Saturday, October 26, 2019

Police, Catalan Separatists Clash as Day of Protest Ends in Violence

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Police, Catalan Separatists Clash as Day of Protest Ends in Violence

Clashes between police and militant elements in a thousands-strong crowd of demonstrators transformed part of central Barcelona into a battleground late on Saturday as another day of pro-independence protests turned violent. 

Projectiles were fired, at least six people were hospitalized with injuries, and barricades were set alight after officers charged ranks of demonstrators — many young and masking their faces — who had amassed outside Spanish police headquarters. 

The violent standoff in the city's tourist heartland offered stark evidence of the fault lines developing between hardline and conciliatory elements within the region's independence movement. 

It lasted several hours before protesters dispersed through the city's streets. 

Barcelona has witnessed daily pro-secession protests since Oct. 14. That was when Spain's Supreme Court sentenced nine politicians and activists to up to 13 years in jail for their role in a failed independence bid in 2017, prompting widespread anger in the region and sending shockwaves through Spain's political landscape. 

Catalan pro-independence demonstrators attend a protest to call for the release of jailed separatist leaders in Barcelona, Spain, Oct. 26, 2019. Banners read "Freedom."

Saturday's protest was not the first marred by violence, with unrest notably on Oct. 18 having been more widespread. But it contrasted starkly with events earlier in the day, when 350,000 Catalans had marched peacefully through the city in support of calls from civil rights groups for the jailed separatist leaders to be freed. 
 
Bottles, balls, bullets

The later protest was organized by CDR, a pro-independence pressure group that favors direct action and has cut off rail tracks and roads, as well as trying to storm the regional parliament. 

It began around 7:30 p.m. (1730 GMT) and as the crowd grew to around 10,000, according to police estimates, demonstrators threw a hail of bottles, balls and rubber bullets at officers, TV footage showed. 

Police carrying shields and weapons and backed by some 20 riot vans then charged the demonstrators in an attempt to disperse them, splitting the crowd in two along Via Laietana near the police headquarters. 

Reuters TV footage showed police armed with batons forcing their way through the crowd while demonstrators threw stones and flares. News channel 24h showed police grappling one-on-one with demonstrators, who fell back before reforming their lines. 

Some projectiles were fired, with a Reuters photographer among those hospitalized after being hit in the stomach by a rubber or foam bullet. Catalan emergency services said that, in all, six people were hospitalized. 

The organizers of the earlier protest, grass-roots groups Assemblea Nacional Catalana (ANC) and Omnium Cultural, had hoped that, with pro-secessionist parties split over what strategy to adopt, it would refocus attention in the secessionist camp by 
drawing the largest crowd since the court verdicts were passed. 

"From the street we will keep defending all the [people's] rights, but from the institutions we need political answers," ANC leader Elisenda Paluzie told the gathering, pledging to organize more protests. 

Local police said around 350,000 attended, compared with a daily peak of 500,000 at the Oct. 18 protest and 600,000 at a march that took place on Catalonia's national day last month. 

All those figures, however, represent only a small percentage of the region's 7.5 million population, and its electorate is almost evenly split over the issue of independence. 

A Catalan pro-independence demonstrator throws a fence into a fire during a protest against police action in Barcelona, Spain, Oct. 26, 2019.

Mainstream Spanish parties, including the minority Socialist government, have consistently rejected moves toward Catalan independence and all except for the left-wing Podemos are opposed to any form of referendum. 

They are now gearing up for a national election on Nov. 10. 
 
'Prison is not the answer'

Both ANC and Omnium Cultural eschew violence and their then-leaders were among the nine jailed on Oct 14. 

Many who joined their march carried Catalan pro-independence flags and banners bearing slogans that included: "Prison is not the answer," "Sit and talk" and "Freedom for political prisoners." 

In the front row was regional government head Quim Torra, who earlier presided over a ceremony at which hundreds of Catalan mayors endorsed a document demanding self-determination. 

"We have to be capable of creating a republic of free men and women ... and overcoming the confrontational dynamic with a constructive one," he told them. 

While not currently affiliated with any party, Torra belongs to the separatist political movement Junts per Catalunya. It has been in favor of maintaining confrontation with authorities in Madrid, while its leftist coalition partner Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya favors dialogue. 

One marcher, Maria Llopart, 63, criticized the lack of unity between the two parties. "Everything looks very bad. We are not advancing," she said. 

Francesc Dot, 65, said the nine leaders had been jailed in defense of "Spain's unity." 

His wife, Maria Dolors Rustarazo, 63, said she should also be in prison because she voted in the 2017 referendum, which Spanish courts outlawed. "If [all separatist votes] ... have to go to jail, we will go, but I don't think we would all fit," she said. 

She condemned the violence but had understanding for young protesters being "angry at the lack of democracy." 

On Saturday they included Manel, a 20-year-old student with his face obscured by a cloth, who said he was among those who lit barricades during last week's unrest. 

"We need a consistent protest — more streets and less parliamentary talk, because that doesn't seem to work," he said before the CDR protest turned violent. 

"If we halt the economy, the Spanish government would be obliged to talk." 


October 27, 2019 at 10:20AM

Comey confident Barr's findings on him, Russia investigation will restore confidence in DOJ

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Comey confident Barr's findings on him, Russia investigation will restore confidence in DOJ Former FBI Director James Comey called on the Justice Department to offer more transparency in the probe into the Russia investigation, and indicated that the attorney general's findings would show no wrongdoing on his and his team's part.
October 27, 2019 at 09:55AM

Bolivia's Morales Vows Second-Round Vote if Fraud Found in Official Tally 

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Bolivia's Morales Vows Second-Round Vote if Fraud Found in Official Tally 

Bolivian President Evo Morales on Saturday vowed to hold a runoff election if an audit of a vote count that gave him an outright win turned up evidence of fraud, as he sought to calm a sixth day of protests and international criticism over his disputed re-election to a fourth term. 
 
Morales, already Latin America's longest-serving president, is the lone survivor of a group of fiery leftist leaders who took office in the previous decade, most of whom have since been replaced by right-leaning governments. 
 
He has overseen a rare period of economic and political stability in South America's poorest country. But charges of vote-rigging lodged by the opposition and doubts about the legitimacy of the vote raised by official observers threaten to dog his 2020-25 term and tarnish his reputation as a democrat. 
 
In a speech at a military event, Morales invited countries in the region that have called for him to hold a runoff vote — the United States, Brazil, Argentina and Colombia — to take part in an audit of the official tally. 
 
"Let's do an audit vote by vote," Morales said in the coca-growing region of Cochabamba. "I'll join [the audit]. If there's fraud, the next day we'll convene a second-round" election, he added in comments broadcast on state TV. 

Pressure campaign

Shortly after Morales spoke, his chief rival in the race, Carlos Mesa, a former president, announced his supporters were forming a commission to pressure the international community to not recognize the election's results. 
 
Brazil, landlocked Bolivia's biggest trade partner, already said it would reject Morales' win until the regional Organization of American States (OAS) finished an audit of the vote count, which has not yet started. 
 
The European Union and Washington-based OAS, both of whom sent observer missions to Bolivia, have also pushed Morales to convene a second-round vote to calm unrest and restore credibility to the election.  

Police officers block a road leading to the Presidential Palace during a protest march in La Paz, Bolivia, Oct. 26, 2019.

Protesters blocked roads in parts of the highland capital of La Paz on Saturday, chanting "fraud" and waving Bolivia's red-yellow-and-red flag as anti-government strikes continued in different cities in the South American country. 
 
The country's embattled electoral board, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal (TSE), and Morales' government have both denied any foul play and invited the OAS to audit the official tally. But they have not said whether they will accept the OAS's condition that the audit's conclusions be legally binding. 
 
Peru said on Saturday that it would take part in the audit at Bolivia's request, but it called for the process to be carried out respecting Bolivian laws. 

TSE results

The vote count by the TSE at 100% on Friday showed Morales had 47.08% of votes versus Mesa's 36.51% in a crowded race of nine candidates. That gave him the 10-point lead needed to face Mesa in a Dec. 15 second-round vote, when the opposition would most likely rally behind Mesa to defeat Morales. 
 
The TSE sparked an uproar after the election on Sunday when it halted publication of a quick vote count that showed Morales headed to a second round with Mesa. When the quick count resumed after an outcry, it confirmed Morales' prediction that he would pull off an outright win with the help of rural votes. 
 
Mesa's campaign said it found 100,000 votes that should have been annulled because of irregularities but instead swung in Morales' favor. 
 
