Tag Archives: palestinian

Youth Fantasy Face-Off: Will Oscar Pill or The Seventh Son Become Your New Harry Potter?

Now that marketing is kicking into gear for the final half-chapter of the Harry Potter saga, fans everywhere are starting to feel the disappointment and sadness that comes with the ending of a beloved movie franchise. But you know who’s feeling it even more? Producers and studio execs! For them, ending this series is like taking a huge bulldozer to a perfectly healthy money tree! So naturally, everyone’s now scrambling to find the next Harry Potter . Right now, two children’s fantasy series, Eli Anderson’s Oscar Pill books and Joseph Delaney’s The Wardstone Chronicles , are competing for the prize. But which one will triumph?

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Youth Fantasy Face-Off: Will Oscar Pill or The Seventh Son Become Your New Harry Potter?

Miral Actor, Peace Activist Juliano Mer-Khamis Shot and Killed

Sad, sobering news: Israeli actor and peace activist Juliano Mer-Khamis, who played Seikh Saabah in Julian Schnabel and Rula Jebreal’s Miral , was shot and killed by a masked gunman Monday. Worse still, the murder took place just outside his “Freedom Theater,” a drama and culture center that he set up inside a Palestinian refugee camp. Said a Miral rep, “Rula and Julian were very shocked at this tragic news.” [ New York Post ]

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Miral Actor, Peace Activist Juliano Mer-Khamis Shot and Killed

California Says Yes To Molten Solar

The California Energy Commission has approved a permit for SolarReserve to build a 150-megawatt solar plant that uses molten salt to store energy, the company announced Wednesday. —The Santa Monica, Calif.-based start-up says its Rice Solar Energy Project will be located 30 miles from Blythe, Calif., and when running at full capacity will supply enough energy to power the equivalent of 68,000 homes annually. The project also has a 25-year power purchase agreement with Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E). ==================== California Says Yes To Molten Solar December 16, 2010 9:44 AM PST by Candace Lombardi http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-20025870-54.html?part=rss&tag=feed&sub… —continued—- The molten salt system will enable the solar farm to store and release solar energy so that it can continue to generate electricity for up to eight hours after sunset, according to SolarReserve. Molten salt solar plants, which have been built in Spain by SolarReserve with additional molten solar projects underway in Nevada and Sicily, work by using molten salt to retain and release heat energy. In the case of a molten salt solar plant, heliostats–giant rotating mirrors controlled by computers to best track and reflect sun onto a specific point–reflect sun rays onto a central tower, or a series of pipes, containing a molten salt mixture. The molten salt generally consists of sodium nitrates and potassium. The solar rays heat the liquefied salt to a temperature of up to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The steam from the molten salt is then harnessed to power a generator that makes electricity. Afterward, the cooled molten salt is then piped back to the tower to be heated once again. In the case of the proposed Rice Solar Energy Project, the heliostats will be directed to a large central tower using a molten salt system developed by Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne. The company received more than $10 million to develop more efficient molten-salt systems, as part of a Department of Energy (DOE) project sponsoring 13 companies with funds. However, this latest California board approval does not mean this project is full steam ahead. The Rice Solar Energy Project still needs to receive approvals from both the Bureau of Land Management and the Western Area Power Administration, according to SolarReserve. added by: twohawks

Israel condemns Norway’s upgrade of Palestinian standing in Oslo to ‘diplomatic delegation’

Israel harshly condemned Norway on Thursday for upgrading the standing of the Palestinian representation in Oslo from a 'general delegation' to a 'diplomatic delegation'. Naor Gilon, who heads the Western Europe division at the Foreign Ministry, summoned the Norwegian charg

