Thứ Ba, 1 tháng 5, 2012

Elan Steinberg Dies at 59; Led World Jewish Congress

Giao duc | school of medicine |

Elan Steinberg, who brought what he called a new, "American style" assertiveness to the World Jewish Congress as its top executive, winning more than $1 billion from Swiss banks for Holocaust victims and challenging Kurt Waldheim, the former United Nations secretary general, over his Nazi past, died on Friday in Manhattan. He was 59.

By DOUGLAS MARTIN
Published: April 6, 2012
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Elan Steinberg in 1986. He resigned from the congress in 2004.

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The cause was complications of lymphatic cancer, his wife, Sharon, said.

As its executive director from 1978 to 2004, Mr. Steinberg was a key strategist for the congress as it grew bolder under a younger generation of Jews. He helped organize the research, hearings, press leaks and lawsuit that led the Swiss banks to agree to pay $1.2 billion to Holocaust victims in the late 1990s.

He also ruffled feathers. Abraham Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League, told The New York Times that he applauded the congress's "persistence," but worried that the Swiss might begin to see Jews as "their enemy." He said the congress's crusade "fed into the stereotype that Jews have money, that it's the most important thing to them."

Even Simon Wiesenthal, the relentless hunter of Nazi war criminals, questioned the congress's new aggressiveness when it threw itself into the Austrian presidential campaign in 1986 to try to defeat Mr. Waldheim, who was ultimately elected. Mr. Waldheim had hidden his membership in a Nazi military unit linked to atrocities.

Mr. Wiesenthal argued that Mr. Waldheim was "an opportunist" but not a war criminal. He worried that the congress, by inserting itself into Austria's internal politics, was undoing years of patient work toward reconciling young Austrians and Jews.

Mr. Steinberg countered that electing Mr. Waldheim would stain all Austrians. "In the whole world it will be said that a former Nazi and a liar is the representative of Austria," he said.

The tough stance was a departure for the congress, which was formed in 1936 in response to the rising Nazi threat in Europe and whose headquarters are now in New York. Mr. Steinberg himself used the word "strident" to describe his approach in taking the once-staid organization into quarrels, as it did in 1985 when President Ronald Reagan, alongside Chancellor Helmut Kohl of West Germany, visited a German cemetery in which Nazi SS soldiers were buried.

"For a long time," Mr. Steinberg said, "the World Jewish Congress was meant to be the greatest secret of Jewish life, because the nature of diplomacy after the war was quiet diplomacy. This is a newer, American-style leadership — less timid, more forceful, unashamedly Jewish."

Mr. Steinberg steered the congress in opposing the presence of a Carmelite convent at the site of the Auschwitz death camp and championing former slave laborers under the Nazis in their fight for compensation.

When Steven Spielberg was making the 1993 film "Schindler's List," he wanted to shoot scenes inside a building that had been part of the Auschwitz camp, Mrs. Steinberg said. As she recounted the episode, Mr. Spielberg went to the congress and conferred with Mr. Steinberg, who told him, "You cannot film on the graves of Jews." Mr. Spielberg instead built a replica of the building.

"Whenever Jews were in danger, or Jewish honor offended, he vigorously yet elegantly spoke up," Elie Wiesel, the author and Holocaust survivor, said in a statement read at Mr. Steinberg's funeral. "Whenever Jewish memory was attacked, he attacked the attacker."

Elan Steinberg was born in Rishon LeZion, Israel, on June 2, 1952, to Holocaust survivors. He grew up in the Brownsville and Borough Park sections of Brooklyn and was a graduate of Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan and Brooklyn College. He received a master's degree in political science from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, then taught there.

He joined the congress in 1978 as its United Nations representative, and rose to executive director — first of the American section, then of the world body. Menachem Rosensaft, the congress's general counsel, said Mr. Steinberg was instrumental in persuading the Vatican and Spain to recognize Israel.

Mr. Steinberg resigned in 2004 but remained a consultant to the congress's president, Ronald S. Lauder. He was vice president of the American Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors and Their Descendants.

