Monthly Archives: May 2017

Emmanuel Macron launches legal complaint over offshore account allegations spread by Marine Le Pen – The Independent

Posted: May 8, 2017 at 12:16 am

Emmanuel Macron has launched legal action over allegations that he holds an offshore account, which were raised by Marine Le Pen just days before the French presidential election.

She was accused of using fake news in a last ditch attempt to damage the frontrunners chances after challenging him over the claims during a televised debate.

The Paris prosecutors office said no one was named in Mr Macrons complaint, which has triggered an inquiry into the suspected spread of false stories aimed at influencing the election.

Ms Le Pen alluded to allegations that Mr Macron has an offshore account in the Bahamas, which appear to stem from an article published on the right-wing website Disobedient Media.

Asked on BFMTV on Thursday morning whether she had any proof to justify repeating the claims, the Front National politician admitted she did not.

Claiming she was not formally accusing Mr Macron of any wrongdoing, Ms Le Pen said: Ive just asked him the question. If I had proof, I would have claimed it yesterday."

Mr Macron has denied the accusations and said he did not have any account in the Bahamas or any other tax haven

Speaking on France Inter radio, he blamed Ms Le Pen for spreading fake news, adding: "All this is factually inaccurate."

His team said the former investment banker was the victim of a cyber misinformation campaign, although the original source of the claims remains unclear.

Some reports have cited intelligence sources as saying Russia is targeting Mr Macron in a campaign conducted online, while the California-based Disobedient Media attributed the claims to "leaked documents".

Ms Le Pen and Mr Macron will face each other in the second and final round of the French presidential election on Sunday, where the latest polls predict victory for the centrist candidate on 61 per cent of votes.

Additional reporting by agencies

See the rest here:

Emmanuel Macron launches legal complaint over offshore account allegations spread by Marine Le Pen - The Independent

Posted in Offshore | Comments Off on Emmanuel Macron launches legal complaint over offshore account allegations spread by Marine Le Pen – The Independent

Quiet Lucerne Road, Oxford, was enraptured with tales of the high … – The Oxford Times

Posted: at 12:15 am

NEIGHBOURS in one of Oxford's quietest suburban streets were enraptured with tales of the high seas on Saturday afternoon.

Former ship mates of renowned sailor and author Alan Villiers gathered at his old home in Lucerne Road, Summertown, to share memories of his most famous expedition a full-scale re-enactment of the 17th century Mayflower crossing from England to America which he captained in 1957.

The occasion for the gathering was the unveiling of a blue plaque at the home where his 101-year-old widow Nancie still lives.

Left-to-right Katherine Chetwynd, Peter Villiers and Kit Villiers unveil the plaque to honour their father. Their mother Nancie is pictured below left.

Guest speaker David Thorpe, a deckhand on the '57 voyage, recounted how his gruff and stern captain spoke to him just twice during the crossing once upbraiding him for winding up a rope with 'yachtsman's coils'.

Born in Australia, Alan Villiers first went to sea in 1919 as an apprentice aboard coastal schooners that traded on the rough Tasman sea.

He then became a journalist, writing about his often dramatic adventures.

He came to England aboard a Finnish sailing ship in a harrowing expedition on which his friend and shipmate Ronald Walker died.

He recorded the experience in his book By Way of Cape Horn which became a best-seller and a film.

During the Second World War he commanded a flotilla of landing craft at Normandy Landings, before settling in Oxford in the 1950s and continuing to pursue his passion for sailing, including the Mayflower II.

Mr Thorpe recalled how he met his future captain when, as an undergraduate at Oxford University in 1955, the famous sailor and author came to give a talk at University College.

He recalled: "Honestly, only Alan could have had that beery lot hanging on to his every word on the subject of rope."

Remembering their time together on the Mayflower II he said: "Captain Villiers was a true 'master under God', as the old ship's articles use to say: he believed in God, and used to read the bible to us every Sunday."

He rounded up his speech by saying: "And behind every great man is a great woman, and I don my cap to Nancie," to a round of applause from the crowd.

