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Aileen Campbell MSP
World-leading targets will make Scotland greener, faster
Scotland will stop contributing to climate change within a generation under new, tougher, climate change proposals.
The planet faces a global climate emergency and a new carbon neutral target is being set in a move to safeguard it for future generations.
Amendments to the Climate Change Bill have been lodged to set a legally binding target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2045 at the latest, with Scotland becoming carbon neutral by 2040.
The existing targets proposed in the Bill were already world-leading.
In response to calls from young people, scientists and businesses across the country, Scottish Ministers have adopted the advice of independent experts, the UK Climate Change Committee.
This means that in addition to the net-zero target for 2045, Scotland will reduce emissions by 70% by 2030 and 90% by 2040 – the most ambitious statutory targets in the world for these years.
The Committee’s recommended targets for Scotland are contingent on the UK adopting a net-zero greenhouse gas emission target for 2050.
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Update: CRE respond to Minister's Wrong Figures
COMMENT: ABC Complaints Review Executive (CRE) have provided a response to our complaint regarding factual errors in a story featuring interviews with climate change Minister Penny Wong and Macquarie University's Tim Flannery.
The report transcript included the following statement from Minister Penny Wong:
"We've got around 85 per cent of the world's economies signed up to the Copenhagen Accord."
and the following statement from Professor Flannery:
"I think he's done a pretty good job overall and the Copenhagen Accord shows that.
We've got something like 80 countries now signed up to that."The UNFCC indicate that currently 40 Annex I countries and 30 non-Annex I countries have provided targets under the Copenhagen Accord (see UNFCC website HERE). Number of countries in the UN: 192, Number of countries listed by UNFCC as providing emission targets under the Copenhagen Accord: 70: or 36%.
We requested that ABC append the report with a statement indicating the number of countries that have provided targets under the Copenhagen Accord to this report to clarify Minister Wong's apparently misleading statement. ABC have refused to do so, thus helping to promulgate factual inaccuracies. The ABC's Complaint Review Executive report is posted in full below:
Received 23 April, 2010
REVIEW OF COMPLAINT
A request for review was received on 6 April 2010. It was acknowledged on 6 April and the complainant was advised that the Complaints Review Executive would aim to complete the review by 4 May 2010.
On 19 February 2010 The World Today included a report – Head of UN climate change team calls it quits.
The complainant wrote on 21 February 2010 regarding a report on The World Today. He stated that that the ‘UNFCC (sic) indicate that currently 40 Annex I countries and 30 non‐Annex I countries have provided targets under the Copenhagen Accord.’ He believed that –
‘In light of this both Minister Wong and Prof Tim Flannery’s statements are in‐correct. Although Prof Flannery’s is acceptable in context. The ABC reporter should have had these facts at hand and questioned Minister Wong on her stated figures. Instead factual errors were allowed to be reported.’
He also considered that ‘Knowledge of the number of countries that provided emission targets would have allowed the reporter to pick up errors made by the interviewees.’
ABC Audience & Consumer Affairs (A&CA) responded on 29 March advising that the ‘views of Senator Wong and Tim Flannery are their own, they are not the views of the ABC’. A&CA advised that ‘For the purposes of section 5 of Editorial Policies, the comments of contributors are not considered factual content.’ A&CA wrote that they ‘believe the interviews were suitably questioning, on the issue that was the focus of the report; the continuity of negotiations over a global climate treaty following the departure of the top UN official on climate change.’
Following a further exchange of emails on 29 March about the relevant section of ABC Editorial Policies the complainant requested a review by the CRE. On 5 April he also emailed his request direct to the CRE.
Basis of Assessment
Stories on The World Today are categorised as News and Current Affairs content and must meet editorial standards set out in section 5 of the ABC’s Editorial Policies. Section 5.2.2(d) of the Editorial Policies says: Editorial judgements are based on news values, not for example on political, commercial or sectional interests or personal values.
In addition the ABC’s Code of Practice Section 3 ‘News and current affairs content’ notes:
3.2 Every reasonable effort, in the circumstances, must be made to ensure the factual content of news and current affairs is accurate and in context
3.4 Editorial judgments will be based on news values
The context of the story was a follow up to the announcement the day before of the resignation of Mr Yvo de Boer, head of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC):
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/02/18/2824113.htm
The interviewer was seeking responses to the announcement by interviewing the Federal Minister for Climate Change, Penny Wong, and the Chair of the Coasts and Climate Change Council, Professor Tim Flannery. While the focus of the interview was not about the numbers of countries who had signed up to the Copenhagen Accord, both interviewees referred to this as part of their responses. The references were not precise:
‘We’ve got around eighty five percent of the world’s economies signed up’ (Minister Penny Wong)
‘We’ve got something like 80 countries now signed up..’ (Professor Tim Flannery)
Professor Flannery also referred to Mr Todd Stern, the UN Special Envoy on Climate Change who he said was predicting ‘we’ll be at 100 countries within the next few weeks’.
The complainant has provided this link to challenge the figures expressed, with an expectation that the interviewer would choose to pursue this issue: http://unfccc.int/home/items/5262.php
The story heading was ‘Head of UN climate change team call it quits’ and the clear line of questioning concerned the impact of the resignation, the qualities required by a new chief negotiator and the likely impact of a new appointment.
While it was open to the interviewer to challenge the particular references, the particular angle and substance of the news story was the resignation of Mr Yvo de Boer, and what the change to such an important position would mean.
The resignation is the heart of the brief story, the essential news value. In previous determinations by the CRE regarding the interpretation of ‘factual content’ provided by third parties, it has been considered that the comments of contributors are not subject to the same requirements for accuracy as ABC staff who are required to meet the standards of the ABC’s Editorial Policies. In this case, the program’s decision to seek comment from two credible and recognised speakers was sufficient to satisfy the ABC’s requirement that every reasonable effort be made to ensure accuracy (Ed: Sir Marc: ACCURACY?-both "credible" speakers got their figures astoundingly wrong!).
Having assessed the content, considered the listener’s concerns and reviewed the ABC’s response, I consider that ABC editorial requirements were not breached. Therefore the complaint is not upheld.
COMPLAINTS REVIEW EXECUTIVE
Posted by Marc Hendrickx at 12:05 AM
Labels: penny wong
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Academy for the Psychoanalytic Arts
Rethinking psychoanalysis as being outside of a medical model
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Home » Library » Titles A - E » Martial metaphors and medical justice: Implications for law, crime, and deviance
Martial metaphors and medical justice: Implications for law, crime, and deviance
by Bruce Arrigo
The presence of martial metaphors and war-making discourse embedded within the national psyche are well documented (e.g., Sherry, 1995). America's preoccupation with militarization eclipses many facets of institutional life and human social behavior. Some noteworthy examples include the social construction of: (1) women, gender, and sexuality (Higgonet et al., 1987); (2) lesbian and gay identities (Berube, 1990, Murphy and Poirier, 1993); (3) race and ethnic history (Takaki. 1998; Natty, 1986); (4) economics, science, and technology (Markusen et al., 1991; Lotchin, 1992; Mendelsohn et al., 1988); and (5) political culture (Gillis, 1989; Gibson, 1994; Hunter, 1991). Interestingly. we know little about the presence of martial metaphors in the construction of medicine (cf. Sontag, 1989 on AIDS and attitudes toward the state). Moreover, we know even less about the impact of these metaphors for medical justice2
This deficiency in the literature is significant. As Ericson (1994:153) warns, "the military model is as pervasive as the medical model in efforts to colani[z]e the control of crime and other forms of deviance." If his cautionary observation is remotely correct, what does it portend for our understanding of medicine and medical justice, particularly when these social realities are anchored by martial images and saturated in war-making discourse? Arguably, the implications for the control of crime/deviance are considerably recast as the overlapping and interdependent effects of the medical and military models fashion alienating, marginalizing, and oppressive meanings for citizens who are "combating forms of dis-ease."
This essay is an attempt to shed light on this under-examined question, One access point for an assessment of martial metaphors, medicine, and justice is found in the postmodern, deconstructive methodology of Jacques Derrida (1976, 1978, 1981, 1992, 1997). Derrida's contributions to this enterprise are significant on two fronts. First, as Young (1990: 98-99) explains, deconstructive analysis allows us to unveil the structures, embedded in discourse, that deny and repress difference.3 This is what Derrida (1976) calls the "metaphysics of presence." Second, deconstruction directs us to the "free play of the text" (Milovanovic. 1994: 102). In other words, once a narrative (such as the discourse of medicine) is constructed, the story "insists" and is forever incomplete (Derrida, 1973). This insistence is a recognition that the narrative always signifies more than what is intended. Teasing out several of the implicit meanings and unstated assumptions within the text on military rhetoric and medicine will help advance our investigation of the effects these meanings and assumptions have for the construction of law, and the control of crime and deviance.
In part one of this essay, selected insights from Derrida's deconstructive philosophy are outlined. In part two, Table 1 is presented. The Table lists several everyday martial metaphors and then demonstrates how these images have found their way into the discursive text of medicine. Several observational comments concerning the manifest meanings for these warmaking metaphors in medicine are offered. In other words, the surface level intent is identified so that a coherent narrative can be constructed (Jackson, 1991). In part three, a Derridean critique of war text is presented, based on the previously delineated deconstructive principles and mindful of the underlying, unstated messages and/or values embedded in the text. Table 2 facilitates this investigation. In part four, the implications this deeper textual analysis holds for the nature of law and the control of crime/deviance are provisionally described. In order to situate the overall study, however, some general comments on the genealogy of martial rhetoric and medical justice are warranted.
ON FOUCAULT, THE SOCIAL CONTROL THESIS, AND PUBLIC HYGIENE
It is difficult to say with precision the point at which commentary on war-making discourse in medicine was first examined with any degree of precision or depth. This notwithstanding, the insights of Michel Foucault (e.g., 1965. 1972, 1973, 1977, 1990) are perhaps, if nothing else, the most illuminating and most critically inspired.
Foucault's investigation of disciplinary institutions (e.g., the penal, the psychiatric) was a deliberate effort at de-bunking the purpose of confinement. In short, he reasoned that institutionalization was a form of controlling (or isolating) the socially undesirable, that is, it was a state-sponsored method of "policing public hygiene" and ridding society of difference (Foucault, 1990: 134, 1965, 1977). Although his comments are somewhat limited to the policing of difference through psychiatry and penology (cf. Foucault, 1973 on medical perception), his notions have implications for the archeology of medical justice and military metaphors in general.
According to Foucault, the medical function of psychiatry (i.e., public hygiene) was linked to the management function of policing (i.e., social control and order). This union enabled medicine to advance its "true vocation;" namely, cleansing public morality (Foucault, 1990:180). This "assault" on immorality gave rise to the founding of psychopathic hospitals. These corrective treatment facilities sanitized, de-pathologized, and normalized maladaptive behaviors through sustained psychotherapeutic interventions (Arrigo and Williams, 1998:5). As a result, all problems of social hygiene were "captured within the medicalized psychiatric web of stabilization and homogeneity" (Foucault, 1965:34).
Foucault's (1965, 1973) examination of medicine and the mentally "diseased" resonate with his study of crime and criminality (Foucault, 1977). "The arrival of psychiatry into criminality- provided a new direction for the examination of mental illness and crime... where attention could be focused on the individual; that is, the criminal, as opposed to the crime itself" (Arrigo and Williams, 1998:6). Much of the analysis on criminal pathology explored the question of "dangerousness." This is what Foucault (1990) refers to as the "psychiatrization of criminal danger" (p. 128). In this exploration, Foucault contends that insanity, that is, the irrationality of the minds of crazy people, became the justificatory cause celebre for medicine's policing and controlling of difference. Indeed, as Foucault (1990) explains:
[Insanity] is hidden; it represents a danger in that it is beyond the actor's responsibility; beyond his control because he is frequently unaware of it .... [Psychiatry] has invented an entirely fictitious entity, a crime which is insanity, a crime which is nothing but insanity (p. 132).
Thus, following Foucault, medicine's introduction into the study of criminality created a new crime: "the unpredictable and latent danger of the insane constituted a crime in itself" (Arrigo and Williams, 1998:7). In the wake of this perceived public threat, medicine's responsibility was to it supervise...whatever was in a state of disorder, whatever presented a danger" (Foucault, 1990: 188). Confinement of individuals followed the identification of dangerousness, though not necessarily because of a clear act of criminality. In this regard, dangerousness functioned as a metaphor (Arrigo, 1996) where the police and psychiatry amounted to "institutions intended to react to danger" (Foucault, 1990:188). Absent proof that one was a threat to another, one could still be confined, institutionalized, as a danger to one's self (Arrigo, 1993: 7-27), As Arrigo and Williams conclude (1998:7): "Thus, any form of danger [became] justification for involuntary (criminal/civil) confinement. Accordingly, psychiatry [became] a 'social police.'"
There is one more dimension to Foucault's critique worth noting for purposes of our investigation on military metaphors and medical justice. Underpinning his assessment of disciplinary institutions is a rich and provocative theory on the inextricable relationship shared among power, knowledge, and truth (Foucault, 1980). Space limitations do not permit a more detailed examination of these notions; however, some comments are warranted.
Medicine became an all-encompassing, monolithic expression of power "not because it embraced everything but because it came from everywhere" (Foucault, 1980: 93, 1973). For example, "psychiatry was a legitimated form of disciplinary control through the instrumentality of scientific discoveries and medical breakthroughs" (Arrigo and Williams, 1998:8). Indeed, society's comprehension of mental illness, disease, incompetence, dysfunction, dangerousness and the like, as connected to insanity, was "inventively transformed into clinical and psychopharmacological strategies of social control" (Ibid). These strategies of control, of policing public hygiene, operated as "weapons of attack and defense in the relations of power and knowledge" (Sarup, 1993:66; emphasis added). The presumed truth of psychiatry, as a weapon of attack, justified and legitimated the deprivation of citizen liberties. As Sarup (1993) notes:
Whereas we might normally regard knowledge as providing us with power to do things that without it we could not do, Foucault argues that knowledge is a power over others, the power to define others. In his view knowledge ceases to be a liberation and becomes a mode of surveillance, regulation, and discipline (p. 67; emphasis added).
Foucault's (1972) archeology of knowledge, particularly when applied to medicine, demonstrates how medical justice, "speaks a [certain) truth, exercises power accordingly-, and produces a disciplinary society in which people [a]re normalized and de-pathologized" because of their differences (Arrigo, 1993: 49, 135). Indeed, the new, inventive technologies of epidemiology, forensic psychiatry, neuroscience. and the like, as state-endorsed emblems of power, harness knowledge and truth giving way to the homogenization of morality and to the policing of public hygiene.
Thus, following Foucault, we see how military metaphors play a prominent role in describing his genealogical methodology. Notions of policing, strategies of surveillance, practices of defense and attack are important dimensions to his treatment of medicine and medical justice. Although Foucault's more historical comments are instructive for suggesting some of the linkages between the military and medical models, his treatment of this phenomenon is sketchy at best. The core of Foucault's critique centered on the sedimented and oppressive function of disciplinary institutions. In order to advance the analysis on martial rhetoric, medical justice, and their implications for law, crime, and deviance, the insights of Derrida are useful. The principles descried below are perhaps the most rudimentary for understanding Derrida's deconstructive methodology. However, they are sufficient for purposes of examining how war-making metaphors operate in medicine.
ON DERRIDA AND DECONSTRUCTION; SOME BASIC PRINCIPLES
For purposes of my investigation, this section will describe three overarching tenets contained in Derrida's deconstructive philosophy. Although these tenets are presented in summary fashion, their applicability to the overlapping effects of the military and medical models are easily discernible. These principles include: (1) the reversal of hierarchies; (2) differance; and (3) the trace. In subsequent sections of the article, reference to additional Derridean concepts will facilitate a more thorough analysis of the text on martial rhetoric and medical justice.
