الأربعاء، 7 نوفمبر 2018

The Fight for the Senate, 2018: The Results As They Come In

The Fight for the Senate, 2018: The Results As They Come In

Republican control of the U.S. Senate is on the line tonight. But thanks to a 2018 landscape in which there are far more vulnerable Democratic seats (26 out of 35, which includes special elections in Minnesota and Mississippi), the GOP is favored to hang onto or even increase its narrow margin of control (currently 51 senators, plus the insurance policy of the vice-president’s tie-breaking vote). But there are a lot of very close races on tap. The Cook Political Report rates nine of them as toss-ups, and another four as competitive. So any number of outcomes are possible when the dust settles.
In this regularly updated post we will note competitive Senate races that have been called by a major media outlet (most often the Associated Press) as having been decided, with some additional information on the significance of the particular result.
2:29 a.m. EST: Democrats finally clawed back a Republican-held seat as Congresswoman Jacky Rosen defeated incumbent Dean Heller in Nevada. In a test of the two parties’ organizational strength, Democrats prevailed narrowly in the early voting and then on Election Day. Heller went from being an underdog to a narrow favorite in the home stretch — but is now a former senator.
2:00 a.m. EST: Mississippi Senate special election goes to a runoff between incumbent Republican Cindy Hyde-Smith and Democrat Mike Espy. Because it was a nonpartisan special election to fill out the term of former senator Thad Cochran, a majority was required to avoid a November 27 runoff. The main surprise here is that Hyde-Smith barely ran ahead of Espy, a former congressman and Clinton administration Secretary of Agriculture, despite facing underwhelming Republican opposition from fiery neo-Confederate Chris McDaniel. But in this heavily Republican state, the incumbent will be a strong favorite in the runoff.
11:11 EST: Democrats lose another heartbreaker as Claire McCaskill loses to Josh Hawley in Missouri. McCaskill’s luck in this red state finally ran out, as terrible losing margins in rural areas sank her against the state’s attorney general. This was a race she looked to be narrowly leading in, and another in which Trump will take credit for the late win.
10:15 EST: Beto O’Rourke loses, officially killing Democrats’ dreams of holding the Senate, and ousting Ted Cruz. Though the race was close enough to drag out hopes of Betomania well into election night, the Texas Senate race ended how most recent polls said it would: with O’Rourke narrowly losing to Cruz. Ultimately, O’Rourke’s massive fundraising haul and Cruz’s profound unlikability was not enough to turn Texas blue. Should we blame Beyoncé for waiting so long to announce her endorsement? Were Republicans secretly hoping to rid themselves of Cruz while keeping the Senate? Will failing to actually win dampen Beto 2020 enthusiasm? There will certainly be plenty of pieces pondering these questions and more in the days to come.
9:30 EST: Democrat Joe Manchin survives again in pro-Trump West Virginia. In an outcome that would have mattered a lot more had Democrats done better in other red states, Senator Joe Manchin defeated Republican attorney general Pat Morrisey, who had been gaining some momentum down the stretch. Manchin helped insulate himself against Republican attacks by voting to confirm Brett Kavanaugh.
9:05 EST: Republicans win in Tennessee — chances for a blue Senate are basically kaput. For a long time there, Democrats felt good about Tennessee. No longer: Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn, a close Trump ally, has beat Phil Bredesen, the popular former governor running as a moderate. Bredesen always said he’d win as long as the race didn’t get nationalized, but he started slipping in polls around the time of the Kavanaugh fight. In the end, even Taylor Swift’s endorsement couldn’t give him the win.
8:49 EST: Mike Braun prevails over Joe Donnelly in Indiana. 
Mitch McConnell’s job appears to be secure. In preelection polls, Donnelly looked like one of the safest Democratic incumbents from a heavily pro-Trump state. But on the strength of overwhelming support from rural areas, businessman Mike Braun put an end to Donnelly’s Senate tenure — and, in all probability, to the Democratic Party’s hopes of winning a majority in the upper chamber Tuesday night.
8:30 EST: Bob Menendez holds onto his Senate seat in New Jersey.When the Cook Report classified Menendez’s race as a toss-up recently, things got tense for Democrats over a race that under normal circumstances they would have won going away. What was not normal was that Menendez had been indicted on corruption charges and escaped with hung jury. Contrary to political custom he chose to run again anyway. After some moments of doubt, the voters of New Jersey seem to have decided to hold their collective noses and vote to keep the Senate seat blue rather than give it to GOP challenger Bob Hugin — and Mitch McConnell.
8:08 EST: Sherrod Brown wins easily in a state Trump carried by eight points. Left-leaning Ohio “populist” Democrat Sherrod Brown, thought initially to be vulnerable in a state that Trump carried by eight points, was quickly called the winner over Republican congressman and Trump buddy Jim Renacci soon after the polls closed. It’s potentially another sign of midwestern buyer’s remorse over Trump and his allies. And Brown is sure to be mentioned as a 2020 presidential possibility.
7:15 EST: Sanders and Kaine cruise to reelection. No one thought that Vermont’s Bernie Sanders or Virginia’s Tim Kaine were in any trouble. But these two national Democratic figures won instantly when the polls closed in their states. And while Sanders was never in a scintilla of trouble, it is significant that Kaine easily dispatched Trump ally and neo-Confederate hero Corey Stewart, who nearly won the GOP gubernatorial nomination last year.