Mr Villiers' son Kit, who attended the ceremony with his brother Peter and their sister Katherine, said he was surprised by the number of people who had turned up.

He added: "We are very pleased at the interest shown."

The ceremony was also attended by the director of the National Maritime Museum Dr Kevin Fewster and American historian Marietta Mullen, an expert on the Mayflower II voyage who travelled from Plymouth, Massachusetts.

She said afterwards: "It is an honour just to attend: the voyage of '57 is a phenomenal story and there were amazing people aboard that ship."

Read more from the original source:

Quiet Lucerne Road, Oxford, was enraptured with tales of the high ... - The Oxford Times

Posted in High Seas | Comments Off on Quiet Lucerne Road, Oxford, was enraptured with tales of the high … – The Oxford Times

New Iowa City space wants to incubate the next brick-and-mortar stores – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Posted: at 12:13 am

May 7, 2017 at 10:00 am | Print View

IOWA CITY In the age of online shopping, a group of three hopes its new space will foster the next generation of small businesses and brick-and-mortar stores.

RADinc short for retail arts design incubator opened in downtown Iowa City last month. Its a mix of retail storefront, event space and shared studio space.

We want to do as many interesting, cool, creative things as possible with as many different types of people as possible in a way that is incredibly affordable and accessible, said co-founder Simeon Talley.

Making the space cheap and centered downtown, he said, is key because thats where a lot of everything happens in Iowa City but a lot of times a lot of artists, a lot of makers, outside of the university are really priced out of it.

So far, six retail tenants and 10 others work or sell out of RAD. The current location, 123 E. Washington St., is not permanent, but Talley said RAD has at least a year to try its concept.

Talley came to Iowa while working on Barack Obamas 2008 presidential campaign. He started RAD with Andre Wright and John Engelbrecht, two other Iowa Citians interested in the retail and arts communities.

Talley explained more about RAD and the three founders hopes for it.

Q: What type of tenants are you trying to attract?

A: We want people that are serious about what theyre doing and testing it out, seeing if its a viable product, business idea, artistic endeavor. People that want to turn the thing that theyve been doing on the side or the thing that theyre really passionate about in to their livelihood or something thats a little bit bigger part of their life and can benefit from space and connecting to other artists.

Q: Do you want tenants to outgrow the space?

A: Absolutely. That would be ideal.

Q: Why have all of these different interest areas in one place?

A: I think everybody benefits from a community-driven approach and just learning about, connecting to people in similar situations, but youll always be surprised by the sort of collaborations that just sort of happen.

Q: What do you want RAD to become?

A: Incubators have popped up and gone away with very mixed success and reviews. If we can figure out how to do that correctly on the creative, artistic side, that would be great, but also just this idea of incubating the next generation of brick-and-mortars, of local artisans, of makers and providing an intentional, supportive ecosystem for people in Iowa, I think that would be a very powerful and compelling thing.

Q: What is an obstacle for RAD?

A: I think the scaling up and figuring out the right pricing for our tenants and the different services that were offering that still makes it affordable and accessible, but still allows us to afford the rent ourselves. This is a commercial enterprise, were an LLC. Were treating this as a business.

Q: You started in politics. How did you wind up in this creative world?

A: A lot of it is just community organizing. One of my first jobs in politics was as a field organizer. That approach of connecting dots, connecting people, identifying resources, being resourceful, collaborating with other like-minded people, finding areas where there should be more collaboration, thats just a skill set and a way of approaching work, life, existing in a community that I learned from the Obama campaign.

l Comments: (319) 398-8366; matthew.patane@thegazette.com

We make it easy to stay connected:

More stories from Matthew Patane

See the original post here:

New Iowa City space wants to incubate the next brick-and-mortar stores - The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Posted in Intentional Communities | Comments Off on New Iowa City space wants to incubate the next brick-and-mortar stores – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Test Server Singularity EVE Online

Posted: at 12:12 am

CCP Games runs a test server, called Singularity, in order to test drive changes, fixes, new features and gather community feedback.

