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  • Half term holiday flights on knife edge: Family breaks under threat as Met office warns ash cloud could blanket Britain

    Half term holiday flights on knife edge: Family breaks under threat as Met office warns ash cloud could blanket Britain
    By RAY MASSEY
    ©Eruption: A photographer captures the volcano exploding out of the earth
    Met office says a dense layer will cover the UK on Friday
    Civil Aviation Authority says the number of flights could be 'rationed'
    National Air Traffic service warning of further chaos today
    Ryanair warned after saying it could fly its planes through the ash
    The holiday plans of hundreds of thousands of Britons were in the balance last night as the Icelandic volcano threatened flight chaos.
    A provisional five-day forecast by the Met Office shows a dense layer of ash engulfing the country on Friday – the start of the bank holiday weekend and half term.
    High concentrations would cause serious delays and cancellations for air passengers, and trigger knock-on effects for flights over one of the busiest weekends of the year.
    ©Hundreds of holidaymakers transport plans were in ruins last night, but thousands more face trouble in the coming days as the ash heads south
    Some planes would be able to take off and land under the ash cloud, but the Civil Aviation Authority said the number of flights may have to be 'rationed'.
    The warnings have left many anxious about whether their flights at the start of half term will be disrupted. Up to two million people are expected to fly in and out of the UK over the four days of the bank holiday weekend.
    Officials insisted that Britain and the rest of Europe have learned from last year’s fiasco, caused by another Icelandic volcano, when planes were grounded for six days.
    ©The screen says it all: The arrivals board at Edinburgh airport shows how many flights were cancelled and long delays for those that were expected
    It caused misery for tens of thousands of passengers, many of whom were stranded abroad and were forced to make their way home by road, rail and sea.
    Although Transport Secretary Philip Hammond is confident that the great getaway will still happen, confusion reigned in Whitehall last night.
    This was largely because of the unpredictable nature of weather and volcanic activity.
    ©Forty winks: A passenger tries to sleep after failing to secure alternative accommodation or transport after his flight was cancelled yesterday
    Yesterday thousands of passengers endured disruption as Scotland became a virtual no-fly zone.
    British Airways cancelled all flights to and from Glasgow, Edinburgh and Newcastle, while BMI, easyJet, Flybe and Aer Lingus all scrapped services.
    Ryanair claimed the cancellations were an over-reaction but went on to halt all its flights in and out of Scotland. More than 250 flights were cancelled across Europe.
    After a test flight up to 41,000ft in Scottish airspace, airline boss Michael
    O’Leary described the so-called ‘red zone’ of highest density volcanic ash over Scotland as a 'non-existent, mythical and a misguided invention'.
    ©The latest satellite image showing the ash plume from the Grimsvotn volcano, under the Vatnajokull glacier in south-east Iceland
    The crisis has been sparked by the eruption of Iceland's Grimsvotn volcano, which has been spewing out plumes of ash, steam and smoke since Saturday.
    Scientists say high concentrations of ash can cripple aircraft engines.
    Since last year's eruption, airlines and the Civil Aviation Authority have eased the rules and now allow flights through 'low density' ash clouds.
    Airlines that want to fly their planes through medium and high concentrations have to convince the CAA that it is safe.
    ©
    Grounded: Two Ryanair jets and a FlyBe aircraft sit on the tarmac at Edinburgh airport yesterday
    ©Long wait: Using their suitacase as a makeshift chair, two passengers at Glasgow airport pass the time by reading a book and checking a mobile phone
    ©Waiting and more waiting: Passengers at Edinburgh Airport wait to board buses to other airports after their flights were cancelled
    If the UK is overshadowed by high concentration ash, airlines would be forced to cancel and delay flights, and timetables could be disrupted for days.
    Decisions on whether to fly are based on forecasts from the Met Office's Volcanic Ash Advisory Service, rather than real-life measurements of concentrations.
    Although the Met Office has part ownership of a research plane, it is currently being used in Ireland to study 'marine organic particles'.
    A dedicated Met Office atmospheric research plane, commissioned after last year's volcanic chaos, is not due to arrive until next month.
    ©Huge power: The eruption makes a spectacular sight over the Icelandic landscape
    ©On the ground: A car drives towards the erupting Grimsvotn volcano which has sent thousands of tonnes of volcanic ash into the sky
    ©Stunning: As the volcano erupts, huge dark ash and storm clouds gather across the Icelandic skyline
    Yesterday it was in talks with the German Aerospace Centre to borrow a test plane.
    Last night the Met Office said it stood by its five-day prediction showing the entire UK covered in an ash cloud of the highest density from 35,000ft to 55,000ft.
    A spokesman for the Met Office said: 'These are the most recent charts available and are on our website. We stand by them.
    He added: 'It is based on the assumption that the volcano will continue to erupt at the same rate. It is a guide, not definitive.'
    source: dailymail

