Technical fault in the power unit derails launch during countdown to liftoff The penultimate space shuttle launch was postponed on Friday because of mechanical problems, dashing the hopes of the biggest crowd of spectators in years, including the mission commander’s wife, Gabrielle Giffords, the Arizona congresswoman who survived an assassination attempt earlier this year. Nasa hopes to try again to send space shuttle Endeavour on its final voyage on Monday. President Barack Obama and his family visited Kennedy Space Centre anyway and met Giffords, who is recovering from a gunshot wound to the head and has been in Cape Canaveral since Wednesday to attend her husband’s launch. The White House said Obama saw Giffords for about 10 minutes before meeting the shuttle’s crew. Giffords has not been seen publicly since the assassination attempt on 8 January, and left her Houston rehabilitation hospital for the first time to travel to Florida. It was not immediately known whether she would stay for the next attempt, or return to Houston. She had been expected to watch the liftoff in private – as were the other astronauts’ families. “Bummed about the scrub!! But important to make sure everything on shuttle is working properly,” her staff said via Twitter. Endeavour was fuelled and the six astronauts were heading to the launchpad when the countdown was halted about three and a half hours before the liftoff, at 3.47pm local time. Nasa’s silver-coloured astrovan did a U-turn at the launch control centre and returned the crew to quarters. It would have been the first time in Nasa history that a sitting president and his family witnessed a launch. As a consolation, Obama and his family got an up-close look at Atlantis. It will make the last shuttle flight this summer as Nasa winds up the 30-year programme and retires the fleet to museums. The president and his wife met briefly with Endeavour’s crew. Obama told the crew he was hoping to get back to Florida for a shuttle launch. “One more chance, we may be able to get down here,” he said. Launch director Mike Leinbach said the next launch attempt for Endeavour would be Monday at the earliest – and hinted at an even longer delay. Technicians will have to crawl into the shuttle’s engine compartment to track a suspected electrical short circuit in a power distribution box. As many as 700,000 spectators had been expected to visit the area around the launch site. Endeavour’s upcoming mission to the International Space Station is the last in its 19-year history. It will deliver a $2bn physics experiment. The shuttle – the youngest in the fleet – was built to replace Challenger, destroyed during liftoff in 1986, and made its maiden voyage in 1992. The space shuttle Space Nasa United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Peter Moss, a British travel writer, was among 16 victims of a remote-controlled nail bomb explosion at a busy tourist cafe A British travel writer and novelist has been named among the 16 victims of a terrorist bomb explosion at a busy tourist cafe in Marrakech. Peter Moss, 59, was at the Argana cafe in the popular Jamaa el-Fnaa square when a remote-controlled nail bomb was detonated at lunchtime. A video released before the attack by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb reportedly claimed responsibility, with terrorism experts saying the group was one of several likely candidates. Moss, a father-of-two, was a writer, broadcaster and comedian, who had earned praise for several screenplays and novels including The Singing Tree and The Age of Elephants. At the British Press Awards in 2004, while working for the Jewish Chronicle, he was celebrated as “one of the country’s finest travel writers, with an unmatched eye for detail”. Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt said: “While we do not yet know the exact cause of the blast, reports from the Moroccan authorities are that this may have been a result of terrorism. An act of this kind, causing the death of 16 innocent people, is cruel and wrong, and I condemn it in the strongest terms.” As investigations continued into the blast, the country’s deadliest for eight years, Moroccan authorities said the bomb had been packed with nails and set off remotely and not by a suicide bomber. Jamaa el-Fnaa square, next to the city’s historic market area, draws crowds of tourists with its snake charmers, fire-eaters and tooth pullers. Most of the dead were foreign nationals – including French, Dutch and Canadian tourists – and at least 23 others were injured by the explosion. British ambassador Tim Morris has travelled to Marrakech to bolster the UK team dealing with the aftermath and Interpol has described the attack as “senseless and deplorable”. While police from both Morocco and Spain could be seen working in the wreckage, friends and family of the victims gathered at the city’s Ibn Tofail hospital. Mouhou Rachid, a cafe worker, said at least one of his co-workers had died and another was in hospital with serious injuries. “The explosion was terrible. When I recovered consciousness I