Friday, June 21, 2013

[GVGT][LOL] China Air-Freight Handlers at Guangzhou Airport

Old Today, 10:38 AM ? #8

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Join Date: May 2010

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faster cheaper better.

but seriously most cargo handlers work like this. dont care anyhow throw one... dont put fragile things in normal check in

I think the main issue here was if he actually placed them properly the first time, it would have been done much quicker.

He anyhow throw so many fall on the ground lor

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Hubble spots galaxies in close encounter: Colliding galaxy pair takes flight

June 20, 2013 ? The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has produced this vivid image of a pair of interacting galaxies known as Arp 142. When two galaxies stray too close to each other they begin to interact, causing spectacular changes in both objects. In some cases the two can merge -- but in others, they are ripped apart.

Just below the centre of this image is the blue, twisted form of galaxy NGC 2936, one of the two interacting galaxies that form Arp 142 in the constellation of Hydra. Nicknamed "the Penguin" or "the Porpoise" by amateur astronomers, NGC 2936 used to be a standard spiral galaxy before being torn apart by the gravity of its cosmic companion.

The remnants of its spiral structure can still be seen -- the former galactic bulge now forms the "eye" of the penguin, around which it is still possible to see where the galaxy's pinwheeling arms once were. These disrupted arms now shape the cosmic bird's "body" as bright streaks of blue and red across the image. These streaks arch down towards NGC 2936's nearby companion, the elliptical galaxy NGC 2937, visible here as a bright white oval. The pair show an uncanny resemblance to a penguin safeguarding its egg.

The effects of gravitational interaction between galaxies can be devastating. The Arp 142 pair are close enough together to interact violently, exchanging matter and causing havoc.

In the upper part of the image are two bright stars, both of which lie in the foreground of the Arp 142 pair. One of these is surrounded by a trail of sparkling blue material, which is actually another galaxy. This galaxy is thought to be too far away to play a role in the interaction -- the same is true of the galaxies peppered around the body of NGC 2936. In the background are the blue and red elongated shapes of many other galaxies, which lie at vast distances from us -- but which can all be seen by the sharp eye of Hubble.

This pair of galaxies is named after the American astronomer Halton Arp, the creator of the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, a catalogue of weirdly-shaped galaxies that was originally published in 1966. Arp compiled the catalogue in a bid to understand how galaxies evolved and changed shape over time, something he felt to be poorly understood. He chose his targets based on their strange appearances, but astronomers later realised that many of the objects in Arp's catalogue were in fact interacting and merging galaxies.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/bHbx20Ze7-Q/130620132225.htm

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Medical care lags behind Afghan military growth

FORWARD OPERATING BASE SHINWAR, Afghanistan (AP) ? The young Afghan soldier lay in great pain on a cot at an army base, his uniform pants cut up to his thigh so medics could clean the wound in his right knee where he was shot fighting insurgents.

The medics bandaged him and gave him morphine and an IV bag of fluids. But they couldn't stitch up the wound or give further care because there's no medical doctor at the base in the eastern province of Nangarhar. The base's two-room medical facility is run by a dentist, and its nine medics have only basic medical training. The wounded soldier had to wait overnight in the clinic until it was safer to drive him about 50 kilometers (31 miles) to a more sophisticated medical facility in Jalalabad.

The Afghan National Army faces a shortage of doctors, even as the number of wounded soldiers soars during a fierce wave of Taliban attacks. While the U.S.-led military coalition has praised the Afghan security forces' rapid growth and improving skills, its military medical program hasn't kept pace.

The Afghan National Army has only 632 medical doctors ? 72 short of its goal ? to care for about 177,000 soldiers nationwide. At the same time, its clinics are having equipment, supply and logistical problems.

The result is bottlenecks at the field clinics, where wounded soldiers can wait hours or days to be transferred to a hospital. Such delays can increase the risk of medical problems and lengthen the time it takes to recover.

The Afghans also can no longer rely on the U.S. military's medical system as international forces reduce their presence in the country. The U.S. isn't giving the Afghans any medical equipment, and medical evacuations by American helicopters are limited. The withdrawal of U.S. combat troops is set to be complete by 2014.

More than 330 Afghan army soldiers have died so far this year, according to a tally by The Associated Press, though it's not clear what impact the doctor shortage had on their wounded because details on Afghan casualties could not be obtained through NATO or the International Security Assistance Force.

Last year, more than 1,200 Afghan soldiers died, compared to more than 550 in 2011, according to data compiled by the Washington-based Brookings Institution.

The medics at Forward Operating Base Shinwar in Nangarhar have gone through 7-week combat medical course, and they are often paid more than enlisted soldiers and know how to read and write. But beyond that, they often have little experience.

American medical adviser Sgt. Connor Quinn, who serves in the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, said he's working to encourage the Shinwar medics to treat their wounded before transporting them to the nearest medical facility. Quinn's Fort Campbell, Ky.-based unit advises the Afghan military on a variety of staff and operational issues.

"I've been trying to teach them what to do at the point of injury," such as stopping major bleeding or keeping airways open, said Quinn, 26, a U.S. Army combat medic from San Martin, Calif.

Most wounded soldiers from Shinwar are transferred to the brigade medical facility in Jalalabad because it's fairly close by ground, and calling for a helicopter from the army's fledgling fleet can often take more time than driving.

Afghan clinics also face problems with equipment, supplies and training.

At Camp Parsa, a large Afghan army base in Khost province in the east, the medical facility is clean and spacious. Afghan National Army Col. Shazad Gul, the officer in charge of the medical clinic at Parsa, is a pharmacist by training. He has a staff of physician assistants and medics, but what he really needs is medical doctors and surgeons for his 13-bed medical facility.

