Sunday, December 18, 2011

HBT: Blue Jays reportedly make highest bid for Darvish

As we noted last night, nothing will be official until next week, but the New York Post is reporting that the Blue Jays have made the highest bid for negotiating rights for Japanese sensation Yu Darvish.

The Post reports that ?according to several sources with knowledge of the situation,? the Blue Jays owner, Rogers Communications, ordered the team to bid upwards of $40-50 million for the rights to negotiate with Darvish. If they are the winners, they would then have 30 days to get him under contract, which could cost an additional $75 million, many speculate.

The Blue Jays landing Darvish would make the AL East pretty interesting next year. The Jays were just a .500 team in 2011, but they have a core of great talent with Jose Bautista, Brett Lawrie ? who would get more than 43 games in 2012 ? and Ricky Romero.

With Darvish in the fold, the Jays would officially obtain ?frisky? status, no?

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/16/report-the-blue-jays-are-the-high-bidders-for-yu-darvish/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

All In Against Newt (talking-points-memo)

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Gadhafi killing may be war crime, ICC says

Ousted Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi was shown no mercy and brutally killed by the same people he ruled over for more than 40 years. Graphic pictures and videos captured his final moments. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

By msnbc.com saff and news services

The?slaying of former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, who was captured and killed by rebels in October, may have been a war crime, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said late Thursday.

"I think the way in which Mr Gadhafi was killed creates suspicions of ... war crimes," ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo told reporters.


"I think that's a very important issue," he said. "We are raising this concern to the national authorities and they are preparing a plan to have a comprehensive strategy to investigate all these crimes."

Under pressure from Western allies, Libya's National Transitional Council has promised to investigate how Gadhafi and his son?Muatassim were killed.

Cell phone footage showed both alive after their capture. The former Libyan leader was seen being mocked, beaten and abused before he died.?NTC officials said crossfire was to blame for his death.

A lawyer for Gadhafi's daughter said on Wednesday he had written to the ICC to ask if an investigation had been launched into the killing of her father and brother.

Patrick Baz / AFP - Getty Images, file

A defaced portrait of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is pictured in Tripoli on September 1.

A copy of the letter, seen by Reuters, said that Mommar Gadhafi and?Muatassim were "murdered in the most horrific fashion with their bodies thereafter displayed and grotesquely abused in complete defiance of Islamic law."

Story: Gadhafi daughter seeks ICC probe into his killing

The U.N. Security Council referred Gadhafi's crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators to the ICC in February and authorized military intervention to protect civilians in March. The ICC indicted Gaddafi, his son Saif al-Islam and the former intelligence chief for war crimes.

Saif al-Islam is now in the custody of the Libyan authorities who have said they plan to try in him in Libya instead of handing him over to The Hague-based ICC. Moreno-Ocampo has said this was possible.

Story: Libya can try Gadhafi's son, Seif

Moreno-Ocampo has also said he was investigating allegations that the anti-Gadhafi forces and NATO were also guilty of war crimes during the civil war.

40,000 killed?
Meanwhile, Libya's new interim government, which has been in control of the oil-producing OPEC member since Gadhafi fled Tripoli in August, estimates that more than 40,000 Libyans were killed during the country's civil war.

"Gadhafi was responsible for these deaths," Libyan U.N. envoy Ibrahim Dabbashi told Reuters on Thursday.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., tells TODAY's Savannah Guthrie says it would have been better if former Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, who was brutally murdered Thursday by the people he ruled over for more than 40 years, had been hauled off to an international criminal court to be held accountable for his crimes.

His comments came in response to calls by New York-based campaigners for NATO to investigate its role in the deaths of civilians during the civil war.

Fred Abrahams of Human Rights Watch (HRW), a rights advocacy group, is in Libya and has been investigating several dozen civilian casualties allegedly caused by NATO.

Abrahams has been investigating the matter to determine as precisely as possible how many civilians were killed by the NATO airstrikes, which began in March and ceased in October.

"By our count, up to 50 civilians died in the (NATO) campaign, perhaps more," Abrahams told Reuters.

"We're not alleging unlawful attacks, let alone war crimes," he said. "We believe the onus is on NATO to investigate these cases thoroughly so they can identify and correct the mistakes."

He urged NATO to consider compensation "as appropriate."

However, Libya's government has not asked NATO to investigate.

