Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Sociologist who resisted internment dies in Canada

A sociologist who refused to be sent to internment camps that kept more than 100,000 Japanese-Americans captive during World War II has died in the Canadian city of Edmonton.

Gordon Hirabayashi, who died at the age of 93, was vindicated four decades later when a U.S. court in 1987 overturned his conviction and concluded that the U.S. government's internment policies had been based on political expediency, not on any risk to national security.

Hirabayashi had by then left the United States, working in Lebanon and Egypt before taking a job at the University of Alberta as chairman of the sociology department.

His son, Jay Hirabayashi, said on Facebook that his father died Monday morning. He said his mother, Esther Hirabayashi, 87, died about 10 hours later. The couple was divorced.

Gordon Hirabayashi was born in Seattle and attended the University of Washington. As a student there, he was one of the first to challenge the U.S. government policy.

In 1942, five months after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, he turned himself in to the FBI and was sentenced to 90 days in prison, a verdict that was upheld on appeal through to the U.S. Supreme Court.

According to a University of Washington newsletter from 2000, Hirabayashi was in his senior year when he refused to get on a bus that was taking Japanese-Americans to internment camps on the West Coast.

"I wasn't a rebel looking for a cause," Hirabayashi said at the time. "In fact, I was preparing to go. But in the days before I was supposed to leave, I realized that I couldn't do it."

He said he knew his parents might be in jeopardy, as they had not been eligible for naturalization when they immigrated to the United States.

"But the second generation, my generation, were U.S. citizens," Hirabayashi said. "We had constitutional rights. I didn't think anything could happen to us. We had a rude awakening."

His disbelief continued as he fought his legal battle, with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union.

"When the case got to the federal courts I thought I might win it, since the primary goal of federal judges was to uphold the Constitution," he said. "But the judge told the jury, 'You heard the defense talking about defending the Constitution. That's irrelevant. The issue is the executive order that the military issued.' Under those circumstances, the jury came back very fast."

Having his conviction overturned many years later was a real vindication not only for Hirabayashi but for "all the effort people had put in for the rights of citizens during crisis periods."

He said it also changed his view of his home country.

"There was a time when I felt that the Constitution failed me," he said.

"But ... the U.S. government admitted it made a mistake. A country that can do that is a strong country."

Hirabayashi spent 23 years at the University of Alberta before retiring in 1983. His focus was the study of peasants in developing countries and the problems of confronting the mounting impact of post-Second World War industrialization.

Jay Hirabayashi called his father "an American hero."

"Besides being a great father ... (he) taught me about the values of honesty, integrity, and justice," he said.

He noted that though his parents were divorced, "they somehow chose to leave us on the same day."

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/01/03/2572451/sociologist-who-resisted-internment.html

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Lithuania still planning to adopt euro in 2014 (AP)

VILNIUS, Lithuania ? Lithuania is still determined to introduce the embattled euro currency in two years, a government official said Tuesday, despite skepticism by the Baltic country's president.

The center-right government was doing everything possible to join the eurozone in 2014, its previously stated goal, said Virgis Valentinavicius, an adviser to Prime Minister Andrius Kubilius.

"The most important thing are stable finances" to meet the standards of the EU "and the prime minister is sure that our country will meet them," said Valentinavicius.

"We can only hope that EU will solve the problems of common currency by that time," he added.

However, in an interview published Monday in the Veidas magazine, President Dalia Grybauskaite expressed doubt that Lithuania would be ready, saying "2014 was unrealistic." She did not elaborate.

Grybauskaite, a former finance minister who served as the EU's budget commissioner for five years, could be seen as veiled criticism of the government, which barely managed to pass the 2012 budget in last December.

The budget will have a slightly higher than expected deficit of 3 percent of gross domestic product ? the upper limit allowed by the EU ? as growth prospects deteriorate due to the European financial crisis.

Lithuania, which joined the EU in 2004, is obliged to introduce the euro along with other East European members of the bloc, though there is no deadline for doing so.

Poland, for instance, has said it would take a slower path to currency integration and would be ready to adopt the euro in four years. Lithuania, a nation of 3 million people, wants to phase in the euro as soon as possible, or 2014.

The Bank of Lithuania said that inflation could become the biggest obstacle to eurozone membership.

