Thursday, January 31, 2013

In Timbuktu, a giant task of reconnecting a remote city to the world

Before they left, Islamists in northern Mali cut Internet and phone connections. Restoring them is just the first step toward piecing Mali back together.

By John Thorne,?Correspondent / January 29, 2013

When the Internet got knocked out three weeks ago here in Timbuktu, Islamist militants who then ran the city did what most of us would do: They harassed their service provider.

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?They all had my number, and they all called to complain,? says Aguissa Maiga, the local chief technician for Orange, a leading telecoms company in Mali that serves many customers in Timbuktu.

There was an irony to the cries for restored connectivity. Militants have spent the past nine months trying to isolate northern Mali as a hardline Islamist realm. Those in Timbuktu ultimately sabotaged telecoms stations as French and Malian forces advanced on the city last week, says Mr. Maiga.

Now he faces the urgent mission of helping get Timbuktu?s citizens back on their phones and back online ? among the first of many tasks involved in knitting a torn country back together.

Administration must be rebuilt, and tens of thousands of displaced people need to return home. Meanwhile, French and Malian forces must keep the peace. Islamists have been evicted from cities and towns, but could turn to a guerrilla campaign. Many in Mali also fear reprisal attacks as authorities work to restore order.

Mali began fraying years ago. Under-development and poor governance in the north helped fuel ethnic Tuareg rebellions, and in recent years enabled criminal networks that Al Qaeda-linked militants tapped for cash.

Last April, Islamist militants capitalized on yet another Tuareg revolt to launch their own takeover of Mali?s north. In Timbuktu, as elsewhere, they set up a harsh rule based on a literalist reading of Islamic texts.

Some things were compulsory ? among them attending prayer and dressing modestly. Others, such as cigarettes, mixed-sex socializing, and music, were forbidden. Punishments ranged from simple beatings to stoning alleged adulterers and cutting off the hands of people accused of theft.

Morality police

Militants in Timbuktu set up morality police to keep an eye on residents and enforce their version of religious strictures, with one office near a busy market. Before long, people were avoiding the area, said a local merchant who asked not to be named because she feared a possible reprisal.

?There were always lots of Islamists in the street, though,? he says. ?Sometimes they would even grab people returning home from prayer at the mosque, and force them to pray again.?

One day the merchant?s sister was caught getting water from a pump by her door while wearing a knee-length dress, the merchant said. She was held for ten hours in a bank ATM booth, then released with a beating. Her brother began monitoring the morality police office, passing information on abuses to Human Rights Watch.

The militants grew watchful against such activities, says the merchant, who escaped suspicion by being discreet. One day he was alarmed by a summons for questioning by a morality police commander over two men who loitered regularly in the area.

?Every day I see them, and one wears dark glasses,? the commander said, according to the merchant. ?Who is that one, and what is he doing??

?He?s old and unemployed, that?s all,? the merchant began. The commander cut him off:??You tell them if they come back again, we?ll take them.?

Reports filtered out

Islamist efforts to escape outside scrutiny ultimately failed. Thanks in part to people like the merchant, reports of life under their rule filtered out of the north, and helped build international pressure for a military campaign to unseat them.

That campaign was kick-started this month by a surprise Islamist advance south to the city of Konna, prompting a distress call from Mali?s interim president and overnight deployment of French troops to lead a counter-offensive.

Somehow during the turmoil, the Orange relay station at Konna was knocked out of service, cutting Internet connections from cities up the line. It was then that Islamists in Timbuktu, served by Konna?s station, began pestering Maiga, the Orange technician.

Over the past weekend, French and Malian forces have pushed into the north, taking cities including Timbuktu apparently without a fight. Islamists there mostly fled town as their enemies advanced ? but not before burning the main Orange telecoms relay and shooting up two others, says Maiga.

?When they realized the French were coming, they decided to cut all communications so people couldn?t give away their positions,? he says.

Today Timbuktu remains offline. Cell phones and the Internet are inaccessible, while the main Orange relay station is a twisted wreck of blackened metal and tumbled machinery. Maiga hopes to get new equipment in place in the coming days.

?They even burned the generator that powers the station, and the fuel tank, and they stole most of the backup batteries some time ago,? Maiga says. He paused, then spoke words that would be as true in many other contexts across northern Mali: ?All these things need to be replaced.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/7EPKwqlAFmA/In-Timbuktu-a-giant-task-of-reconnecting-a-remote-city-to-the-world

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Monster Truck Will Shake New Zealand for Safer Buildings

With the tires of a monster truck and guts that pound the ground like a dinosaur, the T-Rex is not just the ultimate Tonka toy.

The truck simulates an earthquake, revealing the properties of rocks and sediments below to watching researchers, and therefore shedding light on how the ground shakes during a temblor.

The U.S. Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation is sending T-Rex to New Zealand's South Island, to shake the soils around Christchurch, where a series of earthquakes in 2011 destroyed buildings and took lives.

The earthquakes caused widespread liquefaction, a phenomenon in which shaking of water-logged soils turns the sediment temporarily from a solid to a liquid. The jiggly, wet soils undermined buildings and other structures. As many as 7,500 homes were abandoned. Parts of downtown Christchurch remain cordoned off due to the extensive damage.

The seismic data gathered with T-Rex will inform engineers, on an area-by-area basis, how to rebuild structures in Christchurch to resist future earthquakes, according to a statement from the Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation.?The seismic waves can find which soils are more likely to liquefy, and which soils are more stable. Engineers can design structures to withstand earthquakes, but first they need to know more about the soils in each area, the statement said.

"Designing a quake-resistant building starts with the soil," Brady Cox, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin, said in the statement. "The stiffness and layering of the soil has a profound effect on the strength of shaking felt during an earthquake."

The 64,000-pound (29,000 kilogram) shaker truck will sail overseas on Feb. 3, arriving in Christchurch in March.

Reach Becky Oskin at boskin@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @beckyoskin. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter?@OAPlanet. We're also on?Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/monster-truck-shake-zealand-safer-buildings-201727346.html

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Police push for background checks on gun purchases

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Law enforcement leaders who met with President Barack Obama Monday urged him to focus on strengthening gun purchase background checks and mental health systems, but did not unify behind his more controversial gun control efforts.

The message from sheriffs and police chiefs gathered at the White House reflected the political reality in Congress that the assault weapons ban in particular is likely to have a hard time winning broad support. The president appeared to recognize the challenge of getting everything he wants from Congress as well, participants in the meeting said.

"We're very supportive of the assault weapons ban," as police chiefs, said Montgomery County, Md., Police Chief J. Thomas Manger in an interview with The Associated Press. "But I think everybody understands that may be a real tough battle to win. And one of the things that the president did say is that we can't look at it like we have to get all of these things or we haven't won."

Opinions over an assault weapons ban and limits on high capacity magazines ? two measures the president supports ? were divided in the room. While Manger said the police chiefs from the large cities support that kind of gun control, some of the elected sheriffs who were in the meeting may not.