Fareed Zakaria Calls Out Glenn Beck’s Math Skills On Muslim Terrorist Claim

Fareed Zakaria, who occasionally throws fairly well-disguised bombs from his perches at CNN and Time in a manner so serene many fail to notice– is taking on his cable news stylistic opposite, Glenn Beck– or at the very least, his math skills. In his trademark soothing tones, Zakaria gave Beck a math lesson on those 10%, or 157 million, “Muslim terrorists” Beck claimed were plotting to attack America– namely, that that figure is “1000% wrong.” Zakaria opens up his segment, aptly titled “What in the world?,” by simply following through on the 10% math to figure out just how many people 10% of the international Muslim community would be. Zakaria’s lesson even included a virtual chalkboard, just to make sure Beck got the message, one must assume. He correctly points out would be somewhere in the neighborhood of 157,000,000 Muslim terrorists, and notes Beck’s laments of “why, oh why wasn’t this receiving any media coverage?” Zakaria’s answer? “Well, let me suggest one reason: it is total nonsense– a figure made up by Glenn Beck with absolutely no basis in fact.” He also uses U.S. State Department figures to negate Beck’s, which claim there were 11,000 total terrorist attacks around the world in 2009, including every act of terror in Iraq and Afghanistan, and testimony from terror expert Peter Bergen, who emailed Zakaria to tell him Beck’s figures were “1000% wrong.” It doesn’t get much better for Beck during Zakaria’s semi-out of character deconstructing of his argument. Team Beck, meanwhile, has already put together a comprehensive retort to Zakaria, with data showing, among other things, that support for Osama Bin Laden “ranges from 4% in Azerbaijan to 56% in the Palestinian territories.” added by: TimALoftis

Time Managing Editor Rick Stengel ‘Sad’ Israel-West Bank Wall ‘Has Actually Worked’

In Time Magazine Managing Editor Rick Stengel’s mind, it’s really “sad” that the wall between Israel and the West Bank – intended to keep murderous terrorists in the Palestinian territory – has been a success. Stengel apparently considers Isreali deaths worthwhile if they lead to more productive peace talks. In a “Morning Joe” segment yesterday titled “Why Israel doesn’t care about peace” – after the upcoming Time cover story – Stengel posited that the lack of violence in Isreal is responsible for that country’s supposed reluctance to reach a peace deal. Stengel stated (video below the fold – h/t Jim Hoft ): They haven’t had a car bombing in two and a half years. And the sad truth really is that the wall with the West Bank has actually worked . I mean, most Israelis in the course of their lives don’t come into contact with any Palestinians at all. The wall is functioning. And the Gaza strip is so small and so isolated they feel that those folks, the Hamas folks are not that big of a threat… I mean, the Israelis feel like, you know what? The status quo isn’t so bad and we don’t mind is there is no peace at all. So the truth is sad, presumably, because the deaths of innocent Israelis would be a worthwhile price to pay for the progression of Middle East peace talks, by Stengel’s account. That is what Stengel is saying: the wall has succeeded, but at the price of impeding the peace talks. He says that fact is sad, meaning no wall, or a less effective wall would be preferable. More Israelis would die from car bombings, but at least the peace talks would move forward. Stengel believes it would be preferable for more Israelis to be killed by Palestinain terrorists, if it meant that those murderers would get Israeli leaders to the negotiating table. Good to know. This is not a commentator saying this, mind you. This is the managing editor of Time magazine opining that more Israeli deaths would be preferable to the status quo. If this does not convince you that the mainstream media is decidedly anti-Israel, nothing will. The contention that Israel is less interested in peace talks because it does not have much to fear from the belligerent territory to its west is a valid concern, and does not require one to weigh in on the Israeli/Palestinian issue. But Stengel made a value judgment on that statement, claiming that more Israeli deaths (how many more he didn’t specify) are an acceptable sacrifice. That speaks volumes about Time’s ability to weigh in objectively on the issue.

