Thursday, November 25, 2010

A true Scotsman wears nothing under his kilt...

A Black Watch or Campbell tartan kilt (date un...Image via WikipediaA true Scotsman wears nothing under his kilt. But this is to change if some people can get their own way.

But never more, it seems.Scots are now reportedly  being warned that the sartorial habit is both indecent and unhygenic. Bloody Sassenachs!

A representative of the  Scottish Tartans Authority recently stated that when you hire a kilt, remember to also to wear underwear because, it is claimed, many are left in a disgusting state. Indeed!

Kilt rental firms are being backed by the organisation charged with maintaining standards in Highland dress. The age-old custom of "going commando"  has had its day!

The tradition dates back to clansmen warriors who wore little but long kilts around their shoulders. The Scottish military subsequently  took up the fashion and Scots regiments even today still parade sans underwear.

A spokesman of the Authority recalls his own father, a sergeant-major, who used to clip a car mirror on the end of his pace-stick to hold under the kilts of his men to check if they were suitably undressed for parade.

To bare or not bare divides opinion.

Its just tradition to go without - a macho cultural pressure on Scotsmen - it really doesn't prove  much today.

But wearing underpants seems a sensible idea if you do hire kilts - otherwise feel free to please one's self.


A highland soldier dressed in his kilt stood on guard, rifle in the at ease position.

A beautiful young woman in her early 20's approached him,and gentled lifted his kilt

"Gruesome!" she commented.

"Och lassie, it grew some while you have been here." he replied.


Acknowledgements: Associated Press







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Monday, November 15, 2010

Dying of a broken heart - the widowhood factor...

Vector image of two human figures with hands i...Image via WikipediaDying of a broken heart- the widowhood factor...

Did you know that you  can really die of a broken heart?

Researchers at St Andrews University have studied what is called the 'widowhood effect'. In particular men are likely to have their lives cut short by the death of their wives.

The research examined more than 58,000 married couples. Their findings suggest that 40% of men and 26% of women die within 3 years of their partners death.

The study took into account  a wide range  of causes of death: including cancers, other diseases, alcohol abuse, smoking, accidents, murders and suicides.

Even taking these other factors  into account, many widowers  and widows die through the loss of their spouse. The findings will appear in the scientific journal Epidemology early in 2011.
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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Gay father and lesbian mother dispute access through British courts...

Nuclear Lesbian FamilyImage via Wikipedia
A British gay man and a lesbian woman are in dispute over their children. They are locked into an unprecedented battle in a British court over access of their children who were conceived and born through artificial insemination.


The lesbian mother and her long-term partner have taken their case to the Court of Appeal after the sperm donor father  won a shared residency order earlier this year. This allows him to see his children for almost half the time.

The parents met after he had placed an ad in the Gay Times in 1999. The ad said." Gay guy wants to be a Dad. White, handsome, solvent 30's, professional, in happy relationship, non-scene, has everything but kids." The ad also said." I require little involvement. I have a lot to offer."

He then reportedly  donated sperm on two occasions to the lesbian couple, who had a boy and girl, now aged nine and seven respectively. The father had parental responsibility  for the children from the outset, which gave him the legal right  to seek greater access later on.


Now the mother is accusing the father of trying to "marginalise" her lesbian partner. The legal representative of the lesbian couple told a panel of three judges that the children need and have a permanent home with them. She accepted the children had a meaningful relationship with their father and did not dispute his rights of contact with his children. But the mother claimed  a residency order  because the children had been with her and her partner since their birth and were their primary caregivers

The case will be watched closely by experts because it is unprecedented in establishing the rights of a donor and because of its impact on shared residency. Campaigners and fathers' groups want shared residency to be accepted as the norm on seperation of parents. The case continues!.


Acknowledgements: The Times

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Covert nuclear sites in Burma - true or false?

