Friday, August 3, 2012

Chinese activists land in Newark

one month after escaping house arrest and pledged to continue the fight for human rights

blind activist Chen Guangcheng China has come to start a new life in America, while sworn to fight against injustice in their homeland.

The time was the last stage of a game, an escape was only a month under house arrest in rural China that ended with him speaking to a crowd of reporters outside the New York University, where becoming a university.

"We must join arms and continue fighting for the goodness in the world and continue to fight against injustice ... I hope everyone is working for me, to promote justice and equity in China, "Chen said through an interpreter.

Address

Chen drew a small group of spectators who applauded and some cars honked their horns. "Nothing is impossible as long as you put your heart in it. As we say in China, there are no small matter, as long as you put your heart in it," he said.

United Airlines Flight UA88, had left Newark about two hours behind Beijing International Airport as a storm rolled in - a culmination of mounting one of the most remarkable chapters stormy courage and injustice in recent years the history of China.

After discussions blows, imprisonment, injury, refuge of the embassy and diplomatic relations between the two superpowers Chen output led to a mixture of relief and consternation among activists in China We are pleased Chen course, but fears that his cause could lose one of its most influential advocates.

New York University in Greenwich Village, said he considered a partner in his law school. "Over the past seven years I've never had a day off, so I came here for some recovery in the body and mind," said Chen.

In April Chen escaped 19 months of house arrest in his courtyard home in rural Shandong province. He and his family were beaten and harassed as Dongshigu Linyi city became a virtual prison run by plainclothes guards, and full of security cameras.

This followed more than four years in prison on accusations - denied by his lawyers -. This aroused a crowd to disrupt traffic and property damage

After the bilateral talks between the two governments hammered an agreement to stay in China, with greater protection against thugs in Linyi. However, the agreement fell apart within hours, as Chen has learned that his lawyer, brother and nephew was beaten when he was alone in the hospital in Beijing, where he was treated for colitis and a broken foot suffered during his flight.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was visiting Beijing stepped in and helped organize permission for Chen, his wife and daughters to go to U.S. to study.



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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Chinese activists land in Newark

one month after escaping house arrest and pledged to continue the fight for human rights

blind activist Chen Guangcheng China has come to start a new life in America, while sworn to fight against injustice in their homeland.

The time was the last stage of a game, an escape was only a month under house arrest in rural China that ended with him speaking to a crowd of reporters outside the New York University, where becoming a university.

"We must join arms and continue fighting for the goodness in the world and continue to fight against injustice ... I hope everyone is working for me, to promote justice and equity in China, "Chen said through an interpreter.

Address

Chen drew a small group of spectators who applauded and some cars honked their horns. "Nothing is impossible as long as you put your heart in it. As we say in China, there are no small matter, as long as you put your heart in it," he said.

United Airlines Flight UA88, had left Newark about two hours behind Beijing International Airport as a storm rolled in - a culmination of mounting one of the most remarkable chapters stormy courage and injustice in recent years the history of China.

After discussions blows, imprisonment, injury, refuge of the embassy and diplomatic relations between the two superpowers Chen output led to a mixture of relief and consternation among activists in China We are pleased Chen course, but fears that his cause could lose one of its most influential advocates.

New York University in Greenwich Village, said he considered a partner in his law school. "Over the past seven years I've never had a day off, so I came here for some recovery in the body and mind," said Chen.

In April Chen escaped 19 months of house arrest in his courtyard home in rural Shandong province. He and his family were beaten and harassed as Dongshigu Linyi city became a virtual prison run by plainclothes guards, and full of security cameras.

This followed more than four years in prison on accusations - denied by his lawyers -. This aroused a crowd to disrupt traffic and property damage

After the bilateral talks between the two governments hammered an agreement to stay in China, with greater protection against thugs in Linyi. However, the agreement fell apart within hours, as Chen has learned that his lawyer, brother and nephew was beaten when he was alone in the hospital in Beijing, where he was treated for colitis and a broken foot suffered during his flight.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was visiting Beijing stepped in and helped organize permission for Chen, his wife and daughters to go to U.S. to study.