saw people picking up victims. My friend has injuries in the stomach, face and head.” Israel’s foreign ministry said two of the victims, a man and a woman, were Jews living in Shanghai and that the woman apparently had Israeli citizenship. The attack is the deadliest in Morocco since 12 suicide bombers killed 33 people in co-ordinated strikes in Casablanca in 2003. The latest attack was a blow to Morocco’s most important tourist city. Tourism is Morocco’s biggest source of foreign currency and the second biggest employer after agriculture. “We are going to work very hard so that this does not have an impact on tourism in Marrakesh,” said Salaheddine Mezouar, the finance minister.”To go to a country as a tourist and return dead is a terrible thing.” Fernando Reinares, a terrorism expert at Spain’s Royal Elcano Institute, told RNE radio there were few doubts that jihadists were behind the attack. “Morocco and its monarchy are a target for al-Qaida and for the north African groups that have been associated with al-Qaida.” The attack adds to the challenges facing Morocco’s ruler, King Mohammed VI, as he tries to prevent the uprisings in the Arab world from reaching his normally stable kingdom. He recently pardoned a raft of political prisoners, including some alleged militant Islamists. The monarch has promised to reform the constitution to placate pro-democracy protesters. But more protests are planned for Sunday. Morocco Global terrorism Damien Pearse Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Peter Moss, a British travel writer, was among 16 victims of a remote-controlled nail bomb explosion at a busy tourist cafe A British travel writer and novelist has been named among the 16 victims of a terrorist bomb explosion at a busy tourist cafe in Marrakech. Peter Moss, 59, was at the Argana cafe in the popular Jamaa el-Fnaa square when a remote-controlled nail bomb was detonated at lunchtime. A video released before the attack by al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb reportedly claimed responsibility, with terrorism experts saying the group was one of several likely candidates. Moss, a father-of-two, was a writer, broadcaster and comedian, who had earned praise for several screenplays and novels including The Singing Tree and The Age of Elephants. At the British Press Awards in 2004, while working for the Jewish Chronicle, he was celebrated as “one of the country’s finest travel writers, with an unmatched eye for detail”. Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt said: “While we do not yet know the exact cause of the blast, reports from the Moroccan authorities are that this may have been a result of terrorism. An act of this kind, causing the death of 16 innocent people, is cruel and wrong, and I condemn it in the strongest terms.” As investigations continued into the blast, the country’s deadliest for eight years, Moroccan authorities said the bomb had been packed with nails and set off remotely and not by a suicide bomber. Jamaa el-Fnaa square, next to the city’s historic market area, draws crowds of tourists with its snake charmers, fire-eaters and tooth pullers. Most of the dead were foreign nationals – including French, Dutch and Canadian tourists – and at least 23 others were injured by the explosion. British ambassador Tim Morris has travelled to Marrakech to bolster the UK team dealing with the aftermath and Interpol has described the attack as “senseless and deplorable”. While police from both Morocco and Spain could be seen working in the wreckage, friends and family of the victims gathered at the city’s Ibn Tofail hospital. Mouhou Rachid, a cafe worker, said at least one of his co-workers had died and another was in hospital with serious injuries. “The explosion was terrible. When I recovered consciousness I saw people picking up victims. My friend has injuries in the stomach, face and head.” Israel’s foreign ministry said two of the victims, a man and a woman, were Jews living in Shanghai and that the woman apparently had Israeli citizenship. The attack is the deadliest in Morocco since 12 suicide bombers killed 33 people in co-ordinated strikes in Casablanca in 2003. The latest attack was a blow to Morocco’s most important tourist city. Tourism is Morocco’s biggest source of foreign currency and the second biggest employer after agriculture. “We are going to work very hard so that this does not have an impact on tourism in Marrakesh,” said Salaheddine Mezouar, the finance minister.”To go to a country as a tourist and return dead is a terrible thing.” Fernando Reinares, a terrorism expert at Spain’s Royal Elcano Institute, told RNE radio there were few doubts that jihadists were behind the attack. “Morocco and its monarchy are a target for al-Qaida and for the north African groups that have been associated with al-Qaida.” The attack adds to the challenges facing Morocco’s ruler, King Mohammed VI, as he tries to prevent the uprisings in the Arab world from reaching his normally stable kingdom. He recently pardoned a raft of political prisoners, including some alleged