Reversal of Hierarchies - In written or spoken texts, terms or words take on value. This valuation is always in relation to the term's position or opposition to other terms. "One [term] becomes dominant, the other repressed" (Milovanovic, 1994: 101). For Derrida (1973, 1978, 1976) this is the manifestation of "the metaphysics of presence" In other words, given every opposition, some terms are dominant, privileged, active, and present while others are subordinate, devalued, passive, and absent. This creates hierarchies (e.g., good/bad, right/wrong, objective/subjective, fact/fiction, health/disease). Hierarchies are fundamental to all phenomena.
According to Derrida (1976, 1973), however, everything is a "text;" that is, a story or narrative that unfolds. A text can be twisted, contorted, and "reversed" to reveal the oppositions embedded in words. Reversing the hierarchies allows one to understand what is present and absent, what is empowered and disempowered, what is privileged and de-valued in the written or spoken word.
Differance - Moreover, through the deconstruction of a text, the interdependent quality of these oppositions can be made explicit (Balkin, 1987: 746-751). This interdependence is expressed in how terms (oppositions) both "differ" from and "defer" to one another (Derrida, 1973, Sarup, 1989).' This is what is meant by the neologism differance. Indeed, within any hierarchy (e.g., man/woman), although the two terms are different from one other, each defers to the other, implies the other term, while, at the same time, deferring to the other. thus demonstrating dependence on the other term (Milovanovic, 1994: 101, Henry and Milovanovic, 1996: 83).
The Trace - We note, then, that within any opposition, differance also implies the mark of the other, the trace of the other word, in the hierarchy. "Within each term of a hierarchy, one ...contains the hidden trace of the other" (Milovanovic, 1994: 101). The trace is what maintains the value position relationship between the two terms. Indeed, following Derrida (1973), we can say that the articulation of any term (presence) implies the hidden term (absence), and that meaning "insists" through the interdependence of each. As Sarup (1989) explains: "Each sign in the chain of meaning is somehow scored over or traced through with all the others, to form a complex tissue which is never exhaustible" (p. 36).5
For a Derridean deconstructive methodology to be effective one must discern the term that is absent and de-valued in a hierarchy; that is, the repressed, hidden word that sustains the term that is felt as present. This deconstructive reversal requires that one make visible that which is concealed, As Balkin (1987) indicates:
"[a]ny social theory must emphasize some human values over others. Such categorizing necessarily involves a privileging, which in turn can be deconstructed. But the goal of deconstruction is not the destruction of all possible social visions, By recalling the elements of human life relegated to the margin in a given social theory, deconstructive readings challenge us to remake the dominant conceptions of our society" ((p.763; emphasis added).
ON MARTIAL METAPHORS AND MEDICINE: A PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS
Table 1 identifies a limited series of popular military metaphors and juxtaposes each against their medical model counterparts. This listing is not exhaustive and is based on popular media images (Barak, 1994). The chronicling of metaphors is an extension of my prior work on medicine, law, and crime (e.g., Arrigo, 1993, 1996). The comments that follow Table 1 represent a surface level analysis on the power of martial rhetoric to shape, in part, our understanding of medicine and medical justice.
Although somewhat contrived, these ten sets of metaphors reveal how war-making discourse and militarism inform our understanding of medicine and, by extension, medical justice. In what follows, five interpretive statements are made about how martial rhetoric contributes to our knowledge of medicine. While these observations are speculative and provisional, they demonstrate how the military and medical models in fact collapse into one another. Indeed, as I present my summary statements, consider how different these comments are from the mission and function of the military in American society.
1. Disease and contagion are identifiable, knowable, and controllable. It is possible to combat various forms of illness and pathology.
TABLE 1:
2. Disease is debilitating and life threatening. It invades the human body and must be eliminated or neutralized, otherwise it will take over one's life. 3. If it is not curtailed or stopped, disease can be destructive not only to our bodies but to the public health of society.
4. Controlling disease requires constant vigilance; that is, it requires a policing of public hygiene through the gathering of clinical studies and testable data conducted by trained physicians and other doctors.
5. Based on the available medical information, illness can be treated, arrested, cured, and the war against disease can be won even if an operation by a specialist is required.
It is worth noting that even on the basis of a surface level analysis, there are several very revealing aspects of war-making discourse in medicine. Clearly, if we were to substitute, for example, the words "disease" or "illness" with the words "enemy" or "foe" throughout the summary statements presented above, the conclusions we would reach would be quite applicable to the generally agreed upon purpose and operation of the military.
Further, the ease with which the military model can be collapsed into the medical model (and vice versa), given the brief listing of metaphors as chronicled above, lends credibility to Ericson's (1994) warning concerning the pervasiveness of their capacity to control crime and other forms of deviance. Indeed, although not specifically identified in the Table, the presence of martial rhetoric in medicine represents a potent force by which strategies for surveillance, notions of defense and attack, and practices of policing can be legitimately enacted and enforced (Foucault, 1965, 1973, 1977).
Finally, and perhaps most speculatively, the text of medicine and militarism represents an established defense, indeed a "community," whose primary purpose is to identify what is right and wrong, what is safe and unsafe, what is good and bad for our individual and collective health. This message suggests that medicine knows how to correct, control, and treat, the illnesses that afflict us so that we can be restored, made well, and can shed our disease.
DECONSTRUCTING MARTIAL RHETORIC AND MEDICAL JUSTICE
By returning to the essential Derridean principles previously outlined and by applying them to Table 1, a more detailed sequencing of comments concerning medical justice is possible. Although these observations are also preliminary, they do set the stage for our assessment on the nature of law and the control of crime/deviance given the presence of martial rhetoric in medical discourse. In order to provide a more systematic deconstructive evaluation, I examine how each tenet relates to particular facets of Table 1.
Reversal of Hierarchies
Given the presence of martial rhetoric in the medical model, it remains to be seen what terms are present and what terms are absent in the text constituting the "medical metaphors" of Table 1. Following Derrida's deconstructive philosophy, by reversing the hierarchies one can decipher several oppositions embedded in the metaphors, thus learning more about what is valued and what is devalued in the text in question. Although this process is inexhaustible (Sarup, 1989) and undecidable (Derrida, 1973), several noteworthy oppositions are discernible. Table 2 lists several medical terms/phrases that assume metaphorical dimensions. These metaphors are the most prominently featured in Table 1. Table 2 also includes their opposites.
Overt images of war and violence, and covert images of death and destruction underscore the medical metaphors. These impressions both saturate and conceal the more absent and repressed terms embedded in the hierarchies. The opposites listed in Table 2 include such notions as peace, health, well-- being, and rest. These more hidden value positions differ substantially from the privileged terms; however, their absence helps maintain the terms that are felt as present, active. dominant. Further, by sustaining the images of war, violence, disease or, conversely, by focusing on the reversal of hierarchies (i.e., peace, serenity, health) we see how the valued and de-valued terms in the hierarchy defer to one another.
Thus, we acknowledge the interdependence of the terms in each hierarchy. Meaning insists in the present/absent terms constituting each hierarchy. The military rhetoric embedded in the medical metaphors described above has value insofar as the trace (or the mark) of these terms contains their opposites.
To illustrate the reversal of hierarchies, differance, and the trace function, let us look more specifically at one metaphorical term. The suggestion that one's "body is under siege" implies that the soma, as a fortified place, is encircled by an opposing armed force intending to take it, usually in some violent way. This siege of the body is persistent; that is, the intent is to gain control and to overtake the body. The absence of the body's siege is to displace control, to be at rest with the soma, to let go of one's fortification, to allow the body to experience its own peace, to simply be without insistence. Both descriptions are embedded in each other's value position, though they differ considerably. To speak deconstructively of the body under siege we must speak of its tranquility as well. Each term is the trace of the other and their respective articulations reveal the interdependence of both in the hierarchy.
MILITARY METAPHORS IN MEDICAL JUSTICE: IMPLICATIONS FOR LAW, CRIME, AND DEVIANCE
Given our provisional deconstructive analysis on martial rhetoric and medicine, the questions remains: what effects do these meanings and assumptions have for the construction of law and the control of crime and deviance? To address this matter, I examine Derrida's notion of community and hospitality and link them to the problem of difference and power as previously delineated in my Foucauldian genealogical critique.
This Special Issue contains a series of articles examining the militarization of crime and its control (see also, Kraska, 1996, Kraska and Cubellis, 1997; Kraska and Kappeler, 1997). The present article, however, more subtlely canvasses this terrain by examining the interdependent and overlapping effects of the military and medical models for purposes of justice. Both disciplinary "regimes" are institutions. As such, they are analogical to Derrida's (1997) notion of community. Derrida displays an antipathy for the notion of community. Essentially, the word connotes "fusion" and "identification" (Weber, 1995: 46). More specifically, though, Derrida's etymological examination of the word suggests the following:
[C]ommunio is a word for military formation and is a kissing cousin of the word 'munitions': to have a communio is to be fortified on all sides, to build a 'common' (com) 'defense' (munis), as when a wall is put up around the city to keep the stranger or the foreigner out. The self-- protective closure of 'community,' then, would be just about the opposite of ..preparation for the incoming of the other, 'open' and 'porous'to the other. ... A 'universal community' excluding no one is a contradiction in terms; communities always have an inside and an outside (as cited in Caputo, 1997: 108).
Thus, the word community implies a more negative effect. "it suggests injustice, inequality, and an 'us' versus 'them' orientation" (Arrigo ad Williams, 1999:8). Medical and military communities, then, are designed to exclude some others. Following our Derridean deconstruction of medical metaphors, these others represent those who are different in some respect; that is, those who experience dis-ease. Disease represents the common foe of the military/medical community. Disease seizes the body and must be policed and combated. Disease is that against which the militarized medical community wages war.
This war, however, is a fight against that difference which disease signifies (e.g., the mentally ill, the physically disabled, the elderly) (Arrigo, 1996). And, to the extent that martial rhetoric informs medicine, this war proceeds through hospitality to the other. This hospitality is what Derrida (1997:110) terms the "welcoming of the other; the invitation to the stranger." But how does the community of militarized medicine host the difference of the other, the difference that is the dis-ease of the stranger?
According to Derrida (1997), the etymology of hospitality is also problematic.
The word hospitality derives from the Latin hospes, which is formed from hostis, which originally meant a 'stranger' and came to take on the meaning of the enemy or 'hostile stranger' (hostilis) + pets (polis, poles, potentia) to have power (pp. 10- 111).
The military and medical communitys' hosting of the other's difference is a display of power. Thus, "being 'hospitable' is an effort to welcome the other while maintaining or fortifying the mastery the host has over the domain" (Arrigo and Williams, 1999:9). Under these conditions, hospitality is never truly hospitable. Derrida (1997:112) refers to this predicament as the "impossibility, of hostil-pitality" (emphasis added). The community that is medicine, informed by military metaphors, can never truly host that difference which disease embodies. The "common defense" of medicine is fashioned around the notion of inhospitality or hostilpitality. The power that this community represents, vanquishes those whose difference challenges its authority.
Thus, the nature of law and the control of crime and deviance in medicine, given the presence of martial rhetoric, functions to advance the policing of public hygiene consistent with the power/knowledge claims of privileged science. Following Foucault (1965, 1973, 1977), medical science is the avatar of truth and, as such, law defers to its pronouncements to advance the episteme of medical justice (Arrigo, 1996: 47-93). The control of crime and deviance in militarized medicine is transformed into the surveillance and discipline of disease through the corrective regime of medicine. All forms of illness symbolize disunity, disorder, pathology, and they are brought under the hospitable and normalizing force of medicine. Accordingly, the health hazards of crime, drugs, and violence, in short, the war against disease, is arrested. This arresting is the injustice that is done to those who are the strangers, the enemies (i.e., those excluded from) the community because of their insistence on being who they are; namely, different.
Derrida (1997) reminds us that "pure unity... is a synonym of death" (p, 13). The presence of military metaphors underscoring medicine and medical justice, have significant implications for the control of disease. Simply put, the difference that disease signifies is policed, patrolled, surveillanced, and corrected. The intent of this article was not to suggest that all forms of such disciplinary regulation are or are not appropriate, rather, the fundamental question provisionally examined here goes to the force and scope of militarized medical discourse to cleanse that which does not already fit into its normalizing, unifying logic.
Clearly certain expressions of dis-ease ought not be subjected to the corrective power of medicine. What remains uncertain, however, is whether it is possible to strip the medical and military models of their capacity to colonize the control of crime, the nature of law, and the presence of deviance. This is the project that awaits. This is a project whose time has come. Perhaps it is possible not only to except some manifestations of difference, some forms of dis-ease, some expressions of social undesirability, but to revel in the disunity that they represent. This may very well be the only way to forestall the "death" that militarized medicine would otherwise inflict upon us. It may very well be the pathway to peace, health, serenity.
[Footnote]
2 There are a few isolated studies. especially including the work, of Szasz (1963, 1987) and Arrigo (1993, 1996), These projects. though, tend to focus on metaphors in psychiatric justice only. For an analysis of how the language of crime and medicine produces sustained trunscarcerative practices see Arrigo (1997).
3 Criminological scholarship has only recently explored this phenomenon. For additional theoretical analysis see Arrigo, 1995: 449-451: Arrigo and Bernard, 1997: 52-54. For applications to psychiatric medicine and disordered criminal defendants see Arrigo, 1994.
4 For Derridean applications to the "oppositional" relationship among justice, law, equality see, Arrigo and Williams (1999).
5 Derrida (1973: (57-162) refers to this as the iterable nature of the text producing an indefinite number of nuanced meanings or undecidables. For a feminist sociolegal analysis of this Derridean concept see, Cornell (1992: 85).
6 Especially in Points 9 and 10 of the Table the interchange abl ity of medical metaphors in martial rhetoric and military metaphors in medical discourse are clearly demonstrated.
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[Author note]
BRUCE A. ARRIGO, PH.D.1
California School of Professional Psychology - Fresno
'Direct all correspondence to: Bruce A. Arrigo, Ph.D. Professor and Director. Institute of Psychology. Law, and Public Policy, 5130 E. Clinton Way. Fresno. CA 93727. (209) 456-2777 Ext. 2290. Email: barrigo@mail.cspp.cdu
This paper was previously published in the Journal of Political and Military Sociology; DeKalb; Winter 1999; 27 (2): 307-322, and has been reproduced with permission.
*Bruce A. Arrigo, Ph.D., is Professor and Chair of the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of North Carolina - Charlotte, with additional faculty appointments in the Psychology Department, the Public Policy Program, and the Center for Applied and Professional Ethics. Formerly the Director of the Institute of Psychology, Law, and Public Policy at the California School of Professional Psychology-Fresno, Dr. Arrigo began his professional career as a community organizer and social activist for the homeless, the mentally ill, the working poor, the frail elderly, the decarcerated, and the chemically addicted. Dr. Arrigo received his Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University, and he holds a master’s degree in psychology and in sociology. He is an internationally recognized scholar who has authored more than (100) journal articles, chapters in books, and scholarly essays. These works explore interdisciplinary, applied, and policy topics in criminological theory, law and psychology, and problems in crime and social justice.
He is the author, coauthor, or editor of thirteen (13) books; including, Madness, Language, and the Law (1993), The Contours of Psychiatric Justice (1996), Social Justice/Criminal Justice (1998), The Dictionary of Critical Social Sciences (with T.R. Young, 1999), Introduction to Forensic Psychology (2000), Law, Psychology, and Justice (with Christopher R. Williams, 2001), The Power Serial Rapist (with Dawn J. Graney, 2001), Punishing the Mentally Ill: A Critical Analysis of Law and Psychiatry (2002), Criminal Competency on Trial (with Mark C. Bardwell, 2002), Psychological Jurisprudence: Critical Exploration in Law, Crime, and Society (in press), Criminal Behavior: A Systems Approach (in press), The French Connection: Rediscovering Crime, Law, and Social Change (with Dragan Milovanovic and Robert Schehr, in press), and The Female Homicide Offender: Serial Murder and the Case of Aileen Wuornos (with Stacey L. Shipley, in press). Dr. Arrigo was the Editor of Humanity & Society (1996-2000) and is founding and acting Editor of the peer-reviewed quarterly, Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice. He is a past recipient of the Critical Criminologist of the Year Award (2000), sponsored by the Division of Critical Criminology of the American Society of Criminology. He is also a Fellow of the American Psychological Association through the Law-Psychology Division (Div. 41) of the APA.