25 players to know for the 2018-19 college hoops season

25 players to know for the 2018-19 college hoops season
College basketball is nearly upon us and unlike in many sports, the best players can come from anywhere — some haven't even played a college game yet. Among the 25 players on our watch list, there are seniors who have developed over their four years, sophomores or juniors who are set to make a big jump and freshmen who are coming in ready to dominate.

The beauty of college basketball is that there is talent everywhere, from the one-and-done factory of Duke to smaller schools like the just-down-the-road at Campbell. And per usual, there will be a group of players who are ready to break out.

So here are 25 players to know for the upcoming college hoops season.

الاثنين، 5 نوفمبر 2018

Michael Irvin erupts at Stephen A. Smith with sweat-soaked rant on Cowboys’ greatness

Michael Irvin erupts at Stephen A. Smith with sweat-soaked rant on Cowboys’ greatness
Stephen A. Smith’s job is, in many ways, to push buttons, and he arrived Monday at an entertainment and event center located near the Cowboys' AT&T Stadium ready to do just that. As it turned out, the star of ESPN’s “First Take” didn’t just get under the skin of the dozens of Dallas fans in attendance, but he also provoked quite the eruption from former Cowboys wide receiver Michael Irvin.
Now an NFL Network analyst, Irvin makes no pretense of disguising his loyalty to the organization he helped win three Super Bowls, but as Smith noted before the Cowboys hosted the Titans on “Monday Night Football,” the glory days in Dallas are long over and the team has fallen well behind some other NFL franchises.
That was too much to bear for Irvin, who quickly required some towels to help with the considerable sweat he worked up while shouting about how the Cowboys were set to “rightfully regain and take their proper spot among kings!”
Irvin began what rapidly turned into a rant by claiming that the “championship trophies” possessed by the Cowboys put them “right up there with the Patriots and the Steelers.” He stood up and pointed at Smith, shouting as the crowd cheered, “So when you go to history, let’s go into history! Don’t just go to your history, let’s go into the history!"
“First Take” co-analyst Max Kellerman then asked Irvin if Dak Prescott was the right quarterback to “make some history” with the Cowboys, to which the ex-player pointed to Dallas’s recent trade for former Raiders wide receiver Amari Cooper as the key to unlocking a bright future. “Can you really get an answer on Dak without giving him the weapons around him,” Irvin said. “I think that’s why Amari Cooper was a big deal.”
Turning to the audience and raising his voice, Irvin continued: “We needed to get Amari Cooper, and I think tonight, right here in Dallas, we see the dawn of a new day. The beginning of a new age, and a time when the Cowboys will rightfully regain and take their proper spot among kings!”
At this point, Irvin was standing and shouting, while being wiped down by a production assistant. “Do you hear me?!" he exclaimed. “Regain and take their proper spot among the kings!!”