Its primary function is to provide a test environment as close as possible to the live environment of Tranquility. For this purpose, the Tranquility database is "mirrored" (copied) over to the Singularity server once every few months (or more often, if needed by the CCP Quality Assurance department) in order totest the performance of the server and client with as many players as possible at the same place (such asfleet fight situations), periodical mass testing events are often held on Singularity as well.

New and Reactivated Accounts

Newly created accounts and characters on Tranquility will only be available on the test server after a full mirror of the Tranquility database has been completed.

Test Server Resources

Information on how to connect to the test server and provide feedback can be found at the Test Server Feedback section of the forums:

Test Server Feedback

Additional information regarding the test servers can be found on ourTest Servers Information page.

Test Server Customer Support

Due to the Singularity servers nature a test environment which may break at any point in time the server is offered "as is." Bugs found should be reported, preferably via the in-game Bug Reporting tool (located in the Help menu of the client) or via the community website to receive developer attention. Support tickets from Singularity, however, are not answered or forwarded.Should users come across any non-bug issues on the test server, then it is recommended to leave feedback within the "Test Server Feedback" forum.

No Attachments with this Article

Link:

Test Server Singularity EVE Online

Posted in Singularity | Comments Off on Test Server Singularity EVE Online

Dwarf Planetary Systems Will Transform the Hunt for Alien Life – Singularity Hub

Posted: at 12:12 am

Written speculation about life beyond the confines of Earth dates back thousands of years, to the time of the Greek philosophers Epicurus and Democritus. Unrecorded curiosity about this question undoubtedly goes back much further still. Remarkably, todays generation seems about to get an answer from the study of exoplanets planets orbiting other stars than the Sun. The early results are upending many assumptions from that long history.

Two months ago, our research team at the University of Cambridge and the University of Lige in Belgium reported that a nearby star, called TRAPPIST-1A, is orbited by seven planets similar in size and mass to Earth. All seven planets are temperate, meaning that under the right atmospheric and geologic conditions, they could sustain liquid water. Three of the planets show particular potential for habitability, receiving about as much energy from their star as the Earth receives from the Sun.

Our discovery received ecstatic and gratifying news coverage around the world. In many ways, though, the TRAPPIST-1 system is an odd place to look for life. The central star is just 1/12th the mass of the Sun and scarcely bigger than the planet Jupiter. It gives off just 0.05 per cent as much light as the Sun. TRAPPIST-1A belongs to a class that we call ultra-cool dwarfs, the very smallest stars that exist.

Searching for habitable planets around ultra-cool dwarfs has long been considered a waste of time. Even as astronomers found that exoplanetary systems are generally different from the solar system, old attitudes lingered. The Earth and Sun appear so normal and hospitable to our eyes that we get blinded by their attributes. Major programs are therefore directed at finding an Earth twin: a planet the mass and size of our own, orbiting a star just like the Sun, at the same Earth-Sun distance. The detection of such a world remains decades away.

In the effort to answer the question Is there life elsewhere? the focus on Earth twins is perceived as a safe path, since we can expect that similar conditions will lead to similar results (at least part of the time). However, we argue that this is far too conservative a goal, considering the huge number and diversity of available planets. That is part of the message of TRAPPIST-1. Research should be about finding what we dont already know. Identifying a life-bearing Earth twin would be a resounding scientific success, but it would teach little about the overall emergence of biology in the Universe.

Our ambition is wider. Instead, we seek an answer to How frequently is life found elsewhere? This simple change of words means that we should also be investigating planetary systems unlike the solar system. It would be disappointing and surprising if Earth were the only template for habitability in the Universe. Sun-like stars represent just 15 per cent of all stars in the Milky Way. More than half of those, in turn, exist in binary star systems that have also been disregarded as being too different from the conditions present in the solar system. The search for Earth twins therefore covers a nearly insignificant fraction of all the outcomes in nature.

Once we reset the goal to measuring the total frequency of biology, ultra-cool dwarfs become an obvious target. Half the stars in the Milky Way have masses less than one-quarter of the Suns. Our preliminary results suggest that rocky worlds are common orbiting low-mass stars, including ultra-cool dwarf systems, possibly more so than in orbit around Sun-like stars. Ultra-cool dwarfs also open a much easier route to detecting and studying temperate, Earth-like planets.

