Senin, 21 Mei 2012

You Should must Know about 10 Facts Sex


What's the average size of a guy's equipment? Where can't you buy "marital aids" – and speaking of sex toys, why do some Japanese ones have happy faces on them? Get answers to these and seven more sexy questions you probably never thought to ask here! 
A recent visit to Manhattan's legendary Museum of Sex yielded more than a mob of 18-year-old girls giggling in the foyer – it provided an entertaining and educated look into the history of sex.
Here are some little-known sex facts that may surprise you – or at least give you ammunition for a fascinating dinner conversation!

The best medicine

According to the Museum of Sex, the vibrator was originally used as a medicinal treatment for female "hysteria" during the 19th century. The vibrator-induced orgasms helped doctors dissipate hysteria's anxiety-related symptoms.

Say cheese!

Semen contains zinc and calcium, both of which are proven to prevent tooth decay.

 

Hop to it

 The iconic "Rabbit" is renowned for two things: excellent orgasm results and an odd smiley face on its tip. Women's Health tells us the smiley face was actually a result of conservative Japanese customs. Apparently, Japanese consumers frown upon "the production of sex toys that too closely resemble phalluses," so the smiley face was added.

Sabtu, 19 Mei 2012

California’s Budget Shortfall

Governor Jerry Brown seems to have his hands full, especially with the deplorable state of California's fiscal situation. He credits himself with a credit upgrade after the state had been on the brink of collapse. In an address to the people of California Jerry Brown talks of his past accomplishments in being a take-charge leader who's honest and is not afraid to do what's necessary in asking the help from his constituency.
This time Governor Brown really stepped into something deep. Somehow, some way California's budget is experiencing a shortfall of $16 billion. With all the spending cuts and all the rhetoric, the state has failed to even come close to being within the vicinity of manageable. Of course, Governor Brown blames that on one of the worst recessions since the Great Depression and the federal government's rejection to aid California.

Senin, 14 Mei 2012

King: No talk to prostitute in Secret Service case

WASHINGTON (AP) — The chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee is refusing to meet with a Colombian prostitute involved in the U.S. Secret Service scandal.
Rep. Peter King tells CNN that a meeting with the woman, identified by her lawyer as Dania Londono Suarez, would merely be "a publicity stunt."
The New York Republican's panel is conducting its own investigation of the incident in which several Secret Service agents consorted with prostitutes in advance of President Barack Obama's arrival for a regional summit in Cartagena, Colombia last month.
Asked in an interview Monday about reports the woman wants to meet with him, King replies, "There's been enough cheap publicity." He says, "I'm not going to give her another forum."
Nine Secret Service agents have lost their jobs in the scandal.

Rabu, 21 Maret 2012

I am Women


7 Best Answers in Polling of women must marry
 After one week of holding the poll, "Women Wajibkah Still Married?", Yahoo! SHE get more than 3000 answers to both pro and con. Most of those who think marriage is still obliged to argue that marriage is the determined nature of women religious, and as a social creature who has the social and biological needs, women should get married. But many contra party, stating that women are already well established, can support themselves, and can live independently without a man, no need to force yourself to get married.

Here are seven best answers from readers who've chosen Yahoo! SHE team. Seven winners are entitled to a Jade Yoga mat. (Send an email to confirm your identity kuis@yahoo-inc.com for).

Selasa, 20 Maret 2012

I am Woman

 me and my life, my daily, ambition and my dream

7 Best Answer in the poll "Different Relationships Religion"




Last week, Yahoo! SHE held a poll about interfaith relations. About 6000 readers participated in the poll and some of them also voiced their opinions on this issue, and the following seven best answers according to Yahoo! SHE.

