Archive for May, 2009

Watch my hands, read my lips

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

How does one say “sorry” to someone who can’t hear or speak?

“It can get embarrassing,” says Yin Qiuju, a sign-language teacher, recalling that she once saw a man pleading with a speech-and-hearing impaired couple hit by his car.

The couple refused to take the money he offered for a medical examination, and also declined his offer to take them to hospital. But they blocked his car and would not let him pass. Soon, a small crowd had gathered around them.

From the couple’s sign language, Yin understood that all they wanted was for the man to say sorry. So she told this to the young man and also taught him to express his apology in sign language.

This incident made Yin realize that it is important for everyone to learn some basic sign language.

Fifty-two-year-old Yin has been a sign-language teacher at Beijing’s Second Deaf-mute School for 10 years, but spends her spare time as a volunteer teaching sign language in primary and middle schools, parks, and residential communities.

“I was deeply moved by the passion shown by the Olympic volunteers recently,” says Yin whose students - from 10-year-old pupils to 70-year-old grandmas, from security inspectors at railway stations to police officers at Olympic venues - are all eager to communicate and help the speech-and-hearing impaired.

With the increasing demand for learning sign language, Yin has had to rope in her colleagues at other schools in Beijing and make several teams to teach the language. “I am busy helping staff of police stations, banks and post offices communicate with their speech-and-hearing impaired clients.”

Dozens of volunteers who have learned sign language, have joined Yin. Chang Zhifu is one of them. The retired worker applied to be an Olympic volunteer as early as in 2001 and has been learning sign language for six years.

“I need to become competitive compared with younger volunteers, by acquiring many skills such as English proficiency and sign language,” says the 60-year-old.

Wearing “Smile Wristlets” with the five colors of the Olympic Rings and blue volunteer uniforms, Chang is a volunteer sign-language teacher at an information kiosk in the Xidan Culture Square. Using various gestures, she conveys such expressions as “welcome to Beijing”, “you are wonderful” and “please provide your ID”.

“I really like to help volunteers who are eager to learn some basic skills to communicate with the disabled,” says Chang.

She realized her dream of learning sign language when she met volunteers from the Hongyan Sign Language Service Union from Beijing Union University, three years ago. The volunteers came to her house to teach her twice a week.

With the help of the BOCOG and the media, she has a teacher from the China Disabled Person’s Federation to correct her gestures. “The language is simple, but to express it accurately is very hard,” says Chang.

Chang always carries a small notebook carrying detailed descriptions of the gestures to be used for different words, to review. “Sometimes, I can’t help practicing these when I am on the bus, and this has led to many people thinking I am speech-and-hearing impaired,” she says.

Chang is proud that she knows all the expressions in Daily Sign Language Dialogue in China and in Sign Language for the Beijing Paralympics. She continues to teach volunteers in 30 information kiosks in Xicheng district. She also helps train university students who will be working as volunteers at the Paralympics.

Many foreign journalists are impressed by Chang and her team’s work and have expressed their appreciation for the devotion shown by the volunteers. Mary Windishar, an American journalist, told Chang “you are wonderful” in the sign language she has learnt recently.

Chinese frontier guards arrest Indian, Nepali human traffickers

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Eight human traffickers, including five Chinese and three foreigners, were arrested by frontier guards in south China for attempted smuggling of 18 foreigners in to Hong Kong.

The three foreign human traffickers, also called “snakeheads” in China, were identified as Sarifulslam from India, Krishna Kumar Adhikari from Nepal and Bobby (nickname) from India, according to Chen Senyang, a spokesman from the frontier police detachment of Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, on Wednesday.

Frontier guards from the detachment, who had been tipped off, stopped a speedboat last Friday at sea about one nautical mile (1,852 meters) from Hong Kong.

They found 10 foreigners inside the speedboat, and arrested five Chinese snakeheads living in Shenzhen City, among whom a man surnamed Tang was the ring leader.

Bobby called Tang, not knowing that he had been arrested. He told Tang there were eight further stowaways he wanted Tang to transport.

Bobby and the two other foreign snakeheads were arrested on the same night.

The 18 stowaways, including 15 men, one woman and two children, are from Pakistan, Ghana, Bangladesh and India. They were told by human traffickers that they could work two years lawfully in Hong Kong if their trips end successfully.

Each of them paid between 3,000 yuan (440 U.S. dollars) and 6,000 yuan for their trips.

All the involved 26 people have been transferred to the public security bureau of Shenzhen, Chen said.

The snakeheads could face jail sentences while the 18 stowaways would be repatriated after their identities were confirmed, according to Chen.

