Saturday, March 22, 2014

Flight 370: Where is that missing plane?




The Fascination Surrounding The Disappearance of The Malaysia Airlines Plane


Where is that missing plane?
That is the million dollar question. It has been two weeks since Malaysian Flight 370 disappeared, and now there are signs that they may have found pieces of it off the Australian coast. How in this day and age with all the technology- satellites, cameras, radar, cellphones- can something as big as a 777 airplane just go missing for 13 days?
It simply defies logic.
The story understandably has gripped the world. I've been reporting on it on CNN since it first went missing. People stop me on the street asking about that plane. Whenever I’m on the air reporting the story, my twitter feed trends worldwide; meaning it’s one of the top things people are tweeting about in the world. I’ve never seen anything like it. When I ask psychologists about it they say it’s because, number one, it’s a mystery. Even in our sleeping hours our brains are constantly trying to solve problems and are not satisfied until it does. This problem has not been solved.
And number two, it’s relatable.
Most of us fly, if not frequently for business, we do it a few times a year for holidays or vacations. So, we put ourselves in the shoes of the passengers. My colleague Sally Kohn wrote this on CNN.com: “Stories about death inherently hold our attention. The more dark among us — and HBO producers — might attribute this to a lust for the gruesome. Freud would simply call it our “death drive” — that mix of fear and fascination that our lives must ultimately end.”
I agree with her. It’s more often than not the dark shows like The Walking Dead –zombies- or True Blood- vampires- or Dexter-serial killers-that garner the biggest ratings and cult followings. And let’s not forget The X Files, The Twilight Zone and so on. That’s all well and good. Not to bring you down, we must remember that there are at least 239 families who are grieving. There are mothers who are in anguish. One of them stepped in front of cameras earlier this week and cried and pleaded with the Malaysian government to tell her what happened to her son. We must hold that top of mind when we’re trying to figure out this conundrum.
One man’s mystery is another man or woman’s misery.

Malaysia Airlines Flight 370

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 (MH370/MAS370)[a] was a scheduled international passenger flight that disappeared on 8 March 2014 en route from Kuala Lumpur International Airport to Beijing Capital International Airport. The aircraft, a Boeing 777-200ER, last made contact with air traffic control less than an hour after take-off. Operated by Malaysia Airlines (MAS), the plane carried 12 crew members and 227 passengers from 15 nations, the majority of passengers being Chinese citizens.
On the same day, a joint search and rescue effort, later reported as the largest in history, was initiated in the Gulf of Thailand and the South China Sea. On 11 March, the search area was extended to the Strait of Malacca. On 12 March, authorities also began to search the Andaman Sea, northwest of the Strait of Malacca. Subsequently, new information led to the search area being expanded to include the Indian Ocean south of Sumatra, as well as significant tracts of land.
On 15 March, in the wake of media reports that US investigators believed that the aircraft had headed west back across the Malay Peninsula after air traffic control lost contact and that a satellite had continued to receive "pings" from the aircraft for several hours,[b] Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak announced that satellite-related data showed that the aircraft's ACARS and transponder had been switched off and that radar data indicated that the aircraft's "movements are consistent with the deliberate action of someone on the plane." As of 18 March, there were 26 countries participating in the revised search, focusing on a northern locus from the Kazakh–Turkmen border to northern Thailand, as well as a southern locus from Indonesia to the southern Indian Ocean.
The flight departed from Kuala Lumpur International Airport on 8 March at 00:41 local time (16:41 UTC, 7 March) and was scheduled to land at Beijing Capital International Airport at 06:30 local time (22:30 UTC, 7 March). It climbed to its assigned cruise altitude of 35,000 feet (10,700 m) and was travelling at 471 knots (542 mph; 872 km/h) true airspeed when it ceased all communications and the transponder signal was lost. The aircraft's last known position on 8 March at 01:21 local time (17:21 UTC, 7 March) was 6°55′15″N 103°34′43″E, corresponding to the navigational waypoint IGARI in the Gulf of Thailand, at which the aircraft was due to alter its course slightly eastward.
The aircraft was expected to contact air traffic control in Ho Chi Minh City as it passed into Vietnamese airspace just north of the point where contact was lost. The captain of another aircraft had attempted to reach the pilots of MH370 "just after 1:30 a.m." to relay Vietnamese Air Traffic Control's request for MH370 to contact it; the captain said he was able to establish contact, but just heard "mumbling" and static.
Malaysia Airlines (MAS) issued a media statement at 07:24, one hour after the scheduled arrival of the flight in Beijing, stating that contact with the flight had been lost by Malaysian ATC at 02:40. MAS stated that the government had initiated search and rescue operations. It later emerged that Subang Air Traffic Control had lost contact with the aircraft at 01:22 and notified Malaysia Airlines at 02:40. Neither the crew nor the aircraft's onboard communication systems relayed a distress signal, indications of bad weather, or technical problems before vanishing from radar screens. The last words that Malaysian air traffic controllers heard, at 01:19, were those of the co-pilot saying "All right, good night".
New Scientist reported that, prior to the aircraft's disappearance, two ACARS reports had been automatically issued to engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce's monitoring centre in the United Kingdom; and The Wall Street Journal, citing sources in the US government, asserted that Rolls-Royce had received an aircraft health report every thirty minutes for five hours, implying that the aircraft had remained aloft for four hours after its transponder went offline.
The following day, the acting Transport Minister of Malaysia announced that the details of The Wall Street Journal report were inaccurate, stating that the final engine transmission was received at 01:07, prior to the flight's disappearance from secondary radar. Follow-up reporting by Reuters suggested that the evidence may have taken the form of "pings" sent by the aircraft's communication systems, and possibly not data (telemetry reports).
The Wall Street Journal later removed references to Rolls-Royce from its report and stated that the belief of continued flight was "based on analysis of signals sent by the Boeing 777's satellite-communication link... the link operated in a kind of standby mode and sought to establish contact with a satellite or satellites. These transmissions did not include data..." On 13 March, the White House Press Secretary said "an additional search area may be opened in the Indian Ocean based on some new information" and a senior official at The Pentagon told ABC News: "We have an indication the plane went down in the Indian Ocean." Inmarsat said that "routine, automated signals were registered" on its network, although a company executive did add that "keep-alive message[s]" continued to be sent after air traffic control first lost contact and that these "ping signals" could be analysed to help estimate the aircraft's location.
On 14 March, The Independent stated, based on the continued pinging by the aircraft, that it could not have disintegrated in mid-flight or had other sudden catastrophic occurrence: "all signals – the pings to the satellite, the data messages and the transponder – would be expected to stop at the same time". A call for transponders to be automated and not arbitrarily controlled by humans gained momentum after the attacks of 11 September 2001, when three of the hijacked aircraft had their transponders switched off. However, no changes were made as aviation experts opted for a flexible control, believing that transponders may need to be reset in case of a malfunction or an electrical emergency.
According to Chinese media, relatives heard ringing tones when calling to the passengers. However, Flight 370 was not equipped with a base station that some airlines offer for in-flight cellphone contact, it is presumed that the passengers' low powered cellphones were not able to transmit back due to distance from a transmission tower, flight altitude, and shielding by the aircraft body.
On 11 March, it was reported that military radar indicated the aircraft had turned west and continued flying for 70 minutes before disappearing off the Malaysian radar near Pulau Perak, and that it was tracked flying at a lower altitude across Malaysia to the Malacca Strait. This location was approximately 500 kilometres (310 mi) from its last contact with civilian radar. The next day, the Royal Malaysian Air Force chief distanced himself from the report saying it should not be misinterpreted. According to the Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Transport, Pham Quy Tieu, "We informed Malaysia on the day we lost contact with the flight that we noticed the flight turned back west but Malaysia did not respond."
US experts, assigned to assist with the investigation while maintaining a low profile that did not upstage Malaysian authorities, analysed the radar data and subsequently reported that the radar data did indeed indicate that the aircraft had headed west back across the Malay Peninsula, with Reuters and The New York Times saying that the route changes suggested that the aircraft remained under a trained pilot's control. The New York Times also said the aircraft experienced significant changes in altitude.
Although Bloomberg News said that analysis of the last satellite "ping" received suggested a last known location approximately 1,000 miles (1,600 km) west of Perth, Australia, the Malaysian Prime Minister on 15 March said that the last signal, which was received at 08:11 Malaysian time, might have originated from as far north as Kazakhstan. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak explained that the signals could not be more precisely located than to one of two possible loci: a northern locus stretching approximately from the border of Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan to northern Thailand, or a southern locus stretching from Indonesia to the southern Indian Ocean. China, Thailand and India all stated that there was no evidence that the aircraft ever entered their airspace.
On 17 March, The New York Times, citing "senior American officials," said that the scheduled flight path was pre-programmed to unspecified western coordinates through the flight management system before the ACARS stopped functioning, and a new waypoint "far off the path to Beijing" was added. With such a reprogramming the aircraft would make a banked turn at a comfortable angle of around 20 degrees and the passengers would not feel anything unusual.