"According to (the bank's) analysts, the greatest risks to missing the Maastricht criteria is inflation," bank spokesman Mindaugas Milieska said. "Despite a slowdown in economic growth, inflation is strongly affected by outside factors such as fluctuation of global energy and food prices."

In November annual inflation in Lithuania was 4.4 percent, compared with an average 3 percent in the 17-member euro area.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120103/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_lithuania_euro

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Prosecutors to take stage Tuesday in Mubarak trial (Reuters)

CAIRO (Reuters) ? The trial of Egypt's ousted President Hosni Mubarak will resume in earnest Tuesday when judges begin hearing arguments from prosecutors, who say Mubarak and his co-defendants are to blame for the deaths of hundreds of protesters.

Lawyers demanded Monday that the head of Egypt's ruling military council, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, be summoned back to the court to give fresh testimony. They also asked for Tantawi's deputy General Sami Anan to give evidence.

Mubarak, his two sons, the former interior minister and senior police officers face charges ranging from corruption to involvement in the deaths of around 850 protesters during the uprising that unseated him last February.

Mubarak is the first leader toppled in a wave of Arab uprisings last year to stand trial in person and the case has drawn worldwide attention.

In a country still grappling with political chaos and an economic crisis almost a near since the uprising began, many people believe national renewal will be impossible unless justice is achieved for those killed and their families.

No official has been convicted over the killing of protesters during the 18-day revolt. Mubarak and the other defendants deny any responsibility for the deaths.

The trial was suspended for almost 60 days until last week because some lawyers had demanded the replacement of the panel of judges overseeing the case.

They said they were not given a fair chance to question Tantawi when he stood as a witness in September.

Presiding judge Ahmed Refaat said he would decide on possible new witnesses during the next few sessions.

Mubarak, who is being held under guard at a military hospital near Cairo because doctors say he has a heart condition, was brought into the court on a hospital trolley covering his eyes with sunglasses, which his son Gamal took off once he entered the court.

Lawyers for the dead demanded that Mubarak be transferred to a prison in south Cairo where the other defendants are held because his journey from the military hospital in a helicopter cost the state 500,000 Egyptian pounds ($82,000) each time.

(Reporting By Tamim Elyan; Editing by Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120102/wl_nm/us_egypt_mubarak

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Monday, January 2, 2012

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Seasonal stalactites: The sharp end of icicle science

Continue reading page |1 |2

Power-line engineers and Hollywood CGI specialists would love to know more about icicles ? but answers are surprisingly elusive

IT IS not often Stephen Morris helps save a life - he is a physicist, after all, not a physician. But when an architect telephoned him in his office at the University of Toronto, Canada, last year, with a potentially lethal problem, his advice was to the point.

The architect's problem was icicles. He had designed a building whose windowsills accumulated snow in bad weather. Worried about a passer-by being engulfed by a sudden avalanche and suing, he had installed heaters on the windowsills. Consequently meltwater was dripping off the sill and forming enormous icicles that loomed dagger-like overhead. The architect was still worried, and with good reason. Falling icicles reportedly killed five and injured 150 in St Petersburg, Russia, last winter.

Fortunately, Morris understands icicles. In fact, he is the world's leading expert on their formation. Perhaps that's a matter of location. "I live in a cold country," he says. Although Toronto's location on Lake Ontario gives it one of Canada's balmier climates, the surrounding area can seem like one big ice slab in winter.

There is more at stake with icicles than just the risk of an impaling. In January 1998, an ice storm destroyed much of the power infrastructure in the Canadian province of Quebec. Pylons buckled under the weight of the ice and some power lines snapped, leaving millions of homes and businesses without electricity for days. "The cost was estimated at more than 20 billion Canadian dollars," says Masoud Farzaneh, head of the International Research Centre on Atmospheric Icing and Power Network Engineering based at the University of Quebec in Chicoutimi.

Morris's contributions to limiting such costs emerge principally from a large, styrofoam-insulated box standing in the middle of his lab. "We call it the rotisserie," he says. Inside the box a downward-pointing wooden spike attached to a turntable rotates at the stately rate of 12 revolutions per hour. A nozzle drips water onto the wide base of the spike, while an air fan sits in each of the box's corners, blowing cold air at it. The whole contraption is cooled by antifreeze that circulates through the box's walls.

