of Life and Death on the … – The Times (subscription)

A surgeon who views patients not as people, but as timed puzzles to be solved, offers a raw and moving memoir, says Oliver Moody

The marketing bumf that arrived in the post with Fragile Lives, a memoir by Stephen Westaby, a distinguished cardiac surgeon, declared it to be a book in the tradition of Henry Marsh and Paul Kalanithi.

Strewth. When did we hand over the keys of our souls to physicians? Why is the publishing industry so stuck on this strange, but luminous sub-genre of religious writing in which doctors draw up schematics of the human condition under portentous titles like When Breath Becomes Mortal Harm?

In 1933 the literary critic FR Leavis identified scientific rationalism as the worlds present sickness. Now, in an age that is minutely obsessed with bodies, yet blankly terrified of their ceasing to be, hospitals are increasingly charged with the care of the

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Fragile Lives: A Heart Surgeon's Stories of Life and Death on the ... - The Times (subscription)

Spiked: nine out of 10 UK universities ‘restrict free speech’ – Times Higher Education (THE)

University administrations are becoming increasingly censorious, with nearly a quarter of them having actively censored speech and expression in 2017, according to online magazine Spiked.

The Free Speech University Rankings (FSUR), issued by Spiked, claimed that there are now more students unions that do not censor speech in any way than university administrations a reversal of the findings in the previous two yearsof the survey.

The survey assessed 115 institutions. Using a traffic light system, FSUR gave a red assessment to 23.5 per cent of university administrations up from 15 per cent in 2016. According to the survey, these universities are hostile to free speech and free expression, mandating explicit restrictions on speech, including, but not limited to, bans on specific ideologies, political affiliations, beliefs, books, speakers or words.

Although 64 per cent of students unions were red, 16 were given green ratings meaning they have not restricted or regulated speech and expression compared with 12 university administrations.

The FSUR found 73 institutions taking administration and students unions as a whole were red. With 35 given an amber assessment, it means that 94 per cent of universities censor or chill free speech to some degree, according to Spiked. There were only three institutions in the UK with no instances of supposed censorship in 2017: the University of Wales Trinity Saint David, the University of Buckingham and the University of the West of Scotland.

In his introduction to the ranking, Tom Slater, FSUR coordinator and deputy editor of Spiked, wrote that the publication had always argued that campus censorship was about more than the so-called snowflake generation throwing its weight around.

Commenting on the results, Mr Slater said that universities are systematically stifling free speech on campus, while students unions take all the flak.

Students unions have been pilloried for censoring transphobic speech and enforcing transgender pronouns. But our research shows the vast majority of policies in this area stem from universities themselves, he said. While students unions are significantly more censorious and deserve all the criticism they get universities often share and affirm their illiberal, patronising outlook.

The most restrictive included four Russell Group universities with Swansea University joining the University of Oxford, the University of Edinburgh, Newcastle University and Cardiff University.

Among institutions actions considered restrictive by the rankings, there were 129 bans. Of these, 21 institutions banned speakers, 20 banned newspapers, and nine have banned offensive fancy dress, according to Spiked. And 44 per cent of institutions had no platform policies banning fascist, racist and Islamist groups, 43 per cent had censorious religion and belief policies, and 34 per cent had similarly restrictive transgender policies, the magazine said.

The Spiked report said that there was a ban on dressing up as Caitlyn Jenner at Newcastle University, a restriction on blasphemy at London South Bank University, and a policy at the University of Surrey insisting that its mascot, Steve the Stag, isnt depicted by students drinking, smoking or involved in lewd acts.

john.elmes@tesglobal.com

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Spiked: nine out of 10 UK universities 'restrict free speech' - Times Higher Education (THE)

Free speech must work both ways | Opinion | dailyitem.com – Sunbury Daily Item

They have been called a generation built on participation trophies, safety zones and potentiallyunprepared for the real world.

We would refer to the current crop of protesting college studentsas passionate Americans, whose ideologies and values remain works in progress as were all of ours at that age. They are continuing a tradition of peaceful discourse dating back generations.

Criticism of public demonstrations on campuses both locally and across the nation are unfair. Protesting is part of the American way and we encourage todays youth to continue these peaceful exchanges as did preceding generations.

