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Daily Archives: September 16, 2012
3 space station astronauts return to Earth tonight
Posted: September 16, 2012 at 10:15 pm
Three astronauts are preparing to leave the International Space Station tonight (Sept. 16), returning to Earth after a four-month stay aboard the huge orbiting lab.
A Soyuz spacecraft carrying NASA astronaut Joe Acaba and Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin is slated to undock from the space station at 7:09 p.m. EDT (2309 GMT) Sunday and land in the steppes of Kazakhstan nearly four hours later, at 10:53 p.m. EDT (0253 GMT Monday).
The astronauts' departure will bring the space station's Expedition 32 to a close. Padalka commands the expedition, while Acaba and Revin serve as flight engineers. Padalka will hand the orbiting lab's reins over to NASA's Sunita Williams, commander of the new Expedition 33.
Expedition 33 will be a three-person operation for about a month. Williams, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko and Japanese spaceflyer Akihiko Hoshide will have the station to themselves until mid-October, when the arrival of three new astronauts will bring the $100 billion orbiting complex back up to its full complement of six crewmates.
Space news from NBCNews.com
Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: NASA's Opportunity rover has found a new kind of geological "berry" on Mars that has the experts scratching their heads ... and licking their chops.
Acaba, Padalka and Revin launched toward the station on May 14 and arrived three days later. They were originally scheduled to blast off in late March, but a botched pressure test cracked their Soyuz capsule, forcing a six-week delay while a new spacecraft was prepared.
The astronauts' four-month stint marked the first long-term stay aboard the orbiting lab for both Acaba and Revin. Padalka, however, had lived on the station for long durations during two previous missions.
Acaba, Padalka and Revin got to be part of history shortly after they first floated through the space station's hatch. They were there to welcome SpaceX's robotic Dragon capsule, which on May 25 became the first private spacecraft ever to visit the 430-ton orbiting complex.
Dragon's historic flight was a demonstration mission, to see if the capsule and SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket are ready to begin a series of 12 contracted supply runs to the station for NASA. Everything went well, and the first of these bona fide cargo missions is likely to blast off next month.
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Female astronaut takes command of space station
Posted: at 10:15 pm
NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, who holds the record for the longest spaceflight by a woman, took charge of the International Space Station Saturday, becoming only the second female commander in the orbiting lab's 14-year history.
Williams took charge of the space station from Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka, who is returning to Earth on Sunday after months commanding the outpost's six-person Expedition 32 crew. Williams launched to the station in July and will command its Expedition 33 crew before returning to Earth in November.
"I would like to thank our [Expedition] 32 crewmates here who have taught us how to live and work in space, and of course to have a lot of fun up in space," Williams told Padalka during a change of command ceremony. She will officially take charge of the station on Sunday, after Padalka and two crewmates board their Soyuz spacecraft for the trip home.
Padalka, NASA astronaut Joe Acaba and cosmonaut Sergei Revin are scheduled to undock from the space station Sunday at 7:09 p.m. EDT (2309 GMT) and land in the Central Asian steppes of Kazakhstan at 10:53 p.m. EDT (0253 on Sept. 17). The trio is wrapping up a five-month mission to the space station and Padalka thanked his crewmates and flight controllers on the ground for their help during the flight.
Space news from NBCNews.com
Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: NASA's Opportunity rover has found a new kind of geological "berry" on Mars that has the experts scratching their heads ... and licking their chops.
Sunita Williams arrived at the space station on July 17 on a Soyuz spacecraft with two crewmates: Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide and Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko. They will be joined by three new crewmembers in October.
Williams, 46, is a captain in the U.S. Navy and flying on her second long-duration space mission. She first launched into space in 2007 and spent 195 consecutive days in space, setting a record for the longest single spaceflight by a female astronaut. On Sept. 19, she'll celebrate her birthday in space.
In a NASA interview before launch, Williams said a friend asked her if she was nervous about commanding the space station. She said no, adding that the more than two years of training alongside her Expedition 32 and 33 crewmates, as well as the Mission Control team, prepared all the space station crewmembers for life in space.
"When you get up on the space station, you know what to do, so Im not nervous about it all," Williams said. "Im psyched."
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No Assange DNA on torn condom – report
Posted: at 10:15 pm
Embassy asylum ... Julian Assange. Photo: AP
LONDON: Forensic experts have failed to find crucial DNA evidence in the sexual assault case against Julian Assange, a British newspaper has reported.
In a 100-page document shown to lawyers for the WikiLeaks founder, Swedish police made a case for the 41-year-old's extradition to Stockholm for questioning.
The report said staff at two forensic laboratories were unable to find conclusive evidence of Mr Assange's DNA on a torn condom provided by one of two women who claim to have been assaulted in August 2010.