"I think what was made clear was that gun control in itself is not the salvation to this issue," said Sheriff Paul Fitzgerald of Story County, Iowa, one of 13 law enforcement leaders who met with the president, vice president and Cabinet members for more than an hour, seated around a conference table in the Roosevelt Room.

Among the participants included three chiefs that responded to the worst shootings of 2012, including Aurora, Colo., where 12 were killed in July; Oak Creek, Wis., where six died in an assault on a Sikh temple, and Newtown, Conn., scene of the most recent mass tragedy that left 20 first-graders dead.

The White House recognizes that police are a credible and important voice in the debate over guns that has developed following last month's elementary school shooting in Connecticut. Obama opened the meeting before media cameras and declared no group more important to listen to in the debate.

"Hopefully if law enforcement officials who are dealing with this stuff every single day can come to some basic consensus in terms of steps that we need to take, Congress is going to be paying attention to them, and we'll be able to make progress," Obama said.

Obama urged Congress to pass an assault weapons ban, limit high capacity magazines and require universal background checks for would-be gun owners in a brief statement to the reporters. But participants said after the media was escorted from the room, the focus was not on the assault weapons ban.

"He did not ask us if we do or do not support an assault weapons ban," said Hennepin County, Minn., Sheriff Richard Stanek, president of the Major County Sheriffs' Association. "He did not ask us if we do or do not support high capacity magazines."

"I told him very candidly that this isn't just about gun control alone," Stanek said. He said the bigger issue is that the Justice Department's system for background checks is incomplete since many states don't report mental health data or felony convictions. He mentioned how in his home state of Minnesota, a 14-year-old shot and killed his mother with a shot gun, but was later able legally to buy additional handguns and automatic weapons because the background check did not reveal his history. "There's example after example after example like that across the country," Stanek said.

Fitzgerald said the mental health system needs to be better funded because jails across the country are becoming "dumping grounds for the mentally ill."

"I was not the only sheriff that spoke up on that issue," Fitzgerald said. "To me, that is the No. 1 thing if we are going to impact that kind of violence that's happening in America."

All the law enforcement participants interviewed said they appreciated the president's attention to the issue and found the meeting constructive. Manger said the president did a lot more listening than talking and heard about the need to fund more police officers to protect school safety and a proposal to restrict the sale of ammunition on the Internet besides the broad calls for stronger mental health and background check systems.

Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey, president of the Major Cities Chiefs Association, said he's never been more encouraged about the prospect of gun control legislation of some sort, even if the assault weapons ban his group supports is an uphill battle.

"You're not going to get 100 percent of people to agree on anything as it relates to gun control, and we're no different, but a majority of people in the room recognize that something needs to be done," he said. "This was not just a passing thing as far as the president and vice president are concerned. This is something that they are determined to keep in front of the American people until they get something passed."

While the assault weapons ban was not a major focus of the White House meeting, participants say it was discussed at length at a later meeting with Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who sponsored a ban in 1994 that lasted for a decade and last week introduced a renewal of the ban in Congress.

"I would say her message was not well received overall by the group," Stanek said. "Everyone has an opinion on it one way or another."

___

Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at http://twitter.com/nedrapickler

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-push-background-checks-gun-purchases-023655912--politics.html

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The Quest for Vertical Axis Wind Turbines Despite Failures

A small-scale vertical axis wind turbine designed by Wing Power Energy. Image: courtesy of WPE

The vision is beautiful, if not somewhat tried: a large cluster of 360 foot tall towers encircled with long, slightly cupped blades, similar to airplane wings, spinning in the wind like a wind vane. The result? An outpouring of clean electricity at the Megawatt (MW) scale.

That?s what Harry Ruda, CEO of Wing Power Energy, a small vertical axis wind turbine (VAWT) company, sees when he imagines his turbines coming of age. He?s one of the believers out there gallantly chasing the dream of making VAWTS big.

Currently, his 2-kilowatt capacity turbines stand 34 feet tall. However diminutive (both in terms of height and output), Ruda believes these turbines are the blueprint for the next generation of wind energy, that when scaled up, will revamp wind power at the utility level, ushering in wind 3.0.

The quest to slay the faulty dragon of conventional, or horizontal axis, wind turbines (HAWTS) has been an impossible one, thus far. The domination of?conventional wind comes from their reliability, efficiency and increasingly low cost, despite vertical?s touted improvements ? less expensive to build and maintain, safer for birds and bats, quieter, and their ability to use less open space.

?VAWTs are a perfectly legitimate technology, but these are not toys or lawn ornaments,? enthuses Paul Gipe, a renewable energy advocate and analyst, who?s worked in the industry for over 30 years, ?They are supposed to produce electricity, and must compete with all the other machines that produce electricity. Right now, no one produces a VAWT that is more cost effective than a conventional wind turbine.?

There are enough examples of VAWT failure to solidify this air of doubt. According to Gipe, in California in the 1980s, hundreds of VAWTs were in operation producing millions of kilowatt-hours of electricity each year. Those turbines were not cost effective and were less reliable, as evidenced by their aluminum blades weakening and flying off after operating for several hundreds of hours (Eeeek!). Not one of these turbines is operating today.

More recently, a handful of small startups have tried to take up the cause. Helix Wind, a company that seemed to be heading in the right direction, ended its run due to financial troubles. Another, Windspire Energy, received accolades for its streamline design, was promoted in Popular Science?s ?Best of What?s New? in 2008, and then declared Chapter 11 last year when it lost huge amounts of funds while repairing unreliable parts under warranty.

The problem, says John O. Dabiri, the Director for the Center for Bioinspired Wind Energy, California Institute of Technology, is that even though multiple companies are premiering new design developments like improved efficiency of 10-15%, they?ve still ignored the Achilles heal of vertical axis wind ? fees and functionality.

?The main goal should be to change the cost and reliability of the designs, not its efficiency,? said Dabiri. ?If a 2kw turbine costs more than $5,000.00 the company is blowing smoke about its viability.?

This means a turbine would have to be in the range of $1-$2 per kilowatt of maximum power production, and about 5 cents/kwh of electricity to get anywhere close to being competitive with the current fossil fuel market. It would also have to operate smoothly for about 20 years.

If this $5,000 cost point is the measure of success, Wing Energy?s current turbine isn?t likely to make headlines soon their small turbine sells for about $10,000. The Economies of scale bear much of this blame, since until a product is mass-produced, it?s difficult to keep manufacturing, installation, and distribution costs low. However, so too is the material choice.

?We do think there?s a lot of promise for VAWTs,? said Dabiri speaking on the future, but added that the [designers] need to start by using the right materials for small turbines before trying their hand at large wind.?

It?s this sliver of hope that keeps companies trying, including Venger Wind, Wepower Eco, and Urban Green Energy. This is the list that Wing Power wants to best with their turbine that combines the savonius and darrieus design into one technology, allowing it to operate very efficiently in low and high wind speed. This design is already being utilized on the micro wind scale to further the reach of cellphones.