Liu Weiguo

His lawyer said he was unlikely to be allowed to return soon. "The probability of return is low. I fear that the Chinese government will not allow you to return. This kind of thing is unprecedented." Chen is said to be unhappy to leave her family behind in a notoriously violent town controlled by local authorities in Linyi. However, Liu said he did not blame Chen.
"We have to do this from your perspective. He is mentally and physically exhausted and was tormented for years. For rights movement in China has more than enough. We can not ask to do something else. Now he needs time to rest. "



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Tuesday, July 31, 2012



study of tree rings, corals and ice cores found abnormal peak temperature that is aligned with the human-induced climate change



The last 60 years have been the warmest for a millennium in Australia and can not be explained by natural causes, according to a new report from scientists who support the case of a reduction in carbon emissions rights.



In the first major study of its kind in the region, scientists from the University of Melbourne used data from 27 natural climate indicators, including tree rings The corals and ice cores to map the evolution of temperatures during the last 1000 years.



"Our study showed that recent warming in the context of 1000 years is very unusual and can not be explained by natural factors alone, suggesting a strong influence human rights caused by climate change in the Australasian region, "said principal investigator Dr. Joƫlle Gergis.



climate reconstruction was done in 3000 in different ways and concluded with an accuracy of 95% of any other period of the year 1000, after the party or exceeded -1950 warming in Australia.


"The models showed that, before 1850, there was no long-term trends and changes in temperature are probably caused by natural climate variability, which is a random process, "he said.

" However, the [model showed] the warming of the 20th century far exceeds the amplitude of natural climate variability and shows that the warming of recent experience in Australia not unprecedented in the context of the last millennium. "
maximum annual average daily temperatures in Australia rose by 0.75 ° C since 1910. Since the 1950s every decade has been warmer than the last.



Find best price for : --Australasia----Australia--

Wenlock Edge: erotic reputation This extraordinary plant was updated in 1655 a translation of Dioscorides, who claimed "the affections stirrs be Conjugation dranck with wine "

belongs on the wilder side of the fence - thick shadows, not served under the trees and flowering hedges by rain splash. On the other side of the fence, the old order remains intact correctly. Keep out: the fields are green and fertilized with chemicals, thistles and nettles have been treated with herbicides, hedges shook, the trees cut and removed dead wood, lush grass is grazed by lambs and sheep that has suffered so fat. It's bucolic industrial scale.

But in one corner of the field, the rebels gather. Rabbits nibbling the grass of the owners, always a tic-danger signs, have the nerve to have survived centuries of firearms, dogs, railways, roads, disease and climate rotten to steal the life of Earth. In air, the swifts have returned to howl around the rooftops of Wenlock, as if they owned the place. Lords-and-ladies, our intelligent rebellion, not surprisingly, but it disappeared, said in March.




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Sunday, July 29, 2012

multimillionaires bushes study subjects with high levels of precipitation patterns and impaired CO2

an Australian university has embarked on an ambitious project - considered the first of its kind in the world -. To simulate what would be the environment through runaway climate change

The decade of the study, University of Western Sydney Hawkesbury Environment Institute, Australia will have to rub high rates of precipitation patterns and altered consistent with a CO2 "business as usual" global increase in greenhouse gas emissions.

The centerpiece of the study is Eucalyptus external CO2 enrichment experiment, which involved the construction of fiberglass and steel structures six-meter high and 28 to 25 meters in diameter in native forest in Richmond, New South Wales. Structures contain a set of sensors that provide a concentration of CO2 in trees in the rings.

This, scientists say, will create an atmosphere that CO2 is 550 ppm - 40% higher than current levels -. To see how the environment would change living organisms, including humans

aa

This level of CO2 was chosen to mimic how the environment would react in a world where not taken any significant steps to reduce carbon emissions over the next 35 years.

It is anticipated that a 40% increase in CO2 emissions would result in an increase in global average temperature about three degrees Celsius.

An automated computer controlled modular system of the CO2 pumped out of the rings, to account for environmental variability.

Scientists use a giant 43 meter high crane to study the impact on all parts of tall eucalypts, such as bacteria and fungi in soil, the growth patterns of the glass trees and insects that live in the foliage.

many facilities of the institute was funded through an AUS $ 40 million (25 million pounds) of federal grant, the strengthening of an investment of $ 15 million for the University of Western Sydney.