This is enough for Morris and his graduate student Antony Chen to strip away layers of assumption about icicles that have accumulated over the years. Take the established picture that they grow with a "self-similar" shape: that the ratio of an icicle's length to its circumference is always the same. According to this idea, an icicle's precise shape depends on local factors such as the difference between the icicle's surface temperature (0?C), the ambient air temperature (significantly colder), and the rate at which this falls as you move away from the icicle's surface.

Not so, say Morris and Chen. Their experiments show that self-similarity appears in only a small fraction of icicles, when conditions - air movement and water purity, for instance - are just so. "Things that you wouldn't think matter turn out to matter a great deal," says Morris. Only when the fans in the rotisserie gave the air a gentle stir, for example, did a classic icicle with a single tip form; with still air, the tip tended to split in two (Physical Review E, vol 83, p 026307).

It is unlikely that engineers will be able to do much about air movement around power lines, of course. But knowing the conditions under which ice will build up fastest could be a first step towards designing equipment and systems that are more robust. "Icicles are the simplest thing you can think of in this class of problem," Morris says.

In another of his experiments, Morris tackled an idea about icicles floated by Farzaneh and his colleague Kazuto Ueno, now at Kyushu University in Japan. Many natural icicles have a rippled surface, as if composed of a narrowing succession of rings. Theories of icicle growth had traditionally had nothing to say about such features, but Farzaneh and Ueno suggested surface tension between the freezing water and the surrounding air was the culprit: the higher the surface tension, the fewer ripples on the icicles (Physics of Fluids, vol 22, p 017102).

That seemed reasonable. Natural icicles form from dirty water that sits on roofs and in guttering, which has a low surface tension and so should form ripples. Sure enough, when Morris performed his rotisserie experiments with distilled water, no ripples formed. But there was a sting in the tip: when he used tap water, also a pretty pure sort of water, ripples suddenly appeared.

Jerome Neufeld, a theoretical geophysicist at the University of Cambridge, in the less frozen, but damp east of England, confesses himself baffled by this. "The level of impurity even for tap water should be so low, it's hard to conceive of how it should affect the experiment - but it does seem to," he says. It certainly suggests surface tension is not the primary factor.

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

Cricket-Boucher axed as South Africa make ODI changes


JOHANNESBURG | Fri Dec 30, 2011 7:02pm GMT

JOHANNESBURG Dec 30 (Reuters) - Wicketkeeper Mark Boucher was one of three players dropped on Friday when South Africa named their squad for next month's one-day internationals against Sri Lanka.

Boucher, 35, who holds the world record for most test dismissals (540), batsman David Miller and leg-spinner Imran Tahir have paid the price for the limited-overs series defeat at home to Australia in October.

Dean Elgar, a left-handed batsman and part-time spinner, and all-rounder Rory Kleinveldt were called up as Cricket South Africa (CSA) announced a 14-man squad for the first two games of January's five-match series against Sri Lanka.

Kleinveldt, 28, is in line for his ODI debut after two Twenty20 internationals while Elgar, 24, impressed in South Africa's domestic limited-overs competition.

The team will be led by wicketkeeper-batsman AB de Villiers for the first time since he was appointed as ODI captain.

"Elgar fully deserves his opportunity," CSA selection convener Andrew Hudson said in a statement.

"He was the leading run-scorer in the (domestic) one-day cup and also had the best average. In addition he gives us very useful bowling options as a left-arm spinner.

"Kleinveldt played an important role with the ball in helping the Cobras to win the one-day cup and he also has a lot of potential as a lower-order power hitter."

The first game of the series takes place in Paarl on Jan. 11 with the final match scheduled for Jan. 22 in Johannesburg.

South Africa squad: Hashim Amla, Johan Botha, AB de Villiers (captain), JP Duminy, Francois du Plessis, Dean Elgar, Jacques Kallis, Rory Kleinveldt, Morne Morkel, Wayne Parnell, Robin Peterson, Graeme Smith, Dale Steyn, Lonwabo Tsotsobe. (Reporting by Jason Humphries, editing by Stephen Wood)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/UKCricketNews/~3/Oe5LZf833hs/cricket-safrica-squad-idUKB38942420111230

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