?We believe that verticals will ultimately rule the day and replace horizontals because of their innate benefits,? says Ruda pitching his concept. ?One of our missions is to prove this theory by starting with modeling 100 kilowatt capacity turbines and then moving to megawatt.?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=82d3ed71eab121ec7ff8abd82e4267c3

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Beer's bitter compounds could help brew new medicines

Jan. 29, 2013 ? Researchers employing a century-old observational technique have determined the precise configuration of humulones, substances derived from hops that give beer its distinctive flavor.

That might not sound like a big deal to the average brewmaster, but the findings overturn results reported in scientific literature in the last 40 years and could lead to new pharmaceuticals to treat diabetes, some types of cancer and other maladies.

"Now that we have the right results, what happens to the bitter hops in the beer-brewing process makes a lot more sense," said Werner Kaminsky, a University of Washington research associate professor of chemistry.

Kaminsky is the lead author of a paper describing the findings, published this month in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

There is documentation that beer and its bittering acids, in moderation, have beneficial effects on diabetes, some forms of cancer, inflammation and perhaps even weight loss.

Kaminsky used a process called X-ray crystallography to figure out the exact structure of those acids, humulone molecules and some of their derivatives, produced from hops in the brewing process. That structure is important to researchers looking for ways to incorporate those substances, and their health effects, into new pharmaceuticals.

Humulone molecules are rearranged during the brewing process to contain a ring with five carbon atoms instead of six. At the end of the process two side groups are formed that can be configured in four different ways -- both groups can be above the ring or below, or they can be on opposite sides.

Which of the forms the molecule takes determines its "handedness," Kaminsky said, and that is important for understanding how a particular humulone will react with another substance. If they are paired correctly, they will fit together like a nut and bolt.

If paired incorrectly, they might not fit together at all or it could be like placing a right hand into a left-handed glove. That could produce disastrous results in pharmaceuticals.

Kaminsky cited thalidomide, which has a number of safe uses but was famously used to treat morning sickness in pregnant women in the late 1950s and early 1960s before it was discovered to cause birth defects. Molecule "handedness" in one form of the drug was responsible for the birth defects, while the orientation of molecules in another form did not appear to have the negative effects.

To determine the configuration of humulones formed in the brewing process, coauthors Jan Urban, Clinton Dahlberg and Brian Carroll of KinDex Therapeutics, a Seattle pharmaceutical firm that funded the research, recovered acids from the brewing process and purified them.

They converted the humulones to salt crystals and sent them to Kaminsky, who used X-ray crystallography -- a technique developed in the early 20th century -- to determine the exact configuration of the molecules.

"Now that we know which hand belongs to which molecule, we can determine which molecule goes to which bitterness taste in beer," Kaminsky said.

The authors point out that while "excessive beer consumption cannot be recommended to propagate good health, isolated humulones and their derivatives can be prescribed with documented health benefits."

Some of the compounds have been shown to affect specific illnesses, Kaminsky said, while some with a slight difference in the arrangement of carbon atoms have been ineffective.

The new research sets the stage for finding which of those humulones might be useful in new compounds to be used as medical treatments.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Washington.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Jan Urban, Clinton J. Dahlberg, Brian J. Carroll, Werner Kaminsky. Absolute Configuration of Beer?s Bitter Compounds. Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2013; 52 (5): 1553 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201208450

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/-SRPSXQJGt8/130129130849.htm

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Holocaust Edition: 'The Sources Speak'

Holocaust Edition: 'The Sources Speak' [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Marco Finetti
marco.finetti@dfg.de
49-228-885-2230
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

New radio series from Bayerischer Rundfunk publicizes documents from DFG Research Project on the persecution and genocide of Jews / 16 episodes on radio and online

This press release is available in German.

A collection of historical documents from a major project funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) will be made publicly available over the next several months and years. On 25 January 2013, German radio broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk will launch a 'documentary audio edition' entitled Die Quellen sprechen ('The Sources Speak'). The series of 16 episodes, to be broadcast on radio and made available online, will present hundreds of letters, diary entries, decrees, orders, newspaper reports and other texts documenting the persecution and genocide of European Jews between 1933 and 1945. The documents, read by contemporary witnesses and actors, are part of the Holocaust Edition, a project funded by the DFG since 2004.

The Holocaust Edition is the most comprehensive and representative collection and scholarly review anywhere in the world of documents relating to the persecution and genocide of Jews by National Socialist Germany. The project is supported by four research institutions: the Department of Modern and Contemporary History at the University of Freiburg, the Institute of Contemporary History based in Munich, the German Federal Archives, and the Department of Central and Eastern European History at the Freie Universitt Berlin. The DFG is funding this undertaking as one of its long-term projects, which allow individual research projects in the humanities and social sciences to be funded for a longer period than would be possible through individual grants.

From a scholarly point of view, the Holocaust Edition is particularly significant in several ways: most of the documents are being made available for the first time, and the project brings together many well known but previously scattered published testimonies. The selection of documents does not concentrate on the perpetrators but focuses primarily on the victims. The full geographic extent of the Holocaust is covered, including the countries of eastern and southern Europe. The Edition consists of 16 volumes, of which six have been published so far by the Oldenbourg-Verlag. There are also plans to produce an English version, which will be published as part of the Holocaust studies of the Yad Vashem.

In addition to the importance of the project to research, the researchers involved were committed from the beginning to making the documents available to a wider audience, for example through public readings and events. This was one of the reasons for the 'documentary audio edition', which was produced by Bayerischer Rundfunk in partnership with the Institute of Contemporary History and will be broadcast in four seasons between now and 2017.

The first season will include documents from the German Reich (1933-1941), the Reich Protectorate (1939-1941) and Poland (1939-1941). Most of the texts are presented by actors Matthias Brandt and Bibiana Beglau, with some documents being read by Holocaust survivors such as literary critic Marcel Reich-Ranicki and author and painter Max Mannheimer. The readings will be accompanied by additional broadcasts in which researchers from the project and a large number of contemporary witnesses tell their stories. All the broadcasts will be permanently available on the internet along with additional material.

To mark the launch of the series, a special event will be held at the Jewish Community Centre in Munich on 24 January 2013 and include a reading of selected documents. Guests will include the President of the DFG, Prof. Peter Strohschneider. He describes the Holocaust Edition as "both a first-class scholarly achievement and a contribution to the attempt to restore to the victims of the Holocaust their identity and thus their dignity. As a research funding organisation we are very pleased that this attempt is receiving such unusual media attention and coverage."

###

Further Information

Detailed information about the series and broadcast dates is available at: www.br.de/radio/bayern2/sendungen/hoerspiel-und-medienkunst/schwerpunkte/die-quellen-sprechen-116.html

The radio programmes and documents can be downloaded from a website from 25 February 2013: http://die-quellen-sprechen.de/

Detailed information about the project 'The Persecution and Genocide of European Jews by National Socialist Germany 1933-1945' (the 'Holocaust Edition') is available at: www.edition-judenverfolgung.de/neu/

DFG programme contact for the Holocaust Edition:
Dr. Guido Lammers, Humanities and Social Sciences Division, Tel. +49 228 885-2295, Guido.Lammers@dfg.de

Media contact:
Marco Finetti, Head of DFG Press and Public Relations, Tel. +49 228 885-2230, Marco.Finetti@dfg.de



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Holocaust Edition: 'The Sources Speak' [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Marco Finetti
marco.finetti@dfg.de
49-228-885-2230
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

New radio series from Bayerischer Rundfunk publicizes documents from DFG Research Project on the persecution and genocide of Jews / 16 episodes on radio and online

This press release is available in German.

