“I’m a better tennis player because I have to try to compete with Rafa”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Blancer.com Tutorials and projects
Freelance Projects, Design and Programming Tutorials
“I’m a better tennis player because I have to try to compete with Rafa”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Down steep steps underground and into the dark, the air is thick, smoky and hot in this bunker in soon-to-be independent South Sudan.
A pair of handcuffs dangle from a metal girder on the blacked ceiling: A grim reminder of the torture that once went on here.
For South Sudan, already struggling to contain violence, this place offers the starkest of warnings that the future must not be like the past.
“Is this nation going to be an inclusive nation?” asked Jok Madut Jok, a southern academic and history professor at Loyola Marymount University in California, speaking in a recent public lecture.
“That was the place of our nightmares – if you heard someone was taken there, you had said goodbye to them already – they were not coming back”
Mabil William College student
“Or is it going to exercise the double standard that other countries have gone in for – that you become independent, and then go ahead and do the exact things that you had rebelled against?” said Mr Jok, who is also a senior official in the culture ministry.
There are few places in South Sudan’s capital Juba that evoke as much terror as the building known as the “White House”.
During Sudan’s 1983-2005 war, it earned a reputation as the Khartoum government’s main torture and execution site in the south, for those it believed supported rebel forces.
Greasy soot coats the concrete walls and an empty ammunition shell rusts on the ground.
A bare bulb throws shadows into gloomy corners.
“I doubt if any other journalist has ever been down here before,” a government security official says quietly.
“If they did, they didn’t come out alive,” his companion replies.
An estimated 1.5 million died in the war, a conflict fought over ideology, ethnicity, religion, resources and oil.
Southern rebels battled against what they said was marginalisation and the concentration of power by an elitist government in the north.
Now those fighters have become the official army of the south, which will become a separate nation on 9 July, splitting Africa’s largest nation in two.
But such buildings as the White House do not just hold dark memories of Sudan’s bloody past.
People say they also provide a message for the future: That the regime which used violence against its own people in the old unified Sudan has to remain in the past, and must not be taken forward into the new, separate south.
“That was the place of our nightmares – if you heard someone was taken there, you had said goodbye to them already – they were not coming back,” said college student Mabil William.
“It should be called the ‘Red House’, for the blood, not a White House”
SPLA soldier
His father was never seen after his arrest in the war, and is believed to have died in the White House.
“When I voted for separation, to say bye-bye to Khartoum, it was places like that we were waving an end to.”
But while the hopes for change are high, the challenges are great.
The south’s Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) has a far from perfect record.
Its shift from rebel to regular army has provoked accusations of massacres and rape, according to human rights campaign groups.
“Reports of looting, harassment of civilians and even extrajudicial killings give cause for great concern,” a recent joint report of a coalition of international and Sudanese campaign groups read.
It warned of an “increasingly autocratic government” in the south, with power and money concentrated in Juba, and security taking the largest share of the budget.
The SPLA has been battling at least seven militia groups this year alone: The United Nations say both sides have targeted civilians.
More than 1,800 people have died in violence this year, the UN estimates.
The southern government has repeatedly insisted it is working for a better future, and says that while mistakes have been made, the transition from guerrilla movement to government is not an easy one.
“South Sudan will respect the rights of all people living in its territory from diverse ethnic, cultural, linguistic, religious and racial backgrounds,” an official government statement released ahead of its independence read, vowing to follow the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
“There must be no more White Houses in the south”
Marial Chanoung SPLA major general
Once the euphoric celebrations of independence are over, ensuring the promises to protect rights are kept will require the future work of a courageous and dynamic media and civil society.
The northern troops have left the White House, but the area around it is still an active army barracks – now run by the SPLA.
The actual building that gave the complex its name is a short walk from the dungeon: Prisoners would be dragged out to the site where executions were carried out, soldiers say.
The simple, white painted building is now used as a store and dormitory.
Major General Marial Chanoung, the commander in charge of the base, says no-one can say for sure how many thousands of southerners died here.
“There was torture. It is a place known to have killed a lot of our people,” he said.
Around the building is a lumpy field of lush green grass: Red skull and cross-bone signs warn of the risk of landmines or unexploded ammunition.
Soldiers say in the dry season bones can be seen poking out from mass graves.
“It should be called the ‘Red House’, for the blood, not a White House,” said another security officer.
But Maj Gen Chanoung is clear that such acts must not be repeated.
“There must be no more White Houses in the south, never again,” he said.
“The south will be a free country, where justice, freedom is everywhere.”
