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Obama to speak at inauguration of King memorial

Written By admin on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 | 10:58 AM

US President Barack Obama will speak at the dedication of a monument to civil rights leader Martin Luther King that has been rescheduled to October 16, the White House said on Wednesday.

The imposing stone monument on the National Mall in Washington was to have been dedicated on August 28, the 48th anniversary of King's riveting "I Have a Dream" appeal for racial equality in America.

But the passage of Hurricane Irene up the US East Coast forced the date to be pushed back.

In a brief statement, the White House said: "On Sunday, October 16, President Obama will deliver remarks at the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial dedication on the National Mall."

King, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, championed an end to racial segregation through non-violence and civil disobedience. He was assassinated in April 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee, at the age of 39.

His $120 million memorial was designed by Chinese sculptor Lei Yixin and carved from imported Chinese granite.
10:58 AM | 0 comments

Tell the truth: Rosa urges Angelina

Mindo Rosalina “Rosa” Manulang has urged Democratic Party lawmaker Angelina Sondakh to give an honest testimony to Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) investigators when she is questioned by them on Thursday.
“Please [Angelina], tell the truth about what really happened in my case,” Rosa said after her trial hearing on Wednesday.
“I hope her information can help reduce my sentence."
The KPK is scheduled to summon Angelina for questioning on Thursday in its ongoing investigation of a high-profile bribery case centering around a construction project tender for the upcoming SEA Games.
Angelina, who is a member of the House of Representatives' Commission X overseeing sport and who is also on the House Budget Committee, is believed to have helped fix the tender, which was granted to PT Duta Graha Indah (DGI).
Angelina first came under the spotlight after an alleged go-between in the case, Rosa, accused her of playing an important role in the graft, during her testimony with the KPK in May.
Angelina is scheduled to be questioned as a witness for suspect Muhammad Nazaruddin, the recently ousted Democratic Party lawmaker for Commission III overseeing law and legal affairs.
Nazaruddin, who is accused of masterminding the bribery by ordering Rosa, his confidante, to seek a project at the Sports and Youth Affairs Ministry that could be awarded to DGI
10:52 AM | 0 comments

NASA's GRAIL to Map Moon

Written By admin on Sunday, September 11, 2011 | 12:00 PM

NASA had to postpone Thursday's planned launch of twin solar-powered spacecraft to the moon

because of upper level wind conditions, but the U.S. space agency now hopes to launch the GRAIL lunar mission from Cape Canaveral in Florida on Friday, September 9.  Our reporter has more on the GRAIL mission to determine the structure of the lunar interior, from crust to core.

If you look at the moon with a telescope, it's clear that our nearest neighbor is not smooth

and uniform, but marked by craters and mountains.  NASA scientists say that there is even more variation beneath the lunar surface, and that our moon has the lumpiest gravitational field they know of in the solar system.

Ed Weiler, of NASA's Science Mission Directorate, explains the goal of the nearly $500 million GRAIL lunar mission.

"GRAIL, simply put, is a journey to the center of the moon," said Weiler. "It will probe the interior of the moon and map its gravity field 100 to 1,000 times better than ever before."

Weiler explains the twin, washing-machine sized crafts will essentially chase one another around the moon, about 200 kilometers apart, and use radio signals to determine the distance between them.

"As the first satellite goes over a higher mass concentration or higher gravity, it will speed up slightly, and that will increase the distance," he said. "And then as the second satellite goes over, that distance will close again."

In this tandem formation, the spacecraft will spend three months mapping the moon's gravitational field.  NASA expects GRAIL to yield the most accurate gravity map of the moon to date. 

Scientists will then compare gravitational and topographical maps of the lunar surface.  They expect there to be a difference in the gravitational signal over lunar craters and mountains.  If that is not the case, it will be a sign that something is going on in the moon's interior. 

Also, just as the moon creates tides in our oceans, Earth's gravity creates tides in the solid moon - all the way down to its core.  GRAIL will be able to map those changes, enabling scientists to deduce information about the moon's interior.

NASA says the insights gained from the GRAIL mission will help them better understand the way rocky planets, including Earth, formed.  And the gravitational map will be an important navigational tool for future lunar spacecraft. 

The GRAIL twins are scheduled to arrive at the moon around New Year's Day - January 1, 2012.
12:00 PM | 0 comments

Japan Commemorates 6 Months Since Disasters

Photo: AP
Yuki Omori, 23, prays at a makeshift shrine at Kadowaki Elementary School in Ishinomaki, northeastern Japan, September 11, 2011, six months after the March 11 earthquake.
Japan fell silent Sunday in a solemn minute of prayer and reflection marking six months since the massive earthquake and tsunami that left 20,000 people dead or missing and sparked a nuclear crisis.

Sirens wailed at 2:46 in the afternoon as tens of thousands of mourners, many of them dressed in black, gathered to remember the dead in towns and villages along the country's devastated northeastern coast.

In the city of Ishinomaki, mourners gathered on a hill overlooking wrecked homes and businesses to pray for the nearly 4,000 people who died there on March 11, when towering waves swept away whole sectors of the coastal city. Organizers displayed 18,000 letters from children in the form of a giant rainbow spread across the ground.

Similar observances took place in towns and villages in Iwate and Fukushima prefectures, while hundreds of Tokyo residents staged anti-nuclear protests.

The magnitude 9.0 earthquake produced devastation not seen in Japan since World War Two, with the accompanying tsunami swallowing entire towns. The waves flooded the Fukushima nuclear power plant, triggering the worst nuclear crisis since the Chernobyl disaster of 1986.

Political fallout from the disasters forced Prime Minister Naoto Kan from office amid widespread accusations his government downplayed the scale of the nuclear crisis.

Authorities say 83,000 people remain in temporary homes six months after the disasters.  Nearly 7,000 people are reported still living in disaster shelters, as radiation fears from the shuttered Fukushima plant prevent area residents from returning home.

Police say the remains of 1,106 people remain unidentified.
11:53 AM | 1 comments
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