Professor David Ellsworth, who heads the "outdoor" experience, participated in a similar study at Duke University in the United States.

"We give you a window into how biodiversity will behave in terms futuristic."

The first results of the study, scheduled to begin in September, will be published next year.

However, the institute has already conducted a preliminary investigation - the results can be read here and here -. In a small collection of trees in the last 18 months, to test their reactions to warmer temperatures and increased CO2



Find best price for : --South--

multimillionaires bushes study subjects with high levels of precipitation patterns and impaired CO2

an Australian university has embarked on an ambitious project - considered the first of its kind in the world -. To simulate what would be the environment through runaway climate change

The decade of the study, University of Western Sydney Hawkesbury Environment Institute, Australia will have to rub high rates of precipitation patterns and altered consistent with a CO2 "business as usual" global increase in greenhouse gas emissions.

The centerpiece of the study is Eucalyptus external CO2 enrichment experiment, which involved the construction of fiberglass and steel structures six-meter high and 28 to 25 meters in diameter in native forest in Richmond, New South Wales. Structures contain a set of sensors that provide a concentration of CO2 in trees in the rings.

This, scientists say, will create an atmosphere that CO2 is 550 ppm - 40% higher than current levels -. To see how the environment would change living organisms, including humans

aa

This level of CO2 was chosen to mimic how the environment would react in a world where not taken any significant steps to reduce carbon emissions over the next 35 years.

It is anticipated that a 40% increase in CO2 emissions would result in an increase in global average temperature about three degrees Celsius.

An automated computer controlled modular system of the CO2 pumped out of the rings, to account for environmental variability.

Scientists use a giant 43 meter high crane to study the impact on all parts of tall eucalypts, such as bacteria and fungi in soil, the growth patterns of the glass trees and insects that live in the foliage.

many facilities of the institute was funded through an AUS $ 40 million (25 million pounds) of federal grant, the strengthening of an investment of $ 15 million for the University of Western Sydney.

Professor David Ellsworth, who heads the "outdoor" experience, participated in a similar study at Duke University in the United States.

"We give you a window into how biodiversity will behave in terms futuristic."

The first results of the study, scheduled to begin in September, will be published next year.

However, the institute has already conducted a preliminary investigation - the results can be read here and here -. In a small collection of trees in the last 18 months, to test their reactions to warmer temperatures and increased CO2



Find best price for : --South--

'Climbing trees and other sports were my first lessons in art "

What you start?

I grew up in Aberdeen, Washington, providing a green environment of an imaginative mind. I climbed trees, played sports, hunting and fishing with my father. They were my first lessons in art. I have very early memories of circulation while playing outside as a child - and I can integrate my dancing game. Of course, I also received formal training: who has studied ballet, tap and acrobatics, but I do not know if I wanted to get into the visual arts or dance. I lived between the two until the accumulation [accumulating a series of works made in the 1970s]. Now I live among them again.

What was his great discovery?

was in an improvisation workshop and famous in New York, led by Anna Halprin in 1959. That's when I got to "fly" [leave the ground dramatically]. I was in love with improvisation since: the spirit of the game, and its rhythmic structure, which brings me to my childhood. And I always wanted to fly.

Who or what have you sacrificed for your art?

For me, everything is connected. All you have done for my art has never felt like a sacrifice.

His work is closely related to the precepts of visual art. Artists are often required to comply with this art form one?

I've never been worried about what is expected of me. When I arrived in New York, much of my work was the reaction against convention, the claim, romanticism and sentimentalism. It was art. There are visual art or the art of dance - just art. I am disappointed to see these distinctions creeping back in. They were dissolved in the 1960s for good reason.

What song or piece of music that serves as the soundtrack to your life?

My life has been located between the notes of Laurie Anderson, Alvin Curran, John Cage, a host of bands, from Bach and Jean-Philippe Rameau recently. This is a soundtrack varied and complex, but it's great. William Christie can be performed.

My work with the National Arts Council in the 1990s [meet with U.S. politicians to advocate for arts funding]. Art reflects the world around us and what the world could be. The message to those who control the funding was a labor of love.



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