*This autobiographical information was supplied by the author at the time this paper was contributed to the Academy Library. This information may not be current.
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Ignite Jewelry Studios opens in Asheville River Arts District
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Turning down services has never tasted so sweet. The third annual Sweet Dreams, Full Plates campaign set a new record this year – donating an incredible $59,100 dollars in September to support MANNA FoodBank’s mission. “MANNA FoodBank is overwhelmed with gratitude,” said Mary Nesbitt, Chief Development Officer. “Their incredible efforts that involved all levels of staff in area hotels will provide thousands of meals for those who did not know where their next meal was coming from.”
Burial Beer Co. is nearing completion of the largest, local restoration projects on their two-acre property in South Asheville. The historic structure, built in the early 1900’s by members of the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), has been restored to use once again as a two-story bar and restaurant featuring an open mezzanine, roof top and outdoor areas, downstairs bar and communal hall, and full-service, seated upstairs dining room. Forestry Camp Bar & Restaurant will open its doors to the public Friday, September 27th at 5pm.
The metropolitan area of Asheville counts for nearly 425,000 inhabitants, meaning there should be enough entertainment places for the people in this city from North Carolina. The place is filled with art galleries, movie theatres, colleges, cafes, and restaurants and, since there is always something to do around here, you’ll never get bored.
Bears Bees + Brews is partnering with Center for Honeybee Research to host ‘Pollinators: Secret Superheroes Dinner,’ an intimate dinner experience highlighting the essential role pollinators play for the culinary world and for a healthy ecosystem. The dinner is a part of Asheville GreenWorks and Bee City USA— Asheville’s 7th Annual Pollination Celebration.
Garlik Vegan and Sanctuary Brewing Company Join Forces
Garlik Vegan and Sanctuary Brewing are thrilled to announce their joint venture, Inconceivable Cafe! The all new cafe will bring a delicious lineup of food, perfect for pairing with Sanctuary’s award-winning craft brews. The cafe will be located inside of Sanctuary Brewing’s tasting room on First Avenue in Hendersonville, and will feature some of Garlik Vegan’s most popular dishes as well as some fun and exciting new pub food-style items including a variety of Impossible Burgers, tasty sandwiches, and yummy appetizers and shared plates.
The Wine & Oyster Opens in Downtown Asheville
A popular neighborhood eatery has set its sights on a new shell in the pearl of the city. The Wine and Oyster reopens Friday, April 19, bringing bold global wines and fresh flavor-packed oysters to Downtown Asheville. “We are excited and love our new location,” said Steve Klein, owner of The Wine & Oyster. The restaurant first opened in Biltmore Village as a franchise location of Virgola, a New York-based wine bar in 2017. They shucked the franchise the following year, becoming independently owned and operated as The Wine & Oyster. Klein said he hopes the move from Biltmore Village to 3 Biltmore Avenue will give the restaurant a fresh footprint in Asheville’s restaurant scene. “It’s such a fun area and we are looking forward to serving the community and to a bright future as part of the Asheville restaurant community,” Klein said. The new 1,700 square foot space is equipped for hot food production, an aspect that will allow the restaurant to expand their former raw bar and cold menu. The Wine and Oyster will now serve a full lunch and dinner menu peppered with fresh seafood dishes, homemade pastas, paninis and po’ boys. “Everything from our oysters to …
Roux to Host Easter Sunday Brunch Buffet
Easter Brunch Buffet features an array of local and regionally-sourced goodies including BBQ Scottish Salmon, Baked Ratatouille Gratin, Shrimp and Smoked Gouda Grits Station, Carved to order Virginia Ham, Omelets and Local Eggs cooked to order, Roux’s Signature Fried Chicken, Bananas Foster French Toast and so much more!
YMCA of WNC Combats Food Insecurity
Nutrition Outreach program participants receive nutritious food at a YMCA Healthy Living Mobile Market. Asheville, N.C., March 20, 2019 – The YMCA of Western North Carolina celebrates National Nutrition Month every day by providing access to free, healthy food to thousands of families in Western North Carolina.
Vegan Chili competition to benefit the nonprofit animal paradise, Sweet Bear Rescue Farm
Love chili? Get ready to stuff yourself. For the fourth year in a row, an epic chili battle royale is coming to downtown Hendersonville. The fourth annual vegan Chili Cook-Off kicks off on Sunday, March 10th at 2 p.m. at Sanctuary Brewing Company (SBC), with all proceeds benefiting the amazing animals of local nonprofit Sweet Bear Rescue Farm. The event will feature delicious chili entries from chefs, restaurants, and home cooks across the region. From sweet and spicy to wildly hot, from beans and veggies to beefy Beyond Meat, the chili varieties run the gamut. Attendees will get to taste each and every one, then vote for their favorite. With the help of special guest judge Dr Garth Davis, those who make the three top chilis will score Sanctuary Brewing Company gift cards and other prizes. Anyone is welcome to enter; contestants just need to bring a regular size crockpot of their most amazing vegan chili creation with a creative name and an ingredients list. (No animal products, but any other creative combination goes as far as ingredients!). All proceeds from this mouthwatering competition will benefit Sweet Bear, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit animal sanctuary founded by Sanctuary Brewing Company owners Lisa …
Isis Restaurant & Music Hall Rolls Out New Sushi Pop-Up
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Obituary index
B. Harlean Veech
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[January 21, 2017] CORNLAND - B. Harlean Veech, 81, passed away at 10:05 a.m. on December 29, 2016, at Vonderlieth Living Center in Mount Pulaski.
Visitation: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., Wednesday, January 4 at Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home in Mount Pulaski
Service: 11 a.m. Thursday at the funeral home
Funeral home: Fricke-Calvert-Schrader, Mount Pulaski
B. Harlean Veech, 81, passed away at 10:05 a.m. on December 29, 2016, at Vonderlieth Living Center in Mount Pulaski.
Harlean was born on March 28, 1935, in Lincoln; daughter of John Harris and Anna Elizabeth (Field) Bryson. She married Delmar Lee Veech on October 3, 1953, in Cornland. He preceded her in death on May 26, 2016.
Harlean is survived by her children: Marcia (Chuck) Meyer of Indianapolis, IN, Monica Edgecomb of Rochester, and Jason (Annette) Veech of Springfield, her sisters, Sheila (Kent) Anderson of Sunrise Beach, MO, and Carla (Wayne) Clark of Lake Fork, one sister-in-law: Priscilla Veech of Forsythe, nine grandchildren: Amy (Jason) Dumo; Emily (Jim) Willan; Matthew (Julie) Shelton; Casey (Ethan) Murphy; Jenna Edgecomb; Mollie (Sean) Finn; Kyle (Nicole) Veech; Jadon Veech; Gage Veech; five great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her parents and her husband.
Harlean began her career after graduation from high school as a bookkeeper at Springfield Marine Bank in Springfield. After moving to Florida, she worked as a Teller at Community Federal Savings and Loan Association in Jupiter, Florida. Upon returning to Illinois in 1965, she built a 35-1/2-year-long career as Postmaster for the U.S. Postal Service in Cornland, Illinois. During her latter postal career, she owned and operated Flowers & Fantasies in Mount Pulaski, Illinois, for seven years.
Through the years, Harlean served in many civic and social organizations within her community. During her postal career, she served as: Secretary/Treasurer of the Illinois Branch of the National League of Postmasters; Secretary of the National League of Postmasters’ Executive Board in Alexandria, VA; and Director of Meetings and Conventions for the National League of Postmasters for 30 years. She received many prestigious awards during her postal career, one in particular, the Oscar Pogue Award—the highest honor awarded to any member of NLP. Harlean and Delmar enjoyed traveling to many national cities, took many cruises and visited ancestors in Ireland.
Services for Harlean will be 11:00 a.m. Thursday, January 5, 2017, at Fricke-Calvert-Schrader Funeral Home in Mount Pulaski with Mark Weber officiating. Visitation will be from 4:00-7:00 p.m. Wednesday, January 4, 2017, also at the funeral home. Burial at Mount Pulaski Cemetery will follow the service.
Memorials may be made in Harlean’s name to the Mount Pulaski Christian Church or donor’s choice.
Serving as her pallbearers are; her grandsons, Matthew Shelton, Kyle Veech, Jadon Veech, and Gage Veech, her grandson-in-law, Jim Willan; her nephews, Darren Anderson and Chad Clark; and her nephew-in-law, Doug Marlin.
Click here to send a note of condolence to the family of B. Harlean Veech
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Click on the name of the appropriate funeral home (in the line above) and insert the family name to send a note.
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The Horde levels 50-60 guide has been rewritten and revamped. My 1-60 Horde leveling guide is now completely updated for the 1.12 Drums of War patch. As you can see it is about 15% larger than the 40-50 guide (single largest guide page yet). There is also a lot of route changes. I moved the entire Silithus section from level 55 to level 58, which allowed me to include a lot more quests for that zone. There is also a lot of other improvement to the route, including adding a lot more quests into the guide, mostly from Moonglade, Silithus and Eastern Plaguelands. This will make the final level 59 grind much shorter.
Zygor Guides is an in-game software strategy guide for World of Warcraft. Every guide comes complete with the Guide Viewer, which displays step by step instructions of what quests to accept, how to complete objectives, when to use items, and more. Our gorgeous waypoint arrow will point you exactly where to go at all times and the model viewer will display fully rendered 3D models of NPCs and objects mentioned in the guide.
Nov 10 How to get to the broken isles Hello I am a lvl 100 hunter and I want to go the broken isles. You see after using my character boost,finished my mission on attacking the horde and getting my new bow I wasn't able to go to the broken isles. I heard you were able to get to lvl 110 if you go but I am not able to get there. There are no portals,no ships and no mission's for me to get to. Please tell me a way to get to the broken isles for the allianceTerthelard12 Nov 10
Nov 15 4 Garrison Mounts You Can get with ease Hi guys, I decided to make a video about the Garrison Invasion mounts and how you can get them. The percentage of mount drops are pretty high, so if you want to learn more check out this video I made: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpITHj8d16w&t=10s With that same character, I made another guide about what buildings I choose and routes I take to make gold using a Draenor Garrison: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8BcMEBpZ6o&t=19s Let me know what you think!Druidria0 Nov 15
World of Warcraft Classic is currently in beta, which means some players are getting a chance to experience a much older version of the MMO ahead of its release. WoW Classic is based on how WoW played in August 2006, back around update 1.12. Back then, things were different. Tauren hitboxes were much larger, sitting could cause certain combat effects to not trigger and completed quests were marked with dots and not question marks. Strange days.
Well, I think, a “wall of of text” is not defined by the amount of characters. To create a wall of text you need two things: lots of characters, and lots of missing line breaks / paragraphs. I’m completely aware of that, and I’m always trying to section and format my texts in a manner that makes it usable for readers ;) I think the limit of 990 chars is not contributing to avoid walls of text. (It’s easy to build a a wall of text with only 500 chars, but I think you got what I mean…)
Nov 6 Who is this? in Westfall, there is a quest called "livin' the life" where you have to go into a cave and hide inside while you listen to a conversation between Glubtok (a boss in deadmines, who is a giant two-headed ogre) and a "Shadowy Figure"(it's a female btw), you can actualy see the figure, it looks like a priest in shadow form or something like that. In the Dead Mines dungeon, there is a worgen boss who is named admiral something dont remember, and once you kill him, he says "You will never find her, until it is too late." I believe he's talking about the shadowy figure. Just wondering but who exactly is "she" or the "shadowy figure"?Rubberchops6 Nov 6
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Main » 2019 » December » 4 » Forex forecast and recommendations today 04.12.2019: EURUSD - Is Trump threats are serious ?, GBPUSD
Forex forecast and recommendations today 04.12.2019: EURUSD - Is Trump threats are serious ?, GBPUSD
Events that should pay attention today:
18:00 MSK. US: ISM composite index for the non-productive sphere.
The euro dollar forex trading forecast for EURUSD:
Donald Trump on Tuesday continued their threats. At this time, under the hand hit France and China. Trump has performed in London at the NATO conference, where he said that the second economy of the Eurozone does not behave properly and may fall under the tax. About Beijing US President said that he could wait for the conclusion of the transaction is still a year or two, they say it's not in a hurry, and America gets a good fee from China. Is Trump serious threat? In my opinion, no. A few hours after these statements by US President said the United States and France could agree on trade, since the problems are not as big as it may seem at first glance. About China Trump said that he could sign the agreement, but it should be good. Trump is almost three years as president and his strategy has always been in this period is the same: first intimidate and then sit down at the negotiating table and to negotiate for itself on favorable terms. So this time it all intimidated, and after a while said that he was ready to negotiate. How this process will affect the value of the euro. Euro correlated with gold, and precious metal earlier in the week showed an increase of "threats Trump." Who can turn the gold market down and against this background, the euro will show a decline.
EURUSD recommendation: Sell 1.1091 / 1.1114, and take profit 1.1046
Pound to dollar forex forecast GBPUSD today 04/12/2019
The British pound is now the strongest currency in the market. Early parliamentary elections will be held in the UK on December 12, and the lead in many polls the ruling party led by Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Investors are positive on the pound, as the process is complete BREXIT waiting, which began in the summer of 2016 and in three years had all bored. Jones promises to withdraw Britain from ES January 31, 2020 - he believes the market is growing and the pound. Johnson was carried out its promise? Definitely can not say, because once he had missed when promised complete BREXIT October 30. But investors are now looking at the pound is optimistic and ready to buy a pound of December 12, inclusive, that is, before the voting day.
GBPUSD recommendation: Buy 1.2985 / 1.2970, and take profit 1.3038
Dollar against the yen forex prognnoz USDJPY today 12/04/2019
At present, formed a mixed background. On the one hand, it is possible to expect reduction of quotations on the background of the negative dynamics of the debt market, where the yield spread on 10-year United States and Japan, government bonds shows a decline the last two trading days. On the other hand, I expect the downward trend in the precious metals market, which may cause the growth of a given currency pair, as USDJPY has a strong inverse correlation with gold.
USDJPY recommendation: flat 108.34 -108.91
FreshForex analyst
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Board index » Research
GUESTS AND MEMBERS CAN POST HERE. Not moderated, so you are on your own. Spambots and stalkers and anti-semites will be deleted and banned without notice. Else, try to be thoughtful, protect your own privacy, don't swear much (makes one appear infantile), but I won't censor. POLICE YOURSELF.
Mark 13's version of Matt24
Post subject: Mark 13's version of Matt24
PostPosted: 19 Jan 2017, 08:10
I first checked the CNTTS apparatus for Greek variants which can affect syllable counts (leaving out some, cuz they looked like they were based on Latin texts), and made a master WITHOUT metering it.
Doc (you need to get the Bibleworks fonts at http://www.bibleworks.com/fonts.html to use it)
Mark13MeterTemplate.doc [99.5 KiB]
PDF (which if you convert to doc, you'll have the fonts embedded).
Mark13MeterTemplate.pdf [278.79 KiB]
Will work on the meter, but now you can too.. without the hassle of formatting the text. Lessee what we come up with?