Seven readers below are entitled to a MAC cosmetics package worth $ 1 million. Retrieval can be done in the office Yahoo! Indonesia, Sentra Senayan II Floor 8, Jalan Asia Afrika No.. 8, Central Jakarta, or sent by mail to the winner out of Jakarta, after a confirmation by email to kuis@yahoo-inc.com Bios

Sabtu, 03 Maret 2012

Bizarre

When Hector Siliezar visited the ancient Mayan city of Chichen Itza with his wife and kids in 2009, he snapped three iPhone photos of El Castillo, a pyramid that once served as a sacred temple to the Mayan god Kukulkan. A thunderstorm was brewing near the temple, and Siliezar was trying to capture lightning crackling dramatically over the ruins.
In the first two images, dark clouds loom above the pyramid, but nothing is amiss. However, in the third photo, a powerful beam of light appears to shoot up from the pyramid toward the heavens, and a thunderbolt flashes in the background.
Siliezar, who recently shared his photographs with occult investigators, told Earthfiles.com that he and his family didn't see the light beam in person; it appeared only on camera. "It was amazing!" he said. He showed the iPhone photo to his fellow tourists. "No one, not even the tour guide, had ever seen anything like it before." [See photo]

Jumat, 24 Februari 2012

Does Obama’s Corporate Tax Plan Make the Grade?

President Obama's plan to slash corporate tax rates from 35% to 28% and overhaul the business tax system is meeting its fair share of criticism after being unveiled yesterday. While the headline number seems to appease both sides of the aisle, the rest of the Administration's plan is raising questions about which "loopholes" will be closed to pay for the tax rate decrease, and will they open the door to even more workarounds.
"The president says he wants to increase overall revenue from corporations, so while he lowers the headline rate a little bit, he broadens the base in sometimes damaging ways," says Chris Edwards, director of tax policy at the Cato Institute.
For Edwards those "damaging ways" include new tax loopholes for things like green cars and buildings, incentives to increase wages and tax credits for manufacturing.
The plan also proposes to bring back money earned by American companies overseas by imposing a new tax on profit made overseas.
"This administration wants to penalize the foreign operations of U.S. companies," says Edwards. "Those foreign earnings were earned in the foreign country, they pay tax on those profits in the foreign countries. There's no real reason why the U.S. Government ought to have a claim on that foreign money."
Still for all its faults, Edwards grades the plan a "C."
"It does show that both democrats and republicans support the idea of overhauling our tax code," he says. "There is general concern that we are scaring away investment because of the current tax code."
Despite the President's plan, Edwards doesn't see much movement being made on the issue amid a contentious election season and a Congress that's slow to move on everything these days. He believes we won't see any real progress until 2013 and the next Congress and perhaps the next President.