LESBIAN COUPLE ALLEGEDLY KILLED BY ONE OF THE WOMEN'S FATHER

Britney Cosby and Crystal Jackson
Britney Cosby and Crystal Jackson

What We MUST Learn From the Murders of Britney Cosby and Crystal Jackson

[OPINION] AS A LESBIAN COUPLE IS ALLEGEDLY KILLED BY ONE OF THE WOMEN'S FATHERS, CYNTHIA GREENLEE SAYS A CULTURE OF INTOLERANCE MUST GIVE WAY TO A CULTURE OF LOVE


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I know, with certainty, that my father would not murder me.
Earlier this month, police discovered the bodies of 24-year-old Britney Cosby and her same-sex partner, Crystal Jackson, dumped like so much rubbish outside a Texas convenience store.  Authorities later arrested Cosby’s father, James, a registered sex offender who lived with Cosby and her grandmother. While details and a motive for the killings are not entirely clear, family members have said that Cosby disapproved of his daughter’s “lifestyle.”
Trying to wrap my mind around this particularly heinous act of domestic violence (or, rather, trying not to think about it), my thoughts kept returning to my own large Southern Black family. While I can say with confidence that none of my kin would kill me for my sexuality — for that’s the implication in the Cosby-Jackson murders — or any other reason, I’ve also heard too many kitchen-table comments about “lifestyle” from relatives and too much snickering about that one who “had sugar in his blood.” All this in a clan that’s chockablock with gays on the family tree, but has operated under our own suffocating “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. Violence doesn’t always have to be physical.
RELATED: GAY MEN ARE NOT 'A WASTE'
Many of those casually homophobic comments revolved around my cousin Patrick, who died several years ago and would have turned 47 on this St. Patrick’s Day. As kids, we rode on the back of my uncle’s pickup truck in the North Carolina mountains. He grew to be a man of both substance and model-worthy beauty. Whenever you saw Patrick, you also saw his impossibly spoiled Chihuahua-Yorkies, Dexter and Divo (the masculine form of “diva”). Whenever he saw you, he made you feel like you were the most important thing in his world. Though his life was often a life of struggle, he wrote in his journal that “abundance is my natural state.” His worst flaws were also his best qualities: He cared nothing for money (particularly, the bills), and he had the habit of generously loving people ill-equipped to love him in return.
And, yes, Patrick was gay. I don’t mean to reduce him to his sexuality. But it needs to be said directly, emphatically and affirmatively. I’m a historian. Believe me, I know it’s far too easy to write someone’s sexuality out of their eulogies and their histories.
When I was a college junior, a friend and I visited Patrick in Los Angeles. Giving us the grand tour of his apartment, he threw open a closed door to his roommate’s bedroom. It had the un-lived feel of a hotel room, with a few items artfully strewn across the futon. When I returned home, I called Patrick and, after chatting a while, I said quietly, “Patrick, I know that wasn’t Donnie’s bedroom. I know he’s not just your roommate, and I know you’re gay.” A long pause, then “What are you talking about? Does everybody in the family think I’m gay”? My clumsy attempt to signal my openness threw him into a panic.
Patrick was born to a teenage mom and a hellraiser who was reincarnated into a hellfire-and-brimstone preacher. As a child, his father made Patrick don his sister’s dresses and pushed him out the house for all the neighbors to see and mock his “effeminate” ways. Patrick left home as a teen (not a surprise) and worked for a a record store, where his father’s congregants sometimes laid “Rest in Peace” wreaths on the sidewalk. For years, he would meet his mother and sister only at the mall or public places. When he came out of the closet, Patrick became an “apostate.”
The anguish of Patrick’s “homegoing” was compounded by the need to raise funds for his funeral; Patrick only had a small life insurance policy. Thinking the large Greenlee extended family could crowd-source the expenses, I called and talked to relatives far and wide. There was the elderly relative who insinuated that Patrick had AIDS, saying “you know that boy was out in California in those bathhouses”; another who doesn’t go out the house without a few hundred dollar bills in his wallet, but “didn’t have the money”; and a cousin who prefaced her public commitment of $250 with “I’ll give, but I don’t approve of his lifestyle,” and then gave a fraction of what she promised.
I couldn’t understand why some people were talking about “lifestyles” when others of us were reeling from Patrick’s death. Before he died, Patrick told me that being born in a family is itself a social contract: that we were bound to love each other and do each other right. He planned to make us live up to that contract. But invoking “love” and “family” wasn’t particularly effective. My family’s reluctance to open their wallets or do so only after moralizing indicated just how badly we had failed Patrick.
Our failure began well before his death. I could think back more than a decade, when a cousin who cozied up to Patrick suggested that Patrick’s bout of skin cancer might be “the AIDS” — this said in a stage whisper. And then there was the aunt who would allow me to take her grandson anywhere anytime, but wouldn’t let Patrick take the teen to the movies without others along. When I talked to another cousin about the aunt’s obvious bigotry — based on the idea that Patrick would molest his younger cousin because he was gay and therefore a pedophile ­— the response: “That’s not her. It’s her church.”
I won’t absolve The Black Church — which often wraps its retrograde gender and sexuality politics in scripture and choir robes — and I won’t deny its impact on how many Black families view homosexuality and their loved ones. It’s hard to counter homophobia in the family when it comes with a readymade quote from Leviticus, and the church has been a pillar of Black survival. But I don't believe that Black families are inherently more homophobic than any other communities in our society.
Bigotry is never simple. And I know my family’s story is not a simple story of villains and victims. When Patrick became ill, I saw his father rub his feet to alleviate the painful symptoms of his cancer, the numbing of his extremities —  a humbling act of kindness from a man who will likely always believe his son was “deviant.” I remember Patrick’s grandmother, who took him in and didn’t blink at rumors that he was “carrying on” with another preacher’s son in their small town. I appreciate my cousins who loved Patrick  — the messy, sparkling, lovable entirety of him — and didn’t balk when he needed the last support we could give him.
Patrick was infinitely more forgiving than I am; having to leave home at an early age meant he gave up family connections, a safety net, the possibility of college and years of enhanced earning power. I still feel angry for him, and I struggle to make even banal conversation with relatives who have spouted homophobia at the kitchen table. I grapple with trying to understand their intentions and whether intentions really matter when your actions alienate and stigmatize your family. One day soon, I’ll start this conversation … with them.
There is now a cottage industry in “how to be an ally” lists. But I don’t know what it means to be an ally in my family, how to speak so others will listen, but not be tolerant of intolerance. “Ally” seems too pale, too neutral a word to describe the action of being radically loving, not that provisional “hate-the-sin-love-the-sinner” kind of love.
For me, justice is the highest expression of love: To love you, I must want for you what I would want for myself, the same opportunity to live your best life. We need to be radically loving to counter the real emotional violence done to our relatives simply because they are gay; the imposed silence of the closet at the old homeplace; and the family reunions where not all family could be sure of their welcome.
Cynthia Greenlee is a doctoral candidate in African-American history at Duke University and a member of the #EchoingIda Black women’s writing collective. You can follow her @CynthiaGreenlee.


