Monday, December 19, 2011

APNewsBreak: US aid a step toward Korea nuke talks (AP)

The United States is poised to announce a significant donation of food aid to North Korea this week, the first concrete accomplishment after months of behind-the-scenes diplomatic contacts between the two wartime enemies. An agreement by North Korea to suspend its controversial uranium enrichment program will likely follow within days.

A broad outline of the emerging agreement has been made known to The Associated Press by people close to the negotiations.

Discussions have been taking place since summer in New York, Geneva and Beijing. They have already yielded agreements by North Korea to suspend nuclear and ballistic missile testing, readmit international nuclear inspectors expelled in 2009, and resume a dialogue between North Korea and South Korea, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of sensitivity of the negotiations.

The announcement of the food aid, expected to take place as early as Monday in Washington, not only would be welcome news for North Korea, but also pave the way for another crucial U.S.-North Korea meeting in Beijing on Thursday. That meeting in turn could lead within weeks to the resumption of nuclear disarmament talks that would also include China, Japan, Russia and South Korea.

The so-called six-party talks were last held three years ago, and resuming them would amount to a foreign policy coup for the Obama administration.

Suspension of uranium enrichment by North Korea had been a key demand from both the U.S. and South Korea of the North, which has tested two atomic devices in the past five years.

The U.S. would provide 240,000 tons of high-protein biscuits and vitamins ? 20,000 tons a month for a year ? but not much-wanted rice, according to reports in the South Korean media. It would be the first food aid from the U.S. in nearly three years.

Negotiators have sought for two decades to convince North Korea to dismantle its plutonium-producing nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, which the government insists exists to generate much-needed power. But plutonium can be used to make atomic bombs, and North Korea also stands by its right to develop missiles to defend itself against the nuclear-armed United States.

In 2009, North Korea tested a missile capable of reaching U.S. shores, earning widespread condemnation and strengthened U.N. sanctions. An incensed North Korea, which insisted the rocket launch was designed to send a satellite into space, walked away from ongoing nuclear disarmament talks in protest.

In the weeks that followed, North Korea tested a nuclear device and announced it would begin enriching uranium, which would give it a second way to make atomic weapons.

"North Korea's disclosure of a uranium enrichment program was bait" for negotiations and aid, said Jeung Young-tae, an analyst with the Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul. "And the United States grabbed that bait."

With little arable land and outdated agricultural practices, North Korea has long struggled to feed its people. Flooding and a harsh winter further destroyed crops. The World Food Program issued a plea earlier this year for $218 million in humanitarian help to feed the most vulnerable.

As donations trickled in, Washington deliberated for months on whether to contribute food aid.

Then, in July, U.S. and North Korean negotiators met in New York, and again in Geneva in November. Two days of discussion on food aid last week in Beijing led up to this week's expected announcement of a food-aid package.

This diplomatic dance has unfolded as North Korea prepares for two milestone events for its citizens: the 100th anniversary of the April 1912 birth of President Kim Il Sung, who is officially regarded as the nation's "eternal president" long after his death, and a movement to prepare Kim Jong Un, son of current leader Kim Jong Il, to become the next ruler.

A peace treaty with the U.S. to formally end the Korean War and ensure stability on the Korean peninsula has remained a key goal for the North Korean leadership. The war that erupted in 1950 was suspended with an armistice in 1953, but tensions on the Korean peninsula have remained high ever since.

A technical state of war remains, and the U.S. maintains a garrison of 28,500 troops in South Korea to protect its ally against aggression.

More recently, the deadly March 2010 sinking of a South Korean warship and a November 2010 artillery attack on a front-line South Korean island populated by civilians only deepened tensions between North Korea and the West.

Besides a food aid deal, another tangible sign of diplomatic progress has been North Korea's recent willingness to discuss letting U.S. military officials into North Korea to recover remains of U.S. servicemen killed ? a project suspended by Washington in 2005. North Korea has agreed to allow a first U.S. team into the country in the spring, officials said.

