Vanity Fair put another feather in Mark Zuckerberg’s cap today, naming him to the top spot in its “ New Establishment ” list for the second year in a row. What’s the “New Establishment” you ask? Well, in the magazine’s words, it’s “an innovative new breed of buccaneering visionaries, engineering prodigies, and…
Continue reading …Firefighters who took part in the rescue efforts are suffering mental and physical ill health The destruction of the World Trade Centre has taken a heavy toll on the health of those who tried to rescue people from the burning buildings, those who took part in the clean-up, and those who lived near the site, research shows. Firefighters who endangered their lives trying to save people have paid a long-term price: a 19%higher risk of cancer as a result of exposure to toxic fumes, according to a study published in a special Lancet series to mark the 10th anniversary of the atrocity. Other research in the series reveals the scale of mental and physical damage suffered by rescuers and witnesses. Dr David Prezant, chief medical officer of New York City fire department, and colleagues studied the firefighters, together with others from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University, and Montefiore Medical Centre, New York. In the years following the disaster, said Prezant, the firefighters began to ask about cancer. The World Trade Centre fire was like no other they had encountered. “Firefighters are not environmental scientists, but they have the common sense test,” he told the Guardian. “What they said after coming out of those buildings after participating in the rescue and recovery effort was not just that the magnitude was great; they felt they were affected in a different way. “Most firefighters have learned there are different smells to fires. They repeatedly said to us that this area smelled different. They said this was unlike any other firefight we’ve had before.” But this did not stop them risking their lives. “We have a unique group of people. On 9/11 the firefighters ran into these towers, many of them after the south tower had collapsed, with nothing in their minds except saving everyone who was in there. We concentrate on the nearly 3,000 people who died there and the 343 firefighters who died that day, as we should, but we should never forget that 20,000 to 30,000 people were evacuated from that building because of the heroic efforts of these responders. “In subsequent years they did voice concern, asking: ‘What’s going to happen to me?’ From day one we have said we will find out and we will provide you with the services necessary to help you.” One of the strengths of the study, he said, is that every firefighter who was there on 11 September 2001 has had many health checks since. The researchers’ efforts to avoid an over-screening bias have brought the percentage estimates down. Originally they found an increase of 32%. The cancers are various, but the most common were those of the skin, prostate, thyroid and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. The authors say a link between exposure to the pollutants given off by the World Trade Centre and cancer is biologically plausible because “some contaminants in the WTC dust, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyls, and dioxins, are known carcinogens.” Dr James Melius of the New York State Labourers’ health fund calls for inclusion of cancer in the government-funded medical programme for firefighters. “Waiting to do so until definitive cancer studies have been completed (probably many years from now) would be unfair and would pose a hardship for workers who willingly risked their health by responding without hesitation to the WTC crisis,” he said. So far, rescue workers and civilians exposed to the dust have lower death rates than other comparable groups in New York, according to another study . But researchers say that is not surprising, because most were employed or volunteers – both groups that generally have better health – and the illnesses they might succumb to as a result of 9/11 generally do not cause death within 10 years. Nonetheless, the more than 50,000 rescue and recovery workers who went to help at the World Trade Centre are suffering from high levels of mental and physical illness, says a third paper . “Our findings show a substantial burden of persistent physical and mental disorders in rescue and recovery workers who rushed to the site of the WTC and laboured there for weeks and months 10 years ago. Many of these individuals now suffer from multiple health problems,” write Dr Juan Wisnivesky and colleagues from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York. Twenty-eight per cent of the rescue and recovery workers have suffered depression at some time since 9/11; 32% have experienced post-traumatic stress disorder, and 21% panic disorder. Police officers have lower rates – 7%, 9% and 8% respectively – perhaps because of previous stressful experiences, the sort of people who are recruited, or under-reporting for fear of job-related repercussions. Many of the 27,000 workers, including police officers, firefighters, construction workers, and municipal workers, whose health has been monitored since 9/11 have breathing-related problems. Forty-two per cent have respiratory problems. “Inhalation of toxic, highly alkaline dust is the probably cause of upper and lower respiratory injury in rescue and recovery workers,” says the report. Over nine years, 28% have had asthma, 42% sinusitis and 39% gastro-oesphageal reflux disease. Matthew Mauer of the New York State department of health writes in a further