In addition to his wife, the former Sharon Cohen, Mr. Steinberg, who lived in Manhattan, is survived by his children, Max, Harry and Lena Steinberg, and his brother, Alex.

Mr. Rosensaft told another story to illustrate his friend's mix of grit and wit. Mr. Steinberg was negotiating one day with the French culture minister to recover paintings stolen from Jews during the Holocaust. The minister huffed that Mr. Steinberg knew nothing about art.

"You're right," Mr. Steinberg said. "I don't know anything about art. I'm from Brooklyn. I know about stolen goods."

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National Briefing | Science

hinh nen dep | school of medicine |

Bat Deaths Are Traced to Fungus From Europe

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: April 9, 2012
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The mysterious deaths of millions of bats in the United States and Canada over the past several years were caused by a fungus from Europe, scientists reported Monday. Experts had suspected that an invasive species was to blame for the deaths, which were caused by white nose syndrome. Now there is direct evidence that the culprit was not native to North America. More than 5.7 million bats have died since 2006 when white nose syndrome was first detected in a cave in upstate New York. The disease does not pose a threat to humans, but people can carry fungal spores. The fungus may have accidentally been introduced by tourists from Europe. The findings were reported online Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences .

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Migratory Hearts

scholarship.edu.vn | harvard summer school 2011 |

'The Newlyweds,' by Nell Freudenberger

By MOHSIN HAMID
Published: April 26, 2012

At the end of Nell Freudenberger's second novel, "The Newlyweds," we encounter the following sentence: "I believe that it is only by sharing our stories that we truly become one community."

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Ashley Gilbertson/VII, for The New York Times

Nell Freudenberger

THE NEWLYWEDS

By Nell Freudenberger

337 pp. Alfred A. Knopf. $25.95.

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Illustration by Christopher Brand

A worthy objective, surely. Nonetheless we're on tricky ground here, and a little probing on our part is called for. The sentence quoted above is in fact part of a Starbucks "Reach for the Stars" writing competition entry attributed to the novel's protagonist, Amina, a Bangladeshi woman who has immigrated to America. But Amina's entry, it turns out, was not actually written by Amina. It was written, and submitted, by Kim, an American cousin of Amina's American husband, George. Kim is a yoga instructor. She is a storyteller, a bit of a liar. Like Freudenberger herself, she has spent time in South Asia. And Kim is held up, at least partly, as a stand-in for the author:

" 'But you always wear Indian clothes,' Amina said.

"Kim laughed. 'I wear my own version. This kind of thing.' She indicated the bulky sweater she was wearing over an unseasonable cotton dress and a pair of black tights. 'But trust me — I look stupid in a sari.' "

Freudenberger is aware of the pitfalls she faces in telling us Amina's tale, and she wants us to be aware of them too. If Kim has invented a competition-­winning story as Amina, about Amina, without Amina's permission, and with various inaccuracies, what, Freudenberger invites us to ask, has Freudenberger done?

At stake here isn't — or shouldn't be — the question of authenticity, which is a red herring: nationalities, ethnicities, genders and even species do not "own" the right to fictional narratives spoken in what purport to be their voices. Such a proposition, taken to its logical extreme, would reduce fiction to autobiography, and while fiction may well be alive and kicking in the belly of many an auto­biography, to confine fiction solely to that domain would be madness.

No, the more pressing issue is that of verisimilitude, truthlikeness, the illusion of being real, a quality without which fiction that adheres to the conventions of what is commonly called realism (a problematic term, but useful shorthand for the more cumbersome "let's try not to draw attention to the fact that this is all made up"-ism) starts to feel to its audience like an ill-fitting and spasmodic sock puppet.

For despite the subversive wink embodied in Kim — her name of course brings to mind a certain Kipling character who could blend in with the natives but risked occasionally getting caught — the experience of reading "The Newlyweds" remains substantially the experience of reading a work in the realist vein. This is a third-­person account that hews closely to Amina's point of view. Truthlikeness is thus important to its ambitions.