We would remind them, however, that just because you disagree with something doesnt mean its wrong. It was disappointing to see the cancellation of a speech by Breibarts MiloYiannopoulosat the University of California at Berkeley. The event was called off following violence in advanceof the speech which ledto realistic safety concerns. A university spokesman said it was not a proud night for this campus, the home of free speech.

However, it personified the hardest part of free speech to comprehend: That the other side has an equal rightto the First Amendment.

Following the cancellation, The Los Angeles Times editorialized that literature circulated at the protestsaid Yiannopoulos has no right to speak at Cal or anywhere else because hes a tool of Trumps possessive fascist government. This is just the latest variation on the age-old argument of the censor that error has no rights, or, put another way, that one only has a right to free speech if one is speaking the truth. Its an insidious notion that needs to be opposed in every generation.

In this context, weve tilted toward a nation where the loudest voice wins, where meaningful, thoughtful and smart people cant have legitimate disagreements, ordiscuss them witha reasonable and civildialogue. Things arent helped when the nations leader resorts to tweeting in ALL CAPS to make his point.

We are happy students are standing up. We were glad tostudents at Danville voiced their disagreement when school officials closed the curtain of Avenue Q. Those students were informed and involved, and made a decision they felt was justifiedafter voicing their opinion.

Get involved. Stay involved. Stay informed. Be civil and peaceful. Be sure to listen, too. Its all part of the process, like it or not.

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Free speech must work both ways | Opinion | dailyitem.com - Sunbury Daily Item

Berkeley didn’t deserve Trump’s scorn: Exploring limits of free speech when it comes to campus safety – Salon

Recent events at the University of California, Berkeley, reflect the enormous difficulties that campuses can face when trying to ensure freedom of speech while, at the same time, meeting their duty to ensure an inclusive learning environment and protect everyones safety. Many, including President Donald Trump, spoke out about these events, but with apparently little understanding of what actually occurred or all that the campus did to try and protect speech.

On Feb. 1, Milo Yiannopoulos, a controversial speaker who prides himself on being inflammatory, was scheduled to speak at Berkeley at the invitation of the College Republicans student group. A demonstration of approximately 1,500 people developed to protest his presence and to stand against what they considered to be hate speech.

A few hours before the scheduled talk, a group of protesters pulled down police barricades, hurled Molotov cocktails, smashed windows, and threw fireworks and rocks at police, resulting in $100,000 of property damage. According to the university, the violent protesters were 150 masked agitatorswho had come to campus to disturb an otherwise peaceful protest.

Perceiving a serious threat to public safety, campus officials called off Yiannopoulos talk, while also condemning the violence and reasserting their commitment to free speech principles. As university administrators and professors who teach and write about First Amendment law, we see what happened at Berkeley as enormously important in our current debate over free speech.

Did campus officials infringe Yiannopoulos freedom of speech and the rights of the College Republicans to hear his views?

The event has triggered intense debates about the scope and limits of free speech. However, to understand who did the right thing and who did the wrong thing, you must also understand a few basic First Amendment principles.

Basic free speech principles

First, by law campuses must allow all views and ideas to be expressed, no matter how offensive. Above all, the First Amendment means that the government cannot prevent or punish speech based on the viewpoint expressed. This also is a crucial aspect of academic freedom.

Even the expression of hate is constitutionally protected; court cases have addressed this very issue on college campuses in the past. Although hate speech unquestionably causes harms, it nonetheless is expression that is covered by the First Amendment. We therefore strongly disagree with those who say that campus officials at Berkeley could keep Yiannopoulos from speaking because of his hateful and offensive message.

Campus officials at Berkeley recognized that Yiannopoulos had a First Amendment right to speak. Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas Dirks rightly resisted demands, including from Berkeley faculty, to ban Yiannopoulos appearance.

Second, campuses must do all they can to ensure that audience reactions against a speaker are not allowed to silence the speaker. Free speech can be undermined, not only by official censorship and punishment, but also by individuals who seek to disrupt or shut down others when they attempt to exercise their rights. If officials do not work to prevent or punish disruption then there will be a hecklers veto of all unpopular or controversial speakers, and this is not consistent with free speech principles. Campus officials have a duty to protect the free speech rights of protesters, but they must also protect speakers and prevent heckling. Apparently this also occurred at Berkeley. Staff members spent weeks planning extensive security arrangements, including bringing in dozens of police officers from nine other UC campuses.