"This is a scandalous fraud never seen before. That's why the people are reacting," retiree Fredy Salinas, 67, said as he bought vegetables in a market in La Paz. "The people in the government are really shameless." 
 
Morales said his detractors were "envious" of his achievements and accused the opposition, without providing evidence, of trying to stir up unrest to try to unseat him illegally. "With lies and tricks they're trying to instigate hatred and racism," he said.   


October 27, 2019 at 09:04AM

Louise Koppe

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Louise Koppe

Mathieudu68: /* External links */




'''Louise Koppe''', officially Catherine Laurence Koppe, was a 19th-century French feminist writer and journalist, and the founder of France's first [[maternity home]]. She was born on May 4th, 1846<ref>[https://ift.tt/2NbZWMe Archives de Paris, acte de mariage n°10 dressé au 1er arrondissement le 10/01/1865 avec Louis Armand Rétoux, vue 6 / 21] </ref> in the [[former 4th arrondissement of Paris]] and died on May 31, 1900 in the [[19th arrondissement of Paris]].<ref>[https://ift.tt/2CfqQPK? Archives de Paris, acte de décès n°1550 dressé le 01/06/1900, vue 3 / 31] </ref>

==Biography==
[[File:Père-Lachaise - Division 90 - Koppe 10.jpg|thumb|right|Koppe's grave at [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]], Paris (Division 90)|150px]]
Koppe was born into a modest familty. Her father was a tailor and her mother died when Koppe was aged 8. Koppe was raised in a boarding school in the [[Oise]] department. At the age of 18, she married Louis Armand Rétoux, with whom she had five children. She experienced the 1871 [[Paris Commune]] at the age of 20 and met author [[Victor Hugo]] and discovered his literature with emotion, which certainly influenced her social commitment.<ref name=":0"></ref>

In 1894, Koppe joined the [[Masonic lodge]] ''[[Le Droit Humain]]'' that was founded in 1893. She was one of the first feminist members of the lodge.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

In 1878, she took part to the [[International Congress of Women's Rights]] in Paris. She enjoyed writing and founded several newspapers in which her poems, articles and theater plays were published. Maternity is a recurring theme in Koppe's work. In 1879, she founded the newspaper ''La Femme de France'' that became ''La Femme dans la famille et dans la société'' and then ''La Femme et l'enfant'' in 1882.<ref name=":0" />

Louise Koppe died in May 1990. Her three daughters Angèle, Mathilde and Hélène-Victoria kept developing her work.<ref></ref>

==Maternity home==
In 1891, Koppe founded the first [[maternity home]] on in Paris, to host children of mothers in distress.<ref></ref>

In 1930, a silent short film was shooted by anonymous [[Gaumont Film Company|Gaumont]] employees to present the home.<ref></ref>

==Published works==
* ''La Femme de France : journal littéraire et scientifique''; Louise Koppe (ed.), 1st year, n°1 (2 August 1879) - n°11 (11 October 1879)
* ''La Femme dans la famille et dans la société'', 1st-3rd years, 1880-82, Paris

==References==


==External links==
*[https://ift.tt/2JpnWdw La Maison Maternelle]




[[Category:21st-century French women writers]]
[[Category:21st-century French journalists]]
[[Category:French women journalists]]
[[Category:French feminist writers]]
[[Category:1864 births]]
[[Category:1900 deaths]]
[[Category:Writers from Paris]]
[[Category:Burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery]]

October 27, 2019 at 04:59AM

Former Refugee Recalls Danger of Being Smuggled in Truck 

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Former Refugee Recalls Danger of Being Smuggled in Truck 

Ahmad Al-Rashid knows what the suffering was like for the 39 people who were found dead in the back of a truck in southeastern England this week.  

The 29-year-old Syrian refugee found himself gasping for breath inside a refrigerated shipping container with a group of migrants and a load of frozen chicken when a planned trip across the English Channel turned into hours of terror in 2015. The truck hadn't even left the French port of Calais when someone heard the cries of the desperate migrants and opened the doors. 
 
``I was in their shoes. I knew the desperation of their last moments,'' he said of the people who died this week. ``In my case, someone came to help me. [For them], all their screams were in vain.'' 
 
Authorities are calling Wednesday's truck container discovery in a town near London one of Britain's worst human smuggling cases. Rashid said it brought his journey to the U.K., and its terrors, back in stark relief. 

'One hell to another'
 
Rashid fled Aleppo in 2013, thinking he would return to his wife and two children in a few weeks. He first went to northern Iraq, where he taught English to other refugees. But the shooting and bombs followed him ``from one hell to another,'' so he finally decided to pay smugglers to help him get to Europe. 
 
The journey took Rashid from Iraq to Turkey and Greece, where Rashid said the smugglers opened a suitcase full of passports and gave him one from Bulgaria. From Greece, he traveled to Marseille in southern France, then on to ``The Jungle,'' a notorious camp outside Calais where migrants gathered in hopes of hitching rides to the U.K. until it was closed in 2016. 
 
Even after he almost suffocated in the back of the shipping container, Rashid recalled trying to get across the channel until he finally succeeded, hiding in the back of a truck — but just a regular one that wasn't airtight. 
 
He was eventually granted asylum, allowing him to start a new life and bring his wife and children to Britain. 
  
In contrast to his own arrival, Rashid met his family at Heathrow Airport and drove them back to his apartment in the central English city of Derby. 
 
``They could fly, you know, safely, with dignity,'' Rashid said. ``And this was the whole point for me making this journey, because it was for the sake of my family.'' 

FILE - Signs and candles on a wall were placed at a vigil for the 39 smuggling victims found dead in a truck in an industrial park in England, outside the Home Office in London, Oct. 24, 2019.

Now Rashid works with other refugees and migrants, helping them get on their feet in a new land. And he has a message for anyone thinking of traveling to Europe: Don't trust the people smugglers. 
 
``They don't see you as a human being. They see you as a commodity, as money, as an object,'' he said. ``Never, ever, trust them. I mean, I had to put my faith inthem and I regretted it.'' 
 
Rashid told his story to The Associated Press to try to make people understand that migrants and refugees gamble their lives in sealed trucks and leaky rafts because safer routes have been closed to them. They take risks because they feel like they have no other choice, he said. 
 
``No one puts their life in danger for no reason,'' Rashid said. ``People do this out of desperation.'' 


October 27, 2019 at 04:47AM

Photos released of Disney World property allegedly stolen by former employee in $14G heist

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Photos released of Disney World property allegedly stolen by former employee in $14G heist The stolen goods included colorful wigs from the Haunted Mansion.
October 27, 2019 at 04:34AM

US House Impeachment Testimony Resumes With State Department Witness 

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US House Impeachment Testimony Resumes With State Department Witness 

The Democratic-led impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump resumed with testimony from a senior State Department official on Saturday, a day after a judge buoyed the probe by dismissing a central Republican objection. 
 
Philip Reeker, acting assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, was due to meet with the House Foreign Affairs, Intelligence and Oversight committees behind closed doors at the U.S. Capitol. 
 
Lawmakers and staff were holding the first weekend deposition of the investigation, after Reeker's testimony was postponed because of memorial events this week for Representative Elijah Cummings, who had been Oversight Committee chairman and played a leading role in the impeachment inquiry. 

Inquiry ruled valid
 
On Friday, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell rejected the claim that the impeachment process was illegitimate, as he ordered the Republican Trump administration to give the House Judiciary Committee secret material from former special counsel Robert Mueller's reporting on Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election. 
 
Howell said the House did not have to approve a resolution formally initiating the effort for the impeachment inquiry to be valid, something Republicans have been insisting is the case. 

Reeker, 54, is a career diplomat whose current portfolio includes Ukraine, the country central to the investigation of Trump. Reeker has held his position on an acting basis since March 18. 
 
The impeachment inquiry has underscored what current and former U.S. officials describe as a campaign by Trump against career diplomats. Several have already met with congressional investigators. 
 
Investigators were expected to ask Reeker about issues including Trump's abrupt dismissal of Marie Yovanovitch in May as ambassador to Ukraine. According to emails given to congressional committees this month, Reeker was among diplomats who sought to intervene when Trump supporters accused Yovanovitch of being disloyal to the president.  

FILE - Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent leaves Capitol Hill in Washington, Oct. 15, 2019, after testifying before congressional lawmakers as part of the House impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump.