When the clinic sends up paperwork asking for more medical supplies from the ANA's warehouse, Gul complains that most of the time the medication requests aren't filled correctly or they are given expired or nearly expired medications.

American adviser Staff Sgt. Nathan Lethgo said the X-ray machine has been broken for more than three months, and he has been working to get the medical staff on the phone with the equipment technician to try and figure out the problem.

"We want to get them to learn how to sustain their own equipment," said Lethgo, a 29-year-old from Brentwood, Tenn., serving with the 1-61 Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division,

Meanwhile, Lethgo was trying to get two of the clinic's physician assistants in a medical trauma training course run by the coalition forces, but their paperwork was lost. He has to start the process over again, likely pushing back their training until later in the summer, during which the main fighting season in Afghanistan is under way and they'll be needed in the clinic.

The Afghan colonel shrugged and smiled, saying through a translator that these are "new Army problems."

A more sophisticated medical facility is located in the mountains in Gardez, but the roads are sometimes cut off in the winter months. The Afghan Air Force has fewer than 50 Mi-17 helicopters, and the fleet must balance the demands of evacuating casualties against moving troops and supplies.

"If they had more helicopters spread out, they could use them more," Lethgo said. He's hopeful that by the winter, the Afghan Air Force will have expanded its fleet.

Afghan soldiers are at risk every day, not only from the bullets, roadside bombs and vehicle wrecks, but also from their living conditions.

The Afghan soldiers have a lot of gastrointestinal issues, stomach problems and diarrhea, due to the conditions on their bases, said Quinn, the medical adviser at the Shinwar clinic. When trash sits out in the heat without being properly disposed, or when their water pump isn't working, the soldiers get sick, said Quinn. The ANA also regularly sends out medics to the smaller units to administer vaccinations for common diseases.

"Preventative medicine is a big push," said Quinn.

Quinn wants the Afghan medical staff to get regular training that will continue to build their confidence and skills. He was trying to arrange to have the ANA medics continue their training with ANA commandos after the advisers leave.

"They are good at taking care of casualties, and they know what right looks like," Quinn said. "Now it's time for them to walk on their own."

__

Hall was in eastern Afghanistan with the 101st Airborne Division. Follow her on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/kmhall

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/medical-care-lags-behind-afghan-military-growth-072300384.html

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Sources: Senate immigration deal includes tougher border security (CNN)

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Madonna premieres tour film, talks secret project

NEW YORK (AP) ? Madonna said there were days when she was exhausted during her recent "MDNA" world tour, but she decided to press on.

You won't see those behind-the-scenes battles in her new concert film, "The MDNA Tour," which premieres Saturday on the online and cable network Epix. But you will see the 54-year-old pop icon performing ? mainly highlights from her Miami shows ? for two hours on her tour, which started in May of last year and wrapped in December.

"There's no such thing as not in the mood because the show must go on, right?" the singer said at the film's premiere Tuesday night at New York's Paradise Theater. "I'm a human being like everybody else, so I would have my nights, my bad nights and I would cry and I would say, 'I don't want to do this.'"

Madonna told a feverish crowd of fans, her dancers, her tour team, socialites and members of press that she wanted her shows to be a relief for those paying to see her.

"I sold the tickets and I can't let my audience down," she told the crowd of a few hundred. "Before every show everyone came into my dressing room and we got in a circle and said prayers and 50 percent of the time I said them and 49 percent of the time I was crying, usually from over-exhaustion. But there's something about pushing yourself out there when it's pouring rain or you're freezing cold or you don't feel well or something really crazy happened in the world like Hurricane Sandy."

Madonna's tour, which included design help from her 16-year-old daughter, Lourdes, also featured her 12-year-old son, Rocco, as a dancer.

"He was going to go on my tour whether he liked it or not," said Madonna. "I was thrilled to see him every night. He gave me a boost of energy. However, he does not look like that (now). In one year he has grown, he's 6 feet tall and his voice has deepened. I'm a little bit scared of him."

Madonna also unveiled a secret project Tuesday ? a collaboration with photographer Steven Klein. She showed a one-minute trailer that featured her background dancers and showed the singer being dragged on the floor.

She was answering questions before she premiered the black-and-white video and told the crowd she was leaving the stage so they could see it.

"No," they screamed.

"Well I can't sit in front of the trailer. I'll just do a stage dive. No. I saw the Billboard Awards ? no stage dive," she said jokingly, referring to R&B singer Miguel's jump that injured a woman at the awards show last month.

Madonna's new concert film will be released on DVD on Aug. 27.

____

Online:

http://www.madonna.com

____

Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter: twitter.com/MusicMesfin

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/madonna-premieres-tour-film-talks-secret-project-144300722.html

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Defense officials: Four US troops killed in Afghanistan

US defence officials had earlier said four US troops were killed at or near Bagram Air Base.

Officials said the four were killed by indirect fire, likely a mortar or rocket, but had no other details.

The attack comes as the US announced that it will begin talks with top Taliban emissaries to discuss a long-term peace plan for Afghanistan.

Earlier in the day, American and allied forces had formally handed over control of the country's security to the Afghan army and police in a ceremony in Kabul. The transition to Afghan-led security means US and other foreign combat troops will not be directly carrying the fight to the insurgency, but they will advise and back up the Afghan forces as needed with air support and medical evacuations.

Additional reporting by Associated Press

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/266/f/3507/s/2d7af6ba/l/0L0Sindependent0O0Cnews0Cworld0Casia0Cdefense0Eofficials0Efour0Eus0Etroops0Ekilled0Ein0Eafghanistan0E86642270Bhtml/story01.htm

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/kjrhtv/posts/10150303841984990

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