    VIA Half term holiday flights on knife edge: Family breaks under threat as Met office warns ash cloud could blanket Britain

  • SpaceShipTwo For the Space Travels

    SpaceShipTwo For the Space Travels
    SpaceShip

    SpaceShipTwo by Virgin Galactic

    The company specializing on development of space tourism, Virgin Galactic, has presented the conceptual plane for short travel into a terrestrial orbit.

    The Space Tour Transport

    Transport is called SpaceShipTwo, under plans flight should begin mass flights in space in 2011 year. SpaceShipTwo can transport six passengers, the trip will last 2,5 hours.
    Representatives of eight hundred mass-media, the future astronauts, VIP-Persons have gathered for vehicle presentations.

    Flights in space
    SpaceShipTwo
    Space tourism
    Virgin Galactic

    Sir Richard Branson and Burt Rutan have held press conference, governors Bill Richardson and Arnold Schwarzenegger in the same place have acted. The ship has appeared before public in beams of bright light, accompanied by visually-musical show.

    VIA «SpaceShipTwo For the Space Travels»

  • Teenager charged with trespassing on railway - after planking photo ends up on Facebook

    Teenager charged with trespassing on railway - after planking photo ends up on Facebook
    By DAMIEN GAYLE
    ©Crazy: A 14-year-old youth has been charged with trespassing in connection with a photo like this one of a different planker
    A teenager has been charged with trespassing on the railway after a picture was posted on the internet of him apparently 'planking' on train tracks
    The photo of a teenager lying across railway tracks at an unknown location appeared on a planking fan page on Facebook.
    The shot of the youngster with his head on one rail and his feet on the other is one of hundreds which have featured on the group's page.
    Now a 14-year-old boy is set to appear at York Youth Court on July 5 in connection with the photo, according to a spokesman for the British Transport Police.
    Planking is a craze for taking photos of people lying down in unusual places and then posting them on the web.
    ©Game on: Planking during a game of golf
    A spokesman for the fan page - which was only set up in the past fortnight and which we cannot name for legal reasons - defended the past time.
    'For most people, it's just a bit of harmless fun,' he told the York Press, declining to give his name.
    He said the group did not condone people planking in dangerous spots, but added they could not be held responsible for anyone who chose to do so.
    'However, we have decided to regulate the site now and remove some of the pictures,' he said.
    'We have blocked access [to the Facebook profile] to about 800 people under 18, as they might be easily influenced and put themselves in danger.'
    ©Risky: Participants taking part in the craze lie face down in a tree
    The page has already attracted nearly 3,500 'likes' on Facebook.
    Fans have posted pictures of themselves on the page planking in locations including on top of nightclub soundsystems, on cars and on bales of hay.
    The youngster allegedly pictured planking on the rail tracks was arrested after police received calls from members of the public identifying him.
    A spokesman for the British Transport police said: 'After the pictures were brought to our attention, we launched an investigation to identify the male involved.
    'We would like to thank members of the public who came forward to identify the boy pictured, who was extremely lucky he wasnt killed or badly injured as a result of his behaviour.
    ©What a plank: Gordon Ramsay posted up a picture on his Twitter of himself trying out the latest internet craze of planking
    'This was very dangerous behaviour. With high speed trains and electric currents, the railway should never be treated as somewhere to play or hang about. When people are spotted on the railway trains are alerted, which causes disruption and delays.
    'People who trespass on the railway are not just risking a court appearance, they are taking a gamble with their lives.
    'The last thing our officers want is to have to tell a mother, father or another family member that their loved one has died after trespassing on the railway.'
    She confirmed that this was only the second incident of 'planking' on the railways in the UK and the first arrest.
    In recent months, planking has become a worldwide craze - even celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay has posted pictures of himself doing it online.
    ©Tragedy: Simon Hallam was left fighting for his life after a planking stunt gone wrong
    But the phenomenon has already led to tragedies.
    Last month 20-year-old Australian Acton Beale died after he fell seven storeys from the balcony railing of a block of flats.
    Days later, also in Australia, plasterer Simon Hallam was left fighting for his life after falling and hitting his head while planking on the boot of a fast moving car.
    source : dailymail