commentary: “As we mark the 10th anniversary of 9/11, reports of persistent health effects are a sobering reminder that the disaster has had far-reaching effects. One cannot help but wonder what will be reported when we mark the 20th anniversary of this tragedy.” New York Cancer United States Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Manchester proposal coincides with government call for former members of the armed forces to take up teaching It conjures an image of a red-faced sergeant major hollering at the quivering boy in 3B who has forgotten his maths homework. But backers of a proposed free school that will be staffed entirely by former soldiers say parade ground humiliations are the last thing on their minds. Instead, the Phoenix free school in Manchester would offer students ambitious academic goals, outdoor activities and a demonstration of “martial values”. In the modern army, it says, these values are “self-discipline, respect and an ability to listen”. There will be high standards of behaviour – but no demands to “get down and give me 50″. The new 11-18 secondary school, which has yet to find a location, is being proposed by the Centre for Policy Studies , a thinktank, and is backed by Lord Guthrie, a former chief of the defence staff. Its intended headteacher is an army captain, Affan Burki, and it may be housed on surplus army land, such as a “disused TA [territorial army] drill hall”. Tom Burkard, a research fellow at the thinktank who is on the steering committee for the planned school, said: “I want to get away from the idea that it is going to be a glasshouse or sin-bin. “I want to ensure that kids are there because they want to be there. You need a stick somewhere – but if you have to use it very often, you’ve lost the battle.” Burkard makes the case for the school in a report co-authored with Captain Burki. It says: “All the old remedies for poverty, under-achievement and alienation have been tested to destruction. The consequences were starkly before us on the streets of Tottenham and Croydon. But before we put troops on the streets we should consider putting them in our schools.” The proposal comes as the Ministry of Defence gives details of its redundancy programme and coincides with plans by the government to encourage former members of the armed forces to take up teaching , by providing sponsorship and a fast-tracked undergraduate route. In a speech on Thursday, the education secretary, Michael Gove, said he wanted children have more male role models . A quarter of primary schools in England, around 4,000, have no male teachers. Gove also announced that ministers are to scrap a requirement for teachers to record instances when they use physical force, as part of a wider move to “restore adult authority” in the wake of the riots. In a speech delivered at Durand academy in Stockwell, south London, Gove said the regulations on the use of force inhibited teachers’ judgment: “If any parent now hears a school say, ‘sorry, we can’t physically touch the students’, then that school is wrong. Plain wrong. The rules of the game have changed.” Gove made a moral distinction between a “hard-working majority” and a “vicious, lawless, immoral minority”. But he went on to examine what he said were the policy failures behind the “educational underclass”. He said: “To investigate where the looters came from is not to make excuses because of background. It is to shine a light on failures that originated in poor policy, skewed priorities, and the deliberate undermining of legitimate authority.” Gove said there had been a slow erosion of adult authority, subverted by a culture in which young people felt able to ignore civilised boundaries. “The only way to reverse this dissolution of legitimate authority is step-by-step to move the ratchet back in favour of teachers.” Brian Lightman, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, welcomed Gove’s statement on the use of force against pupils. He said: “The use of physical restraint is thankfully required very rarely. On occasions where it is needed, detailed guidance exists and staff fully understand the need to follow it to the letter.” The team behind the Phoenix free school is seeking a partnership with an existing academy sponsor. They have not yet submitted a proposal but hope to open in September 2013, unless their application can be accelerated. If successful, the school would be the first in a chain. Burkard said the reason all its staff would be ex-military was “to ensure that the staff room is working from a common ethos as opposed to having people working at odds with each other”. But the school will not feature cadet-style military training. Burkard said: “I don’t want people to think of it as an outpost of the army, but a community institution that happens to employ soldiers.” Guthrie expressed support for the proposal. “This would be no sticking plaster for the social problems our country faces. Rather, it would help to address deep-seated problems which are now increasingly apparent. If this school is a success, then it should serve as a model for a chain of hundreds of schools. “We must hope that coalition ministers do all they can to expedite this extraordinary and significant initiative.” A spokesman for the Department for Education said: “We welcome the interest of organisations that have the potential to run great free schools.” The first free schools opened their doors to pupils yesterday. Aldborough free school , a primary in Redbridge in east London, and Krishna-Avanti primary in Leicester are among 24 new schools opening this week and next. Secondary schools Free schools Military Defence policy Ministry of Defence Michael Gove Education policy Liberal-Conservative coalition UK riots Manchester Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A Palo Alto woman provides a rare glimpse at the private side of her world-famous neighbor, a guy by the name of Steve Jobs. But Lisen Stromberg isn’t dishing up dirt. Instead, she offers a sweet tribute to Jobs as a regular dad in the neighborhood, attending backyard pool parties…