Britney’s Circus: in cages, scantily clad, wearing sparkles

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Britney Spears posted a set list of songs on her web site one day before her Circus tour, revealing to fans what they can expect from the stage show Monday.

Britney Spears poses with her awards for Video of the Year, Best Pop Video and Best Female Video for “Piece of Me” at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles Sept. 7, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters, File Photo)
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On her web site, Britney said that the songs to be staged include a mix of tracks from throughout her career, and the concert will go in a three-ring-circus set design. The first act will be titled “Circus,” followed by the songs “Circus” and “Piece of Me.”

Britney will also perform “Boys,” new single “If U Seek Amy” and more in the “House of Fun (Anything Goes)” segment. In the following, Britney will take her fans to the “Freakshow /Peepshow,” followed by the “Electro Circ.” For those sections, Britney has a slew of fan favorites lined up, including “Slave” and “Toxic.”

From a clip on the web site, Britney seems to be back to her old form: dancing in cages, scantily clad and wearing sparkles.

The tour kicks off Tuesday in New Orleans, near the place where Britney grew up in Louisiana.

(Agencies)

Britney Jean Spears

Britney Jean Spears was born in rural Louisiana. She loved singing since childhood. She sang with the choir in her local church and even sang on national television as a Star Search contestant. >>> Full Story

Hairdresser: Britney Spears “scared” of former manager

BEIJING, Feb. 26 (Xinhuanet) — Britney Spears’ hairdresser testified Wednesday that the pop superstar told her she was scared of her former manager and friend, Osama “Sam” Lutfi.

Hairdresser Roberta Romero said Spears’ comments came after Lutfi repeatedly sent her text messages, trying to ask her to convey them to the singer, including that he was making efforts to “free” her. Full story

Spectacular water ballet performance

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

The water ballerina from Russia pass through the Olympics Five Rings underwater during a spectacular water ballet performance to cheer the ongoing 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in the Ocean World of Donghu Lake at Wuhan, capital of central China’s Hubei Province, Aug. 16, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)

The water ballerine from Russia put up the posture of the Thousands Hands Bodhisattva (Guanyin) Dance during a bewitching water ballet performance to cheer the ongoing 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in the Ocean World of Donghu Lake at Wuhan, capital of central China’s Hubei Province, Aug. 16, 2008.(Xinhua Photo)
The water ballerina from Russia pass through the Olympics Five Rings underwater during a spectacular water ballet performance to cheer the ongoing 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in the Ocean World of Donghu Lake at Wuhan, capital of central China’s Hubei Province, Aug. 16, 2008.

Gangster’s cell phone leads police to bust

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Police in Shenzhen’s Bao’an district cracked a criminal gang by using a text message sent by another gang member.

Police from local Longcheng police substation detained a suspect on Sunday night. And when his mobile phone kept ringing, they learned he was being ordered to steal a car parked in his housing estate.

Police launched a sting and busted the gang that was stealing cars in the district for several years.

China’s Xinjiang posts officials’ asset declarations online

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Authorities in Altay Prefecture, in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, have publicly released a list of the assets of more than 1,000 current and retired officials.

Altay, in northern Xinjiang, asked 1,064 officials, including those who had retired within the past three years, to file asset reports during the first 20 days of January.

The information was submitted to the prefecture’s discipline inspection commission, which on Tuesday posted the data on its website.

All but eight officials filed reports. Of the eight, three were being held in police custody for bribery. The other five were out of the region during the filing period, Wu Weiping, Party secretary of the commission, said Wednesday.

Wu said some of the officials reported having two houses and some had residences in Beijing or Shanghai.

But nobody reported to having “accepted any money or gift by taking advantage of their posts,” according to the online report.

“The publication of the list is intended to “promote self-discipline, not to ask officials to ‘turn themselves in’,” Wu said.

The commission was examining the unreleased part of the report, which included real estate, stocks, securities and heritage. The released part covered the incomes of salaries, allowance, and rewards for lecturing, writing and consulting.

“If officials fail to provide a lawful source for a huge amount of property, or if we receive tip-offs from the public, we will start an investigation,” Wu said.

Chinese officials began to declare their assets years ago, but the declarations have never been made public.

Though what the Altay authorities choose to post on the Internet is only a small part of the declared assets, the move is still hailed by most critics as a step towards the right direction.

The practice won applause from local residents. They hoped the government could grant them the rights to supervise and report. Some of them even hoped the practice could be carried out across the country.

Zhang Sen, an officer from the prefecture’s public security bureau, said, “The publication of officials’ property can be seen as an alarm bell for us public servants. We should keep the bell ringing in our mind.”