And Freudenberger brings impressive attributes to bear in her attempt to achieve it: a powerful sense of empathy, of being able to imagine what it is to be someone else, to feel what someone else feels; an effective but unfussy writing style that avoids drawing attention to itself; and an international sensibility, which allows her to write about places outside America not as peripheral — mere playgrounds for American characters — but as central to themselves.

The novel begins with Amina recently settled in Rochester, checking for her green card in her new mailbox — new, as George says, because of: "Thugs. Potheads. Smoking weed and destroying private property." This vandalism is no directed, racist attack, but a continuing, community­wide problem, one of many symptoms revealing an America where things aren't as good as they used to be.

But the past hasn't exactly been wonderful either, not for Amina, and not for George, as may go without saying for a couple who meet online across continents through AsianEuro.com and agree, with barely any physical interaction — and despite obvious differences in nationality, culture and religious upbringing — to wed.

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Mohsin Hamid is the author of "Moth Smoke" and "The Reluctant Fundamentalist." His third novel will be published next spring.

Theo www.nytimes.com

Delta Airlines to Produce Its Own Jet Fuel

loa | harvard summer school 2011 |

U.S.-based Delta Airlines will soon be the world"s first air carrier to produce its own jet fuel.



Delta announced Monday it is buying a struggling oil refinery near Philadelphia from the Phillips 66 oil company for $150 million.

The refinery has been losing money and its owner had planned to shut it down, leading to thousands of job losses.

Delta chief Richard Anderson calls buying a refinery an innovative approach to managing the airline's largest expense.

Delta spent $12 billion on jet fuel last year, which was about 36 percent of its operating expenses.

Delta says making its own fuel will save it about $300 million a year.

Theo www.voanews.com

Flag raised to celebrate National Unification Day

NguyenQuangTruong.Name.vn | harvard summer school 2011 |

A flag-raising ceremony was held at historic Hien Luong Bridge across the Ben Hai River on April 30 to mark the 40th anniversary of the liberation of Quang Tri province and the 37th anniversary of the Liberation of South Vietnam.

The national flag is a symbol of the nation's confidence, iron will, and strength, proclaiming "Nothing is more precious than independence and freedom."

The people rallied around the flag during the protracted resistance war against the US and overcome tremendous odds and extreme hardships to gain independence for Vietnam.

Tens of thousands of people from all parts of the country sacrificed their lives in their desire for peace, national independence and reunification and to see the national flag flying on Hien Luong Bridge and both banks of the Ben Hai River.

In his speech at the ceremony, Chairman of the Quang Tri provincial People's Committee, Nguyen Duc Cuong, recalled the tradition of heroism during the 20 years of resistance against the US for national salvation.

On the occasion, the Party Committee and people of Quang Tri were awarded two mementos of the Khue Van Cac pavilion, which symbolizes Hanoi, and Nha Rong Wharf in HCM City.

Source: VOV
Theo en.baomoi.com

Burma Opposition Ends Boycott as UN Chief Addresses Parliament

may quay phim | harvard summer school 2011 |

Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her opposition National League for Democracy party have ended their week-long boycott of parliament, after accepting oath-of-office language that calls on her party to "safeguard" the constitution.
Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi talks to reporters in Rangoon, April 30, 2012.
Photo: AP
Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi talks to reporters at the headquarters of her National League for Democracy party, April 30, 2012, in Rangoon.



The Nobel laureate and 42 other NLD colleagues will enter Burma's parliament for the first time Wednesday. They had objected to the words "safeguard the constitution," arguing the language was crafted by a military junta that ruled the country for decades and jailed thousands of democracy activists.

The tactical retreat came Monday, as U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon addressed the Burmese parliament, in a show of support for democratic reforms initiated by the new, nominally-civilian government that took office last year.