Another career diplomat involved in those communications, George Kent, testified last week that he was told to "lie low" on Ukraine and instead defer to three of Trump's political appointees. Yovanovitch has also testified, accusing the Trump administration of recalling her based on false claims and of eviscerating the State Department. 
 
Focus on Ukraine 
 
At the heart of the impeachment inquiry is a July 25 phone call in which Trump asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a leading Democratic contender to face Trump in the 2020 election, and his son Hunter, who had been a director of a Ukrainian energy company. 
 
The Trump administration was withholding $391 million in security assistance for Ukraine when the call took place, and investigators are looking into whether Trump improperly tied the release of the aid to getting Ukraine's help in probing the Bidens. 
 
Trump denies wrongdoing and, backed by his fellow Republicans in Congress, insists he is being treated unfairly. The administration has refused to hand over documents requested by the congressional committees and has sought to prevent current and former officials from giving interviews. 
 
The committees have scheduled several depositions next week, following Reeker's appearance on Saturday, all behind closed doors. 
 
For Monday, they have called Charles Kupperman, a former deputy national security adviser, and on Tuesday, lawmakers expect Alexander Vindman, the White House National Security Council's (NSC) top expert on Ukraine. 

Court guidance
 
Kupperman on Friday filed a lawsuit asking a federal judge to determine whether he could testify. His lawyer Charles Cooper said the judicial branch needed to weigh in on whether the president could block Kupperman and other White House officials from complying with congressional subpoenas. 
 
Kathryn Wheelbarger, acting assistant secretary of defense for international security, is scheduled to appear on Wednesday, and Tim Morrison, a top NSC Russia and Europe adviser, is scheduled for Thursday. 
 
Democratic members of the three committees said they felt they had gathered a great deal of evidence and did not expect this phase of the investigation to last many more weeks, before public hearings. 
 
"We've heard a lot of compelling testimony. We feel like we know a lot of what's happened," New Jersey Representative Tom Malinowski, told reporters at the House this week. 


October 27, 2019 at 03:42AM

Malaysian-born con artist accused of scamming Washington Redskins player

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Malaysian-born con artist accused of scamming Washington Redskins player A Malaysia-born con artist has been accused of bilking a member of the Washington Redskins and his sports agent out of $1.2 million, according to a published report and court records.
October 27, 2019 at 02:43AM

Happy Choti Diwali Images

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Happy Choti Diwali Imagesdiwali wishes in hindi, diwali message
October 26, 2019 at 03:00PM

Fans defend Nick Jonas after he's groped at concert: 'This is disgusting'

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Fans defend Nick Jonas after he's groped at concert: 'This is disgusting' Jonas Brother fans are calling out a person who groped Nick Jonas during their concert.
October 26, 2019 at 10:00PM

Kamz Inkzone

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Kamz Inkzone

Virenderthind2019:


'''Kamz Inkzone''' is an Indian [[Tattoo artist]], who grow up in Jalandhar.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
He have inked populer singers and actors like [[Garry Sandhu]],  [[Sukh-E]], [[A Kay]], Ninja, [[Master Saleem]], Anadi Mishra, Zora Randhawa, Elly Mangat and many more.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

== Early Life and Education ==
Kamz was born in Jalandhar. He was inspired by art when he was in school. at an early age,
he moved to Ludhiana to learn tattooing, where he learnt from a known tattoo artist Nick Sharma.
<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

October 26, 2019 at 08:26PM

'Russian Agent' Maria Butina Heads Home

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'Russian Agent' Maria Butina Heads Home

For some she was the spy who wasn't - just an eager Russian gun-rights enthusiast keen to improve relations between Russia and America, who was turned into a scapegoat by vengeful U.S. counterintelligence agencies.

For others, Maria Butina is a clandestine Russian agent, a real-life Red Sparrow, with flame-colored hair to match, who infiltrated conservative circles in the U.S., including the National Rifle Association, to establish 'back channel' communications with political figures and aspiring politicians with the goal of influencing them.

However, when she arrived home at Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport to be greeted by her father and a melee of reporters, the 30-year-old shed no new light on the circumstances that led to her getting into trouble with U.S. authorities. She said she felt "well" and was happy "to return home." She was greeted by people offering her flowers.

She has continued to maintain her overall innocence, despite having pled guilty to acting as an unregistered foreign agent. On board an Aeroflot flight from Miami, reporters lined up to interview her even before landing. She told them: "Well guys, almost home. Only a little bit left, only several hours. Thank you for your support. I'm waiting for the plane to land. I'll be in my homeland."

She added her imprisonment had been a "very painful and lengthy experience." On her arrival she again thanked Russians for their support. "I didn't give up simply because I knew that I could not do that," she said.

Journalists wait for Maria Butina's arrival, at Sheremetyevo International Airport outside Moscow, Russia, Oct. 26, 2019.

Released from Tallahassee's Federal Correction Institution Friday after having served more than 15 months behind bars, Butina pled guilty in December to one count of conspiring to engage in unregistered lobbying on behalf of a foreign power. In the Russian capital awaiting her midday Saturday arrival was her father, Valeriy Butin, a retired 55-year-old manufacturing engineer, who had dubbed the charges against her in the past as "psychopathic and a witch-hunt."

She has said she plans to go home to Barnaul, a beaten-down city in Siberia, once a manufacturing center for tanks, ammunition and tractors, but now one with little future.

There were no high-profile Kremlin dignitaries planning to be present at the airport. Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov said Russian President Vladimir Putin had no plans to meet with Butina as he did subsequently with Anna Chapman, the Russian agent who was part of a 2010 spy swap. Chapman was feted on her return and turned into a celebrity with her own television show.

That may suit Butina. In an interview with CNN this year she appeared to distance herself from Chapman, sniffing she had no intention of following in Chapman's footsteps, maintaining curtly, "I'm not a circus bear."

There was a time though that she liked the comparison with Chapman -- "You have upstaged Anna Chapman," Butina's Kremlin contact wrote in an email he sent her from Russia while she was working in Washington, according to U.S. court papers.

Maria Butina is accompanied by federal agents after her release from a Florida prison, during her transfer onto a plane bound for Moscow, at Miami International Airport, in Miami, Florida, Oct. 25, 2019.

Despite their absence at the airport, Kremlin officials lauded Butina. Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for the foreign ministry, described Butina as a "prisoner of conscience," and said she had been subjected to "physical and psychological experiments" in prison.

Last week, when it became known that Butina would be released early for good behavior, Zakharova told state-owned RIA Novosti that "not every adult man would be able to take what Butina has lived through in the American prison."

Butina was sentenced to 18 months in prison after having been arrested on July 15, 2018. FBI agents say she was a small cog in a much larger Russian influence campaign. Her infiltration though was apparently separate from the 2016 Russian election-meddling detailed in former special counsel Robert Mueller's recent report.

But her Washington activity coincided with the broader Moscow-directed effort to covertly shape the last U.S. presidential election. Her trial judge noted Butina was transmitting political reports back to Moscow.

Putin criticized the prosecution of Butina labeling it "arbitrary." He said in April, "It's not clear what she was convicted of or what crime she committed. I think it is a prime example of 'saving face.' They arrested her and put the girl in jail."

FILE - Maria Butina poses for a photo at a shooting range in Moscow, Russia, April 22, 2012.

She has her defenders in the U.S. as well, including Thomas Massie, a Republican congressman from Kentucky.

He tweeted Friday: "She served a ridiculously long sentence essentially for not filing the right paperwork. But now she is free. Sadly, she was jailed to satiate the rampant Russophobia in the US these days. We are better than this."

James Bamford, author of best-selling books on U.S. intelligence agencies, profiled her for the New Republic magazine and argued Butina was "simply an idealistic young Russian" hoping to contribute to a better understanding between Russia and America. She told Bamford: "I thought it would be a good opportunity to do what I could, as an unpaid private citizen, not a government employee, to help bring our two countries together."

That wasn't the view of the judge who presided over her case, though, who said her work was directed by a Kremlin-linked Russian official.

Butina was not formally charged with espionage, which would have suggested the stealing of state and military secrets. Experts say her focus was on infiltrating U.S. political circles in ways that would be useful for Russia's foreign policy.

Some former U.S. counterintelligence officials dismiss her claims of innocence, while acknowledging she wasn't a run-of-the-mill spy. Joseph Augustyn, a 28-year veteran of the CIA's clandestine service, commented in the Atlantic Monthly: "One thing the public should know about Butina is that she was not a 'spy' in the traditional sense, but rather what the intelligence community would call an access agent."