Continue reading …Facebook plans to join forces with Spotify, MOG, and Rdio to launch its long-rumored music service later this month, sources tell Mashable . Facebook won’t unveil the project until the Sept. 22 f8 developer conference, but it’s been a poorly kept secret—evidence of it was found hidden in the code…
Continue reading …Two men arrested in South Yorkshire and Wiltshire as part of investigation into international online hacking gangs Two men have been arrested in connection with online attacks by hacking gangs Anonymous and LulzSec, Scotland Yard said. The men, aged 24 and 20, were arrested on Thursday in Mexborough, near Doncaster, South Yorkshire, and Warminster, Wiltshire, for conspiring to commit offences under the Computer Misuse Act 1990. Scotland Yard said the arrests were part of a continuing investigation in collaboration with the FBI, South Yorkshire Police and other law enforcement bodies, into activities of Anonymous and LulzSec, especially in connection with suspected offences under the cover of online identity “Kayla”. A spokesman said the men were arrested separately. He said the Doncaster address was searched by police and computer equipment was removed for forensic examination. Detective Inspector Mark Raymond from the Metropolitan Police’s Central e-Crime Unit (PCeU), said: “The arrests relate to our inquiries into a series of serious computer intrusions and online denial-of-service attacks recently suffered by a number of multi-national companies, public institutions and gPressovernment and law enforcement agencies in Great Britain and the US. “We are working to detect and bring before the courts those responsible for these offences, to disrupt such groups, and to deter others thinking of participating in this type of criminal activity.” In a separate investigation two men were charged on Thursday over online attacks by Anonymous, Scotland Yard said. Christopher Weatherhead, 20, from Northampton, and Ashley Rhodes, 26, from Kennington, south London, have been charged with conspiracy to carry out an unauthorised act in relation to a computer. Police had already charged a youth from Chester aged 17 and student Peter David Gibson, 22, from Hartlepool, in relation to the same offences. All four will appear on bail at City of Westminster Magistrates Court on September 7. Anonymous LulzSec Hacking Crime guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Suicide bombers in Iraq have killed 12,000 civilians and 200 coalition soldiers since war began, study finds Suicide bombers in Iraq have killed at least 12,000 civilians and 200 coalition soldiers, according to a study. The research paper , by Dr Madelyn Hsiao-Rei Hicks of King’s College London, the London-based Iraq Body Count and others, describes suicide bombs in Iraq as “a major public health problem”, killing significantly more civilians than soldiers. It is published as part of a Lancet series on the health consequences of 9/11. Among the reasons for the high civilian death toll is the difficulty of getting victims to hospital quickly enough for emergency treatment. The study finds children are more likely to die than adults if they are injured in a suicide bombing. Using data amassed by the Iraq Body Count, which collects verified reports of deaths and injuries, as well as other data on military deaths, the authors say more than 30,000 Iraqi civilians were injured by suicide bombs between 20 March 20 2003 and 31 December 2010, and 12,284 Iraqi civilians were killed in more than 1,000 suicide bombings. These amounted to 10% of civilian deaths and 25% of civilian injuries from armed violence in that period, they say. About a third of the Iraqi fatalities (3,963) were demographically identifiable. Of those, 75% were men, 11% were women and 14% were children. An Iraqi child died in at least 159 (16%) of the 1,003 suicide bombings and a woman or child in at least 211 (21%). In the same period, 200 coalition soldiers were killed in suicide attacks. Of those, 175 were from the US in 76 attacks, 16 were Italian in one attack, three were British in one bombing and four Bulgarians and two Thai soldiers died in one incident. “Suicide bombers in Iraq use suicide bombs strategically as cost-effective, precise, highly destructive weapons,” say the authors. The Iraqi civilian population suffers substantially because it is “a primary chosen target of suicide bombers and those who deploy them”. Iraq Middle East Global terrorism Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Rebels say (again) they are closing in on Moammar Gadhafi , but he’s not talking (again) like a man on the brink of defeat. “The Libyan people cannot kneel, cannot surrender, we are not women,” he said in a message broadcast on a Syria-based TV station. “Let there be a long…
Continue reading …Stephanie Kelly graduated in 2009 with a degree in advertising; instead she works as a part-time secretary and writes freelance for an online “Secret Santa Organizer.” Amy Klein has a degree in English lit from Harvard, but the 2007 grad has been touring the country in a minivan as part…
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