Post subject: Re: Mark 13's version of Matt24
This seems to be my smoking-gun proof that whoever did Beza's text, COUNTED SYLLABLES to get that first amen legw humin. Since no scribe even knew syllable counting existed, seems pretty likely that the way to PROVE THE AUTOGRAPH is to find a copy that proves SYLLABLES WERE COUNTED.
See, here's the pic in BW9, see how that codex is not like the others, its lines go by CLAUSE, see https://twitter.com/brainouty/status/822447866853687297
Or a clearer way to see the Beza codex for 13, how the writer begins lines by clauses,
http://www.brainout.net/BezaeD05M05A-Mk13-2.jpg . Notice how nearly every line begins with a conjunction or prep. That's what you'd need to do if COUNTING SYLLABLES PER CLAUSE. But I see no syllable counts there. Yet that style of listing the text lines is so unusual yet cannot be alone, I bet there are other mss 'out there' which do the same: some, maybe even have counts in the margins?
I hope it violates no copyright laws to show the pic, since its point is to demo the text's uniqueness, not make money on it.
Just compare the draft of Mark 13 I'm working on now at the first 119 syllables versus Matt24 and Luke 21. Again, I inserted all the relevant CNTTS variants in BW9 into the Mark 13 text, and then struck out the ones I didn't count, just as in the Template.. but here I counted some of the variants.
Here's the pdf for Mark 13 I'm working on. COUNT THE SYLLABLES to the last amen legw humin and see how they SEVEN.
Mark13Meter.pdf [294.23 KiB]
I'm revising them again in the latest videos, but here again are the latest uploads for Matt24 and Luke 21:
Matt24-25ParsedR5.pdf [270.24 KiB]
Luke21Meter.pdf [114.39 KiB]
The revisions don't change the syllable counts above, but I'm breaking Luke into more visible clauses, fixing Matt25:30b to 14, etc. Totals at right columns remain the same.
If you'd rather have docs, and you have BW fonts, let me know.
As refresher, here's how that syllable accounting works to validate text, cross-ref, dateline, and count prophecy annually,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UN5Sd0t30tA&list=PL1bv_xPIih3fs-vKfMgiVbt4fmi3Xs3Yf&index=68
Ok, so I metered Mark 13 using the Template you provided. Thank you so much, it made it so much easier.
I tried to follow the Westcott and Hort 1881 manuscript (simply because I find it reliable in many cases), but did deviate in two instances. I used ποιήσουσιν (4 syllables) rather than δώσουσιν (3 syllables) in Mark 13:22, and I omitted the αὐτοῦ (2 syllables) in Mark 13:27b. I made these changes, because they appear to work better with the meter, but the whole thing might work better if we use a combination of different variances.
Mark 13:30 ends at 1052 syllables (because of the hoti). I don't know what to make of that.
Also, Mark 13:32b-35 is a solid 126. I find that a bit odd, so I'm wondering if some of those clauses could be broken down even further to yield more sub-sevening. I will experiment with that later.
Mark13MeterWestcottAndHortStyle.pdf [227.16 KiB]
HEB 4:12
The word of God is alive and powerful, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of the soul and the spirit, of the joints and marrow, and is a critic of the thoughts and intents of the heart.
Okay, so what are you using as the meaning of the two datelines?
42 years before 69 AD is what? And how is it that 42 relates to the text of admiring the buildings?
126 years before 69 AD is what? How does it relate to the disciples?
Ending count is 1246 so 1276 AD. What's important about that?
42 years prior to 69 AD could be the start of our Lord's ministry in 27 AD, since He is the true Temple.
Then 126 years prior to 69 AD could be the division of the Hasmonean kingdom into 5 districts by Aulus Gabinius in 57 BC. Since Judah fell with the destruction of Temple in 70 AD, maybe the second dateline is playing off the disintegration of the Hasmonean kingdom.
The other meter you want to proof is the total. What does it mean? 1246 is 1050+196. Why?
I'm doing the same: why is 'my' 1281 the total? 1050+231, so I can claim Mark's evoking the meter of Daniel 9:24-27, but why the PAST total, and why include the 14? If I then add up all the uniquely-occurring initial NT dateline meters I get the same 231 total, including the yet-future '7' dateline meter of John's Gospel. Okay, but is that coincidence or intentional, and why?
Again, when you get the right answer, everything is supposed to click in place like a finished jigsaw puzzle. I don't see where we got that yet. Luke 21 alone seems 'done', but I wonder, since it doesn't add more than its own initial years-to-pre-Church Mill as its total (1050+35), whereas Matthew and Mark go past those values.
Well, first look at the meters you got. 42 in the context of admiring Temple Building makes no sense to me, as 42 is a positive meter, Jacob leaving Haran with two families, 21 years after he entered to get but one wife. But then Eph1 talks of two walls, so if admiring one temple led to two...
Then your 126 meter in connection with naming four of the apostles, could be a kind of memorial. At least two of them are dead when Mark writes: Peter's meter (and Jude's too, he being brother of dead James and BOTH of their names being Jacobus in Greek).. is 126, 28x2=56+70 in 2nd Peter,
https://vimeo.com/channels/bibledatelinemeters/122425890
So there is some possibility those meters are the right ones?
Okay, to your question: thinking over 'your' 196 versus 'my' 231 as the overage ending in Mark.
196=7+14+21+28+35+42+49. All the meters come from these, and all of them are used as dateline meters in the Bible I've seen so far. So 7+49=56, so the total doesn't need to go that far. As you do the actual addition, you'll see the others at each +.
231, is Dan9:24-27 meter, http://www.brainout.net/Dan924HebParsed.pdf. I did a video on it where I got interrupted by God in the middle for making mistakes and didn't edit that out (too long, sorry)
vimeo copy (its playlist won't embed) https://vimeo.com/channels/dan9meter/78470213
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDYmgBx58tM&index=35&list=PLFF2856603C945631
So it's as if, at 231, Mark ends with a meter mnemonic as an epilogue, reminding the reader of God's response to granting Daniel's prayer for more time and Temple Rebuilding. Idea that the close of the 1050 'play' is that God will grant Church more time maybe based ON Daniel's prayer, since after all Christ dies at the start of the 62nd week not the end.
The sum is also equal to the initial NT dateline meters, 7+14+21+28+35+42+49+56+35 . What's interesting here is the doubling of 35 and that JOHN'S GOSPEL alone has a 7 initial dateline meter.. not written yet. So if the prophecy of dateline meters comes true then again you know Mark's Gospel Chap 13, comes from God.
I wonder how many of the meters use this same style, if indeed this is the style. For Matt24's 63 ends up being a prophecy of Luke's meter but also other NT books (not all of them, unless you break the 63 into 7s). Luke ends with 35, which ties back to his initial chapter meter, and of course Matt24 does too.
Bigger point is for sure, that these numbers are deliberate. Whether we can say the above meanings are the right interp of them, is a whole diff kettle of fish.
Here's an interesting (copyrighted) writeup by a Cambridge guy on how the Franks reacted to some strange weather they experienced in 830-875 AD. Compare that to the same periods in each Luke, Mark, and Matthew. The meter doesn't match but does help us to see what people were thinking that does fit the text.
http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/ccc/ce120500.html
Post subject: Re: REVISED Mark 13's play on Matt24
PostPosted: 06 Feb 2017, 19:43
Okay, I needed to make changes due to the variants. Some of them I'd ignored, were so universal and made the meter work so aptly, it seems almost certain that Mark intended them. Much better sevening resulted, with patterns I didn't notice before. Same name, but the online version posted earlier is still preserved. Here, only in this forum, is the revision.
Some meters still bother me. But it's a lot closer, probably, in this revision.
Total meter is unchanged, cuz it's a shorthand metaphor for granting a new 490 through to the end of CA, to say '231'.
Compare this gif of the rise of the Mongol empire and its stopping, to the similar years in Mark 13.
https://twitter.com/ThingsWork/status/8 ... 3627040770
Now compare to https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... imated.gif
Notice that Mark amalgamates both Matt25 virgins and three-slaves parables in that ending.
Looks like Mark might be focusing on the Eastern Empire, whereas Luke is focusing on the West?
So Matt 24-25 is tracking general Church trends, as a master theme, while Luke tracks West and Mark tracks East? That might explain why John never wrote about the Olivet Discourse, but instead was given the Book of Revelation. He was give the three strand of prophecy woven together into one.
Yeah. So in light of that, look at this bio on the last real BYZ emperor, search on 'Emperor and Church' or 'unity' and be prepared for a Rev17 shock, http://www.roman-emperors.org/manuel2.htm
Remember, these were the guys who ALWAYS HAD AND COULD READ the Greek.
Kill me now.
Now posting the Mark 13 videos, starting here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odQ687qJyPY&list=PL1bv_xPIih3fs-vKfMgiVbt4fmi3Xs3Yf&index=86
Latest Mark 13 pdf now online, http://www.brainout.net/Mark13Meter.pdf and is NOT the same as the original uploads in this thread. Am still editing it also.
As far as mapping out how Mark diverges into the history of the East starting in 325 AD, there's too much to explain. He first plays with the locations when Constantine and his sons all die, which most people TODAY wouldn't even understand why, that's a witty segue.
The chronology of the rulers is important. Scroll down to 'THE EASTERN EMPIRE' to know what to look up, here: http://www.roman-emperors.org/impindex.htm
Also Siege of Constantinople (many times in history), Byzantine Empire articles in Wiki are helpful, plus many of the 'timeline of Constantinople' or 'Byzantium' sites (some better than others).
Okay, turns out Mark 13 is doing for Byzantine history what Paul did for Western Rome, and it's a biting annual prophetic satire. Example: Mark 13:34's phrase 'and He gave to His slaves' marks the Latin sack and takeover of Constantinople in 1204.
Many specifics like that one. Here's the revised meter, but am still going through the anaphora keywords so the text will change again.
Mark13MeterR.pdf [441.67 KiB]
In case I forget, the latest versions will be http://www.brainout.net/Mark13MeterR.doc (if BW fonts) and http://www.brainout.net/Mark13MeterR.pdf
For like Paul (so the reader would see it quickly), Mark constructs anaphora out of keywords, starting with Blepw; it starts with very alive Titus' future death as the first occurrence of Blepw; next is Septimius Severus; next Blepw is the 'center' on the yet-future Constantine; but Blepw does not cover his own death, but when he kills Licinius his brother-in-law, his own wife and son Crispus in rapid succession. So he's seeing their deaths which he caused, and they're not seeing anything, get the pun?
The ide occurrences also seven to Blepw, but I don't see any Bible stress. They are all turning points in Byzantine history, usually from recovery back to decline. Death is stressed each time, of the Emperor in question, though the first ref is to Nero who doesn't die at the benchmark, but killed his mother then. Of course, Nero is newly dead when Mark writes, so the connection will be a pregnant one.
So later they will be added, so the 'nest' depicted in the Notes of the pdf will be changed.
Just as Paul had done with the eta's in thelematos, Mark uses Blepw to show reversal by a successor. The successor might be bad or good, but Blepw rulers tagged were all reformers.
This tagging continues with the kurios and huios keywords, as each such time was a turning point in getting Bible manuscripts out of Byzantium and into the West. Scholars know this already, but they don't know Mark is tagging the years it happened, using the same meaning of those tags as in Matthew 24-25!
I wonder now what Luke might be tagging, tho he uses almost none of these keywords, if I recall correctly.
Last edited by brainout on 14 Feb 2017, 04:59, edited 1 time in total.
PostPosted: 04 Mar 2017, 04:53
Update: http://www.brainout.net/Mark13MeterR.pdf now has Byzantine History, revised meter which is spot on re that history, balances more obviously to Matt24/Luke21 as well, astonishing stuff. The above playlist now has 96 vids, so 10 more on Mark 13 and how Rev17 uses it, with many more to come.
I'm blown away at how much difference the variants make and how so much clicks into place when the right ones are found. Had to revamp Matt24 and Luke 21 as a consequence:
http://www.brainout.net/Matt24-25ParsedR6.pdf
http://www.brainout.net/Luke21Meter.pdf
Mark 13's Meter was updated, so use the link again if you want to see it, http://www.brainout.net/Mark13MeterR.pdf . Can now download en masse from the downloads directory, http://www.brainout.net/downloads .
PostPosted: 08 Oct 2017, 03:01
Series will resume after October 15th, with a much-more indepth 'Quantum Bible' showing all the related passages for the Constantine-Justinian I period.
PostPosted: 23 Jul 2018, 10:48
I also have to redo ALL of the Revelation 17 videos. 7-syllable error moves all the syllable counts up. Words philas and blasphemias each have NO elisions, so add one syllable each when you get there. Current 227 should be 5 higher, math error, so it becomes 234 with the elision corrections.
So make those changes. Ruins all the Rev videos I've done but the NEW results are FAR BETTER and more biting sarcasm, so worth it (i.e., musterion standalone word now references the Council of Nicaea and Constantine dies at 'whore'.
Shortcut, use current Rev17R.pdf and just add 7 syllables to the 227, read as if those extra seven were there, as the corrected year.
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December 9, 2015 December 9, 2015 by Ernest Johnson
Brooklyn Man Convicted Of Killing Neighbor Inside Gravesend Building
Fired at Victim Multiple Times, Wounded Another
Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson today announced that a 33-year-old man has been convicted of murder and attempted murder for the 2013 fatal shooting of a man inside a building in Gravesend, Brooklyn, which left another man with a gunshot wound to the arm.
District Attorney Thompson said, “This defendant chose to settle a score with a gun and senselessly took a life. He will now have many years to spend in a prison cell and think about the foolishness of his choice.”
The District Attorney identified the defendant as Tremaine Holmes, 33, of 30 Avenue V in Gravesend, Brooklyn. He was convicted yesterday afternoon of second-degree murder and second-degree attempted murder following a jury trial before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Vincent Del Giudice. The defendant will be sentenced on January 4, 2016 at which time he faces a maximum sentence of 40 years to life in prison.
The District Attorney said that, according to trial testimony, at about 11:55 p.m. on August 15, 2013, the defendant fired multiple shots at point blank range, hitting Perice Brown and also striking another man inside 30 Avenue V. He then chased Darryl Brown, firing multiple shots outside the building. Perice died from his injuries and the other victim suffered a gunshot wound to his arm.
The defendant and Perice lived in the same building and were known to each other. The defendant was apprehended in Binghamton, NY on October 15, 2013.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Bernarda Villalona, formerly of the District Attorney’s Violent Criminal Enterprises Bureau, under the supervision of Nicole Chavis, Chief, and the overall supervision of Executive Assistant District Attorney William E. Schaeffer, Chief of the District Attorney’s Investigations Division.
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The School of Nursing is widely recognised as the training institution of choice in New Zealand, with all clinical programmes accredited by the Nursing Council of New Zealand. An international expert in the psychological needs of individuals with brain injury will visit Auckland in October.
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The University of Auckland (Māori: Te Whare Wānanga o Tāmaki Makaurau) is the largest university in New Zealand, located in the country's largest city, Auckland. It is the highest-ranked university in the country, being ranked 82nd worldwide in the 2015/16 QS World University Rankings.
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Letter from CEOs
Global influence and vision
Climate protection
Fuels and raw materials use
Sustainability with concrete
Home Introduction Letter from CEOs Global influence and vision Key issues — Safety — Climate protection — Fuels and raw materials use — Air emissions — Local impacts on land and communities — Water — Supply chain management — Sustainability with concrete — Working with others Contact Us Search
Safety is an issue of utmost importance. With a common goal to improve health and safety performance, CSI members are working tirelessly to improve this, not only for their own employees but also for contractors and suppliers.
The CSI has delivered on its promises to develop a common reporting protocol for employee safety. It has also delivered safety programs to educate contractors and drivers – which are identified as key areas of concern – to improve safety and particularly to reduce the number of fatalities. The ultimate mission of the CSI and its members is to completely eliminate fatalities.