Smith, not surprisingly, was also getting increasingly agitated, or at least acting that way for dramatic effect. “It is true that when you were a member of the Cowboys, and Jimmy Johnson came on board to coach this team,” he asked of Irvin, “is it true that Jimmy Johnson went to you, and you sat up there and said, ‘If the dawn of a new day is imminent, we need to get rid of this, and this and this'? So what happened to that philosophy?
“Y’all won two playoff games in 25 years, and you’re going to sit up here, sticking out your chest, and talk about, ‘It’s the dawn of a new day’?!” Smith shouted. To vigorous boos, he added, “Y’all ain’t nothing. You ain’t been nothing.”
Shaking his finger at Irvin, Smith got a laugh from the former Cowboy by saying, “Last time y’all were something, you had an Afro!”
However, he went right back to playing up the villain role for all it was worth, telling Irvin, “You’re a champion, walking around with rings, but these 'Boys ain’t won in 23 years and you’re sitting up here representing them. You should be ashamed of yourself!” Smith pointed to the crowd and yelled, “You should be ashamed of yourselves!”
Irvin, forehead glistening like Patrick Ewing in the fourth quarter of a playoff game against the Heat, countered that the youth of Cooper, Prescott and running back Ezekiel Elliott meant that the Cowboys had “10 good years” ahead of them, repeating the phrase, “Dawn of a new day.”
With Kellerman continuing to question Prescott’s ability to be a top quarterback, Irvin went back to frenzied mode, claiming that the third-year player “put up the greatest rookie season ever! Ever!” He added: “Dak Prescott is a big-time player!”
Finally, Irvin took note of what ESPN’s audience could see for some time, saying, “I’m sweating now. Why am I sweating? Is it that hot in here?”
To chants of “Mi-chael! Mi-chael!” he shouted, “I have taken over his show! 'Cause this is my city!”
Kellerman then brought up Cowboys Coach Jason Garrett, who has a 70-57 record in eight-plus years in Dallas, with two playoff appearances. “Is that a great coach?” Kellerman asked.
It was perhaps telling that the subject of the much-maligned coach elicited a far calmer response from Irvin. He said that Garrett “knows how to work with this group of guys,” adding, “Right now he has the young talent, and tonight is the beginning of that.”

"إتنا" ينزلق نحو البحر المتوسط.. وتحذيرات من تسونامي هائل

"إتنا" ينزلق نحو البحر المتوسط.. وتحذيرات من تسونامي هائل
يعد جبل "إتنا" في جزيرة صقلية الإيطالية، واحدا من أكثر البراكين نشاطا في العالم، إلا أن ذلك ليس الشيء الوحيد الذي يثير مخاوف العلماء، حيث حذرت دراسة حديثة من احتمال انزلاق الجبل في البحر.

وفي حال تحققت توقعات العلماء، فإن انزلاق الجبل سيتسبب بتسونامي هائل، بمقدوره تدمير جزء كبير من المناطق الممتدة شرقي البحر الأبيض المتوسط.

ونقلت "سي إن بي سي" عن موريليا أورلوب، الباحثة في مركز جيومار هيلمهولتز لأبحاث المحيط، في مدينة كيل بألمانيا، قولها: "تسحب الجاذبية الجبل نحو الأسفل بقوة، ومن الممكن أن يسحب بسهولة باتجاه البحر، حيث لا يوجد أي شيء لإيقافه".

وسجل العلماء تحركا بطيئا للبركان منذ تسعينيات القرن الماضي، إلا أن أورلوب وزملاءها استخدموا شبكة من الحسّاسات تحت الماء على امتداد القسم الجنوبي الشرقي للبركان، للحصول على تقييم دقيق بشأن حركته. 

وينزلق "إتنا" بمعدل يتراوح بين 2 إلى 3 سنتيمترات سنويا، وفقا للبيانات التي نشرها الباحثون في شهر أكتوبر الماضي، كما رصدت الحسّاسات حركة في أجزاء بعيدة عن مركز النشاط البركاني، الأمر الذي يستبعد فرضية أن تكون "الماغما" أو المواد المنصهرة، هي المسؤولة عن حركة الجبل. 

