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Friday, February 25, 2005 |
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Quake Survivors Complain of Slow Aid Effort |
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ZARAND (Reuters) - Tired and cold survivors
of a powerful earthquake in southeastern Iran begged authorities for food and shelter on Wednesday, complaining aid was slow to reach the worst-hit mountain villages.
Iran has so far declined offers of foreign assistance to deal with the aftermath of Tuesday's tremor which had a magnitude of 6.4 and killed at least 420 people.
Hardest hit were about a dozen villages to the north of the town of Zarand, where fragile one-storey homes collapsed into piles of mud and broken tiles.
The tremor came just 14 months after a devastating quake hit the desert citadel city of Bam, in the same province, killing 31,000 people.
Some 900 were injured in Tuesday's quake, about 700 km southeast of Tehran, and the death toll was expected to rise.
Reuters journalists witnessed a few dozen angry villagers on a high mountain road, some brandishing sticks and stones, besiege a convoy of vehicles, one of which carried Interior Minister Abdolvahed Mousavi-Lari as he toured the affected area.
"We spent the night in the cold. Where is the aid you're talking about on television?" shouted one middle-aged man as the villagers banged on the windows and roofs of the vehicles.
"My children are freezing to death. You want to kill the survivors of the earthquake," a woman shouted hysterically, clutching a rock.
Police dispersed the crowd, some of whom had tried to block the convoy's passage by lying in front of the vehicles.
But aid workers acknowledged the relief effort was still slow and patchy.
RAIN AND FOG
"The aid which has been distributed is tents. We're trying to establish some camps here. We haven't distributed food or blankets yet," said Red Crescent medic Farhad Fathizadeh.
"We're sorry we haven't been able to help people much but we're trying to prepare ourselves for tonight," he said.
In the village of Houdkan, shrouded in fog about 30 km from Zarand, dozens of green and white tents dotted the hillside, many containing two or three families.
Groups clustered around bonfires trying to warm themselves under an intermittent drizzle.
Virtually no building was left standing and those that were had been deserted for fear they could come crashing down at any moment. Black banners draped on the remaining walls announced the names of the dead.
Some 20 aftershocks, with a magnitude of up to 4.6, shook the area on Tuesday, the ISNA students news agency said.
Locals said many of those killed in Houdkan, one of the two most badly damaged villages in the region, had died while at early morning prayers in the mosque.
Kerman province Governor Mohammad Ali Karimi told local radio almost all the affected villages had received tents, blankets and food. He said search and rescue operations, hampered by poor weather and difficult terrain on Tuesday, would be wound up by noon on Wednesday.
Iran's relief efforts were broadly praised on Tuesday by various UN agencies who said local authorities, backed by the Red Crescent, had responded quickly and effectively, employing the lessons learned from the Bam quake.
Posted in : 11:09 AM
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Wednesday, February 23, 2005 |
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Quake News |
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Mehr News Agency:
Posted in : 7:29 PM
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Tuesday, February 22, 2005 |
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Quake News |
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Mehr News Agency:
Posted in : 9:32 PM
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Wartime Heroics |
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As the city of Basra was bombed by night (left), Iraqi librarian Alia Muhammad Baker was busy driving library books to her home to protect them (right). Author/illustrator Jeanette Winter drew images of what she imagined such scenes must have looked like to illustrate her book 'The Librarian of Basra: A True Story from Iraq."
The tale of the Iraqi librarian who saved the books she loves
By Karen Campbell . Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
Of all the children's books about the good one person can do, few are more timely or resonant than Jeanette Winter's "The Librarian of Basra: A True Story from Iraq." The true account of an Iraqi librarian's brave struggle to save her community's priceless collection of books dramatically illustrates the difference one person can make. And in a moving parallel, the author is now leaving her own indelible footprints at the point where the story ends. The book was inspired by a July 2003, article in The New York Times about Alia Muhammad Baker, the chief librarian of Basra's Central Library, who was determined to protect the library's holdings when US troops entered Iraq and fighting and looting broke out. When her own government refused to help, Ms. Baker began spiriting the collection to safety herself, book by book. She carried the books to her home and to a neighboring restaurant, managing with the help of friends to preserve 70 percent of the collection before the historic building burned to the ground nine days later. In the article, Baker remarked "In the Koran, the first thing God said to Muhammad was 'Read.' " Winter, who has written biographies for children, was hooked. "What Alia realized was that without books, you lose history, culture, the rich exchange of ideas," she says.
