সোমবার, ২৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

NASA rover launched to seek out life clues on Mars (Reuters)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) ? An unmanned Atlas 5 rocket blasted off from Florida on Saturday, launching a $2.5 billion nuclear-powered NASA rover toward Mars to look for clues on what could sustain life on the Red Planet.

The 20-story-tall booster built by United Launch Alliance lifted off from its seaside launch pad at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 10:02 a.m. EST (3:02 p.m. GMT).

It soared through partly cloudy skies into space, carrying NASA's Mars Science Laboratory on a 354-million mile (556 million km), nearly nine-month journey to the planet.

"I think this mission is an important next step in NASA's overall goal to address the issue of life in the universe," lead scientist John Grotzinger, with the California Institute of Technology, told reporters shortly after the launch.

The car-sized rover, nicknamed Curiosity, is expected to touch down on August 6, 2012, to begin two years of detailed analysis of a 96-mile (154-km) wide impact basin near the Martian equator called Gale Crater.

The goal is to determine if Mars has or ever had environments to support life. It is the first astrobiology mission to Mars since the 1970s-era Viking probes.

Scientists chose the landing site because it has a three-mile-high (4.8-km high) mountain of what appears from orbital imagery and mineral analysis to be layers of rock piled up like the Grand Canyon, each layer testifying to a different period in Mars' history.

The rover has 17 cameras and 10 science instruments, including chemistry labs, to identify elements in soil and rock samples to be dug up by the probe's drill-tipped robotic arm.

'LONG SHOT'

The base of the crater's mountain has clays, evidence of a prolonged wet environment, and what appears to be minerals such as sulfates that likely were deposited as water evaporated.

Water is considered to be a key element for life, but not the only one.

Previous Mars probes, including the rovers Spirit and Opportunity, searched for signs of past surface water.

"We are not a life-detection mission," Grotzinger said. "We have no ability to detect life present on the surface of Mars. It's an intermediate mission between the search for water and future missions, which may undertake life detection."

With Curiosity, which is twice as long and three times heavier than its predecessors, NASA shifts its focus to look for other ingredients for life, including possibly organic carbon, the building block for life on Earth.

"It's a long shot, but we're going to try," Grotzinger said.

Launch is generally considered the riskiest part of a mission, but Curiosity's landing on Mars will not be without drama.

The 1,980-pound (898 kg) rover is too big for the airbag or thruster-rocket landings used on previous Mars probes, so engineers designed a rocket-powered "sky-crane" to gently lower Curiosity to the crater floor via a 43-foot (13-meter) cable.

"We call it the 'six-minutes of terror,'" said Doug McCuistion, director of NASA's Mars Exploration Program, referring to the landing. "It is pretty scary, but my confidence level is really high."

Curiosity is powered by heat from the radioactive decay of plutonium. It is designed to last one Martian year, or 687 Earth days.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111126/ts_nm/us_space_mars

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Pope calls for responsible, credible climate deal

Pope Benedict XVI holds an audience for members of the Caritas, in St.Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Pope Benedict XVI says the global economic crisis requires a courageous show of brotherhood. Benedict also expressed concern in a speech Thursday at the Vatican that there is a risk that hope will diminish amid the growing troubles, including the uncertainty that young people feel amid the economic crisis. The pope said "humanity is searching for signs of hope." (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

Pope Benedict XVI holds an audience for members of the Caritas, in St.Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Pope Benedict XVI says the global economic crisis requires a courageous show of brotherhood. Benedict also expressed concern in a speech Thursday at the Vatican that there is a risk that hope will diminish amid the growing troubles, including the uncertainty that young people feel amid the economic crisis. The pope said "humanity is searching for signs of hope." (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)

(AP) ? Pope Benedict XVI has urged this week's U.N. climate change conference in South Africa to craft a responsible and credible deal to cut greenhouse gases that takes into account the needs of the poor.

Government ministers from more than 100 countries are expected to attend the final sessions of the two-week conference that opens Monday in Durban. The immediate focus is the pending expiry of the Kyoto Protocol, the 1997 agreement requiring 37 industrialized countries to slash carbon emissions to 5 percent below 1990 levels by 2012.

Benedict said Sunday he hoped the international community would "agree on a responsible and credible response to this worrisome and complex phenomenon, taking into account the needs of the poorest and future generations."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-11-27-EU-Vatican-Climate/id-13b2ebd0111246cbb25407b8e14bb58c

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Santos: 4 slain were longest-held rebel captives (AP)

BOGOTA, Colombia ? Colombia's president says the four security force members found slain during a military operation were the longest-held captives of the country's main rebel group.

President Juan Manuel Santos says all four were killed execution-style, three with shots to the head and one with two shots to the back.

Santos said the three police officers and a soldier whose bodies were found Saturday morning after combat in the southern state of Caqueta had been held between 12 and 13 years.

He called the killings "a crime against humanity."

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) ? Four security force members held by Colombia's main rebel group were found slain Saturday, the defense minister said.

All four were killed execution-style, three with shots to the head and one with a shot to the back, Juan Carlos Pinzon told reporters in a brief appearance.

He said the bodies were found following combat in the country's south between troops and rebels.

He did not name the four or take questions, but blamed the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

"They were cruelly murdered with coups de grace," Pinzon said. He said that chains were found with the bodies.

The FARC is known to hold about 20 security force members, some for more than 13 years, and typically binds them with chains.

It would not be the first time the FARC has slain captives when under military pressure.

In June 2007, FARC fighters killed 11 regional lawmakers they had been holding for five years, apparently under the mistaken belief they were under attack by government forces.

In 2003, FARC fighters killed 10 captives, including a former defense minister and governor, during an attempted rescue when they heard approaching military helicopters.

Latin America's last remaining rebel army, the FARC took up arms in 1964 and has suffered a series of recent setbacks including the combat death earlier this month of its leader, Alfonso Cano.

It is believed to comprise about 9,000 fighters.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_colombia_rebels

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রবিবার, ২৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Kirsten Alana: Friday Photo: Thankful (Huffington post)

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Snapfon ez ONE-c (Unlocked)


When we first reviewed the Snapfon ez ONE (3.5 stars), we thought it was a great simple cell phone, held back by a few issues. Now, with the Snapfon ez ONE-c, some of those issues have been addressed, along with a number of other improvements and a lower price. Sure, the earpiece volume could be higher and it would be nice if the time and date set automatically, but this is still as simple as cell phones get. It's so easy to use that it's our new Editors' Choice for simple phones.