The great divide across Sudan is visible even from space, as this Nasa satellite image shows. The northern states are a blanket of desert, broken only by the fertile Nile corridor. South Sudan is covered by green swathes of grassland, swamps and tropical forest.
Sudan’s arid north is mainly home to Arabic-speaking Muslims. But in South Sudan there is no dominant culture. The Dinkas and the Nuers are the largest of more than 200 ethnic groups, each with its own languages and traditional beliefs, alongside Christianity and Islam.
The health inequalities in Sudan are illustrated by infant mortality rates. In South Sudan, one in 10 children die before their first birthday. Whereas in the more developed northern states, such as Gezira and White Nile, half of those children would be expected to survive.
The gulf in water resources between north and south is stark. In Khartoum, River Nile, and Gezira states, two-thirds of people have access to piped drinking water and pit latrines. In the south, boreholes and unprotected wells are the main drinking sources. More than 80% of southerners have no toilet facilities whatsoever.
Throughout Sudan, access to primary school education is strongly linked to household earnings. In the poorest parts of the south, less than 1% of children finish primary school. Whereas in the wealthier north, up to 50% of children complete primary level education.
Conflict and poverty are the main causes of food insecurity in Sudan. The residents of war-affected Darfur and South Sudan are still greatly dependent on food aid. Far more than in northern states, which tend to be wealthier, more urbanised and less reliant on agriculture.
Sudan exports billions of dollars of oil per year. Southern states produce more than 80% of it, but receive only 50% of the revenue. The pipelines run north but the two sides have still not agreed how to share the oil wealth in the future.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Japanese researchers say they have discovered vast deposits of rare earth minerals, used in many high-tech appliances, in the seabed.
The geologists estimate that there are about a 100bn tons of the rare elements in the mud of the Pacific Ocean floor.
At present, China produces 97% of the world’s rare earth metals.
Analysts say the Pacific discovery could challenge China’s dominance, if recovering the minerals from the seabed proves commercially viable.
The British journal Nature Geoscience reported that a team of scientists led by Yasuhiro Kato, an associate professor of earth science at the University of Tokyo, found the minerals in sea mud at 78 locations.
“The deposits have a heavy concentration of rare earths. Just one square kilometre (0.4 square mile) of deposits will be able to provide one-fifth of the current global annual consumption,” said Yasuhiro Kato, an associate professor of earth science at the University of Tokyo.
The minerals were found at depths of 3,500 to 6,000 metres (11,500-20,000 ft) below the ocean surface.
One-third of the sites yielded rich contents of rare earths and the metal yttrium, Mr Kato said.
The deposits are in international waters east and west of Hawaii, and east of Tahiti in French Polynesia.
Mr Kato estimated that rare earths contained in the deposits amounted to 80 to 100 billion tonnes.
The US Geological Survey has estimated that global reserves are just 110 million tonnes, found mainly in China, Russia and other former Soviet countries, and the United States.
China’s apparent monopoly of rare earth production enabled it to restrain supply last year during a territorial dispute with Japan.
Japan has since sought new sources of the rare earth minerals.
The Malaysian government is considering whether to allow the construction of an Australian-financed project to mine rare earths, in the face of local opposition focused on the fear of radioactive waste.
The number of firms seeking licences to dig through the Pacific Ocean floor is growing rapidly.
The listed mining company Nautilus has the first licence to mine the floor of the Bismarck and Solomon oceans around Papua New Guinea.
It will be recovering what is called seafloor massive sulphide, for its copper and gold content.
The prospect of deep sea mining for precious metals – and the damage that could do to marine ecosystems – is worrying environmentalists.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Ants can recognise their worst enemies by smell, aggressively fighting slavemakers ants but only carrying away less threatening foes, a study shows.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Drugs used in IVF for older women may increase their risk of having a baby with Down’s syndrome, experts say.
Doctors already know that the chance of having a baby with the genetic condition goes up with the age of the mother, especially for those over 35.
UK researchers, who looked at 34 couples, think drugs used to kick-start ovaries for IVF in older women disturbs the genetic material of the eggs.
Work is now needed to confirm their suspicions, a meeting in Sweden heard.
And they do not yet know the magnitude of risk, but say it could also cause many other genetic conditions, not just Down’s.
The findings, presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology’s annual conference, come from a UK study of 34 couples undergoing fertility treatment.
“It raises the concern that some of the abnormalities might be treatment-related”
Mr Stuart Lavery Consultant obstetrician
All of the women in the group were older than 31 and had been given drugs to make their ovaries release eggs ready for their IVF treatment.
When the researchers studied these now fertilised eggs they found some had genetic errors.
