Good words to have
Poltroon (pahl-TROON) A spiritless coward : craven. Poltroon has
been used for wimps and cravens since the early 16th century at least. English
picked up poltroon from Middle French, which in turn got it from Old Italian
poltrone, meaning "coward." The Italian term has been traced to the
Latin pullus, a root that is also an ancestor of pullet ("a young
hen") and poultry.
These sort of stories just fascinate me
A newly unearthed photo shows
Amelia Earhart survived her final flight, investigators say
By Amy B Wang
What happened to Amelia Earhart?
That question has captivated the
public ever since her plane vanished over the Pacific Ocean in 1937 as she
attempted to become the first female pilot to fly around the world.
Now, investigators believe they
have discovered the “smoking gun” that would support a decades-old theory that
Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were captured by the Japanese: a newly
unearthed photograph from the National Archives that purportedly shows Earhart
and Noonan — and their plane — on an atoll in the Marshall Islands.
“I was originally skeptical until
we could get the photograph authenticated,” Shawn Henry, a former FBI assistant
executive director who is now helping privately investigate the Earhart
disappearance, told The Washington Post. “The fact that it came out of the
National Archives as opposed to somebody’s basement or garage somewhere — that
to me gave it a lot more credibility.”
The photograph was rediscovered a
few years ago in a mislabeled file at the National Archives by a former U.S.
Treasury agent named Les Kinney, who began looking into Earhart’s disappearance
after he retired, according to previews for a new History channel documentary,
“Amelia Earhart: The Lost Evidence,” that airs July 9.
The 8-by-10-inch black-and-white
photograph went ignored in a stack of 20 or 30 other pictures until Kinney took
a closer look a few months later, Henry said.
In the photo, a figure with
Earhart’s haircut and approximate body type sits on the dock, facing away from
the camera, Henry points out. Toward the left of the dock is a man they believe
is Noonan. On the far right of the photo is a barge with an airplane on it,
supposedly Earhart’s.
Henry, who was asked to join the
investigation about a year ago, said two different photo experts analyzed the
picture to ensure it had not been manipulated. It had not been, they found. The
experts also compared the facial features and body proportions of the two figures
in the photograph with known pictures of Earhart and Noonan.
For the man on the left, “the
hairline is the most distinctive characteristic,” Ken Gibson, a facial
recognition expert who studied the image, told the “Today” show. “It’s a very
sharp receding hairline. The nose is very prominent. … It’s my feeling that
this is very convincing evidence that this is probably Noonan.”
The figure seated on the dock is
wearing pants, much like Earhart often did, Henry noted.
“I’m looking at her sitting on
the dock and thinking, ‘This is her,’ ” he said.
Though they can’t be sure of when
the photo was taken, there is no record of Earhart being in the Marshall
Islands, he added.
Henry said he traveled to the
Marshall Islands and interviewed the son of a man whose father repeatedly told
others he had witnessed Earhart’s plane land at Mili Atoll in 1937. He also
spoke with the last living person who claimed to have seen the pair after their
emergency landing.
“But again, for me, those things
are all somewhat suspect until you have that photograph, which corroborates
that she was there,” Henry said. “To me, that’s just proof beyond a reasonable
doubt.”
Gary Tarpinian, executive producer of the History
documentary, told the “Today” show that they believe the Koshu, the Japanese
merchant ship in the photo, took Earhart to Saipan, where she died in Japanese
custody.
The team thinks the photo may
have been taken by someone spying on the Japanese, he added. Other questions,
like when and how Earhart died, remain a mystery.
“What happened to her then? Was
there a coverup or not? Did the U.S. government know? What did the Japanese
government know?” Henry said. “I think this actually opens up a whole new line
of questioning.”
Over the past 80 years, three
prevailing theories about Earhart’s disappearance have emerged.
Some speculate that Earhart’s
Lockheed Model 10 Electra crashed and sank to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean,
killing her and Noonan.
Last year, a Pennsylvania-based
group called The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR)
repositioned the spotlight on an alternate theory: With their fuel rapidly
depleting, Earhart and Noonan used celestial navigation to land on a remote
coral atoll named Gardner Island, about 400 miles south of Howland Island, their
original destination. It was there, TIGHAR says, that the two tried to send out
frantic radio calls for help but eventually died as castaways.