A collection of historical documents from a major project funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) will be made publicly available over the next several months and years. On 25 January 2013, German radio broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk will launch a 'documentary audio edition' entitled Die Quellen sprechen ('The Sources Speak'). The series of 16 episodes, to be broadcast on radio and made available online, will present hundreds of letters, diary entries, decrees, orders, newspaper reports and other texts documenting the persecution and genocide of European Jews between 1933 and 1945. The documents, read by contemporary witnesses and actors, are part of the Holocaust Edition, a project funded by the DFG since 2004.

The Holocaust Edition is the most comprehensive and representative collection and scholarly review anywhere in the world of documents relating to the persecution and genocide of Jews by National Socialist Germany. The project is supported by four research institutions: the Department of Modern and Contemporary History at the University of Freiburg, the Institute of Contemporary History based in Munich, the German Federal Archives, and the Department of Central and Eastern European History at the Freie Universitt Berlin. The DFG is funding this undertaking as one of its long-term projects, which allow individual research projects in the humanities and social sciences to be funded for a longer period than would be possible through individual grants.

From a scholarly point of view, the Holocaust Edition is particularly significant in several ways: most of the documents are being made available for the first time, and the project brings together many well known but previously scattered published testimonies. The selection of documents does not concentrate on the perpetrators but focuses primarily on the victims. The full geographic extent of the Holocaust is covered, including the countries of eastern and southern Europe. The Edition consists of 16 volumes, of which six have been published so far by the Oldenbourg-Verlag. There are also plans to produce an English version, which will be published as part of the Holocaust studies of the Yad Vashem.

In addition to the importance of the project to research, the researchers involved were committed from the beginning to making the documents available to a wider audience, for example through public readings and events. This was one of the reasons for the 'documentary audio edition', which was produced by Bayerischer Rundfunk in partnership with the Institute of Contemporary History and will be broadcast in four seasons between now and 2017.

The first season will include documents from the German Reich (1933-1941), the Reich Protectorate (1939-1941) and Poland (1939-1941). Most of the texts are presented by actors Matthias Brandt and Bibiana Beglau, with some documents being read by Holocaust survivors such as literary critic Marcel Reich-Ranicki and author and painter Max Mannheimer. The readings will be accompanied by additional broadcasts in which researchers from the project and a large number of contemporary witnesses tell their stories. All the broadcasts will be permanently available on the internet along with additional material.

To mark the launch of the series, a special event will be held at the Jewish Community Centre in Munich on 24 January 2013 and include a reading of selected documents. Guests will include the President of the DFG, Prof. Peter Strohschneider. He describes the Holocaust Edition as "both a first-class scholarly achievement and a contribution to the attempt to restore to the victims of the Holocaust their identity and thus their dignity. As a research funding organisation we are very pleased that this attempt is receiving such unusual media attention and coverage."

###

Further Information

Detailed information about the series and broadcast dates is available at: www.br.de/radio/bayern2/sendungen/hoerspiel-und-medienkunst/schwerpunkte/die-quellen-sprechen-116.html

The radio programmes and documents can be downloaded from a website from 25 February 2013: http://die-quellen-sprechen.de/

Detailed information about the project 'The Persecution and Genocide of European Jews by National Socialist Germany 1933-1945' (the 'Holocaust Edition') is available at: www.edition-judenverfolgung.de/neu/

DFG programme contact for the Holocaust Edition:
Dr. Guido Lammers, Humanities and Social Sciences Division, Tel. +49 228 885-2295, Guido.Lammers@dfg.de

Media contact:
Marco Finetti, Head of DFG Press and Public Relations, Tel. +49 228 885-2230, Marco.Finetti@dfg.de



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-01/df-hed012913.php

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Today on New Scientist: 29 January 2013

Creatures of the air caught in the mist

Photographer Todd Forsgren uses mist nets to briefly ensnare a variety of tropical South American birds before releasing them, unharmed

Drug reduces enlarged prostate with few side effects

Shrinking enlarged prostates by blocking a potent growth factor could avoid problems - such as erectile dysfunction - that accompany current treatments

Climate change blamed for Australia's extreme weather

Floods have hit the east coast of Australia before recent bush fires have been put out, giving people a taste of climate change's possible consequences

Midnight sun: How to get 24-hour solar power

Rust may be the scourge of electronics but it could help solar power run all night

The most beautiful explanations

The 2012 Edge questions asked for great thinkers' favourite explanations. This Explains Everything collects them all into a fascinating read

Netted Costa Rican birds pay small price for art

Only mildly traumatic, mist nets offer an easy and safe way to catch birds for artistic, and ecological, study

Iran launches monkey into space

The Iranian Space Agency claims to have launched a rhesus monkey into space on a sub-orbital flight, and returned it safely to Earth

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Taye Diggs Stops Home Invasion, Chases Down Intruder

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/01/taye-diggs-stops-home-invasion-chases-down-intruder/

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Allysia Finley: Mickelson and the Sports Star Tax Migration (WSJ)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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1 killed in clashes in Egyptian capital

CAIRO (AP) ? Health and security officials say a protester has been killed in clashes between rock-throwing demonstrators and police near Tahrir Square in central Cairo.

The officials say the protester died Monday on the way to the hospital after being shot. It is the first fatality in Cairo since clashes erupted around Friday's second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.

The death takes to at least 56 the number of people killed in Egypt's latest bout of political turmoil.

It also comes one day after the country's Islamist president declared a state of emergency in three provinces worst hit by the violence and vowed to deal "firmly and forcefully" with the unrest roiling the country.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to brief the media.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/1-killed-clashes-egyptian-capital-130848966.html

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A Congress That Does Things? Immigration Reform Makes Huge Bipartisan Progress

bipartisan-150x115The new Congress is showing signs that it may finally leave behind its old habit of doing nothing: A gang of eight senators from both parties has outlined a framework for comprehensive immigration reform. While progress could get bogged down in details as the legislation comes together, the bipartisan love fest bodes well for tech companies eager to hire more high-skilled immigrants.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/xjW2-dNxf-Y/

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Inside 'Teen Mom 2? Star Leah Calvert's Baby Shower! ? The ...

Baby Shower

Leah sporting an adorable "Mom-to-Be" sash!

Teen Mom 2 star Leah Messer Calvert is anxiously awaiting the birth of her third child next month, but her friends and family gathered today to celebrate the impending arrival with a baby shower!

Although Leah, who is expecting a little girl with her husband of nearly one year, Jeremy Calvert, arrived a tad late for her own shower, things seemed to go off wonderfully. The shower was planned by Leah?s mom, Dawn and Jeremy?s mom, Tammy.?

The Ashley has learned that there was a strict ?No Camera? policy at the shower. After a family ?friend? snuck a camera into Leah?s twins? birthday party one year and then sold the photos to a tabloid, Leah and her mom didn?t want to take any chances.