FILE - Court papers, unsealed July 16, 2018, and photographed in Washington, show part of the criminal complaint against Maria Butina.

As an access agent she would have been able to pinpoint possible recruits and use unwitting accomplices to help promote Russian interests, he and other former counter-intelligence officers argue.

U.S. prosecutors alleged in court documents that Butina "maintained contact information for individuals identified as employees of the Russian FSB," or Russian Federal Security Service. Additionally, prosecutors claimed FBI surveillance observed Butina having a meal with a Russian diplomat whom the U.S. government expelled in March 2018 on suspicion of being a Russian intelligence officer.

Some security analysts, however, say it still remains unclear whether her operation was initiated by Russia's FSB or whether it was conceived by her patron, Alexander Torshin, a former deputy governor of Russia's central bank, as a way to boost himself within the Kremlin administration.

According to Mark Galeotti, an analyst at Britain's Royal United Services Institute, the shadowy siloviki – a Russian term for the "men of force" from the military, intelligence and security services — and their friends, clients and partners in business and politics compete with each other for Putin's attention. Adventurism and covert missions can be highly rewarded when successful.

 "They compete to catch his eye and win his favor," he notes in his book "We Need To Talk About Putin."

 


October 26, 2019 at 08:11PM

8 movies to stream this Halloween

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8 movies to stream this Halloween One of the best parts of Halloween is the movies.
October 26, 2019 at 06:00PM

North Carolina woman held in 2004 murder of ex-sister-in-law after Facebook tip

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North Carolina woman held in 2004 murder of ex-sister-in-law after Facebook tip A North Carolina woman was arrested for a 15-year-old cold case Thursday after a detailed tip to a crime-fighting Facebook page led investigators to a shallow grave on the woman's property in Spring Hope.
October 26, 2019 at 03:51PM

Friday, October 25, 2019

NASA Plans to Land Water-Hunting Robot on Moon in 2022

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NASA Plans to Land Water-Hunting Robot on Moon in 2022

NASA will send a golf-cart-sized robot to the moon in 2022 to search for deposits of water below the surface, an effort to evaluate the vital resource ahead of a planned human return to the moon in 2024 to possibly use it for astronauts to drink and to make rocket fuel, the U.S. space agency said Friday.

The VIPER robot will drive for miles (km) on the dusty lunar surface to get a closer look at what NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine has touted for months: underground pockets of "hundreds of millions of tons of water ice" that could help turn the moon into a jumping-off point to Mars.

"VIPER is going to assess where the water ice is. We're going to be able to characterize the water ice, and ultimately drill," Bridenstine said Friday at the International Astronautical Congress in Washington. "Why is this important? Because water ice represents something significant. Life support."

VIPER stands for Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover.

The rover is expected to arrive on the moon's south polar region in December 2022, carrying four instruments to sample lunar soil for traces of hydrogen and oxygen — the basic components of water that can be separated and synthesized into fuel for a planned fleet of commercial lunar launch vehicles.

In development at NASA's Ames Research Center in California, the VIPER robot will log "about 100 days of data that will be used to inform the first global water resource maps of the moon," NASA said in announcing the plans.

FILE - NASA astronauts in spacesuits drive their lunar truck near K-10 Red, June 10, 2008, in Moses Lake, Wash. NASA scientists and contractors spent two weeks in Moses Lake field testing some of the vehicles and robots that will be used on the moon.

NASA is in the process of kickstarting its Artemis program, an accelerated mission to put people back on the moon for the first time since the 1970s to train and prove technologies that would later be sent on a Mars mission.

Scientists have eyed lunar water as a key resource for enabling long-duration astronaut missions on the moon, though its form and exact amount are unknown. VIPER will aim to find out.

NASA crashed a rocket onto the moon's south pole in 2009 to confirm traces of lunar water ice in the plume of dust kicked up upon impact.
 


October 26, 2019 at 10:48AM

98 years later: Looking back at Tampa Bay's 1921 hurricane

98 years later: Looking back at Tampa Bay's 1921 hurricane


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TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) – Oct. 25 marks the 98th anniversary of the Tampa Bay 1921 hurricane that made landfall in Tarpon Springs. The storm made ...
October 26, 2019 at 06:56AM

Turkey Targets Foreign Journalists in Press Freedom Crackdown 

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Turkey Targets Foreign Journalists in Press Freedom Crackdown 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan filed a criminal complaint Friday against a French magazine over a cover accusing him of "ethnic cleansing," according to the state-owned Anadolu Agency. 

The filing was the latest example of efforts by the Erdogan government to restrict press freedoms in Turkey. 

The complaint filed against the French magazine Le Point's director, Etienne Gernelle, as well as the editor in chief of the publication's international section, Romain Gubert, was based on the cover of the October 24 issue, which depicts Erdogan saluting under the headline "The Eradicator," with the subtitle  "Ethnic cleansing: the Erdogan method." 

Prosecutors alleged the cover constituted an insult to the president, a crime under Turkish law commonly used to target journalists in Turkey, according to Emma Sinclair-Webb, Turkey director for Human Rights Watch, an international NGO that conducts research and advocacy for human rights.    

FILE - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks to the media in his office in Ankara, April 23, 2014.

"The charge in general is one that's been in the penal code for years. But it was not until Erdogan became president that there's been a huge escalation in the use of that charge to prosecute people who are critical of the president," Sinclair-Webb said. 

Turkish reporters are frequent targets of Erdogan, but increasingly foreign journalists based in Turkey are also facing legal action, said Nate Schenkkan, director for special research at Freedom House, an independent think tank that covers issues related to democracy and human rights. 

"I think the main point is that from an international perspective, [the charge] has no merit … from a Turkish perspective, there have been lots of these cases. I would say many have been brought as a warning or threat rather than to put someone in prison," Schenkkan said. 

Bloomberg journalists 

In September, U.S.-based Bloomberg News reported that two of its journalists were facing up to five years in prison for a report on how Turkey's financial regulators and banks were responding to the country's economic difficulties. And in October 2017, a reporter working for The Wall Street Journal was sentenced to prison in absentia for charges related to a 2015 story covering the conflict against Turkey's Kurdish minority in the country's southeast. 

Le Point's criticism of Turkey's military operation against Kurdish groups in Syria is a particular area of concern for Erdogan's government, according to Schenkkan.  

FILE - Turkish soldiers patrol the northern Syrian Kurdish town of Tal Abyad, on the border between Syria and Turkey, Oct. 23, 2019.

The Turkish president has been accused by some of pursuing a policy of ethnic cleansing against the Kurdish population of northern Syria with its military incursion into the region, dubbed Operation Peace Spring. Critics allege that the operation is designed to drive out the region's Kurds so that Turkey can resettle Arab Syrians in their place. 

Ankara says the incursion is necessary to eliminate armed groups that the Turkish government considers terrorists, including the Kurdish YPG and PKK. 

"I think that from the government perspective, they feel that they face unfair criticism for the operations in Syria. They're accused of ethnic cleansing, they're accused of attacking the Kurds … the problem is when you bring a court case and claim that this is somehow illegal," Schenkkan said. 

'They are panicked'

Erdogan spokesman Ibrahim Kalin previously attacked Le Point's October 24 cover on Twitter. 

"The reason they attack our president is clear: they are panicked when their intrigues are foiled with the blow to their agents in Syria. The Kurds are not your agents and never will be. Your days of colonization are over," Kalin tweeted in a thread containing an image of the cover on Thursday. 

And while foreign journalists based in Turkey previously have been charged by authorities for reports critical of the government, the fact that a foreign publications like Le Point was targeted directly is unusual, according to Sinclair-Webb.  

FILE - Members of Reporters Without Borders hold stencils representing portraits of imprisoned Turkish journalists, during a demonstration in front of the Turkish Embassy, in Paris, Jan. 5, 2018.

"It creates a chilling environment for all media, including foreign media," Sinclair-Webb said. 

But Schenkkan said the case against Le Point most likely would not discourage foreign journalists working in Turkey, who are used to this sort of pressure for criticizing the government's policies. 

"I don't think this will change anything for them since this is par for the course. I think foreign journalists in Turkey have become highly aware of minding their p's and q's," said Schenkkan. "They continue to report on things, [but] the government has laid down markers to say that we will come down hard on you if we don't like your reporting. So it takes a lot of courage to continue doing it." 