Just last month, the group
launched an ambitious expedition to try to prove its theory, sending
researchers and a pack of forensically trained border collies to Gardner
Island, now called Nikumaroro. The mission: For the dogs to sniff out human
bones that, through DNA matching, would confirm Earhart and Noonan landed and
then perished on that island.
Henry said he isn’t bothered by
other explanations of Earhart’s disappearance.
“I’ve listened to some competing
theories,” he said. “When you look at the totality of what we put together and
then hold that photograph … I think that photograph is as close to a smoking
gun as you’re going to have in a cold case that’s 80 years old.”
St. Francis
Lord, make me an instrument of
Thy peace;
Where there is hatred, let me sow
love;
Where there is injury, pardon;
Where there is error, the truth;
Where there is doubt, the faith;
Where there is despair, hope;
Where there is darkness, light;
And where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master,
Grant that I may not so much seek
To be consoled, as to console;
To be understood, as to
understand;
To be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we
receive;
It is in pardoning that we are
pardoned;
And it is in dying that we are
born to eternal life. Amen.”
St. Francis of Assisi
“If you have men who will exclude
any of God’s creatures from the shelter of compassion and pity, you will have
men who will deal likewise with their fellow men.” St.
Francis of Assisi
“Remember when you leave this
earth, you can take with you nothing that you have received only what you have
given: a heart enriched by honest service, love, sacrifice and courage.” St. Francis of Assisi
“Do few things, but do them well.
Simple joys are holy.” St. Francis of
Assisi
And one fine morning....
Gatsby believed in the green
light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us
then, but that’s no matter - tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms
farther … And one fine morning -
So we beat on, boats against the current, borne
back ceaselessly into the past.” F.
Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby
Thank God for J.D. Salinger
“Maybe, just once, someone will
call me ‘sir’ without adding, 'you’re making a scene.’” Holden Caulfield
“I am always saying “Glad to’ve
met you” to somebody I’m not at all glad I met. If you want to stay alive, you
have to say that stuff, though.” J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye
“And I have one of those very
loud, stupid laughs. I mean if I ever sat behind myself in a movie or something,
I’d probably lean over and tell myself to please shut up.” J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye
“Make sure you marry someone who
laughs at the same things you do.” J.D.
Salinger
China surpesses writers and gets away with it because we allow them to get away with it
Liu Xiaobo, already in prison, was
unable to attend the ceremony for his Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo in 2010. His
chair was left empty.Credit Andersen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Doubts
arise over Chinese Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo's inability to travel for cancer
treatment
Friend says video description of
imprisoned dissident’s condition as ‘acceptable’ casts doubt on government’s
claim he is too sick to leave China
A friend of imprisoned Chinese
Nobel Peace laureate Liu Xiaobo said on Monday that he doubts the government’s
claims that the ailing dissident is too sick to leave the country in part
because of a video in which Liu is described as being in “acceptable”
condition.
Whether Liu is able to travel is
a key question in negotiations for his possible release from a Chinese
hospital. The US and the European Union have been calling on Beijing to allow
China’s most famous political prisoner, recently diagnosed with late-stage
liver cancer, to choose where he wants to be treated.
Shang Baojun, Liu’s former
lawyer, has said Chinese officials have told Liu’s family members that his
health was so poor that he could not travel.
Liu’s friend Hu Jia, a political
dissident, said on Monday that a video that emerged on YouTube over the weekend
appeared to indicate that Liu was in stable condition. Medical experts were
seen saying that Liu’s treatment plan was going smoothly.
“Currently, his situation is
acceptable,” an unidentified male doctor in a white coat was seen saying in the
video, which did not include any images of Liu and was dated Wednesday.
A separate photo that has been
circulating online showed Liu holding a bowl and being spoon-fed by his wife.
Liu did not appear to be hooked up to life-support.
“Based on the videos and the
photo, we know for sure that his conditions have not deteriorated,” Hu said.
“There’s no question that Liu Xiaobo can travel.”
William Fingleton, spokesman for
the European Union delegation in China, said EU diplomats met with a Chinese
vice minister of justice on Friday regarding Liu’s treatment. Fingleton did not
provide details on the discussion.
In a statement released later on
Friday, the EU’s foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, urged China to immediately
grant Liu parole on humanitarian grounds, citing Liu’s deteriorating health.
