Showing posts with label heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heart. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Heart of Bismuth

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Heart of Bismuth

Monday, February 24, 2014

Germany at Heart of Europe"s Political Predicament; Squaring the Circle; When is the Breaking Point?

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Germany at Heart of Europe"s Political Predicament; Squaring the Circle; When is the Breaking Point?

Monday, January 13, 2014

Mystery Gas Cloud On Course To Enter Supermassive Black Hole At Milky Way’s Heart


Francie Diep
Popular Science
January 13, 2014


Astronomers expect a mysterious gas cloud to cross paths with the black hole at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy in the next few months.


Then, one of two things could happen. The cloud could plunge on in, throwing off intense X-rays as it goes.


Or, if the cloud contains a star that astronomers cannot currently see, the star will pass by unaffected, while some of the cloud enters the black hole less spectacularly.


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, January 13, 2014 at 2:34 pm










Infowars



Mystery Gas Cloud On Course To Enter Supermassive Black Hole At Milky Way’s Heart

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Creating From The Heart To Manifest Your Dreams

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Creating From The Heart To Manifest Your Dreams

Saturday, December 14, 2013

With a hole in its heart, South Africa buries Mandela




QUNU, South Africa Sat Dec 14, 2013 7:59pm EST





African National Congress (ANC) supporters dance while holding a cloth with the image of former South African President Nelson Mandela at the Walter Sisulu University in Mthatha December 14, 2013. REUTERS/Adrees Latif


1 of 14. African National Congress (ANC) supporters dance while holding a cloth with the image of former South African President Nelson Mandela at the Walter Sisulu University in Mthatha December 14, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Adrees Latif




QUNU, South Africa (Reuters) – The body of Nelson Mandela arrived on Saturday at his ancestral home in the rolling hills of South Africa’s Eastern Cape and was greeted by singing, dancing locals ahead of the anti-apartheid leader’s state funeral set for the following day.


As the hearse bearing South Africa’s first black president appeared on the horizon, crowds by the road broke into “Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika” (God Bless Africa), the evocative national anthem adopted after the end of apartheid in 1994.


“I’m so excited and at the same time I’m so hurt because I’m seeing him for the last time,” said grandmother Victoria Ntsingo, as military helicopters escorting the cortege clattered overhead.


“After his long life and illness he can now rest. Madiba is home. His work is done,” she said, referring to Mandela by his clan name.


Mandela, who died on December 5 aged 95, will be buried on Sunday in his family homestead at Qunu, a hamlet of a few hundred houses 700 km (450 miles) south of Johannesburg.


The state funeral will combine military pomp and the traditional rites of his Xhosa abaThembu clan.


It will be the final act in 10 days of mourning for the “Father of the Nation”, who suffered 27 years in prison before emerging to preach forgiveness and reconciliation in the quest to build a multi-racial democracy from the ashes of apartheid.


Hours before the funeral, Mandela’s friend and fellow anti-apartheid legend retired Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, 82, had initially announced he would not attend, in a row over an invitation that threatened to mar the event.


Tutu, like Mandela a Nobel Peace Prize laureate but also a vocal critic of the current South African government and of the ruling ANC party, had said he did not receive a formal invite or any indication that he was on the guest list.


But after the government clarified that he was on a guest list and was welcome to come, Tutu’s spokesman said the archbishop would travel early on Sunday to attend the funeral, averting a potential blot on the event.


“GO WELL, TATA”


Earlier on Saturday, the ANC, the 101-year-old former liberation movement to which Mandela dedicated his life, bid its own farewell in a ceremony at a Pretoria military air base.


With revolutionary songs, clenched fists and cries of “Amandla” (Power) in honor of “Comrade Mandela”, it was the most overtly political of all the ceremonies since Mandela’s death.


“Go well Tata, you have played your part,” President Jacob Zuma said in a eulogy that recalled Mandela’s life as a fighter in the armed struggle for freedom as well his later, more widely recognized role as unifier and nation-builder.


“We will always remember you,” he said, before leading the packed hall in spirited renditions of anti-apartheid anthems.


After the ANC send-off, Mandela’s body was flown by military transport plane, escorted by two fighter jets, to Mthatha, the nearest airport to Qunu. Thousands lined the streets as the hearse proceeded through the town.