Kamis, 23 Februari 2012

The Looming Threat to Gas Prices: Strait of Hormuz Explained

Global oil prices jumped to a nine-month high Tuesday to $106 a barrel after Iran announced it was stopping oil shipments to France and Britain. Iran is responding to heavy pressure from America, Europe and other allies, who want to stop the country's nuclear power program before the radical regime can build nuclear weapons.
This most recent move by Iran to ban oil exports to the two European countries comes as a direct preemptive response to the European Union's planned Iran oil embargo set for this summer. The EU has already frozen assets of Iran's central bank.
In recent weeks, you've also probably heard news stories about Iran threatening to shut down the Strait of Hormuz. It hasn't happened yet, but Iran has indicated it could close the Strait or take other measures should the country feel threatened enough by the Western allies.
But right now you might be wondering: What is the Strait of Hormuz and why does it matter TO YOU?
If Iran tries to block the Strait it could have a huge impact on world oil prices, which would directly impact how much you pay for groceries, gas and electronics — all of which use oil in some way, whether it's part of the manufacturing or shipping process.
The Strait of Hormuz is a waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea. It is the only passage to the open ocean for some of the biggest oil producers in the Middle East
About 20% of the world's oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, including crude oil produced in Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Kuwait. It's a water way that's "absolutely critical to the world economy," according Dr. Daniel Yergin, energy expert and Pulitzer Prize winning author of The Prize and The Quest.
Yergin calls the Strait of Hormuz "the most important chokepoint in the world."
Because so much of the world's oil travels through Strait, any disruption to the shipping channel would have a major impact on global crude oil prices, which ultimately determine the price we pay for gas at the pump.
Some analysts estimate the price of oil could go up by 50% within days if there's a disruption of supply, which would mean much higher prices for us filling our tanks at the gas station — and anything else that requires the use of oil. Crude oil and gas prices have risen sharply since September in large part because of the threat of a disruption in the Strait of Hormuz.
"We've seen oil prices just on threats go up $5, $10 a barrel" in a day, Yergin says. "This is Iran's trump card."
The average price for regular unleaded gas today is $3.58 up nearly 9% since the beginning of this year, according to AAA.com. That is still slightly lower than the highest record average price of $4.11 set in July 2008. But many analysts are predicting that with the threat from Iran coupled with the warmer weather ahead, the U.S. maybe be headed for $4 or even $5 gas prices.
Whether Iran really can shut down the Strait is a big question. Jan Stuart of Credit Suisse says it would be "suicidal" for the Iranians to even try.
"Closing the Strait of Hormuz -- that thing is...30 miles wide," Stuart says. "You need a gazillion boats to literally close it off. It can't happen." (See: $100 Oil Is Here to Stay, but Iran Closing the Strait of Hormuz "Can't Happen": Stuart)
Still, Iran's Navy has recently been conducting military exercises in the area. Some experts say the Iranians are preparing to attack oil tankers in the Strait with missiles and torpedoes from submarines. They might not shut the critical passage down but such attacks would certainly disrupt crude shipments and cause a spike in oil prices.
Whether the Iranians just bluster or actually go on the attack, we're likely to hear more news about this critical waterway in the days and weeks ahead, and that news will have a direct impact on the global economy and how much you're paying for products here in the U.S.

Rabu, 22 Februari 2012

Holding the Handle - The Three Primary Grips

Light Grip Pressure
The hands must work together as a single unit when striking a ball with power. There are three common and fundamentally sound grips from which to choose, which are pictured on the following pages.
In addition to the type of grip you choose, another characteristic of a sound grip is light grip pressure. Gripping the club too tight can cause thin, weak shots that slice. A lighter grip enhances wrist hinge - a vital power source in the swing. This light pressure also increases the amount of clubface rotation, thus improving your chance of squaring the club at impact.
On a scale of 1 to 10, where 1 is light and 10 is tight, I recommend a pressure of 4 or 5. This allows the club to be swung with power and control. At address, feel relaxed and tension-free in your hands and forearms.
Sam Snead said, "Hold the club as if you had a little baby bird in your hand." This pressure, combined with the proper placement of the hands on the handle, will give you your greatest chance to produce longer, straighter shots.
Vardon Overlap Grip (a k a Overlapping Grip)
The Vardon Overlap, sometimes called the Overlapping Grip, is the most common grip among great players. Harry Vardon popularized this grip around the turn of the 20th Century. This grip places the club in the fingers and is the grip most likely to be taught by golf instructors. To place your hands on the handle using the Vardon Overlap, take the little finger on the trailing hand and place it between the index and middle finger on the lead hand (for right-handed golfers, the lead hand is the left). The lead hand thumb should fit in the lifeline of the trailing hand.