"There is no need for a NATO investigation," Dabbashi said. "Usually it is acceptable that there will be some civilian casualties because of some errors."

A press officer at NATO said the alliance was unaware of any reports from rights groups but was ready to receive them.

More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/16/9489841-gadhafi-killing-may-be-war-crime-icc-prosecutor-says

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Friday, December 16, 2011

NASA Developing Comet Harpoon For Sample Return

An anonymous reader writes "NASA appears to have decided that the best way to grab a sample of a rotating comet that is racing through the inner solar system at up to 150,000 miles per hour while spewing chunks of ice, rock and dust may be to avoid the risky business of landing on it. Instead, researchers want to send a spacecraft to rendezvous with a comet, then fire a harpoon to rapidly acquire samples from specific locations with surgical precision while hovering above the target."

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/xSJ2gI-lX5k/nasa-developing-comet-harpoon-for-sample-return

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How Uber Is Launching In Its Newest City, Washington, DC

dc-lightsMy girlfriend: We're late. We need to get a cab to the [Thanksgiving] dinner. Me: I just talked to the cab company and they're going to take forever. I'm trying Uber. Her: There's no Uber in DC. Me [checks app]: Oh, look, there is! The car will be here in 10 minutes.? And that's how I discovered that Uber is launching in Washington, DC. Today, it's announcing to the capital that it's ready for business, having spent?the last month recruiting drivers, testing routes and everything else that goes into opening up in a new area.?I recently talked to Rachel Holt, who's leading Uber DC, to get some more details about how the company has worked out this expansion.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/dZ0uSzP7c-8/

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Davis' block lifts No. 1 Kentucky over No. 5 UNC (AP)

LEXINGTON, Ky. ? Pushed and pressured all day, Anthony Davis finally went somewhere else no one could on the floor. Up.

The freshman soared to block John Henson's shot in the final seconds and No. 1 Kentucky held on to beat No. 5 North Carolina 73-72 on Saturday to extend the Wildcats' home winning streak to 39 games.

"I just jumped as high as I could with my arm up," said Davis, who had seven points and nine rebounds. "I thought I probably would (block it). I have long hands."

Freshman Michael Kidd-Gilchrist scored 17 points and grabbed 11 rebounds for Kentucky (8-0) and Doron Lamb added 12 of his 14 points after halftime in the heavily hyped matchup.

"I didn't realize, because I hadn't been watching much TV, that this game was being played up like the end alls of end alls," Kentucky coach John Calipari said.

Davis sure ended it, all right.

Reggie Bullock hit a 3-pointer for North Carolina (6-2) to cut the Wildcats' lead to 73-72 with 48 seconds left. After freshman Marquis Teague missed the front end of a one-and-one, Davis blocked Henson's shot, grabbed the rebound and the Wildcats ran out the clock.

"If he doesn't block the shot, we lose," Calipari said. "Both teams gutted it out, just gutted it out. This is supposed to be March, not now. I'm exhausted."

Tyler Zeller and Harrison Barnes scored 14 points apiece for the Tar Heels, who led by as many as nine in the first half and held a six-point lead in the second before Kentucky rallied.

The Wildcats haven't lost at Rupp Arena since Calipari took over, a span of 38 games that includes winning their final one at home under Billy Gillispie.

Lamb converted a three-point play as part of a 7-0 run that gave Kentucky a 63-60 lead. After Zeller hit a jumper to cut it to one, Lamb hit a pair of 3s, the second in the corner that gave the Wildcats a 69-64 lead with 3:47 left.

"He had a couple of layups, a couple of threes and they were big shots, they were big shots. That one in the corner was a huge shot and he knocked it down," Calipari said. "I've got good players. We're young, we're inexperienced, but I have really good players."

After a 3-pointer by Barnes, North Carolina's 11th of the game, made it 69-67. Darius Miller's basket made it 71-67. Henson hit two free throws and Kidd-Gilchrist answered with two more before Bullock's 3 set up the final sequence.

After Teague missed the front end of the one-and-one following a foul by Kendall Marshall with 21 seconds left, the Tar Heels had one more chance.

Marshall found Zeller and as Terrence Jones came to double team, he found Henson. Henson went up for a winner, but Davis used his 6-foot-10 frame and massive wingspan to block the ball. He grabbed the rebound as North Carolina never tried to foul as time expired.