Mandela’s widow, Graca Machel, and his former wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, followed the cortege, looking drained and emotional after nine days of memorials in Johannesburg and Pretoria.


The rites included three days of lying in state at the Union Buildings in Pretoria, at which more than 100,000 people queued for hours to say a last goodbye.


One of Mandela’s grandchildren, Mandla, thanked those who had come.


“I have witnessed his army. I have witnessed his people. I have witnessed ordinary South Africans who walked this long walk to freedom with him and I can assure the African National Congress today that the future of this country looks bright.”


FLAGS AND FLY-PAST


Sunday’s funeral will be attended by 4,500 people, from family members and national leaders to foreign guests including Britain’s Prince Charles and American civil rights activist Reverend Jesse Jackson.


The Air Force is expected to stage a fly-past, followed by three military helicopters with giant South African flags in tow, an echo of the historic scenes nearly two decades ago when Mandela was sworn in as president.


At a mass memorial in Johannesburg on Tuesday, Zuma was subjected to a barrage of boos and jeers from the crowd, a worrying sign for the ruling party six months before elections.


Although it is widely expected to win, the ANC is losing support even among South Africa’s black majority because of its perceived inability to tackle chronic poverty and joblessness.


Africa’s biggest economy has enjoyed strong growth since the end of apartheid, but unemployment has remained above 25 percent and it remains one of the world’s most unequal societies, with the average white household earning six times more than the average black one.


Besides the booing of Zuma, there has also been a storm of outrage over a sign-language interpreter accused of miming nonsense at the Johannesburg memorial. The signer has defended himself, saying he suffered a schizophrenic attack.


In Qunu too, there were also a few dissenting voices, mainly from those disappointed at being excluded from the funeral of man who to them was a local leader first, and a world leader second.


“Tata Mandela is a man of the people. When he was alive we used to go to his compound. Whatever was going on, we used to go in the compound and it was never a problem for the people of Qunu,” said resident Malibonwe Gamakhulu.


“And today he is dead and we are being pushed out.”


(Additional reporting by Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo, Pascal Fletcher, Ed Stoddard and Siyabonga Sishi; Writing by Ed Cropley and Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Alison Williams)





Reuters: Top News



With a hole in its heart, South Africa buries Mandela

Friday, November 22, 2013

Uranium enrichment at heart of nuclear disputes








FILE – In this April 8, 2008, file photo released by the Iranian President’s Office, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, center, listens to a technician during his visit of the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility some 200 miles (322 kilometers) south of the capital Tehran, Iran. Seven-nation talks on a deal meant to start a rollback of Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief were delayed Thursday, Nov. 21, 2013, as senior envoys from both sides wrestled with a draft they hoped would be acceptable to both Tehran and its six world powers negotiating with it. (AP Photo/Iranian Presidents office, File)





FILE – In this April 8, 2008, file photo released by the Iranian President’s Office, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, center, listens to a technician during his visit of the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility some 200 miles (322 kilometers) south of the capital Tehran, Iran. Seven-nation talks on a deal meant to start a rollback of Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief were delayed Thursday, Nov. 21, 2013, as senior envoys from both sides wrestled with a draft they hoped would be acceptable to both Tehran and its six world powers negotiating with it. (AP Photo/Iranian Presidents office, File)













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For more than a decade — through standoffs and outreach — the cornerstone of Iran’s nuclear disputes with the West has been uranium enrichment, which is the central process in turning concentrated uranium into nuclear fuel. Negotiators in Geneva must balance opposing interests: Demands by the U.S. and allies for limits and controls over how far Iran can take its program and Tehran’s insistence to maintain its self-sufficiency over every step of the nuclear process from uranium mines to reactor cores. Enrichment also is at the forefront of criticism by Israel and its backers in the West who fear leaving Iran even with the basic technology to make reactor fuel, which is the pathway for possible weapons-grade material.


___


Q: WHAT IS URANIUM ENRICHMENT?


A: It is the process of turning uranium gas feedstock into nuclear fuel. It’s done with centrifuges that separate and concentrate the uranium. About 3.5 percent enrichment is needed for an energy-producing reactor such as Iran’s Russian-build plant at Bushehr on the Persian Gulf coast. Higher levels of enrichment, about 20 percent, are needed for research reactors that produce isotopes for cancer treatment and other applications, such as agricultural to enhance fertilizers. Iran has one main research reactor.