Interlocking Grip
The next most common grip is called the Interlock, or Interlocking. This grip is very popular on the LPGA Tour and has been used by many top male players including Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods. This grip literally locks the hands together, but the golfer also runs the risk of having the handle stray into the palms of the hands. People with small hands, weak forearms and wrists, and beginners in many cases prefer this style of grip. To use the Interlock grip, take the little finger on the trailing hand (the trailing hand for right-handed golfers is the right hand) and intertwine it with the index finger on the lead hand. The lead hand thumb should fit in the lifeline of the trailing hand.
Ten Finger Grip (a k a Baseball Grip)
The Ten Finger grip (sometimes called the Baseball Grip) is the least preferred grip among teachers. It does, however, have its advantages. Hall of Fame Member Beth Daniel, PGA Tour members Bob Estes and Dave Barr and Masters Champion Art Wall Jr. have all used the Ten Finger grip. Teachers often suggest this grip to beginners as it simplifies early instruction. People who experience joint pain, have arthritis or small, weak hands often benefit by using the Ten Finger grip.
To position your hands properly using a Ten Finger grip, start with a perfect lead hand grip, then place the little finger of the trailing hand close against the index finger of the lead hand. Cover the lead hand thumb with the lifeline of the trailing hand.

Kamis, 09 Februari 2012

How Earth's Next Supercontinent Will Form


The Earth has been covered by giant combinations of continents, called supercontinents, many times in its past, and it will be again one day in the distant future. The next predicted supercontinent, dubbed Amasia, may form when the Americas and Asia both drift northward to merge, closing off the Arctic Ocean, researchers suggest.
Supercontinents are giant landmasses made up of more than one continental core. The best-known supercontinent, Pangaea, was once the world's only continent — it was on it that the dinosaurs arose — and was the progenitor of today's continents.
Conventional models of how supercontinents evolve suggest they form on top of the previous supercontinent, known as introversion, or on the opposite side of the world from that supercontinent, known as extroversion. Under these models Amasia would therefore either form where Pangaea once was, with the Americas meeting with Asia to close off the Atlantic Ocean, or form on the other side of the planet from where Pangaea was, with the Americas merging with Asia to close off the Pacific Ocean.
Now, geologists suggest that Amasia might emerge sideways from where Pangaea once existed, in what is now the Arctic, a process known as orthoversion. Moreover, this new model seems consistent with models of how past supercontinents formed, said researcher Ross Mitchell, a geologist at Yale University.
Which way did it form?
The introversion model, on the one hand, assumes that the oceanic plate between continents that formed when a supercontinent pulled apart has stopped spreading. As such, there is nothing to keep the continents from drifting back together and forming another supercontinent. The extroversion model, on the other hand, proposes that the oceanic plate that formed when a supercontinent pulled apart would keep spreading. The continents then drift away from it, meeting up on the other side of the planet to merge.
The new orthoversion model from Mitchell and his colleagues bases its motion of continents on where the edges of past supercontinents were. For instance, when Pangaea broke up, its rim dove or subducted downward into the earth. This subduction zone, which encircles the Pacific Ocean, is known as the Ring of Fire, and is where many of the largest earthquakes and volcanic eruptions now take place.
The orthoversion model proposes that the subduction zone surrounding a one-time supercontinent drives where its former components end up going. This suggests that modern continents will slide either north or south around the Ring of Fire. Since the Caribbean Sea between North and South America and the Arctic Ocean between the Americas and Asia appear transient in nature, the researchers suggest the Americas and Asia will go north instead of south, meeting at the Arctic to form Amasia.
To see which model of the supercontinent cycle might be right, the researchers tried to see which best matched data on how past supercontinents formed. These included Pangaea, as well as Rodinia, which existed between 750 million and 1.1 billion years ago, and Nuna, which existed between 1.5 billion to 1.8 billion years ago.
Rock records
To see how the components of supercontinents moved, scientists analyzed the impact that Earth's magnetic field has on ancient rocks. Magnetic minerals in molten rock can act like compasses, aligning with the planet's magnetic field lines, an orientation that gets frozen in place once the rock solidifies. Since these lines generally run north-south, looking at the way these minerals point can shed light on how the landmasses they are a part of might have drifted in space over time.
The researchers found that Pangaea apparently formed at nearly a 90-degree angle from the direction along which Rodinia fragmented — that is, Pangaea formed neither where Rodinia once was nor on the opposite side of the planet, but somewhere nearly exactly between those spots. Rodinia seemingly emerged in a similar manner from Nuna. Both findings support orthoversion as the explanation for how supercontinents form and fragment.
"Now that we have a clear picture of what the supercontinent cycle actually looks like, we can begin to answer the questions of why the supercontinent cycle operates as it does," Mitchell told OurAmazingPlanet. "Why a supercontinent breaks apart remains an unanswered question."
When to expect Amasia
These findings could also help scientists better understand the history of life on this planet, by figuring out where landmasses were and how organisms might have dispersed.
"Continents with similar fossil records likely share an evolutionary ancestry, but actually establishing a land bridge by juxtaposing those continents is finding the smoking gun," Mitchell said.
As to when Amasia might form, that is "difficult to answer, because the supercontinent cycle is not as regular as the seasonal cycle, for example," Mitchell said. "But we can get a clue from Earth's history — the cycle is speeding up, such that the recurrence interval between successive supercontinents has become less and less. Knowing that Pangea formed 300 million years ago, we can predict a range of Amasia ages from 50 to 200 million years from now."