However, the same analysts have found DNA believed to belong to Mr Assange on a condom from a second woman, The Mail on Sunday reports.
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Mr Assange denies any wrongdoing and says sex with the two women was consensual.
He remains in London's Ecuadorean embassy in a bid to avoid Swedish extradition, which he insists would lead to him being handed to authorities in the US, where the actions of his website are under investigation.
The Swedish police report said one woman, now age 33, claims she was repeatedly molested by Mr Assange at her flat in Stockholm. She said he deliberately broke a condom before wearing it to have unprotected sex with her against her will.
Scientists were unable to find Mr Assange's DNA on the condom and his lawyers suggest that is because a fake one may have been submitted, the newspaper said.
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Missing DNA evidence in Assange case
Posted: at 10:15 pm
Forensic experts have failed to find crucial DNA evidence in the sexual assault case against Julian Assange, a British newspaper reports.
In a 100-page document shown to lawyers for the Australian WikiLeaks founder, Swedish police outlined their basis for seeking the 41-year-old's extradition to Stockholm to face questioning.
The report said staff at two forensic laboratories were unable to find conclusive evidence of Mr Assange's DNA on a torn condom provided by one of two women who claim to have been assaulted in August 2010.
However, the same analysts have found DNA believed to belong to Mr Assange on a condom provided by a second woman, The Mail on Sunday reported.
Mr Assange denies any wrongdoing and says sex with the two women was consensual.
He remains holed up in London's Ecuadorian embassy in a bid to avoid Swedish extradition, which he insists would lead to him being handed to authorities in the United States, where the actions of his secret-leaking website are under investigation.
The Swedish police report said that one woman, now aged 33, claims she was repeatedly molested by Mr Assange at her flat in Stockholm, adding on one occasion he deliberately broke a condom before wearing it to have unprotected sex with her against her will.
Scientists were unable to find traces of Mr Assange's DNA on the condom and his lawyers suggest that is because a fake one may have been submitted, the tabloid reports.
Mr Assange, who has been granted asylum by Ecuador, is yet to be formally charged with any offence by Swedish authorities.
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DNA evidence missing in Assange case
Posted: at 10:14 pm
Forensic experts have failed to find crucial DNA evidence in the sexual assault case against Julian Assange, a British newspaper reports.
In a 100-page document shown to lawyers for the Australian WikiLeaks founder, Swedish police outlined their basis for seeking the 41-year-old's extradition to Stockholm to face questioning.
The report said staff at two forensic laboratories were unable to find conclusive evidence of Mr Assange's DNA on a torn condom provided by one of two women who claim to have been assaulted in August 2010.
However, the same analysts have found DNA believed to belong to Mr Assange on a condom provided by a second woman, The Mail on Sunday reported.
Mr Assange denies any wrongdoing and says sex with the two women was consensual.
He remains holed up in London's Ecuadorian embassy in a bid to avoid Swedish extradition, which he insists would lead to him being handed to authorities in the United States, where the actions of his secret-leaking website are under investigation.
The Swedish police report said that one woman, now aged 33, claims she was repeatedly molested by Mr Assange at her flat in Stockholm, adding on one occasion he deliberately broke a condom before wearing it to have unprotected sex with her against her will.
Scientists were unable to find traces of Mr Assange's DNA on the condom and his lawyers suggest that is because a fake one may have been submitted, the tabloid reports.
Mr Assange, who has been granted asylum by Ecuador, is yet to be formally charged with any offence by Swedish authorities.
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Last season of 'The Office' starts Thursday
Posted: at 10:14 pm
To see a promo of The Office.
"When we started there didn't seem like there was room for a show like this on NBC because the biggest show on NBC I think when we started was 'Will & Grace' and it was a multi-camera world," said showrunner Greg Daniels during a recent teleconference.
The half-hour comedy, pitched to the American public as a mockumentary, is a TV show as seen through the eyes of a documentary film crew capturing the everyday lives of workers at the fictional Dunder Mifflin Paper Co. in Scranton, Pa. To achieve that effect, it was shot with a single camera. There is no studio audience and no laugh track.
"And I kind of feel like we somewhat forced our way into the world through just creative excitement over the cast and the different way of storytelling," said Daniels, who executive produced the show for its first five seasons, left to take over "Parks and Recreation" on the same network and is returning for the ninth and final season, which starts Thursday on channel 2, cable 9.
For its final season, Daniels said, the production company is bringing back 15 veteran cast members (no word on whether Carell is included) and tying up loose ends.
This year will be different and "very arc heavy," said Daniels, who adapted Ricky Gervais' British series for American TV.
"For one thing I feel like the last few years we didn't do arcs so much. We were pursuing more episodic comedy. But I think the real heart of the show are these arcs that allow the characters to have ongoing stories. ... It is all going to be set up in the premiere, but there is so much payoff from nine seasons for so many great characters that my biggest concern is just packing in these great ideas ... and making sure that we hit all of them or at least squeeze in as many as we can into the ending."
