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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: Puzzle of the day: What are theseTurkish ladies doing?

1791.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 02:53 pm

http://img100.imageshack.us/img100/5738/turkkad305n305mermiig9.jpg



Thread: The Journey of Water Through Architecture in Istanbul

1792.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 02:48 pm

A photo exhibition titled "The Journey of Water Through Architecture in Istanbul" has been opened in the Hagia Sophia Museum in light of the 5th World Water Forum that will be held in Istanbul in 2009.

"The exhibition will contribute to the unveiling of cultural remnants of past civilizations that developed through the use of water. For those past societies, that we have inherited much from, water was highly important," said Emine Bağlı, chairwoman of the Cultural Association of Turkish Women (TÜRKKAD)

The World Water Forum chose TÜRKKAD to organize the exhibition, Bağlı said in the speech she delivered at the event's opening.

"This exhibition will reflect both the heritage and contemporary societies' perspective of water," she said. The exhibition reflects artistic and technological dimensions of the theme of water through the display of photos of historic structures such as aqueducts, cisterns, water gauges, maksems (ancient domed or vaulted buildings that contained large water tanks), fountains, sebils (charity fountains in the Ottoman Empire) and şadırvans (fountains for ablution in mosque yards). Hagia Sophia Museum President Haluk Dursun said Hagia Sophia itself, with its fountains and cisterns, reflects a rich water culture. Meanwhile, the Saint Vincent and Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves, who is currently in Istanbul, paid a visit to the Hagia Sophia Museum and visited the photo exhibition that showcases a total of 25 works by photographer Mehmet Okutan.
http://www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/article.php?enewsid=99209



Thread: Zeugma Ancient City To Be Covered With Glass Bell Jar

1793.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 03:59 am

Governor Suleyman Kamci of southeastern province of Gaziantep said Friday ancient city of Zeugma would be covered with a structure resembling a "glass bell jar" in an effort to make the historical site a more attractive place for tourists.

Kamci said the historical artifacts unearthed in Zeugma were currently being displayed at Gaziantep Museum in order to protect the pieces from harsh weather conditions.

"However, these artifacts would be more attractive for tourists if they could be preserved and exhibited in their original location," Kamci said.

He said some of the artifacts that are on display at the museum would be carried to their original places once the historical site is covered with a bell jar.

"We are looking for a sponsor for the construction of such a structure," Kamci added.


-ANCIENT CITY OF ZEUGMA-

Zeugma, an ancient city of Commagene, was unearthed in Gaziantep.

The ancient city was originally founded, as a Greek settlement by Seleucus I Nicator, one of the generals of the Alexander the Great, in 300 B.C. King Seleucus almost certainly named the city Seleucia after himself. The population in the city was approximately 80,000.

In 64 B.C., Zeugma was conquered and ruled by the Roman Empire and with this shift the name of the city was changed into Zeugma, meaning "bridge-passage" or "bridge of boats". During the Roman rule, the city became one of the attractions in the region, due to its commercial potential originating from its geo-strategical location because the city was on the Silk Road connecting Antakya to China with a quay or pontoon bridge across the Firat River (Euphrates).

The ancient city was first discovered during archaeological excavations in 1987. Unique mosaics have been unearthed in the city so far.

http://www.turkishpress.com/travel/view.asp?id=221718




Thread: What are you listening now?

1794.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 03:00 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQilTSv5_m8&feature=related


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33mnZi33Mok



Thread: what caught my eye today

1795.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 02:57 am

Penn and Kym
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33mnZi33Mok



Thread: Question for ladies and a confession

1796.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 01:22 am



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdUt02OEg0Y


http://myspace-803.vo.llnwd.net/00634/30/85/634975803_l.jpg



Thread: No flight of fantasy - scientists develop instructions to make a magic carpet

1797.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Mar 2008 Tue 12:32 am

this is not related to Turkey, still interesting:
Perfectly timed for pantomime season, a team of scientists has come up with instructions for how to make a flying carpet. The magical device may owe more to Walt Disney than to The Arabian Nights , but it is not pure fantasy, according to Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and his co-workers.

The researchers have studied the aerodynamics of a flexible, rippling sheet moving through a fluid, and find that it should be possible to make one that will stay aloft in air.

Pure fantasy? A team of US scientists has come up with instructions for how to make a flying carpet
No such carpet is going to ferry people around, though.

The researchers say that to stay afloat in air, a sheet measuring about 10 centimetres long and 0.1 millimetres thick would need to vibrate at about 10 hertz with an amplitude of about 0.25 millimetres.

Making a heavier carpet “fly” is not forbidden by the laws of physics.

But the researchers say that their “computations and scaling laws suggest it will remain in the magical, mystical and virtual realm”, as the engine driving the necessary vibrations would need to be so powerful.

The key to a magic carpet is to create uplift by making ripples that push against fluids such as air or water.

If it is close to a horizontal surface, like a piece of foil settling down onto the floor, such rippling movements create a high pressure in the gap between the sheet and the floor.

“As waves propagate along a flexible foil, they generate a fluid flow that leads to a pressure that lifts the foil, roughly balancing its weight,” Mahadevan explains.