"He came from the other side of the lane, it was a great play by him," Henson said.

Jones finished with 14 points and Miller had 12 for the Wildcats. North Carolina's P.J. Hairston scored 11 and Henson finished with 10.

Kentucky last reached No. 1 under Calipari in 2009-10, but promptly lost its first game after receiving the ranking. The Wildcats beat St. John's 81-59 on Thursday night before this matchup ? the first between top five teams in Lexington in 13 years.

Last year, these two teams played a pair of memorable games with North Carolina winning 75-73 in Chapel Hill before Kentucky topped the Tar Heels 76-69 in the NCAA regional finals in March.

This one was equally as entertaining even though North Carolina slipped from the No. 1 spot last week when they lost to UNLV in Las Vegas to keep this from being the first No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup in the 35-year history of Rupp Arena.

The Tar Heels committed five early turnovers, but Hairston, who had been questionable to play because of a sprained left wrist, hit a pair of 3-pointers upon entering to give North Carolina a 24-18 lead.

A jumper by Barnes extended it to 34-25, the biggest deficit the Wildcats faced this season and Kentucky trailed at the half for the first time this season, 43-38.

It's the first time the two schools have met this highly ranked since Dec. 26, 1981 in East Rutherford, N.J., when Michael Jordan, James Worthy and Sam Perkins combined for 66 points in North Carolina's 82-69 victory.

Kentucky standout Sam Bowie didn't play in that game because of a stress fracture in his left leg, but that game still featured 18 draft picks ? including five that went in the first two rounds. The NBA draft was 10 rounds through 1984.

This matchup had even more media anticipation and included more than two dozen NBA scouts and front office personnel. Kentucky's young squad that starts three freshmen and two sophomores responded.

"We felt like this was a good test to see where we're at against one of the best teams in the country," Miller said. "We came out with a W. I think we're all pretty happy about it."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111203/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkc_t25_ncarolina_kentucky

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Friday, December 2, 2011

British Library puts 300 years of history online

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Thursday, December 1, 2011

Sullinger scores 21 as No. 2 OSU routs No. 3 Duke (AP)

COLUMBUS, Ohio ? Jared Sullinger scored 21 points and three teammates were close behind as No. 2 Ohio State roared out to an 11-0 lead and never looked back in beating third-ranked Duke 85-63 on Tuesday night in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge.

Buckeyes fans chanted "Overrated" at the Blue Devils in the final minute.

The Buckeyes (7-0) never trailed, weathering a Duke rally later in the first half and then leading by 20 for most of the second half.

"Sometimes you just get your butt kicked," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said.

Austin Rivers had 22 points and Mason Plumlee 16 for the Blue Devils (7-1), coming off wins over ranked opponents Michigan and Kansas in their previous two games.

William Buford scored 20, Deshaun Thomas 18 and Aaron Craft 17 for the Buckeyes, who gave the Big Ten a 4-2 edge in the conference matchups.

Few would have expected such a lopsided result. Duke came in with a record of 11-1 in ACC/Big Ten games and had beaten its last five Big Ten opponents ? including conference bullies Michigan State and Michigan already this season.

The Blue Devils had also won their last four games in which both teams were ranked in the top five.

Craft also had eight assists and five rebounds for the Buckeyes, who built a double-digit lead in the first half and were never really threatened the rest of the way.

They led by 24 with 15 minutes left after Craft banked in a 3 ? he laughed after it clanked in. The Blue Devils responded with a 7-0 run to get as close as 58-41 but Ohio State continued to control the paint. Sullinger was fouled and hit two foul shots, then powered up a shot off the backboard for a 66-43 lead shortly before clock trouble allowed both teams to take a breather with 8:42 remaining.

On consecutive possessions, Ohio State got a dunk by Sullinger and a 3 by Craft thanks to around-the-horn passing that found an open player.

It was a festive, capacity crowd of 18,809 at Value City Arena. One female student held up a sign meant for Sullinger that said, "Jared, will you marry me?" When Rivers ? the son of Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers ? had a turnover, the Ohio State student section chanted, "Daddy's boy! Daddy's boy!"

The half was a shocker, with Ohio State setting the pace early, shrugging aside a Duke comeback and then pulling away for a gaping 47-28 lead at the break.