Jurassic chirp: scientists recreate ancient cricket song


The call of a Jurassic-era cricket was simple, pure and capable of traveling long distances in the night, said scientists who reconstructed the creature's love song from a 165 million year old fossil.
British scientists based their work out Monday on an extremely well preserved fossil of a katydid, or bush cricket, from China named Archaboilus musicus. The cricket lived in an era when dinosaurs roamed the earth.
The detailed wings, measuring about 72 centimeters (three-quarters of an inch) long, allowed scientists to recreate for the first time the features that would have produced sound when rubbed together.
The result is "possibly the most ancient known musical song documented to date," said the study which appears in the US journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The ancient katydid's call should be imagined against a busy backdrop of waterfalls, wind, the sound of water coursing through streams and other amphibians and insects serenading would-be mates, the study authors said.
"This Jurassic bush cricket... helps us learn a little more about the ambiance of a world long gone," said co-author Fernando Montealegre-Zapata of the University of Bristol.
A simple call may have been the creature's best shot at attracting a mate in the nighttime forest, said co-author Daniel Robert, an expert in the biomechanics of singing and hearing in insects at the University of Bristol.
"Singing loud and clear advertises the presence, location and quality of the singer, a message that females choose to respond to -- or not," he said.
"Using a single tone, the male's call carries further and better, and therefore is likely to serenade more females."
However, the long-extinct katydid may have been alerting predators to his location, too. Some 100 million years later, insects began developing the ability to make sounds at frequencies their enemies, like bats, could not hear.