But overlying all of this is a desire by the U.S. and its allies to restart nuclear disarmament negotiations.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Friday that there was no announcement yet on food aid or further U.S. talks with North Korea.

However, those with knowledge of the negotiations told the AP an announcement was expected as soon as Monday, and would include a provision for better monitoring of food distribution to allay concerns that aid meant for the most needy is diverted to North Korea's powerful military.

Nuland, who has said the government wants to ensure the food goes to the needy, "not to the regime, and not to go locked up in storehouses," has said the food in question is better characterized as "nutritional assistance."

"When you think about food, you think about sacks of rice, cans of food, things that might easily be diverted to the wrong purpose," she said Thursday.

"When you talk about nutritional assistance, it could be that, but it could also be things like vitamin supplements to populations in need, like women and children; it could be high protein biscuits or other things." The concern, she said, is that items intended for starving women and children "not find themselves on some leader's banquet table."

___

Associated Press writer Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report. Follow Jean H. Lee, AP's Korea bureau chief, on Twitter at twitter.com/newsjean.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_re_as/as_nkorea_us

big ten championship game ultimate fighter 14 ultimate fighter 14 2011 bowl projections michigan state michigan state ndamukong suh

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Sun Rips Tail From Comet During Solar Close Encounter (SPACE.com)

A newfound comet that plunged through the sun's atmosphere Thursday (Dec. 15) ? and amazingly survived ? was visibly maimed by the encounter, which left the icy wanderer without its long, bright tail, a scientist says.

According to Karl Battams, a solar researcher at the U.S. Naval Research Center in Washington, the death-defying comet Lovejoy slipped through the sun's outer atmosphere (called the corona) with a bright tail in tow, only to reappear tailless on the other side.

The comet zoomed within 87,000 miles (140,000 kilometers) of the sun's surface, making its closest approach at about 7 p.m. EST Thursday (midnight GMT on Dec. 16). Instruments called coronographs aboard several sun-watching space observatories caught the unexpected solar sight.

"Somehow it survived being immersed in the several million-degree solar corona for almost an hour and has now re-emerged back into the views of the LASCO and SECCHI coronagraphs, almost as bright as before!" Battams wrote on his website Sungrazing Comets. "The only notable exception is that it appears to have lost its tail ? In fact its tail is still gently floating out in space where it was before perihelion!" [Photos of Death-Defying Comet Lovejoy]

A?labeled photo of comet Lovejoy ??and the sun after their encounter posted by Battams clearly shows a tail-like feature on one side of the sun and the head of the comet on the other. The tail may be older dust and gas ejected by comet Lovejoy before it entered the sun's corona that is still traveling on the same trajectory, Battams wrote.

But while comet Lovejoy may be mutilated by its sun encounter, comet fans shouldn't worry too much. "I'm pretty confident that we will see Comet Lovejoy grow a new one," Battams wrote.

Comet tails are created when their icy surfaces warm up, creating a gas that gets blown outward by the sun's solar wind. Charged particles from the sun can also turn some of a comet's gases into charged ions to form an ion tail. Comet tails always point away from the sun.

The unexpected survival of comet Lovejoy has amazed Battams and other astronomers because most comets that have close encounters with the sun are destroyed. In fact, many researchers predicted the comet would likely fizzle out, as the chances of its survival were so low.

"What an extraordinary 24hrs!" Battams wrote. "I was wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. And I have never been so happy to be wrong!"

Australian amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy, who discovered the comet on Nov. 27, told SPACE.com that the attention his find has received has been amazing, and that he was happy to make a contribution to astronomy.

"It's been tremendous," Lovejoy told SPACE.com just hours before the comet's swing through the sun. "Apparently it's all over Facebook, and I don't use Facebook. But there's a lot of interest. I think a lot of people like the name ? the Lovejoy name seems to strike a chord with people."