Pricing and Design
Snapfon offers the ez ONE-c direct from its Web site with several decent no-contract service plans through PureTalk USA, which uses AT&T's physical network. Plans start at $10/month. The phone costs $29.99 when purchased with a plan or $59.99 without. Because it is a GSM phone, it will also work with any AT&T or T-Mobile plan.

Setting up your Snapfon is simple right out of the box. There's a fold-out user manual, filled with straightforward, easy to understand directions in a very large font.

The ez ONE-c is made almost entirely of dark grey, shiny plastic with a red SOS button on the back. It measures 4 by 2 by .5 inches (HWD) and weighs just 2.7 ounces. It looks a lot like a calculator, and it should fit into your pocket without a problem. The screen is a 1.6-inch amber LCD with 128x48 resolution, and shows the battery life, date, signal strength, and time.

The keys are extremely large?each one is about the size of a dime. They're made of matte plastic and are easy to press without making a mistake. They're also easy to read, though you can also set the phone to say them out loud as you press them. At the top of the keypad, in between the?Send?and?End?buttons, is a single function key used to navigate the phone's uncomplicated menu. Battery life was excellent at 11 hours 27 minutes of talk time.

Performance and Conclusions
The ez ONE-c is a quad-band (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) GSM world phone, which means you can take it with you on trips abroad. There is no Bluetooth, camera, Internet, or any of the other features that often come standard in most phones. But this is a simple phone, so that's understandable. The only downside is the lack of Bluetooth, since many states have laws requiring hands-free use while driving.

I tested the Snapfon on T-Mobile's network. Reception was good, and call quality was decent overall. Voices sound clear in the earpiece, but extremely thin?there's no depth at all. Although the earpiece sounds a bit louder this time around, I still wish it had a louder maximum volume. Pressed firmly against my ear the volume level was good, but holding the phone like I regularly do caused it to drop off a bit. It would've been nice to see a higher maximum volume for users that are hard of hearing. The speakerphone, on the other hand, gets very loud. On the other end, calls made with the phone sound clear enough, although noise cancellation is lacking. The vibrate function is decent, but like the earpiece, it could stand to be a bit stronger.

There is a button on the left side of the phone for volume control, and another one for an FM radio. The FM radio has good reception, but it sounds tinny over the phone's speaker. It's much better over a standard pair of 3.5mm wired headphones.

There is a button on the right side of the phone for a LED flashlight, which Snapfon claims can produce a beam of light for up to 20 feet. There is also a lock button on the right side to prevent the phone from pocket dialing.

Text messaging was simple due to the large size of the phone's keys, but there is no predictive text, so you're going to need to triple tap out all your messages. The phone can only hold up to 100 messages and 200 contacts at once due to a lack of any significant internal memory. Unfortunately, it still doesn't set the time and date automatically, which is a needless hassle.

A big, red SOS button is located on the back of the phone, which is a great feature to have in case of an emergency. By pressing and holding the button down for 5 seconds, the phone will sound a high-pitched alert and proceed to automatically call 4 programmable numbers until a call connects. It will even send a text message to these numbers that says, "Emergency, please help!" Upon initial activation of the phone, the SOS button is programmed to dial the user's nearest emergency response center until 4 SOS numbers are entered.

There are other good simple phones out there, such as GreatCall's?Samsung Jitterbug J SPH-A310?($99, 4 stars) and the Just5 J509?($89.99, 4 stars). While the Snapfon lacks Jitterbug's live operator, on-call nurse, and personal security service, it still manages to provide a sense of security with the SOS feature, and it's even easier to use and less expensive than the Jitterbug. The J509, meanwhile, lacks a standard headphone jack and isn't a world phone. That leaves the ez ONE-c as the easiest choice, and our Editors' Choice, for a simple phone.

Benchmarks
Continuous talk time: 11 hours 27 minutes

More Cell Phone Reviews:
??? Snapfon ez ONE-c (Unlocked)
??? Samsung Captivate Glide (AT&T)
??? Samsung DoubleTime (AT&T)
??? Samsung Focus Flash (AT&T)
??? Samsung Transform Ultra (Boost Mobile)
?? more

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Peru's highlands conundrum: gold versus water

(AP) ? Peru's biggest mining investment is under threat and government social welfare programs with it as highlands peasants step up protests against a gold-and-copper mine they fear could taint and diminish their water supply.

About 400 protesters tried to enter the mine's grounds Friday and some hurled rocks at police, who responded with tear gas and shotgun blasts, wounding one protester in the leg, Interior Minister Oscar Valdes told a Lima TV station.

Opposition to the $4.8 billion project, an extension of the Yanacocha open-pit gold mine that is Latin America's largest, poses the first major challenge to President Ollanta Humala's leadership.

He won office in June after promising the very people now mobilizing against Conga, whose 51 percent owner is Denver-based Newmont Mining Corp., that he would put clean water above mineral extraction.

He told the residents of the northern state of Cajamarca, one of Peru's most heavily mined, during a May campaign swing that he would ensure their water supply "because you don't drink gold."

"You don't eat gold."

But as protests began to rattle the Conga project last month, with heavy equipment vandalized, roads blocked and work temporarily halted, Humala was modifying the message.

The choice, he now said, need not be water or gold. Peruvians can have both.

After thousands joined protests in Cajamarca against Conga on Thursday, Humala told a gathering of peasant organizations in the capital of Lima: "You have my word. The state will guarantee water. All our children must have water."

Work at Conga was suspended for a third straight day Friday as protests continued, and Valdes said the wounded man was among two protesters arrested. Newmont spokesman Omar Jabara said one Conga worker's truck was badly damaged Friday in a hamlet on the mine's periphery.

Peru's Environment Ministry began last month to review the project ? "some critical aspects of it," said Fausto Roncal, the ministry official in charge of evaluating environmental impact studies. He said its report would soon be delivered to Peru's chief Cabinet minister.

But investigative journalist Gustavo Gorriti reported Friday night on the IDL-Reporteros website that the 11-page report was delivered Thursday and raises "serious environmental objections." He said it recommends a "detailed hydrological and hydrogeological analysis" of the impact of the mine's two pits on an aquifer not adequately studied by Yanacocha.