The Ashley has also learned that the shower was not captured by MTV cameras or attended by any of the show?s production staff, so fans will not get a chance to see this play out on ?Teen Mom 2.? Also missing were Leah?s ?Teen Mom 2? co-stars Kail Lowry, Chelsea Houska and Jenelle Evans.

Congrats to Leah and Jeremy!

(Photo: Facebook)

Source: http://theashleysrealityroundup.com/2013/01/26/inside-teen-mom-2-star-leah-calverts-baby-shower/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=inside-teen-mom-2-star-leah-calverts-baby-shower

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Couponfreestuff: Ancestry.com 25% off Family Tree Maker

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Victims of Nazi anatomists named

Liane Berkowitz was just 19 years old when she was executed by the Nazis.

She was arrested by the Gestapo in 1942 when they caught her putting up posters that displayed messages of protest against an exhibition of Nazi propaganda. She was pregnant at the time of her arrest, but this just led to her execution being postponed until after the birth of her child.

Liane's grim story did not end in her death; her body was one of thousands that were delivered to anatomists and used for dissection and experimentation.

The identity of victims who met this same fate is now coming to light thanks to researchers who are scouring legal records to identify the victims of Nazi terror who ended up on anatomists' dissection tables.

Liane was one of 182 people whose corpses were claimed by the anatomy researcher Hermann Stieve, who, at the time, was a leading anatomist at the University of Berlin.

The full names of the people on "Stieve's list" - the vast majority of whom were women - has now been published by Dr Sabine Hildebrandt, a German-born anatomist based at the University of Michigan.

"Stieve himself put this list together in 1946," explained Dr Hildebrandt, who has been investigating the history of German anatomy for a decade. Stieve's own thorough record of his macabre work has enabled her to identify his victims.

Stieve's crimes have been exposed, but Dr Hildebrandt has now focused her efforts of telling the stories of his victims.

"I wanted to find out who these people were," Dr Hildebrandt told the BBC. "I wanted to make them known again."

'Doomed women'

Stieve was interested particularly in reproductive anatomy; a key reason why so many victims on his list were women.

"Before 1933, he was able to source the bodies of executed men, but no women; Germany was not executing women."

"Then, suddenly, during the Third Reich, women were being executed too."

About half of these women, including Liane Berkowitz, were executed for treason; some were betrayed to the Gestapo by fellow citizens for airing their anti-Nazi politics.

William Seidelman, former professor of medicine at the University of Toronto, has also spent years uncovering links between "medicine and murder" in the Third Reich.

In a 1999 paper in Dimensions: A Journal of Holocaust Studies he revealed some of the details of how Stieve worked closely with the prison in Berlin where prisoners were executed.

"When a woman of reproductive age was due to be executed, Stieve was informed, a date of execution was decided upon, and the prisoner told the scheduled date of her death," wrote Prof Seidelman.

"Stieve was particularly interested in the effects of stress and psychological trauma on the doomed woman's menstrual pattern.

"Upon the woman's execution, her pelvic organs were removed for examination. Stieve published reports based on those studies without hesitation or apology."

Stieve referred to the organs he used as "material". His publications during this time were some of the first to suggest that stress - in the form of being sentenced to death - disrupted a woman's menstrual cycle.

In a mission to reveal the human lives behind this "material", Dr Hildebrandt studied through the personal files of Stieve's victims, which are held at the Memorial Site for the German Resistance in Berlin.

She cross-checked each file against a copy of Stieve's list that is on file at the German Ministry of Justice, identifying every person on the list.

Continue reading the main story

Nazi experiments

  • According to medical historian Paul Weindling, almost 25,000 victims of Nazi scientific experiments have now been identified.
  • Dr Weindling says there were different "phases" to the Nazi's experiments. The first was linked to eugenics and forced sterilisation.
  • The second phase coincided with the start of the war. "Doctors began experimenting on patients in psychiatric hospitals," Prof Weindling writes in a BBC report. "Sporadic experiments were made in concentration camps like Sachsenhausen near Berlin, and anthropological observations at Dachau."
  • The third phase began in 1942, when the SS and German military took greater control of the experiments. There was a surge in the numbers of experiments, with lethal diseases including malaria and louse-borne typhus administered to thousands of victims.
  • During a fourth phase in 1944-45, explains Dr Weindling, "scientists knew the war was lost but they continued their experiments".

Dr Hildebrandt noted the correct spelling of the names of the 174 women and eight men on the list, their exact dates of birth and death, their nationality, the reason for their execution and any other biographical information she could find.

Some of the files contained personal letters expressing final wishes of condemned prisoners. "Some of them expressed wishes to be reunited with their families in death," said Dr Hildebrandt.

One letter by Libertas Schulze-Boysen, a German-born resistance fighter who was once a member of the Nazi party, but left in 1937 and went on join the resistance and collect photographic evidence documenting National Socialist crimes of violence.

Libertas was arrested in September 1942 and sentenced to death for treason in December of the same year.

In a letter to her mother, she wrote: ''As a last wish I have asked that my 'material substance' be left to you. If possible, bury me in a beautiful place amidst sunny nature.''

Dark history

Dr Hildenbrandt said that her research made it "painfully clear" how little anatomists at the time were interested in the fate of the people whose bodies they were dissecting.

This left German anatomical research tainted by association.

Of the 31 anatomical departments at universities in Germany and its occupied territories between 1933 and 1945, Dr Hildebrandt found that "all of them - without exception - received bodies of the executed from execution chambers".

The issue only came to public attention in the past two decades.

Prof Seidelman explained that, in 1989, an anatomy lecturer at the University of Tubingen indicated that specimens he was showing were from Russian or Polish slave labourers executed during the Third Reich.

Prof Seidelman told the BBC: "The students were dismayed and demanded an explanation."

The university held a formal investigation, and all anatomy specimens of "suspect or uncertain origin" were buried in a special section of the Tubingen cemetery and, on July 8, 1990, a commemorative ceremony was held.

Continue reading the main story

Pernkopf's Atlas: A textbook tainted by Nazi association

  • Eduard Pernkopf, chairman of anatomy at the University of Vienna between 1933 and 1945, was a member of the Nazi party whose sourcing of executed prisoners for dissections is on permanent record in his now infamous anatomical atlas.
  • The detailed illustrations in anatomical atlas that Pernkopf produced made it famous among anatomy students.
  • Pernkopf worked 18-hour days dissecting corpses while a team of artists created the images; he worked for over two decades on the book.
  • AS Sabine Hildebrandt revealed in a 2006 paper in the journal Clinical anatomy, as well as confirming Pernkopf's strong affiliation to the Nazi party, this project "revealed the delivery of at least 1,377 bodies of executed persons to the Anatomical Institute of Vienna" during the Third Reich. "The possible use of these bodies as models cannot be excluded for up to half of the approximately 800 plates in the atlas."

Several universities, have carried out formal investigations into their own anatomy departments' procurement of bodies during the Third Reich.

Many institutes in Austria were also involved, notably the University of Vienna.