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Friday, March 14, 2014

Bill Maher and his panel had nothing but praise for Sen. Rand Paul‘s attempt to distance himself from the warhawk-ish tendencies of his party.

 

Effusive Praise for Rand Paul’s

 Non-Interventionism



http://www.mediaite.com/tv/bill-maher-and-real-time-panel-have-effusive-praise-for-rand-pauls-non-interventionism/#ooid=Rub3k2bDoBPZqEm2PMsztDitogdZLMKB

Bill Maher does not often have nice things to say about Republicans, but on this Friday’s edition of Real Time, he and his panel had nothing but praise for Sen. Rand Paul‘s attempt to distance himself from the warhawk-ish tendencies of his party.

Joined by Amy “Tiger Mom” Chua, famed blogger Andrew Sullivan, and author Salman Rushdie, Maher noted that most of the speakers at last week’s Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) were calling President Obama a “pussy” for not taking on the Russians in Crimea. By contrast, he said, Sen. Paul won the straw poll while being of the belief that America must not maintain an empire; and that America needn’t aggressively intervene abroad.

Sullivan agreed: “I think Rand Paul’s attempt to say what most people in this country really understand, which is that we don’t need to run the world. We don’t want to run the world. America would be in a better place if we were less interested in our own power, and more interested in freedom.” The audience applauded such a sentiment.

-RELATED: Memo to Cable News: Learn the Difference Between ‘Isolationism’ and ‘Non-Interventionism’

Rushdie asserted that if Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee in 2016, Rand Paul could stand a chance because he would have the youth vote behind him. “She’ll come off like a neocon,” Sullivan agreed. “In fact, she is a bit of a neocon.”

“And he’s so independent-minded,” Chua chimed in. “I think with Hillary Clinton, you feel like it’s just going to fit into certain familiar things. But he’s just a little unpredictable, you know, he doesn’t care what people think. That’s appealing to a lot of people.”

Watch below, via HBO:

Flight 370: Radar data suggests missing Malaysia plane deliberately flown way off course, but still so many questions.