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Time Managing Editor Rick Stengel ‘Sad’ Israel-West Bank Wall ‘Has Actually Worked’

Germany 0-1 Serbia | World Cup 2010 Group D match report

For Germany, the damage may be only superficial. They will still confidently expect to clamber safely out of Group D but they have now been shown as fallible when the perception was previously that, when it comes to the World Cup, there is no side who are better prepared or more clear-eyed about their objectives. After swatting aside Australia with almost contemptuous ease in their opening match, Germany were beaten here by a 38th-minute goal from Milan Jovanovic, newly of Liverpool, and the failure of Lukas Podolski to score from the penalty spot after Nemanja Vidic’s handball on the hour. The result ends a run of five consecutive World Cup defeats for Serbia and, in the process, represents the biggest shock of the competition to date bar Switzerland’s victory over Spain. • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more There is now considerable pressure on Germany going into their final match against Ghana when Joachim Löw’s side will be missing their most prolific striker Miroslav Klose, who was sent off in a match that will mark the name of Alberto Undiano into every black book of every student of refereeing demonology. The Spanish official brandished 11 red cards in 17 games in La Liga last season and his performance here marked him down as a referee other teams in this competition will want to avoid. In total, he showed his yellow card nine times and that actually seemed conservative given the rate at which he was reaching for his pocket in the first half. In that period there were seven, two of which went to Klose to leave Germany a man down for 64 minutes of an eccentric and entertaining match. The protests from Germany were long and vociferous but, in both cases, Klose was guilty of taking down a player when they had run away from him, even if there was no malice in either challenge. The first came after 12 minutes when Branislav Ivanovic burst out of defence. Klose, chasing back to make the tackle, clipped his opponent’s heels, at least with a degree of cynicism. After that, the striker was as culpable of naivety as well as poor tackling because it was soon obvious that Undiano was not going to show leniency to anyone. After 36 minutes, the Serbia captain, Dejan Stankovic, got a yard away from Klose, and as the Bayern Munich player extended one of his legs to try to prod the ball away he caught his opponent’s heel. The damage was exacerbated two minutes later when Milos Krasic’s cross was knocked down by Nikola Zigic for Jovanovic to turn in the game’s decisive moment. In the circumstances, an argument could be made that Germany acquitted themselves well, putting together a number of scoring chances after the interval. Unfortunately for them, this was a day when Podolski’s finishing was encapsulated by his weak effort from the penalty spot and a late onslaught came to nothing. World Cup 2010 Group D Germany Serbia World Cup 2010 Daniel Taylor guardian.co.uk

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Germany 0-1 Serbia | World Cup 2010 Group D match report

World Cup group matches to be scrutinised for evidence of match-fixing

• Final round of matches considered high-risk • Fifa says betting on throw-ins and bookings harder to track The final round of World Cup group stage matches are most at risk to match-fixing and will be closely scrutinised by to ensure they are totally clean, Fifa has said. Every match in the tournament is monitored by the Early Warning System that detects irregular betting patterns. But Marco Villiger, Fifa’s legal director, told a media briefing it keeps a particularly close eye on high-risk games which complete the first round at the finals. The top two advance from each of the eight first-round groups of four, and by the time teams play their final group match some have already clinched a second-round place while others know they have no chance of qualifying for the knockout stages. “These are the high-risk matches from a betting perspective,” said Villiger. “Match-fixing is the biggest threat facing football at the moment and there is a big risk in the last group matches, especially if a team is involved which has already qualified, or is already out. “We use our all our means to focus on those who have already qualified or are out. The question is, are these high-risk matches and the answer is yes, they are.” Fifa informed every national association, player, coach, delegation member and referee before the start of the tournament that they would watch out for irregular or illegal betting patterns. “I would not believe the World Cup could be a target for the betting mafia but in the meantime we have to be prepared that even the World Cup could be, not just lower-league matches.” A telephone hotline has been set up so that anyone involved in a match – players, coaches or referees – approached by a third party offering them money or a bribe for betting or match-fixing can inform Fifa in confidence immediately. “The threat is here,” said Villiger, “but we’re working closely with our colleagues at Uefa, with Interpol, with 400 bookmakers around the world, to do all we can to keep the game clean.” He added that live betting – for example when bets are placed on the first throw-in or yellow card at a match – was harder to track. “For this World Cup we are focusing much more on the investigative part of betting. We have international co-operation with Interpol and we have a number of informants who provide us with high-level information.” So far Fifa has not detected any signs of irregular betting at the finals but it is not resting on its laurels. “The World Cup, the Euros, the Champions League, other big tournaments are always vulnerable to the betting syndicates. We are binding all our forces together to fight this threat.” World Cup 2010 Fifa guardian.co.uk