SPACE.com assistant managing editor Clara Moskowitz (@ClaraMoskowitz) contributed to this story. You can follow SPACE.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter @tariqjmalik. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111217/sc_space/sunripstailfromcometduringsolarcloseencounter

john beck john beck mariska hargitay gmcr ohio news caracal beef wellington

The gift of prayer for postelection Congo

A Christian Science perspective.

Congolese people and their world neighbors have been hoping for peace and progress in the troubled region. The November 28 elections in Democratic Republic of Congo were its second free elections since independence from Belgium in 1960. But the official election results announced last Friday are in dispute, with the reputed winner and the opposition candidate both declaring themselves president. Reports of irregular voting procedures and preelection violence have led international observers to conclude that the election process lacked credibility.

Skip to next paragraph

Democratic Republic of Congo is the world?s 11th largest country geographically, with abundant natural resources and great potential. But civil war, foreign interventions, and power struggles, fueled largely by competition for resources and ethnic strife, have left Congo in a humanitarian crisis. The country faces poverty, hunger, displacement, unstable governance, lack of infrastructure, and ongoing violence, including widespread sexual violence as a tool of war.

Although Congo may seem far away, it?s more connected to our daily life than we might think. It has extensive mineral reserves including about 80 percent of the world?s coltan, an essential component in electronics, from circuit boards to smart phones. It has oil and gas reserves, plus hydroelectric resources that could power much of Africa. Congo is centrally located in sub-Saharan Africa, so its political stability is key to the whole region.

Beyond practical considerations, we?re connected heart to heart to the people of Congo because all men, women, and children are brothers and sisters in the worldwide human family, all deserving a good and peaceful life. So as I prepare for the holiday season, I want to include Congo?s population in my gift-giving. What kind of gift could I possibly give to help???

The gift of prayer is one of the most precious things we can give ? or receive. Prayer that aligns thought with spiritual truths about God (the Father-Mother of us all) and His-Her spiritual creation helps leaven thought and promote progress, and ?A little leaven leavens the whole lump of dough? (Galatians 5:9, New American Standard Bible).

A Congolese friend of mine who lives in Congo told me he prays regularly for his country. In 1998, when his province of Bas-Congo was under rebel siege, he felt inspired to pray with the Lord?s Prayer and its spiritual interpretation by Monitor founder Mary Baker Eddy in "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures." He prayerfully affirmed the Congolese people?s unassailable oneness with God, divine Mind, acknowledging that God governed his country in peace, harmony, and unity.

My friend strove to live that peacefulness daily with the people around him. He held firmly to the spiritual truth that nothing could overthrow divine peace or destroy his country?s unity. He prayed with Psalm 46, which reads in part: ?God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.... He maketh wars to cease unto the end of the earth ... Be still, and know that I am God.? A week later, the situation calmed down in his area, and there wasn?t any pillaging in his neighborhood. Although he and his family didn?t have enough money during that time, all their daily needs were met. My friend felt that his prayers, along with those of many others, contributed to this resolution.

As I pray to support Congo during this holiday season, I?m inspired by the Christmas story. When Mary and Joseph went to Bethlehem, Mary gave birth to Jesus in a humble stable. In a field nearby, shepherds were watching over their flocks that night. An angel (a message from God) appeared to them, saying: ?Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.? A multitude of angels chimed: ?Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men? (Luke 2:10, 11, 14).

The shepherds went to Bethlehem to see the newborn child, the promised Savior or Christ. They felt God?s presence deeply and shared with others what they had seen and felt.

Divine Love is always shepherding humanity?s thought toward the Christ, the consciousness of God?s sovereign reign of peace and harmony. The divine Father-Mother brings this message to every corner of the globe, especially those places most in need.

To me, the Christ is the true idea of our spiritual identity, the awareness of the childlike innocence and fundamental goodness of each individual. God unfolds each person?s unique individuality and contribution to the world. Divine Mind communicates to every person and nation the constructive ideas that foster progress and meet every human need. This awareness will ultimately save humanity from every form of ignorance or oppression.

God, omnipotent divine Love, is giving to all humankind this wonderful gift of universal love, peace, and cooperation.