These errors could either cause the pregnancy to fail or mean the baby would be born with a genetic disease.
A closer look at 100 of the faulty eggs revealed that many of the errors involved a duplication of coiled genetic material, known as a chromosome.
Often, the error resulted in an extra copy of chromosome 21, which causes Down’s syndrome.
But unlike “classic” Down’s syndrome which is often seen in the babies of older women who conceive naturally, the pattern of genetic errors leading to Down’s in the IVF eggs was different and more complex.
And this led the researchers to believe that it was the fertility treatment that was to blame.
Lead researcher Professor Alan Handyside, director of the London Bridge Fertility, Gynaecology and Genetics Centre, said more research was now needed.
“This could mean that the stimulation of the ovaries is causing some of these errors. We already know that these fertility drugs can have a similar effect in laboratory studies. But we need more work to confirm our findings.”
If more tests back up their suspicions then it would mean that doctors should be more cautious about using these treatments, he said.
The researchers believe their work could also help identify which women might be better off using donor eggs for IVF instead.
Co-investigator Professor Joep Geraedts, of Bonn University in Germany, said: “This in itself is already a big step forward that will aid couples hoping for a healthy pregnancy and birth to be able to achieve one.”
UK fertility expert Mr Stuart Lavery said: “There’s a huge increase in the number of women undergoing IVF at later ages as people delay the age of starting a family.
“Previously we have always thought that these chromosomal abnormalities were related to the age of the egg.
“What this work shows is that a lot of the chromosomal abnormalities are not those that are conventionally age-related. It raises the concern that some of the abnormalities might be treatment-related.
“It’s a little unclear as to whether it’s the medication itself that is affecting the egg quality or whether it’s the medication that is just forcing the issue and allowing eggs that nature’s quality control system would have otherwise excluded, to arise.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Thomas the Tank Engine creator WV Awdry, born 100 years ago, set his railway engine stories in a sort of British Atlantis called Sodor. But where is it?
In Sodor they are celebrating, according to the latest book in the Railway Series of stories started by the Reverend Wilbert (WV) Awdry in 1945.
In the book written by WV Awdry’s son Christopher and marking the centenary of his birth, the engines – after the usual crop of mishaps – transport a bust of their creator to the main station of Sodor where the Fat Controller supervises its unveiling.
But how do you get to Sodor, home of Thomas the Tank Engine and the other locomotives, the Fat Controller and the Troublesome Trucks?
According to WV Awdry, who died in 1997, it’s easy. The Jubilee Bridge at Barrow in Furness actually goes there, he and his brother George wrote in their 1987 book The Island of Sodor. However, ordinary maps say it goes only to Walney Island.
So when you have crossed the bridge, instead of Vickerstown on Walney, you are in “Vicarstown” – gateway to Sodor.
But Awdry himself admitted that Sodor was an afterthought.
In 1950, he writes in The Island of Sodor, after his first four Railway Series books had been written, that he was poring over maps to “find a suitable location for the Fat Controller’s Railway and map it… standardise the scenery at any given spot, and so avoid troublesome questions”.
A preaching engagement on the Isle of Man made him aware that its bishop is officially Bishop of Sodor and Man – Sodor being an old name for the Hebrides whose ecclesiastical link to Man had long lapsed.
So was born the new Sodor, stretching almost from Furness to Man and described with gentle wit and in enormous detail by the Awdrys in their 1987 book.
But to go there, you need not cross the bridge at Barrow and hope that it will miraculously materialise like a British Atlantis. All over Britain, you find parts of Sodor.
The Talyllyn Railway
The narrow-gauge former slate railway running inland from Tywyn in mid-Wales was the world’s first preserved line, its society being formed in 1951. WV Awdry was one of its earliest members.
“He came and volunteered for the first time in ’52. He and his family had a fortnight’s holiday in Tywyn and he worked as a guard,” says David Mitchell, the line’s former managing director.
“And that of course was the famous occasion when they left the tea lady behind, which got written into one of the stories.
“He used to come and oil fishplates and work on the track and things like that in his younger days. And when he died he left us the contents of his study which we have recreated here.”
The Talyllyn Railway and its engines are the basis for the Skarloey narrow-gauge railway in WV Awdry’s books – the first ever railway in Sodor.
Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway
The scenic narrow-gauge line which carries visitors in open carriages from the Cumbrian coast to the slopes of Scafell Pike inspired the Arlesdale Railway in the Awdry series.
WV Awdry’s first book on the line, Small Railway Engines, includes a visit by the Thin Clergyman (himself) and the Fat Clergyman (his friend the Rev Teddy Boston, who had a railway running round the grounds of his Leicestershire rectory).