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World Cup group matches to be scrutinised for evidence of match-fixing

Palestine’s Speed Sisters on track for race equality

All-female, British-backed driving team line up alongside men for debut in Ramallah event When Suna Aweidah pulls on her red overalls and slips behind the wheel of her car next Friday, she will empty her mind of everything but the race ahead. But there will be an indelible nugget of pride that she and her team, the Speed Sisters, are breaking through the traditional conservatism of Palestinian society to compete in a motor racing event on an equal basis with men. As she eases her Opel Corsa on to the Ramallah race track, she will block out the yells of “Suna , yallah!” (Let’s go!), and focus on the map of the course she has memorised and the techniques she has learned at the hands of British instructors. “When I’m racing, I feel freedom. I love speed. When I’m on the track I can break the rules,” she says. The Speed Sisters comprise eight women, aged 18 to 39, Muslim and Christian, and are starting to grab attention, practical backing and the adoration of the crowds on what is unsurprisingly a male-dominated motor racing circuit. Friday’s race, the biggest that the female racers have participated in, will be their first both as a team and since undergoing two days of intensive training in the West Bank by two British instructors. Men and women compete on an equal basis but, Aweidah says, the men have more expensive, modified cars giving them an advantage. Aweidah now has a dedicated car in which to race, but for years relied on the loan of spare vehicles from a local supportive car rental firm, Dallah. And a supporter has donated an old BMW for team training and racing. The women have the backing of the British consulate in East Jerusalem, which has invested about £6,500 in suits, helmets, training and revamping the BMW. “They aren’t just a positive role model for women, but for all Palestinians,” said consulate spokeswoman Karen McLuskie. “They are really inspiring in a conflict zone where fun is low on the priority list.” For team captain Aweidah, Friday’s race will be the high point – so far – of her struggle to fulfil her ambition to be a racing driver. She has wanted to be behind a wheel since she was a girl watching ordinary drivers in her home town of Beit Hanina in East Jerusalem. “I love driving. I love cars. It’s in my blood – it’s stronger than me,” she says. When the Palestinian Motor Sport Federation was established in 2005, Aweidah hoped to be able to participate in races. But her family was reluctant. A year later she was invited to a women-only go-kart competition in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt. “I told my family, I insist on going. We have no go-karts in the West Bank, I had only ever seen a picture of one. I had no idea how to drive one, or what the rules were.” Aweidah came sixth in a field of 18. Her family grew more supportive. Her first race in the West Bank was in 2006. To her astonishment, she found two other women participating. “The men racers found it strange, but they said OK, let them come. After a while they saw how we drive, that we proved ourselves, and they were OK. We started asking them for tips on driving – like when to use the handbrake.” Most of her friends were supportive. “Some said we’re proud of you because you do what we can’t. Some of my married friends would like to race but their husbands won’t allow it. But some women said this is a man’s sport.” With the British consulate’s encouragement, the female drivers finally formed a team. British trainers and former competitors Helen Elstrop and Sue Sanders spent last weekend, courtesy of the consulate, building on the women’s basic driving skills and mental preparation for racing. “The strength of character they’ve shown, not only on the track but in their lives in general, is phenomenal,” says Elstrop. She was surprised to discover how positive and supportive the “boys” were. “They want to see the girls compete at a higher level.” The women, she says, were “like sponges” in the training sessions. “They are astounding, a phenomenal set of girls. We are definitely sisters in speed.” The youngest of the team is Marah Zahalka, 18, a business student at Bir Zeit University whose mother is a driving instructor. Another team-member, Mona Ennab, 24, is supported at races by her mother and aunts dressed in traditional Palestinian dress. Betty Saadeh, 29, comes from a racing family: her father was a rally champion in Mexico and her brother was the 2009 autocross champion in the West Bank. Aweidah – who lives with her parents and two of her siblings, and works for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency – says the success and acceptance of the Speed Sisters is an indication of progress in Palestinian society. “It’s getting easier for Palestinian women to do the things they want, not only in sport but in all life. Palestinian women are proving themselves more and more.” She hopes one day to be able to represent Palestine in competitions abroad. “And to have our own state here so we could invite other countries to compete with us.” But for now, she is focusing on next Friday, and where that might lead. “We’re on the first step still but – inshallah – we will reach the stars.” Palestinian territories Gender Motor sport Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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Palestine’s Speed Sisters on track for race equality