Buford had 13 points (on 5-of-9 shooting) and so did Thomas (6 for 8). Sullinger was just a notch back with 12 points (5 of 7) as the Buckeyes shot 61 percent (20 of 33) to the Blue Devils' 44 percent (12 for 27).

The Buckeyes ran off the first 11 points while Duke's younger players appeared nervous and tentative.

After Plumlee ended the cold start with a shot over Sullinger 4 minutes in, the Blue Devils regained their balance as Rivers and Seth Curry took turns beating the Buckeyes off the dribble for layups.

Plumlee's reverse dunk ? the crowd howled that he traveled ? cut Ohio State's lead to 18-17 at the 9:50 mark.

But just that quickly, the Buckeyes streaked away again.

After Buford made two foul shots, Sullinger hit a leaner off glass and Plumlee protested his second foul, with the Buckeyes sophomore completing the three-point play. Substitute guard Jordan Sibert went high over the rim to tip in a miss before Buford scored in transition. Thomas then tossed in a half-hook from the left baseline to cap a 10-0 run that made it 28-17.

During that spell and beyond, the Buckeyes scored on eight consecutive possessions. When Craft hit a 14-foot jumper off a kickback pass from Sullinger at the 5:38 mark, it was 34-21.

With the crowd roaring and Duke struggling to get anything other than buckets off drives, Ohio State closed the half with Thomas hitting another half-hook in traffic and then watching as his jumper off an inbounds pass bounced three times on the rim before falling as the buzzer sounded.

The Buckeyes, typically a mild-mannered team on the boards, dominated (18-11) and outscored the Blue Devils 10-0 in second-chance points in the opening half.

Craft was an unsung star of the first 20 minutes. He had seven points, five assists, two rebounds and just one turnover ? and wasn't credited for a steal even though he had a hand in several turnovers or Duke misplays.

Rivers was the extent of the Blue Devils' attack with 13 points at the break.

It was Duke's second game in Columbus. In the only other meeting in Ohio's capital city, the Blue Devils won 94-89 in double overtime on Dec. 30, 1964, at old St. John Arena.

The Blue Devils had won their last 35 games in November, dating to a 73-62 loss to Marquette in 2006.

The victory was Ohio State's 29th in a row at home.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111130/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkc_t25_duke_ohio_st

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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

NATO attack was blatant aggression: Pakistan army (Reuters)

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) ? A senior Pakistani army official has said a NATO cross-border air attack that killed 24 soldiers was a deliberate, blatant act of aggression, hardening Pakistan's stance on an incident that could hurt efforts to stabilize Afghanistan.

Islamabad decided on Tuesday not to attend a major conference on the post-2014 future of Afghanistan in Germany next week, an angry riposte to the attack that threatens to set back peace efforts in Pakistan's troubled neighbor.

Continuing Pakistan's angry tone, Major General Ishfaq Nadeem, director general of military operations, said NATO forces were alerted they were attacking Pakistani posts, but helicopters kept firing. His comments, from a briefing to editors, were carried in local newspapers on Wednesday that characterized the attack as blatant aggression.

"Detailed information of the posts was already with ISAF (International Security Assistance Force), including map references, and it was impossible that they did not know these to be our posts," The News quoted Nadeem as saying at the briefing held at army headquarters on Tuesday.

NATO helicopters and fighter jets attacked two military border posts in northwest Pakistan on Saturday in the worst incident of its kind since Islamabad allied itself with Washington in 2001 in the war on militancy.

Fury over the attack is growing, with another protest in the city of Lahore and more tough editorials in newspapers.

The helicopters appeared near the post around 15 to 20 minutes past midnight, opened fire, then left about 45 minutes later, Nadeem was quoted as saying. They reappeared at 0115 local time and attacked again for another hour, he said.

Nadeem said that, minutes before the first attack, a U.S. sergeant on duty at a communications centre in Afghanistan told a Pakistani major that NATO special forces were receiving indirect fire from a location 15 km (9 miles) from the posts.

The Pakistanis said they needed time to check and asked for coordinates. Seven minutes later, the sergeant called back and said "your Volcano post has been hit," Nadeem quoted the sergeant as saying.

Nadeem concluded that confirmed NATO knew the locations of the Pakistani posts before attacking, said The News.