The scientific advantages of ultra-cool dwarfs come from their stellar properties, from how we identify exoplanets, and from how we expect to investigate their atmospheres. The TRAPPIST-1 planets were found as they passed in front of their star, events known as transits. When the planet transits, it casts a shadow whose depth tells us how much of the stellar surface is being hidden by the planet; the bigger the planet, the deeper the shadow. Because ultra-cool dwarfs are so small, the transit of an Earth-sized planet in front of TRAPPIST-1A is approximately 80 times as prominent as an equivalent transit against a much larger, Sun-like star.

During a transit, any gases in the planets atmosphere change the appearance of starlight streaming through. Around ultra-cool dwarfs, the atmospheric signature is boosted by about a factor of 80. The atmospheric composition of the TRAPPIST-1 planets will be detectable using current and upcoming facilities, such as the James Webb Space Telescope launching in 2018, unlike the decades of technological development needed to study an Earth twin. Extracting a reliable atmospheric signal requires observing dozens of transits. Here, too, systems such as TRAPPIST-1 have huge advantages. Around tiny ultra-cool dwarfs, transits of temperate planets happen once every few days to every couple of weeks, instead of once a year for a planet exactly like Earth.

Astronomers, including ourselves, have already begun investigating the compositions of giant planets around other stars, detecting molecules such as water, carbon monoxide, methane, and hydrogen cyanide. With the discovery of the TRAPPIST-1 system, we can extend those explorations to Earth-sized planets. Our first efforts will be to characterize the greenhouse gas content of atmosphere, and assess whether the surface conditions are conducive for liquid water. Then we will seek out signs of biologically produced gases, analogous to ways that living organisms have transformed the composition of Earths atmosphere.

Claiming a discovery of life will be hard. We cannot rely on the detection of a single gas but instead will need to detect several, and will need to measure their relative abundances. In addition, we will have to be extremely wary of false positives. For instance, repeated stellar flares could build up oxygen in an atmosphere without the presence of life. The richness of the TRAPPIST-1 system is an important asset, because we can compare its planets to one another. All seven planets originated from the same nebular chemistry; they share a similar history of receiving flares and meteoritic impacts. Weeding out false positives will be much easier here than in planetary systems containing only one or two temperate, potentially Earth-like worlds.

More important, TRAPPIST-1 is not a one-off discovery. Ultra-cool dwarf stars are so common that there could be numerous other similar systems close to us in the galaxy. The TRAPPIST (Transiting Planets and Planetesimals Small Telescopes) facility we used to find the TRAPPIST-1 planets was just the prototype of a more ambitious planet survey called SPECULOOS (Search for habitable Planets Eclipsing Ultra-Cool Stars), which has already begun operations. We expect to find many more Earth-sized, rocky planets around dwarf stars within the next five years. With this sample in hand, we will explore the many climates of such worlds. The solar system contains two: Venus and Earth. How many different types of environments will we discover?

Using SPECULOOS, we will also begin to address the many objections scientists have raised about the habitability of planets around ultra-cool dwarfs. One argument is that such planets will be tidally locked, meaning that they have permanent day and night sides. Planets orbiting in close proximity around small stars could excite each others orbits, leading to major instabilities. Ultra-cool dwarf stars frequently flare up, emitting ultraviolet and X-rays that might vaporise a planets oceans into space.

Far from holding us back, those arguments motivated us. Now we can assess the actual conditions, and explore counter-arguments that Earth-sized planets around stars such as TRAPPIST-1A might in fact be hospitable to life. Oceans and thick atmospheres could mitigate the temperature contrast between day and night sides. Tidal interaction between close-orbiting planets might provide energy for biology. Some models suggest that planets forming around ultra-cool dwarfs start out with much more water than Earth has. Ultraviolet radiation could help to produce biologically relevant compounds We are optimistic.