Three of the Arlesdale engines – Rex, Bert and Mike – are named after the Ravenglass and Eskdale engines River Esk, River Irt and River Mite.
“It is not difficult to this day to still identify most pages with various sites on the line,” says the railway’s general manager, Trevor Stockton.
A second book in the series, written by Christopher Awdry, is about Jock the New Engine – based on the line’s fourth locomotive, Northern Rock.
The Brighton connection
Awdry says in The Island of Sodor that his best-known creation, Thomas, is a class E2 0-6-0 tank engine from the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway; the Fat Controller acquired him as a result of some nifty accounting following World War I.
Very few of the E2 class were built, and even fewer have the forward extension to the side water tanks which Thomas has.
Thomas first appeared in the second Railway Series book in 1946, in which he is employed moving the carriages for the trains at a big station.
That station with its double arched roof looks quite like Brighton, which would make sense for an engine from the LB&SCR.
Other definite links
Sodor’s Culdee Fell Railway is a rack railway – so steep that the trains have cogs underneath which catch on a toothed rack running up between the rails for extra grip.
Britain’s only rack railway is the Snowdon Mountain Railway, which was visited by Awdry and his friend Teddy Boston in 1963.
Cornwall’s Bodmin and Wenford Railway is home to Alfred and Judy – the inspiration for Awdry’s china clay engines Bill and Ben.
Both worked at Par docks near St Austell where they shunted china clay wagons to the wharfs.
Other possibles
Awdry loved railways large and small. All lines, bridges, stations and engines contributed to the inspiration of the stories. If you have a memory of a railway scene that reminds you of Sodor, it’s likely that Awdry saw it too.
He grew up at Box in Wiltshire, and is supposed to have got the idea of engines talking (“I CAN do it. I WILL do it….”) from the sound as they puffed up the incline on the Great Western line nearby.
Box is near Bath, one end of the Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway – among the most fondly remembered of Britain’s lost lines. It is tempting to find the letters SO DO R in the railway’s name. But Awdry gives no hint of it, nor do SD&JR enthusuasts claim it.
But then, the rest of us will never know everything the Reverend Mr Awdry knew about Sodor.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
By Emma Simpson
So what’s the real story on public sector job losses as the biggest government spending squeeze for decades kicks in?
We are tracking public sector employment in Coventry to try to find out.
And we have a big update on what has been happening these last few months.
Between January and March this year, 369 public sector posts have closed across the city.
We have been getting jobs data from six public sector bodies, which represent 70% of public sector employment in the city.
We have also been doing some investigating ourselves and reckon we now have 95% of the picture.
It’s the nitty-gritty detail behind the daily headlines.
“The last few months have been quite bleak in many ways, knowing that big changes were afoot”
Ruth Nelson ex-Coventry City CouncilLeaving the council in ‘bleak times’
In our first story back in March, we reported that there had been only 15 posts closed in the three months to the end of the December 2010.
Well, we have now established that the total was actually 355.
Or to put it another way, the total number of public sector job losses in Coventry since the Coalition’s Spending Review of last October now stands at 724.
That’s 2.3% of the total number of public sector jobs in Coventry, or 3.6% if you exclude university workers.
All in all, a lot of people have left their jobs.
So where have the closures been?
Coventry is an interesting city when it comes to public sector employment. Not only does it have the usual number of council workers, NHS staff and teachers, it has a lot of government agencies – a mini-quango capital.
And they were the first in the firing line.
The agency to improve technology in schools, known as Becta, shut in March and another quango, the Qualifications and Curriculum Development Agency, is also in the process of being wound down.
A total of 237 posts disappeared from the offices of those two national quangos located in Coventry.
Another national body, the Skills Funding Agency, lost a total of 237 people through voluntary redundancy and early retirement schemes. It is in the process of being restructured.
With its diverse mix of public and private sectors, Coventry is a mini UK economy. BBC News is following the fortunes of its workers and businesses over the next 12 months and beyond.
At the start of 2011, the second wave of job losses came from Coventry City Council, as the effects of the reduction in its funding from Whitehall started to be felt.
A total of 183 posts have closed, spread right across the organisation. These were mainly workers who left through the voluntary redundancy programme.
We have a far from complete picture on the overall number of compulsory redundancies in the public sector across the city. All we can say is that the number is at least 35 for the period in question.
As we reported before, public sector bodies are still trying to redeploy workers into vacant posts so as to minimise redundancies.
But more job losses are expected.
So what has been the impact of these losses on Coventry so far?