"The dramatic changes sweeping Myanmar [Burma] have inspired the world.  And we know that your ambitions for the future reach higher still," Ban said. "I have no doubt that Myanmar will quickly regain its place as a respected and responsible member of the international community."

Burma's President Thein Sein (L) and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon shake hands before their meeting.
Reuters
Burma's President Thein Sein (L) and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon shake hands before their meeting.
Ban, speaking in the administrative capital, Naypyitaw, hailed what he called the "vision, leadership and courage" of President Thein Sein, whose post-election initiatives include clearing the way for Aung San Suu Kyi and her party's successful run for office April 1.

The U.N. chief also praised the international community for its moves to ease long-standing sanctions imposed on the former military regime, and called for foreign investment.

"I urge the international community to go even further in lifting, suspending or easing trade restrictions and other sanctions," he said. "Second, Myanmar needs a substantial increase in international development assistance as well as foreign direct investment."

Meanwhile, in Rangoon, Aung San Suu Kyi addressed the NLD decision to be seated in the new parliament.  She said she and her NLD colleagues were yielding to "the desires of the people" who elected them, and to those who have voiced disapproval for her party's boycott of the legislative body.

She is set to meet with the U.N. chief Tuesday, ahead of Mr. Ban's scheduled visit to upper Burma's Shan state.

Theo www.voanews.com

Rural areas in need of eye care

dau thu ki thuat so | harvard summer school 2011 |

VietNamNet Bridge – Up to 80 per cent of people with visual problems could be treated for eyesight improvement if there were more funding and human resources, according to eye care experts.

VietNamNet Bridge – Up to 80 per cent of people with visual problems could be treated for eyesight improvement if there were more funding and human resources, according to eye care experts.

A doctor examines a child's eyes at the Viet Nam National Institute of Ophthalmology in Ha Noi. Only 211 among 697 districts nationwide have qualified ophthalmologists. (Photo: VNS)

"Millions of rural people, especially the disabled, have no access to eye care services due to shortages of qualified ophthalmologists and eye care clinics," said the Viet Nam National Institute of Ophthalmology Director (VNIO), Do Nhu Hon.

He described this as an "ignored area" of eye care services in Viet Nam.

Hon said that, nearly 1,200 ophthalmologists in Viet Nam were working in the largest cities; Ha Noi, HCM City and Da Nang.

The institute statistics said that the rate of eye doctors per capita in large cities was about 1.4 per 100,000 people in rural areas, compared to 6.5 per 100,000 as country average.

There are only 211 among 697 districts nation-wide that have ophthalmologists or assistants. Half the staff at communal health care clinics have not been trained in eye care.

"Two-thirds of people who have eye problems are unaware that they could be treated," said Hon.

A study by the German CBM Organisation and the National Steering Committee for Blindness Prevention indicated that the negligence of eye care could pose a problem, both at the communal and national scale.

Lack of priority policies to support human resource training and medical staff working in rural, mountainous and remote areas are existing barriers to help the disabled and the blind rehabilitating into community.

A health official from the northern province of Son La Luong Xuan Hia said that the province could not handle an increasing number of blind people.

"The province needs a plan to restructure health care system, particularly training more staff to take care of the disabled, including the blind," said Hia.

"Disabled patients usually receive fewer support from medical staffs than normal patients," said Doctor Nguyen Thi Thu Hien from the VNIO.

She said that the country is lacking programmes for the disabled, and especially for those with visual problems. Most of eye care programmes are funded by NGOs.

"Visual care programmes should receive more attention in this country. This could help improve living standards for the general population," she said.

According to data collected by the General Statistics Office, in 2009 there were 6.7 million people in Viet Nam living with disabilities, of which 75 per cent lived in rural areas, and 33 per cent of them were visual problems.

Nun Van Nga from Nhat Hong Humanity Centre in HCM City, said the lack of awareness and available knowledge about visual health has led many people to go blind. Another problem she pointed out was a lack of training by medical specialists.

VietNamNet/Viet Nam News

Theo en.baomoi.com