No matter what we find by studying planets orbiting ultra-cool dwarfs, we cannot lose. We can only learn. If we manage to identify the presence of life on a planet similar to those in the TRAPPIST-1 system, then we can start measuring how frequently biology emerges in the universe. We could have the first clues of extraterrestrial biology in a decade! If we find that none of those worlds is habitable, or that they are habitable but barren, we would learn that life is rare and precious. It will vindicate the Earth-twin approach without delaying it.

In either case, we will define the context of our existence: as one among many, or as an isolated outlier. Both possibilities are humbling. Both are thrilling.

This article was originally published at Aeon and has been republished under Creative Commons.

Banner Image Credit:Detail from an impressionistic poster of the TRAPPIST-1 planetary system. IoA/Amanda Smith

More here:

Dwarf Planetary Systems Will Transform the Hunt for Alien Life - Singularity Hub

Posted in Singularity | Comments Off on Dwarf Planetary Systems Will Transform the Hunt for Alien Life – Singularity Hub

New technology in the war against mosquitoes: Ascension eyes spraying with drones; Lafayette uses drones to scout … – The Advocate

Posted: at 12:10 am

That buzzing you hear from the ditch may soon not only be the beating wings of flitting mosquitoes but the propellers of a large, flying mosquito killer.

In Ascension Parish, officials are close to buying a new aerial drone able to fly, hover and spray up to 20 pounds of chemicals at a time in hard-to-reach areas where mosquitoes breed.

And in Lafayette Parish, a private mosquito control company is using drones to scout for breeding sites.

David Matassa, Ascension's director of mosquito control and brother of Parish President Kenny Matassa, said the drone can spray with a precision that would allow parish workers to save on cost and limit environmental impact compared with more broadly applied aerial methods. The drone, for instance, could be used to spray a ditch along a heavily traveled road with no shoulder that's traditionally been unsafe and hard to spray.

"This is the state of the art. This is the turning corner of mosquito control as far as programs in the country going toward this type of technology," David Matassa said.

While a parish worker is still in training and working on licensing requirements with the Federal Aviation Administration, Matassa said, the drone, which will cost $5,000 to $8,000, could be flying parish skies in time for the peak mosquito season.

The remotely operated drone won't replace the trucks and planes that already spray periodically through the parish and which kill the adult mosquitoes.

The drone, which can spray 80 acres in a days work, will be used to kill larvae growing in standing water, taking out the next generation of mosquitoes before they take flight.

Thats actually one of the most important things you can do to control the population of mosquitoes, is larvicide, he said.

Technology pioneered by the U.S. military to observe the battlefield and, later, to kill militants, remotely controlled aerial drones are being envisioned in a growing number of civilian applications, from Amazons promises to revolutionize delivery with its Octocopter to experiments to use drones to monitor Gulf Coast hurricanes.

In the Gulf South, mosquito control remains a public health concern as the flying blood-suckers pose a disease risk to the population, including West Nile and Zika virus.

+6

Tiny aircraft equipped with cameras may soon be snooping around abandoned lots and overgrown

The drone that Ascension Parish is looking at buying a circular, tail-less craft with eight mini-props and a tank on the bottom had its origins in remote-control helicopters developed to spray terraced rice paddies in the hillsides of Japan, China and southeast Asia where it is difficult to bring in land-based spray equipment.

Logan Noess, one of the owners of Maverick Drone Systems of Savage in Minnesota, said those early craft, developed about 15 years ago, cost around $100,000. The latest version costs 10 percent of those early craft. The cheaper variety has drawn the interest of local governments, including Ascension Parish, he said.

Noess, whose company is a U.S. dealer for the Chinese-built craft, a DJI Agras MG-1, said his company recently conducted a series of demonstrations in eight to 10 Louisiana parishes following a national conference of mosquito control officials.

We were just spraying water out in fields, and from everything we have seen, it should work great, he said.

Matassa, who went to that conference and witnessed a demonstration, speculated that Ascension may be the first in the state to use a drone for aerial spraying but likely wont be the only one for long. He said he has spoken with other program directors, and many are eyeing drones for similar uses.