Mogherini also said that China
should “allow him to receive medical assistance at a place of his choosing in
China or overseas”, and that Liu and his wife should be free to communicate
with the outside world.
Reliable, independent information
on Liu’s condition and his desire to travel has been difficult to obtain, as
Liu and his wife, Liu Xia, have long been isolated by the authorities, out of
the reach of most friends and the media. While the couple have not publicly
stated their willingness to go abroad, their friends believe they wish to do
so, based on Liu Xia’s earlier indications to her friends.
China’s foreign ministry said on
Monday that it has no information on Liu’s case. “I can only say that we hope
that the relevant countries can respect China’s judicial sovereignty instead of
making use of this individual case to interfere in China’s domestic affairs,”
spokesman Geng Shuang said at a regular news briefing.
China’s justice department did
not immediately respond to faxed questions about Liu’s case.
Liu, a writer and an outspoken
government critic, was sentenced in 2009 to 11 years in prison on a charge of
inciting subversion of state power, a year after he co-authored Charter ‘08, a
document calling for democracy and rule of law in China. He was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize in 2010 while incarcerated.
Liu
Xiaobo, China’s Prescient Dissident
By Jiayang Fan
July 3, 2017
China’s lone Nobel Peace Prize
laureate, the political dissident Liu Xiaobo, is gravely ill. In 2008, Liu, a
prolific essayist and poet, was working on a manifesto advocating peaceful
democratic reform, which became known as Charter 08, when the Chinese
government tried him and found him guilty of “inciting subversion of state
power.” Since then, he has been serving an eleven-year sentence at a prison in
the remote northeastern province of Liaoning, and his wife, Liu Xia, has been
under house arrest in Beijing, despite the lack of any charges against her.
Liu’s diagnosis of late-stage liver cancer came at the end of last month. The
prognosis is grim. In a video that a friend of the couple’s shared on social
media, Liu’s wife says, through tears, that the doctors “can’t do surgery,
can’t do radiation therapy, can’t do chemotherapy.”
Yet even this particularly
wretched twist of fate has not liberated the man who has devoted his life to
fighting for liberty. Although Liu, who is now sixty-one, has been transferred
to a hospital in Shenyang, on medical parole, he has yet to be granted release
from his sentence. Last Thursday, his lawyer said that the authorities are
refusing to allow him to travel abroad for medical treatment. In response to a
statement from the United States Embassy calling for the couple to be given
“genuine freedom,” the Chinese foreign ministry warned that “no country has a
right to interfere and make irresponsible remarks on Chinese internal affairs.”
It added that “China is a country with rule of law, where everybody is equal in
front of the law.”
This is a curious remark, given
the increasingly repressive regime that the Chinese President, Xi Jinping, has
fostered since taking office, in 2013. Civil society and the rule of law were
part of what Liu campaigned for more than a decade ago, but, as unlikely as
those concepts seemed then, they are less certain now. After a period of
enforced ideological conformity, the government has expanded its security
apparatus, increased censorship, tightened its control of nongovernmental organizations,
and toughened surveillance laws. Rights lawyers and activists have been
arrested and jailed, and others have fled abroad.
Liu once had opportunities to do
so himself. A scholar of Chinese literature and philosophy, he taught at
Beijing Normal University in the nineteen-eighties, where he became known for
his frank reappraisals of China’s past and present, particularly of the
brutalities imposed during the decades under Mao. Liu’s passion and audacity
could at times be provoking to both his peers and to the public, but they spoke
to a deep investment in his country’s future and his determination to
contribute to it.
His intellectual honesty rendered
him vulnerable yet dauntless. In the spring of 1989, Liu was in New York, where
he was teaching at Barnard College, when the student protests calling for
democracy and accountability began in Tiananmen Square. He returned to Beijing
and stayed in the square for several days, talking to the students about how
democratic politics must be “politics without hatred and without enemies.” When
Premier Li Peng imposed martial law, Liu negotiated with the Army to allow
demonstrators a safe exit from Tiananmen. But, at the beginning of June, the
Party ordered a crackdown, in which hundreds of people were killed. (The state
has never permitted an official tally.) For Liu’s involvement in the events,
the Chinese press labelled him a “mad dog” and a “Black Hand” for allegedly
manipulating the will of the people, and he was sentenced to two years in
prison for “counter-revolutionary propaganda.”