“Despite our best efforts, our business has not grown this year. We are getting by, but continue to have anxieties about the future”
Sam Harrison Owner, Tinderbox toy shop, CoventryToy shop does all it can to surviveArchitect sees recovery buildingCuts ‘to hit women harder’
It’s clearly a very big deal if you are one of those people who have had to leave the public sector, even with a pay-off.
But this local economy seems to be proving fairly resilient, so far at least, in these tough times.
If you look at unemployment, the claimant count for people on Jobseeker’s Allowance has been creeping upwards again.
From last October, the number is up by 657, from 9,765 to 10,422, a rise of almost 7%.
This number, of course, reflects people looking for work, whether they came from the public or private sector.
And there are some encouraging signs in the private sector.
As well as our jobs tracker, we have been following a big group of public sector workers and private sector companies in Coventry.
It’s only a snapshot, but half of our companies have actually hired staff over the last three months, creating more than 400 new jobs. Twenty of their new recruits have come from the public sector.
I found that pretty striking.
The local Chamber of Commerce does its own survey work and it, too, is seeing some growth in jobs.
“The order books in many sectors are looking good,” said Louise Bennett, its chief executive.
“Our members seem to not only be holding staff, but talking about recruiting as well. But it’s still very fragile.
“We’re still asking the government to be cautious about its cuts to public spending and for the Bank of England to think carefully before raising interest rates.”
It’s early days, then. Like so many other places, Coventry remains vulnerable. Watch this space for another update in three months’ time.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
US particle physicists are inching closer to determining why the Universe exists in its current form, made overwhelmingly of matter.
Physics suggests equal amounts of matter and antimatter should have been made in the Big Bang.
In 2010, researchers at the Tevatron accelerator claimed preliminary results showing a small excess of matter over antimatter as particles decayed.
The team has submitted a paper showing those results are on a firmer footing.
Each of the fundamental particles known has an antimatter cousin, with identical properties but opposite electric charge.
When a particle encounters its antiparticle, they “annihilate” each other, disappearing in a high-energy flash of light.
The question remains: why did this not occur in the early Universe with the equal amounts of matter and antimatter, resulting in a Universe devoid of both?
The Tevatron results come from a shower of particles produced at the facility when smashing protons into their antimatter counterparts, antiprotons.
The proton-antiproton collisions in turn create a number of different particles, and the team operating the Tevatron’s DZero detector first noticed a discrepancy in the decay of particles called B mesons.
Particle physics has an accepted definition for a “discovery”: a five-sigma level of certaintyThe number of sigmas is a measure of how unlikely it is that an experimental result is simply down to chance rather than a real effectSimilarly, tossing a coin and getting a number of heads in a row may just be chance, rather than a sign of a “loaded” coinThe “three sigma” level represents about the same likelihood of tossing more than eight heads in a rowFive sigma, on the other hand, would correspond to tossing more than 20 in a rowA five-sigma result is highly unlikely to happen by chance, and thus an experimental result becomes an accepted discovery
These decayed into pairs of particles called muons alongside pairs of their antimatter versions, antimuons. But, as the team reported in May 2010 in a paper published in Physical Review Letters, there was a notable 1% excess of the matter particles.
However, unpicking important events in the soup of interactions created in particle physics experiments meant that those measurements were associated with a level of uncertainty – reflecting the probability that the effect they see is a random statistical occurrence, rather than new physics.
The researchers now have 50% more data to work with, and have tried to establish that their earlier result in fact came from the particle decays that they first proposed.
As they reported this Thursday, they have now reduced the uncertainty in their experiment to a level of 3.9 sigma – equivalent to a 0.005% probability that the effect is a fluke.
But particle physics has a strict definition for what may be called a discovery – the “five sigma” level of certainty, or about a 0.00003% chance that the effect is not real – which the team must show before they can claim to have solved the long-standing matter/antimatter mystery.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Our selection of the big moments, best speeches and quips from politicians in Westminster and the devolved institutions.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Sit in on a driving lesson in the American roundabout capital, Carmel
A roundabout revolution is slowly sweeping the US. The land of the car, where the stop sign and traffic light have ruled for decades, has started to embrace the free-flowing British circular.
A few moments after entering Carmel, it’s clear why the city has been described as the Milton Keynes of the US.
As the sat-nav loudly and regularly points out, there’s often a roundabout up ahead.
But unlike in the English town famous for its roundabouts, driving into this pretty city on the outskirts of Indianapolis also involves passing several under construction.
“We are saving thousands of gallons of fuel per roundabout per year”
Mayor Jim Brainard
The city is at the forefront of a dizzying expansion, across several American states, of the circular traffic intersection redesigned in 1960s Britain and then exported globally. The first arrived in the US in 1990 and about 3,000 have sprung up since.