Neither Roncal nor other Environment Ministry officials could immediately be reached for comment.

Once a fiery leftist, Humala slid toward the center to win the presidency of a nation that earns 61 percent of export revenues from mining. A boom in metals prices has fueled 7 percent annual economic growth over the past decade, and Humala inherited a nation with more than $40 billion in mining investment lined up.

But little of the mining wealth has reached the highlands where most mines are located and where Humala won office promising pensions for the elderly poor, a higher minimum wage, more education and health spending, rural electrification and sanitation.

To help finance those programs, Humala got the mining industry to agree to a windfall tax that the government says will reap more than $1 billion a year.

Conga mining is scheduled to start in 2015 and is projected to yield 11.6 million ounces of gold ($20 billion at today's prices) and 3.1 billion pounds of copper ($10 billion at today's prices) over two decades.

If the project is scratched, investor confidence could sag and the underpinning of Humala's social agenda collapse.

"This is a trial balloon for the pact Humala's government made with the mining impresarios," said Julia Cuadros, executive director of Cooperaccion, a nonprofit organization that promotes sustainable development.

Yet local opposition to the project is stiff, and led by elected officials. Critics say an environmental impact study for Conga that was approved last year doesn't adequately address the potential downstream damage of gouging open pits into mountaintops in what is likely an important aquifer.

It "will eliminate the principal mountain lakes of the region, which are the last that remain that can supply urban expansion in the coming years" Cajamarca's regional president, Gregorio Santos, told The Associated Press.

Not just the 7,000 or so immediate inhabitants will be affected, he said, but tens of thousands in valleys below. At risk, Santos added, are "probable water supply sources for forestation and sustainable agriculture programs, and also for fish farming."

Four man-made reservoirs will replace the four small mountain lakes to be displaced by the 8-square-mile (2,000-hectare) project at the headwaters of two rivers. The biggest reservoir will be used to help extract metal from rock crushed and laced with cyanide before settling it on barriers to prevent ground contamination.

The other three, said Newmont's Jabara, will more than double stored water for surrounding communities.

"We're doing everything that we can to make sure this project is environmentally sound," Jabara said. That includes a willingness to modify the environmental impact. "At the end of the day a project can't be successful if it ends up adversely affecting water supplies."

But environmentalists say that's exactly what happened with the Yanacocha mine, which began operating in 1993 and produced 3 million ounces of gold in its best year.

Peru's relatively lax clean-water standards permitted it to contaminate waterways, they say, while the regulatory process is biased in favor of miners because the Mining Ministry has the last word on environmental impact studies for mining projects.

"That doesn't happen in Chile, Colombia or Ecuador," said Manuel Glave, a respected Lima economist.

Peru currently has more than 60 disputes over the alleged detrimental impact of mining on water supplies, according to the national ombudsman's office.

The rancor has put an end to some projects.

Former President Alan Garcia's government, which approved Conga and was bullish on mining, nevertheless halted the Tia Maria project of Mexican-owned Southern Copper Corp. in April after three protesters died in clashes with police.

But Garcia's government also often sought the arrest of anti-mining and other protest leaders.

Humala may be similarly inclined. A top lawyer in the Interior Ministry, Julio Talledo, told the AP it has asked prosecutors to file criminal charges against Gregorio Santos and four local leaders who have led protests against Conga. The charges include "hindering the functioning of public services" and carry prison terms of at least two years. Prosecutors have yet to act on them.

Conga's credibility issues owe to past behavior of the Yanacocha consortium, which includes the Peruvian company Buenaventura Mining Co. and the International Finance Corporation, with a 5 percent stake, according to analysts.

In 2000, hundreds were sickened when a Yanacocha contractor spilled 335 pounds (150 kilograms) of mercury, a byproduct of the mine.

The consortium later provoked protests with exploratory drilling at the nearby Cerro Quilish. It shelved that project after complaints it would directly affect the water of the regional capital of 350,000 people.

More broadly, resistance to mining may owe more to the fact that it employs relatively few Peruvians, just 126,000 out of a population of more than 29 million.

Conga has 6,800 workers, mostly locals who live in wind-swept mountains dominated by subsistence farmers where running water, electricity, decent schools and health care have been in short supply.

The Yanacocha consortium is sponsoring projects in the mining zone that it says will address those deficiencies.

Yanachocha paid a total of $292 million in income taxes and royalties last year and made voluntary contributions of $29 million ? not including social investments, Jabara said.

___

Associated Press writers Franklin Briceno and Martin Villena contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-11-25-LT-Peru-Mining-Dispute/id-9616bcdb81f64d7db7658e1788872403

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শনিবার, ২৬ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Pope says economic crisis requires brotherhood (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Pope Benedict XVI says the global economic crisis requires a courageous show of brotherhood.

Benedict also expressed concern in a speech at the Vatican Thursday that there is a risk that hope will diminish amid the growing troubles, including the uncertainty that young people feel amid the economic crisis.

"Humanity is searching for signs of hope," he said.

Benedict lamented what he called the "divide" between wealthy and poor nations, and the harm many people are suffering to their dignity. He cautioned that helping the needy means more than feeding the hungry ? people must explore the causes of hunger, he said.

Benedict was speaking to members of the Italian branch of Caritas, a Catholic charity.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_financial_crisis

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Amish in 3 states concerned over haircut attacks (AP)

MILLERSBURG, Ohio ? Members of the Amish community in three states have been frightened by recent hair-cutting attacks in Ohio, making fearful calls to authorities and arming themselves with pepper spray and shotguns, a sheriff said.

Jefferson County Sheriff Fred Abdalla said Amish in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Indiana were concerned about the attacks that led federal authorities on Wednesday to raid the compound of a breakaway Amish group and charge seven men, including group leader Sam Mullet, with hate crimes.

"We've received hundreds and hundreds of calls from people living in fear," he said. "They are buying Mace, some are sitting with shotguns, getting locks on their doors because of Sam Mullet."

The sheriff added, "Sam Mullet is evil."

A daughter-in-law and former brother-in-law told federal investigators Mullet allowed the beatings of those who disobeyed him, made some members sleep in a chicken coop and had sexual relations with married women to "cleanse them."