REINVIGORATED MILITARY

The NATO attack shifted attention away from Pakistan's widely questioned performance against militants who cross its border to attack U.S.-led NATO forces in Afghanistan, and has given the military a chance to reassert itself.

Islamabad's decision to boycott next week's meeting in Bonn will deprive the talks of a key player that could nudge Taliban militants into a peace process as NATO combat troops prepare to leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Wednesday Pakistan's decision to boycott the conference was "regrettable" but hoped to secure Islamabad's cooperation in future.

"Nothing will be gained by turning our backs on mutually beneficial cooperation," Clinton told reporters in South Korea.

The army, which has ruled Pakistan for more than half of its history and sets security and foreign policy, faced strong criticism from both the Pakistani public and its ally, the United States, after the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

The al Qaeda leader had apparently been living in a Pakistani garrison town for years before U.S. special forces found and killed him in a unilateral raid in May.

Pakistanis criticized the military for failing to protect their sovereignty, and angry U.S. officials wondered whether some members of military intelligence had sheltered him. Pakistan's government and military said they had no idea bin Laden was in the country.

The army seems to have regained its confidence, and won the support of the public and the government in a country where anti-American sentiment runs high even on rare occasions when relations with Washington are healthy.

More than 1,000 students from a hardline Pakistani religious party protested in Lahore, yelling "Death to NATO" and "Death to America."

"If NATO and America do something like this again, we are going to turn Pakistan into their graveyard," said 23-year-old university student Zahoor Ahmad.

History student Mudassir Durrani said: "This attack is a slap in the faces of the Pakistanis who support America. It is time for secular and religious forces to come together to fight America."

NATO hopes an investigation it promised will defuse the crisis and that confidence-building measures can repair ties.

But the military is firmly focused on NATO, and analysts say it is likely to take advantage of the widespread anger to press its interests in any future peace talks on Afghanistan.

The army is well aware that many Pakistanis believe the war on militancy their country joined has only served U.S. interests while thousands of Pakistani soldiers have died fighting.

"If the military and government are not in sync with the public opinion, they are seen as the bad guys, they are seen as the lackeys of the Americans," said Mahmud Durrani, a former national security chief and ambassador to Washington.

"The leadership has no choice but to condemn it (NATO). The anger in the public is phenomenal."

Exactly what happened at the posts along an unruly and poorly defined border is still unclear.

A Western official and an Afghan security official who requested anonymity said NATO troops were responding to fire from across the border. Pakistan says the attack was unprovoked.

Both explanations are possibly correct: that a retaliatory attack by NATO troops took a tragic, mistaken turn in harsh terrain where differentiating friend from foe can be difficult.

Nadeem was adamant that all communications channels had informed NATO that it was attacking Pakistani positions.

"They continued regardless, with impunity," The News quoted him as saying.

(Additional reporting by Chris Allbritton in ISLAMABAD and Mubasher Bukhari in LAHORE; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Paul Tait)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111130/wl_nm/us_pakistan_nato

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

DNC ad targets Romney over flip-flops (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Democrats are using humor to try to undermine Republican Mitt Romney, pushing a movie trailer-style ad that portrays his candidacy as a "the story of two men trapped in one body."

The new ad released Monday is part of an aggressive effort by Democrats to portray Romney as being inconsistent on a number of issues important to conservative voters as he seeks to challenge President Barack Obama next year. Democrats are trying to slow the former Massachusetts governor's progress with six weeks remaining before Republican primary voters begin picking their nominee.

The Democratic National Committee ad, called "Mitt versus Mitt," argues that Romney has changed his views on health care and abortion rights, showing contradictory clips of Romney on the issues. "From the creator of `I'm running for office for Pete's sake,' comes the story of two men trapped in one body," the ad says.

The DNC is airing the advertisement in Albuquerque, N.M., Raleigh, N.C., Columbus, Ohio, Pittsburgh, Milwaukee and Washington. It directs viewers to a website, http://www.MittvMitt.com, with a longer version.

Romney has blasted Obama's handling of the economy and his campaign has accused the president of saying anything to hold onto power. Romney has tried to position himself as the Republican best positioned to take on Obama. Last week, his campaign aired an ad in New Hampshire challenging the president on the economy.

Democrats are trying to undercut Romney's standing in the GOP primary as he tries to fend off a large field of his fellow Republicans, including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and businessman Herman Cain. Democratic party leaders plan to make Romney's character and consistency core parts of their campaign against him.