+ - Employee lost time incident frequency rate (per million manhours, directly employed) for all activities Click to collapse
The CSI guidelines for measuring and reporting safety were published for the first time in 2005. Before that, the data collected covers only cement activities instead of all different types of activities of member companies, i.e. aggregates, readymix, etc. Hence, only data from 2005 onwards are presented here to provide a comparable basis.
“Lost time incident frequency rate” in the diagram refers to the number of employee lost time injuries in hours per 1,000,000 manhours of directly employed full-time employee.
+ - Employee fatality rate (per 10,000 directly employed) for all activities Click to collapse
“Fatality rate” in the diagram is calculated based on total number of fatalities in all activities (cement, aggregates, ready-mix, etc.) per 10,000 directly employed full-time employees.
+ - Total number of fatalities for all activities by employment type Click to collapse
Number of companies reporting all activities: 12 11 11 12 14 14
With fluctuation in the early years, a mild decreasing trend is noted in fatalities of companies’ own full-time employees and contractors from 2008. However, fatalities of third parties increased during the same period. Even after taking into account the factor of better and wider scope of reporting, the situation still warrants more efforts to improve companies’ performance in the area.
There is still a long way to go, but the first step is to ensure that, within the next 10 years, the average safety performance of CSI members will, as a minimum, match that achieved by the leading industrial sectors.
To achieve this, the CSI is enhancing members’ efforts by collecting and sharing information on incidents, focusing on sharing and discussing good safety practices on critical activities, to address the root causes of fatal accidents and their ultimate prevention.
The CSI is partnering with the Global Road Safety Partnership, which operates in 30 countries, bringing governments, businesses and civil society organizations together to help tackle the man-made, global road accident crisis, particularly in emerging regions. This partnership will assist in tackling road safety fatalities, a major cause of fatalities in the cement industry.The CSI is strengthening and expanding its network of country level workgroups with its members to address safety issues at the local level. So far, local initiatives are operating in India, China, Brazil, Egypt, Mexico and Thailand.The focus of the CSI’s work in the past has been on safety, with good reasons. Nevertheless, a healthy work force goes hand-in-hand with safe operating practices. The CSI has therefore embarked on a scoping exercise to identify how a coordinated approach to health issues could bring added value to members and to the cement sector as a whole.
Go to www.wbcsdcement.org/safety to find out more on CSI's work on health and safety.
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Safety Climate protection Fuels and raw materials use Air emissions Local impacts Water Supply chain management Sustainability with concrete Working with others
Safety Climate protection
Fuels and raw materials use Air emissions
Local impacts Water
Supply chain management Sustainability with concrete
(English & Japanese)
Download the summary report
(English, Chinese, Japanese, Portugese, Spanish & Thai)
The CSI is a sector-project of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD).
Visit the CSI official website.
An IMS Consulting Service
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In the Hotel Lobbies of Sam Shepard and Sally Rooney
Author: Ariel Katz |
Hotels by nature are spaces of temporary, transitory, and hard-to-classify encounters. Setting a story in a hotel frees characters to have discussions they might otherwise not have, to do things they might otherwise refrain from doing.
Revisiting Alice Munro’s “Material”
Munro raises questions about the relationship between two things that often coincide in writers: the first is a certain amount of self-indulgence and self-mythologizing; the second is the difficult work of putting aside the ego and observing the world.
Domestic Whimsy in Fascism’s Shadow
Natalia Ginzburg’s 1963 novel is a record of a lost world and a lost way of life. Its insistently domestic narrative style, in its humanizing particularity, is also an act of resistance against the ascendant totalitarian ideologies looming over its characters’ lives.
Exploring the Self in Orlando and The Puttermesser Papers
Virginia Woolf and Cynthia Ozick both feature protagonists who flaunt societal gender-based expectations like marriage and children in their mock-biographies.
How Can We Be Happy in a World Full of Suffering?
Olivia Laing, in her new novel, writes of a feeling that resonates: “She felt blank. She felt blank and mildly hysterical, she was itching to do something but it wasn’t clear what.”
Eudora Welty and Place in Storytelling
In her essay “Place in Fiction,” originally delivered as a lecture at Duke in 1955, Eudora Welty almost immediately positions place as an antidote to broad generalizations about human experience.
Foreignness and Familiarity in Mavis Gallant’s “Mlle. Dias de Corta”
Mavis Gallant’s “Mlle. Dias de Corta” unfolds more like a novel than a short story. It’s a second-person address to a tenant the narrator, an aging, xenophobic French widow, had twenty years before—a young actress, Alda Dias de Corta, whom the widow took in “for companionship rather than income.”
Reading Herzog in 2018
Saul Bellow’s novel is often characterized as a rich portrait of a mind in crisis. It’s also an exploration of the role of history—and memory—in personal life.
Photography and Language in John McPhee’s “Under the Cloth”
The view camera creates a particular kind of image through extreme pause and meticulous composition; by writing about a view camera, McPhee creates a particular kind of essay, one that uses the techniques of both view camera photography and narrative.
The Cocoon and the Vista: Rebecca Solnit and Czeslaw Milosz on Vastness
Both Solnit and Milosz transform picturesque vistas into fully alive places on the page. Their methods are instructive not only for writing about place, but as tools for toggling between any set of Big Questions and the particulars of moving as a body through streets.
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Tag: Jeremy Paxman
Come Off It, Paxo! If You Earn a Million a Year the Licence-Payer Has a Right to Know
Last night’s Newsnight saw Old Malvernian millionaire interrogator Jeremy Paxman clashing with Old Etonian millionare Mayor of London Boris Johnson. But according to Paul Waugh the most exciting bits of the interview weren’t included:
In what insiders described as “fantastic political theatre”, Mr Johnson clashed repeatedly with his interviewer over his stance on an EU referendum, on his membership of Oxford University’s Bullingdon Club and on David Cameron’s public image.”
Mr Johnson raised the issue of Paxman’s pay, saying: “You are paid elephantine sums by the taxpayer.”
Paxman replied: “If only that were true. You don’t know [what I earn]. I should stop making assertions.”
In unscreened exchanges, Mr Johnson pointed out that Londoners could see how much he earned as Mayor but licence-fee payers were not allowed similar transparency. At one point, Mr Johnson said: “Why don’t you get a proper job?”
When asked about drunken antics in his Oxford days, the Mayor replied: “Ask me a serious question…”
Splendid stuff and I quite agree with those “Mayoral Aides” (Boris?) who are urging that the full interview be put up online.
What interests me especially is the question of Paxo’s alleged £1 million salary. It interests me first as a nosey bastard. It interests me second as a licence-fee payer. But most of all it interests me ideologically.
They can be terribly grand BBC presenter types – the Paxos and Dimblebys – when quizzed about their personal lives. The salary issue, especially, they seem to think is tantamount to asking the Queen whether or not she goes to the loo. And up to a point I agree with them. A BBC political interviewer’s private life, in so far as it does not bear on his public role as frank and fearless interrogator of slippery MPs, is none of our ruddy business.
Where it is our business, though, is in cases like the Paxo/Bozza clash above. The ideological undercurrent to Paxo’s line of questioning (he may not share it but tough: that’s his karmic price for working for the pinko BBC) goes like this: “You are a toffy public school boy. David Cameron is a toffy public school boy. You were both in the Buller. You both earn way, WAY more than the national average. How can throwbacks like you possibly be fit to run modern Britain?”
This tack is outrageous and deserves to be challenged at every turn, as vigorously as possible. (Can you imagine a similar line of questioning being adopted if Boris’s and Dave’s “crimes” were to be, say, black or female or homosexual or physically handicapped?) Boris was quite right to make his response personal, for an ex public schoolboy on a million a year (or whatever Paxo earns) by asking such a question lays himself open to a charge of hypocrisy.
No more do Boris Johnson’s or David Cameron’s class, background and income rule them out of being great, effective and morally decent politicians than Paxo’s class, background and income rule him out of being a first rate interviewer.
If Paxo wishes to be impertinent (and disingenuous) on this score, then he should damned well expect some impertinence back.
Wind Farms: Will Paxo ride to his brother’s rescue?
Boris Johnson for Prime Minister
Maybe we’d be better off if David Cameron had gone to Harrow
BBC endorses tax avoidance. Good. Now can we stop paying our licence fees?
Posted on October 21, 2009 April 12, 2017 Author JamesCategories blogTags Boris Johnson, class, David Cameron, hypocrisy, Jeremy Paxman, Newsnight
On telly Jeremy Paxman is a terrifying figure: combative, irascible, impatient, contemptuous and ungenerous. (For an example of the latter, do check out how he begins his interview with right wing US commentator Ann Coulter – who promptly wipes the floor with him). But in real life he is an absolutely sweetheart. On several occasions I’ve watched him compere charity quizzes and prove himself to be such a cuddly, good-natured, double-cheek-kissing, borderline luvvie I wondered whether perhaps he suffers from Jekyll/Hyde syndrome. Either that or the Paxman you see on TV is some kind of evil killer replicant version of the real Jezza, with all the human qualities removed.
It’s this nice, sensitive side of Paxman, I hope, which will ride to the rescue of his brother James – currently fighting a valiant campaign to prevent a wind farm blighting a beauteous stretch of Devon overlooking Dartmoor national park. Presumably the brothers get on (I’m way too scared to ring up and ask, in case the evil TV replicant answers the phone) and go to stay with one another. In which case, Jezza will surely have been to his brother’s Dartmoor pad, noticed the region’s rugged magnificence, and been struck by the fact that what the area really doesn’t need is nine wind turbines on 120 foot high sticks dominating the horizon and quite removing all sense of the natural from the landscape. And will thus be compelled to lend his weight, as a public figure, to this tremendously worthwhile cause.
Or will he? Paxman is an ostensibly bright man. But unfortunately there are an awful lot of ostensibly bright people who have been taken in by Al Gore’s Man Made Global Warming Myth, in much the same way as many global “intellectuals” were seduced in the Thirties (and Forties, Fifties, Sixties, Seventies, Eighties, Nineties and Noughties if your name’s Professor EL Hobsbawm) by Josef Stalin. Even more unfortunately, Paxman works for the BBC where to question the Al Gore version of “climate change” is about as career safe as it would have been for an ambitious SD officer in Nazi Germany to start championing the human rights of Jews, gypsies and homosexuals.
A bit like the Queen, leading BBC interviewers have to adopt a guise of impartiality so it’s not always easy to know what they really think. (Actually I lie, it’s pimpsqueak: they’re tree-hugging pinkoes, every man Jack of them). When I Googled to find what Paxo’s views are on “climate change”, all I could find was a piece he wrote in the BBC’s in house magazine Ariel, in which he lambasted his employers for their ecological hypocrisy.
He wrote: “It strikes me as very odd indeed that an organisation which affects such a high moral tone cannot be more environmentally responsible.”
“The BBC’s environment correspondents, even the makers of series like Planet Earth, are trapped in a bizarre arrangement in which they travel the globe to tell the audience of the dangers of climate change while leaving a vapour trail which will make the problem even worse.”
How are we to interpet this? The charitable interpretation is that he is not taking a stance on “climate change” per se, merely on the inconsistency of the BBC’s attitude, viz: ‘If you really believe all this green drivel you’re spouting, at least show some kind of intellectual and moral consistency.’
What makes me fear that Paxo is very much part of the problem not the solution, however, is his apparent belief in ‘carbon credits’. Elsewhere in the article, he complains that BBC staff are being forced personally to fork out for the cost of carbon-offsetting the air-, land- and sea-miles for all their BBC junkets to the Olympics, Glastonbury, and God knows where else. He speaks as if, somehow, this were a bad thing; as if – heaven forfend – it ought to be the licence-payer who ought to be funding these carbon-offsets.
“Come off it, Jeremy!” as I’m sure his killer TV replicant would say under different circumstances. There are varying levels of credulousness and air-headed stupidity among warmists. But only the really thickest of thick actually believe that paying fifteen quid so that some bloke in India can plant a mango tree so as to carbon-neutralise the cost of your eco-junket in Copenhagen is anything other than silly, pointless and redolent of the Emperor’s New Clothes.
Still, here is the perfect opportunity for Paxo to prove me wrong. Go on Jezza! Come out for your bro! Speak up against the wind farm menace! Otherwise, it may be that I shall be forced to distrust anything you say on any subject ever again, for I will know that you are not the questing, intellectually fearless empiricist you claim to be but, well frankly, that you’re just another of Al Gore’s useful idiots.
We need to talk about wind farms…
Come off it, Paxo! If you earn a million a year the licence-payer has a right to know.
‘Wind farms cure cancer, save kittens, create world peace’ says new wind industry report
The best article on wind farms you will ever read
Posted on August 11, 2009 April 22, 2017 Author JamesCategories telegraphblogTags Jeremy Paxman, TV
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BETHLEHEM, PA - ***CD GIVEAWAY SHOW*** DENNIS DEYOUNG AND THE MUSIC OF STYX
Location: THE WIND CREEK EVENT CENTER
77 Sands Blvd
Details: Dennis DeYoung’s new album "26 East" included in the ticket price and given to each paid admission upon entry.
DENNIS DEYOUNG is a founding member of STYX and the lead singer and writer on seven of the bands eight Top Ten Hits. His live concert showcases all the STYX Greatest Hits spanning the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s. The set includes all eight top Top 10 hits including LADY, BABE, COME SAIL AWAY, TOO MUCH TIME ON MY HANDS, BEST OF TIMES, MR. ROBOTO plus Classic Rock Anthems RENEGADE, BLUE COLLAR MAN, SUITE MADAME BLUE, ROCKIN THE PARADISE and more.
Additional Info/Tickets: www.windcreekeventcenter.com/events/dennis-deyoung-the-music-of-styx/
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We are working on the Arabic content for this section
Home | My Account | View Cart | Checkout
— Main Menu —About Us - About Derek Prince - What We Do - Statement of Faith Where We Work - Middle East - - Algeria - - Kuwait - - Egypt - - Lebanon - - Iraq - - Syria - - Qatar - - UAE - - Oman - - Bahrain - - Yemen - - Saudi Arabia - Worldwide Resources - Free Teaching Letters - Daily Devotional - Self Study Bible Course - - Introduction - - Abbreviated Names Of Bible Books - - Foundation - - Deeper Life - - Israel:God’s Chosen People - - The Future - Mobile App - Latest News Get Connected - Give - Contact Us Store
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Derek Prince (1915 – 2003) was born in India of British parents. Educated as a scholar of Greek and Latin at Eton College and Cambridge University
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Derek Prince in Middle East
Derek Prince Ministries owes much of its origins in the Middle East. Almost immediately after his powerful experience of conversion, Derek Prince was shipped off to North Africa aboard a troop ship. Speaking of his three years in the deserts of Egypt, Libya and the Sudan, he says he was “discipled in the desert.” He studied his Bible with the same diligence and thoroughness he had applied in his academic career. After three years serving the British Army in North Africa, Derek was posted to Jerusalem. There he met and married a Danish lady, Lydia Christensen, the mother of a small children’s home. The family spoke Arabic, and Derek practiced his Arabic with them. At the same time he began teaching himself Hebrew. Together the family saw the rebirth of the state of Israel in 1948 and lived through the War of Independence. After working and ministering in many nations, Derek died in his sleep at his home in Jerusalem on the 24th of...
Christians in war-torn Iraq are seeking comfort in God’s word
Dear Friend, Pastor Rashid lives in war-torn Baghdad. He and others in his church are refusing...
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Institute of Sustainable Infrastructure (USA) Awards DHA City Karachi
After a year-long evaluation, the Institute of Sustainable Infrastructure in Washington DC, USA, has given the “International Award” to Defence Housing Authority City Karachi (DCK).
According to the DHA spokesperson, the award was received by DCK project director Brig Mohammad Rafique at a ceremony held at the Metro Centre in Washington DC.
The award has also been conferred upon the DCK’s lead consultants Osmani and Company (Pvt) Ltd with their international associates Prof Spiro Pollalis, Doxiadis and RMJM.