___


Q: SO WHY THE WORRY ABOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS?


A: Because uranium enriched to 20 percent is only several steps away from being boosted to weapons-grade levels at more than 90 percent. Iran says it has no intention of building a bomb. But the West and others worry that Iran could one day start a fast-track weapons program with its stockpile of 20 percent enriched uranium or stop just short of making weapons and become a de facto nuclear armed state.


___


Q: WHY WON’T IRAN GIVE UP ENRICHMENT?


A: This is what Iran has frequently called its “red line” in the nuclear talks. Iran’s leaders say they will never relinquish control over the entire nuclear cycle as a matter of national pride. Iran portrays itself as an emerging technological giant of the Islamic world. The nuclear energy program is a pillar of Iran’s self-image as center of scientific advances independent of the West. Iran has made some other important strides, including claims of sophisticated drone development, a homegrown auto industry and an aerospace program that officials say has sent rockets to the edge of space with animals aboard.


___


Q: WHERE IS THEIR ROOM FOR COMPROMISE?


A: Iran says it could discuss capping the level of enrichment at 5 percent or lower. Such a promise would also require additional monitoring by the U.N.’s nuclear watchdogs, the International Atomic Energy Agency, which already visits many Iranian nuclear sites. Keeping the enrichment labs at lower capacities would add more time to watch for any breakout attempts at higher levels. It also would freeze the stockpile of 20 percent, currently about 200 kilograms (440 pounds). Iran also could agree to accelerate the transformation of the 20 percent enriched uranium into reactor-ready state, which effectively takes it out of the loop for further enrichment.


___


Q: IS IT POSSIBLE TO MAKE A BOMB WITH ENRICHMENT AT 5 PERCENT OR LOWER?


A: No. But Israel and others worry that giving Iran the capacity to enrich could open the door to a secret program for higher levels someday. Iran denies this.


___


Q: IS IRAN CORRECT IN CALLING ENRICHMENT A “RIGHT?”


A: Iran is a signer of the U.N.’s Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which governs the spread of atomic technology. But the document does not specifically spell out any “rights” for enrichment. Iran, however, sees its support of the treaty as granting it the “right” of enrichment. The U.S. and allies have balked at Iran’s previous demands to acknowledge the “right” of the enrichment. Instead, the West appears to support the position that Iran can continue some level of enrichment, but only under strict U.N. monitoring.


___


Q: WHEN DID IRAN START ENRICHMENT?


A: It was announced in 2006, but enrichment was part of the nuclear disputes between Iran and the West for more than a decade. In late 2003, Iran agreed to suspend its work on installing centrifuges and related facilities as part of nuclear talks with European envoys. The negotiations faltered and Iran moved ahead with its enrichment plans.


___


Q: WHERE ARE IRAN’S ENRICHMENT SITES?


A: Iran has two main uranium enrichment facilities. The oldest and largest — in Natanz, about 260 kilometers (160 miles) southeast of Tehran — is largely built underground and is surrounded by anti-aircraft batteries. Uranium enrichment began in 2006. Another site is known as Fordo, which is built into a mountainside south of Tehran. Its construction was kept secret by Iran until it was disclosed in September 2009 in a pre-emptive move before its existence was revealed by Western intelligence agencies. The area is heavily protected by the Revolutionary Guard. U.N. nuclear inspectors have visited both sides and have installed round-the-clock monitoring systems.


___


Q: HOW MANY OTHER COUNTRIES ENRICH URANIUM?


A: More than a dozen countries have enrichment programs, but several of those do not have nuclear weapons.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Uranium enrichment at heart of nuclear disputes

Monday, October 7, 2013

Such a Nice Band: The Head and the Heart

The Head And The Heart Maggie Caldwell


There is a certain sound that became popular in indie music four or five years ago that seemed to have sprung forth in reaction to the gloomy mood of the Great Recession. It is a stripped down, bombast-free, rustic folk sound popularized by such acts as The Fleet Foxes, The Great Lake Swimmers, and Mumford and Sons. The songs often feature swelling choruses and invoke a spirit that rallies against the dying of the light. This boot-strap hitching, mellow optimism also has been the hallmark of a band of six strangers from Seattle, who, through mutual admiration of each other’s talents at open mic nights around the Emerald City, agreed to join forces, record an album, and head out on the road, recession be damned.