Rabu, 18 Januari 2012

The Sick Waters of Voronezh

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The Elektronika House of Culture
VORONEZH, Russia — Live water heals memories, the American essayist Annie Dillard once claimed. But what of dead water, or boiled water?
The poet who wrote the following lines died in the Gulag:
“Memory is a sickly Jewish girl” (Mandelstam. Egyptian Stamp)
Paradoxically, however, Siberia was not where he was sent for his gravest offense: a poem about Stalin’s “cockroach whiskers”. For that, he was banished from his native St. Petersburg, but allowed to choose the place of his own exile.
Mandelstam chose Voronezh, an old Tsarist city in the south of Russia, on the banks of a tributary of the Don river.
The river was sick. Its waters around Voronezh had become stagnant, a notorious breeding ground for malaria — so much so that by 1913, it was said that not one Voronezh family had avoided succumbing to malaria.
Spraying the mosquitoes from air proved ineffective; thus, on August 14, 1937, the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) declared that the malaria breeding grounds would be flooded by raising the river’s water level using a dam. The project was entrusted to professors Sergeev, Volkov, Muffel, Kostsov, Dubyansky and Krasnolsky.
★ ★ ★
“In the rubber tint of boiled St. Petersburg water, I am drinking the unattained domestic immortality” (Mandelstam, Egyptian Stamp)
Forty years after Mandelstam’s death in a Siberian hard labor camp, Mikhail Malik, a retired secret police officer (NKVD), was rewarded by the Soviet state for his services in World War II: he would be allowed to choose the city in which to be issued an apartment.
As an active participant in the lifting of the Siege of Leningrad, he was offered the option to live there. He loved St. Petersburg but felt drawn to a gleaming modern new district that was rising on the left bank of the Don, across the river from the still war-ravaged center of a historic city.
Thus, he too chose Voronezh. But Malik’s new place differed fundamentally from the last city that the living Mandelstam had ever seen: it had gained a sea.
“The Voronezh Sea” is what residents call the 70 square kilometer reservoir that was built in 1972 — 35 years after the Don river had first been dammed.
Did you know? Everyone in Russia was having a great time in the 1970s? People were watching lots of Tarkovsky movies, usually during the work day. They went to hair salons! They got very drunk! They stayed drunk since April 1970, the centenary of Lenin’s birthday. Drunk lumberjacks carved his name in swathes of virgin forest, in gratitude for these sweet lost years. People were comfortable. This is not a story you would hear from dissidents or refuseniks. But most people weren’t refuseniks or dissidents. Malik certainly was neither; Malik held a casual disdain for the Jews.
In the 1970s, everyone just assumed that things would keep ticking along forever. Someone suggested that more factories be built in Voronezh, that the giant artificial rubber factory be expanded, and people nodded in assent; a place was needed for them to draw water from. Drunk surveyors and builders further dammed the Don, and built, badly, an impressive reservoir, with a volume of 204 km³, a length of nearly 50 km, an average width of 2 km, and average depth of 2.9m.
The reservoir was beautiful. It was impossible to think that just some 40 years ago, this area had been a notorious malaria breeding ground. A bold double-decker bridge connected the decrepit, historic old town to the jaunty, radiant, new town. The artificial concrete banks of this man made sea were draped with shiny new sand delivered by truck from Kazakhstan; a beach emerged.
A wide avenue was built, with trams, flanked by multi-storied blocks of apartments with south-facing balconies.
dolphin park