After his release, Liu was
offered asylum in the Australian Embassy, but he refused it. Similar offers
came again and again, but a life in which Liu did not feel that he could make a
direct impact held no appeal for him. At a time when other intellectuals,
registering the need for self-preservation, turned to writing books less likely
to be banned on the mainland, Liu chose to prioritize his principles, in order
to be an “authentic” person. He was barred from publishing and giving public
lectures in China, but on foreign Web sites he wrote more than a thousand
articles promoting humanitarianism and democracy; he called the Internet “God’s
gift to China.” Liu was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, in 2010, while he was
serving his sentence, in recognition of “his long and non-violent struggle for
fundamental human rights in China.”
In an essay titled “Changing the
Regime by Changing Society”—which during his trial was cited as evidence of his
counter-revolutionary ideals—Liu expressed hope that the Chinese people would
awaken to their situation and that their new awareness would forge a sense of
solidarity against the state. But he also warned of a growing moral vacuum in
the nation. He wrote:
China has entered an Age of
Cynicism in which people no longer believe in anything. . . . Even high
officials and other Communist Party members no longer believe Party verbiage.
Fidelity to cherished beliefs has been replaced by loyalty to anything that
brings material benefit. Unrelenting inculcation of Chinese Communist Party
ideology has . . . produced generations of people whose memories are blank.
It’s impossible to say what
access Liu has had to the outside world during his incarceration. It would
certainly pain him to see how little younger people in China care or even know
about the events in Tiananmen (the subject is strictly censored in the media)
and how the nation’s growing international prominence has obscured its domestic
ills—though he predicted as much. “The Chinese Communists are concentrating on
economics, seeking to make themselves part of globalization, and are courting
friends internationally precisely by discarding their erstwhile ideology,” he
wrote in 2006. “When the ‘rise’ of a large dictatorial state that commands
rapidly increasing economic strength meets with no effective deterrence from
outside, but only an attitude of appeasement from the international mainstream,
the results will not only be another catastrophe for the Chinese people, but
likely also a disaster for the spread of liberal democracy in the world.” It
perhaps would not surprise him to hear that last week, austerity-stricken
Greece, which is courting Chinese investment, blocked a European Union effort
to issue a statement condemning China’s human-rights violations.
As the news of Liu’s illness
spread surreptitiously throughout China, democracy activists started a petition
far narrower in its ambitions than Charter 08. It asks only for Liu to be freed
and to be given whatever medical care might help him now. He would surely be
grateful to his supporters for that gesture, but more than his illness he would
regret how correctly he diagnosed Beijing’s recurring authoritarian impulses
and his countrymen’s growing indifference to them. Liu has always been a man of
ideas, but that prescience will be of no comfort to anyone.
Jiayang Fan became a staff writer
at The New Yorker in 2016.
China
refuses cancer treatment abroad for Nobel winner Liu Xiaobo
By Steven Jiang, CNN
Beijing (CNN)Nobel Peace
Prize-winning Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo has been refused permission to
travel overseas to receive cancer treatment.
Liu, 61, was granted medical
parole and released from jail earlier this month after he was diagnosed with
late-stage liver cancer.
A Chinese vice minister of
justice met with diplomats from the US, Germany and the EU on Thursday to brief
them about Liu's case, and told the diplomats that Liu can't go abroad for
treatment because he is too sick to travel, according to a source familiar with
the meeting.
Liu had been serving an 11-year
prison sentence for "inciting subversion of state power" in Jinzhou,
near the city of Shenyang in northeastern China.
His case has come under an
international spotlight amid allegations from his supporters that he had become
gravely ill because his cancer wasn't treated in prison.
In a statement released
Wednesday, Shenyang authorities appeared to attempt to dispel this speculation,
saying his cancer was diagnosed less than a month ago, on June 7, after a
routine check-up found unusual symptoms on May 31.
A medical team comprised of eight
renowned oncologists have seen Liu seven times and formed a treatment plan, it
said, adding that the hospital has invited traditional Chinese medicine (TCM)
practitioners to join the team at the request of Liu's family.
US ambassador's appeal
Terry Branstad, the new US
ambassador to China, on Wednesday urged Beijing to let Liu seek cancer
treatment overseas.