Flag of Mandalay DivisionImage via Wikipedia

ISIS Reports

Exploring Claims about Secret Nuclear Sites in Myanmar

by Robert Kelley, Andrea Scheel Stricker and Paul Brannan
January 28, 2010
Download PDF
Various dissident groups and news reports have recently claimed that there are covert nuclear sites in Burma, including reactors and uranium mines and mills.1  The evidence behind these claims is largely based on defectors or analysis of ground photos and overhead imagery of suspected sites.
ISIS decided to test some of these claims, at least the ones where the actual site could be identified.  Two sites were assessed and both appeared non-nuclear.  This conclusion followed from a rather straightforward analysis of widely available imagery and relevant open source information.
Many of the claims involve suspect sites without enough information to identify their exact location.  ISIS could not evaluate these sites.
To the extent that information about sites relies on defectors, it requires confirmation because defectors too often provide unreliable information.  If the information is gathered from non-governmental debriefing processes, it can suffer from additional reliability and problems.
Overall, the lack of specifics about many of the sites mentioned in the reports from opposition groups and defectors makes independent analysis using commercial satellite imagery very difficult.  Those reporting the existence of secret nuclear sites in Burma should provide more direct and specific evidence, in addition to geographical coordinates, in order for some of the sites to be further investigated. 
ISIS does not want to overweigh the importance of debunking a few claims about secret nuclear activities in Burma.  There remain valid suspicions about the existence of undeclared nuclear activities in Myanmar, particularly in the context of cooperation between Myanmar and North Korea.  But the methods used in the public so far to allege secret nuclear facilities are flawed.  Identification of suspect nuclear sites requires a more rigorous basis than is currently evident.

Uranium Mill Claim

ISIS assessed satellite imagery of two sites claimed to be a uranium mine and a mill in Burma, one of the few claims with enough specificity to allow it to be checked independently, and determined that the sites are not likely to be related to uranium mining and milling.  This claim was first made in 2007 by DictatorWatch, a group promoting democracy in Burma and China, and later supported by Desmond Ball and Phil Thorton in an August 2009 Sydney Morning Herald report.2  The refinery, or mill, lies on the Myit Nge River 14.5 miles southeast of Mandalay and 17.7 miles northeast of Kyaukse, hereafter referred to as the Myit Nge Chaung site.  The mine is located about 1.5 miles to the northwest of the refinery.  The closest village is Ongyaw to the north of the mine (see Figure 1).  Examination of the images and comparison to open source information makes it very unlikely that it is a uranium mining and refining operation.


Figure 1: Google Earth image from August 29, 2009 showing the location of the Myit Nge Chaung facility, the associated mine, and the town of Ongyaw, Kyauk Mi.  DictatorWatch claims that the Myit Nge Chaung facility is a uranium refinery. 

ISIS assesses that the Myit Nge Chaung refinery is a cement plant on the Mandalay to Pyin Oo Lwin road, National Highway 3 (see Figure 2).  The plant is very large for any small clandestine uranium operation in Burma.  The mill is also typical of a cement plant in several key ways.  It has very large rotary kilns, which are used to roast the limestone feed materials to produce cement.  This is not done for uranium but is done for many other metals and cement preparation.  There is a large pile of coal or coal ash north of the plant, which is probably the fuel used in the rotary kilns.  The site also has many vertical bulk silos.  Silos are used for handling solid powders in industrial operations.


Figure 2:  Close-up of Google Earth image of the Myit Nge Chaung facility from August 29, 2009.  It shows distinctive characteristics of a cement plant.


A uranium mill extracting uranium from rock ore would have many more signatures of liquid processing, such as crushers, thickeners, solvent extraction columns and a prominent liquid waste pond.  These signatures are absent.  Uranium can be extracted from phosphates in fertilizer operations.  This is clearly not a phosphate fertilizer plant.

In addition, the mill matches characteristics in a ground photograph of the AAA Cement Plant, also called the Triple A Cement Plant (see figure 3).  Piping, structures, scaffolding and stacks appear in the same positions between the two pictures.
Figure 3.  On the left, a ground photograph of the AAA Cement Plant in Myanmar.3  On the right, a GoogleEarth satellite image of the Myit Nge Chaung site.  The location of stacks, piping and structures appear to correspond between the two images.

Uranium Mine Claim

ISIS also assesses that the mine north of the Myit Nge Chaung site is not likely a uranium mine (see Figure 4).  It is not possible to conclusively identify the ores being mined from the overhead photo signatures.  Nevertheless, the mine looks more like a quarry where bulk material is identified by its general characteristics and removed by diggers and buckets.  The light colored material could easily be limestone.
Figure 4:  Google Earth image from April 3, 2009 showing the large mining operation 1.5 miles northwest of the Myit Nge Chaung site. The mountain where mining is taking place is apparently homogeneous and is being mined from all sides (see Figure 5).  This has resulted in the mountain being scraped away piecemeal at all sides rather than by modern open pit mining techniques—which is one type of technique expected at a uranium mine.

Figure 5:  Google Earth close-up of the same area from April 3, 2009 showing the simplistic piecemeal mining technique not characteristic of uranium mining.