I guarantee you within a few years, most all (mosquito control) programs will have them, Matassa said.

Matassa said the drone can fly a few hundred feet high and 8,000 feet over land in a few minutes. While the drone could be outfitted with cameras, parish officials plan to focus on the spray technology, he said.

The contractor who handles mosquito control for Lafayettes City-Parish government already uses smaller, cheaper drones but for a different application.

Glenn Stokes, owner of Mosquito Control Contractors Inc., said he uses a few $1,500 drones outfitted with surveillance cameras to look for hard-to-access breeding sites, including the parishs more than 1,000 residential and commercial detention and retention ponds, but he does not yet use drones for spraying.

Because of the expense, that would require a change in the City-Parish contract, he said.

The drones have a great potential, and I think you know they will be more and more in use, and at some point in time, thats going to be in the future, they could actually replace inspectors, Stokes said.

+6

Tiny aircraft equipped with cameras may soon be snooping around abandoned lots and overgrown

The use of camera-outfitted drones by businesses, law enforcement and even Stokes operation has generated privacy concerns, however. Stokes said his company only looks into the yards of homes that are abandoned or for which the company has received permission, though he said a major public health scare could result in broad surveys of breeding locations.

Its a delicate line, Stokes said of the use drones and privacy rights.

Original post:

New technology in the war against mosquitoes: Ascension eyes spraying with drones; Lafayette uses drones to scout ... - The Advocate

Posted in Ascension | Comments Off on New technology in the war against mosquitoes: Ascension eyes spraying with drones; Lafayette uses drones to scout … – The Advocate

Book review: ‘Wanderers’ looks at space exploration from various points of view – Florida Times-Union

Posted: at 12:09 am

THE WANDERERS

Author: Meg Howrey

Data: G.P. Putnams Sons, 384 pages, $27

The framework for Meg Howreys The Wanderers is space exploration, specifically the effects on three space travel veterans and those closest to them of an elaborate 17-month earthbound simulation of travel to Mars and back.

When you evaluate whether this novel would be a good choice for you, do something that will gain or lose it a lot of this is something I might enjoy points, depending on your perspective and mood. Assume, whatever the Martian motif or cover blurbs may suggest, that the book is NOT sci-fi or anything much like it. Instead, its literary fiction whose space-travel theme provides some special tools for examining human personality, identity, and relationships. Also, assume it is NOT plot-driven: the narrative framework IS the plot, and everything else is the exposition and evolution of the characters.

A few years into the future, privatization of space exploration is the accepted reality. The moon is an immediate target for mining, but the president of multinational Prime Space Inc. has his sights set on a crewed mission to Mars. Primes immediate project is to recruit primary and backup three-person crews for the fully automated craft, and quickly plunge the primary crew into a simulation so intense that even space veterans, as the crew all are, will not be able to find anything unrealistic about it.

Prime Space has opted for a three-person crew of American, Japanese, and Russian space travel veterans. They havent worked together before, but Prime Spaces personality-matching algorithms have been working overtime to pick a crew that will be compatible and complementary.

American Helen Kane is the ultimate astronaut, a technically ultra-qualified pragmatist who has worked hard to adapt her personality to politically or personally complex situations. In her 50s, she is thrilled and relieved to have an opportunity to return to outer space. Yoshihiro (Yoshi) Tanaka, the youngest crew member, is adaptable and has an artistic sensibility. Sergei Kuznetsov is a decisive character with a big personality. Perhaps to highlight what a capable three-way match Prime Space has pulled off, each of the crew is fluent in the native languages of the other two.

The story is told from seven points of view, those of Helen, Helens adult daughter, Yoshi, Yoshis wife, Sergei, one of Sergeis adolescent sons and a Prime Space family liaison employee. The daughter, the wife and the son each have developing life narratives apart, if not wholly detached, from what is happening with the Mars simulation.

Some of the individual chapters covering the non-crew characters read like stand-alone short stories. The narratives, in and out of the simulation, have themes that mirror each other: the limits of love, boundaries between human and artificial intelligence, and differences between the outwardly perceived and inner selves. The characters sometimes verge on becoming human-bodied avatars for specific character traits, but the author keeps them relatable.