Malaysia Flight 370: Amid a sea of questions, 28 of the most compelling

By Tom Watkins and Michael Pearson, CNN
updated 9:28 PM EDT, Fri March 14, 2014



(CNN) -- Questions about the fate of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared a week ago over Southeast Asia, continued Friday to hang in the air. Here is what we know -- and don't know -- from hard data to conspiracy theories.
THE SEARCH
1. Where is the plane?
As evidence grows that the plane could have flown for hours after losing contact with air traffic control, the search area too has grown: It now includes the Gulf of Thailand, South China Sea, Strait of Malacca, the Andaman Sea and the Indian Ocean.
That could be anywhere from India to Australia, a stretch of the globe so vast that only the luckiest of breaks would turn up the missing plane. "This is an impossible task," said Peter Goelz, former National Transportation Safety Board managing director. "They've got to narrow it down more."
A classified analysis of electronic and satellite data suggests Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 likely crashed either in the Bay of Bengal or elsewhere in the Indian Ocean, CNN learned Friday.
The analysis, conducted by the United States and Malaysian governments, used radar data and satellite pings to calculate that the plane diverted to the west, across the Malayan peninsula, and then either flew in a northwest direction toward the Bay of Bengal or southwest into another part of the Indian Ocean.
2. What happened to the plane?
No one knows for sure. But Malaysian military radar did register dramatic changes for Flight 370 in altitude -- going up to 45,000 feet, before descending to 23,000 feet -- and an erratic path as it moved across Malaysia in what are some of the last known readings of the plane's location, according to a senior US official.
The same official, who is familiar with analysis of that radar data and declined to be identified because of the sensitive nature of the information, cautioned that this assessment is not definitive. The readings are not believed entirely accurate due to the distance the plane was operating from the radars that detected it, according to the official.
3. Did the aircraft go off course?
Possibly. "I'm trying to imagine a scenario in which a pilot would do that," said John Testrake, an American Airlines pilot with more than a quarter-century of experience flying. But, he added, "if it had stayed on course, (searchers) would have found the wreckage."
Even if it had lost power, investigators would have been able to calculate its location within 100 miles or so based on its trajectory, he said. "Apparently it didn't, and somebody took it off course. That has to be a pilot or somebody in the cockpit to do that."
Some accounts have placed the aircraft hundreds of miles from its expected flight path to Beijing, and authorities have expanded the search area to include that possibility. But they're also still searching along the planned flight path. A big problem is that the plane's identifying transponder stopped working. Though it would have remained visible to radar, that is more difficult to follow. Still, experts are reviewing radar and satellite data in hopes of finding the plane.
4. How big is the search area?
Authorities break huge swaths of the possible crash site into small grids. Then, planes or ships scour the grids to eliminate them as candidates. As of Friday, 57 ships and 48 aircraft from 13 countries were involved in the search. The grids cover the southern tip of Vietnam, South Thailand, about half of Peninsular Malaysia and parts of the South China Sea, Gulf of Thailand, Strait of Malacca and Andaman Sea and the Indian Ocean.
5. If the plane crashed into the water, would anything still be floating?
Not large pieces of the plane, according to Steve Wallace, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration's former director of accident investigation. But "it's certainly possible that substantial pieces of lightweight debris, not aircraft structure, could be found floating six days after the aircraft struck the water," he said. That could include things like life jackets and seat cushions, he said.
A FAILURE TO COMMUNICATE
6. How does a plane the size of a Boeing 777-200ER just disappear?
It doesn't. It -- or its pieces -- are somewhere. It doesn't help that Flight 370's flight path is unclear and that the search areas include vast waters and sparsely populated jungles and mountains.
But its apparent disappearance is made even stranger by the fact that the jet was laden with massive amounts of technology, including a transponder, UHF and VHF radios, automatic beacons, GPS and computer communications systems, as well as the cell phones of the passengers and crew.
7. What role does the transponder play, and why do I hear so much about it?
  A transponder is a radio transmitter that is in the cockpit and works with ground radar to communicate with air traffic controllers. When it receives a radar signal, it returns a code that identifies the aircraft, its speed, the altitude and the position. It's a key element because it stopped working during the flight.
8. Do we know why it stopped working? How do you turn it off?
That's a key question. The transponder is between the pilots and can be turned off with a twist of the wrist, but former airline Capt. Mark Weiss said that, because of the vital information it provides, it's highly unlikely a pilot would turn it off. Though it is considered reliable, it sometimes fails, which is why the jet carries a backup transponder.
But activating the second transponder would have required that the pilot or co-pilot make the switch, something he may find difficult to do in a high-stress situation. Without the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, it's difficult to say who was in the cockpit and what happened, Weiss said.
That may be intentional. One reason to turn off the transponder would be to hide the plane's flight information from radar screens.
Other experts give conflicting opinions: One says the circumstances point to someone -- perhaps a hijacker -- deliberately turning the plane around; another says a catastrophic power failure could explain the anomalies.
9. What about the plane's data and voice recorders?
Investigators would love to find the recorders, which -- assuming they were not destroyed in a crash -- would hold a trove of information on what was going on in the cockpit at the time the plane disappeared from radar, as well as technical data about what the plane was doing and how it was performing. The problem is that investigators have not been able to detect where they might be. So, until searchers can narrow their efforts, they won't help.
And time could prove key: The recorders' batteries die after about 30 days.
10. Was anything else on the plane sending data?
Authorities believe that "pings" from the plane's Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS) were transmitted to satellites for four to five hours after the transponder stopped sending signals, a senior U.S. official told CNN.
That information, combined with radar data and the fuel the jet was known to be carrying, suggests that the plane may have flown to the Indian Ocean, the official said. That would be in the opposite direction of the plane's scheduled route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
But the reports on this latest lead have conflicted: Malaysian authorities had said earlier that nothing on the plane was transmitting after 1:07 a.m. Saturday.
11. What is ACARS?
Introduced in 1978, the air/ground data system was initially used by airlines to record and report basic aircraft movement messages, according to Rockwell Collins, which sells avionics and communications systems to aviation customers. In 1989, ACARS's use was expanded to include air traffic service communications. It uses three radio frequency paths for delivery: two ground-based satellite systems (VHF and UHF) and a satellite link (SATCOM) to send and receive information.
"It's a system where you send digital communications from ship to ground," said John Testrake, a pilot for American Airlines with more than 20 years' experience flying. The automated system generally sends routine messages to the airline, like when the aircraft lifted off or landed and how much fuel it may have, he said. It can also be used to communicate text messages like "light continuous turbulence over the Rockies south of Denver," he said.
"You might want to send that report to your dispatcher so they can give a heads up to the next flight that's coming into that area."
Tom Haueter, former director of the National Transportation Safety Board's Office of Aviation Safety, said ACARS typically beams down engine parameters, temperatures, the amount of fuel burn and any maintenance discrepancies.
According to Malaysia Airlines, all of its aircraft are equipped with ACARS, which transmits data automatically. "Nevertheless, there were no distress calls, and no information was relayed," the airline said.
12. How long was this system working?
The aircraft's ACARS was sending pings over five hours after the transponder last emitted a signal, an aviation industry source told CNN on Friday. These pings don't provide information about speed or altitude, but they do indicate the plane was intact for that long since an aircraft has to be powered and have structural integrity for the ACARS to operate, the source said.
Those pings were detected by satellites, which combined with radar and other data was used to calculate where the plane may have traveled. A U.S. official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, said the satellite recorded electronic "handshakes" with the 777 that were later analyzed.
The information gleamed from this analysis -- which the U.S. official described as "unprecedented" -- fueled thinking that the aircraft turned westward away from the Gulf of Thailand and toward the Indian Ocean. Referring to the five-to-six hour range in which it's believed the plane was flying after its transponder cut off, the same official said, "We believe we have the time of the loss of the airplane within an hour."
THE PILOTS, THE COCKPIT AND THE BATHROOM
13. Just how experienced were the pilots?
Very. Fariq Ab Hamid, 27, who joined Malaysia Airlines in 2007, was first officer on the flight. He has 2,763 flying hours and was transitioning to the Boeing 777-200 after finishing training in a flight simulator. The pilot, Capt. Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, has 18,365 flying hours. He joined the airline in 1981.
14. If they're so experienced, why did I read about the first officer letting passengers in the cockpit on another flight? Is that legal?
Jonti Roos has said that Fariq invited her and a friend into the cockpit for a 2011 flight from Phuket, Thailand, to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from takeoff to touchdown. Though this would be a violation of U.S. regulations put in place after the September 11, 2001, attacks, the legality would vary from country to country. Upon learning of Roos' assertion, Malaysia Airlines said it was "shocked," and former FAA Chief of Staff Michael Goldfarb said such behavior "violates every code of conduct."
Though what Fariq is accused of having done would have been against company policy, "nobody on that plane is going to stop him," Testrake said. Still, such behavior would have resulted in firing on a U.S. carrier, he said. "The days are long gone where you could invite the pretty girl up; there are other ways to get pretty girls."
15. They're experienced, but that doesn't mean they couldn't have made a mistake, does it?
Certainly possible. That's what the investigation showed happened with the 2009 Air France flight, though there was an element of mechanical failure as well. In that case, though, there was also inclement weather -- not the case with Flight 370. As of Friday, nothing suggests that pilot error played a role in the flight's disappearance.
16. Was the cockpit door locked?
We don't know what was going on in the Boeing jet, but, since the September terrorist attacks, "the door is always locked any time a plane is moving," said American's Testrake.
And when nature calls?
The pilot would not discuss specifics but noted, "Basically, it involves other crew members, so there's always at least two members in the cockpit. The door is unlocked briefly, for a few seconds, just long enough for the people to go in and out."
FROM HARD NEWS TO IDLE SPECULATION
17. Didn't The Wall Street Journal report that the plane had sent out engine data for hours?
Yes. The newspaper then corrected its story, saying that data leading investigators to believe the plane had flown for up to five hours actually came from the plane's satellite-communication link. Malaysian officials denied the newspaper's initial report, and a senior aviation source with extensive knowledge of the matter told CNN's Richard Quest that the newspaper's account was wrong. The source told Quest the plane was not sending engine data, as the newspaper had originally reported.
18. Could the plane have landed somewhere?
One theory U.S. officials are considering, according to that Wall Street Journal report, is that someone might have taken the plane to be used for some other purpose later. So it's theoretically possible that the plane could have landed at a remote airstrip where it's being hidden.
But there are some big holes in that theory. The 777 is a big plane. It requires, at minimum, nearly a mile to land. And, says Quest, there's the matter of getting it someplace without setting off alarm bells. "You can't just fly a Triple 7 and not have a radar trace," he said. One senior U.S. official, citing information Malaysia has shared with the United States, told CNN that "there is probably a significant likelihood" that the aircraft is on the floor of the Indian Ocean.
19. Couldn't a pilot just "fly under the radar"?
Again, theoretically. As a tool intended to keep track of what's going on in the sky, radar data don't extend all the way to the ground. Military pilots are trained to take advantage of this when they need to sneak into a country undetected. But those aircraft are also equipped with terrain-evading radar and other features intended to help fighter and helicopter pilots hug the ground, noted aviation consultant Keith Wolzinger of the Spectrum Group. Understandably, Boeing doesn't offer those features on its commercial airliners. "Airline pilots are not trained for radar avoidance," said Wolzinger, himself a former 777 pilot. "We like to be on radar." Also, unlike military craft, civilian airliners don't have gear to detect when they've been spotted on radar. So any efforts to fly undetected would be rudimentary.
20. What about those Chinese satellite photos?
On Wednesday, China released satellite images from a spot in the South China Sea that appeared to show large objects floating in the water Sunday, a day after the disappearance. Search crews checked the location and found no trace of wreckage. China later said that releasing the photos was a mistake and that the images weren't related to the plane, according to a Malaysian official.
21. How about "crowdsourcing"? Could that help find the plane?
Ostensibly. Colorado firm DigitalGlobe has one of the most advanced commercial satellite networks, and its images of the Strait of Malacca and Gulf of Thailand can capture details as small as a baseball field's home plate, the longest side of which is 17 inches. Volunteers can flag anything they find interesting, but so many answered the call this week that the firm's website crashed. (The website appeared to be up on Friday.) Also, there's the vast size of the search area.
22. It's been more than a decade since 9/11, but is foul play possible? Hijackers? Terrorism?
The CIA and FBI aren't ruling it out, but authorities aren't ruling out much, at this point. It's highly suspicious that the plane may have turned around. Those suspicions are further fueled by the loss of communications with the plane, considering the aircraft had "redundant electrical systems" that would have had to be disabled. Robert Francis, former vice chairman of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, said his first thought upon hearing the circumstances of the flight's mysterious disappearance was that it blew up, but even an explosion would not be proof of terrorism.
23. What about those passengers who were flying with stolen passports?
Interpol says it has identified the men as Iranians Pouri Nourmohammadi, 18, and Delavar Seyed Mohammad Reza, 29, and Malaysian investigators say neither of them has any apparent connection to terrorist organizations. Stolen passports don't necessarily indicate terrorism. In fact, passengers flew without having their travel documents checked against its lost-and-stolen passport database more than a billion times in 2013, according to Interpol. Among the reasons someone might use a stolen passport: to immigrate to another country, to export goods without being paying taxes or to smuggle stolen goods, people, drugs or weapons.
24. Could mechanical failure explain it?
It's one of the stronger possibilities. The absence of a debris field could suggest that the pilot made an emergency landing on water and the plane then sank intact, but there is still the mystery of the distress signal. There wasn't one. However, aviation consultant Kit Darby has said that it's possible there was a power failure, and during the hour of backup power the pilot was attempting to return to "the airports and a region he knows." There's also the possibility that the tail or a wing tore from the fuselage. This particular Boeing had suffered a clipped wingtip in the past, but Boeing repaired it. Another possibility is that a window or door failed, which would cause the temperature inside the plane to drop to 60 degrees below zero, creating a freezing fog and giving crew members only seconds to don oxygen masks before becoming disoriented and then incapacitated.
25. Could lithium batteries be to blame?
They could be. Investigators are looking into concerns lithium batteries in the cargo hold -- which have been blamed in previous crashes -- played a role in the disappearance, according to U.S. officials briefed on intelligence and law-enforcement developments in the investigation. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
If the batteries being carried on the plane caused a fire, it could have caused the 777 to crash. But it doesn't explain other anomalies, like why it may have turned west.
For example, a pilot's likely first instinct if lithium batteries were smoldering would have been to turn around and return to the airport of origin -- not fly for an additional five hours, said Arthur Rosenberg, an aviation expert who is a pilot, engineer and partner in the New York-based law firm Soberman & Rosenberg. It's also likely radio traffic would have initially been picked up, as it was with the pilots aboard Swissair Flight 111 that crashed off the coast of Canada following a fire, he said.
26. Could it have been hit by a meteor?
There was a meteor in the area at takeoff, but this seems to be atop a list of strange conspiracy theories popping up in the absence of empirical data explaining the plane's disappearance. Given what little is known about the flight path, it seems like a long, long shot that a meteor is to blame.
27. What about reports that passengers' cell phones continued operating after the flight's disappearance?
The answer to the question about meteors and conspiracy theories applies here, too. When phones are disabled or turned off -- which would presumably happen after a plane crash -- calls to those cell phones go directly to voice mail. Friends and loved ones of the missing passengers, however, reported ringing when they called. Technology industry analyst Jeff Kagan says a call would connect first to a network before trying to find the end user, and the ringing sound callers hear masks the silence they would otherwise hear while waiting for the connection to be made. "If it doesn't find the phone after a few minutes, after a few rings, then typically, it disconnects, and that's what's happening," he said.
PRECEDENT
28. Is this the first time a plane has vanished?
No. Perhaps no disappearance proved as vexing as Air France 447, which went down after departing Rio de Janeiro on June 1, 2009. It took four searches and almost two years before the bulk of the wreckage and majority of bodies were recovered. The voice and data recorders weren't found on the ocean floor until May 2011.
Analysis shows 2 possible Indian Ocean paths for airliner
Interactive: What happened to Malaysia Airlines Flight 370?
Transponder's fate may prove key to solving puzzle
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: Days pass, no word of loved ones