واستبعد فريق الباحثين احتمالية الانزلاق السريع للجبل نحو البحر، مؤكدين على أن مثل هذه الانهيارات شائعة في دورة حياة البراكين، وخصوصا مع بركان مثل "إتنا"، الذي يقدّر عمره بـ 500 ألف عام.

وبالرغم من تطمينات العلماء، إلا أن التاريخ سجل حالات لانهيارات بركانية مفاجئة وسريعة، ففي مايو من عام 1980، انهارت الجهة الشمالية لجبل سانت هيلين بولاية واشنطن، على إثر هزة أرضية بلغت شدتها 5.1 على مقياس ريختر، وتسببت بانزلاقات أسفرت عن وفاة 57 شخصا وخسائر اقتصادية بلغت قيمتها 1.1 مليار دولار.

Who was Michael Dertouzos? Google Doodle honours computer scientist who predicted the internet

Who was Michael Dertouzos? Google Doodle honours computer scientist who predicted the internet
Google’s latest Doodle celebrates the life of Michael Dertouzos, the Greek computer scientist who anticipated how the internet would come to dominate almost every aspect of our lives.

Monday’s homepage image honoured the renowned academic, who died in 2001, on what would have been his 82nd birthday.

As the director of MIT’s Laboratory for Computer Science for almost 30 years, Mr Dertouzos was a pivotal figure in the creation of the World Wide Web Consortium – the alliance of companies and groups promoting the evolution of the internet.

Mr Dertouzos even recruited Tim Berners-Lee, the primary inventor of the World Wide Web, to lead the consortium.

Mr Berners-Lee said: “If it hadn’t been for Michael there would not probably have been a World Wide Web Consortium.”

Born in Athens in 1936, Mr Dertouzos won a Fulbright scholarship to the University of Arkansas. He would spend the rest of his career in the US, joining the MIT faculty in 1964.

Under his leadership, MIT’s Laboratory for Computer Science would develop RSA encryption, an important algorithm in helping ensure computer data could be transmitted more securely.

There were other key innovations in his three decades at the helm: the development of distributed systems, time-sharing computers and the ArpaNet.

But Mr Dertouzos is remembered most for championing the internet at a time few could see how powerfully it would shape the global economy.

In his 1997 book What Will Be: How the New World of Information Will Change Our Lives, the professor predicted that the internet would become “an Information Marketplace where people and their computers will buy, sell and freely exchange information and information work.”

He said he wanted computers to be “as natural a part of our environment as the air we breathe”, spearheading a 2001 collaboration with MIT’s Artificial Intelligence Lab to find ways in which computer technology could be used for humanity’s benefit.

“We made a big mistake 300 years ago when we separated technology and humanism,” he wrote. “It’s time to put the two back together.”

عضو تعليم البرلمان: مناقشة مشروع الجامعات الإلكترونية مطلع الأسبوع المقبل

عضو تعليم البرلمان: مناقشة مشروع الجامعات الإلكترونية مطلع الأسبوع المقبل


أكدت النائبة ماجدة نصر، عضو لجنة التعليم بالبرلمان، أن اللجنة ستعقد مطلع الأسبوع المقبل 3 اجتماعات ستناقش عدة قضايا وملفات تعليمية هامة على رأسها عدة مشاريع قوانين سيتم مناقشتها خلال الأيام المقبلة.

وأضافت عضو لجنة التعليم بالبرلمان، في تصريحات لـ"اليوم السابع"، أن اللجنة اتفقت مع أول اجتماع لها في دور الانعقاد الرابع أن يتم استكمال مشاريع كل القوانين التي لدى اللجنة، موضحة أن اللجنة ستناقش الأسبوع المقبل 10 مواد من مشروع قانون تنظيم الجامعات، إلى جانب مشروع قانون الجامعات الإلكترونية.

وأشارت عضو لجنة التعليم بالبرلمان، إلى أن اللجنة ستضع خلال اجتماعها أيضا جدول أعمال بسلسلة زيارات ستجريها اللجنة وأعضائها خلال الفترة المقبلة، للمدارس، خاصة تلك المدارس التي تعمل بالنظام التعليمي الجديد.