Rabbi Who Outed Helen Thomas is ‘Liberal’ Who Opposed Iraq War, ‘Reevaluating’ His Views

During an interview on CNN’s Reliable Sources on Sunday, Rabbi David Nesenoff, known for exposing Helen Thomas’s anti-Semitic views, informed viewers that, up until now, he has has considered himself to be a liberal Democrat – who even opposed the Iraq War and supported Barack Obama – but now asserts that ” I have to really reevaluate liberal and conservative and really find out where I stand because I think I’ve been a little blind.” Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the Sunday, June 13, Reliable Sources on CNN: HOWARD KURTZ: Did you have any idea when you took out that video camera and asked Helen Thomas that question that she was hostile toward Israel? RABBI DAVID NESENOFF, RABBILIVE.COM: I didn’t approach her thinking that. Now that I see a lot of things in the news, I certainly can review and see that she’s had a lot of different thoughts, but, of course, there might be anti-Israel or pro-Palestinian. That’s very different than anti-Semitic and anti-Jewish and wanting to cleanse a piece of land, so, up until this point, this is just an individual who is pro-Palestinian. People should look out for the Palestinian rights. Everybody should look out for everybody’s rights, and there’s nothing wrong with that. KURTZ: As you know, Helen Thomas has been a longtime institution here in the capital, she’s been a heroine to many female journalists, and some people are blaming you for ending her career. NESENOFF: Yeah, you know, I received about 25,000 hate mail, you know, emails, and, more shocking than even that, is the hate media I’m beginning to learn about – you know, from TV and newspapers and blogs and talk shows and entertainers, and they’re accusing me of being some right-wing ambusher, and it really rocked my world because I have to reevaluate my life and my standing in the agendas because, yeah, I’m a New York Democrat Jewish liberal supporter of Obama, donated to his candidacy for a year, said give him a chance, give him a chance, defended, watched all these liberal media, and now I have to reevaluate, I have to speak, I have to now speak to people with all different agendas because if I was part of a team where their agenda was that Israel and the Jewish people don’t have a connection – which is exactly what Helen Thomas said – there’s no connection, why are they even there- KURTZ: Well, let me interrupt you. What do you mean when you say “hate media”? I mean, obviously, you find yourself in the middle of this firestorm. Do you feel that journalists, programs, commentators have been personally unfair to you? And can you explain how? NESENOFF: You know, I find that people that don’t cover the story or people that cover the story are so upset that they don’t know what to do, so they have to attack me, maybe we’ll say he did something on purpose or he filmed it a certain way, or we’ll find out what he did in his past. I mean, they don’t know what to do with it, but why don’t they actually ask me and find out maybe I liked Helen Thomas and I was actually for the fact that she went ahead and spoke to President Bush and said watch it with the Iraq War, although now I understand – and we have to reevaluate – that maybe when she was protesting the Iraq War, I was saying that because I didn’t want our soldiers to be in harm’s way. It turns out she didn’t want the Iraqis to be in harm’s way. So we have to, kind of, I have to really reevaluate liberal and conservative and really find out where I stand because I think I’ve been a little blind.

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Rabbi Who Outed Helen Thomas is ‘Liberal’ Who Opposed Iraq War, ‘Reevaluating’ His Views