Fans will also finally get answers to their documentary questions.
"People are always asking, 'Why are they still filming? What are they after?' I think we are going to explore that for comedy and for story effect."
Daniels also provided some spoilers for the final season.
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Nothing, however vile, justifies censorship
Posted: at 10:14 pm
The tawdry piece of work that is the Innocence of Muslims raises problems for the proponents of censorship
The friends of freedom should not make exceptions because freedom's enemies never do. Admittedly, the trailer for Innocence of Muslims (one of its many titles) makes the temptation to allow just one exception close to overwhelming. It advertises an amateur and adolescent piece of religious propaganda that depicts Muhammad as a violent and lascivious fool. Copts probably made it. As there is no great difference between Christian and Islamist extremists, why not intervene in this clash of fundamentalisms and stop one sect inciting another sect to violence?
Even before mobs attacked the US embassy in Cairo, its diplomats felt the urge to abandon basic principles. "We firmly reject the actions by those who abuse the universal right of free speech to hurt the religious beliefs of others," they said. Hillary Clinton was hardly more robust. "The United States deplores any intentional effort to denigrate the religious beliefs of others. Our commitment to religious tolerance goes back to the very beginning of our nation." It was a little too late in the day before she recalled America had other commitments going back to its founding, and muttered for all that America still does "not stop citizens from expressing their views, no matter how distasteful".
European states, with all their counter-productive restrictions on freedom of speechand yes, thank you, I include laws against Holocaust denial, denial of the Armenian genocide and all the other prohibitions of hatred that litter the statute bookswould find a way to ban the film and arrest the filmmakers. The British police would use public order and breach of peace laws. The wistful tone of the Obama administration make one suspect that it wished the US Constitution did not prevent it following suit
Innocence of Muslims is one of the hardest cases for liberals I've come across. But even this tawdry piece of work raises problems for the proponents of censorship. The first is a problem with language. Mount a critique of Islamist religious fanaticism, and it is only a matter of time before you find that defenders of religious reaction have hijacked liberal language. You are an "orientalist", they say, an "Islamophobe", "neo-colonialist" or "neocon". (The suffix "neo-" has become a synonym for "evil". The reader need only see a "neo-" to know that no good will follow.)
'Offences against Islam'
The joke of it is that defenders of censorship represent "orientalism" at its most patronising. They see the world's Muslims as an undifferentiated and infantile mass. The smallest provocationa cartoon in a Jutland newspaper, a trailer for a nasty but obscure filmis enough to turn them into a raging mass of bearded men who bellow curses as they fire their Kalashnikovs. They take no account of those in Libya, Egypt and Iran who want nothing to do with clerical violence. As seriously, they do not understand that "offences against Islam" are manufactured by extremists, who must keep their supporters in a state of violent rage or see their power wane.
The murder of US diplomats was not carried out spontaneously, but by a jihadist militia that wanted to kill Americans on the 9/11 anniversary. In Egypt, the controversy over the Coptic film was created by Al-Nas, a Salafi channel dedicated to promoting militant Islam. These crises are political events, in other words. Their promoters must create the poisonous atmosphere in which they thrive. Does anyone doubt that if the Muhammad film had never been made, they would not have found another target for their fury? Has everyone forgotten that their targets have included men and women liberals have a duty to defend? The same people who scream today, applauded the murder of Salman Tasser for protesting against the execution of Pakistani "blasphemers" who "insulted" Islam. They hoped for the murder of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, because she tried to stand up for the right of immigrant women to resist religious oppression in Europe.
Then of course there is the case of The Satanic Verses. Salman Rushdie has chosen this week to publish his autobiography. I would have said that the timing was perfect from his publisher's point of view, except that so many other weeks would have revealed how the violence caused by Ayatollah Khomeini's attempt to suppress The Satanic Verses in 1989 and murder all those associated with it never passed. Readers who were around at the time will remember that a desperate Rushdie tried to appease his persecutors by issuing an abject apology. He learned that there are forces you cannot appease, when the Islamists laughed and carried on with the terror campaign. It is a lesson we would do well to remember.
To bring the story up to date we now have before us the example of the UK's Channel 4's documentary on the origins of Islam. It was everything that the Muhammad trailer was not. Tom Holland presented a thoughtful and balanced film on the arguments among historians about whether the armies that exploded out of Arabia to conquer the Persian empire and much of the Byzantine empire were Muslim, or whether Islam came later. His documentary was public service television at its most scrupulous. I speak from experience when I say that he has no hatred of religion. The last time I met him was at a debate where he argued for and I argued against a motion that religion was a force for good in the world.