"The University of Vienna had a special streetcar hearse that delivered the cadavers from the execution chamber of the regional court to the anatomy institute," explained Prof Seidelman.

Eduard Pernkopf, who was chairman of anatomy there between 1933 and 1945, left a printed legacy in the form of a now infamous anatomy tome. It is now understood that many of the incredibly detailed illustrations in Pernkopf's atlas depicted the bodies of victims of Nazi terror.

Prof Seidelman said that researchers were at the "very early stage of the journey of revealing the stories of those humans who became 'experimental material'".

"They became inanimate objects," he added.

Dr Hildebrandt agrees that the issue still casts a shadow on anatomy today, and while a great deal has been published about the crimes of the perpetrators, "German post-war anatomy was built in part on the bodies of [the] victims".

She added: "It's time to return the names to the numbers - to give faces and biographies to the so far anonymous victims of anatomy in the Third Reich in order to remember and honour their humanity and the iniquities they had to endure."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-21086388#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Celebs now fashionable targets in hoax 911 calls

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Celebrities have long contended with the occasional downsides of stardom ? tabloid scandals, stalkers, box office bombs, the paparazzi. Now, add "swatting" to the list ? a prank that sends police charging to the gates of stars' homes on false reports of gunmen, hostages or other crimes in progress.

Instead of bad guys, responding officers, police dogs, helicopters and sometimes SWAT teams have found only stunned domestic and security staff unaware of any trouble ? because there wasn't any.

The recent hoax 911 calls to the homes of Tom Cruise, Justin Bieber, Ashton Kutcher, Chris Brown and other stars are leading authorities to eye some 911 calls with extra suspicion and lawmakers to call for stiffer penalties for the pranksters.

"This is a very vexing problem that needs to be fixed at the early stages," said California State Sen. Ted Lieu, who is proposing tough consequences, including hefty fines, for those caught swatting. "If this isn't resolved, this will result in a tragic situation."

Swatting is the rare trend that actually didn't start in Hollywood. Authorities in Dallas, Washington state, Alabama and elsewhere have arrested teens and young men for bogus 911 calls that have drawn large police responses and in some cases, resulted in innocent people being detained by police.

The term comes from the pranksters' desire to have heavily armed special weapons teams dispatched to their calls. That doesn't always happen, but the calls tie up resources ranging from dispatchers, patrol officers, helicopters, detectives and cyber-crime specialists.

The Beverly Hills Police Department estimated more than half of its emergency resources were occupied with the Cruise swatting call on Jan. 17. It was just one of a rash of calls aimed at celebrities over the next several days, including a false claim there was a domestic violence incident at Brown's home.

"We're getting much better at deciphering what is real and what is not," said Steve Whitmore, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. The agency has handled calls at Bieber's home and a former Kardashian family home.

Patrol units will check out every call but will hold off calling in the big guns until signs of an actual crime emerge, he said.

Authorities in the Los Angeles area are concerned that the high-profile calls against stars are inspiring copycats who perhaps notice the immediate attention swatting incidents command on tabloid news sites.

Los Angeles police Cmdr. Andrew Smith said the department has seen an increase in the number of swatting calls since last year, when stars such as Kutcher, Bieber and Cyrus were targeted.

"People are jumping on the bandwagon thinking it's funny or a clever or interesting," Smith said. The calls aren't just tying up patrol officers, but also investigators probing the pranks who could be assigned to larger crimes.

"The last thing we want to have our detectives do is spend a bunch of time on a foolish prank like this," he said. "We want our detective handling robberies, burglaries and other crimes."

Police arrested a 12-year-old boy in December who is suspected of placing swatting calls at numerous homes, including Kutcher's. That call brought out many heavily-armed officers and prompted the actor to leave the set of "Two and a Half Men" to make sure his home and workers were safe.

Prosecutors are still evaluating potential charges against the boy.

"If we catch you, and we're going to catch you, you're going to be prosecuted," Smith said. "We've got some pretty clever detectives in this department. They'll find out who did these things."

There are also concerns that swatting will lead officers to treat certain 911 calls differently.

"At some point, we don't want law enforcement to feel like this is another cry-wolf situation," Lieu said.

Smith said that's a possibility, but he said officers are being told to treat all 911 calls with caution, even if they know they're traveling to a celebrity's home and the call has the traits of a prank.

The California bill, which is also being proposed by Assemblyman Mike Gatto, would increase the penalties for convicted swatters to up to three years in jail if someone was hurt as a result of their call, and also make them responsible for the costs of the emergency response.

Whitmore and Smith said they did not have precise estimates for how much swatting calls cost, and it does not appear any agency is tracking the phenomenon nationwide.

The term swatting was coined by the Dallas FBI office a few years ago after its agents busted a group responsible for 60 hoax calls around the nation. The group's leader was sentenced to more than five years in prison and ordered to pay more than $75,000 in fines, although most swatting calls are handled by local authorities.

Hoaxers often use a computer and programs available online to trick 911 systems into thinking the distress calls are coming from the address where officers are dispatched, even though the prankster may be miles, or several states, away.

Although the use of Internet phone providers can make it harder to track the callers, "nothing on the internet is ever terribly secret," Smith said. "There's always going to be a trail,"

Spoofing a phone number is legal and used for many legitimate business purposes, but it has become a favorite technique of pranksters to harass strangers or send pizza deliverymen or locksmiths to unwitting targets' homes.

Dr. John Grohol, a research psychologist who studies internet behavior and founded the online community PsychCentral.com, said the motivation for celebrity swatting may be rooted in the hoaxers desire to impact the stars' lives and gain notoriety for themselves in online communities.

"You have to kind of look at it from the perspective that most people don't have a lot of opportunity to affect a celebrity's life directly," Grohol said. "This is a way that a person can feel empowered."

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/celebs-now-fashionable-targets-hoax-911-calls-150505911.html

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Ethics & OED: Practitioner Discipline at the USPTO July/Aug. 2012 ...

In addition to discussing the impact of the America Invents Act on ethics, specifically from a malpractice standpoint, I will also discuss the enforcement efforts of the Office of Enrollment and Discipline (OED) during 2012.

An odd order sequencing I know, but with great energy and certainty that I wouldn?t run out of time I set out to ambitiously review the 48 disciplinary actions taken by OED during 2o12. Then as the calendar started to no longer be an alley I thought that perhaps I should work my way backwards.

With this in mind, what follows is discussion of the two disciplinary proceedings undertaken by the USPTO during the months of July and August 2012. There were no OED disciplinary decisions from September 2012.

Hugh D. Jaeger of Wayzata, Minnesota, is an attorney licensed ?to practice in both Minnesota and Pennsylvania. ?He is also a registered patent attorney (Registration No. 27,270). The Supreme Court of Minnesota suspended Jaeger for violating various Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct for neglecting client matters, signing documents without consent, failing to return client files and failing to cooperate with the disciplinary investigation into his actions. ?In what was essentially a negotiated resolution, the August 11, 2011?Order of the Supreme Court of Minnesota indefinitely suspended Jaeger for a minimum of 120 days and ordered that he be placed on inactive status (i.e., retired) following the end of his suspension period. The Supreme Court of Minnesota Order also notes that Jaeger agreed not to apply for reinstatement to practice in Minnesota and that he would not apply for admission (or readmission) to any other bar in any other jurisdiction. As the result of this Minnesota proceeding Jaeger was also similarly ordered suspended by Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.