    VIA Teenager charged with trespassing on railway - after planking photo ends up on Facebook

  • Fosters and FXFOWLE have won award World Architecture News

    Fosters and FXFOWLE have won award World Architecture News

    Nordhavnen City

    In a category of “city architecture”, within the limits of award WAN AWARDS, winners became known: building Beijing International Airport, project Foster + Partners, and plan Nordhavnen City Regenerative, project FXFOWLE. Both projects have outstripped more than hundred competitors, in a nomination of already realised buildings and objects.

    City design

    The constructed projects: the jury should choose 6 projects among the declared. In a nomination “city design” architectural objects in categories were accepted: "transport", "landscape", "infrastructure", "planning", "city design".

    City design

    In a category of not constructed projects were accepted both under construction buildings, and conceptual projects.

    Beijing International Airport by Foster + Partners

    Beijing Airport

    VIA «Fosters and FXFOWLE have won award World Architecture News»

  • Heritage: Fallen Egyptian archaeologist wants international Grand Museum

    Heritage: Fallen Egyptian archaeologist wants international Grand Museum
    For more than a decade, he was the self-styled Indiana Jones of Egypt, presiding over its antiquities and striding through temples and tombs as the star of TV documentaries that made him an international celebrity.

    Fallen Egyptian archaeologist wants international Grand Museum
    In this June 18, 2015 photo, Zahi Hawass, Egypt's former head of antiquities, speaks during 
    an interview with The Associated Press in his office in Cairo. For more than a decade, 
    he was the self-styled Indiana Jones of Egypt, presiding over its antiquities and striding
     through temples and tombs as the star of TV documentaries that made him an international
     celebrity. But four years after the 2011 uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak
     and nearly ended his own career, Hawass can be found in a cramped office, 
    lamenting the state of the antiquities bureaucracy he once ruled like a pharaoh 
    and dreaming of a new museum whose fate lies in limbo 
    [Credit: AP/Hassan Ammar]

    But four years after the uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak and nearly ended his own career, Zahi Hawass can be found in a cramped Cairo office, lamenting the state of the antiquities bureaucracy he once ruled like a pharaoh and dreaming of a new museum whose fate lies in limbo.

    His trademark wide-brimmed hat and safari vest may be hung up for now, but he is brimming with ideas on how to revive Egypt's antiquities and bring back tourists after years of unrest.

    A long-planned new facility out by the pyramids, called the Grand Egyptian Museum, was intended to open this year, but the government says it is short the one billion dollars needed to complete the project.

    "Government routine cannot work for museums," Hawass said in an interview in his office, asserting that state bureaucracy is one of the main reasons the current Egyptian Museum has fallen into disrepair. For the new museum, "the directorship, the curatorship, it can be from America, from Germany, from England, from any place in the world. You need this museum to be international."

    He also says private, international sponsorship is needed.

    "If you pay $10,000, I put your name, written on the wall of the museum. If you pay $100,000, I put your name on the facade of the museum. If you build a whole gallery, I will name (the gallery after you)," he said, adding that the government should announce that Egyptian monuments belong to the entire world, not just Egyptians.

    As to the challenge of moving artifacts from the current museum in downtown Cairo over bumpy roads to the site of the new facility on the city's outskirts, Hawass says "any TV channel" would pick up the tab in return for exclusive rights to document the artifacts' restoration and transport. "They will run in competition to do this," he said.