In his first public remarks since
arriving in China, the former Iowa governor told reporters that he hoped the
two sides could work together to address Liu's condition.
"It's very serious," he
said. "Obviously, our hearts go out to him and his wife and we're
interested in doing what can be done to see if it's possible. We Americans
would like to see him have the opportunity for treatment elsewhere, if that
could be of help."
A Chinese foreign ministry
spokesman dismissed the ambassador's appeal.
"Liu Xiaobo is a Chinese
citizen," said Lu Kang at a regular press briefing Wednesday. "Why
should we discuss his case with other countries?"
Liu's plight has become a
rallying point for activists in Hong Kong, which is hosting Chinese President
Xi Jinping as part of festivities to mark 20 years of Chinese rule in the
former British coloy.
A video posted Wednesday by
Boxun, an overseas Chinese news website known for its access to Chinese
government sources, appeared to show Liu working, exercising and meeting
visiting family members in prison.
It also shows him receiving
medical check-ups and treatment in prison and at hospitals.
Liu could be heard describing how
prison officials had been taking good care of him, especially his health, and
expressing his gratitude to them.
The statement from Shenyang's
judicial authorities said that Liu's wife, Liu Xia, was staying with him at the
hospital.
"Liu Xiaobo and his family
members are satisfied with the work and treatment by the prison and the
hospital," it said.
The statement also said Liu had a
history of hepatitis B before imprisonment and prison authorities had provided
him with an annual physical examination as well as monthly checkup -- and no
abnormal conditions had been found before the recent diagnosis.
A prolific writer and longtime
activist, Liu had been in and out of jail since the bloody crackdown on
pro-democracy protesters in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in 1989.
His most recent conviction, on
Christmas Day 2009, stemmed from his co-authorship of Charter 08, a manifesto
calling for political reform and human rights in China.
In 2010, while in prison, Liu was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for "his long and nonviolent struggle for
fundamental human rights in China."
CNN's Katie Hunt in Hong Kong
contributed to this report.
Liu
Xiaobo Embodied Hope for China’s Democracy. Now He’s Sick.
点击查看本文中文版
By STEVEN LEE MYERS and AUSTIN
RAMZYJUNE 27, 2017
BEIJING — In the fall of 2008,
dozens of activists secretly worked to produce a political manifesto. It was
only 3,554 Chinese characters long, but it listed a series of demands on
China’s leaders to make the country a liberal democracy.
Less than a decade later, one of
the main authors, the Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo, is confined in a
hospital, released from prison though not from custody, to be treated for what
his lawyers described as an advanced case of liver cancer.
Mr. Liu’s imprisonment and now
his illness have become a grim reflection of the fate of that cause, one born
in hope but crushed by China’s intolerance of dissent — and the world’s
increasing resignation, even acquiescence, to it, given the country’s
diplomatic and economic clout.
The document was called Charter
08 and was modeled after one published by dissidents in Czechoslovakia under
Communist rule, Charter 77. More than 300 activists in China signed at first —
and many more did later, inside and outside of the country.
While almost no one expects China
to become a democracy now, that was at least a hope in 2008.
“When Charter 08 was signed,
there was a yearning for more open dialogue and talk about a peaceful societal
transition,” said one of the signatories, Ai Xiaoming, a scholar and
documentary filmmaker in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou. “But now there
is even more strict social control, and the room for civil society has shrunk
significantly.”
Ms. Ai, who met Mr. Liu before
his imprisonment, also expressed guilt that he alone among the organizers had
been convicted and sentenced so harshly — to 11 years in prison for “inciting
subversion of state power” — though many others also faced harassment that
forced them underground or out of the country.
International attention — Mr. Liu
was awarded the Nobelin 2010 — gave Ms. Ai and others hope of protecting him,
but the world moved on, even as China tightened its controls over nonprofit
organizations and moved to arrest lawyers.
“It’s sad to see he’s no longer
the center of attention,” Ms. Ai said in a telephone interview. “We had a kind
of illusion that the government would be nice to him given his international
influence. Now I doubt that was the case.”
Mr. Liu’s wife, the poet and
photographer Liu Xia, has been under strict house arrest in Beijing since his
Nobel Prize was announced. Friends circulated a cellphone video on Monday in
which a crying Ms. Liu said doctors “can’t operate, can’t use radiotherapy,
can’t use chemotherapy” to treat her husband’s cancer.