October 26, 2019 at 06:29AM

Made in China

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Made in Chinamade in china review
October 25, 2019 at 05:00PM

NFL star who lost wife and child opens up about faith: 'A miracle I'm not in a straitjacket'

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NFL star who lost wife and child opens up about faith: 'A miracle I'm not in a straitjacket' Former NFL defensive tackle and three-time Pro-Bowl player Tommie Harris opened up to "Fox and Friends" co-host Ainsley Earhardt about the unimaginable tragedies that upended his life and reinforced his faith in God.
October 26, 2019 at 05:34AM

Poll: Most Americans Oppose Reparations for Slavery

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Poll: Most Americans Oppose Reparations for Slavery

Few Americans are in favor of giving reparations to descendants of enslaved black people in the United States, a new poll shows, even as the idea has gained momentum among Democratic presidential contenders. 
 
Only 29% of Americans say the government should pay cash reparations, according to the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll. 
  
But the poll reveals a large divide between Americans of different racial and ethnic backgrounds. 
  
Most black Americans, 74%, favor reparations, compared with 15% of white Americans. Among Hispanics, 44% favor reparations.   

'It's over with'
  
Lori Statzer, 79, of West Palm Beach, Florida, opposes cash reparations and an official government apology. 
 
``None of the black people in America today are under the slavery issue,'' said Statzer, who is white. ``It's over with.''  

FILE - A whip used to punish slaves is on display in the Slavery and Freedom Gallery in the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, Sept. 14, 2016, in Washington.

Using taxpayers' money to pay reparations ``would be unfair to me,'' she added. ``My ancestors came to this country, worked hard to become Americans and never asked for anything.'' 
 
Poll respondents also were sharply divided by race on whether the U.S. government should issue an apology for slavery: 64% of white Americans oppose a government apology, while 77% of black Americans and 64% of Hispanics believe an apology is due. 

Overall, 46% of Americans favor and 52% oppose a national apology. 
 
Not everyone realizes how horrible slavery was to black Americans, said Nathan Jordan, 63, adding that the federal government should apologize for slavery ``because it was wrong.'' 

How much?
 
While he supports reparations, Jordan, who is black and lives in Vienna, Georgia, can't put a dollar figure on what would be fair. 
 
``I don't think the government could even afford that,'' he said. ``I don't know what the value would be. There are still a lot of [black] people trying to catch up. I'm not sure if they'll ever catch up.'' 
 
Alicia Cheek, 56, of Asheboro, North Carolina, who is black, opposes both reparations and a government apology, saying white people today ``can't be liable for what their ancestors did.'' She also questions how a fair amount could be determined. 
 
The nation is marking 400 years since the first slave ship sailed to what would become the United States, bringing about 20 slaves to the British colony at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619. 
  
Over the next two centuries, more than 300,000 men, women and children were forcibly brought to what is now the U.S. from Africa, according to the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database. 
 
The debate on reparations has flared on and off since the moment slavery in the U.S. officially ended in 1865. 
 
After the Civil War, Union Army General William Tecumseh Sherman promised compensation to freed slaves in the form of land and mules to farm it — hence the phrase ``40 acres and a mule.'' But President Andrew Johnson took away the offer. 

Legislative proposals
 
More than 120 years later, then-Representative John Conyers, a Detroit Democrat, introduced legislation to establish a commission to develop reparations proposals. He reintroduced it in every congressional session until he resigned in 2017, and it was reintroduced last year by Representative Sheila Jackson Lee, a Texas Democrat. Presidential candidate and Democratic Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey filed a Senate companion bill this year. 
 
Other Democratic candidates have come out in support of reparations or at least a commission to study it. 
  
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, has publicly opposed the idea of a national reparations policy. 
  
Anita Belle, founder of the Reparations Labor Union in Detroit, said ``doing the right thing means making amends for what a nation did wrong.''   

FILE - Reparations Labor Union founder Anita Belle talks about slave reparations during an interview in Detroit, April 10, 2019.

Belle said she was encouraged to see even a low level of support for reparations among white Americans. 
 
``That's still progress,'' she said. 
 
An apology for slavery would help the country move on, said Reuben Miller, assistant professor in the University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration. 

Enduring disadvantages
 
``And by moving on, I don't mean moving on and forgetting,'' he said. ``I mean moving on past the atrocity. It would teach a lesson about the relationship of black Americans with their government.'' 
 
The new poll finds that about 3 in 10 Americans think the history of slavery still has a great deal of influence on black Americans. About another 3 in 10 think it has a fair amount of influence. 
 
And many see enduring disadvantages for black Americans in public life. About two-thirds of Americans think white people are treated more fairly than black people by police, and about half see advantages for white people in applying for jobs or shopping in stores. 
 
``We have to look at righting the wrong with cash to the people that were done wrong,'' Belle said. ``To just say we aren't going to do anything is to just perpetuate the wrong.'' 


October 26, 2019 at 04:55AM

Authorities Arrest 2 More in UK's Gruesome Truck Deaths Case

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Authorities Arrest 2 More in UK's Gruesome Truck Deaths Case

British police arrested two more people Friday in connection with the deaths of 39 others found in the back of a container truck in southeastern England as the investigation into one of the country's worst human smuggling cases geared up.

Police said the man and the woman, both 38 and from Warrington, a town in northwestern England, were arrested on suspicion of manslaughter and conspiracy to traffic people. The 25-year-old driver of the truck remains in custody on suspicion of murder.
 
The new arrests came as police began the grim process of conducting post-mortem examinations of the dead. The remains of 11 people from the truck were transported by ambulance from the Port of Tilbury under police escort Thursday.

Essex Police said 31 men and eight women were found dead in the truck early Wednesday at an industrial park in Grays, a town 25 miles (40 kilometers) east of London.

Although U.K. police said they believed the dead were Chinese citizens, Chinese officials told reporters in Beijing that the nationalities and identities of the victims had not yet been confirmed.  

Flowers are placed at the scene where bodies were discovered in a lorry container, in Grays, Essex, Britain, Oct. 24, 2019.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said China was working in cooperation with local authorities.

"No matter where these victims come from, this is a great tragedy which drew the attention of the international community to the issue of illegal immigration," she said. "The international community should further strengthen cooperation in this area, strengthen sharing of information and intelligence ... to prevent such tragedies from happening again."

'Humanitarian disaster'
 
Hua said Chinese authorities were also seeking information from police in Belgium, since the shipping container in which the bodies were found was sent to England from the Belgian port of Zeebrugge.

Human smuggling from China is believed to have fallen drastically in recent years amid the country's rapidly growing domestic economy. However, some Chinese, particularly those with lesser education, continue to be drawn to Europe and North America by the promise of much higher wages than they can earn at home, despite the considerable risks involved.
 
Parts of China, especially the southeastern province of Fujian, have long histories of sending migrants abroad.
 
The issue is a difficult one for China's ruling Communist Party, which is intensely sensitive about China's international image and has staked much of its legitimacy to rule on improving living standards for the bulk of China's 1.4 billion people.

In an editorial Friday, the party newspaper Global Times said authorities in Britain and elsewhere hadn't done enough to crack down on people smuggling.
 
"Such a serious humanitarian disaster occurred under the eyes of the British and Europeans," the newspaper said. "Britain and the related European countries have not met their responsibility for protecting these people from dying in such a manner."

Large-scale trafficking
 
British police believe the truck and container took separate journeys before ending up at the industrial park. They say the container traveled by ferry from Zeebrugge to Purfleet, England, where it arrived early Wednesday and was picked up by the truck driver and driven the few miles to Grays.

FILE - Police work at the scene where bodies were discovered in a lorry container, in Grays, Essex, Britain, Oct. 23, 2019.

The truck cab, which is registered in Bulgaria to a company owned by an Irish woman, is believed to have traveled from Northern Ireland to Dublin, where it caught a ferry to Wales, then drove across Britain to pick up the container.

Global Trailer Rentals Ltd told Ireland's national broadcaster RTE the trailer it owns was leased Oct. 15 in County Monaghan, in Ireland, at a rate of 275 euros ($299) per week. The Dublin-based company said it will make the data from its tracking system available to investigators.

The company's directors told RTE it was "shell-shocked" at the news.

Groups of migrants have repeatedly landed on English shores using small boats to make the risky Channel crossing, and migrants are sometimes found in the back of cars and trucks that disembark from the massive ferries that link France and England.
 
But Wednesday's macabre find in an industrial park was a reminder that criminal gangs are still profiting from large-scale trafficking.