    Hawass knows TV. He was once a staple on the Discovery Channel and had his own reality show on the History Channel called "Chasing Mummies," the promo for which introduced him by saying "100,000 years of history belong to one man... Only he holds the key to the world's greatest ruins."

    The productions earned him droves of fans abroad but led to accusations of grandstanding in Egypt, where he was seen by many as a self-promoter who mistreated subordinates and abused his position for personal gain. He lost his job as head of antiquities after the 2011 uprising and faced corruption charges, of which he was later cleared.

    But his swashbuckling antics gave a boost to Egyptian archaeology, with fundraising efforts and international tours of King Tut artifacts generating tens of millions of dollars.

    His name is still associated with many of Egypt's most famous digs, including grand discoveries such as the Valley of the Golden Mummies in Bahariya Oasis in 1999 and the mummy of Queen Hatshepsut almost a decade later. He has long campaigned to bring home ancient artifacts spirited out of Egypt during colonial times, and once said he had managed to recover 5,000 pieces.

    Zahi was an outspoken supporter of his longtime patron Mubarak, and has praised President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who led the military overthrow of an Islamist president in 2013 and was elected last year. But that support has not translated into an official role other than promotional work for tourism in Egypt.

    When asked about the state of antiquities today, Hawass says things have improved over the last year, carefully avoiding direct criticism of anyone in particular. But he points out that there is still theft, mismanagement and corruption - noting two incidents in recent months in which artifacts were found to have been replaced with replicas.

    "This did not happen before," he said, adding that in order to prevent such abuses, "we need to restore the people before we restore antiquities," by boosting employees' salaries and providing them with health insurance.

    Hawass insisted during the interview that he is focused on writing and has no desire to return to his previous position as head of the country's antiquities. "People come here every day and ask me to come back... I think I did my duty, and it's time for me now to publish all that I discovered."

    But at the glitzy launch of his latest book earlier this month at a ceremony at a five-star hotel attended by hundreds of Cairo's elite, he was less guarded about possible ambitions to return.

    "Maybe," he said, as a torrent of fans pressed to take photos next to him.

    Author: Brian Rohan | Source: The Associated Press [June 30, 2015]

  • Nightmare for air passengers begins as hundreds of flights are cancelled and volcanic ash threatens half-term getaway

