Archive for April, 2010

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Women’s Nike Air Pegasus 26 + (Club/Purple-Lilac-Metallic/Silver-White-Anthracite)

April 18, 2010

Women’s Nike Air Pegasus 26

A shoe is an item of footwear produced at first to protect the human being foot and later, additionally, as an item of decoration in itself. The foot contains more bones than any other single part of the body, and has evolved over hundreds of thousands of years in relation to vastly varied terrain and climatic conditions. Together with the proprioceptive system, it is what makes balance and ambulation possible.

Until recent years, shoes were not worn by most of the world’s population—largely because they could not afford them. Only with the advent of mass production, making available for the first time the cheap flip-flop-type sandal, for example, has shoe-wearing become predominant.

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L.A claims for return of stolen inheritance

April 16, 2010

In the event, which discussed proposals to change the UNESCO convention on the recovery of stolen goods illicitly, participates
Bolivia, Peru, Mexico, Honduras, Ecuador, Guatemala, Chile and Spain
A score of countries with powerful archaeological legacies, including several American, discussed at a conference opened in Cairo how to protect and retrieve their stolen heritage.

“We want to get together and work together to identify and regain our stolen inheritance,” said the secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), Zahi Hawas, the startup of the First International Conference on Cooperation for the security and restoration of cultural inheritance.
The event, which will be discussed tomorrow proposals to change the UNESCO convention on the recovery of stolen goods illegally, with the participation of Spain, Peru, Guatemala, Bolivia, Ecuador, Mexico, Chile and Honduras.

Also participating nations like
China, India, Cyprus, South Korea, Nigeria, Greece, Iraq, Italy, Syria, Sri Lanka, Libya and USA.

Hawas said that the cooperation with scientific institutions and museums around the world is needed to regain the stolen goods and fighting archaeological robbery.
“If museums resist to buy stolen goods, trade can stop,” Hawas said that Egypt has explained that although recovery agreements with “95 percent of world museums, there are still 5 per cent” who have not subscribed .

The Nile nation eight years ago launched a campaign through which recovered about 5 thousand archaeological pieces that had left the nation illegally.

However, still litigating for the return of as many parts as the Rosetta Stone or the bust of Nefertiti, presently exhibited in museums in Berlin and London respectively.
Hawas again demanded the return of these works, and also used to highlight the “excellent cooperation” with countries like Switzerland or Spain.

Besides Egypt, the other participating countries will publish tomorrow a list of items considered were illicitly removed and whose refund claim to various international institutions.

In the case of Peru, its ambassador to Egypt, Liliana Chinese, said that his country be included in the final document the request for restitution of a collection of pieces from the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu, Peru.

“These pieces were transferred temporarily to the University of Yale (USA) and now this institution declines to return them,” said Chino.

In addition, they request more than 100 textiles belonging to the pre-Inca Paracas culture, found in Gothenburg (Sweden), and the treasure of 500 thousand pieces of silver and gold coins minted in Peru rescued from the bottom of the Odyssey by the company in March and whose return to Spain last year issued U.S. justice.

“Last year alone recover thousands of stolen items and we struggled, but Peru is a country with so much material that is very difficult to control,” said Chino.

Also noted the need to reform the UNESCO Convention of 1970 which prohibits the illegal trade in cultural property.

For the archaeologist and deputy minister of Culture and Sports of Guatemala, Hector Escobedo, are needed “more international agreements to prevent the entry into other countries of parts removed illegally.”

“Guatemala is looking for to retrieve some of the monuments from Piedras Negras, one of the most important Maya sites, and a wooden lintels chicozapote who left the country in the nineteenth century and is on exhibit in Switzerland,” said Escobedo.

For his part, Ambassador of Ecuador in Egypt, Edwin Johnson, complained that his country “part of the list of those who suffered the plundering”, especially pre-Columbian inheritance and colonial art from Quito, which was developed during the century XVII.

100`s of works, according to Johnson, they were taken lawlessly from temples, churches and even museum premises, therefore urged to strengthen border controls.

The thieving of altarpieces of churches located in rural areas is also a “recurring problem in Bolivia, according to the charge d’affaires of Bulgaria in Egypt, Raul Pals.

In the case of Spain, Jesus Manal, deputy manager of the Historical Heritage Security of the Spanish Ministry of Culture, explicated that its action is concentrated on fighting the depredations, robberies in rural areas and control traffic of archaeological artifacts.

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Mexico: a growing controversy up an interview with drug kingpin

April 13, 2010

The Mexican magazine publisher Proceso, which published an interview with a leader of the Sinaloa cartel, said the distribution of the specimens was hampered by intimidation in the state of the country’s northwest.

A spokeswoman for the magazine publisher said about all copies of the interview with Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada was purchased by two men.

The interview had generated much controversy.

Process, one of the leading news magazines of Mexico, said the huge purchase was intended to prevent the Sinaloa population had access to copies.
“Political connections”

Margarita Carreon, head of sales process, said the local distributor of the magazine was addressed on Sunday by two men who bought more than 1,700 individuals who had not yet made the point of sale.

Carreon told El Noticiero News he considered the main cause for bullying was not the story of “El Mayo”, but an article accompanying the publication in which it was linked to drug kingpin with a local politician in Sinaloa.