CNN's Rene Marsh, Shimon Prokupecz, Eliott C. McLaughlin, Greg Botelho, Chelsea J. Carter, Mike Ahlers, Barbara Starr, Jim Sciutto and Pamela Brown contributed to this report.


Exclusive: Radar data suggests missing Malaysia plane deliberately flown way off course - sources

KUALA LUMPUR Fri Mar 14, 2014 6:01am EDT
The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers USS Kidd and USS Pinckney are seen en transit in the Pacific Ocean in this U.S. Navy picture taken May 18, 2011. Kidd and Pinkney have been searching for the missing Malaysian airliner and are being re-deployed to the Strait of Malacca of Malaysia's west coast as new search areas are opened in the Indian Ocean, according to officials on March 13, 2014. REUTERS/US Navy/Seaman Apprentice Carla Ocampo/Handout
The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers USS Kidd and USS Pinckney are seen en transit in the Pacific Ocean in this U.S. Navy picture taken May 18, 2011. Kidd and Pinkney have been searching for the missing Malaysian airliner and are being re-deployed to the Strait of Malacca of Malaysia's west coast as new search areas are opened in the Indian Ocean, according to officials on March 13, 2014.
CREDIT: REUTERS/US NAVY/SEAMAN APPRENTICE CARLA OCAMPO/HANDOUT 
(Reuters) - Military radar data suggests a Malaysia Airlines jetliner missing for nearly a week was deliberately flown hundreds of miles off course, heightening suspicions of foul play among investigators, sources told Reuters on Friday.

Analysis of the Malaysia data suggests the plane, with 239 people on board, diverted from its intended northeast route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing and flew west instead, using airline flight corridors normally employed for routes to the Middle East and Europe, said sources familiar with investigations into the Boeing 777's disappearance.

Two sources said an unidentified aircraft that investigators believe was Flight MH370 was following a route between navigational waypoints when it was last plotted on military radar off the country's northwest coast.

This indicates that it was either being flown by the pilots or someone with knowledge of those waypoints, the sources said.

The last plot on the military radar's tracking suggested the plane was flying toward India's Andaman Islands, a chain of isles between the Andaman Sea and the Bay of Bengal, they said.

Waypoints are geographic locations, worked out by calculating longitude and latitude, that help pilots navigate along established air corridors.

A third source familiar with the investigation said inquiries were focusing increasingly on the theory that someone who knew how to fly a plane deliberately diverted the flight.

POSSIBLE SABOTAGE OR HIJACK

"What we can say is we are looking at sabotage, with hijack still on the cards," said that source, a senior Malaysian police official.

All three sources declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media and due to the sensitivity of the investigation.

Officials at Malaysia's Ministry of Transport, the official point of contact for information on the investigation, did not return calls seeking comment.

Malaysian police have previously said they were investigating whether any passengers or crew had personal or psychological problems that might shed light on the mystery, along with the possibility of a hijacking, sabotage or mechanical failure.

As a result of the new evidence, the sources said, multinational search efforts were being stepped up in the Andaman Sea and also the Indian Ocean.