The Mayor of Carmel, Jim Brainard, has become America’s evangelist-in-chief on the matter. He has demolished 78 sets of traffic light intersections in his city and replaced them all with those round islands so familiar to drivers in the UK. Four more will be finished in the coming months.
“We have more than any other city in the US. It’s a trend now in the United States. There are more and more roundabouts being built every day because of the expense saved and more importantly the safety.”
He quotes a study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety which suggests there is on average a 40% decrease in all accidents and a 90% drop in fatal ones when a traffic intersection is replaced by a roundabout.
The long-term financial saving is about £150,000, he says, due to reduced maintenance costs, and there are also fuel savings.
“Not just the cars that aren’t idling at traffic lights, but starting from a dead stop takes up more fuel also, so we are saving thousands of gallons of fuel per roundabout per year,” says the Republican mayor.
“And aesthetically, we think they’re much nicer. If one is looking out their living room window, would you prefer to see a blinking traffic light all night or a beautifully landscaped roundabout with a fountain and flowers?”
The modern roundabout gives way on entry and priority to cars already on itThey are usually smaller than rotariesAnd vehicles usually travel at lower speedsRotaries may have traffic lights and stop signsMarble Arch in London and the Arc de Triomphe in Paris are found on rotary systems
The mayor’s unlikely passion began while studying in the UK, and his strong Anglophile credentials are in evidence from a glance around his office – a book by Prince Charles entitled Vision of Britain lies on the coffee table.
“I remembered those roundabouts in England and it raised the question in my mind – why don’t we do this? I remembered they worked better than traffic lights so I started to do a bit of research and convinced my traffic engineers to try some.”
There was scepticism at first, he says, but public education is critical and there was a newsletter and video campaign to tell people about the safety and environmental advantages.
Before every roundabout, there are squiggly lines on the road and on roadside signs to warn drivers which lane they need to be in.
The mayor’s ambition is to replace the city’s remaining 43 traffic lights too, apart from one. The traffic lights on the corner of Main Street and Range Line Street will survive – not because a plaque at the spot claims the country’s first automatic traffic signals were installed here in 1923, but the street’s just too narrow to fit a roundabout.
The ornate fountain roundabouts of Carmel are a far cry from the large, one-way rotary systems conceived in the US and in Europe in the early 20th Century but which largely fell out of favour due to congestion problems.
Then forward-thinking British traffic engineers like Frank Blackmore tinkered with the designs and the UK established the modern roundabout by introducing a mandatory “Give way” rule for cars entering.
The US still has the older versions, called rotaries or circles, in cities like Washington DC and they remain quite unpopular, a confusing sprawl of signals, stop signs and concentric lanes.
The simpler British version first came to the US in 1990 in Nevada and it is these which are now proliferating. California has built nearly 200 in the last two or three years.
The problems Americans have navigating them was satirised in the film European Vacation starring Chevy Chase, who takes his family sightseeing in London but gets stuck until nightfall on a roundabout next to Big Ben.
There is some truth in that caricature. Some drivers in Carmel have been known to wait for the whole roundabout to clear before entering, says driving instructor Mike Ward, but learners soon get used to them.
But police in the city say the number of accidents on them, often caused by confusion or unfamiliarity, is still a lot fewer and less serious than at a traffic light.
The people of Carmel seem happy living in the country’s unofficial roundabout capital. The mayor, who has made roundabouts a central plank of his manifesto, is on the verge of earning his fifth term in office.
“I think they’re awesome,” says Blair Clark, who has lived in the area for 26 years. “They keep the traffic flowing, you don’t have to stop, you save gas and there are less accidents.”
Another driver, filling up his gas tank, says: “We’re proud of our city and proud of our roundabouts.”
But beyond Carmel, there has been greater resistance to them. One newspaper columnist in Atlanta says this undesirable European import will lead to higher taxes and accidents.
And Dan Neil, a motoring journalist at the Wall Street Journalist who personally welcomes their arrival, thinks there is something deep in the American psyche which is fundamentally opposed to them.
“This is a culture predicated on freedom and individualism, where spontaneous cooperation is difficult and regimentation is resisted.
Clive Sawers, British traffic engineer who has consulted US cities on roundabouts
“You see it in the way Americans get in line, or as the Brits say, queue. We don’t do that very well.
“Behind the wheel, we’re less likely to abide by an orderly pattern of merging that, though faster for the group, make require an individual to slow down or, God forbid, yield.”
Americans tend to be orthogonal in their thinking and behaviour, he says.