U.S. discovery suggests new way Galaxies might form

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

NASA’s Galaxy Evolution Explorer has, for the first time, identified dwarf galaxies forming out of nothing more than pristine gas likely leftover from the early universe, according to the results of a new study published by Thursday’s journal Nature.

Dwarf galaxies are relatively small collections of stars that often orbit around larger galaxies like our Milky Way.

The findings surprised astronomers because most galaxies form in association with a mysterious substance called dark matter or out of gas containing metals. The infant galaxies spotted by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer are springing up out of gas that lacks both dark matter and metals. Though never seen before, this new type of dwarf galaxy may be common throughout the more distant and early universe, when pristine gas was more pervasive.

Led by David Thilker of the Henry A. Rowland Department of Physics and Astronomy at The Johns Hopkins University, a team of astronomers spotted the unexpected new galaxies forming inside the Leo Ring, a huge cloud of hydrogen and helium that traces a ragged path around two massive galaxies in the constellation Leo. The cloud is thought likely to be a primordial object, an ancient remnant of material that has remained relatively unchanged since the very earliest days of the universe. Identified about 25 years ago by radio waves, the ring cannot be seen in visible light.

“This intriguing object has been studied for decades with world-class telescopes operating at radio and optical wavelengths,” said Thilker, a research scientist. “Despite such effort, nothing except the gas was detected. No stars at all, young or old, were found. But when we looked at the ring with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer, which is remarkably sensitive to ultraviolet light, we saw telltale evidence of recent massive star formation. It was really unexpected. We are witnessing galaxies forming out of a cloud of primordial gas.”

In a recent study, Thilker and his team found the ultraviolet signature of young stars emanating from several clumps of gas within the Leo Ring. “We speculate that these young stellar complexes are dwarf galaxies, although, as previously shown by radio astronomers, the gaseous clumps forming these galaxies lack dark matter,” he said. “Almost all other galaxies we know are dominated by dark matter, which acted as a seed for the collection of their luminous components — stars, gas, and dust. What we see occurring in the Leo Ring is a new mode for the formation of dwarf galaxies in material remaining from the much earlier assembly of this galaxy group.”

Our local universe contains two large galaxies, the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy, each with hundreds of billions of stars, and the Triangulum galaxy, with several tens of billions of stars. It also holds more than 40 much smaller dwarf galaxies, which have only a few billion stars. Invisible dark matter, detected by its gravitational influence, is a major component of both giant and dwarf galaxies with one exception — tidal dwarf galaxies.

Tidal dwarf galaxies condense out of gas recycled from other galaxies and have been separated from most of the dark matter with which they were originally associated. They are produced when galaxies collide and their gravitational masses interact. In the violence of the encounter, streamers of galactic material are pulled out away from the parent galaxies and the halos of dark matter that surround them.

Because they lack dark matter, the new galaxies observed in the Leo Ring resemble tidal dwarf galaxies, but they differ in a fundamental way. The gaseous material making up tidal dwarfs has already been cycled through a galaxy. It has been enriched with metals — elements heavier than helium — produced as stars evolve. “Leo Ring dwarfs are made of much more pristine material without metals,” said Thilker. “This discovery allows us to study the star formation process in gas that has not yet been enriched.”

Large, pristine clouds similar to the Leo Ring may have been more common throughout the early universe, Thilker said, and consequently may have produced many dark-matter-lacking, dwarf galaxies yet to be discovered.

Boy weds bitch to avoid death

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

A group of Indian tribals married off a toddler to a bitch in eastern India to prevent his predicted death by a tiger, a report said yesterday.

The ceremony at a temple in Orissa state’s Jajpur district was conducted with all the traditional rituals , including a dowry for the bride - the village bitch. The dog sported two silver rings and a silver chain, the UNI news agency reported.

The one-and-a-half-year-old groom’s parents were advised to arrange the marriage when they noticed a tooth growing from their infant son’s upper gum - considered a bad omen. Sanrumula Munda, the groom’s father, said the ceremony would not prevent him from marrying when he comes of age.

Another quake rocks eastern Indonesia

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

An earthquake measuring 5.3 Richter scale rocked East Nusa Tenggara province in eastern parts of Indonesia on Thursday, no report of damage or casualty, meteorology agency said here.

The quake struck at 16:03 Jakarta time (0903 GMT) with epicenter at 105 kms northeast Ruteng of the province and at 610 kms in depth, an official of the agency said.

Indonesia, with over 230 million population and 17,000 island sits at a vulnerable zone so called “the Pacific Ring of Fire” where two continental plates, stretching from the Western Hemisphere through Japan and Southeast Asia, meet that cause frequent volcanic movements.

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Friday, May 22nd, 2009

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