To receive Christian Science perspectives daily or weekly in your inbox, sign up today.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/JHWyf_49phw/The-gift-of-prayer-for-postelection-Congo

acrylamide advent calendar adobe air 2005yu55 advanced search personhood amendment haynesworth

Saturday, December 17, 2011

One white, one black: Wrong body cremated

The wrong body was cremated after an unfortunate mix-up at a hospice facility in Denver. KUSA-TV's Kyle Clark reports.

By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

The grief of two Colorado families?was compounded when the bodies of their loved ones got switched, resulting in the wrong patient getting cremated, a Denver investigation has discovered. The deceased men, one who was white and the other who was black, were wearing identification wristbands at the time of the mix-up.

Robert Mitchell, of Denver, and Perry Heath, of Aurora, Colo., died at The Denver Hospice on Nov. 10, according to an investigation by Denver's 9News.com. The?families began their respective funeral preparations; unbeknownst to them, many Colorado funeral homes outsource their work, and their late family members were about to go through a complex maze of third-party providers.

Perry Heath was supposed to be cremated. His family arranged for a cremation through 5280 Cremation and Funeral Services of Aurora, according to 9News. Despite its name, 5280 Cremation does not perform cremations, and outsourced the work to a third-party provider.

That same day, reported 9News, Robert Mitchell's family made arrangements for his burial. They hired Taylor Funeral and Cremation Services, also of Aurora, to handle his viewing, and funeral. Taylor doesn't have a mortuary, though, so they hired a transport company to pick up Mitchell's body and take it?to a separate embalming company.

The outsourced transport workers arrived at The Denver Hospice on Nov. 10 for Mitchell and Heath as scheduled, but that's when things went wrong.

According to 9News, Metropolitan Mortuary Services took Heath's body, slapping a band on his wrist with Mitchell's name on it next to one that?bore his real name. And SI Funeral Services removed Mitchell's body from the hospice.

The error became evident when Taylor Funeral Home received?Heath's body a few days before what was supposed to be Mitchell's viewing and funeral. Mitchell is black, and this white body clearly wasn't his.?Meantime, Mitchell had been cremated by another company.

Both transport contractors blamed The Denver Hospice. They told 9News they were directed to the bodies by staff members.

New processes put into place
The Denver Hospice said it will now require nurses, not other staff, to accompany transport contractors to patients' rooms.

"We're sorry that this happened and we've put in new processes, training procedures and oversight to make sure nothing like this happens again. And we ask people to trust that we are taking very good care of their loved ones," Janelle McCallum, ?chief clinical officer at The Denver Hospice, told 9News. "The care and concern that we show when the person is in our care, and the precision that we use when they're there, has to also be shown as they're leaving."

A nurse will check each patient's ID wristband before signing paperwork allowing the body to be removed, she added.

Due to the mix-up, reported 9News, Mitchell was cremated and buried at Fort Logan National Cemetery under Heath's name. He has since been disinterred.

"The [hospice] should have checked as well as the people who picked up these bodies," Marcus Mitchell, Robert Mitchell's son, told 9News.

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9466947-one-white-one-black-wrong-body-cremated

sam hurd arrested facebook timeline presidential debate atlanta falcons roddy white roddy white howard stern

What Soldiers Look Like Before, During and After War [Photography]

Photographer Claire Felicie's Marked project shows the faces of soldiers before, during and after war. The differences are slight but undeniable. Skin is weathered, wrinkles are deeper and eyes are sadder. See for yourself. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/n37FqxAFUeE/

adderall muskingum county muskingum county social security social security intc barometer

Gunshots, explosions heard in west Kabul: witness (Reuters)

KABUL (Reuters) ? Several suicide bombers attacked a police station in the west of the Afghan capital Kabul on Friday, a police source said.

"At least four suicide bombers carried out an attack on a police station," the source said, adding that one bomber detonated his explosives. Police were still fighting the others, who were armed with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, the source said.