If youre looking for a nail biter, this is not your book. If youre open to a space themed, humane and generally hopeful thought-provoker about humans on and potentially off of the home planet, give it a try.

Anne Payne organizes the Jax Freestyle Book Club for Real Readers at meetup.com.

More here:

Book review: 'Wanderers' looks at space exploration from various points of view - Florida Times-Union

Posted in Space Exploration | Comments Off on Book review: ‘Wanderers’ looks at space exploration from various points of view – Florida Times-Union

aligarh: Aligarh’s answer to minority tag is nanotech, solar research … – Economic Times

Posted: at 12:08 am

Aligarh, May 7 (IANS) The Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), a nearly 100-year-old institution born out of the independence movement and the quest to modernise Muslim education, has often been a victim of minority politics that attracted negative media attention. But what is little known is the kind of path-breaking research the institution is doing in the areas of nanotechnology and solar energy.

The AMU has taken up fresh scientific research projects, including on how to solve the water crisis using nanotechnology and recycle waste water using an eco-friendly and low-cost methods?.

And its outgoing Vice Chancellor, Lt. Gen. Zameer Uddin Shah, a former deputy chief of the Indian Army, hopes the it will be "among the top 200 universities in the world by 2020" when it celebrates its centenary.

"The AMU has a very bright future," the retired general, the elder brother of Bollywood veteran Naseeruddin Shah, told IANS in a wide-ranging interview at his office, speaking about the university, how it is striving to be at par with modern educational institutions and, of course, allegations of financial impropriety against him.

"We need to encourage good quality research in applied sciences as well as the social science and we are doing that," Shah said.

He said the university has taken up a project on desalinating sea water or brackish water using nanotechnology that would bring a "sea change in Indian coastal cities" and provide low-cost drinking water.

"The project will ensure India has sufficient resources of quality and quantity of potable water," he said.

He said AMU scientists have achieved "significant success" in recycling waste water by using the novel concept of plant technology, also called "anaerobic digestion" -- a process of using micro-organisms to break down biodegradable material substances.

The Safeguarding Water resources in India with Green and Sustainable technologies -- Swings -- project is financed under the joint EU-India research funding to find low-cost and sustainable solutions for waste water treatment.

The university has successfully piloted the project on its campus and has built a plant that treats the wastewater generated on the campus.

Shah said the university's? scientists were also involved in harnessing solar energy for automobiles and the "purpose is to reduce dependence on fossil fuels".

"They are doing research on solar power for automobiles. Once the project is complete, we will be able to charge your car (a hybrid or electric) battery in 20 minutes which otherwise takes six hours," said Shah, whose term ends in the middle of this month.

While the thrust in its image makeover is on good scientific research, the Vice Chancellor said the management has also been trying to "battle a misconception" that AMU breeds fundamentalism.

"To a large extent, perceptions have changed but we are also proud of our Muslim ethos," he said about the varsity that has an exclusive Olympic-sized swimming pool for women students, as also a separate horse riding club for them.

For those Muslim men and women who pass out from madrassas, the university has introduced a concept of a bridge course to enable their admission in regular university courses and integrate them into the mainstream with modern education.

"Earlier, they were admitted only in theology, Arabic, Persian and Urdu. But we wanted them to get admitted to any course.

"We made them do this one-year bridge course. People later qualified for Mass Communications, English Honours and other subjects because of the solid potential these guys gain from memorising the Quran in madrassas," said Shah, himself a madrassa pass-out.

"I felt madrassas were being demonised all over the world and in our country also you hear a lot of rubbish about them. After all, these are educational institutions."

The university is facing another challenge in a legal battle on its minority character, challenged by the government in the Supreme Court. It is feared this may close the doors of modern liberal education for thousands of poor Muslims.

Shah said AMU, which has "contributed a great deal towards the empowerment of Muslims in India, must stay as a minority institution...till the situation of Muslims is corrected".