Several members of the group outside Bergholtz in eastern Ohio carried out the attacks in September, October and November by forcibly cutting the beards and hair of Amish men and women and then taking photos of them, authorities said.

The Amish believe the Bible instructs women to let their hair grow long and men to grow beards and stop shaving once they marry. One victim told the FBI he would rather have been "beaten black and blue than to suffer the disfigurement and humiliation of having his hair removed," according to court papers.

Mullet told The Associated Press in October that he didn't order hair-cutting but didn't stop his sons and others from carrying it out. He said the goal was to send a message to other Amish that they should be ashamed of themselves for the way they were treating Mullet and his community.

"They changed the rulings of our church here, and they're trying to force their way down our throat, make us do like they want us to do, and we're not going to do that," Mullet said.

U.S. Attorney Steven Dettelbach said Wednesday that religious differences should be a matter of theological debate, not disputes "resolved by late night visits to people's homes with weapons and violent attacks." He said he did not know how often hate crimes involve intradenominational disputes.

Those arrested include Mullet; his sons Johnny, Lester and Daniel; Levi Miller; Eli Miller; and Emanuel Schrock. The charges carry a penalty of up 10 years in prison.

The men appeared in U.S. District Court in Youngstown on Wednesday afternoon, and Magistrate Judge George Limbert ordered them detained by the U.S. Marshals Service pending hearings next week.

Attorneys for Johnny and Lester Mullet and Levi and Eli Miller said they could not comment Wednesday on the details of the case. Messages seeking comment were left for attorneys representing Daniel Mullet and Emanuel Schrock.

Lawyer Andy Hyde, who represents Sam Mullet in the state case, said Mullet would contest the federal charges but said he didn't know if he would represent Mullet in federal court.

The seven men were sleeping when the FBI and local police showed up at their homes before dawn Wednesday, the sheriff said. Three men initially refused to come out of their rooms, but all seven were arrested without incident, he said.

The FBI affidavit detailed four hair-cutting attacks. The attacks occurred against a couple in Trumbull County on Sept. 6; on Oct. 4 against a man and his son in Holmes County; later on Oct. 4 against a man in Carroll County; and on Nov. 9 against a man allegedly lured to the Mullet complex in Jefferson County.

An FBI affidavit said Johnny, Lester and Daniel Mullet and Levi and Eli Miller all confessed in early October to taking part in at least a couple of the attacks.

Johnny Mullet told detectives that it was his idea to cut the hair and beards and that he discussed the idea with his father, who gave him the addresses of two victims, the affidavit said.

Lester Mullet told detectives that after two attacks in late September, the men went home and told Sam Mullet what happened. He said his father laughed and called them nuts, the court document said.

Abdalla, the sheriff, said he didn't know the specifics of the religious disagreements that prompted Mullet to form his own community in 1995.

But the heart of his recent dispute with Amish bishops stemmed from his desire to excommunicate several members, the FBI said. Other bishops concluded the excommunications weren't consistent with Amish teachings and scripture and decided not to recognize the penalties, the FBI said.

Authorities said previously that some Amish refused to press charges, following their practice of avoiding involvement in the courts.

Dettelbach alluded to the issue, saying: "It is not the victim's job to decide or to bring charges. I think that's a message I would like people to understand. These charges in this case are the result of our independent determination that crimes occurred."

Ohio has an estimated Amish population of just under 61,000 ? second only to Pennsylvania ? with most living in rural counties south and east of Cleveland.

They have a modest lifestyle and are deeply religious. Their traditions of traveling by horse and buggy and forgoing most modern conveniences distance them from the outside world and symbolize a yielding to a collective order.

___

Seewer reported from Toledo.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_re_us/us_amish_attacks

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Evolutionary biologist Lynn Margulis dies in Mass.

AMHERST, Mass. (AP) ? Evolutionary biologist, author and National Medal of Science winner Lynn Margulis (MAR'-guh-liss) has died.

The University of Massachusetts, where she was a professor of geosciences, says Margulis died at her home on Tuesday. She was 73.

Margulis was once married to astronomer Carl Sagan. But she was best known for her theory of symbiogenesis. That theory argues that inherited variation does not come from random mutations in genes but from long-lasting interaction between organisms.

She was also a strong proponent of the hypothesis that the earth acts as a living organism.

Margulis was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1983 and received the National Medal of Science in 1999.

She was born in Chicago and enrolled at the University of Chicago when she was 14.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-11-23-Obit-Margulis/id-b7a3d45b3b5249c99d9864b77ea1e8ba

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Brazil suspends Chevron's drilling rights (Reuters)

BRASILIA (Reuters) ? Brazil's government suspended Chevron Corp's drilling rights until Chevron clarifies the causes of an offshore oil spill, the latest twist in a political firestorm threatening the U.S. company's role in Brazil's oil bonanza.

The decision on Wednesday came as the head of Chevron's Brazilian unit testified before Brazil's Congress, where he apologized for the November 8 spill that leaked about 2,400 barrels of oil into the ocean off the coast of Rio de Janeiro.

Brazil's National Petroleum Agency said it decided to halt Chevron's drilling rights after determining there was evidence that the company had been "negligent" in its study of data needed to drill and in contingency planning for abandoning the well in the event of accident.

The agency, known as ANP, also rejected a request from Chevron made before the leak to drill wells in the deeper subsalt areas in the Frade field where the spill occurred. The field is located in the oil-rich Campos Basin and is the only block in Brazil where Chevron produces oil as the operator.

The Campos Basin is currently the source of more than 80 percent of Brazil's oil output.

While Chevron said late on Wednesday it had not received formal notice of the drilling halt, the company announced an indefinite voluntary suspension of all current and future drilling off Brazil, apart from plug and abandonment work.

"Chevron acknowledges, however, that ANP has posted a notice of suspension to its website," the company added.

The only rig working for Chevron off Brazil is Transocean Ltd's Sedco 706, which drilled the well that leaked.

The spill is an ominous reminder of the risks involved in offshore drilling, cooling the euphoria over vast subsalt oil reserves that Brazil found in 2007 up to 7 km (4.4 miles) below the seabed. The country is banking on those reserves of up to 100 billion barrels to speed its development.

Chevron has previously drilled for subsalt depth targets in the field, which is also owned by Brazil's state-controlled energy giant Petrobras and Frade Japao, a Japanese consortium. Chevron owns 52 percent of Frade, whereas Petrobras owns 30 percent and Frade Japao 18 percent.

Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil company, has been fined $28 million by Brazil's environmental agency for the spill, an amount that is sure to rise when ANP and Rio's state government slap fines on the company, as they have pledged to do.

Chevron had already halted all of its local drilling operations after the leak occurred, before ANP's announced suspension. ANP said the suspension will remain in place until Chevron fully restores safety conditions in the field.

Chevron's CEO in Brazil, George Buck, told Brazilian lawmakers that the company "acted as rapidly and safely as possible" and "used all resources" to contain and stop the flow of oil from the well.

"We controlled the source in four days. We worked with transparency and cooperation with the authorities of Brazil," Buck said.

INVESTIGATIONS, RECRIMINATIONS

Chevron initially attributed the "sheen" on the sea surface to naturally occurring seepage from the seabed. The company is being investigated by the Federal Police, which noted discrepancies between Chevron's account of the spill and the government's.

The Frade leak, while small, is likely to provide more ammunition for the growing worldwide opposition to offshore drilling in the wake of the estimated 4-million-barrel BP Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

The Frade oil flow has been staunched except for residual droplets still bubbling up from a fissure in the sea floor, but this is expected to cease in a few days. Chevron said the oil "stain" on the sea surface now equated to about a barrel.

Most oil has been mechanically dispersed, while 350 cubic meters of oily water has been recovered and will undergo processing.

Addressing a crowded congressional commission through an interpreter, Buck said Chevron still did not understand how the crude rose 567 feet up to the seabed after rock "parted" while drilling in the 8.5 inch-wide column.

"We have an ongoing investigation. We will share the lessons learned with the people of Brazil to ensure that this never happens here or anywhere else in the world," Buck said.

Lawmakers, some calling the spill a "crime," also turned their ire on ANP in the four-hour hearing and which they said had proven ill-equipped and ill-prepared, even as Brazil pursues its ambitions to rapidly increase oil output.

Production is unaffected at Frade, which produces 79,000 barrels per day of oil, or 4 percent of the country's output. Chevron, with a share of Frade production that amounts to just over 1 percent of its worldwide output, had originally targeted peak capacity of about 72,000 barrels per day from the field.

Petrobras has so far dodged the criticism Chevron has faced despite having approved the development plans for Frade field.

Chevron, based in San Ramon, California, is also a 30 percent partner in the nearby $5.2 billion Papa-Terra project, which is operated by Petrobras. Petrobras and Chevron expect to produce 140,000 bpd oil and equivalent gas from Papa-Terra in 2013.

(Additional reporting by Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro and Braden Reddall in San Francisco; Writing by Todd Benson and Reese Ewing; Editing by Bob Burgdorfer, Gary Hill and Matt Driskill)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/ts_nm/us_chevron_brazil_anp

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Stocks on track for 6th day of losses on Europe fears (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Stocks tumbled about 2 percent and were on track for a sixth straight day of losses on Wednesday as frustration over the euro zone debt crisis coupled with weak Chinese factory data sank sentiment.

A weak German bond sale sparked fears the debt crisis was even beginning to threaten Berlin, with the leaders of France and Germany still at odds over a longer-term structural solution.

The poor demand for German government bonds showed that investors viewed investing in the euro zone as being too risky.

Debt problems plaguing Europe and the United States have pressured markets, knocking the S&P down more than 7 percent over the last six sessions. World stocks hit their lowest in six weeks on Wednesday.

"As the selling across German bunds deepens with investors questioning the safety of its debt, investors are slowly realizing that yields may lurch higher across the spectrum, creating yet another leg lower for sentiment. Such a negative feedback loop was hardly in the cards," said Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co in New York.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) slid 201.88 points, or 1.76 percent, at 11,291.84. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) dropped 21.86 points, or 1.84 percent, at 1,166.18. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) took off 51.82 points, or 2.06 percent, at 2,469.46.

All 10 S&P sectors were negative, with financials among the biggest decliners over concerns about exposure to European debt. JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) dropped 3 percent to $28.52 and Citigroup Inc (C.N) lost 3.6 percent to $23.60.

Economically sensitive stocks such as energy and commodity-related issues were also lower. The PHLX oil service sector index (.OSX) dropped 3.4 percent and the S&P materials sector (.GSPM) fell 2.3 percent. Schlumberger Ltd (SLB.N) was down 3.3 percent to $66.66 and DuPont and Co (DD.N) was off 2.6 percent to $44.24.

Volume was light ahead of the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, when markets are closed.

One of the few bright spots, Deere & Co (DE.N) climbed 3 percent to $74.05 after quarterly earnings beat expectations and sales climbed 20 percent.

Adding to market worries, data showed Chinese manufacturing shrank the most in 32 months in November, intensifying concerns about a global economic slowdown. U.S. crude oil fell 1.8 percent on fears of reduced demand from China, the world's No. 2 economy.

U.S. data painted a mixed picture and showed little reason for optimism. New jobless claims rose last week and consumer spending barely increased in October, while another report showed new orders for a range of long-lasting manufactured goods rose.

(Reporting by Angela Moon; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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BlackBerry Curve 9380 hits the FCC, talking the T-Mobile talk

RIM's first all-screen Curve has sashayed over to the FCC. Two models of the BlackBerry Curve 9380, the REA70UW and REB70UW, are included in the latest filing, which goes into typical laborious detail on radio frequencies and the like. Thankfully, those myriad charts and graphs reveal support for WCDMA band IV, meaning that the phone plays nice with T-Mobile's 3G network. Let's just hope that, if given the chance to strut its stuff in the US market, it follows the Curve family tradition of arriving keenly priced. We'll have to wait and see if it hits our wallet's sweet spot, but for those more interested in the phone's internals, the source link beckons below.

BlackBerry Curve 9380 hits the FCC, talking the T-Mobile talk originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 24 Nov 2011 17:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/uOkJCP0CXVc/

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American Republicans Hope to Copy Spanish Conservative Success (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | The Spanish conservatives won a decisive election Sunday, ousting the ruling Spanish Socialists. Could something similar happen in America in the 2012 election?

There are some striking similarities between the Spanish case and the American situation. The party in charge was blamed for the economic turmoil wracking the country. And the conservative Popular Party has been promoting change.