The tragedy recalls the deaths of 58 Chinese migrants who suffocated in a truck in Dover, England, in 2000 after a perilous, months-long journey from China's southern Fujian province. They were found stowed with a cargo of tomatoes after a ferry ride from Zeebrugge, the same Belgian port that featured in the latest tragedy.

In February 2004, 21 Chinese migrants — also from Fujian — who were working as cockle-pickers in Britain drowned when they were caught by treacherous tides in Morecambe Bay in northwest England.
 


October 26, 2019 at 04:28AM

Concern Grows in South Korea Over Trump Cost-Sharing Demands

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Concern Grows in South Korea Over Trump Cost-Sharing Demands

The United States and South Korea this week held fresh negotiations over how to split the cost of the 28,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea. The current deal expires at the end of the year, and U.S. President Donald Trump has reportedly demanded a fivefold increase in how much Seoul pays.  

Trump says South Korea and other allies are taking advantage of the U.S. He reportedly wants Seoul to pay more than five times the amount it contributes now. Analyst Shin Beom-chul said some South Koreans would see such a demand as absurd, and that it could fuel anti-U.S. sentiment. 

South Korea experienced mass anti-U.S. protests as recently as the late 2000s. However, these days, it's hard to find overt displays of anti-U.S. sentiment. Polls suggest both conservative and liberal South Koreans broadly support the U.S. alliance.  

FILE - South Korean (blue headbands) and U.S. Marines take positions as amphibious assault vehicles of the South Korean Marine Corps fire smoke bombs during a U.S.-South Korea joint landing operation drill in Pohang, South Korea, March 12, 2016.

It's not guaranteed to stay that way, though. As Trump turns up the heat on cost-sharing, some familiar pockets of protest are getting louder. 

Four hours south of Seoul, local villagers have set up a permanent roadblock to protest a controversial U.S. anti-missile system. As a result, the U.S. must deliver supplies to the base via helicopter.  

Activist Kim Young Jae said he was also upset about the cost-sharing dispute. He said the U.S. was asking for more than what he saw as the total cost of the U.S. military presence, and he wondered how South Koreans could accept this. 

Local resident Lee Jong-hee said that even if Trump wound up getting more money from South Korea, it would drive a wedge between Washington and Seoul. 

It's an outcome that Trump seems increasingly willing to risk. 


October 26, 2019 at 04:23AM

Ssc.nic.in

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Ssc.nic.in
October 25, 2019 at 10:00PM

結のほえほえゲーム演説:第98回「『AI:ソムニウムファイル』。打越作品に登場する女性キャラって……」

結のほえほえゲーム演説:第98回「『AI:ソムニウムファイル』。打越作品に登場する女性キャラって……」


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ごきげんよう。女優・タレントとして活動しております。結です。 季節はすっかり秋ですね。 秋の夜長といえば,読書や映画も良いけれど,やっぱりゲーム。しかも「 ...
October 26, 2019

Made In China

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Made In China
October 25, 2019 at 08:00PM

Fb log in

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Fb log in
October 25, 2019 at 06:00PM

Made In China review

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Made In China review
October 25, 2019 at 05:00PM

Breta sögur

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Breta sögur

C1614: Created page


'''''Breta sögur''''' (Sagas of the Britons) is an [[Old Norse|Old Norse-Icelandic]] rendering of [[Geoffrey of Monmouth]]'s ''[[Historia Regum Britanniae|Historia regum Britanniae]]'' with some additional material from other sources. It survives in two recensions: a longer but poorly preserved version in AM 573 4to and a shorter, abridged version in ''[[Hauksbók]]'' (AM 544 4to).<ref name=":0"></ref> In both versions, ''Breta sögur'' follows the B-version of ''[[Trójumanna saga]]'', the Old Norse-Icelandic translation of [[Dares Phrygius]]'s ''de excidio Trojae historia''.<ref></ref> ''Breta sögur'' begins with a summary of the story of [[Aeneas]] and [[Turnus]], derived from the [[Aeneid]].<ref name=":0" /> Along with ''[[Rómverja saga]]'', ''[[Veraldar saga]]'' and ''Trójumanna saga'', it represent the earliest phase of translation of secular works into Old Norse-Icelandic.<ref name=":1"></ref>

The ''Hauksbók'' version of ''Breta sögur'' contains the only extant copy of [[Gunnlaugr Leifsson]]'s ''[[Merlínússpá]]'', a translation of Geoffrey of Monmouth's [[Prophetiae Merlini|''Prophetiae Merlini'']].<ref></ref> It is likely, thought not proven, that Gunnlaugr was also responsible for translating ''Breta sögur''. If not translated by Gunnlaugr himself, it is equally possible that it was translated by another monk at [[Thingeyrar Monastery]].<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

Both recensions of ''Breta sögur'' are based on an earlier translation.<ref name=":3"></ref> Because of the poor preservation of these texts and the absence of the original Latin exemplar, it is hard to trace the development of the ''Breta sögur'' from Latin to Old Norse-Icelandic. Because the author of ''[[Skjöldunga saga]]'' was familiar with the ''Historia Regum Britanniae'', a version of the Latin text must have been available in Iceland by the end of the 12th century.<ref name=":3" /> However, Kalinke argues that AM 573 4to shows that a variant version of Geoffrey of Monmouth's text was used, one which was closer to romance than chronicle.<ref name=":2">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

The longer version of the text represented in AM 573 4to is also evidenced in a 17th-century paper copy (Stock. Papp. fol. no. 58) of the lost ''[[Ormsbók]]''.<ref name=":0" /> However, this copy is incomplete and finishes before the Arthurian material begins.<ref name=":2" /> Sections from this longer version were incorporated into the universal history section of [[Reynistaðarbók]] (AM 764 4to), copied either from AM 573 4to or from a manuscript closely linked to it.<ref name=":1" /> In 1968 a fragment of a version of the saga was found in the binding of an Icelandic manuscript in [[Trinity College Dublin]].<ref name=":0" />

== Further reading ==

*
* Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)

== References ==
<references />

[[Category:Sagas]]
[[Category:Old Norse literature]]
[[Category:Arthurian literature]]

October 25, 2019 at 09:51PM

'Excalibur' found? 700-year-old sword discovered stuck in a rock

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'Excalibur' found? 700-year-old sword discovered stuck in a rock Legend has it that King Arthur was the only person able to pull Excalibur from a stone. But a newly discovered blade found stuck in a rock in a Bosnian river is being described as a "real-life Excalibur."
October 25, 2019 at 09:28PM

Indonesia’s Report on 737 MAX Crash Urges Redesign, Better Training

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Indonesia's Report on 737 MAX Crash Urges Redesign, Better Training

Indonesia has recommended closer scrutiny of automated control systems, better design of flight deck alerts and accounting for a more diverse pilot population in the wake of a Boeing 737 MAX crash, according to a copy of a final report seen by Reuters.

The report into the crash of the Lion Air jet, Oct. 29, 2018, that killed all 189 people on board is to be released publicly later Friday.

Less than five months after the Lion Air accident, an Ethiopian Airlines 737 MAX crashed, leading to a global grounding of the model and sparking a corporate crisis at Boeing, the world's biggest plane manufacturer.

Relatives react at the scene where the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 crashed shortly after takeoff on Sunday killing all 157 on board, near Bishoftu, south of Addis Ababa, in Ethiopia, March 13, 2019.

Indonesian investigators Wednesday told families of the victims that a mix of factors contributed to the crash, including mechanical and design issues and a lack of documentation about how systems would behave.

"Deficiencies" in the flight crew's communication and manual control of the aircraft contributed to the crash, as did alerts and distractions in the cockpit, according to slides presented to the families.

The final report said the first officer was unfamiliar with procedures and had shown issues handling the aircraft during training.

The report also found that a critical sensor providing data to an anti-stall system had been miscalibrated by a repair shop in Florida and that there were strong indications that it was not tested during installation by Lion Air maintenance staff.

Lion Air should have grounded the jet following faults on earlier flights, the report said and added that 31 pages were missing from the airline's October maintenance logs.

Lion Air did not respond to a request for comment.

Boeing issued a statement after Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee released its final report on the accident.

Boeing's President and CEO Dennis Muilenburg said said the company is addressing the committee's safety recommendations and working to enhance the safety of the 737 Max jet "to prevent the flight control conditions that occurred in the accident from ever happening again."

Muilenburg said the aircraft and its software are receiving "an unprecedented level of global regulatory oversight, testing and analysis. This includes hundreds of simulator sessions and test flights, regulatory analysis of thousands of documents, reviews by regulators and independent experts and extensive certification requirements."