Posted in : 1:37 PM
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Monday, February 21, 2005 |
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Thursday, February 17, 2005 |
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Iranian Cleric Blogs for Free Expression |
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TEHRAN (Reuters) - Blogging might not sound an appropriate hobby for a senior Iranian government official, particularly one who is a Muslim cleric. But presidential adviser Mohammad Ali Abthai has turned the practice of writing Internet journals, or blogging, into a powerful tool against the reformist government's hardline foes and a means to reach out to the country's disenchanted youth. More...
Posted in : 9:28 PM
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Tuesday, February 15, 2005 |
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New Web Site for Education Journalism |
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New Web Site for Academics Roils Education Journalism Scott Jaschik and Doug Lederman had covered higher education for years but on May 30, 2003, they found out that - in journalism - there's no such thing as tenure. On that day, both Mr. Jaschik and Mr. Lederman, the editor and managing editor of The Chronicle of Higher Education, announced they were leaving the paper, where they had both worked for nearly 20 years. They did not explain why.
But now they are back on the beat, competing through a start-up with their former employer. Mr. Jaschik and Mr. Lederman, along with Kathlene Collins, who worked at The Chronicle for 20 years, introduced last month an online publication, insidehighered.com. In doing so, Mr. Jaschik and Mr. Lederman, who are both editors, and Ms. Collins, who is the publisher, are trying to become the first significant competition in higher education publishing since the intellectual-if-gossipy Lingua Franca folded in 2001. The Chronicle of Higher Education has long been the giant in the field. Founded in 1966 by Corbin Gwaltney, a former editor at Johns Hopkins University who still owns the publication, it quickly established itself as a must-read for college administrators and faculty. The Chronicle now has a print circulation of just over 85,000 and its Web site gets more than 10 million page views per month.
Along the way, The Chronicle also earned a reputation for being stodgy and resistant to change. Jeffrey Kittay, the founder of Lingua Franca, now an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, says that The Chronicle regards itself as the paper of record in higher education, and that makes it an easy target. "They fulfill a need," he said. "They aren't lazy; they've taken on a lot of responsibility. But they see themselves with certain constraints, that's why you get this love-hate relationship."
When Mr. Jaschik and Mr. Lederman saw their relationship with The Chronicle end in 2003, there was speculation among the remaining staff that they had been forced out over differences with Mr. Gwaltney. Both Mr. Jaschik and Mr. Lederman are circumspect when asked about their departure from The Chronicle.
"We had come to the conclusion that we and The Chronicle's owner had different visions about what the publication and company should be," said Mr. Lederman. Mr. Gwaltney was traveling and could not be reached for comment. Phil Semas, the editor in chief of The Chronicle, would only say, "We reached a mutual agreement they should leave." Some of that different vision will be on display on insidehighered.com. The site features news and opinion pieces, plus links to many of the blogs about academia that thrive on the Web. "The impact of the blogs on higher education is huge," said Ms. Collins.
And, in contrast to The Chronicle, which is a print publication that publishes its content online, insidehighered.com is an online-only publication. The three founders all cite the desire for their site to be as easily accessible and democratic as possible. Insidehighered.com is free, with no registration required; access to most of The Chronicle's articles requires a password that can only be obtained with a print subscription, which costs $82.50 a year.
"A big part of our model is to try and reach everyone in higher ed - it means that everyone can be part of the conversation," said Mr. Jaschik. "We want grad students, young professors, people at institutions without a lot of money, in addition to people at wealthier institutions and senior administrators."