The DNC ran advertising in Arizona last month hitting Romney on comments he made to a Las Vegas newspaper, saying the housing crisis needed to run its course and hit bottom.

___

Online:

www.MittvMitt.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_el_pr/us_democrats_romney

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AMD's getting into the DRAM game, isn't afraid to shoot the outside J

Don't you wish every component in your computer were made by the same company? That's AMD's thinking behind a range of desktop DRAM -- leaping into bed with VisionTek and Patriot Memory who will build the branded modules to Sunnyvale's specifications, tweaked for speed with OverDrive tuning tools. You'll be able to pick up DIMMs in 2GB, 4GB and 8GB flavors -- a low-end "entertainment" model running at 1333MHz and 1600MHz, "performance" edition also at 1600MHz and a Radeon-branded unit that will top the family at 1866MHz. The stuff will be available from retailers like Amazon, Fry's and Best Buy Canada, but we don't know when nor how much it'll cost to bring this level of branding harmony to the inside of your case.

Continue reading AMD's getting into the DRAM game, isn't afraid to shoot the outside J

AMD's getting into the DRAM game, isn't afraid to shoot the outside J originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Nov 2011 13:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, November 28, 2011

NASA launches $2.5 billion rover to Red Planet

NASA has launched its next Mars rover, kicking off a long-awaited mission to investigate whether the Red Planet could ever have hosted microbial life.

The car-size Curiosity rover blasted off atop its Atlas 5 rocket at 10:02 a.m. ET Saturday, streaking into a cloudy sky above Cape Canaveral Air Force Station here. The huge robot's next stop is Mars, though the 354-million-mile (570-million-kilometer) journey will take eight and a half months.

Joy Crisp a deputy project scientist for the rover at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., called the liftoff "spectacular."

"This feels great," she said as she watched the rocket lift off from Cape Canaveral.

Pamela Conrad, deputy principal investigator for the mission at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said, "Every milestone feels like such a relief. It's a beautiful day. The sun's out, and all these people came out to watch."

  1. More space news from msnbc.com

    1. Partial solar eclipse gets a little southern exposure

      Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: A partial solar eclipse darkened the skies only slightly over? areas of New Zealand, Tasmania, South Africa and Antarctica on "Black Friday."

    2. NASA launches $2.5 billion rover to Red Planet
    3. Russian leader suggests punishing space failures
    4. Space 'superbubbles' could spawn cosmic rays

The work Curiosity does when it finally arrives should revolutionize our understanding of the Red Planet and pave the way for future efforts to hunt for potential Martian life, researchers said.

"It is absolutely a feat of engineering, and it will bring science like nobody's ever expected," Doug McCuistion, head of NASA's Mars exploration program, said of Curiosity. "I can't even imagine the discoveries that we're going to come up with." [Photos: Last Look at Curiosity Rover]

Long road to launch
Curiosity's cruise to Mars may be less challenging than its long and bumpy trek to the launch pad, which took nearly a decade.

NASA began planning Curiosity's mission ? which is officially known as the Mars Science Laboratory, or MSL ? back in 2003. The rover was originally scheduled to blast off in 2009, but it wasn't ready in time.

Launch windows for Mars-bound spacecraft are based on favorable alignments between Earth and the Red Planet, and they open up just once every two years. So the MSL team had to wait until 2011.

That two-year slip helped boost the mission's overall cost by 56 percent, to its current $2.5 billion. But Saturday's successful launch likely chased away a lot of the bad feelings still lingering after the delay and the cost overruns.

"I think you could visibly see the team morale improve ? the team grinned more, the team smiled more ? as the rover and the vehicle came closer, and more and more together here when we were at Kennedy [Space Center]" preparing for liftoff, MSL project manager Pete Theisinger of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said a few days before launch.

A rover behemoth
Curiosity is a beast of a rover. Weighing in at 1 ton, it's five times more massive than either of the last two rovers NASA sent to Mars, the golf-cart-size twins Spirit and Opportunity, which landed in 2004 to search for signs of past water activity.

While Spirit and Opportunity each carried five science instruments, Curiosity sports 10, including a rock-zapping laser and equipment designed to identify organic compounds ? carbon-based molecules that are the building blocks of life as we know it.