1See: Desmond Ball and Phil Thorton, “Burma’s Nuclear Secrets,” Sydney Morning Herald, August 1, 2009,  http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/burma8217s-nuclear-secrets/2009/07/31/1248977197670.html?page=fullpage#contentSwap2 ; Bertil Lintner, “Tunnels, Guns and Kimchi: North Korea’s Quest for Dollars: Part 1, YaleGlobal Online, June 9, 2009, http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/content/NK-quest-for-dollars-part1; “Images of Suspected Uranium Mine and Refinery in Burma,” DictatorWatch.org, March 2007, http://www.dictatorwatch.org/phshows/burmafacility.html. 2“Images of Suspected Uranium Mine and Refinery”; Ball and Thorton, “Burma’s Nuclear Secrets.”
3http://www.pengfei.com.cn/eng/view.asp?keyno=295
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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Elderly US man attacked by flesh - eating ants as he lay on his hospital bed...

MSN LogoImage via Wikipedia An elderly man has been attacked by a swarm of flesh-eating ants as he lay in a hospital bed in Florida receiving treatment for a heart condition.


Cornelius Lewis, 76, was recovering from an operation to fit a pacemaker when the ants, which have been spotted in the hospital previously, bit him hundreds of times on the legs and genitals, The Daily Mail reported.



The attack went unnoticed by hospital staff for hours because the pavement ants, a common household pest, were hidden by the bedcovers.



Mr Lewis's son said the hospital was supposed to check his father more regularly.



"He was supposed to be monitored every 10 minutes," Neil Lewis told Newspress.com.



Neil said when the hospital finally did discover the ants and try to move Mr Lewis they found ants in the new room as well.



Lee Memorial Health System, which runs the Gulf Coast Medical Centre, confirmed there was an ant problem and said staff were taking steps to make sure nobody else was attacked.



"There are no reports of other patients being bitten by ants and Gulf Coast is the only hospital with an ant problem," public relations director Karen Krieder said.



All the companies' hospitals are now being treated by pest control experts.



Lewis is still being treated at the Gulf Coast Medical Centre


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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Fall gardening tips for gay gardeners born without green thumbs



Fall gardening tips for gay gardeners  born without green thumbs.









Looking for a place to stalk the Great Pumpkin? Try pumpkinstation.co



“I believe in God, only I spell it N A T U R E.”

—Frank Lloyd Wright, architect



Ah … fall is in the air. The mad hustle of the holidays is nearly upon us as our non-existent summer fades away. The light is changing and the mornings are darker and sleepier. There’s something exceptionally beautiful about fall. It’s one of the rare times in San Diego when you can actually see the seasons starting to change—green leaves take on warm hues and crunch beneath our feet; evenings are chillier and a misty fog blankets our seaside town.



I love to stroll my neighborhood at dusk, just after the sun has set. Little cottages and their gardens begin to take on a new appearance and everything seems to have a seasonal orange glow. Gourds are perched on shadowy porches and Halloween pirates and skeletons keep guard over picket fences. Plants are moist with dew and occasionally, when we’re lucky, there is the smell of rain. Glancing in windows you can see friends and lovers sharing a meal or huddling over tables preparing crafts and costumes. Fall signals a change and mixes things up for us a bit. Unlike the spring, where it’s all about renewal and growth, the fall is more about introspection. It’s a quieter time for us to enjoy being inside and a chance for us to tend to our homes and gardens.



Walking through our gayberhood I’m often struck by how beautiful some of the yards and gardens are—even in the fall. From exotic succulents to seasonal flowers, there are quite a few of us who have obviously been gifted with the gay green thumb. My partner David and I have not been so fortunate. We attempt to “garden,” but for us the endeavor should really be called “death prevention.” We usually have our standard quibble over whether to hire a gardener or just do it ourselves. I succumb to the theory that it’s meditative, and that by doing the work myself I am reconnecting with nature. But let’s be clear: There is a difference between enjoying a hike in the woods and fishing thousands of palm tree seedlings from your Buddha fountain. I’ve taken to naming certain plants and will often whisper sweet nothings to them, pet them and beg them not to die. We do a fair job pruning and wrestling with unruly vines. Sometimes it works out and other times it looks as if our trees have been struck by lightning. Occasionally I’ll call one of my more Martha-inclined friends for a gardening intervention, in which he or she helps me pull David and his electric chainsaw out of the trees.



Fortunately, for those of us less gifted in the garden there are plenty of local experts in our community who can offer advice on how to keep a garden fresh and tame this fall. Landscape designers Joel Berlin and James Kressley of Anandascapes have some professional tips on how to keep the lightning strikes at bay. “In the fall a clean-up is usually necessary for salvias and ornamental grasses. Many of these plants will get ‘leggy’ or simply turn brown by the end of the summer. When I see leaves sprouting from the bottom blades or stalks, I often cut them down, leaving the new sprouts to begin the cycle again.” Kressley said.