During the ceremony, the institute’s chief executive William Berterra appreciated the leadership role taken by Pakistan in sustainable planning of cities. He reiterated adopting a sustainable infrastructure for a whole city had been done for the first time and appreciated Pakistani engineers and planners for achieving this gigantic task within 12 months.
He said DCK had now become a sustainability benchmark, which will be followed in developing other cities around the world.
Meanwhile, Brig Rafique said this was just the start of a long partnership between DHA and the institute and the authority would continue to work on sustainable infrastructure and promote sustainability for the betterment of every Pakistani.
Institute of Sustainable Infrastructure is an internationally recognized organization that has developed and maintains a sustainability rating system for civil infrastructure in the world, and was founded by the American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC), the American Public Works Association (APWA) and the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE).
Top 10 Features of Sustainable Infrastructure of DHA City Karachi (DCK)
DHA City Karachi – Sector 3 Map
Sustainable Transportation in DHA City Karachi (DCK) – All You Need To Know!
Jawed Khan, Houston, USA says:
Congratulation to all DHA city Karachi team members.
Keep up good work.
« The Creative Mind – Redesigning Pakistani Design Education
[Polling] DHA City Karachi (DCK) New Price Calculation Formula »
Top 10 Features of Sustainable Infrastructure of DHA City Karachi (DCK) DHA City Karachi – Sector 3 Map Sustainable Transportation in DHA City Karachi (DCK) – All You Need To Know! DHA City Karachi – Sector 5 Map DHA City Karachi – Sector 7 Map
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PZB - Zoning Division
PZB - Zoning DivisionCurrently selected
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Solicit feedback from industry, primarily in the AGR Tier, to ascertain how best to accommodate Landscape Service operations that are integrated with farming operations for the nursery industry, and other considerations.
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03/29/2017 No Agenda
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03/29/2017 N/A 03/29/2017
07/11/2017 Postponed* N/A N/A N/A N/A
*(To allow industry representatives time to provide supporting back up documentation to substantiate further discussion.)
Art. 7, Landscaping
The Landscape Subcommittee will reconvene in 2017 to address pending topics and work on the reorganization of Chapters in Article 7, Landscaping. The Subcommittee will be making recommendations for Unified Land Development Code (ULDC) amendments to be presented to the Land Development Regulation Advisory Board (LDRAB) and the Board of County Commissioners (BCC) in Round 2017-02, for tentative adoption in January 2018.
05/17/2017 05/17/2017 05/17/2017 05/17/2017 N/A
06/20/2017 06/20/2017 6/20/2017 06/20/2017 N/A
07/12/2017 07/12/2017 07/12/2017 07/12/2017 N/A
08/02/2017 08/02/2017 08/02/2017 08/02/2017 N/A
11/01/2017 11/01/2017 11/01/2017 N/A N/A
This Subcommittee will be reviewing minor amendments that require feedback from industry and interested parties. In Round 2017-02, this subcommittee is scheduled to review Article 2, Development Review Procedures to consider amendments oriented to address current applications review practice and the reorganization of some chapters in Article 2.
06/27/2017 06/27/2017 06/27/2017 06/27/2017 6/27/2017
07/25/2017 07/25/2017 07/25/2017 07/25/2017 N/A
08/21/2017 Postponed N/A N/A N/A N/A
10/10/2017 10/10/2017 10/10/2017 N/A 10/10/2017
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PZB Main Office
2300 N Jog Road
West Palm Beach, FL 33411-2741
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MALAGUENA SARASATE PDF
admin May 24, 2019 0 Comments
Sheet Music – £ – Pablo de Sarasate – Malaguena (violin & piano). : Sarasate Pablo Malaguena Op 21 No 1 For Violin and Piano. by Francescatti. International Music: Books. Pablo de Sarasate. Publisher: G. Schirmer. Malagueña for Violin and Orchestra. Work Notes. Available in the USA and Canada only. Publisher. Hans Sikorski.
Author: Tam Gahn
Published (Last): 7 June 2008
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The Early Years – Yehudi Menuhin. Introspection Late Night Partying. The first book, Op. Aires Bohemios, Zigeunerweisen Gypsy Airs. John Malaguna Adams San Francisco: Potstock ‘s Souvenir de Sarasate. James Ehnes in Recital.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pablo de Sarasate. Of Sarasate’s talents as performer and composer, Shaw said that he “left criticism gasping miles behind him”. The violin now bears his name as the Sarasate Stradivarius in his memory. The Parlophone Recordings, This page was last edited on 20 Septemberat Drinking Hanging Out In Love.
In other projects Wikimedia Commons. The central portion is like a miniature theme and variations or, more properly, variation — there is just one elaboration of malaguea new thought.
At Brusselshe met Berthe Marxwho traveled with him as soloist and accompanist on his tours through Europe, Mexico, and the US; playing in about concerts. The deep, relaxed melody that opens the A section is shoved aside by a foot stomping passage, un poco meno lento, in which the pianist is offered an inimitably folkish tune while the violinist shoots off with some elaborate pizzicati. Responding to the same call from the publishing firm of N. Later, as his abilities developed, he was sent to study under Jean-Delphin Alard at the Paris Conservatoire at the age of twelve.
LIVRO VERTEBRADOS KARDONG PDF
Rainy Day Relaxation Road Trip. The Soul of Lady Harmsworth: Jazz Latin New Age. The Art of Yulian Sitkovetsky, Vol. Genre Chamber Music Classical. Aaron Rosand Plays Sarasate.
Pablo de Sarasate – Wikipedia
Sarasate died in BiarritzFranceon 20 Septemberfrom chronic bronchitis. Sarasate’s own compositions are mainly show-pieces designed to demonstrate his exemplary technique. Sexy Trippy All Moods.
Pablo Sarasate was born in PamplonaNavarrethe son of an artillery bandmaster. Famous Encores for Violin. Like most of Sarasate ‘s short pieces, these are salon music at its most suave and disarming, filled in equal parts with ravishing Spanish melody and intricate virtuoso elaboration.
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Malagueña y Habanera, for violin & piano, Op. 21 (Danzas Españolas Nos. 1 & 2)
Perhaps the best known of his works is Zigeunerweisena work for violin and orchestra. Romantic Evening Sex All Themes.
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Sarasate, Malaguena for Violin (IMC)
The popularity of Sarasate’s Spanish flavour in his compositions is reflected in the work of his contemporaries. He began studying the violin with his father at the age of five and later took lessons from a local teacher. The Habanera in Op. Probably xarasate most performed encores are his two books of Spanish dances, brief pieces designed to please the listener’s ear and show off the performer’s talent.
LAS NOCHES LUGUBRES JOSE CADALSO PDF
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Malaguena (violin & piano)
By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. There, at seventeen, Sarasate entered a competition for the Premier Prix and won his first prize, the Conservatoire’s highest honour. Sarasate, who had been publicly performing since childhood, made his Paris debut as a concert violinist sarasatteand played in London the following year. Spanish Dances; Caprice Basque; Zigeunerweisen. Fantasy on La forza del destino Verdi.
Apparently he picked up the violin and played a passage of music perfectly his father had been struggling to play for a long time.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to use the site fully. She also arranged Sarasate’s Spanish dances for the piano.
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Elmhurst CRC News
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ECRC
Email Updates • Service Information • Contact Us
Elders, Deacons, SLT
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Welcome to Elmhurst Christian Reformed Church!
You may have noticed that Elmhurst Christian Reformed Church (Elmhurst CRC) is big on "journeys." Honestly, it's not because we don't like rest or because we want to exhaust anyone. It's simply because we believe that being a Christian is more than a box we check on a census form and that living a Christian life is more than keeping up with a set of rules.
Instead, we believe that being a Christian is all about accepting God's grace, following Jesus and learning to become more like him. And we believe that living the Christian life is all about exploring, encountering and experiencing the hope-bringing, life-changing Jesus. Those are life-long journeys—filled with highs and lows, broad vistas and shady wilderness, calm tides and rough waters.
No matter what a journey looks like, we love when Elmhurst CRC gets to be a part of the faith journey of someone's life. This is why — ever since Rev. Katherine Tessman founded this church in Bellwood in the 1920s — we have committed ourselves to community outreach in everything from:
our vibrant preschool ministries
to adult Bible studies
to local and global service projects
This is why we cherish the wisdom and traditions of our founders and older members while welcoming and utilizing the fresh visions, dreams and gifts of new members and younger generations. This is why we value individuality and diversity — because in each of our unique personalities, gifts and abilities comes a fresh reflection of the image of God and something of value in our journey together.
So what does this mean for you? Well, that we'd love for you to join us! It doesn't matter where your past experiences have led you. It doesn't matter how old you are, who you are, what you wear or what you look like. It doesn't matter where you are in your journey with (or without) Jesus right now.
What matters is that you're curious, wondering about Jesus' promise of grace, of forgiveness, of hope, of this chance to start fresh, to be loved unconditionally. What matters is that you're curious about God's will and purpose for your life. What matters is that you long for others to take this journey of spiritual discovery and of following Jesus with you.
We can't promise you perfection or a journey free from disappointment or frustration. But in our imperfect, broken ways, we'll do our best to help you explore, encounter and experience Jesus. So come by!
Get current news and events the easy way! The church-wide enewsletter is delivered to your email inbox once a week. You may select the enewsletters you would like to receive information from, or unsubscribe from this service at any time. Sign up here.
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Strange and Forgotten Console emulators
From Emulation General Wiki
Console generation: First (1972–1980) – Second (1976–1992) – Third (1983–2003) – Fourth (1987–2003) – Fifth (1993–2001) – Sixth (1998–2013) – Seventh (2005–2017) – Eighth (2012–) – Console Boom – Strange and Forgotten Consoles
Atari consoles – Microsoft consoles – NEC consoles – Nintendo consoles – Sega consoles – SNK consoles – Sony consoles
Beneath the clean and successful exterior of gaming giants like the Super Nintendo and PlayStation lies the Gap of Vidya: a realm populated by unwanted and forgotten consoles of old, immortal in their plasticity. Here we may receive knowledge of their eternal fate. Not everything on this page can or will be emulated.
If it's a video game console from the third generation and beyond, it's on this page for your viewing pleasure.
See also Console Boom emulators for the 70s and 80s consoles.
1 Consoles
1.1 Third generation
1.2 Fourth generation
1.3 Fifth generation
1.4 Sixth generation
1.5 Seventh generation
1.6 Eighth generation
2 Handhelds
Consoles[edit]
Third generation[edit]
MAME support
Action Max None None VHS tape console released in 1987 by Worlds of Wonder. It relied on a light gun and score counter for all of its 5 games, which could not really be lost. There's an add-on for the multi-arcade LaserDisc emulator DAPHNE called SINGE. We're in murky waters here, so run this at your own risk.
Cinemassacre Demonstration
Amstrad GX4000 Good TOSEC/✓ A consolized version of the Amstrad CPC.
Atari XEGS Preliminary Yes A repackaging of the Atari 8-bit computer line marketed as a game console. Notable for having possibly the worst physical design ever. It has preliminary support in MAME, as does the 65XE computer it's based on. Overview CGR Review
BBC Bridge Companion Good Yes
Casio PV-1000 Good No-intro A 1983 console pulled from shelves very quickly. Like many others, its titanic failure makes it a rarity nowadays.
Commodore 64 Games System Good Yes A hacked up console version of the regular Commodore 64, released only in Europe. Failed hilariously due to its outdated tech (1984 hardware in 1990!), the fact that the normal Commodore 64 was already sufficient, and a bad case of the 'no games'.
Dendy Decent Yes The NES, but for slavs. (TCRF COMEDY!) Only Kinaman can properly explain this one (turn on CC). Has decent support in MAME, and its status as an NES clone means its "exclusives" can be played on NES emulators that support broken pirate carts.
Dina Good Yes Hybrid clone of both the SG-1000 and ColecoVision. Sold by Telegames as the Telegames Personal Arcade, allegedly with permission from Coleco themselves. The console's build quality leaves a lot to be desired, not to mention that games for the aforementioned platforms can be played on most ColecoVision emulators anyway.
Family Driver/Video Driver None None Sega also had a go with the VHS-Based console market with the Family Driver from 1988 and unlike most of these type of consoles, this did not play Light-gun games but instead played driving games. Only three games were released for the system; it's unknown when Sega discontinued it.
LJN Video Art None None A notorious "educational" console made by the notorious LJN released in 1985. It was meant as a paint program type system that was meant to compete against television rather than mainstream consoles at the time. It flopped hard. Commercial AVGN Review
My Vision Good None
Philips Videopac + G7400 Imperfect No-intro
RDI Halcyon None None A terrifying machine based on HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey, featuring voice-recognition and AI learning. Its failure bankrupted RDI. There are currently no known emulators for the Halcyon, as mankind has yet to fully comprehend its awesome power.
Super Cassette Vision Decent TOSEC/✓ 1984 successor to the original Cassette Vision. Much easier to emulate as the hardware is similar to some other obscure systems. The graphical quality is somewhere between the ColecoVision and NES. Was actually fairly successful in Japan until the Famicom came along and kicked its ass. Then this happened. It has a homebrew scene that is still alive with some cool stuff like a port of Super Mario Bros and was the first console with a Dragon Ball videogame.
Soundic SD-290 None None Released by Soundic in 1983, the SD-290 was designed to undercut the competition but the lack of compelling games and dated hardware drove customers away from it. Only 11 of the 16 games planned for the system were released. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued.
Furthermore, it's important to note that Soundic sold SD-290 motherboards to various companies to rebrand them as their own consoles.
Terebikko\Video Phone None None The Terebikko is a VHS-Based edutainment console released in Japan by Bandai in 1988 and in the US by Mattel in 1989, The Japanese version had less then 10 games made for it but most of them are based on high profile properties such as Super Mario, Sailor Moon, Doraemon and Dragon Ball Z, Meanwhile, Only 2 games are known to of been released for the US version, both were discontinued in 1994 and it's unknown how many units were sold.
Video Challenger Preliminary None Released in 1987 by Select Merchandise and licensed to 4 companies in different regions, this VHS-Based console only had around 8 games released for it and like most systems of this type, it only played Light-gun games. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued.
Videosmarts None None Released around 1986 by the Connor Toy Corporation, the Videosmarts is VHS edutainment console that taught Preschool to Second Grade Subjects, It's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
View-Master Interactive Vision None None 1988 edutainment VHS console that used two audio tracks on each tape, the player choosing one of two options on the screen, to create interactivity. Also had short mini-game segments with ColecoVision-like graphics. Unlike the other VHS systems, the games were actually decent. No known emulators.
VTech Socrates Preliminary Yes ✓ Old edutainment console released in 1988. It featured a robot-type character called Socrates and had wireless infrared controllers. The same company would later release the V.Smile and V.Flash systems many years later.
Zemmix Series Good Yes Korean system that was simply an MSX/MSX 2, depending on the model, in console form. Mostly just existed as a way to play MSX games. Though there were a few games made specifically for it, they were playable on the MSX as well. Any MSX emulator should work for its games.
Fourth generation[edit]
Commodore CDTV Preliminary TOSEC // redump A console version of the Amiga 500. Can be emulated in WinUAE like other Amiga hardware.
Konami Picno None None Released in Japan by Konami in 1992, the extremely rare Picno is an odd hybrid of a Video Game Console and a Drawing Tablet that used cartridges similar to HuCard's and Sega Pico. It's unknown how many units were sold, when it was discontinued or how many games were released. Software & sources lists.
Krokha None None The Krokha (Кроха) is an unreleased Russian console by SKB Kontur (СКБ Контур). The console was only in development for a short time in 1990 before Kontur pulled the plug on the project. They made 200 units for internal testing and, after it was cancelled, the 200 units were given to the people who worked on the system.