Earlier, a Reuters witness heard gunfire and at least two explosions.

The Taliban generally target military personnel or foreigners, such as in the attack on a convoy of NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) vehicles in late October, which killed 13. That attack was also in the west of the city, an area which does not have a high concentration of foreign residents.

A huge suicide bomb killed 80 people at a Shi'ite Muslim shrine in Kabul last week, an attack the Taliban condemned.

(Reporting by Hamid Shalizi; Writing by Daniel Magnowski)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/wl_nm/us_afghanistan_blasts

weather houston weather houston small business saturday small business saturday hank baskett beyonce dance for you beyonce dance for you

Friday, December 16, 2011

Thursday's 'critical' Iowa debate: 4 predictions (The Week)

New York ? The GOP gang is getting together Thursday night for one last hurrah in 2011 ? the final chance to make their pitch before the voting starts

Thursday night's Republican presidential debate in Sioux City, Iowa, "will be the final episode in one of the most popular reality television series of 2011," say Peter Hamby and Paul Steinhauser in CNN, and "the stakes could not be higher for all involved." After this face-off between the remaining seven GOP presidential contenders, most voters will tune out until Jan. 3, when the Iowa caucuses launch the actual vote-counting phase of what's already been a long and grueling campaign. What can we expect from this "critical" Fox News/Iowa GOP debate?

1. This will be the last debate for some of the candidates
"If first impressions matter in politics ? and they do ? so too does the last thing voters see before casting a vote," GOP strategist Doug Heye tells CNN. At least half of Iowa caucus-goers are still undecided, giving everyone a strong incentive to shine. That's especially critical for the low-polling candidates ? Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum, and to a lesser extent Rick Perry ? who have staked their campaigns on a strong finish in Iowa. When the next debate rolls around Jan. 7, "the GOP field will undoubtedly be smaller," says Catalina Camia in USA Today. This debate will help determine "who stays and who goes."

SEE MORE: Is the 'frustrating' primary campaign hurting the GOP?

?

2. Romney will try to knock Gingrich out
"Expect Mitt Romney, in his elegant way, to slice Newt Gingrich to pieces," Republican strategist Alex Castellanos tells CNN. Romney doesn't have to win Iowa, but if he can keep Gingrich from coming out on top, "his last serious opponent will be dead and stored in a freezer." As the acknowledged and self-proclaimed frontrunner, Gingrich "has the most at stake when the bantering begins tonight," says Bret Hayworth in the Sioux City Journal, but "Romney has the most to gain."

3. Everyone else will be gunning for Gingrich, too
"Frankly, Romney would be more than happy to see Reps. Ron Paul (Texas) or Bachmann (Minn.) have a good night," says Jennifer Rubin in The Washington Post. Paul especially, since he has a real shot at winning Iowa, and Romney wants him to. But "the more votes Gingrich loses, the better for everyone else," so with all his rivals "trying to provoke and skewer him," Gingrich had better turn in "a steady and uneventful performance." He "can't afford to lose his cool," agrees CNN's Castellanos. "If Newt does his 'angry badger' impression, he will be finished."

SEE MORE: The sad return of Donald Trump's freak show

?

4. Someone will have an "oops" moment
"Expect to see at least one candidate make a significant mistake," says the Sioux City Journal's Hayworth, something like Romney's $10,000 bet or Perry's brain freeze. "But don't expect to learn much more about where the candidates stand on the issues." The format of the debate is definitely skewed toward forcing "an oops moment," says Iowa State political science professor Steffen Schmidt. "That's been the biggest news from almost all these debates ? who is gonna slip on the banana peel." Everyone will be waiting for, or trying to cause, those pratfalls.

View this article on TheWeek.com
Get 4 Free Issues of The Week

Other stories from this topic:

Like on Facebook?-?Follow on Twitter?-?Sign-up for Daily Newsletter

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111215/cm_theweek/222514

verlander verlander patriots new england patriots justin verlander pepper spraying cop pepper spraying cop