Mr. Liu’s Nobel Prize — in
recognition of “his long and nonviolent struggle for fundamental human rights
in China” — focused attention on his fate, but over the years he was sidelined
if not forgotten by the pragmatic needs of countries that felt no choice but to
work with China, not criticize it.
China’s response to the prize
illustrated the risks of going against it. Norway’s government has no say in
who wins the prize, but it is awarded by a five-person committee chosen by the
Norwegian Parliament. China swiftly cut imports of Norwegian salmon, depriving
Norway of its largest market.
China wields those sorts of
economic levers with great effect, Graham T. Allison argues in a new book,
“Destined for War,” about the potential collision of the United States and a
rising China.
“Few governments have had the
capabilities or will to resist,” Mr. Allison, director of the Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs at Harvard, said by email from Dalian, China,
where he was attending the World Economic Forum’s annual summer meeting.
In the case of Norway, its
diplomats persuaded China to restore full relations after making a series of
conciliatory gestures that dismayed human rights campaigners there and in
China.
For the United States, the focus
on China’s record of human rights has become increasingly muted, especially
under President Trump, reflecting the conflicting
“China is very smart about this,” said Hu Jia,
a rights advocate in Beijing. He noted how Greece, which is courting Chinese
investment, recently thwarted a European Union effort to make a statement about
human rights abuses in specific countries to the United Nations Human Rights
Council.
“Because of issues like economic
cooperation, security, North Korea and terrorism, leaders aren’t as willing to
raise human rights problems with China,” Mr. Hu said.
Charter 08 was signed in the
twilight of the administration of President George W. Bush, who used his second
term to advance what the White House promoted as a “Freedom Agenda” in the
aftermath of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. President Barack Obama vocally
championed human rights around the world, but he pursued the issue less
vigorously when it came to China.
Mr. Obama praised Mr. Liu’s Nobel
Prize, but when the Senate passed legislation that would have renamed a street
in front of China’s embassy in Washington after him, the administration
signaled that Mr. Obama would veto it. The bill quietly died in the
Republican-controlled House after Mr. Trump’s election last fall.
Mr. Trump and his advisers have
clearly indicated that human rights are less important on the president’s
agenda than security and trade matters.
“Human rights has retreated in
terms of people’s interest in China,” said Jerome Cohen, director of the
U.S.-Asia Law Institute at New York University’s School of Law.
The fear of being excluded from
China’s market is palpable. “Everybody is under pressure from constituents to
have a piece of the action,” Mr. Cohen said. “Of course, the U.S. no longer
asks other countries to do anything, because we decided it’s not important for
our purposes.”
Secretary of State Rex W.
Tillerson, going against tradition, did not introduce his department’s annual
human rights report in March, though he appeared with Ivanka Trump at the
department on Tuesday to introduce a similar report on human trafficking. For
the first time, the department reduced China’s rating to the lowest tier of
countries, signaling that it has exerted minimal effort to combat trafficking.
On Wednesday morning, the new
American ambassador to China, Terry Branstad, said that the Trump
administration would like to help arrange medical treatment for Mr. Liu abroad,
a day after the American Embassy said it had called on China to release him and
his wife.
“We’re interested in doing what
can be done to see if it is possible,” Mr. Branstad said in brief remarks to
reporters outside the embassy residence in Beijing. “We as Americans would like
to see him have the opportunity for treatment elsewhere, if that could be of
help.”
As news of Mr. Liu’s illness
emerged, China’s beleaguered democracy advocates issued a new petition, one
that was far more modest than Charter 08. It simply called for Mr. Liu and his
wife to be unconditionally released and urged that he be given the medical
treatment he needed. Within hours it had more than 400 signatures.
Steven Lee Myers reported from
Beijing, and Austin Ramzy from Hong Kong.
There’s a 250 light-year hole in the center of emission nebula N44 and astronomers aren’t sure why.
There’s
a 250 light-year hole in the center of emission nebula N44 and astronomers
aren’t sure why. It could be that particle winds from massive stars are pushing
out the gas. Perhaps a more compelling explanation though, based on the
detection of X-ray emitting gas, is that supernova explosions carved out this
cavern