It’s been four years since the members of The Head and the Heart released their self-produced eponymous first album, a collection of heart-on-your-sleeve, piano-driven acoustic folk songs laced with violin; rounded out by a clean, driving percussion section; and driven home by gorgeous three-part vocal harmonies. Through heavy touring and word of mouth, they’ve sold more than 10,000 copies. And when Seattle’s Sub Pop label re-released an expanded edition in 2010, The Head and the Heart’s NPR darling status was sealed.


Continue Reading »


Culture | Mother Jones



Such a Nice Band: The Head and the Heart

Saturday, September 28, 2013

United Pilot Suffers Heart Attack During Flight


A United Airlines pilot died after suffering a major heart attack while flying from Houston to Seattle, forcing crew members to make an emergency landing in Idaho while two doctors on board did CPR in the first-class cabin.


Pilot Henry Skillern, 63, of Humble, Texas, was still alive when firefighters and paramedics ran to his aid Thursday night on the Boise Airport tarmack. He died a short time later while being treated at Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center, spokeswoman Jennifer Krajnik said.


Skillern had been a pilot for United Airlines for 26 years.


Boise airport spokeswoman Patti Miller said it’s not uncommon for a medical emergency to force a plane to divert to the nearest airport. The Boise airport has had three such diversions in the past two days, she said. But it’s rare for a serious malady to strike pilots who undergo regular medical screening to keep their Federal Aviation Administration certification current.


Passengers aboard the Boeing 737-900 flown by Skillern seemed to handle the emergency well, Miller said.


“It seemed like they felt that everything that could be done, was being done,” she said. “The passengers were concerned for him, but everyone was very calm.”


Passenger Bryant Magill described a professional scene onboard.


“I’m really impressed with all the flight attendants,” Magill told Seattle TV station KOMO. “They kept themselves calm. They kept it professional. There was no panic on the plane.”


United spokeswoman Christen David declined to release details about how the crew members realized the pilot was in distress and what their next steps were. The first officer radioed air traffic controllers at 7:55 p.m. to report the aircraft needed to make an emergency landing; the plane was on the ground in Boise by 8:10 p.m., Miller said.


The two doctors and an off-duty United Airlines pilot were among the 161 people aboard the flight. The off-duty pilot aided the first officer — who is also a trained pilot — in landing the plane while the physicians performed CPR.


The doctors who helped the pilot were from Madigan Army Medical Center, said Jay Ebbeson, public affairs officer for the hospital at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.


Glenn Harmon, an aerospace physiologist who was an airline pilot for nine years before becoming a professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, said all commercial airline pilots undergo a medical screening every six months to keep their certification with the FAA.


That screening typically includes a test to measure heart function called an EKG, Harmon said, but the test doesn’t necessarily pick up every condition.


Sometimes, the in-flight environment can have a small impact on pre-existing medical conditions, Harmon said. The air on a flight is dry, usually at between 10 or 20 percent humidity, and that can contribute to dehydration.


“One thing that happens to us as pilots is we might be dehydrated and not know it,” Harmon said. “We don’t like to guzzle lots of water because it’s so complicated now to get up and leave the cockpit to go to the bathroom.”


Sitting in a cramped seating position for long periods can lead to deep vein thrombosis, or clots deep inside the body. Passengers can get up from their seats and move around to help prevent DVT, but pilots don’t get the same opportunity, Harmon said.


The cabin pressure also has a slight effect on blood oxygen levels.


Flight crews train for medical emergencies, and most airlines subscribe to a service that puts them in immediate radio contact with a doctor on the ground in case of emergencies. Additionally, all commercial flights have a first officer onboard who is trained to fly the plane in addition to the pilot. There’s often a third, off-duty pilot flying to or from work who can help in an emergency.


Even the biggest commercial aircrafts can generally be flown and landed by just one pilot, Harmon said.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



United Pilot Suffers Heart Attack During Flight

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Dr. Orlowski On Gun Violence Plea: "I Spoke From The Heart"


Lawrence O’Donnell speaks to Washington Hospital Center’s Chief Medical Officer,  Dr. Janis Orlowski, about why the Navy Yard shooting was a “senseless trauma” and why she wishes her trauma were “put out of business.”