    Nightmare for air passengers begins as hundreds of flights are cancelled and volcanic ash threatens half-term getaway
    By DAVID DERBYSHIRE and RAY MASSEY
    ©On the ground: A car drives towards the erupting Grimsvotn volcano which has sent thousands of tonnes of volcanic ash into the sky
    BA, Easyjet, Loganair, KLM and Eastern Airways all cancel flights after Civil Aviation Authority warning
    Passengers stranded overnight at Edinburgh airport as chaos starts with 252 flights cancelled
    Ash cloud expected over Heathrow at around 1pm
    All flights from Heathrow and London City airports to and from Scotland cancelled
    President Obama cuts short his stay in Ireland to avoid effects of ash cloud
    Aviation sector says it is better prepared than last year
    Transport Secretary warns of further disruption in the week ahead
    ©
    Stranded: Passengers sleep on the floor at Edinburgh Airport after their flights were cancelled late last night
    Tens of thousands of families are facing air travel chaos from today – and into the half-term holidays – as a thick cloud of volcanic ash descends over the UK.
    The towering plume of Icelandic ash, smoke and steam hit Scotland and Ireland last night, bringing disruption to airlines, leading to the cancellation of 252 flights - and forecasters say the plume is expected to reach Heathrow airport by 1pm bringing further chaos.
    British Airways and a host of other airlines last night cancelled all flights between London and Scotland until 2pm today, and the Civil Aviation Authority has said the ash cloud is moving unpredictably and changing by the hour.
    ©Closer to the source: A plane flies past smoke plume from the eruption of the Grimsvotn volcano in Southeast Iceland but flights in Britain are being cancelled
    ©Stationary: Eastern Airways, which has cancelled all flights to an from Scotland, now has its planes standing still at Aberdeen Airport
    Shortly after 8am the Met Office said that high level densities of ash were likely to be confined to Scotland and northern England today.
    A Met Office spokeswoman went on: 'The weather is uncertain over the next few days. We have a low pressure system moving in tomorrow and there could be some westerly winds.
    'However, very small changes in weather patterns can make very large changes in how the ash will move.'
    Between 30 and 40 BA flights will be affected from airports including Heathrow, Gatwick and London City to and from Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen. The airline runs 80 flights a day between these airports.
    ©Pink lightening: The stormy conditions around the Grimsvotn volcano look dramatic but authorities insist that it poses a lesser threat than the last ash cloud
    ©Problems: The departures board at Edinburgh Airport shows the disruption caused by the volcanic ash cloud already
    Royal Dutch Airlines KLM cancelled the 16 flights scheduled for this morning to and from Aberdeen, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Newcastle.
    The airlines said customers on any cancelled flights will be able to claim a full refund or rebook on to alternative flights – and that all other flights will operate as scheduled.
    A BA spokesman said: ‘We would urge customers not to travel to the airport if their flight has been cancelled.’
    At least 36 flights were cancelled in Scotland last night and today, as airports across Britain were put on stand-by for imminent disruption.
    Easy Jet, Aer Lingus, Flybe, KLM, Logan Air and Eastern Airways have all cancelled flights to and from Scotland.
    Ryan Air has been ordered by the Irish Aviation Authority to cancel flights to and from Glasgow, Prestwick, Edinburgh and Aberdeen.
    ©Presidential flight: Barack Obama and Air Force One touch down at Stansted Airport last night after he was forced to rearrange his plans because of the ash cloud
    'Perhaps it's a little bit too early to be absolutely sure about that, but clearly that's the most important thing - if the ash stops belching out of the volcano then, after a few days, the problem will have cleared, so that's one of the factors.
    'The other is the wind speed and direction. At the moment the weather patterns are very volatile which is what is making it quite difficult, unlike last year, to predict where the ash will go.
    'The public can be absolutely confident the regulators that airlines are only able to operate when it is safe to do so.'
    U.S. President Barack Obama flew from Ireland to London last night – a day early – to ensure the cloud does not delay his state visit.
    ©Haves and have nots: President Obama flew early so he could avoid being stuck in Ireland longer than he wanted, but these stranded passengers at Edinburgh Airport didn't have that luxury
    ©
    ©Grey skies: Emergency services vehicles in Kirkjubaearklaustur are covered in a thick layer of the volcanic ash from clouds that are now passing over Britain
    ©
    ©
    How are we going to get home? Tourists leave the Islandia Hotel yesterday in Nupur as ash continue to pour out of the erupting volcano
    What happens now depends on three things. How long the volcano continues to erupt (this could be days or just hours); how the airlines decide to interpret the ash guidelines issued by the Civil Aviation Authority – which is unknown – and, lastly, the weather.
    With a fair wind and a bit of geological luck, holidaymakers might manage to get away as planned this weekend.
    But if, like the millions of Britons who enjoyed the blissfully silent skies of April last year, Iceland’s trolls and elves decide they too appreciate the silence of plane-free skies, we could be looking at yet another week of travel nightmare for millions.
    UK airspace is 'better prepared' for volcanic ash cloud as flights could be threatened

    source: dailymail

    VIA Nightmare for air passengers begins as hundreds of flights are cancelled and volcanic ash threatens half-term getaway

  • The passing-out ball: End-of-year celebrations prove a little TOO much for some Cambridge students