Scott McLemee, who worked at Lingua Franca and then at The Chronicle and has been hired to write a column for insidehighered.com, said he thought there was a big market in higher education that was not being served by The Chronicle. "The Chronicle was traditionally oriented towards the administration - there was a brief period where it tried to reach a larger constituency, and then it retrenched," said Mr. McLemee. "They have no particular interest in reaching anyone else." It is still too early to know how much of the market insidehighered.com can capture. According to an estimate in the September 2004 Advertising Age, The Chronicle grossed $33 million in advertising revenues and $7 million in circulation revenues in 2003, although its total number of advertising pages for the year, 3,169, was down 14 percent from 2002. Some of that ad revenue comes from recruitment advertising, and it is there that insidehighered.com and other well-established recruitment sites such as higheredjobs.com could pose a challenge to The Chronicle.
Within a couple of weeks, insidehighered.com plans to add a job search database, including some innovative features, like a searchable database of résumés and recommendations for applicants, that Ms. Collins says will facilitate the labyrinthine academic hiring process. "We are part of the entire recruiting process, not just that first step of posting the job," said Ms. Collins. Mr. Semas of The Chronicle said that there was much on The Chronicle's site that was free, including the job search database and some of the chat forums. He also said that he was not alarmed by the new competition.
"We think that we already do a good job of covering higher education both in print and online, and provide a very popular job service for people in higher education, and we've been doing it since 1966." From New York Times.By LIA MILLER
Posted in : 7:46 AM
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Sunday, February 13, 2005 |
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Google Maps is openinig |
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Google just released a new type of search machine, their map searcher. Google Maps is an online service that allows users in the U.S. to find location information, navigate through maps, and get directions quickly and easily. Google Maps has several unique features:Draggable maps – you can click and drag Google maps to view adjacent sections; no more long waits while new areas download. Integrated Local search results – Google Maps integrates local search results from Google Local. So to find a pizza place, simply type in "pizza in San Jose", and pizza places appear at various locations on your map, with phone numbers for each location on the right side of the page. Turn-by-turn directions – Type in an address and Google Maps plots the route for you, displaying it visually on the map itself, together with step-by-step directions for getting there (or back from there). When you click on one of these steps (say, "turn left"), you see a floating bubble with a magnified view of the area mentioned in the directions. Keyboard shortcuts – You can use arrow keys to pan left, right, up and down. The Page Up, Page Down, Home and End keys let you pan out even wider. And you can zoom in with the plus (+) key and zoom out with the minus (-) key. click here
Posted in : 3:44 PM
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The World Press Photo of the Year 2004 |
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The international jury of the 48th annual World Press Photo contest selected a color image of the Indian photographer Arko Datta of Reuters as World Press Photo of the Year 2004. The picture shows an Indian woman mourning the death of a relative who was killed in the Asian tsunami catastrophe.The picture was taken in Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, on 28 December 2004.
For mor information click on this photo. For visit winners names of this contest, click here.
Posted in : 1:18 AM
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Monday, February 07, 2005 |
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Weblogging: A Tool for Feminine Expression |
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Women who write weblogs have all one thing in common:
they want to express themselves more freely, share their
intimate moments and portray their concerns, thoughts
and lives as they are.
A large number of women from different age groups,
social classes, and with different educational
backgrounds and attitudes have registered weblogs in
their names. They are no longer willing to adopt
silence in the virtual cyber world, providing the others with a chance to talk about their feelings
and desires, the Farsi newspaper Iran wrote.
Hamid Mortazavi, a psychiatrist, says women use
weblogs as a tool to express their viewpoints and
exchange opinions. "Perhaps these women, driven by
the male-chauvinist atmosphere and absence of
gender equality in our country, are trying to use
weblogs to narrow the gap. Women writing weblogs
on the Internet have grown more individualist and
extrovert compared to the previous generation.
They speak more openly of their real private lives
than did their mothers and grandmothers,Ó he opined.
A male weblogger, whose identity was not disclosed,
believes this is the first time women are able to
voice their opinions on a variety of subjects for
a public audience freely.
"This is not an insignificant minor event, especially
in a country wherein women have always been told to
hide their femininity, hold back their feelings and
express themselves through another person--usually a
man," he commented.
For see more, click on photo
Posted in : 8:05 PM
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