Grandfather Malik’s new apartment was across the street from the beach. Photographs show the author holding a small shovel, as he stands in front of a changing booth near the artificial lighthouse. The beach was named “Dolphin Beach”.
Dolphin Beach was adjacent to Dolphin Park, a children’s amusement park owned by the giant, shadowy Elektronika computer corporation.
★ ★ ★
Excerpt from an interview with Former Soviet Ambassador to Cuba and Chairman of the RSFSR Council of Ministers (1983-1989) Vitaly Vorotnikov:
“Q: Is that the plant which produced the first Soviet videotape recorders?
A: It did, but they were of little importance. The plant primarily worked for the military.”
The reason there was a park was that the authorities anticipated the beginnings of new families in this new outpost.
Though it was too late for my grandparents to start another family, Malik would wake up at 5 A.M. every morning and go for a brisk morning walk in the park.
What did he pass on his walks?
The shady park, edged off from the road with poplar trees, was planted with pines and conifers and dotted with carved wooden statues of characters from Russian folk tales. In the middle of the park was a miniature racetrack complete with obstacles and road signs on which you could go in a rented pedal car, or even on a small bicycle. There was a booth where you could shoot at tins from a pneumatic rifle.
And all around there were simple amusement rides: spinning spaceships, the “little sun” ride that looks like a windmill, a “centrifuge” (the scariest ride in the park) controlled by portly matrons wearing armbands.
On the other edge of the park, away from the beach, there was a miniature castle, the size of a small house, complete with towers and turrets. Yet its wooden doors were always locked. Next to it was an enormous set of swings: a tower with two oscillating arms attached to a small platform on which up to three older children could sit or stand.
Buffering the playground from the busy road was the Elektronika House of Culture, a sprawling, rectangular concrete building with enormous paneled windows, owned by the Elektronika corporation, that housed cultural events, amateur theater and student music performances. Its wide steps cascaded to a square with a complex of wide, angular fountains.
From the balcony of my grandparents’ 5th floor flat across the road, you could see the House of Culture and its fountains, the pine-tree park behind it, and the reservoir beyond. You would always hear the rattling of the trams as they went over the bridge and to the right bank. Looking directly down from the balcony, you saw, jutting out, the roof of the furniture and hardware store that occupied the ground floor of the building.
★ ★ ★
“Thirty years had passed, like a slow fire” (Mandelstam, Egyptian Stamp)
The collapse of the USSR crippled Elektronika with a flood of western consumer goods and drastic cuts in its contracts from the defunct and bankrupt military.
With Elektronika’s bankruptcy, the House of Culture became abandoned. Its fountains dried up.
A decade after it hosted the Soviet Rock star Victor Tsoi, the little park had become overgrown and nature had begun to creep in. Slowly, the pedal boat harbor had overgrown with swampy weeds, the fiberglass boats had spung leaks and remained tethered but half submerged in the water, with their little numbers peeling off. The beach café ceased operating. The matronly park attendants were quickly laid off and there was no one to operate or look after the rides. The transport budget was cut, and there was no money to repair the trams. Rails were uprooted for scrap metal, and before long, the bridge fell silent.
Red, red blood
In an hour’s time — there’s just soil
In two hours it sprouts flowers and grass
In three, it’s alive again
Warmed by the rays of a star
Called the sun
(Victor Tsoi, “A Star Called the Sun”; author’s translation).
Children continued to play on the defunct rides for some time, pushing each other along in the fiberglass cars along the rusting rails of the “Rocketa,” swinging from the limply flailing limbs of the “Little Sun.”
Soon, the children had grown up and began to stage dog fights in the park. No more children took their place, because parents were too frightened to let them near the park, and also, because there were very few children now: a recent article in the Moscow Times revealed that “mortality among Russian men has risen by 60 percent since 1991 and is now four to five times higher than in Europe.”
People began to fall ill. Children playing near the water began to report signs of giardia lamblia, malaria and even cholera.
A water sample from the reservoir at Dolphin Beach was found to contain 5 times the legal limit of contaminants. Cholera traces were also found.
All swimming was banned at the reservoir, but this ban was disregarded by those seeking to assuage the inclement Voronezh heat and catch fish.
It was hard to find fish, because of the high concentration of petrochemical and sewage contamination, much of it coming from the factories which the reservoir was built to service, such as the Artificial Rubber Factory.
“This was an environment built not for man, but for man’s absence.” (Ballard, Highrise)
Warm water returned from these factories bred high concentrations of blue-green algae that killed fish.
New Russians arrived and built McMansions on the bank of the reservoir, but saved money on plumbing and diverted household waste straight into the reservoir.
The slush formed on the bottom of the artificial lake now threatens to slide these houses into the reservoir.
Water from the reservoir began to be introduced into some regional water supplies; its contamination led to heavy chlorination. Some have associated this with an increase in bladder cancer rates. To release the chlorine, boiling this dead water had become essential.
“I propose to you, my family, a coat of arms: a glass of boiled water” (Mandelstam, Egyptian Stamp).
An investigation determined that the reservoir was built too wide and shallow; it was built with significant deviations from design.
Several plans for the city to clean up the bottom of the reservoir, and deepen it, had been rejected for lack of funds.
Elektronika House of Culture had been first sold to Flamingo nightclub, then to a Mitsubishi affiliate, then to a supermarket.
★ ★ ★
“A lake connected with the moon unveils hidden kinships” — Saint-Exuerry.
Recently, a plan was proposed to sell the House of Culture and Dolphin Park to a developer who would deepen and narrow the reservoir, dry out the shallow areas near the banks, removing the blue-green algae and rescuing prime real estate, at the cost of 50 million euros. That salvaged land would then be converted into a business center and aquapark, with water slides and other amenities, including a Yacht Club:
“The project envisions construction of City-Voronezh on an area of 29 hectares. Development of raised beach territories in the area of the Voronezh water reservoir with simultaneous improvement of the reservoir condition through its deepening is one of the possible solutions to the problem of the shortage of vacant lots for public and residential buildings and recreational territories. The following facilities are planned as part of City-Voronezh: a mixed-use shopping & entertainment center, business center, exhibition center, hotel complex, aquapark, sports and fitness complex, residential complex, administrative building, and yacht club.”
As the magician says to the desperate Ivan Osokin in P.D. Ouspensky’s eponymous novella, “Everything can be brought back. Everything. But even that will not help.” Indeed, when Osokin is granted the power to know everything he knows as an adult and is sent back in time with the chance to correct his past mistakes, he somehow still ends up re-living his original life: “There is something in us that keeps us where we find ourselves. I think this is the most awful thing of all,” he exclaims in agony, on board a ship.