Fighting MCAS

In the report, Indonesian regulators recommended a redesign of the anti-stall system known as MCAS that automatically pushed the plane's nose down, leaving pilots fighting for control.

Boeing has said it would remake the system and provide more information about it in pilot manuals.

According to the report, Boeing's safety assessment assumed pilots would respond within three seconds of a system malfunction but on the accident flight and one that experienced the same problem the prior evening, it took both crews about eight seconds to respond.

Boeing has said it cannot comment before the release of the report.

A panel of international air safety regulators this month also faulted Boeing for assumptions it made in designing the 737 MAX and found areas where Boeing could improve processes.


October 25, 2019 at 06:04PM

Charles Barkley tells Mike Pence to 'shut up' after VP blasts NBA cowardice, hypocrisy on China

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Charles Barkley tells Mike Pence to 'shut up' after VP blasts NBA cowardice, hypocrisy on China On Thursday night, Charles Barkley harshly criticized Vice President Mike Pence, after Pence weighed in on the NBA-China controversy earlier in the day.
October 25, 2019 at 12:49PM

Florida Uber driver picks up new mom, buys clothes for her sick baby

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Florida Uber driver picks up new mom, buys clothes for her sick baby A Florida Uber driver picked up a new mother from a children's hospital and bought her clothing for her sick baby, telling Fox News on Thursday, "I was just happy to do something nice for her because she was having a rough day."
October 25, 2019 at 11:35AM

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Gene Frenette: Earthquake World Series

Gene Frenette: Earthquake World Series


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In 1989, before the first pitch of Game 3 of the World Series between the San Francisco Giants and Oakland A's, an earthquake hit Candlestick Park ...
October 25, 2019 at 07:41AM

Margit Pavelka

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Margit Pavelka

Biografer: ←Created page with ''''Margit Pavelka''' (born 1945; Bad Goisern am Hallstättersee) is a professor emerita of Histology and Embryology and former head of Center for Ana...'


'''Margit Pavelka''' (born 1945; [[Bad Goisern am Hallstättersee]]) is a professor emerita of [[Histology]] and [[Embryology]] and former head of Center for Anatomy and Cell Biology, [[Medical University of Vienna]].

==Early life and education==
Pavelka was born in [[Bad Goisern am Hallstättersee]] and attended high school in [[Bad Ischl]]. After graduation, she passed examination with ''[[Matura]]'' honor in 1963 and following it, joined [[Medical University of Vienna]] seven years later in order to receive training at Vienna Hospital and [[Vienna General Hospital]]. Following training and acquiring skills in [[internal medicine]], Pavelka relocated to the Institute of Micromorphology and Electron Microscopy where she received further training in electron microscopy, [[immunohistochemistry]], [[cytochemistry]], [[histology]] and [[embryology]]. She then pursued [[habilitation]] defending her thesis ''Functional Morphology of the Golgi Apparatus'' in 1987.<ref name=cv></ref>

==Career==
From 1992 to 1998, Pavelka served as University Professor at the [[University of Innsbruck]] and since November 1998 holds the same position at the [[University of Vienna]]. Five years later, she became the head of the Institute of Histology and Embryology where she was promoted to head the Department of Cell Biology and Ultrastructure Research in the Center for Anatomy and Cell Biology of the Medical University of Vienna in October 2004. From 2004 to 2008, Pavelka served as president of the Austrian Society for Electron Microscopy and then became its vice president and honorary member. From 2001 to 2013, Pavelka was the head of the Center for Anatomy and Cell Biology and since 1 October 2013, serves as professor emerita.<ref name=cv/>

Pavelka also serves on editorial boards of ''[[Histochemistry and Cell Biology]]'' and the ''European Journal of Histochemistry''.<ref name=cv/>

In 2010, Pavelka had co-authored a book with Jürgen Roth titled ''Functional Ultrastructure''.<ref></ref>

==References==



[[Category:1945 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Austrian histologists]]
[[Category:Embryologists]]
[[Category:University of Innsbruck faculty]]
[[Category:University of Vienna faculty]]



October 25, 2019 at 10:34AM

Alaska’s Iditarod Joins New Global Sled-dog Racing Series

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Alaska's Iditarod Joins New Global Sled-dog Racing Series

Alaska's famed Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race has joined a new global partnership billed as the World Series of long-distance sled dog racing and aimed at bringing more fans to the cold-weather sport.

The Iditarod has teamed up with Norway pet food supplement company and series creator, Aker BioMarine, and other races in Minnesota, Norway and Russia for the inaugural QRILL Pet Arctic World Series, or QPAWS, next year.

Logistics were still being worked out, but the series will use a joint point system over a still-undetermined time frame, GPS tracking and an online platform to follow the racing teams. Talks with potential broadcast outlets also are under way, organizers say.

FILE - Defending Iditarod champion Joar Lefseth Ulsom of Norway greets fans on the trail during the ceremonial start of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, March 2, 2019, in Anchorage, Alaska.

"Together with Iditarod and the other unique events, we will make QPAWS a winning TV concept in order to build the sport for the future," series project manager Nils Marius Otterstad said in an email to The Associated Press. He said the Iditarod was approached about the idea a year ago and agreed to move forward on it during this year's race in March.

The other races

At 1,000 miles (1,610 kilometers), the Iditarod will be the longest race among those participating the first year, as well as serve as the finale to the series next March. The series also will feature races kicking off in late January with the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon in Minnesota, followed by the Femundlopet in Norway in early February by the Volga Quest in Russia a week later.

Discussions also are under way to add other races, including the 1,000-mile (1,610-kilometer) Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race traversing Alaska and Canada's Yukon each February. Marti Steury, the Quest's executive director for Alaska, said Quest officials are watching to see how the first year goes.

New Iditarod CEO Rob Urbach poses for a photo in Anchorage, Alaska, Oct. 15, 2019.

Participants in any of the QPAWS races don't have to join the circuit if they prefer to stick to just one contest, according to the Iditarod's new CEO, Rob Urbach. Because the races are so globally distant and scheduled so closely together, he said the circuit could take place over two years.

"The complexity of our racing is unique in the world of sports, and therefore may see some different ways to do the series," he said.

The Iditarod is already well-steeped in technology, despite the low-tech aspect of the trail, which spans two mountain ranges and the frozen Yukon River before it heads up the wind-scrubbed Bering Sea Coast to the finish line in the Gold Rush town of Nome. Sleds are equipped with GPS trackers that allow fans to follow them online and enable organizers to ensure no one is missing.

Race volunteers and contractors working out of an Anchorage hotel process live video streamed from village checkpoints, using satellite dishes. Some volunteers handle race-standing updates sent through equipment that activates a super-size hot spot in the most remote places with satellite connections.

Troubled time for Iditarod

The move to QPAWS follows a troublesome time for the Iditarod that was marked in recent years by multiple challenges, including escalating pressure from animal-welfare activists over multiple dog deaths, a 2017 dog-doping scandal and the loss of major sponsors.

Urbach, a former CEO of USA Triathlon, recently met with representatives of the Iditarod's harshest critic, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. PETA's executive vice president Tracy Reiman called the new racing circuit a "World Series of Cruelty" destined for failure.

"Just as Ringling Bros. circus struggled to find an audience for its abusive elephant shows, the dogsledding industry is desperately scrambling for viewers — but kind people today have no interest in watching dogs being forced to run until their paws bleed, they choke on their own vomit, and they drop dead on the trail," Reiman said in an email.

Branding expert Conor O'Flaherty said the venture has the potential to create a bigger audience.

"What's important for a sport like this is it not only represents the distinct community, it also represents part of cultural history that's important to protect," said O'Flaherty, managing director at New York-based SME Branding.

Urbach contends QPAWS will go far in raising the exposure of long-distance mushing and better educate the public about the special relationship the dogs have with their human teammates. 

"You could argue that the sport needs a rejuvenation," said Urbach, who took the helm of the Iditarod in July.

Mushers interested, cautious

With so many details about the series still unknown, many mushers are taking a wait-and-see approach. Defending champion Pete Kaiser said he plans to participate only in the Iditarod.

"My main concerns are, what do you have to do to win this thing and what are the logistics," he said.

Three-time winner Mitch Seavey, who comes from a multigenerational family of mushers, also is watching developments closely.

"I'm in favor of the Iditarod and other races doing new things. We need to change our demographic. We need to change our fan base, or at least expand it. We need to modernize and appeal to more people," Seavey said. "Give them a chance. That's what I'm saying."