Some of these instruments sit at the end of Curiosity's five-jointed, 7-foot-long (2.1-meter) robotic arm, which by itself is nearly half as heavy as Spirit or Opportunity.

The arm also wields a 2-inch (5-centimeter) drill, allowing Curiosity to take samples from deep inside Martian rocks. No previous Red Planet rover has been able to do this, researchers say.

"We have an incredible rover," said MSL deputy project scientist Ashwin Vasavada of JPL. "It's the biggest and most capable scientific explorer we've ever sent to the surface of another planet."

Learn more about Curiosity's mission (800kb PDF)

Curiosity is due to arrive at Mars in early August 2012, touching down in a 100-mile-wide (160-km) crater called Gale.

While the rover's launch was dramatic, its landing will be one for the record books, if all goes well. A rocket-powered sky crane will lower the huge robot down on cables ? a maneuver never tried before in the history of planetary exploration. [Video: Curiosity's Peculiar Landing]

A giant mound of sediment rises 3 miles (5 kilometers) into the Martian air from Gale Crater's center. The layers in this mountain appear to preserve about 1 billion years of Martian history. Curiosity will study these different layers, gaining an in-depth understanding of past and present Martian environments and their potential to harbor life.

Life as we know it depends on liquid water. So the rover will likely spend a lot of time poking around near the mound's base, where Mars-orbiting spacecraft have spotted minerals that form in the presence of water, such as clays and sulfates.

"Going layer by layer, we can do the main goal of this mission, which is to search for habitable environments, " Vasavada said. "Were any of those time periods in early Mars history time periods that could have supported microbial life?"

If Curiosity climbs higher, its observations could shed light on Mars' shift from relatively warm and wet long ago to cold, dry and dusty today, researchers said.

"We want to understand those transitions, so that's why we're headed there [to Gale]," said Bethany Ehlmann of JPL and Caltech in Pasadena.

Setting the stage for life detection
Curiosity isn't designed to search for Martian life. In fact, if the red dirt of Gale Crater does harbor microbes, the rover will almost certainly drive right over them unawares.

But MSL is a key bridge to future efforts that could actively hunt down possible Martian life forms, researchers said. Curiosity's work should help later missions determine where ? and when ? to look.

"We don't really detect life per se," Vasavada said. "We set the stage for that life detection by figuring out which time periods in early Mars history were the most likely to have supported life and even preserved evidence of that for us today."

You can follow Space.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

? 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45444246/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Rosemary Gibson: Why Republicans Are Wrong About Rationing and Dr. Berwick

It's a sad day for health care in America now that Republican senators have refused to confirm Dr. Donald Berwick, who has been serving in a recess appointment as Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Dr. Berwick announced that he is resigning effective December 2.

Americans could not have a better champion for good medical care. I know this for a fact. I led quality and safety initiatives at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for sixteen years and had the privilege of working with Dr. Berwick and his smart, dedicated colleagues at the Boston-based Institute for Healthcare Improvement.

They worked tirelessly to bring the science of improvement to hospitals, doctors' offices and other health care facilities. In case you haven't noticed, they have been extreme laggards in implementing the most rudimentary process improvements that safety critical industries such as aviation and nuclear power deploy routinely to reduce the potential for harm.

Here is one of many examples of how Dr. Berwick helped save lives. A preventable cause of hospital death is called 'failure to rescue'. It occurs when a patient's condition deteriorates and doctors and nurses miss the fact that the patient is in trouble.

With Dr. Berwick's leadership, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement identified a possible solution and taught doctors and nurses in hospitals around the country how to implement it. Called rapid response teams, many doctors and nurses who put these teams in place reported that mortality at their hospitals dropped.

Dr. Berwick and his team made this and many other life-saving improvements possible. Without a doubt, many Americans are alive today because of the work he taught, inspired and led.

If you want to see the human face of failure to rescue and why his work matters, take a look at Wall of Silence. It tells the stories of people and their families who were harmed by errors. You can also find out how to protect yourself from all kinds of mistakes.

Take a look, too, at the Consumers Union Safe Patient Project, which has organized people and their families who have been harmed by errors, infections and other causes. They advocate for public policies to make health care safer for us all.