There are even more similarities between Popular Party leader Mariano Rajoy and the likely Republican nominee, Mitt Romney. And those similarities are more than just the initials "M.R." Rajoy has run before for office, like Romney. Rajoy is like Romney in that both rarely provide more than vague ideas on taxes and spending cuts. Both are relatively bland, struggle somewhat with providing a personal touch and adopt strategies of "flexibility." In other words, Spain picked a pragmatist instead of an ideologue and settled for flavorless over flamboyant.

That's what Republicans are doing by seriously considering picking Romney to lead the party. It should be comforting to the GOP that a Romneyesque candidate can win

But there are some differences between the two cases. First, Spain is a parliamentary system, where parties pick leaders and prime ministers, while voters merely pick seats. In America's presidential system, the party nominees are on the ballot.

Second, Spain's problems are more severe than ours. Spain's unemployment is a whopping 21.5 percent, more than twice as bad as America's rate.

Third, outgoing Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero is no Barack Obama. The Spanish Socialist leader's ratings were far below that of the U.S. president. Not only had Zapatero been the country's leader since 2004 (twice as long as Obama), but he presided over his country's real estate bubble and meltdown.

Fourth, European analogies for American elections are not always perfect. American papers used the election results of 1992 in the United Kingdom (where conservative John Major of the Tories held off a challenge from the more liberal Neil Kinnock of the Labor Party) to predict success for George H.W. Bush against Bill Clinton. It didn't work out so well for the GOP.

Still, the Democratic Party can't afford to ignore how a conservative party with an uninspiring leader defeated left-of-center incumbents, holding them accountable for economic problems.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111121/us_ac/10489321_american_republicans_hope_to_copy_spanish_conservative_success

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Spain tilts to the right as voters oust Socialists (AP)

MADRID ? Spain's center-right conservatives swept convincingly into power and into an economic hot seat Sunday as voters enduring 21.5 percent unemployment dumped the ruling Socialist government ? the third time in as many weeks that Europe's debt crisis has toppled an administration.

The vote in the country with the eurozone's highest jobless rate and a center-stage spot in Europe's debt crisis saga came as the continent's troubles cause financial havoc across the globe. And the victory for Spain's Popular Party came just after financially troubled Greece and Italy saw their governments fall.

As thousands of cheering supporters waved red-and-yellow Spanish flags and blue-and-white Popular Party banners on a Madrid avenue outside party headquarters, future prime minister Mariano Rajoy called for Spaniards of all political stripes to work together to overcome the crisis ? but sounded a somber note of warning for a country with an economy that has stalled.

"It is no secret to anyone that we are going to rule in the most delicate circumstances Spain has faced in 30 years," he said. "For me, there will be no enemies but unemployment, the deficit, excessive debt, economic stagnation and anything else that keeps our country in these critical circumstances."

But the 56-year old Rajoy gave no hints of how he will tackle Spain's unemployment nightmare ? with a much higher rate for young adults. So far, Rajoy has only promised tax cuts for small- and medium-size companies that make up more than 90 percent of all firms in Spain.

Rajoy faces the towering task of restoring investor confidence and lowering Spain's soaring borrowing costs with deficit-reducing measures, while preventing an already moribund economy from heading into a double-dip recession. The country only just climbed out of one last year that was prompted by the bursting of a real estate bubble.

With 99 percent of the vote counted, the Popular Party had won 186 seats compared to 154 in the last legislature. The Socialists plummeted from 169 seats to 110, their worst performance ever.

It was a resounding mandate that gave the party, known as the PP, an absolute parliamentary majority ? and far more seats than the 176 it needed for this cushion in the lower chamber of Parliament, Spain's most important.

Rajoy acknowledged he has no miraculous cures to solve Spain's economic troubles, but said the PP has shown in the past it gets things done, after ruling Spain from 1996 to 2004. These results included making Spain a founding member of the eurozone ? an achievement the PP prides itself on.

"We stand before one of those crossroads that will determine the future of our country, not just in the next few years but for decades," said Rajoy, who lost in his two previous electoral bids to run Spain.

Voter David Cordero said he wants Rajoy to create jobs and protect social services like state-paid health care and education.

"This is what this country needs right now," he said.

The conservatives won 44.6 percent of the vote and the Socialists took 28.7 percent, according to official results. In the last elections in 2008, the Socialists won by about four percentage points.

The result showed a clear Spanish shift to the right as the nation confront its worst economic crisis in decades and is mired in Europe's sovereign debt crisis.

Just as the campaign was winding down last week, the government's borrowing costs rose to levels near where other eurozone countries such as Greece, Ireland and Portugal had to request huge bailouts from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

Besides the recent changes in which Greece and Italy replaced their governments with teams made up of technocrats, Ireland and Portugal ? which also required huge bailouts to avert default ? saw their governments change hands.

Spanish Socialist party candidate Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba conceded defeat, saying that his party would fight to protect the welfare state from social spending cuts that Rajoy will almost certainly be forced to enact to meet EU-mandated deficit reduction cuts his party has pledged to fulfill.

Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, whose popularity plummeted as the crisis deepened and he enacted austerity measures that doomed him among supporters, did not seek a third term in office ? and he didn't appear in public Sunday night.

In the Senate, with 58 percent of the votes counted, it was 134 seats for the PP and 50 for the Socialists. Several dozen more seats in that chamber are not elected directly. Rajoy is expected to take power in mid-December.

In a surprise, a new pro-independence Basque coalition called Amaiur won seven seats in Parliament and now outnumbers the Basque region's traditionally strongest party, the moderate Basque Nationalist Party, with five.

The victory for Amaiur came a month after the armed Basque separatist group ETA declared it would lay down its arms and seek independence through strictly peaceful means.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111120/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_spain_elections

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Libya says Gadhafi son to be tried at home

Moammar Gadhafi's son and one-time heir apparent will be tried at home and will not be handed Libya's new leaders said Sunday they will try Moammar Gadhafi's son at home and not hand him over to the International Criminal Court where he's charged with crimes against humanity. The government also announced the capture of the toppled regime's intelligence minister, who is also wanted by the court.

In one of several emerging complications, however, the former rebel faction that captured Seif al-Islam Gadhafi a day earlier is refusing to deliver him to national authorities in Tripoli, raising concern over whether he will get a proper trial and demonstrating the interim leaders' weak hold over their fractured nation.