Third, there may be situations where controlling the audience proves impossible, and there is no choice but to prevent a speakers presence to ensure public safety. This should be a last resort taken only if there is no other way to prevent a serious imminent threat to public safety. This appears to be exactly what occurred at Berkeley, where the riotous demonstrators could not be controlled. In such cases, authorities should do all they can, after the fact, to identify and punish those who used violence and violated the law, and should assess how different security arrangements might be more effective in preventing future disruptions. Campus officials should also do what they can to reschedule the speaker for another time.

Misguided criticism of Berkeley officials

A number of commentators were outraged that Yiannopoulos was not able to speak and claimed that free speech was under attack at Berkeley. But the campus itself consistently reaffirmed his right to speak, resisted calls to cancel the event and arranged for extraordinary security at great expense. The vast majority of the demonstrators were also merely exercising their free speech rights. Thus, the campus efforts were consistent with free speech principles. If there is blame to be assigned it should focus on the small number of outsiders who were intent on using violent and unlawful means to disrupt the event.

Nonetheless, President Trump tweeted after the event that federal funds might be withheld from Berkeley unless it allowed freedom of speech.

Putting aside that he lacks the legal authority to do this, Trump ignored the fact that freedom of speech never is absolute. Campuses can punish speech that constitutes true threats or harassment, or incitement of illegal activity. Campuses also need to act to protect the safety and welfare of all on campus.

Campus officials at Berkeley faced an enormously difficult situation. They were not insensitive to speech and they did not deserve the disapproval of the president. The campus did not keep Yiannopoulos from speaking because of his views, but because public safety at the time necessitated it.

Erwin Chemerinskyis the dean of the School of Law atUniversity of California, Irvine.Howard Gillmanis chancellor atUniversity of California, Irvine.

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Berkeley didn't deserve Trump's scorn: Exploring limits of free speech when it comes to campus safety - Salon

Campus free speech bill moves forward in state Senate – The Durango Herald

DENVER Designated free speech zones on Colorado public college campuses are one step closer to being a thing of the past after Senate Bill 62 was passed Friday by the state Senate.

SB 62 would prohibit public higher education institutions from restricting the freedom of expression by students on college campuses by limiting such displays to areas designated as free speech zones. It would abolish such zones.

The bill was heard in the Senate Education Committee last week, where concerns about allowing for speech that could lead to violence and a lack of input from universities were assuaged and it was passed unanimously.

An amendment nearly as long as the original bill was presented by sponsor Sen. Tim Neville, R-Littleton, to clarify the bill and rework it after conversations with the University of Colorado.

Changes from the amendment include:

Removal of a provision for public forums to be open for free expression. It was replaced with a definition of student forums, which extends to any area on campus not expressly used for academic purposes.Stripping a portion of the bill that required the establishment of monuments to the First Amendment where free speech zones had been located.Clarification that SB 62 did not prevent an institution of higher education from prohibiting, limiting or restricting expression that is not protected under the First Amendment. This would include hate speech that incites violence.Changing references from persons to students to ensure the bill would be interpreted as applying to college enrollees and not university employees.The goals and intent are to protect the rights of students to exercise freedom of speech on campus, while still respecting the right of universities to preserve their important education safety mission, Neville said of the amendment.

Also included was a definition of the term expression, which includes peaceful assembly, protests, oratory, holding signs and circulating petitions and other written materials.

The absence of a provision for voter registration events as an act of free expression was worrisome for Senate Democrats, who moved twice to amend the definition to include voter registration.

We always talk about wanting everyone to get out and vote, especially the young folks, and if were going to talk about the right to free speech, the right for their opinions to be heard, what is more important than to actually get them registered to vote so they can let their opinions be heard, said Sen. Andy Kerr, D-Lakewood.

Republicans in the chamber insisted that they would rather wait until they spoke with representatives of universities and not damage the rapport they had developed while working on the amendment adopted Friday.

Neville said the provision for voter registrations could be added when the bill is heard in committee in the House after it receives a third reading and final passage next week.