October 25, 2019 at 10:10AM

Huge ancient baths unearthed in Greece's lost city of Tenea

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Huge ancient baths unearthed in Greece's lost city of Tenea New excavations at the ancient city of Tenea have unearthed amazing new finds, including a massive bath, the Greek government announced this week.
October 25, 2019 at 09:55AM

Insidious 2

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Insidious 2Insidious
October 25, 2019

Census Report: US Will Get Older, More Diverse

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Census Report: US Will Get Older, More Diverse

The U.S. population will grow older and more diverse over the next four decades, according to new Census Bureau projections presented Thursday at a meeting of demographers.

As the U.S. median age increases, there will be a smaller ratio of workers in the labor force able to pay the payroll tax that funds Social Security payments to people of retirement age. In 15 years, the number of people over age 65 will be larger than the number of children for the first time in U.S. history, according to the presentation at a Southern Demographic Association meeting in New Orleans.

At the same time the U.S. is growing older, it will also become more diverse, with children leading the way. By next year, no single race group alone will make up more than half of U.S. children, the projections show.

Although non-Hispanic whites currently are a majority in the U.S., their numbers will dip below 50% of the population in 40 years, declining from 199 million next year to 179 million in 2060, the projections show.

People who identify as two or more races will be the fastest-growing group in the next 40 years, its population expanding as births outpace deaths.

Other fast-growing groups include Asians, whose growth will be driven by migration, and Hispanics, whose growth will be driven by natural increases, according to the projections.

The U.S. is expected to cross the 400 million-person threshold by 2058, as it adds 79 million more people in 40 years, but annual growth will slow down. The U.S. has about 326 million people today.

Population growth is expected to go from an additional 2.3 million per year currently to an additional 1.6 million people a year by 2060.

Growth comes from immigration and when births outpace deaths, but that natural increase will decline as the nation ages. The nation's median age is expected to go from 38 today to 43 by 2060.

As the number of people over age 65 grows, the share of working-age adults, who pay with their employers for Social Security through a payroll tax, will also decline. Next year, there are expected to be 3.5 working-age adults for every person of retirement age, but that ratio declines to 2.5 by 2060, according to the projections.


October 25, 2019 at 04:53AM

2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike

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2019 Chicago Public Schools Strike

Alexf505: Started Page




Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2) - Ongoing ()|place=[[Chicago]],IL|causes=|goals=Better Compensation, Increase in Staffing, Wrap-around Services, and Smaller Class Sizes|notes=|methods=[[Strike action|Strikes]], [[Demonstration (people)|Demonstrations]]|result=|howmany1=~ 36,000 CPS Teachers and Staff|howmany2=|side1=[[Chicago Teachers Union]], [[Service Employees International Union]]|side2=[[Chicago Public Schools]], [[Mayor of Chicago]]|side3=|leadfigures1=[[Jesse Sharkey]], [[Stacey Davis Gates]]|leadfigures2=[[Lori Lightfoot]] , [[Janice Jackson]]|leadfigures3=|fatalities=|injuries=|arrests=}}

The '''2019 Chicago Public Schools Labor Strike''' is an on-going labor dispute between [[Chicago Public Schools]] and The [[Chicago Teachers Union]] which represents teachers and PSRPs, and the [[Service Employees International Union]] Local 73 which represents the district's support staff. The strike began on October 17th, 2019 when both unions failed to reach a contract agreement with [[Chicago Public Schools]] over compensation, benefits, staffing, wrap-around services such as counselors, nurses, and librarians, and caps on class sizes.

== Background ==
After the expiration of the CPS contract with CTU in June 2019, a contract dispute emerged. Chicago Public Schools initially offered the union a 14% raise over 5 years while the union was seeking 15% over 3 years. The district proposed a 1.5% increase in healthcare costs while the union sought to maintain their current contributions. An independent fact-finder report suggested that the district offer a 16% raise over 5 years, and a 1% increase in healthcare costs. The district accepted the report, but the union rejected it. On top of pay and healthcare, the two sides disagreed on the length of the contract; the district proposed a 5-year contract while the union proposed a 3-year contract. <ref></ref>

On September 24th, 2019, The CTU hosted a rally alongside SEIU Local 73 representing school support staff and Chicago Park District workers featuring Vermont Senator and Presidential Candidate, Bernie Sanders. <ref><nowiki>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Sanders was joined on the stage by city alderman, other labor activists, and actor [[John Cusack]].<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 2, expected 1)</ref>

On September 27, 2019, CTU members voted to authorize a potential strike starting on October 17 if a contract deal is not reached<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 2, expected 1)</ref> with 94% of its members voting in favor of a strike.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> The union's top priorities in contract negotiations are reducing classroom size and increasing the number of support staff such as nurses, librarians and social worker)<ref></ref>.

On July 16th, 2019, SEIU Local 73 which represents the district's support staff such as custodians, bus aids, and security guards authorized a strike with a 97% approval vote from its members after contract negations stalled between the district and the union after their contract expired in June 2018. <ref></ref> The union cited work schedules, compensation, staffing and benefits as points of conflicts in their contract negotiations. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref></ref>
[[File:Chicago Teachers Union Rally 10-14-19 3748 (48906578637).jpg|left|thumb|267x267px|Chicago Teachers Unions, SEIU Local 73 , and their supporters rally downtown for a fair contract on October 14th, 2019. ]]
On October 14th, 2019, the CTU and SEIU Local 73 held a rally for a fair contract in downtown Chicago 3 days before the strike. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Despite progress made over the weekend prior, both sides remained divided on class sizes and staffing shortages.<ref></ref>

On October 16th, 2019, the CTU held its house of delegates meeting where the bargaining team presented the board's final offer. The union delegates voted to reject the district's latest contract proposal leading to the beginning of a joint strike with SEIU Local 73 at 12:01 am on October 17th <ref></ref> leaving roughly over 300,000 students out of school<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

On October 16, 2019 CPS cancelled classes for October 17, 2019 in anticipation of the CTU strike.  CTU delegates officially voted to go on strike hours afterwards.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 4, expected 1)</ref>

<br />

== Strike and Actions ==

=== October 17th ===
On October 17th, 2019 at 12:01 am, members of the Chicago Teachers Union and the SEIU Local 73, walked off the job. Pickets in front of schools began at 6:30 am in the morning until 10:30 am followed by a rally downtown later in the day.

The CTU and SEIU Local 73 began a rally outside Chicago Public Schools headquarters in downtown Chicago at around 1:30 pm. At around 2:30 pm, the demonstrators began marching through the loop towards to Millennium Park.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

=== October 18th ===
On October 18th, 2019, the strike entered its second days as neither the CTU and SEIU Local 73 were able to reach a contract agreement. CPS staff members of the CTU and SEIU began picketing outside schools at 6:30 am to 10:30 am. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>. The two unions held another rally downtown later that day. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

=== October 21st. ===
On October 21st, the strike entered its 5th day and 3rd school day. Union members returned to the picket line from 6:30 am to 10:30 am.

=== October 22nd ===
On October 22nd, 2019, the strike entered its 6th day and 4th school day. Union members picketed from 6:30 am to 10:30 am

== Reactions ==

=== Chicago Public Schools: ===

* On October 4th 2019, Chicago Public Schools released a contingency plan in the event of a work stoppage to provide CPS students with access to school buildings and meals. <ref></ref>

* On October 16th, 2019, Chicago Public Schools cancels classes hours ahead of the CTU house of delegates meeting as a result of the expected strike between CPS and the CTU and SEIU Local 73. <ref></ref>
* On October 17th, 2019, Chicago Public Schools cancels classes for Friday October 18th when the district is unable to reach an agreement with the CTU and SEIU Local 73. <ref></ref>
* On October 20th, 2019, Chicago Public Schools announced that classes on Monday October 21st were cancelled after neither union was able to reach an agreement with the district. <ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
* On October 21st, 2019, Chicago Public Schools cancelled classes for Tuesday October 22nd.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
* On October 22nd, 2019, Chicago Public Schools cancelled classes for Wednesday October 23rd. <ref></ref>
* On October 23rd, 2019, Chicago Public Schools cancelled classes for Thursday October 24th due to the on-going strike of the CTU and SEIU Local 73.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

=== Chicago Teachers Union: ===

=== Lori Lightfoot: ===

=== SEIU Local 73: ===

=== Public Reaction: ===

== References ==
<references />

October 25, 2019 at 04:52AM

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