In the capital, Information Minister Mahmoud Shammam said ex-Intelligence Minister Abdullah al-Senoussi was captured alive on Sunday by revolutionary fighters from a southern region called Fazan, not far from where Gadhafi's son was seized on Saturday while trying to flee to neighboring Niger.

Fighters tracking al-Senoussi for two days caught up with him at his sister's house in Deerat al-Shati, about 40 miles (70 kilometers) south of the desert city of Sebha, said fighter Abdullah al-Sughayer. There were few other immediate details on his capture, and it was not clear whether his captors would also resist turning him over to Tripoli.

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Interactive: Gadhafi's children (on this page)

Though they are wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, Libya will likely seek to try both men at home.

Speaking earlier in the day, before al-Senoussi's capture, the information minister said Seif al-Islam, the ousted Libyan leader's one-time heir apparent, must be tried in Libya even though the country's new leaders have yet to establish a court system.

"It is only fair for the Libyan people that he is tried here. ... Seif al-Islam committed crimes against the Libyan people," Shammam told The Associated Press.

"The ICC is just a secondary court, and the people of Libya will not allow Seif al-Islam to be tried outside," Shammam said.

The ICC indicted the two men along with Gadhafi in June for unleashing a campaign of murder and torture to suppress the uprising against the Gadhafi regime that broke out in mid-February.

Al-Senoussi, Gadhafi's brother-in-law, was also one of six Libyans convicted in absentia and sentenced to life in prison in France for the 1989 bombing of a French passenger over Niger that killed all 170 people on board.

ICC spokesman Fadi El Abdallah said Sunday that Libya would have to convincingly lay out its arguments in what is called a "challenge of admissibility" if it wanted to try the two men at home instead of sending them to The Hague court.

"The issue is that there is already a case before the (ICC) court," he said. "Now Libya has a legal obligation under international law to present a challenge to say: 'We have this suspect and he will be dealt with under our national laws.'"

"... They will need to show that they have a serious, genuine legal system capable of functioning fairly in this case," he said.

Seif al-Islam, who was once the face of reform in Libya and who led his father's drive to emerge from pariah status over the last decade, was captured by fighters from the small western mountain town of Zintan who had tracked him to the desert in the south of the country.

He was then flown to Zintan, 85 miles (150 kilometers) southwest of Tripoli, where he remains in a secret location.

On Sunday, the fighters holding Seif al-Islam posted a video on YouTube of him saying an injury to his hand was the result of a NATO airstrike a month ago that struck his convoy in Wadi Zamzam, about 90 miles (140 kilometers) southeast of Tripoli. He said 26 people were killed in the strike.

Photos of him with three fingers of his right hand in bandages had raised questions about whether he was mistreated by his captors.

"The agreement is that I receive medical treatment here in Zintan because there is a medical team and they have the necessary anesthesia for an operation," he said.

In the video, he appeared in good health and was dressed in brown robes and a turban in the style of ethnic Tuaregs.

He seemed confident, even referring to those holding him prisoner as "brothers and family."

Slideshow: Conflict in Libya (on this page)

"There is no problem. We are talking and dialoguing and we have much to talk about," he said.

The faction of rebel fighters from the western mountains formed one of the key forces against Gadhafi's regime during the six-month civil war.

Even after Gadhafi's fall in August and after his capture and killing in October, Libya's numerous and sometime competing rebel factions have refused to disarm, raising fears of new violence and instability.

"We have priority over Seif al-Islam ? we caught him, and we were the forefront leaders in this revolution," said Tahir al-Turki, head of the small town's local council, explaining why he would not be sent to the capital.

"He will be safer with us in Zintan. We don't know who will take him or deal with him in Tripoli," he said.

That position shows how powerful regional factions backed by bands of armed fighters are able to act autonomously, even on issues of the highest national interest.

Shammam, the information minister, played down suggestions that a power struggle was brewing over the high-value prisoner or that the position of local officials was undermining the authority of the national leadership.

He said the national leadership had no objection to keeping Seif al-Islam in Zintan until a trial can be organized, but that the small town was not capable of organizing and holding the trial itself.

"If you catch a criminal in Texas, you're not going to bring him to Washington, are you?" Shammam told the AP.

Authorities in the National Transitional Council would also likely face challenges in organizing a trial.

Libya, under the elder Gadhafi's 42-year rule, had intentionally weak state institutions and a government that barely existed. Gadhafi, who held no title, had ultimate authority and did not want the development of any other power centers that might challenge him.

Slideshow: Moammar Gadhafi through the years (on this page)

As a result, a capable court system, like other state bodies, must be built from scratch.

The International Criminal Court prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo told the AP Saturday that he will travel to Libya on Monday for talks with the NTC on where the trial will take place.

Ocampo said that while national governments have the first right to try their own citizens for war crimes, his primary goal was to ensure Seif al-Islam has a fair trial.

International human rights groups have called for Seif al-Islam to be quickly sent to the court in The Hague, Netherlands, citing the apparent killings in custody of his father and brother Muatassim on Oct. 20 as "particular cause for concern."

Meanwhile, new details emerged about Seif al-Islam's capture in which fighters swarmed a two-car convoy in the south of the country that some officials said was on its way to neighboring Niger. The car carrying him got stuck in the sand while trying to escape.

Al-Ajami al-Etery, who led the operation, said Seif al-Islam tried to hide his features by throwing sand on his face when he stepped out of his car.

"He said his name was Abdel-Salam and he pretended to be a shepherd, but we found him out and arrested him," he told the AP.

___

Al-Shalchi reported from Cairo. Associated Press writer Toby Sterling in Amsterdam contributed to this report.

? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45375101/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Tata Motors rolls out revamped Nano (Reuters)

REUTERS ? Tata Motors released an upgraded Nano model, the company said on Monday, as it looks to improve on well below-estimate sales of a product touted as the world's cheapest car.

Tata has sold around 130,000 Nanos since the car was launched in April 2009. The four-seater car costs as little as 140,000 rupees ($2,730), and was launched in a blaze of publicity in price-sensitive India.

Sales have underperformed expectations, as rising input costs forced the firm to increase the car's price, and a land dispute at the model's original factory forced Tata to move production to an alternative site.