The USPTO issued a Notice and Order Under 37 CFR 11.24, which gave Jaeger 40 days to respond. No response was forthcoming. Thus, as the result of this?reciprocal disciplinary proceeding, the USPTO suspended Jaeger for a minimum of 120 days. After serving the 120 day suspension, the OED Order suggests that he may request reinstatement pursuant to 37 CFR ? 11.60 for the sole purpose of being placed on voluntary inactive status. The OED order, similar to the Order of the Supreme Court of Minnesota, forbids Jaeger from being restored to active status as a member of the patent bar. ?Thus, for all intents and purposes Jaeger was disbarred.

If you read through disciplinary orders from OED you start to become familiar with the language used and the penalties handed out. This effective disbarment of Jaeger is peculiar in ways, but illustrative of what we see over and over again in other ways. It is peculiar for the Office to invite reinstatement only for the purpose of voluntarily going on inactive status. That, however, seems perfectly consistent with the Order of the Supreme Court of Minnesota. Thus, once again we see that the discipline handed out by the State will be equivalent to the discipline ordered by the USPTO in a reciprocal disciplinary proceeding.

Reading between the lines, and based on a 27,270 registration number, it seems that Jaeger was at or near the end of his career anyway. In order to get this disciplinary matter to go away he essentially agreed never to practice law again. In return the States of Minnesota, Pennsylvania and the USPTO will allow Jaeger to end his practice career as ?retired inactive? rather than disbarred.

?

In the Matter of Anthony J. De Laurentis (August 1, 2012)

Anthony J. De Laurentis (Registration No. 24,757) was disbarred on consent from practicing law in Maryland for participating in a conspiracy to suppress completion in three auction sales of tax liens throughout the state of Maryland in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act (15 U.S.C. ? 1). He was not criminally charged, recognized his wrongful conduct and voluntarily terminated his participation in the conspiracy. De Laurentis also fully cooperated in an investigation by the United States Department of Justice that culminated in the indictment and conviction of his co-conspirators.

The USPTO issued a Notice and Order Under 37 CFR 11.24, which gave De Laurentis 40 days to respond. No response was forthcoming. Thus, as the result of this?reciprocal disciplinary proceeding, the USPTO excluded De Laurentis from practice for violating 37 CFR 10.23(a) and (b) as the result of being disbarred in the States of Maryland. Rule 10.23(a) is the one that prohibits a practitioner from engaging in ?disreputable or gross misconduct.?

Rule 10.23(b) lists various things not to do. There are any number of sections of 10.23(b) that, could fit. The closest fits seems to be:

  • 10.23(b)(3), which prohibits a practitioner from engaging in ?illegal conduct involveing moral turpitude.?
  • 10.23(b)(4), which prohibits a practitioner from engaging in ?conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.?
  • 10.23(b)(6), which prohibits a practitioner from engaging in ?any other conduct that adversely reflects on the practitioner?s?fitness to practice before the Office.?

Moral of the Story: Don?t commit a crime!

?

In the Matter of Mark L. Chael (August 1, 2012)

On September 26,2011, the Supreme Court of Illinois ordered that Mark L. Chael (Registration number 44,601)?be suspended from the practice of law for six (6) months for violating Rules of Professional Conduct by attempting to charge an unreasonable fee, by engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation, and by engaging in conduct which?tends to defeat the administration of justice, or to bring the courts or the legal profession into disrepute. According to the Illinois State Bar Association website, Chael ?recorded more than 260 hours of time he falsely claimed to have spent on behalf of one of the firm?s clients during a two-month period.?

?The USPTO issued a Notice and Order Under?37 CFR 11.24, which gave Chael 40 days to respond. No response was forthcoming. Thus, as the result of this?reciprocal disciplinary proceeding, the USPTO determined that there was no genuine issue of material fact. The USPTO further determined that suspension was the appropriate discipline. Chael was suspended from the practice of patent, trademark, and non-patent law before the USPTO for a period of six (6) months for violating 37 CFR 10.23(b)(6) via 37 CFR 10.23(c)(5)(i) by having his license to practice law in the state of Illinois suspended on ethical grounds by the Supreme Court of Illinois.

The USPTO suspension was applied?nunc pro tunc. Discipline imposed?nunc pro tunc is appropriate only if?the practitioner: (1) promptly notified the OED Director of his or her suspension or disciplinaary disqualification in another jurisdiction; (2) establishes by clear and convincing evidence that the practitioner voluntarily ceased all activities related to practice before the Office; and (3) complied with all provisions of 37 CFR ? 11.58. That was found to be the case effective October 17, 2011, thus the six (6) month suspension started effective that date.

Chael was a partner with a prominent Chicago patent firm. He is no longer listed on that firm?s site.

?

In the Matter of Heather L. Mansfield (August 2, 2012)

Heather L. Mansfield of Westfield, New Jersey, was a registered patent attorney (Registration No. 39,157). The Director o f the United States Patent and Trademark Office (?USPTO? or ?Office?) has accepted Ms. Mansfield?s affidavit of resignation and ordered her exclusion on consent from the practice ofpatent, trademark, and non-patent law before Office.

Mansfield voluntarily submitted her affidavit of resignation at a time when a disciplinary investigation was pending against her, thus she is deemed to have conclusively acknowledged that her conduct violated?37 C.F.R. ?? 10.23(b)(5) and 10.23(a) via 10.23(c)(1) predicated upon certain acts that culminated in her guilty plea and conviction of one count of ?Interference with Custody of Children ? Conceal? in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Hunterdon County on January 5,2012. ?This stemmed from charges brought on March 3, 2011, by the New Jersey State Police, for Kidnapping and Interference with Custody. An Amber Alert was authorized and she was apprehended near the Canadian border. See Hunterdon County Press Release.

While Ms. Mansfield did not admit to violating any of the Disciplinary Rules of the USPTO Code of Professional Responsibility, she acknowledged that, if and when she does apply for reinstatement, the OED Director will conclusively presume, for the limited purpose of determining the application for reinstatement, that (i) the allegations set forth in the disciplinary investigation against her are true, and (ii) she could not have successfully defended herself against such allegations.

Source: http://www.ipwatchdog.com/2013/01/27/ethics-oed-practitioner-discipline-at-the-uspto-julyaug-2012/id=33860/

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Performing Arts Education Centers Opens to the District, Community ...

The LVUSD Performing Arts Education Centers (PAEC) in Agoura Hills and Calabasas kicked off their grand opening festivities Friday night in both cities.

The $44 million identical facilities, located on the Agoura Hills and Calabasas high school campuses, were entirely funded through Measure G, which passed in 2006.

"I like to describe these as 'welcome to our new classrooms,'" Dan Stenosky, LVUSD superintendent, said at the Agoura Hills site reception. "This is a cultural community assett."