Claims by Republicans that Dr. Berwick supports rationing of medical care are uninformed and frankly, absurd. A physician who is devoted to stopping harm and preventing death is not going to turn around and harm people by withholding needed care.

If Dr. Berwick remained as administrator of CMS, he would have continued to bring competence and passion to benefit millions of Americans covered by Medicare and Medicaid.

Republican senators won't let him do it and they will be among the losers. They will get sick someday just like everyone else. So will their parents, spouses, children, grandchildren and siblings. Being a well-known muckety-muck in Washington -- or related to one -- confers no immunity from health care harm.

Watch Donald Rumsfeld's interview with Diane Sawyer and toward the end, you'll see him get choked up when he talks about his wife who almost died from a medical error. "She was dying," he said. "I remember looking at Joyce in the hospital bed. And she looked just like her mother who'd died in her 90s. And she was that bad." She has since recovered.

The scale of health care harm in the U.S. is enormous. Arlington National Cemetery -- where about 330,000 people are buried -- would fill up in about three years with all the Americans who die every year from medical mistakes.

These numbers are based on the conservative estimate of nearly 100,000 deaths annually from medical errors reported by the Institute of Medicine. Since this report was published twelve years ago, other studies report that the number of deaths is higher.

That's not all. Arlington Cemetery would be filled up in about three years with the nearly 100,000 other people who die from hospital-acquired infections annually, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Dr. Berwick had the courage to acknowledge the extent of health care harm and show hospitals, doctors and nurses how to prevent it. He has performed an incredible public service yet most Americans don't know it. None of this matters to Republicans who have political fish to fry.

Whether Democrat, Republican, or Independent, everyone will get sick someday and want the best and safest care possible. The good news is that Dr. Berwick will likely continue his noble work wherever he goes. We can be thankful for that.

Rosemary Gibson is the author of Wall of Silence, which tells the human story of medical errors, and The Treatment Trap, which shines a light on overuse of unnecessary medical care. She led national quality and safety initiatives at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for sixteen years.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rosemary-gibson/why-republicans-are-wrong_b_1114699.html

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Brooke Hauser's 6 favorite books about immigrants (The Week)

New York ? The journalist recommends works by by Dave Eggers, Henry Roth, and Junot D?az

The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne Fadiman (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $15). Fadiman spent nine years in Merced, Calif., documenting the culture clash between American doctors and Hmong refugees from Laos. At the center of the story is a little girl with severe epilepsy ? a condition that her doctors want to treat with anti-convulsants, and that her parents attribute to the wandering of her soul.

What Is the What by Dave Eggers (Vintage, $16). Eggers channels the voice of real-life hero Valentino Achak Deng, one of Sudan's 20,000 "Lost Boys," who walked thousands of miles to escape civil war.

SEE ALSO: Ann Beattie's 6 favorite books

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Call It Sleep by Henry Roth (Picador, $16). Roth was 28 when he wrote his debut novel, about a boy coming of age in the Jewish slums of New York's Lower East Side. Though it didn't sell many copies when it was first published, in 1934, Roth's portrayal of the Jewish immigrant experience is now an American classic.

The Gangster We Are All Looking For by L? Thi Diem Th?y (Anchor, $15). "Linda Vista, with its rows of yellow houses, is where we eventually washed to shore." So begins this semiautobiographical novel about a young girl who flees Vietnam by boat and ends up in San Diego. L?'s lyrical and spare story brilliantly captures what it's like to mourn the loss of one's home country while searching for a place in America.

SEE ALSO: Chris Matthews' 6 favorite JFK reads

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Netherland by Joseph O'Neill (Vintage, $15). O'Neill, who was born in Ireland and raised in Holland, has written one of the most memorable works of fiction about life in New York City post-9/11. The Dutch narrator is a financial analyst who rediscovers a love of cricket while befriending a wily Trinidadian expat. The novel exposes the personal connections formed and lost in the aftermath of a crisis.

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot D?az (Riverhead, $15). Oscar Wao, a Dominican-American "ghetto nerd," hails from New Jersey, but he is haunted by fuk?, a curse that has followed his family from Santo Domingo. D?az's shatteringly original novel proves that sometimes, home is the strangest of strange lands.

SEE ALSO: Mark Whitaker's 6 favorite memoirs

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? Brooke Hauser's first book, The New Kids, is a group portrait of the students at an all-immigrant New York City high school.

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