Kressley assured me that planting options are bountiful in the fall. “I always encourage edibles in your garden,” he said. “Broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, chard, collards, kale, greens, peas, spinach, beets, carrots, turnips, garlic, onions and lettuces are all great vegetables you can grow in the cooler months here in San Diego.”



Kressley also stressed the importance of knowing what plants are in your yard. “If you have Australian plants like the Anigozanthos or Kangaroo Paw they are used to wet summers and dry winters. You can either adjust the water amount for them or plant a complementing specimen along with it—one which likes winter water, like a succulent. The plants will actually “share” the water through the seasons.



In the spirit of the season I asked James where we might be able to source great pumpkins. “If you don’t have the space to grow your own pumpkins this season (and they do take a lot of space), I would suggest going to one of our local Pumpkin Station locations (pumpkinstation.com). There’s even fun activities for children. The Rancho Bernardo location even has a 6-foot tall corn field maze,” Kressley said.



Special thanks to James Kressley for the seasonal tips. He and Berlin can be seen on HGTV’s “Ground Force.” You can reach them via their website at anandascapes.com or at (619) 701-9875 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (619) 701-9875 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.



— Jimmy Sullivan holds a B.A. in architecture and is the owner of CitiZen Design Studio, a design firm located in Hillcrest. Write to Jimmy at jimmy@citizenarch.com or visit his website at citizenarch.com.



Tool Box:

Acknowledgements: Jimmy Sullivan




Rancho Bernardo and neighborhood boundariesImage via Wikipedia
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Friday, October 22, 2010

Facebook ads may inadvertantly out gay members...

Image representing Facebook as depicted in Cru...Image via CrunchBase

Facebook users may inadvertently reveal their sexual preference to advertisers in an apparent wrinkle in the social-networking site's advertising system, researchers have found.



The researchers set up six Facebook accounts, analyzing the type of advertisements served to them and way those advertisements differed based on the profile's declared sexual preference.



Two of the profiles purported to be males interested in females, and two females interested in males. Another profile was for a male interested in other males, and the last a female interested in other females. All six profiles claimed to be 25-year-olds living in Washington, D.C.



Unsurprisingly, the researchers found that ads that explicitly mentioned sexual preference, such as ads for gay bars, were served to the gay profiles. But they found that many ads that did not explicitly refer to sexual preference were shown exclusively to the gay profiles.



One example was an advertisement for a nursing program at a medical college in Florida, which was only shown to gay men.



The researchers said that persons seeing the ad would not know that it had been exclusively aimed at them solely based on their sexuality, nor would they realize that clicking on the ad would reveal to the advertiser, by implication, their sexual preference in addition to other information they might expect to be sent, such as their IP (Internet Protocol) address.



"The danger with such ads, unlike the gay bar ad where the target demographic is blatantly obvious, is that the user reading the ad text would have no idea that by clicking it he would reveal to the advertiser both his sexual preference and a unique identifier (cookie, IP address, or e-mail address if he signs up on the advertiser's site)," the researchers wrote in a paper. "Furthermore, such deceptive ads are not uncommon; indeed exactly half of the 66 ads shown exclusively to gay men (more than 50 times) during our experiment did not mention 'gay' anywhere in the ad text."



The scenario would appear to violate Facebook's advertising policy, which says "Any targeting of adverts based on a user attribute such as age, gender, location or interest, must be directly relevant to the offer and cannot be done by a method inconsistent with privacy and data policies."



A Facebook spokeswoman downplayed the study, saying that the site does not pass any personally identifiable information back to an advertiser.



Christopher Soghoian, a doctoral candidate at the School of Informatics and Computing at Indiana University, wrote on his blog that Facebook could deal with the issue in a couple of ways.



The site could simply stop allowing advertisers to target ads based on sensitive information, such as sexual preference or political affiliations, or it could inform users that an ad was targeted based on a specific attribute of their profile, Soghoian wrote.



"Users should also be told, after clicking on the ad, but before being directed to the site, that the advertiser may be able to learn this sensitive information about them, simply by visiting the site," Soghoian wrote. "I suspect that neither option is going to be something that Facebook is going to want to embrace."



The research paper, "Challenges in Measuring Online Advertising Systems," was written by Saikat Guha of Microsoft Research India, and Bin Cheng and Paul Francis, both of the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems in Germany.






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