Furthermore, A former employee that worked on the Krokha back in the day has released Photos, Schematics and Rom Dumps for the system on his Website
Memorex VIS Imperfect None A beautiful monster sold only at RadioShack in the early 90s. The software may be playable on Windows 3.x emulators, as the console's OS was an altered version of that.
Philips CD-i Imperfect Yes ✓ Thanks to working with Nintendo to develop a CD add-on for the SNES, the CD-i is notorious for having egregiously terrible Mario and Zelda games, so much so that the Big N disowned their existence and considered it a blank space in their official history. Aggressively promoted and held on for multiple years with multiple different models (targeted at everything from gamers to pharmaceutical companies), but couldn't compete with mainstream consoles and computers of the time.
Pioneer LaserActive Preliminary TOSEC
Sega Pico Good TOSEC/No-intro Child's edutainment console released in 1993. Was actually fairly successful. Has good support in MAME.
Super A'Can Preliminary No-intro ✓ An extremely rare Taiwan-only console released in 1995.
Fifth generation[edit]
3DO Preliminary Redump 2017
Amiga CD32 Preliminary TOSEC // redump A console version of the Amiga 1200. Can be emulated in WinUAE like other Amiga hardware.
Apple Bandai Pippin Preliminary Yes Apple's attempt at being relevant to games. It failed.
Vintage review Currently, there is only preliminary MAME support, but some of its games may be playable on other Apple emulators.
Arcadia Skeet Shoot None None Released in October of 1998 by Toymax (The makers of the Creepy Crawlers and My Pet Monster toys), this Projector-based console, that only played Light-gun games, sold 435,000 units in the first 18 months before being recalled after reports of projectors overheating, melting, smoking and in a few rare cases, causing burn injuries (Faulty cartridges were to blame). After about three revisions, the system was discontinued sometime between 2000 and 2001 with only 5 out of the 9 games advertised known to have been released. It's unknown how many units were sold once the console was relaunched after the recall.
Capcom Power System Changer Good None A console version of the Capcom CPS arcade board. Compatible with SNES controllers.
Casio Loopy Preliminary No-intro A Japan-only game console designed for girls focused on printing stickers. A Magical Shop add-on allowed for the printing of any screenshot, not just Loopy games. Drunken Printing Demonstration Ashens overview
FM Towns Marty Preliminary Trurip An early fifth-generation console released by Fujitsu in 1993. It failed due to its astronomical price. Another version called the Car Marty was also released, designed to be a GPS for automobiles. Preliminary MAME support for both.
Playdia None Yes A disc-based system released in Japan by Bandai in 1994. Notably, it had a wireless controller and all of its titles were interactive movies like Dragon's Lair. No known emulators.
Video Buddy None None Released in November of 1999 by the Interactive Learning Group, this VHS-based console was designed for children aged 3 to 7 years old and had about 20 games released for it. A revision of the Video Buddy that used DVD's instead of VHS's was released in 2003 and while both versions were initially successful, a crowded "Children" console market led to its downfall. The other company that made the DVD-based console shut down in 2006. It's unknown how many units were sold.
Sixth generation[edit]
Buzztime Home Trivia System None None Released around 2004, the system is the result of a partnership between Cadaco Toys and NTN Buzztime; and, as the name implies, the console was designed around playing trivia with family and friends. It's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
Nuon None Trurip
Images? A hybrid DVD player/game console with enhanced movie-viewing tools, from a bunch of former Atari personnel. Only a few games were made for the system, as the cheaper PS2 slaughtered it. There was a closed-source emulator in production called Nuance, but its author died and he didn't release the source code himself. Though it became publicly available.
V.Smile Imperfect Yes ✓ An educational game machine by VTech. It derived from Sunplus' 16-bit SPG-series CPU architecture, which had similar peers including most Jakks Pacific TV games and Vii. The XaviXPORT was similar but had its own custom XaviX CPUs.
XaviXPORT Preliminary None A fitness based system, employing the usage of motion controls in an effort to get players off of the couch - beating Nintendo's Wii by more than 2 years! Each game cart came with a dedicated controller and an own CPU (not in the system, similar to Super FX chips in some SNES carts). The XaviXPORT was actually developed by eight of the engineers who worked on the original development of the NES. An upgraded version with a 16-bit "Super XaviX" CPU compared to the original 8-bit CPU came in 2005. Also of note is the fact that Jackie Chan partnered with SSD Company Limited in order to bring his likeness to the console, which resulted in two licensed games. David Haywood is particularly working on reverse-engineering the XaviX technology for MAME.
Seventh generation[edit]
Game Wave None Redump A failed attempt to steal sales from the upcoming Nintendo Wii, the Game Wave was an obscure console released in 2005 by ZAPiT Games that only had trivia games. It also had a VeggieTales family party game.
Giga Pets Explorer TV Game System
GoGo TV Video Vision None None Released in sometime between 2005 and 2006 by Manley, the GoGo is Another PS2 Eye-Toy turned into edutainment console and like the Ion, it flopped and has since fallen into obscurity, it's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
Hasbro Ion None None Released in time for the 2005 Holiday season, the Ion is basically a PS2 Eye-Toy turned into edutainment console for preschoolers and at the time, the Ion was turning heads at toy fairs, hype was building and the console looking to be real hit for Hasbro but for whatever reason, the console flopped and disappeared into obscurity faster then the refunds could be made, it's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
Mattel Hyperscan Preliminary Redump Something you would expect to see under a bargain bin at Wal-mart, the Mattel Hyperscan was a card/disc based system released in 2006 to appeal to some poor child's aunt at Christmas. It ran on a 32-bit Sunplus system-on-a-chip CPU, a successor to the 16-bit CPUs used to run consoles such as the V.Smile, many Jakks Pacific TV games and Vii. CGR Review.
Interac TV None None Released by Fisher-Price in 2006. The Interac TV was designed to turn any DVD Player into an educational console. just sync the custom wireless controller to your DVD Player and put a game disk in. Unfortunately incompatibly issues resulted in most people been unable to sync the controller to their player and some even said that their DVD player couldn't even read the disks. it's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
Smart Cycle None None Released in 2007 by Fisher-Price and not to be confused with their later phone\tablet controller of the same name. the Smart Cycle is a hybrid between an exercise bike and a edutainment console. it's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
Story Reader Video + None None Release in 2006 by Publications International. The Video + turns the Story Reader electronic book into one of many educational consoles of the 2000s. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued. Around 7 games were released for the system,
Telestory Interactive Storybook System None None Release in 2006 by Jakks Pacific for kids aged 3 and up, The Telestory is yet another edutainment console from 2000s and all the games are exactly what the console name would suggest, it's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
Vii Preliminary Yes A rather poor excuse of a response to the Wii, made by JungleTac, KenSingTon, and a dozen or so manufacturers churning out shoddy variants of it. Emulators have recently been made for the platform, with several projects aiming to provide support for Sunplus' rather oddball architecture, such as MuchimeX for the original Xbox, and Unununium, the latter being the basis for a MESS core. The same goes for VTech's V.Smile, the XaviXPORT and most Jakks Pacific TV games including those Disney tie-in ones.
Zeebo None None An obscure Brazilian console released in 2009. It was based on the BREW platform, and its games were delivered via a 3G mobile network. It was only sold in Brazil, Mexico, and China.
Eighth generation[edit]
Ouya None None
Funtastic TV Adventures None None Released in 2015 by Wal-Mart under their Kid Connection brand, the Funtastic is an educational console made for preschoolers and the only games known to have been released for the system are the two pack-in games. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued.
My Clem Box None None Released in 2018 by Italian toy company Clementoni and sold exclusively in Italy, My Clem Box is an educational console with Wii-like motion controls. Because it's still being sold, it unknown how games will be made for it and when it well be discontinued. Info on how many units have been sold so far have not been released to the public.
Smart TV Consoles None None Launched sometime in the early 2010s by Italian toy company Clementoni, Smart TV is series of educational consoles sold exclusively in Italy. The controllers of these console ranged from traditional to the gimmicky with some having motion and PS2 EyeToy-like controls. It's unknown how many games were released for these systems.
Handhelds[edit]
Bandai Digi Casse None No Originally released in Japan by Bandai in 1984, another short-lived console from the early 80s. Only had around 4 to 6 games released for it. The console was released in Europe by an unknown company and in Russia as the Elektronika NM 26, both sometime in the late 80s.
Epoch Game Pocket Computer Good Yes Only 5 games exist for this handheld (Released in 1984). All can be found here.
Grandstand Light Games None No Have you every played a poor Game & Watch clone and said to yourself "I Would Love to Play This On The Big Screen"? Then the Light Games from 1988 is for you. It has a built-in projector and less then 10 games released for it. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued.
Hartung Game Master Decent Yes (No-intro) A German Game Boy knockoff released in 1990. Also distributed in the UK as the Systema 2000 and under alternate names in other countries, including Super Game and Game Tronic. Demonstration
Palmtex PVS / Super Micro None No Released in 1984, Super Micro was a handheld console similar to the Milton Bradley Microvision in design. Bad timing, a lack of advertising, and issues with its design and quality (the plastic body is vary fragile) resulted in failure. Palmtex sold less then 37,000 units and discontinued the console the same year it was released. Only three of the eight games announced were released.
Romtec Colorvision None No Released in 1984, The Colorvision was another cheaply made console released during the Video Game Crash. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued. Only 5 games were released for it.
VTech 3D Gamate None No An extremely rare console released in 1983 by VTech, it's unknown how many units were sold and was likely discontinued shortly after released. While six games were announced, only 3 are known to have been released.
VTech Variety None No Another extremely rare console released from VTech in 1983, like the 3D Gamate. It's unknown how many units were sold and was also likely discontinued shortly after released. Only six games are known to have been released for it.
VTech ProScreen None No Yet another extremely rare console from VTech, The ProScreen was released in 1984 and only three games are known to have been released.
Bandai Denshi Manga Juku None No Released in Japan by Bandai in 1995, the Denshi Manga Juku was a touchscreen-based console that was the predecessor to the WonderSwan. It was discontinued in 1996 and only four games were released for it (including of all things, an exclusive Rockman aka Mega Man game).
Barcode Battler None No Released in Japan by Epoch in 1991 and internationally later the same year. The console was basically a digital trading card game, whereas the player used Barcodes to get new characters, enemies and power-ups, Barcode cards were available in packs and the player was even encouraged to use Barcodes found on everyday products around the house. The Barcode Battler was hugely popular in Japan but a major flop everywhere else. It's unknown how many units were sold or how many cards were officially released.
Cybiko/Cybiko Xtreme Imperfect TOSEC The Cybiko is a Russian handheld computer introduced in the U.S. by David Yang's company Cybiko Inc. as a retail test market in New York on April 2000, and rolled out nationwide in May 2000. It is designed for teens, featuring its own two-way radio text messaging system. It had over 430 "official" freeware games and applications.
Gamate Good Yes Another attempt to capture part of the Game Boy market, the Gamate was released in the early 90s by Bit Corporation. The magnitude of its failure makes it and its software obscenely rare today, with prices over 500 dollars for the handheld alone on eBay. It's so obscure that it wasn't until December 2014 when preliminary support for the handheld was added in MAME, and ROM dumps were made.
In2it None No The Philips In2it is an unreleased touchscreen-based console that never matured past internal testing and media press kits. Unfortunately after the failure of the CD-I, the console was cancelled and only 10 out of the few hundred systems manufactured are known to still exist. Furthermore, 10 games are known to have been made for it.
Koei PasoGo None No In 1996, Koei released a Game Boy competitor in Japan called the PasoGo, and for some reason Koei decided to market it as being designed specifically to play the traditional Asian board game, Go. The console flopped thanks to its high price tag of 39,800 Yen (about $600 when adjusted for inflation), the size of the device, and the fact that all six launch titles were slightly different versions of Go. It's unknown how many units were sold or when it was discontinued.
MegaDuck/CougarBoy Good Yes Chinese knockoff Game Boy (Made and released in 1993 by a Hong Kong firm) that was branded with various bizarre names, despite each version being exactly the same. Used cartridges. ROMs are out there, surprisingly.
Pixter None No Released in 2000 as Fisher-Price's first Video Game Console, the Pixter was one of many consoles from the 2000s sold in the toy aisle and marketed towards children; around 25 to 50 games were released for it before being discontinued in 2007.
Tiger Game.com Imperfect No-intro // TOSEC Launched on August 1997. An infamous piece of shit, with quite possibly the worst screen on any handheld ever. Somehow still had a "port" of Resident Evil 2. CGR review. Notable milestones in industry: it was the first video game console to include a touchscreen and the first handheld console to include Internet connectivity.
Watara Supervision Good No-intro // TOSEC An attempt at making a real competitor for the Game Boy/Color and introduced in 1992.
Apple iPod None No In 2006, Apple introduced "iPod games" as there first step into the handheld console market, despite having third party companies like Square Enix, Hudson Soft and EA making games for the iPod, it wasn't the huge hit they hoped it would be, a mix of awkward click wheel controls, controversy over pricing and the lack of an iPod-specific SDK resulted in a lack of interest from developers and a quick decline in game sales, Apple stopped releasing iPod games in 2009 and removed them from the iTunes store in 2011, Around 50 games were released for the iPod.
DigiBlast None No The DigiBlast is a Linux-based console from 2005 that was meant to compete with both the GameBoy Advance and the VideoNow series of portable video players, Unfortunately despite having a solid launch lineup, The system was a major flop and quickly became one of the worst selling consoles ever released, only selling about 100,000 units in its short lifespan.
Fisher-Price iXL None No Released in 2010 and discontinued in 2012, The iXL is a Touchscreen-based console designed for kids 3 to 7 years of age, it's unknown how many units were sold or how many games were released for it.
GameKing Preliminary Yes A rather bastardized attempt at making a Gameboy-esque handheld, manufactured and marketed by TimeTop (aka Guangzhou Daidaixing Tec. Electronics Co. Ltd.) in 2003. Strangely enough, this one's even more primitive than the Supervision, Gamate and Mega Duck consoles before it, as it uses a lower-resolution 64x32 screen, and that's despite companies such as Subor (i.e. that Chinese company who gained notoriety for developing an AMD-based gaming PC/console hybrid) releasing workalike clones of the Game Boy and, more recently, GBA clones. MAME support for it is preliminary at best.
Gizmondo Preliminary Yes (No-intro) A disaster of a handheld, the Gizmondo was released in 2005 with a furious marketing campaign. It was ahead of its time in that it (was supposed to have) included built-in advertisements to make the console cheaper. LGR Review
GP32 Preliminary Yes (No-intro) A Korean handheld, it was released on November 23, 2001, in South Korea only. It was the first handheld to use SD cards and had pretty good specs for the time, so everybody ended up just jailbreaking it and using it as an emulator/homebrew platform. The developers later went on to develop the more successful GP2X line, which was designed from the ground up for emulators. An emulator was made for the system in 2002 called "GeePee32" that is known to be able to emulate many commercial games for the system, though some lack sound. However, the project is inactive. It can be found here: [1]
Giochi Preziosi My Life None No Released in Italy in 2007, My Life was marketed towards young girls five to thirteen years of age, A Simple life simulator serves as the built-in game and as the main UI. How many units sold, number of games were released and when it was discontinued is unknown.
K-Magic None No Released in 2010 by K's Kids for the 0-6 years market, The K-Magic is an educational handheld console that used cartridges called "Magic Cards" and was overall designed to be as simple as possible. It was discontinued in 2018 with the release of the K-Magic 2. It's unknown how many games were made for it or how many units were sold.