“We like right angles, yes and no answers, Manichean explanations. Roundabouts require more subtlety than we’re used to.”
Un-American or not, it’s only a matter of time before they are covering every US state, says Gene Russell, a leading civil engineering professor at Kansas State University.
So while the Americans give the British fast food, rock and roll and baby showers, in return they get free-flowing, circular traffic intersections. A fair cultural exchange?
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
7 days quiz
It’s the Magazine’s 7 days, 7 questions quiz – an opportunity to prove to yourself and others that you are a news oracle. Failing that, you can always claim to have had better things to do during the past week than swot up on current affairs.
1.) Multiple Choice Question
Police in Newquay, Cornwall, say they will be confiscating certain items this summer in a crackdown on anti-social behaviour. Which of these is not on their list?
Sexually explicit inflatablesClothes with offensive slogansNovelty handcuffsSex toys
2.) Multiple Choice Question
“I hadn’t planned on doing it… it was just, yeah, sort of off the cuff.” Said who?
A Murray fan who queued for 75 hours for a ticketAndy Murray bowing to the Royal BoxPrince William, joining a Mexican wave
3.) Multiple Choice Question
A handbag belonging to the former British Prime Minister Lady Thatcher has fetched £25,000 ($40,000) at a charity auction in London. Who bought it?
A man said to be a fanThe Ronald Reagan museumA Russian oligarch
4.) Multiple Choice Question
After a mini-heatwave, thunderstorms struck the South East of England on Tuesday. Which of these was not struck by a bolt out of the blue?
Gatwick Airport control towerSouthern Railway train servicesTelevision coverage of Wimbledon
5.) Multiple Choice Question
Californian firemen created a video-cutie when they filmed the rescue of a four-week-old kitten from a metal pipe. But what did they name the animal?
PiperSqueezyMetallica
6.) Multiple Choice Question
And sticking to the theme of animal names, Blue Peter has made its final broadcast from London ahead of its move to Salford. Which of the show’s pets featured in a pop song?
Jason the SiameseGeorge the tortoiseShep the Border Collie
7.) Multiple Choice Question
Which age group did figures reveal this week is driving most of Facebook’s growth in the UK?
Under 18s30 to 40-year-oldsOver-50s
Answers
It’s novelty handcuffs. The crackdown is because residents are worried that the behaviour of drunken revellers in Newquay is forcing families away from the town centre. It was Andy Murray. The player said he had only been told by a reporter that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were attending when he came off the practice courts. But he wasn’t entirely convinced. It’s the man believed to be a fan. The black glossy leather bag was owned by Lady Thatcher for more than 30 years and was on her arm during Cold War-era negotiations with the former American president, Ronald Reagan, and the then leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev. Air passengers at the West Sussex airport faced delays, as did passengers on several rail lines, including the Southern London to Brighton route. The roof over Wimbledon’s centre court did spring a leak but there was no lightning. Piper was freed with the help of a mechanical cutter and has been adopted by a local television station employee. Although the firefighters have visiting rights. John Noakes’ catchphrase “get down Shep” was incorporated into a pop song of the same name by The Barron Knights in 1978, reaching number 44 in the charts. It’s the over-50s. According to research by Nielsen, in the last year the number of over-50s using the site has increased by 84%.
Your Score
0 – 3 : Ignore
4 – 6 : Like
7 – 7 : Friend
For past quizzes including our weekly news quiz, 7 days 7 questions, expand the grey drop-down below – also available on the Magazine page (and scroll down).
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
It is 60 years since British spies Burgess and Maclean sensationally fled to the Soviet Union, and now top Libyan football figures have defected to the rebels. But how do defectors adjust to their new lives?
You have spent years in the half-light, betraying those closest to you. And now your secret is out.
Spirited away to the foreign power you covertly served all along, you know you can never return to the homeland that now reviles you as a traitor.
With your loyalties out in the open, you must make a life for yourself in your adopted nation. How?
In June 1951, the press was filled with speculation about the whereabouts of two missing British diplomats, Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean, who had disappeared the previous month.
The pair, it would later transpire, were in the Soviet Union, having fled from their imminent exposure as double-agents passing state secrets to Moscow.
These two urbane, upper-middle class Englishmen – part of the notorious Cambridge Five spy ring – would now have to adjust to life in a regime they had idealised as a workers’ paradise.
It was not a task for which both men were equally suited.
Maclean assimilated enthusiastically into Communist Moscow, establishing himself as a European security expert whom his colleagues affectionately nicknamed Donald Donaldovitch.