The gala weekend long festival entitled "LVUSD Festival of the Arts and Education: A Grand Opening Celebration" in Agoura began the evening with a donor reception and facility tour followed by performances from the Agoura High School music program.

Agoura High Principal Larry Misel, who is retiring at the end of this year, expressed his enthusiasm over the finished product.

"This is really designed as an educational facility, so kids are not only performing, they're learning everything they'll be able to use to go right out into the world to get a job," he said.

The debut of the program is a dream long held by former superintendent Don Zimring, who attended the celebration. "This was part of the vision we had backin 1996," he said. "It took us this long to get here but we never wavered ... I was hopefully one of its strongest, loudest advocates."

The center, designed by architect John Sergio Fisher, houses a 650-seat main theater and the smaller 'black box' for educational classes and smaller productions. The state-of-the-art facility will offer the school district theater arts education, cross-curricular instruction, virtual programs, lectures, live presentations and more.

In addition, the buildings are open for rental to outside groups.

"This will be a cultural hub where the arts and education will not only enrich the students but also the greater community," said Lesli Stein, school board president.

Theater student and senior Sydney Heller, a back-stage tour guide for the evening, said she feels fortunate to be a part of this program.

"With a lot of public schools across the country cutting back on arts programs, this is really a big deal for us, because it shows that our community really respects what we do," she said.

Another unique aspect of two district theaters is the opportunity for Agoura and Calabasas to join creative forces, according to theater manager Gilles Chiasson.

"I will continue to stress the notion that students from both communities will have an opportunity to perform at both venues, regardless of where they live," he said. "I don't see the rivalry."

Box offices at both sites will offer tickets to either theater. For program information and to purchase tickets, go to the PAEC website.

Source: http://agourahills.patch.com/articles/performing-arts-and-education-center-opens-with-flourish

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Azarenka beats Li, defends Australian Open title

Victoria Azarenka of Belarus hugs her trophy after winning the women's final against China's Li Na at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Victoria Azarenka of Belarus hugs her trophy after winning the women's final against China's Li Na at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Victoria Azarenka of Belarus reacts as she celebrates her win over China's Li Na in the women's final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

China's Li Na falls for a second time during her match against Victoria Azarenka of Belarus in the women's final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

China's Li Na receives treatment to her ankle during her match against Victoria Azarenka of Belarus in the women's final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013.(AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

Victoria Azarenka of Belarus reaches for a backhand return to China's Li Na during the women's final at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)

(AP) ? Victoria Azarenka had the bulk of the crowd against her. The fireworks were fizzling out, and when she looked over the net she saw Li Na crashing to the court and almost knocking herself out.

Considering the cascading criticism she'd encountered after her previous win, Azarenka didn't need the focus of the Australian Open final to be on another medical timeout.

So after defending her title with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 victory over the sixth-seeded Li in one of the most unusual finals ever at Melbourne Park, Azarenka understandably dropped her racket and cried tears of relief late Saturday night.

She heaved as she sobbed into a towel beside the court, before regaining her composure to collect the trophy.

"It isn't easy, that's for sure, but I knew what I had to do," the 23-year-old Belarusian said. "I had to stay calm. I had to stay positive. I just had to deal with the things that came onto me."

There were a lot of those things squeezed into the 2-hour, 40-minute match. Li, who was playing her second Australian Open final in three years, twisted her ankle and tumbled to the court in the second and third sets.

The second time was on the point immediately after a 10-minute delay for the Australia Day fireworks ? a familiar fixture in downtown Melbourne on Jan. 26, but not usually coinciding with a final.

Li had been sitting in her chair during the break, while Azarenka jogged and swung her racket around before leaving the court to rub some liniment into her legs to keep warm.

The 30-year-old Chinese player had tumbled to the court after twisting her left ankle and had it taped after falling in the fifth game of the second set. Immediately after the fireworks ceased, and with smoke still in the air, she twisted the ankle again, fell and hit the back of her head on the hard court.

The 2011 French Open champion was treated immediately by a tournament doctor and assessed for a concussion in another medical timeout before resuming the match.

"I think I was a little bit worried when I was falling," Li said, in her humorous, self-deprecating fashion. "Because two seconds I couldn't really see anything. It was totally black.

"So when the physio come, she was like, 'Focus on my finger.' I was laughing. I was thinking, 'This is tennis court, not like hospital.'"

Li's injury was obvious and attracted even more support for her from the 15,000-strong crowd.

Azarenka had generated some bad PR by taking a medical timeout after wasting five match points on her own serve in her semifinal win over American teenager Sloane Stephens on Thursday. She came back after the break and finished off Stephens in the next game, later telling an on-court interviewer that she "almost did the choke of the year."

She was accused of gamesmanship and manipulating the rules to get time to regain her composure against Stephens, but defended herself by saying she actually was having difficulty breathing because of a rib injury that needed to be fixed.

That explanation didn't convince everybody. So when she walked onto Rod Laver Arena on Saturday, there were some people who booed, and others who heckled her or mimicked the distinctive hooting sound she makes when she hits the ball.

"Unfortunately, you have to go through some rough patches to achieve great things," she said. "That's what makes it so special for me. I went through that, and I'm still able to kiss that beautiful trophy."

She didn't hold a grudge.

"I was expecting way worse, to be honest. What can you do? You just have to go out there and try to play tennis in the end of the day," she said. "It's a tennis match, tennis battle, final of the Australian Open. I was there to play that.

"The things what happened in the past, I did the best thing I could to explain, and it was left behind me already."

The match contained plenty of nervy moments and tension, and 16 service breaks ? nine for Li. But it also produced plenty of winners and bravery on big points.

Azarenka will retain the No. 1 ranking she's mostly held since her first Grand Slam win in Melbourne last year.

Li moved into the top five and is heartened by a recent trend of Australian runner-ups winning the French Open. She accomplished that in 2011, as did Ana Ivanovic (2008) and Maria Sharapova (2012).

"I wish I can do the same this year, as well," Li said.

Later Saturday, Bob and Mike Bryan won their record 13th Grand Slam men's doubles title, defeating the Dutch team of Robin Haase and Igor Sijsling 6-3, 6-4.

Sunday's men's final features two-time defending champion Novak Djokovic and U.S. Open winner Andy Murray. Djokovic is seeking to become the first man in the Open era to win three titles in a row in Australia.

Azarenka was planning a night of partying to celebrate her second major title, with her friend Redfoo and the Party Rock crew, and was hopeful of scoring some tickets to the men's final.

She said she needed to let her hair down after a draining two weeks and hoped that by being more open and frank in recent times she was clearing up any misconceptions the public had of her.

"When I came first on the tour I kind of was lost a little bit," he said. "I didn't know how to open up my personality. It's very difficult when you're alone. I was independent since I was, you know, 10 years old. It was a little bit scary and I wouldn't show my personality.

"So the (last) couple of years I learned how to open up to people and to share the moments. I wasn't really good before. I hope I got better. It's your judgment."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-26-Australian%20Open/id-f48beaa7dd8f4ab68978ea7e5fd4dcfd

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