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Dr. Orlowski On Gun Violence Plea: "I Spoke From The Heart"

Dr. Orlowski On Gun Violence Plea: "I Spoke From The Heart"


Lawrence O’Donnell speaks to Washington Hospital Center’s Chief Medical Officer,  Dr. Janis Orlowski, about why the Navy Yard shooting was a “senseless trauma” and why she wishes her trauma were “put out of business.”




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Dr. Orlowski On Gun Violence Plea: "I Spoke From The Heart"

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Pathfinders: Into the Heart of Afghanistan




Documentary which gains an unprecedented insight into the lives of the Parachute Regiment’s elite reconnaissance platoon, accompanying them on an arduous six…
Video Rating: 4 / 5




Pathfinders: Into the Heart of Afghanistan

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Shimkus undergoes heart procedure

John Shimkus is pictured. | AP Photo

Shimkus is a Republican serving Illinois’ 15th Congressional district. | AP Photo





Rep. John Shimkus is recovering from non-surgical heart procedures, after noticing an abnormal heartbeat, a press release from his office said.


The Republican who serves Illinois’ 15th Congressional district underwent an electrophysiology test, followed by an ablation Tuesday at the Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis.







The congressman will need some time to recover and so will miss House activities for the week, as well as the hearing in the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Environment and the Economy, which he chairs, the press release said.


Shimkus is expected to return back to work July 15.




POLITICO – Congress



Shimkus undergoes heart procedure

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Movie Review: ‘One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das,’ a Documentary


Meditation is a way to practice letting go of expectations. In that spirit, “One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das” is a fine enough documentary, a nice enough introduction to a charismatic figure with a fascinating life, an unusual art and worldwide fans.




But oh, what might have been. (It is an elusive goal, this letting go of expectations.)


Krishna Das is a singer of kirtan, a call-and-response chanting of, normally, names for God in Sanskrit. Some of this film’s best moments feature him performing kirtan in his low rumble for ecstatic, blissed-out audience members in churches, yoga centers and concert halls. (He sounds a bit like Eddie Vedder.) Krishna Das, also known as KD to his fans, turns 66 this month and has a busy touring schedule and several albums, including one (“Live Ananda”) nominated for a Grammy.


He was born on Long Island as Jeffrey Kagel, who grew to be a budding rocker (and almost a member of Blue Oyster Cult). As a confused seeker in the late ’60s, he met Ram Dass — also American, born Richard Alpert — who turned him toward India and Neem Karoli Baba, known to his followers as Maharajji. Mr. Kagel considered Maharajji his guru, and Maharajji gave him his new name. With his guru, the reborn Krishna Das chanted, loved and learned.


Still, Maharajji sent him back to the United States and, soon after, died. His devotee then felt lost in grief, wrestling with depression and drugs before remembering his promise to his guru: I will sing for you in America.


Yet Krishna Das, having reversed his life’s course several times, is no stereotypical mystic: He wears his Long Island heritage as closely as he does his red flannel and red T-shirts (red being popular among followers of the deity Hanuman, who practice service). Casual, humble and appealing, likely to speak obscenities as well as ideas, he is a thoughtful talker in the lengthy, medium-frame shots in this film, and the images of his youth and time in India offer some visual context.


The first-time feature director Jeremy Frindel has gathered stars of the American meditation and yoga firmament to sing the praises of Krishna Das: people like Ram Dass, Lama Surya Das (another American, born Jeffrey Miller), Sharon Salzberg, Daniel Goleman and the record producer Rick Rubin. But perhaps all those names were a distraction, because the film makes almost no room for its subject’s interactions with others. “One Track Heart” is too hagiographic to dive into messy spots, where truth tends to live. YouTube clips can offer as much insight.


A little dialogue, a little mixing it up with friends, a little picture of Krishna Das’s daily life would have gone a long way toward giving this documentary texture. Instead it’s another bunch of talking heads, and the result might fare better on the small screen.


One Track Heart


The Story of Krishna Das


Opens on Wednesday in Manhattan.


Directed and edited by Jeremy Frindel; director of photography, Mr. Frindel; music by J Mascis and Devadas; produced by Mr. Frindel and Mike Harrop; released by Zeitgeist Films. At the IFC Center, 323 Avenue of the Americas, at Third Street, Greenwich Village. Running time: 1 hour 12 minutes. This film is not rated.




NYT > Arts



Movie Review: ‘One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das,’ a Documentary