Burgess, however, proved less adaptable. As depicted in Alan Bennett’s television play An Englishman Abroad, he slumped into lonely alcoholism, scarcely bothering to learn Russian and continuing to order his suits from Saville Row. He drank himself to death aged 52.
Their contrasting experiences raise the question of how a defector should go about constructing a new life.
Despite the end of the cold war, defectors are, after all, back in the news.
After Col Gaddafi’s foreign minister and former spy chief Moussa Koussa defected to the UK, Foreign Secretary William Hague urged other Libyan officials to follow suit, promising they would be “treated with respect” in Britain.
In the wake of this call, a group of 17 leading Libyan football figures, nation’s goalkeeper, and three other national team members, announced their defection to the rebels within Libya.
One adopted Briton in a position to offer defectors guidance is former KGB Colonel Oleg Gordievsky, who worked for MI6 as a double agent for 11 years until he came under suspicion from Soviet authorities in 1985.
Gordievsky had been based at the USSR’s embassy in London when he was ordered back to Moscow on a pretext and interrogated. But, in an astonishing escape which rivals any episode in espionage fiction, he managed to reach the border with Finland and was smuggled across by British officials.
“I had no problems because I was friends with British people… I was used to British culture”
Oleg Gordievsky Double agent
Feted for his daring as well as the invaluable information he provided, Gordievsky settled happily into life in the Surrey commuter belt. He wrote a series of books and articles and, he says, felt gratified to be welcomed into London’s intelligence and literary community.
Indeed, such was his familiarity with UK customs – he had been posted to London in 1982 – and the length of his service for MI6 prior to, he dislikes the label “defector”. Gordievsky insists he had been British all along.
But he admits that his first wife, Leyla, did not share his motivation to embrace his adopted country. Their marriage collapsed after she managed to join him in the UK.
“I had no problems because I was friends with British people for 11 years,” he says. “I was used to British culture and the British way of life.
“But my wife, who joined me later – she had problems and had to go back to Russia because she couldn’t find balance in her life in Britain.
“I was very happy to be in Britain, British culture.”
Indeed, both ideological commitment and a sense that one continues to be useful to one’s adopted country appear to be crucial to sustaining defectors in exile.
The journalist and historian Phillip Knightley met Kim Philby, another of the Cambridge spies, shortly before his death in Moscow in 1988.
The Soviet authorities had never entirely trusted Philby and denied him the senior KGB post he had been expecting.
During the cold war, the Glienicke bridge linked West Berlin with Potsdam in the east, allowing both sides to exchange prisonersIn 1962, Soviet spy Rudolf Abel was swapped for US pilot Francis Gary Powers at the bridgeTwo years later, Konon Molody, who masterminded the Portland spy ring in south-west England, was exchanged for MI6 agent Greville WynneIn 1985, 23 American agents were traded at the bridge for four Warsaw Pact officers. Further exchanges were made the following year
As a result, Knightley recalls him as a broken, pathetic figure, pining nostalgically for “Coleman’s mustard, the Times, the crossword and English cricket”.
But what Knightley believes kept Philby, who did not live to see the collapse of the Berlin Wall, going was his unswerving Marxist-Leninist views and his conviction that he had done the right thing.
“All of the defectors I have ever met complained about the way they were treated – they didn’t feel they had enough recognition, they didn’t feel they were properly compensated,” Knightley says.
“If you are told you have got to live in a place for the rest of your life, you are bound to be discomfited.
“You are cut off from your previous life completely. You have the stigma of being a traitor for the rest of your life.”
Not all highly-prized defectors, of course, have been spies. When the ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev fled the USSR for France in 1961, according to some sources, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev personally signed an order to have him killed.
And on the other side, host governments have an incentive to keep their assets in good spirits – whether or not they are defectors.
According to Prof Keith Jeffery, the official historian of MI6, intelligence agencies are haunted by the memory of Peter Wright. The former MI5 officer revealed the secrets of the service in his book Spycatcher after becoming disgruntled with his pension arrangements.
As a consequence, Prof Jeffery argues, agencies are keen to make sure that anyone under their care still feels important.
“There’s a marketing dimension to it,” he says. “They do put a lot of effort into keeping (defectors) happy because they hope this would encourage others to do the same.
“It’s very important to keep them happy. While they’re happy they’ll tell you stuff.”
It seems defectors, like the rest of us, just need to feel wanted.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
25 years of IVF treatment at one of the UK’s first dedicated centres
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi travels outside Rangoon for the first time since her release from house arrest last year.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Thailand’s election victors Pheu Thai, led by ousted PM Thaksin’s sister Yingluck Shinawatra, announce plans to form a five-party coalition.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.