"At the moment, Muslims in India are the worst off, worse than the Dalits. We don't need reservations. We need your affirmative actions in education.

"Because of poor schooling, Muslim children kind of fall behind. They have bread and butter issues, so they don't qualify for institutions of higher education."

Shah's tenure ends on May 16 and the battles at the university, which has 1,400 teachers and 2,000 non-teaching staff, has been "tougher" than those he fought as a soldier in the Indian Army.

"Here you have everyone posing as a friend but there are only a few real friends," he said, lamenting how he was accused of financial, administrative and academic irregularities.

"I was alleged to have bungled 120 crore (of rupees)," he said, adding he has replied to all the allegations that were made by a "set of people" who were upset because he wanted to discipline them.

"There were some teachers who were never taught and indulged in politics," he said, alleging that they were behind the campaign against him.

(Sarwar Kashani can be contacted at sarwar.k@ians.in)

--IANS

sar/vm/tb/sac

Read the rest here:

aligarh: Aligarh's answer to minority tag is nanotech, solar research ... - Economic Times

Posted in Nanotech | Comments Off on aligarh: Aligarh’s answer to minority tag is nanotech, solar research … – Economic Times

WW3 arms race: Russia leading ‘HYPERSONIC’ arms race with unstoppable missiles – Daily Star

Posted: at 12:07 am

RUSSIA is ahead in the "hypersonic" arms race with the US as its deadly unstoppable missiles near deployment.

Scientists claim Putins "hypersonic" nukes are "far more advanced" than the US equivalent.

Russia's cutting-edge Sarmat missiles are due to enter into service as soon as 2018.

The new missile will be twice as light as the Voyevoda it replaces and will also be lightning-fast in comparison.

GETTY

Putin has an arsenal of state-of-the-art weaponry at his fingertips. Could this be the hardware that wages WW3?

1 / 11

The T-90 tank: equipped with a 125mm smoothbore cannon and remote controlled anti-aircraft gun

The results are better than those of the US

The improved performance of the new missiles will mean they are capable of penetrating the high-tech US THAAD missile defence system.

"The results are better than those of the US," director of the Russian Academy of Sciences' Siberian Branch Vasily Fomin said on Wednesday.

Fomin also claimed that Russia's missiles were capable of travelling at five times the speed of sound.

GETTY

While Alexei Leonkov told the Sputnik news agency: "The missile system which is about to enter into service is a fifth generation system.

"Its characteristics are so impressive that our opponents have reason to be afraid of it.

GETTY

As Donald Trump has promised to start an arms race, we take a look at the futuristic weapons being developed for the US military.

1 / 10

The Lockheed Martin HULC is an exoskeleton that allows soldiers to carry loads of up to 200lbs for long distances

"They will fly to their target at hypersonic speeds performing maneuvers so that the existing American missile defense system would be incapable of intercepting them."

Leonkov also said the new missile would have a range of 11,100 miles, meaning they could easily strike US cities from Russian soil.

The news will come as a massive blow to Donald Trump as it was revealed yesterday that North Korea also possessed missiles capable of breaching the THAAD defence system.

Continued here:

WW3 arms race: Russia leading 'HYPERSONIC' arms race with unstoppable missiles - Daily Star

Posted in Ww3 | Comments Off on WW3 arms race: Russia leading ‘HYPERSONIC’ arms race with unstoppable missiles – Daily Star

Molly at the Marriott: Inside America’s Premier Psychedelics Conference – New York Times

Posted: at 12:07 am


New York Times
Molly at the Marriott: Inside America's Premier Psychedelics Conference
New York Times
Rather than rock stars, scientists from schools like Johns Hopkins and N.Y.U. were the main attraction, bringing evidence to the medical case for psychedelics like psilocybin (the active ingredient in magic mushrooms) to assuage end-of-life anxiety, to ...

Read the rest here:

Molly at the Marriott: Inside America's Premier Psychedelics Conference - New York Times

Posted in Psychedelics | Comments Off on Molly at the Marriott: Inside America’s Premier Psychedelics Conference – New York Times