The interview came as a surprise in Mexico, because the press rarely has access to the leaders of drug cartels.

In the story, Zambada spoke of his fear of being captured by authorities and criticized the government’s strategy to take on drug-related fury that has left over 18,000 dead since 2006.

He also said he frequently talks on the telephone with the top leader of the poster and Mexico’s most wanted man, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.
“Scoop or Scandal?
Mexican Soldier

The interview, conducted at an undisclosed location, was conducted by veteran Mexican journalist Julio Scherer Garcia, who has been criticized by some for providing a platform to speak Zambada.

Others believe that the scoop is one of the huge journalistic achievements of recent times in Mexico.

In any case, many think that the obvious intimidation in Sinaloa is a stark reminder of the pressure on the press in the areas most affected by violence related to drug trafficking.

And above all, so the disputation about the interview appears to confirm is that Mexico, including the media, is still learning to accept his main problem with the drug cartels.

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United States: claim for inspection of Internet privacy laws

April 7, 2010

Technology parties and privacy groups in the U.S. have called for a inspection of Internet privacy laws because they say the government has too much admission to private data online.
Google, eBay, Microsoft, Intel, AT & T, among others, launched the coalition of the Due Process Digital (Digital Due Process) that seeks to update the Privacy Act 1986, passed before the explosion of Internet use.
The coalition calls for court orders issued before the e-mails and text messages are delivered to the competent authorities.
The idea is to protect more data and information stored online tracking of mobile phones, said Maggie Shiels, Technology reporter.
A law of another era
The alliance looks for to rewrite the Privacy Act Electronic Communications (ECPA, for its acronym in English), 1986 – which establishes what type of digital private info the government can access and how you can get.
“Not surprisingly, a law written in 1986 has not provided protection to the privacy you need 25 years later,” said Richard Salgado, senior counsel for Google for information security.
The coalition, which includes more than 30 fellow members from the world of diligence, privacy and the academy, noted that the ECPA is a “confusing patchwork of rules that have been seen in contradictory ways by the courts.”
For example, the offices of law enforcement can access exclusive info from emails, instant messages and other data stored online through simple citations, not guaranteed by a court order.
The coalition recommends the establishment of an order before the internet providers deliver the information online, as is required for a physical search of a suspect’s computer.
Need to similar security before the cell phone companies to deliver tracking information of their customers.
It also seeks to ensure that the courts any real-time information such as text and instant messaging-is relevant to an investigation.
“The law has made clear that the same rule implements to emails and documents stored with a service provider, while at the same time flexible enough to meet the needs of law enforcement,” said Jim Dempsey, the Center for Democracy and Technology.
Negotiation
Alliance fellow members said they already had speaks with the White House, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI, for its acronym in English) and the Departments of Justice and Commerce.
They recognized that it was potential that the authorities charged with enforcing the law to resist any change and that certainly would be a long argument before the Congress to act.
“We’re not waiting to be enacted this year, but it’s time to start the talks,” said Dempsey.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he planned to hold audiences on “much-needed upgrades” to the law of privacy.

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Hadron Collider experimentation starts looking for the Big Bang

April 3, 2010

Scientists working on the Huge Hadron Collider (LHC, by its initials in English), almost ambitious physics experiment in earth, started on Tuesday a test that seeks to revive the conditions of beginning of the universe after the Big-Bang-and determine new aspects of its intrinsic nature

The research workers confirmed the clash of 2 beams of subatomic particles at a rate slightly below that of light. The hit energy generated a record seven trillion volts.

The experiment tries to discover hints to some of the big questions that still have no answer in particle physics.

The LHC, wich construction price was U.S. $ 9,000 million, eventually started to get results 18 months after their operation then, getting suffered some breaking.

The experiment of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN for its French acronym) was retarded several hours due to a problem with the beams.

In search of the Higgs boson

During the experiment, scientists will look for signs of the Higgs boson, a subatomic particle also called the “God particle” that is crucial for the current understanding of physics. The theory is that it provides mass to everything in the universe.

Although it is anticipated their existence, scientists have never seen, said Matt McGrath, science specialist for El Noticiero, from Geneva.

In this Swiss city, in a circular tunnel 27 km long, 100 meters beneath the Franco-Swiss border, is the LHC.

McGrath explains that researchers have been working on raising the energy contained in small bundles running through the tunnel 11,000 times per second.

The plan is to cross the beams at several points in the circuit to create collisions with record amounts of energy.

Years of analysis

Guido Tonelli, spokesman for the scientists working in one of the sensing elements that will follow the results of subatomic particles, said “the business of small beams of particles collide at high energies is not easy.”

“Getting match has been likened to throwing needles through the Atlantic Ocean and make collide halfway. The researchers promise will happen. And it might shed light on some very deep and difficult questions of physics,” adds .

The LHC, Tonelli says, “can finally begin to shed light on these results, but do not expect fast answers. The vast quantities of data generated by the colliding beam takes years of analysis before drawing final conclusions.

Known as “God’s machine”, the greatest particle accelerator in the world had tripled in March, the most intense energy ever achieved. This occurred during the preparations for the current experiment in research of the secrets of the universe.

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