In November, Tata offered Nano owners the option to install safety protection in their vehicles after local media reported that seven cars had caught fire. The carmaker said it was not a recall as the fires were specific to the units.

The new Nano boasts increased fuel efficiency, a more powerful engine and new interiors, the company -- India's third-largest carmaker by domestic sales -- said in a statement. ($1 = 51.340 Indian Rupees)

(Reporting by Henry Foy in MUMBAI; Editing by Aradhana Aravindan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111121/india_nm/india606370

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Gilead Sciences to buy Pharmasset for $11 billion

(AP) ? Gilead Sciences says it will spend $11 billion to buy drug developer Pharmasset at a price more than 88 percent over the stock's latest closing price in a bet on its experimental hepatitis C treatments.

Gilead says it will pay $137 per share in cash for each Pharmasset share. That stock closed at $72.67 on Friday.

Pharmasset said earlier this month it had started late-stage clinical trials of an experimental hepatitis C drug. It also plans two other late-stage trials in 2012.

Hepatitis C is a viral infection that often has no symptoms but which can lead to life-threatening liver damage.

Gilead will pay for the deal with cash on hand, bank debt and senior unsecured notes. It expects the acquisition to close in next year's first quarter.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-11-21-Gilead-Pharmasset-Acquisition/id-623577a7873b48f884426e92c645dac3

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Papal Kiss Gets All Legal ? CAFFEINATED POLITICS

How can this not be a fun story to cover?

The Vatican is promising legal action to stop the distribution of a photo of Pope Benedict kissing an imam on the mouth. The photo is fake, by the way, and is part of a shock-factor advertising campaign by Italian fashion company Benetton that features world leaders getting fresh.

Benedict?s inamorata in the photo is Ahmed Tayeb, leader of Al Azhar in Cairo, Sunni Islam?s most influential institution. Another ad shows President Obama kissing Chinese President Hu Jintao.

The new campaign, as well as the UNHATE Foundation, a new Benetton think tank aimed at, um, communicating love, are part of the company?s social responsibility strategy. Click here for the foundation website and here for slideshow of the ads. WSJ?s Heard on the Runway has more here, and the Journal has a story on the ad campaign here.

The Vatican, however, isn?t feeling the unhate. It said in a statement Thursday its lawyers in Italy and around the world had been instructed to ?take the proper legal measures? to stop the use of the photo, even in the media, Reuters reported.

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Source: http://dekerivers.wordpress.com/2011/11/18/papal-kiss-gets-all-legal/

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NASA Probe Beams Home Best Moon Map Ever (SPACE.com)

Scientists have stitched together the highest-resolution topographic map of the moon ever created, using observations made by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft.

The new lunar map covers 98.2 percent of the moon and depicts the natural satellite's surface and features at a pixel scale of about 330 feet (100 meters). A global view of Earth's nearest neighbor at such high resolution had never existed before, scientists said.

"Our new topographic view of the moon provides the dataset that lunar scientists have waited for since the Apollo era," said Mark Robinson of Arizona State University, principal investigator of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC), in a statement Thursday (Nov. 17).

"We can now determine slopes of all major geologic terrains on the moon at 100-meter scale, determine how the crust has deformed, better understand impact crater mechanics, investigate the nature of volcanic features and better plan future robotic and human missions to the moon," Robinson added.

The new map was created using thousands of pictures acquired by the Wide Angle Camera, part of the LROC imaging system. The Wide Angle Camera maps nearly the entire moon every month from LRO's average altitude of 30 miles (50 kilometers), building up a record of how the lunar surface looks under varying lighting conditions.

NASA launched the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2009 on a $504 million mission to map the moon in unprecedented detail. The spacecraft is about the size of a Mini Cooper car and carries seven instruments to study the lunar surface.

In addition to its mapping role, the spacecraft has also spotted several historic artifacts of moon exploration, including NASA's Apollo landers and the boot prints left behind by moon-walking astronauts during the six manned lunar landings between 1969 and 1972.

The new moon map from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter doesn?t cover 100 percent of the moon because persistent shadows prevent the camera from snapping good photos near the north and south poles. However, another instrument aboard LRO, the Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter, can map out polar terrain, so the "holes at the poles" may soon be filled in. [Photos: Our Changing Moon]

But even with the small polar blank spots, the new map is still plenty exciting, researchers said.

"I could not be more pleased with the quality of the map ? it?s phenomenal!" Robinson said. "The richness of detail should inspire lunar geologists around the world for years to come."

Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111118/sc_space/nasaprobebeamshomebestmoonmapever

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Panama: US agrees to French extradition of Noriega (AP)

PANAMA CITY ? Panama's government said Wednesday the long-awaited extradition of former dictator Manuel Noriega is one step closer to reality after a French court said it received U.S. approval to send Noriega home to face a 20-year prison sentence here.

The Foreign Ministry said in a statement that U.S. approval was needed to return Noriega to Panama because the United States originally extradited him to France, where he was sentenced to seven years for money laundering.

The statement said the French court announced that it had received the U.S. approval.

The ex-dictator's defense lawyer said Noriega could be sent to Panama by Christmas. But lawyer Julio Berrios said a Nov. 23 hearing could find that France must reissue the extradition decree it originally issued in July and that could delay the extradition beyond Christmas.

During his 1983-89 turn as Panama's president, Noriega ruled with an iron fist, ordering the deaths of those who opposed him.

Then-U.S. President George H.W. Bush ordered an invasion in December 1989 to oust Noriega. He was captured and taken to Miami to face drug trafficking charges.

U.S. prosecutors said Noriega helped Colombia's Medellin cartel ship tons of cocaine into the United States. Jurors convicted him in April 1992 of eight of 10 charges, and he was sentenced to 17 years in prison.

After his U.S. sentence ended in 2007, Noriega was extradited to France, where he was sentenced to seven years in prison for money laundering.

Panama wants Noriega returned to serve two prison terms of 20 years handed down after convictions in absentia. He was convicted of embezzlement, corruption and murdering opponents, including military commander Moises Giroldi, who led a failed rebellion two months before the U.S. intervention, and Hugo Spadafora, an opponent whose decapitated body was found on the border with Costa Rica in 1985.

Noriega still faces murder charges in the killing of an opposition leader in the 1970s, but France denied an extradition request on that count.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_panama_noriega

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