LAST SIGHTING

In one of the most baffling mysteries in modern aviation, no trace of the plane nor any sign of wreckage has been found despite a search by the navies and military aircraft of more than a dozen countries.

The last sighting of the aircraft on civilian radar screens came shortly before 1:30 a.m. Malaysian time last Saturday (1730 GMT Friday), less than an hour after it took off from Kuala Lumpur, as the plane flew northeast across the mouth of the Gulf of Thailand. That put the plane on Malaysia's east coast.

Malaysia's air force chief said on Wednesday an aircraft that could have been the missing plane was plotted on military radar at 2:15 a.m., 200 miles northwest of Penang Island off Malaysia's west coast.

This position marks the limit of Malaysia's military radar in that part of the country, a fourth source familiar with the investigation told Reuters.

When asked about the range of military radar at a news conference on Thursday, Malaysian Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said it was "a sensitive issue" that he was not going to reveal.

"Even if it doesn't extend beyond that, we can get the co-operation of the neighboring countries," he said.

The fact that the aircraft - if it was MH370 - had lost contact with air traffic control and was invisible to civilian radar suggested someone on board had turned off its communication systems, the first two sources said.

They also gave new details on the direction in which the unidentified aircraft was heading - following aviation corridors identified on maps used by pilots as N571 and P628. These routes are taken by commercial planes flying from Southeast Asia to the Middle East or Europe and can be found in public documents issued by regional aviation authorities.

In a far more detailed description of the military radar plotting than has been publicly revealed, the first two sources said the last confirmed position of MH370 was at 35,000 feet about 90 miles off the east coast of Malaysia, heading towards Vietnam, near a navigational waypoint called "Igari". The time was 1:21 a.m..

The military track suggests it then turned sharply westwards, heading towards a waypoint called "Vampi", northeast of Indonesia's Aceh province and a navigational point used for planes following route N571 to the Middle East.

From there, the plot indicates the plane flew towards a waypoint called "Gival", south of the Thai island of Phuket, and was last plotted heading northwest towards another waypoint called "Igrex", on route P628 that would take it over the Andaman Islands and which carriers use to fly towards Europe.

The time was then 2:15 a.m. That is the same time given by the air force chief on Wednesday, who gave no information on that plane's possible direction.

The sources said Malaysia was requesting raw radar data from neighbours Thailand, Indonesia and India, which has a naval base in the Andaman Islands.


(Additional reporting by Christine Chan in Singapore. Writing by Alex Richardson: Editing by Dean Yates)

How To Find Your G-Spot:Your G-Spot GPS


Your G-Spot GPS

What the G-spot is, how you can find it, and the mind-blowing blended G-spot orgasm.

You may never have encountered the G-spot before, but it is a peak hot spot on a woman’s body that leads straight to orgasm. And this type of vaginal orgasm can be unbelievably intense. Still, some people question whether the G-spot really exists, and this is mostly because it is difficult to find if you are new to the terrain.
Finding Your G-spot
The easiest way to locate your G-spot is by leaning or lying back while you insert a finger into your vagina. Your finger should be shaped like a hook, almost as if you are gesturing someone to come closer. If you feel around one or two inches in from the top of your vagina, you should find a spongy bump that feels different from the rest of the vaginal tissue.
Many women say that touching the G-spot, or urethral sponge, feels almost like touching the tip of their nose. Some women may feel the urge to urinate when the G-spot is stimulated, but this feeling usually subsides. Keep moving your finger around the inside of your vagina to get a better sense of its structure and texture.
Put Your Partner on the Path to Your Pleasure
Once you are comfortable locating your G-spot on your own, introduce it to your partner. Encourage him to explore, and build his confidence by letting him know what feels good. It’s actually easier to find the G-spot when you are aroused because the tissue fills with fluid and swells during arousal. You can guide him to the right place, first using his fingers, then during intercourse.
Achieving G-spot Orgasm
G-spot orgasms generally require long, sustained stimulation, especially when you’re first starting to explore them. The man-from-behind position is great for G-spot stimulation, but remember that since it’s located on the belly-button side of the vagina, he needs to penetrate at an angle that pushes his penis against the front wall of the vagina.
A woman-on-top position, especially one in which you kneel over him and lean back, allows you to control the angle of penetration. Also, the CAT position, short for coital-alignment technique, provides a variation on the missionary position in which the rocking back and forth helps to provide consistent friction for G-spot stimulation. Don’t forget that the G-spot is fairly close to the entrance of the vagina, so he’s more likely to stimulate it through shallow penetration as the head of his penis rubs against it.
The G-spot and the Blended Orgasm
Stimulating the G-spot is also a great complement to oral stimulation. When your partner is working your clitoris with his mouth, have him insert one or two fingers into your vagina with a gentle thrusting motion. If he tilts them upward slightly, he is likely to hit your G-spot and bring about some intense sensations that may ultimately result in a combined clitoral and vaginal orgasm — and even ejaculation.
Remember, the destination is less important than the journey. Let go of your intense focus on the goal, work to build pleasure and intimacy rather than stressing out, and enjoy finding your G-spot together!
Last Updated: 01/03/2013
Laura Berman, PhD, is a leading sex and relationship educator and therapist, popular TV and radio host, New York Times best-selling author, and assistant clinical professor of ob-gyn and psychiatry at the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

NYC buildings explosion kills three, others missing

New York City firefighters examine the rubble at an apparent building explosion fire and collapse in the Harlem section of New York, March 12, 2014. REUTERS-Eric Thayer
 New York City firefighters examine the rubble at an apparent building explosion fire and collapse in the Harlem section of New York, March 12, 2014.
CREDIT: REUTERS/ERIC THAYER

(Reuters) - Two New York City buildings collapsed on Wednesday in an explosion believed to be caused by a gas leak, killing three people, injuring at least 36, and setting off a search for more victims feared trapped in the rubble, officials said.

The blast, which scattered debris across nearby rooftops, brought down the neighboring five-story buildings, with a total of 15 apartments, at about 9:30 a.m. (1330 GMT) on a largely residential Upper Manhattan block at East 116th Street and Park Avenue.

Clouds of thick smoke billowed from the rubble of the apartment buildings that sat above a ground-level church and a piano store in a largely Latino working-class neighborhood. Officials declined to give a number of people still missing.

Mayor Bill de Blasio, who rushed to the scene in East Harlem, where a cascade of twisted and burnt metal blocked the sidewalk and covered parked cars, said preliminary information showed the explosion was caused by a gas leak.

Officials at the press conference said the blast occurred 15 minutes after a resident in an adjacent building called Con Edison to complain of a gas odor.

Edward Foppiano, Con Ed's vice president for gas operations, said that while the utility could not say for certain what caused the explosion, it was treating the incident as a gas leak issue. The utility most recently responded to customer complaint about a gas odor in the area last May, but the issue had been resolved, Foppiano said.

The National Transportation Safety Board said it was investigating the "gas explosion and subsequent fire."

Metro-North Railroad, which had shut down train traffic moving through Manhattan while it cleared debris from the tracks announced late afternoon it had restored all commuter train traffic passing through the area.

Hundreds of firefighters were scouring the mounds of debris for survivors and trapped bodies. Two women were killed and the body of another person was found in the rubble late in the day, raising the death toll to three, a police spokesman said.

De Blasio said there were "a number" of people missing.

"This is a tragedy because there was no time to warn people ahead of time," de Blasio said. "We are expending every effort to locate each and every loved one."

Of those injured, one was in critical condition and most suffered cuts, broken bones and smoke inhalation, authorities said.