But as well as lifting it, the ripples can drive the foil forward — a trait required by any respectable magic carpet.

“If the waves propagate from one edge,” says Mahadevan, “this causes the foil to tilt ever so slightly and then move in one direction towards the edge that is slightly higher. Fluid is then squeezed from this end to the other, causing the sheet to progress like a submarine ray.”

To travel at speed, the carpet would have to undulate in big ripples, comparable to the size of the carpet. This would make the ride very bumpy.

“If you want a smooth ride, you can generate a lot of small ripples,” says Mahadevan. “But you’ll be slower.”

“It’s cute, it’s charming,” says physicist Tom Witten at the University of Chicago in Illinois, who is intrigued that the researchers thought to study such an unusual engineering feat.




Thread: Happy Easter

1798.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 24 Mar 2008 Mon 09:56 pm



Thread: US MILITARY DEATHS/US MEDIA

1799.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 24 Mar 2008 Mon 03:30 pm

US death toll in Iraq hits 4,000

US troops continue to face attacks from Sunni and Shia fighters as the war enters its sixth year

The death toll of US military in Iraq has passed 4,000 after the US Central Command announced that four more troops had died in an attack.

The soldiers were killed on Sunday by a roadside bomb during a patrol in southern Baghdad, the military said on Monday.

At least 50 Iraqis, most of them civilians, also died on Sunday in violence including bomb blasts and shootings.

In the most deadly attack, 13 Iraqi soldiers were killed when a suicide bomber drove a vehicle packed with explosives into a security checkpoint in the northern city of Mosul.

Conflict rages

More than 29,000 American soldiers have been wounded after years of conflict in Iraq, according to the icasualties.org website, which also carried the 4,000-strong US death toll.

The death toll is still considerably smaller than the number of Iraqis who have died in the conflict.

After five years, was the Iraq war worth it?

"It has been left to journalists and academics to try and estimate the number that have died. Estimates vary from 89,000 on the lowest side to the highest figure that I have heard - which is one million," James Bays, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Baghdad, said.

"When you speak to an Iraqi who has stayed here in this country throughout the last five years, everyone knows someone who has died, and most families have lost a family member."

At least 97 per cent of the US military deaths came after George Bush, the US president, announced the end of "major combat" in Iraq on May 1, 2003.
Facing violence

Since the US military toppled Saddam Hussein, Iraq's president, it has faced a violent anti-occupation campaign and witnessed violence between the country's sectarian communities.

"No casualty is more or less significant than another; each soldier, marine, airman and sailor is equally precious and their loss equally tragic," Rear Admiral Gregory Smith, US military spokesman in Baghdad, said of the losses.

"Being in the military means we are willingly in harm's way to protect others in order to bring hope and a sustainable security to the Iraqi people."

The milestone death toll comes day after Bush defended his decision to invade Iraq, saying the US would remain in Iraq and promising American soldiers that they would emerge victorious.

'Far from over'

Hoda Abdel Hamid, Al Jazeera's Iraq correspondent, said the high death toll showed that the conflict had not been fully contained by the US.

In video

The impact of the US death toll on military families


"The Bush administration keeps saying that things are getting better and better. Reaching such a milestone is a reminder that the war is far from over in Iraq," she said.

"We are at a transition period. Despite the fact that the surge is working, despite the fact that the violence has dropped ... things could get much worse underground."

Abdel Hamid said that the "surge" could not work effectively unless it was accompanied by national reconciliation of Iraq's sectarian communities.

Cause of deaths

More than 80 per cent of soldiers killed have died in attacks by al-Qaeda in Iraq, Sunni and Shia fighters, icasualties.org said.

The remainder died in non-combat related incidents.

Around 40 per cent of those killed were struck by roadside bombs, according to the website, making these weapons the main cause of fatalities.


For the US army, 2007 was the deadliest year,
when it lost 901 soldiers in Iraq [AFP]

Small-arms fire was the second biggest killer, the website said, with helicopter crashes, ambushes, rocket attacks and suicide bombings also the cause of many deaths.

The deadliest year for the military in Iraq was 2007 when it lost 901 troops, the icasualties.org website figures said.

This figure compares with 486 deaths in 2003, the first year of the conflict, 849 in 2004, 846 in 2005 and 822 in 2006. Since the start of 2008, 96 soldiers have died.

Vietnam has been the deadliest war for the US military, apart from the two world wars, with 58,000 soldiers killed between 1964 and 1973, an average of 26 a day.

On average, just over two US soldiers die each day in Iraq.

'Surge' debate

American soldiers in Iraq interviewed by news agencies said that while they were sad about the losses, the conflict was justified.

"It's sad that the number is that high. It makes you wonder if there is a different way of approaching things. Nobody likes to hear that number," said senior Airman Preston Reeves, 26, from Birmingham, Alabama.

"Every one of those people signed up voluntarily and it's a shame that that happens, but tragedies do happen in war.

"It's a shame you don't get support from your own country, when all they want you to do is leave Iraq and all these people will have died in vain."