Lperkins@durangoherald.com

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Campus free speech bill moves forward in state Senate - The Durango Herald

NASA’s Hubble Telescope discovers Dwarf star with ‘basic building blocks for life’ – The Indian Express


The Indian Express
NASA's Hubble Telescope discovers Dwarf star with 'basic building blocks for life'
The Indian Express
NASA, Hubble Space telescope, White Dwarf star, Minor planet ripped apart, planetary Study presents evidence that the planetary system associated with the white dwarf contains materials that are the basic building blocks for life. ( Source: University ...
Hubble spots comet being shredded by white dwarfThe Space Reporter
Hubble Discovers A Comet 100000 Times Bigger Than Halley'sI4U News
Halley's comet? Nope. New discovery is 100000 times biggerUSA TODAY
Daily News & Analysis -Daily Caller -Microfinance Monitor
all 24 news articles »

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NASA's Hubble Telescope discovers Dwarf star with 'basic building blocks for life' - The Indian Express

NASA’s Hubble Telescope Snapped a Rare Photo of a Dying Star … – MERRY JANE

Unless youve been totally cut off from all news lately, youve probably noticed that things arent going so well here on earth. The environment is being destroyed, Trump is signing executive orders without bothering to even reading them, and Tom Brady has yet another ring to add to his collection. Unfortunately, things in space arent much different.

NASAs Hubble Telescope just took a photo of a star dying. According to Time, the snapshot captured the star transforming from a red giant to a planetary nebula - or as NASA is calling it, the Calabash Nebula.

The photo shows the red giant blowing dust and sulphuric gases into space at a speed of 621,371 miles per hour. Because of its stinky, sulphur strewn into the galaxy, scientists also call the nebula the Rotten Egg Nebula.

Over the next thousand years, the cloud will turn into a fully formed planetary nebula, but for NASA, the split second when that the star exploded was the key moment, a rarity that they were lucky, and skilled, enough to catch on camera.

Now lets just hope that NASA can retain some funding to remind us that theres still some beauty left in this universe, even if it takes a telescope to see it.

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NASA's Hubble Telescope Snapped a Rare Photo of a Dying Star ... - MERRY JANE

The Hubble Telescope Captured This Spectacular Photo of a Star Dying – Thrillist

About five billion years from now, the sun will slowly begin to die by expanding and transforming into a red giant star. Of course, humans will likely be long gone by then, but other stars in the universe can provide us with a good idea of what the sun's death might look like now. In fact, NASA's Hubble Telescope recently captured the explosive death of low-mass star like the sun and, as you can see in the extremely rare image, it's spectacular.

NASA first released the stunning new photo last Friday, noting that such images are extremely rare due to how quickly (in astronomical terms) this phase of a star's evolution occurs. Specifically, the photo shows theCalabash Nebula, a red giant, transforming into a planetary nebula by explosively spewing its outer layers of gas and other materials into space at more than 620,000mph, according to the space agency. The gas (the yellow stuff) can be see shooting into opposite directions, creating the beautiful spectacle.

NASA also points outCalabash Nebula is often referred to as the Rotten Egg Nebula, because it contains a lot of sulphur, which can smell like a rotten egg. So, does that mean space is, uh, letting one rip as the star dies? Thankfully, NASA said we're more than 5,000 light years away. Phew.

h/t BGR

Sign up here for our daily Thrillist email, and get your fix of the best in food/drink/fun.

Tony Merevickis Cities News Editor at Thrillist and thinks this is simultaneously beautifuland kind of terrifying. Send news tips to news@thrillist.com and follow him on Twitter @tonymerevick.

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The Hubble Telescope Captured This Spectacular Photo of a Star Dying - Thrillist

Why NATO needs a European pillar POLITICO – POLITICO.eu

Soldiers of armored infantry battalion Panzergrenadierbataillon 122 of the Bundeswehr, the German armed forces, in Lithuania | Johannes Simon/Getty Images

Opinion

If Europe tries to protect the alliance only by buying American commitment through increased defense spending, it will fail.

By Jean-Marie Guhenno

2/11/17, 4:13 AM CET

Updated 2/11/17, 2:00 PM CET

Europeans have every reason to worry about U.S. President Donald Trump. He has declared NATO obsolete. Hes spoken more glowingly about Russian President Vladimir Putin than about most WesternEuropean leaders. And hes suggested he will apply his transactional vision of diplomacy to his countrys alliances. A president who has unabashedly made America First his guiding principleis telling Europeans Americas commitment to themwill depend on their willingness to pay for it.