At least three children were among the injured. Two of them were treated for minor injuries and released, while a third is in critical condition, hospital officials told a news conference.

Neighbors said they thought an earthquake was shaking them from their beds and breakfast tables. The explosion, which could be heard from blocks away, shattered windows around the neighborhood.

"I heard a big explosion. Boom!" said Aisha Watts, who lives in the building next door.

"The walls started crumbling down. The windows were gone," said Watts. The mother of three said she feared she would die but was soon rescued by a neighbor who kicked down the jammed door to her home.

Six blocks away, Robert Pauline's apartment was rocked by the explosion.

"All of a sudden the whole building shook. We had no idea what was going on," said the 56-year-old Columbia University data processor.

President Barack Obama was briefed on the collapse and sent his condolences to the victims' families and his support to first responders at the scene.

"Our thoughts and prayers go out to everyone impacted by this incident," the White House said in a statement.

Crowds of residents, their faces covered with protective scarves and masks, filled the sidewalks of surrounding streets, which were blocked off with yellow police tape.

"It's a very active scene. It's a very chaotic scene," said Fire Department spokesman Michael Parrella.

Fire trucks used high cranes to spray blasts of water into the rubble, as dozens of ambulances and police cruisers with flashing lights swarmed the scene.

During the morning commute, trains were held at nearby stations because of debris on the tracks and passengers were ordered off the Metro-North Railroad cars at the Fordham stop in the Bronx, passengers said.

New York City firefighters examine the rubble at an apparent building explosion fire and collapse in the Harlem section of New York, March 12, 2014. REUTERS-Eric Thayer

Firefighters try to extinguish a fire at the site of a building collapse in Harlem, New York, March 12, 2014. REUTERS-Shannon Stapleton
For a graphic on the explosion, please click on link.reuters.com/mys57v

(Additional reporting by Anna Hiatt; Writing by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Gunna Dickson)

Monday, March 3, 2014

Malcom X and Betty Shabazz's Children

    
Attallah Shabazz (born November 16, 1958)
attallah shabazz
Attallah is the eldest daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz. She works as an artist, actress, theatrical director and producer, and lecturer.
Qubilah Shabazz (born December 25, 1960)
qubilah shabazz
Qubilah is the second daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz. She was reportedly arrestedfor allegedly plotting to have Louis Farrakhan killed, believing he played a role in her father's death. Shabazz was four-years-old when she witnessed her father's assassination. She attended Princeton University and has mostly remained out of the spotlight and the public eye. Little is known about her life today. She's the mother of Malcolm Shabazz, the first male born into the family, who was killed last year in Mexico at the age of 28.
Ilyasah Shabazz (born July 22, 1962
ilyasah shabazz
Ilyasah is the third daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz. She works as a community organizer, activist, and motivational speaker. She's also an author who has written and edited a number of books including "Growing Up X."
Gamilah Lumumba Shabazz (born 1964) 
Gamilah is the fourth daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz. Little public information is available about her present life.
Malaak Shabazz (born September 30, 1965)
malaak shabazz
Malaak is a twin and she and her sister Malikah are the youngest daughters of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz. She was born in the months after her father was assassinated.
Malikah Shabazz (born September 30, 1965)
Malikah last made headlines in 2011 when she plead guilty to identity theft and was sentenced to five years probation.
Betty Shabazz and Malcolm X both left behind six beautiful daughters. The pair had no boys, just girls, two of which are twins. Meet Attallah, Qubilah, llyasah, Gamilah, Malikah & Malaak Shabazz, six women who carry on such an amazing legendary legacy.
Attallah Shabazz is the first born of the legendary pair Betty Shabazz and Malcolm X. Attallah resembles her father. She was born in 1958 - 
Malaak Shabazz is a twin. Her and her twin sister Malikah were born in 1965 after the assassination of their father. 
Ilyasah Shabazz was born in 1962, she is the third daughter of Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz.


Qubilah Shabazz: An 'Ideal Young Lady'

By CHARISSE JONESPublished: January 13, 1995 New York Times
Unlike her mother and sisters, Qubilah Shabazz is not an esteemed professor, nor an aspiring actress. She is not the oldest child, nor the baby. Her moment in the spotlight was fleeting and tragic, and occurred on Feb. 21, nearly 30 years ago.
That was the day she and her three sisters accompanied their pregnant mother to the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem. They sat in the audience, saw their father, Malcolm X, walk onto the stage, and then heard the gunfire as he fell to the floor -- shot to death by an assassin.
But yesterday, Ms. Shabazz, 34, became notorious, accused of hiring an assassin to kill the leader of the Nation of Islam, Louis Farrakhan -- the man who was once her father's protege, then his successor, and in the minds of some of her family, ultimately, his betrayer.
It is a suspicion her mother, Dr. Betty Shabazz, has held for 30 years. When asked last March whether she believed Mr. Farrakhan was involved in her husband's death, Dr. Shabazz said: "Of course, yes. Nobody kept it a secret. It was a badge of honor. Everybody talked about it, yes." When asked later to elaborate, she told another interviewer that she had not "changed my position in 30 years."
It is not known how much Qubilah Shabazz believed in that theory, but she was indicted in Minneapolis yesterday by a Federal grand jury on charges of using the telephone and crossing state lines in the course of trying to hire someone to kill Mr. Farrakhan. The accusations stunned some who knew Ms. Shabazz. Percy Sutton, the former Manhattan borough president, who served as lawyer to Malcolm X and remains a close family friend, said she was an "ideal young lady."
"Nothing in her background would suggest to me that she could ever be involved in any criminal matter, including conspiracy," said Mr. Sutton, whose enterprises includes Inner City Broadcasting Corporation. "Dr. Shabazz has raised her daughters to be outstanding women."
Mr. Sutton would not say what Ms. Shabazz did for a living. Suggesting that the family was prepared for the possibility of an indictment against Ms. Shabazz, Mr. Sutton said: "I have been aware of the pending possibility of this since last week and have been involved in preparing for the eventuality."
Mr. Sutton said he planned to leave for Minneapolis today.
The second of six girls, Ms. Shabazz was born on Christmas Day, 1960. Gordon Parks, the famed photographer and film director, was her godfather. Not yet 5 years old when her father was murdered, her father's rise and fall within the Nation of Islam played a major role in her early childhood, with the firebombing of her family's home in East Elmhurst, Queens, on Feb. 13, 1965, and Malcolm X's murder a week later. Three Black Muslims were convicted of the killing.
Ms. Shabazz and her five sisters grew up under the tutelage of their mother, who gave birth to twins after her husband's death, and while rearing six children, went on to attain her doctorate and become director of communications and public relations at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn.
Mrs. Shabazz kept her children in a tight embrace. Her oldest daughter, Attallah, an actress and playwright, told USA Today in 1993 that her mother hid copies of Malcolm X's autobiography from her and her sisters to shield them from published pictures of their father's bloodied body.
"But my sister Qubilah and I found them," she said. They wanted to learn all that they could not remember about their slain father, the elder Ms. Shabazz recalled.
The girls grew up in New York City, moving from Queens after the assassination to a two-story brick house in a working-class neighborhood in Mount Vernon, N.Y. A former neighbor, Mary Ryan, said yesterday that she remembered young Qubilah as being very shy. She said she never heard family members speak about Malcolm X, except once when Qubilah was small. "She came into my driveway and said, 'Do you know who my father was?' " Ms. Ryan recalled.
Eventually, Ms. Shabazz moved to New York City. Unlike her sister Attallah, who received acclaim for her involvement in the arts, and speeches on the lecture circuit, or her younger sister Gamilah, a rapper, Qubilah has received little attention from the news media. Last September, she moved to Minneapolis.
In the past four years, Malcolm X has re-emerged as an icon and hero. The director Spike Lee told his life story in the movie, "X," prompting a slew of news specials and documentaries about the slain activist. Rappers have quoted his speeches on records, and the letter "X" became ubiquitous symbol on T-shirts and baseball caps.
But before the mania, when his image was still that of a racial demagogue and his teachings were often overshadowed by those of his contemporary, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X's family bore the responsibility of telling his story, and keeping his memory alive.
Often in interviews, they spoke not of the fiery orator, but the tender husband and father. Attallah Shabazz, who is writing a book about her father, told The Los Angeles Times in 1989 that "he was actually a mush, a real pushover when it came to his girls."
"You were never a bad girl," she said. "You could make many mistakes."
But memories of old times did not ease the ache of her father's absence, she said.
"You would rather just have him right there beside you for his birthday," Attallah Shabazz said in 1989. "And instead of being out on the lecture circuit commemorating his memory, I would rather just be able to take him out to dinner."