Withdrawal calls

Against the backdrop of the rising US military death toll, both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, Democratic candidates for the 2008 presidential nomination, are calling for the withdrawal of troops.

Clinton has said that she may consider pulling troops out of the country after 60 days, she should win the nomination and the presidency.

But John McCain, who is set to become the Republican candidate in the presidential race, has advocated US soldiers remaining in Iraq.

McCain remains a strong supporter of Bush's controversial "surge", which saw 30,000 extra soldiers deployed in an attempt to improve security in Iraq.







Thread: what caught my eye today

1800.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 24 Mar 2008 Mon 03:05 pm

US death toll in Iraq hits 4,000

US troops continue to face attacks from Sunni and Shia fighters as the war enters its sixth year

The death toll of US military in Iraq has passed 4,000 after the US Central Command announced that four more troops had died in an attack.

The soldiers were killed on Sunday by a roadside bomb during a patrol in southern Baghdad, the military said on Monday.

At least 50 Iraqis, most of them civilians, also died on Sunday in violence including bomb blasts and shootings.

In the most deadly attack, 13 Iraqi soldiers were killed when a suicide bomber drove a vehicle packed with explosives into a security checkpoint in the northern city of Mosul.

Conflict rages

More than 29,000 American soldiers have been wounded after years of conflict in Iraq, according to the icasualties.org website, which also carried the 4,000-strong US death toll.

The death toll is still considerably smaller than the number of Iraqis who have died in the conflict.

After five years, was the Iraq war worth it?

"It has been left to journalists and academics to try and estimate the number that have died. Estimates vary from 89,000 on the lowest side to the highest figure that I have heard - which is one million," James Bays, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Baghdad, said.

"When you speak to an Iraqi who has stayed here in this country throughout the last five years, everyone knows someone who has died, and most families have lost a family member."

At least 97 per cent of the US military deaths came after George Bush, the US president, announced the end of "major combat" in Iraq on May 1, 2003.
Facing violence

Since the US military toppled Saddam Hussein, Iraq's president, it has faced a violent anti-occupation campaign and witnessed violence between the country's sectarian communities.

"No casualty is more or less significant than another; each soldier, marine, airman and sailor is equally precious and their loss equally tragic," Rear Admiral Gregory Smith, US military spokesman in Baghdad, said of the losses.

"Being in the military means we are willingly in harm's way to protect others in order to bring hope and a sustainable security to the Iraqi people."

The milestone death toll comes day after Bush defended his decision to invade Iraq, saying the US would remain in Iraq and promising American soldiers that they would emerge victorious.

'Far from over'

Hoda Abdel Hamid, Al Jazeera's Iraq correspondent, said the high death toll showed that the conflict had not been fully contained by the US.

In video

The impact of the US death toll on military families


"The Bush administration keeps saying that things are getting better and better. Reaching such a milestone is a reminder that the war is far from over in Iraq," she said.

"We are at a transition period. Despite the fact that the surge is working, despite the fact that the violence has dropped ... things could get much worse underground."

Abdel Hamid said that the "surge" could not work effectively unless it was accompanied by national reconciliation of Iraq's sectarian communities.

Cause of deaths

More than 80 per cent of soldiers killed have died in attacks by al-Qaeda in Iraq, Sunni and Shia fighters, icasualties.org said.

The remainder died in non-combat related incidents.

Around 40 per cent of those killed were struck by roadside bombs, according to the website, making these weapons the main cause of fatalities.


For the US army, 2007 was the deadliest year,
when it lost 901 soldiers in Iraq [AFP]

Small-arms fire was the second biggest killer, the website said, with helicopter crashes, ambushes, rocket attacks and suicide bombings also the cause of many deaths.

The deadliest year for the military in Iraq was 2007 when it lost 901 troops, the icasualties.org website figures said.

This figure compares with 486 deaths in 2003, the first year of the conflict, 849 in 2004, 846 in 2005 and 822 in 2006. Since the start of 2008, 96 soldiers have died.

Vietnam has been the deadliest war for the US military, apart from the two world wars, with 58,000 soldiers killed between 1964 and 1973, an average of 26 a day.

On average, just over two US soldiers die each day in Iraq.

'Surge' debate

American soldiers in Iraq interviewed by news agencies said that while they were sad about the losses, the conflict was justified.

"It's sad that the number is that high. It makes you wonder if there is a different way of approaching things. Nobody likes to hear that number," said senior Airman Preston Reeves, 26, from Birmingham, Alabama.

"Every one of those people signed up voluntarily and it's a shame that that happens, but tragedies do happen in war.

"It's a shame you don't get support from your own country, when all they want you to do is leave Iraq and all these people will have died in vain."

Withdrawal calls

Against the backdrop of the rising US military death toll, both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, Democratic candidates for the 2008 presidential nomination, are calling for the withdrawal of troops.

Clinton has said that she may consider pulling troops out of the country after 60 days, she should win the nomination and the presidency.

But John McCain, who is set to become the Republican candidate in the presidential race, has advocated US soldiers remaining in Iraq.

McCain remains a strong supporter of Bush's controversial "surge", which saw 30,000 extra soldiers deployed in an attempt to improve security in Iraq.








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