militant Islamists. The monarch has promised to reform the constitution to placate pro-democracy protesters. But more protests are planned for Sunday. Morocco Global terrorism Damien Pearse Giles Tremlett guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The decision-making authority of elected officials in Benton Harbor, Michigan was suspended under a new emergency manager law passed by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder. In a speech Wednesday, Snyder said he also wanted to abolish the minimum number of hours children are required to be in school. He announced that he was targeting 23 school districts for takeover by state-appointed unilateral executives. “Every single one of those places has just been told that them having locally elected officials, that’s a problem,” MSNBC Rachel Maddow explained Thursday. “That democracy is in the way of making things more efficient in Michigan, that Democracy is not the way we fix problems in America, that it is a problem.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The decision-making authority of elected officials in Benton Harbor, Michigan was suspended under a new emergency manager law passed by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder. In a speech Wednesday, Snyder said he also wanted to abolish the minimum number of hours children are required to be in school. He announced that he was targeting 23 school districts for takeover by state-appointed unilateral executives. “Every single one of those places has just been told that them having locally elected officials, that’s a problem,” MSNBC Rachel Maddow explained Thursday. “That democracy is in the way of making things more efficient in Michigan, that Democracy is not the way we fix problems in America, that it is a problem.”
Continue reading …Twenty years after her assault at a college party, Liz Seccuro received a letter of apology from her attacker. The correspondence that followed led her to pursue justice at last It was late summer 2005 and we were about to set out on an extended vacation with our two-year-old daughter, Ava. “Hey, you got a letter,” said my husband Mike, tossing it to me like a Frisbee. It smelled faintly of vanilla, nice paper. I ripped it open and began to read the very precise, almost feminine cursive script. Dear Elizabeth: In October 1984 I harmed you. I can scarcely begin to understand the degree to which, in your eyes, my behaviour has affected you in its wake. Still, I stand prepared to hear from you about just how, and in what ways you’ve been affected; and to begin to set right the wrong I’ve done, in any way you see fit. Most sincerely yours, Will Beebe In 1984, I arrived, like any other student, at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. An only child, I was the first in my family to attend college. My parents were thrilled, although the university was far from our home town, a suburb of New York City. I had graduated top of my high school class and was prepared to make something great of myself. But those hopes and dreams were dashed about five weeks later. A dorm friend, desperately wanting to join a
Continue reading …Since the 1950s, scientists have been striving to create computers that can think like humans. And each year they pit their efforts against a panel of real humans. Brian Christian went head to hard drive… It’s early September and I wake up in a Brighton hotel, the sea crashing just outside. In a few hours, I will embark on what I have come here to do: have a series of five-minute-long instant-message exchanges with strangers. It may not sound like much, but the stakes for these quick chats are high. On the other side of the conversation will be a psychologist, a linguist, a
Continue reading …‘In the early years I tried leaving many times, but my husband would threaten to kill me and I was demoralised enough to believe him’ When my husband John
Continue reading …One family holiday was enough to leave our resident chef well and truly hooked on his very own spice odyssey Few temptations could winkle me out of my own corner of England during a warm spring or
Continue reading …One minute Jesse Eisenberg was a small-time actor in indie movies, the next he was starring in the film that defined a decade. He talks about life after The Social Network and why he’ll never be comfortable with success From a certain perspective, Jesse Eisenberg ‘s acting career resembles a darkly ironic cosmic joke, with Eisenberg as the victim. The story goes like this: you are a shy and awkward child, deeply uncomfortable in your skin. Then, one day, you discover acting, which you find “enormously comforting”. Performing a prescribed role soothes your paralysing self-consciousness; hiding inside a character, you get the attention you crave, minus the deer-in-the-headlights panic of trying to “be yourself”. Unsurprisingly, you prove particularly good at portraying fiercely intelligent but emotionally semi-detached geeks, angry at the self-assured world from which they, like you, feel
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