Ilyasah Shabazz, right, and Malaak Shabazz, daughters of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X,
Shabazz, Betty (28 May 1936?-23 June 1997), civil rights activist, educator, nurse, mother, was born Betty Dean Sanders, the daughter of Shelman Sandlin, a construction worker, and the teenager Ollie Mae Sanders from Pinehurst, Michigan. (Because her birth certificate is lost, scholars are uncertain about her place of birth.) Her young parents were unmarried--this was a social stigma in 1930s America--and her relationship with her mother was stormy. When she was eleven years old, she was adopted by Helen and Lorenzo Malloy, affluent, middle-class African American Methodists from Detroit, Michigan. Providing Shabazz with many social and material advantages, the Malloys also valued educational attainment, and they pushed her to excel in her classes and study hard. After graduating from high school, Shabazz enrolled in Alabama's Tuskegee University, then known as Tuskegee Institute, one of the nation's most distinguished places of higher education for African Americans. However, she was not happy there. Unaccustomed to the blatant racism of Jim Crow laws, she quickly decamped to New York City in 1956 to continue her studies.
She picked up courses at Brooklyn State College School of Nursing, where her own unpleasant and insecure early childhood experiences motivated her to dedicate her energies to improving the health and welfare of young people. At Muhammad Mosque No. 7 in Harlem, New York, she met Malcolm X, a charismatic leader of the Black Muslims, and began studying for membership in the Nation of Islam. The leader of the Nation of Islam at that time, Elijah Muhammad, enjoined his followers to abandon their given surnames and take up the name "X." Their birth names were connected to American slavery, he argued, and thus were vestiges of slaveholders' attempts to crush any signs of African culture and individual assertion in their property. To adopt the name "X" was to abandon the victimized past of slavery, and to acknowledge the African families and communities that the descendants of American slaves had lost. Shabazz changed her name to Betty X.
In 1956 Shabazz earned her nursing degree, and she received her nursing license from the state of New York on 14 January 1958. That same day she married Malcolm X in Lansing, Michigan. During their seven years together, "Sister Betty" as she became known in the Nation of Islam, preferred to remain behind the scenes. She had six daughters with Malcolm: Attallah, Ilyasah, Gamilah, Qubilah, and twins, Malika and Malaak. She focused on raising her children as good Muslims in a tranquil home, but she balanced this domestic life with occasional public appearances. Shabazz was particularly effective in speaking out against stereotypes of women in the Nation of Islam community, and in defining a national agenda for African American women that grounded their social justice activism in religious faith and commitment to their families and communities. In public discussion of her marriage to Malcolm X, she presented a side of the civil rights figure that softened violent and adversarial images of him which had stoked white Americans' anxieties about black masculinity and black nationalists.
By 1964, tensions brewed between Malcolm X and some of the Nation's leadership, including his mentor, Elijah Muhammad. The inner circle of the Nation was threatened by Malcolm's national influence and visibility, and in turn Malcolm was shocked and disappointed by observations of corruption in the ranks and by Muhammad's admission to having adulterous relationships with several of his secretaries. A disillusioned Malcolm X persuaded Shabazz to join him in converting to the Sunni Muslim faith. She took up the surname "Shabazz" after his name change to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, upon completion of his spiritual pilgrimage to the holy land of Mecca. Like other civil rights activists, they fielded threatening telephone calls and death notes, which culminated in the firebombing of their Elmhurst, N.Y., home in 1965. Twenty-eight-years old and pregnant with the twins, Shabazz was home with her husband and children as their residence was engulfed in flames, but miraculously no one was injured.
Later that year on 21 February, tragedy struck again. As Malcolm began a speech in upper Manhattan's Audubon Ballroom, an argument erupted between two men in the audience. When he stepped in front of the podium to calm them down, Shabazz and her four eldest daughters watched in horror as three men shot him. The crowd restrained one gunman, Talmadge Hayer, until police arrived, and in the weeks that followed police arrested Norman 3X Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson, both members of the Nation of Islam, on charges of murdering Malcolm X.
All three men were tried for first-degree murder. On 14 April 1966, the Supreme Court sentenced them to life in prison. As Russell J. Rickford wrote in his 2003 biography, Betty Shabazz: A Remarkable Story of Survival and Faith Before and After Malcolm X, these convictions did not alleviate her suspicions, shared by many of Malcolm's aides and allies, that the Nation of Islam had commissioned Malcolm's assassination, with the support of the federal government. In ensuing years her suspicion extended to the charismatic minister Louis Farakkhan, a friend of Malcolm's who had denounced him upon his departure from the Nation of Islam (pp. 288-92, 493). When her troubled daughter Qubilah was indicted in January 1995 for plotting to assassinate the minister, Shabazz and Farakkhan set aside their differences to successfully prevent her daughter from serving prison time.
The decades that Shabazz spent after Malcolm X's shocking death were demanding ones. While working full time and raising her daughters, she obtained three degrees: a BA and MA in public health education from Jersey State City College, and a PhD in education administration. After earning her doctorate in 1975 at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, she accepted a position as a teacher and then administrator at Brooklyn's Medgar Evers College. She served there for twenty-one years, including a directorship of its office for institutional advancement and public relations.
Shabazz, who never remarried, preferred to stay out of the limelight in the decades after Malcolm X's death. Yet she kept his legacy alive by monitoring the fair and dignified use of his image and writings, by supporting efforts to improve the lives and safety of urban youth, and by emphasizing the relevance of his ideas about diversity, racial injustice, and self-knowledge. She signed papers that would lead to the establishment of the nonprofit Malcolm X and Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center, in the Audubon Ballroom where her husband had once lay dying. The center sponsors civil rights and human rights workshops in collaboration with state and national agencies, educational empowerment activities for youth, election debates, and performances and public programs pertaining to African American and Islamic history and culture. On 3 May 1990 in New York City, Shabazz received the Urban League's most prestigious honor, the Frederick Douglass Award.
In 1997 she sustained third-degree burns when Malcom Shabazz, her troubled twelve-year-old grandson, set fire to her apartment; she died three weeks later.
Although her life was punctuated by tragedies, Shabazz accentuated themes of hope, persistence, and aspiration. After the apotheosis of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s, she drew from its legacy of reconciliation and civil action to continue to enhance the lives of young people and to establish opportunities for people of color living in America's cities. She stood as a model to African American women, exhibiting the stamina, grace, and creativity necessary for maintaining health and mental wellness while juggling the demands of family, community, and career.