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Sri Lanka in UN list of countries accused of intimidating critics
Posted: at 10:14 pm
[TamilNet, Sunday, 16 September 2012, 12:47 GMT] Sri Lanka has been included in the the United Nations list of 16 nations singled out for cracking down on critics, the Washington Post reported. The UN report added that most of those countries governments are going unpunished for their acts of reprisal. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay told a special session of the Human Rights Council that the 16 nations detailed in a new report have been far from sufficient in preventing members of their own governments from resorting to intimidation and attacks on various activists, the Post further said.
The other 15 countries, named in the UN report covering mid-June 2011 to mid-July 2012, are: Algeria, Bahrain, Belarus, China, Colombia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Lebanon, Malawi, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Uzbekistan and Venezuela.
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay
"Smear campaigns against those who cooperate with the U.N. may be organized. Threats may be made via phone calls, text messages or even direct contacts. People may also be arrested, beaten or tortured and even killed, Washington Post quoted Navi Pillay as saying.
While urging the UN Rights Council and the world's nations to do more to combat alleged cases of killings, beatings, torture, arrests, threats, harassment and smear campaigns against human rights defenders, Navi Pillay further said, [w]e need more coherent and solid strategies to put an end to reprisals. Reprisals are not only unacceptable: they are also ineffective in the long term. Preventing people from expressing their will or their dissent freely, does not succeed. Ultimately, freedom will always prevail. And information will always find its way to the outside word."
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Sri Lanka in UN list of countries accused of intimidating critics
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Dan Morain: Promise of youth fails to produce at the polls
Posted: at 9:13 am
The headline was true enough, though it was politically incorrect by today's standards: "Pretty Teen Coed Is First Vote Caster."
This newspaper detailed how Joanne Durbin, that "pretty blonde college student," and a half-dozen other newly minted young voters might change the face of democracy.
At 19, Durbin stepped into the voting booth and cast her ballot in a local El Dorado County election, apparently becoming the first Californian to exercise her right under the 26th Amendment, which took effect July 1, 1971, and lowered the voting age to 18 from 21. Before hurrying off to class at Sacramento State, Durbin surveyed the polling place and noted that no one lined up behind her.
"I guess they are just lazy, like the adults," Durbin, smart kid that she was, told the reporter.
Forty-one years later, Joanne Durbin Testerman is a nurse and a grandmother living in Arizona, where she helps care for her aging parents. She has missed only one election since, though she had a good excuse; she was giving birth to twins. But the youth vote has never materialized.
A product of the Vietnam War era, the 26th Amendment was in place for the 1972 presidential election. We know how that turned out. George McGovern, the peace candidate who sought to mobilize young people outraged by the Vietnam War and draft, won Massachusetts and the District of Columbia, and nothing else.
People described in the newspaper article are now in their 60s. I found a few of them with help from The Bee's researcher, Pete Basofin. They all had become regular voters and drilled into their kids' heads the need to vote.
"Politics governs the air you breathe," said Melanie Connors, 61, who spent a career as a child protective services worker. "You need to stay informed and involved."
"I have my two cents. I might as well put it in there. I fought for it," added Tony Kessler. A Navy veteran living in San Luis Obispo, he has voted every time since, except for a few years when he was living in Japan. "I thought things were going to start changing. But nothing happened."
Indeed, four decades later, the vast majority of young people still don't vote. The Public Policy Institute of California estimates that 19 percent of people 25 or younger are likely voters in this state, compared with 74 percent of voters who are 65 and older.
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Dion Lee: sleek, futuristic, leathery
Posted: at 9:12 am
Dion Lee fused sportswear and futurism in his sleek spring summer 2013 show at London Fashion Week.
The Australian wunderkind, showing in London for the second time, held the crowd of international editors on the edges of their benches as they leaned in for closer looks at his accomplished creations.
The first thing to catch their eyes? That would be the leatherlots of it. Appearing in forensically fitted pencil skirts and jackets, it featured slashed-and-plaited panels that created vertebrae-like patterns down the backs of thighs and spines.
But there was simplicity too, as in the purity of the white, midriff-baring tracksuit that opened the show (yup, midriffs: it's practically a Lee-girl requirement to show it off). Colour filtered into the opening series of white looks in the form of transparent orange panels. It built through periwinkle dresses into more blazers, this time with sea-creature swirls and folded-leather peplums.
Dressesexcellent, wearable dresseswere mostly high-necked, with split, neoprene bodice panels that brought to mind lungs and respiration. Has London given the designer room to breathe?
Theres always a consciousness of the body that runs through the collections, he told us backstage. Particularly with this one, there was that kind of layering and transparency and building those shapes underneath the torso. But it was also looking at parallels between technology and the human race.
Technology, the human race and some mighty fine leather jacketscome back next season, Dion. Youre welcome in London anytime.
See the full collection here
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