    The passing-out ball: End-of-year celebrations prove a little TOO much for some Cambridge students
    By RICHARD HARTLEY-PARKINSON
    ©The morning after: Walking seems to have got too much for the girl in the red dress, while the chap on the right seems to be feeling a little warm after a night of partying
    They've finished their exams, they're about to venture into the big wide world, and they've just spent hundreds on the hottest night in town.
    So no wonder it all proved a bit too much for some Cambridge University students, staggering home after partying all night to celebrate the end of term.
    Even at £200 for a couple, and on top of the cost of a new ball gown and tails, revellers at the Trinity May Ball were far from reserved - perhaps savouring their final carefree days of student life.
    Bleary-eyed after a night of partying, as the sun rose the youngsters carried on the celebration with drunken punt rides on the River Cam or breakfast in college gardens.
    ©Relaxed: As the sun rose, students who had paced themselves continued to drink bubbly as the sun rose
    The ball is a tradition dating back 145 years that is among the largest events in the Cambridge student social calendar and is as famous for the morning after events as the big night itself.
    After dinner and dancing the night of official events was brought to a close with a spectacular fireworks display, but for some it was a sign that the night was still young.
    ©The morning after the night before: These students look like they're up for continuing for some time with two bottles of Pimms
    One guest said: 'The champagne was flowing, but if you want to be among the survivors the next day, you learn to pace yourself.'
    The Trinity May Ball is normally held on the first Monday of May Week - the traditional end of term at Cambridge University.
    This year, however, it took place in June and is one of a series of balls taking place across the campus.
    The ball has continued every year since 1866 and has only had two breaks. Once in 1910 when King Edward VII died and again during the Second World War from 1939 to 1945.
    ©Class, style and some high jinx: One couple looks like they've stepped out of a Dickens novel as they make their way home while another share a laugh with friends
    The only trouble that was reported in the town was three calls from residents who complained to Cambridge City Council over excess noise.
    Robert Osbourn, the council's environmental protection team leader, told the Cambridge News that some complaints were inevitable.
    He said: 'You are never going to be able to guarantee that nobody hears anything.'
    The students also do their bit for charity. With 17 balls and major events being held in Cambridge this academic year, the total funds from all college May Balls is likely to reach tens of thousands of pounds.
    ©Having a punt: These party goers decide to have a more leisurely ride along the River Cam with cups of coffee
    ©Home time: Students file out of the Trinity May Ball in an orderly manner
    ©Friendships made: Students lie on the lawns in front of King's College as the sun rises over the spires of Cambridge
    ©Glamour: A group of women look as splendid as they did the night before as they set off home in their ball gowns
    ©It's a busy day for punters in Cambridge with hundreds of students to transport along the Cam
    source :dailymail

    VIA The passing-out ball: End-of-year celebrations prove a little TOO much for some Cambridge students

  • Heritage: Bulgarian officials seize ancient coins at airport

    Heritage: Bulgarian officials seize ancient coins at airport
    The customs officials at Sofia Airport prevented an attempt to smuggle a priceless monetary hoard. A collection, consisting of 82 silver tetradrachms of Philip II of Macedonia (the middle of fourth century B.C.), was found by the officials of "Customs Intelligence and Investigation" department at Sofia Airport Customs House.

    Bulgarian officials seize ancient coins at airport
    The 82 silver tetradrachms date to the time of King Philip II of Macedonia 
    [Credit: Bulgarian Customs Agency]

    Some of the tetradrachms were minted around the years 359-336 B.C., with the obverse depicting the Macedonian King with a wreath on his head. According to the executed expert report, the seized coins belonged to a collective trouvaille.

    Bulgarian officials seize ancient coins at airport
    The ancient coins were hidden inside routers destined for the United States 
    [Credit: Bulgarian Customs Agency]

    Pursuant to the Law on Cultural Heritage, each one of the tetradrachms is of extraordinary cultural, financial and scientific value.

    The monetary hoard was intended for export through a courier company, which had to transport it from Bulgaria to USA. The coins were concealed inside three routers. All the tetradrachms were seized and an Administrative Offence act was drawn up.

    The details of the case are now being clarified.

    Source: Bulgarian Customs Agency [June 20, 2015]

  • Design kilometre

    Design kilometre

    Design kilometre

    The given architectural decision for Hua Qiang Bei Road in the Chinese city of Shenzhen command WORKac has offered. The design project corresponds to growing commercial value and character of territory — this tendency has led to a problem of transport congestion and stoppers. Architects have suggested to make a series of strategic crossings of road.

    5 Exclusive Lanterns

    The project consists from “5 conceptual lanterns”, each of which has the function. Lanterns are visible from apart — by the way, during day heat they create a shade.

    Chinese street

    Architectural street

    Architectural project

    Kilometre street

    Night prospectus

    Night Chinese Street

    Each of lanterns carries out the own social program; in one the electronic museum, in other — information centre, in other — viewing pavilion is organised. Under the earth lanterns are connected with each other, in this zone has been created four additional metro stations.

    VIA «Design kilometre»