The Continents leaders should listen carefully. For too long, European countries have not been serious enough about their own defense; most spend much less than the 2 percentof GDP goal set by NATO. If they do not change course, a president who has little understanding of soft power and, in his own words, only respects strength, will not take them seriously.

A European security landscape defined in bilateral talks between Russia and the U.S. is a serious possibility, one that would be terrible news for the Continent. Trump might care most about fighting Islamic terrorism; for Russia, the priority remains dividing Europe to gain the upper hand.

If Europes only response is to buy American commitment through increased defense spending as NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg has indicated alliance members should do it will fail. NATO cannot sustain itself as a political alliance if it is guided by monetarytransactions. Its European members must show unity of purpose and vision: The time has come to create a European pillar of NATO.

* * *

Today, there is no shared vision of what NATO stands for, and apparently little interest in the White House for the principles that gave substance to the NATO security commitment during the last 67 years. The transatlantic solidarity defined by Article 5 of NATOs founding treatyis only credible if it is underpinned by a set of shared values.

NATO is about North Americasengagement in Europe, and Europeans, working with Canada, must take the initiative in proposing a vision adapted to the 21st century. Otherwise, they run the risk that a president who has little time for the Continent will see his European allies simply asadjuncts to an America First strategy and blatantly ignore their interests.

Germany and France, whose military capacities are increasingly compatible and complementary, should take the lead once elections in bothcountries have taken place.

The idea of a European pillar is not new, but was deemed unnecessary for many years because the alliances members shareda solidconsensuson its functions. As a proposal, apillarnow makes sense in terms of realpolitik. With a U.S. president who appears more than happy to play nations against one another, European countriesare unlikelyto make themselves heard unless they can present a coherent, united position.

The move wouldalso benefit intra-European political dynamics. Europeans are unlikely to support increased defense spending if it is perceivedsimply as aresponse to American bullyingand support for Washingtons somewhat incoherent policies. Increased effort must come with a renewed sense of political ownership for NATOs European members.A stronger EU that regains political momentum by making its own security a political priority, is an indispensable partner to a strong NATO.

The specifics of a more integrated effort, whether aEuropean headquartersor an expanded role for the European Defense Agency, or ideas to implement the EU global strategy in the area of security and defense as agreed by EU member countriesin November, should be discussed between EU nations.

National governments will want to retain a central role in matters of national security, butthe European institutions can help coordinate the effort and give it a broader European dimension.

* * *

A European pillar will first have to decide on its membership. Germany and France, whose military capacities are increasingly compatible and complementary, should take the lead once elections in bothcountries have taken place.

A caucus needs to emerge within NATO. It should include the six founding members of the EU, as well asmore recent members, which could agree on two founding principles: that the emergence of a European pillar is made necessary by the changed strategic landscape; and that a European pillar should be conceived as a means to strengthen NATO, not as an alternative to it. In fact, one of its key goalswill be to keep the U.S. engaged.

That core group should in time be opened to other members of the EU and should establish close consultation mechanisms with EU non-NATO members, such as Sweden, and with NATO nonEU members, such as Norway and Turkey.

Polish soldiers pose during a welcome of U.S. troops in Zagan, Poland | Natalia Dobryszycka/AFP via Getty Images

An informal political approach is probably the only viable path to this European pillar, since a formal institutional approach would likely stall veryquickly. A formal arrangement withTurkey, for example, will remain difficultuntil its problems with the bloc the question of Cyprus reunification remains a sore point are solved.

And within theEU, serious differences have emerged on what role the Unionshould play in its own defense. Separated from the question of EU membership, a European pillar within NATO could bring countries with varying degrees of EU adherence into the fold. TheUnited Kingdom one of the Continents most important military powers for example, is about to leave the EUbut couldfind its strategic interests best served by a close relationship with the new group.

In an era of rising nationalism, creating a European pillar ofNATO may sound ambitious. But opinion polls show that Europeans, while critical of many aspects of the EU, considerdefense to be an area that warrants more, rather than less, cooperation. The EU will not get out of its present malaise by renouncing its ambitions. On the contrary, it needs to be more ambitious if it wants to respond to the security concerns of its citizens. The exceptional circumstances confronting Europe require an exceptional response.

Jean-Marie Guhenno is president andCEO of International Crisis Group, the independent conflict prevention organization.

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Why NATO needs a European pillar POLITICO - POLITICO.eu