 The Original Source



Sabtu, 14 Januari 2012

You should see this


Iran ships approached U.S. vessels in Gulf, Why?


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Small Iranian military motorboats approached U.S. vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz twice last week but the Pentagon said the interactions were not seen as hostile, even at a moment of heightened tensions between the two countries.
Video released by the Pentagon showed the armed boats with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps' navy approaching within several hundred yards (meters) of the USS New Orleans, an amphibious transport ship, on January 6, a U.S. military official said.
The same day, a similar incident occurred with the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Adak, with the Iranian boats seen riding in its wake, guns visible.
"This interaction between U.S. naval vessels and the Iranian vessels is commonplace," said Captain Jane Campbell, a Pentagon spokeswoman. "There is nothing in these that shows any kind of hostile intent."
U.S. officials say it is routine to take video of such incidents and the U.S. military decided to release imagery at the request of news organizations.
Nine American vessels have passed through the strait since the start of the year. It was not immediately clear whether any of the other seven had been approached in this manner by Iranian vessels.
The approaches come at a time of concern about the possibility of a clash between the United States and Iran in the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important oil shipping lane.
Tehran has threatened to close the strait if new U.S. and EU sanctions over its nuclear program cut off Iranian oil exports. Iran has also threatened action if another U.S. carrier moves into the Gulf.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has warned that closure of the strategic waterway would be seen as a red line by the United States and would require a response.
The Pentagon also sought on Friday to discourage speculation
the U.S. military was quietly building up its forces in the region to counter any perceived threat.
The number of U.S. forces in Kuwait has grown to about 15,000 in recent weeks, including two combat brigades, as troops have withdrawn from Iraq following the end of the war there.
Navy Captain John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, said he was not aware of any decision to permanently increase the number of troops based in Kuwait.
The U.S. force there has expanded temporarily because a brigade deployed to Iraq at the end of the war had been shifted to Kuwait to finish its deployment, he said.
Force numbers in any given location shift regularly depending on needs, Kirby said.
"I'm not aware of any plus-up that's been ordered into Kuwait. And I don't think the numbers would bear out that there is, in fact, a huge plus-up in Kuwait," he told reporters.
"Iran is certainly a factor in our discussions with our allies and in our thinking about the future of the Middle East - there's no question about it - thanks to their destabilizing behavior," Kirby told reporters at the Pentagon.
"But I want to disabuse everybody of the notion that there's some kind of quiet increase going on, specifically aimed at some sort of contingency planning for any one country in that part of the world," he said
Earlier this week, the military said a second aircraft carrier had arrived in the Arabian Sea and a third was on its way to the region. The Pentagon portrayed that as a normal rotation, with one ship en route to its home port. Kirby said it was not unusual to have two carriers in the region.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said the United States would have about 40,000 troops in the region after the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq at the end of 2011. Kirby declined to specify where they would all be located.