Leapster Preliminary Yes (No-intro) The Leapster Learning Game System (Released in late 2003) is an educational handheld game console aimed at 4 to 10-year-olds (preschool to fourth grade) and made by LeapFrog Enterprises. Its games teach the alphabet, phonics, basic mathematics (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division), art, and animal facts to players. It featured a touchscreen and games from various licenses from Thomas & Friends to Sonic X. Oddly enough it's successors, i.e. the Didj, Leapster Explorer, and LeapPad series of tablets which run on the Pollux and NXP3200 platforms along with a customized Linux distribution has a homebrew scene that even features some emulators.
Nintendo Pokémon Mini Decent TOSEC A very downgraded Game Boy (But also the tiniest cart-based handheld device made by Nintendo). It was first released in NA and then Japan on late 2001. Only Pokemon related games were released, and its catalog of games is also very limited. It's also very rare nowadays. Decent support in MAME, though there are other choices to play these games on other emulators.
Nokia N-Gage None Yes Nokia's attempt at making a cell phone/handheld system hybrid, before mobile gaming really took off. Although it was the most powerful handheld in its time and released in October 2003, it failed due to a high price, a terrible button layout, numerous design flaws, and its underdeveloped cell phone component. Had a redesign called the QD, but it was only slightly better. Most of its games were ports, either from the GBA or from the PS1 and Saturn. While it didn't have any standout titles, it still had a few odd original entries from big franchises such as Elder Scrolls Travels: Shadowkey and SSX: Out of Bounds, and was the only system to have an English version of Xanadu Next (before the 2016 global re-release for Windows PCs). There's one emulator called N-GageCool, but it's dead payware that only runs Java games. Modern open source emulators are in the works.
POP Station None No This infamous Game & Watch clone was originally released sometime between late 2004 and 2006 by an Unknown Chinese Manufacturer, the first few modals had a selection of four games and each system only had one built-in game, meaning you would need to buy four of them to get all the games available, later models used interchangeable cartridges. it's unknown if these later models are were made by the same manufacturer that made original systems or if theirs other companies making clones. It's unknown how many units have been sold so far.
Tapwave Zodiac None Some A handheld released in 2003 that used an enhanced Palm OS. Ahead for its time, even receiving awards. However, the PSP and Nintendo DS killed it. LGR Review
Teachermate Handheld Educational Computer None No Released in 2008 by the non-profit company, Teachermate, This educational handheld console was only sold to schools and taught kids in a Kindergarten to Second Grade level, It's unknown how many games were made for it, how many units sold or when it was discontinued.
VideoNow XP None No Released in 2003 and underwent 5 total revisions. An often forgotten attempt by Hasbro and their subsidiary Tiger Electronics (of Game.com fame) to use the popularity of their VideoNow portable video players to enter the Video Game market.
C2: Color & Card None No Released in 2015 in China by Baiyi Animation, The extremely rare, C2 was made to bank on the popularity of Roco Kingdom films but ultimately it was a flop. Only 6 games were made for it and was discontinued shortly after released.
Clemstation 6.0 None No Released in 2018 by Clementoni, the Clemstation is an "multimedia educational console" only sold in Italy that appears to be on a running custom version of Android. Because it's still being sold, it unknown how games will be made for it and when it well be discontinued, info on how many units have been sold so far not been released to the public.
Evercade None No Evercade is an upcoming cartridge based handheld that will be released on April 9th, 2020 . The console designed to emulate officially licensed retro games and games from Indie publishers / developers. Since the console has yet to be released, it unknown how games will be made for it, when it well be discontinued or how many units of this system will sell.
Kids Pad None No Released in 2012 by LG. The Kids Pad was only sold in South Korea and featured an app store and support for cartridges. How many units sold, number of games were released and when it was discontinued is unknown.
K-Magic 2 None No Released in 2018 by K's Kids for the 0-6 years market, The K-Magic 2 simplifies the original console by having everything already built-in and ready for parents and children to use, Because it's still being sold, when it well be discontinued and info on how many units have been sold so far not been released to the public.
M&D Monon Color Preliminary No Like the C2, The Monon Color from 2014 also tried to bank on the popularity of Roco Kingdom films and was only slightly more successful than it; it's unknown how many games (At least 15) were released for it or when it was discontinued. Preliminary support for it was added in MAME 0.205 on December 2018.
NEO Consoles None No Released in 2017.by Takara Tomy. The NEO Series are educational consoles only sold in Japan and appear to be using a custom version of Android. Because it's still being sold, it unknown how games will be made for it and when it well be discontinued, info on how many units have been sold so far not been released to the public.
Playdate None No The Playdate is an upcoming handheld with a released date of sometime in 2020. The console has a monochrome screen similar to an e-paper display one would find on a Kindle. Game development is aimed mainly at indie studios. Since the console has yet to be released, it unknown how games will be made for it, when it well be discontinued or how many units of this system will sell.
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Fourth-generation video game consoles
Fifth-generation video game consoles
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History, Winnebago County, Wisconsin: Its cities, towns, resources, people
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970 HISTORY OP WINNEBAGO COUNTY,
Avhich he developed and improved into one of the finest farms in the county. He was a man of intense energy, broad-minded and pro¬ gressive, and took an active interest in public affairs, serving as chair¬ man of the toAvn board, and for eighteen years served as school clerk. ToAvard the close of the Civil War he enlisted in the First Regiment, AVisconsin Cavalry, and entered the army and served until honorably discharged. He died at Oshkosh in 1903 at the age of seventy-three years and was buried in the Lebanon cemetery, his wife having died at Lebanon in 1889, aged fifty-seven. Their other surviving children are: Daniel W., a physician at Alihvaukee; Timothy L., also a physi¬ cian at Alilwaukee, and Alary, now (1908) sister superior in the parochial schools at Austin, Chicago.
John receiA^ed a good English education in the district schools at home, then took a course of training in a business college, after which he was a student in the University of AATsconsin for two years, and later pursued his law studies in the law department of the Univer¬ sity of AVisconsin. From 1879 until 1884 he taught in country and village schools; then for one year was principal of the Weyauwega high school, after Avhich he passed his examination and was admitted to the bar of AA^isconsin and settled down to the general practice of his profession at Oshkosh. Air. Harrington conducted his practice alone for three years, then from 1890 to 1895 had associated with him Air. Walter W. Quartermass, his partner, now deceased, being six years district attorney.
Air. Harrington is a careful student and an able lawyer, recog¬ nized as an authority on questions of taxation, of which he has made a special study, and in 1898 was appointed by the city council of Osh¬ kosh special tax commissioner, his duties involving the revaluation of all the taxable property of the city. In politics Mr. Harrington is a Democrat. He was nominated by his party for the office of dis¬ trict attorney in 1890, and in 1906 Avas its unsuccessful nominee for state senator. From 1899 to 1904 he, served as chairman of the county board, and since the year last named has served as a member of the state board of regents of normal schools under the appointment of Governor La Follette, and of this board he is a member of nu¬ merous committees. He is active in the local and state councils and affairs of his party. In religious faith Mr. Harrington is a Catholic. He is one of the charter members of the Candlelight Club, the leading men^s social and literary club of Oshkosh.
On April 14, 1891, Mr. Harrington married Miss Anna C, daugh¬ ter of John and Mary Bourke, of Oshkosh. They have fiye children,
Title History, Winnebago County, Wisconsin: Its cities, towns, resources, people
Title of work History, Winnebago County, Wisconsin: Its cities, towns, resources, people
Author Lawson, Publius V. (Publius Virgilius), 1853-1920
Description This 1908 history of Winnebago County, Wisconsin, provides a comprehensive overview of the history of the county from the early years of European exploration and settlement. Topics covered include agriculture, educational institutions, Winnebago County residents in the Civil War and Spanish-American War, the legal and medical professions, civic and social organizations, businesses and industries, railroads, newspapers, schools, and churches. Histories of the cities and villages of Oshkosh, Neenah, and Menasha, as are biographical sketches of county residents.
Place of Publication (Original) Chicago
Publisher (Original) C.F. Cooper and Company
Publication Date (Original) 1908
Format-Digital xml
Rights We believe that online reproduction of this material is permitted because its copyright protection has lapsed or because sharing it here for non-profit educational purposes complies with the Fair Use provisions of the U.S. Copyright Law. Teachers and students are generally free to reproduce pages for nonprofit classroom use. For advice about other uses, or if you believe that you possess copyright to some of this material, please contact us at asklibrary@wisconsinhistory.org.
Identifier-Digital Winn1908000
State Wisconsin;
County Winnebago County;
Decade 1630-1639; 1660-1669; 1670-1679; 1680-1689; 1710-1719; 1720-1729; 1730-1739; 1750-1759; 1760-1769; 1810-1819; 1820-1829; 1830-1839; 1840-1849; 1850-1859; 1860-1869; 1870-1879; 1880-1889; 1890-1899; 1900-1909;
Subject Ho Chunk Indians; Fox Indians; Menominee Indians; Sauk Indians;
Page Number 970
Format-Digital jpeg
Identifier-Digital Winn19081076
Full Text 970 HISTORY OP WINNEBAGO COUNTY, Avhich he developed and improved into one of the finest farms in the county. He was a man of intense energy, broad-minded and pro¬ gressive, and took an active interest in public affairs, serving as chair¬ man of the toAvn board, and for eighteen years served as school clerk. ToAvard the close of the Civil War he enlisted in the First Regiment, AVisconsin Cavalry, and entered the army and served until honorably discharged. He died at Oshkosh in 1903 at the age of seventy-three years and was buried in the Lebanon cemetery, his wife having died at Lebanon in 1889, aged fifty-seven. Their other surviving children are: Daniel W., a physician at Alihvaukee; Timothy L., also a physi¬ cian at Alilwaukee, and Alary, now (1908) sister superior in the parochial schools at Austin, Chicago. John receiA^ed a good English education in the district schools at home, then took a course of training in a business college, after which he was a student in the University of AATsconsin for two years, and later pursued his law studies in the law department of the Univer¬ sity of AVisconsin. From 1879 until 1884 he taught in country and village schools; then for one year was principal of the Weyauwega high school, after Avhich he passed his examination and was admitted to the bar of AA^isconsin and settled down to the general practice of his profession at Oshkosh. Air. Harrington conducted his practice alone for three years, then from 1890 to 1895 had associated with him Air. Walter W. Quartermass, his partner, now deceased, being six years district attorney. Air. Harrington is a careful student and an able lawyer, recog¬ nized as an authority on questions of taxation, of which he has made a special study, and in 1898 was appointed by the city council of Osh¬ kosh special tax commissioner, his duties involving the revaluation of all the taxable property of the city. In politics Mr. Harrington is a Democrat. He was nominated by his party for the office of dis¬ trict attorney in 1890, and in 1906 Avas its unsuccessful nominee for state senator. From 1899 to 1904 he, served as chairman of the county board, and since the year last named has served as a member of the state board of regents of normal schools under the appointment of Governor La Follette, and of this board he is a member of nu¬ merous committees. He is active in the local and state councils and affairs of his party. In religious faith Mr. Harrington is a Catholic. He is one of the charter members of the Candlelight Club, the leading men^s social and literary club of Oshkosh. On April 14, 1891, Mr. Harrington married Miss Anna C, daugh¬ ter of John and Mary Bourke, of Oshkosh. They have fiye children,
History, Winnebago County, Wisconsin: Its cities, towns,...
Title Page. Volume I
- [blank]
- [Plate]
List of Portraits. Volume I
The History of Winnebago County
Chapter I. Natural Phenomenon
Chapter II. Primitive People
Chapter III. The Winnebago Tribe
Chapter IV. The Winnebago Chiefs
Chapter V. The Coming of Nicolet
Chapter VI. The Fox Tribe and the Battle of the French and Outagamis
Chapter VII. The Menominee Tribe an Chief Oshkosh
Chapter VIII. Colonel Robert Dickson Ice Bound
Chapter IX. John Lawe's Thrilling Moonlight Plunge Through the Fox River Rapids Astride Chest Containing $9,000 in Silver
Chapter X. When Winnebago County was Alive with Wild Animals
Chapter XI. The Beauty of the Virgin Scenery of the County Described by Travelers, Just Before the Coming of the Pioneer
Chapter XII. The Trading Posts
Chapter XIII. Treaties Made with the Aboriginal Tribes, by which the Title to the Indian Lands Passed to the United States
Chapter XIV. Building a County--Its Civic Administration, Courts, Schools, Buildings and Institutions
Chapter XV. Recollections of William W. Wright, Styled the Father of Oshkosh, and His Wife, Styled the Mother of Oshkosh, of the Earliest Beginnings of Social, Civic and Religious Life in the County and the City of Oshkosh, Having Lived Through the Changes
Chapter XVI. National and Legislative Representation
Chapter XVII. Organization of Towns
Chapter XVIII. The Steam and Sail Boats on the Lake and River in Earlier Days
Chapter XIX. Origin and Meaning of Place Names of Lakes, Rivers and Localities
Chapter XX. Population, Wealth and Products of Winnebago County
Chapter XXI. Literature, Art, Music and the State in Winnebago County
Chapter XXII. Township History
Town of Algoma
Town of Black Wolf
Town of Clayton
Town of Menasha
Town of Neenah
Town of Nekimi
Town of Nepeuskun
Town of Omro
Village of Omro
Town of Oshkosh
Town of Poygan
Town of Rushford
Town of Utica
Town of Vinland
Town of Winchester
Town of Winneconne
Butte des Morts Hamlet
The Village of Winneconne
Town of Wolf River
Bay Boom
Chapter XXIII. City of Neenah
Chapter XXIV. Founding the Mission of the Winnebago Rapids
Chapter XXV. Sale of the Reservation of Winnebago Rapids to Harrison Reed--the Arrival of the Pioneers--the Village Named Neenah
Chapter XXVI. The Coming of Governor James Duane Doty--the Loggery--a Character Sketch of the State Builder
Chapter XXVII. Colonel Harvey Jones Buys the Village of Neenah
Chapter XXVIII. Town of Neenah Organized
Chapter XXIX. Pioneering in the Olden Days--Beginnings of the Social, Mercantile, Civic, School and Church Activity
Chapter XXX. The Lock, the Canal and the Dam
Chapter XXXI. When Neenah was Known as the ""Flour City.""
Chapter XXXII. The Invention of the Roller Flour Mill
Chapter XXXIII. Why Neenah is Called the Paper City
Chapter XXXIV. Various Manufacturing, Mercantile and Public Enterprising in Business and Social Life--the Doctors and Lawyers
Chapter XXXV. Bank, Bankers and Bank Buildings
Chapter XXXVI. The Newspapers in Neenah
Chapter XXXVII. The Growth of the Civic Organization of the City of Neenah, Traced from the Beginning, and the Public Improvements
Chapter XXXVIII. The Log School House ""Not Worth a Red Cent""--the Pioneer Teacher at Six Dollars a Month, and the New Palace School Edifices, with their Normal Corps of Professors and Instructors
Chapter XXXIX. The Gas and Electric Light Plants, Water Works, Population, Library, City Hall, Fire Companies and Parks in the City of Neenah, and the Samuel A. Cook Armory
Chapter XL. The Church Society and Church Buildings in Neenah
Chapter XLI. History of the City of Oshkosh
Chapter XLII. Manufacturing in Oshkosh
Chapter XLIII. Banks and Banking in the City of Oshkosh
Chapter XLIV. Early Judicial History and Organization of the County
Chapter XLV. Bench and Bar
Chapter XLVI. The Schools of Oshkosh
Chapter XLVII. The Church, the Manse, the Pastor in Oshkosh
Chapter XLVIII. The City of Oshkosh and Winnebago County in the Civil and Spanish Wars
Chapter XLIX. Steamboating in the Early Days on Lake Winnebago, the Fox and Wolf Rivers
Chapter L. Complete Record of Yachting, Racing and Yacht Clubs on the Adjacent Lakes
Chapter LI. Governor Coles Bashford of Oshkosh, and the Celebrated Contest Over Election Frauds Fifty Years Ago
Chapter LII. City of Menasha
Chapter LIII. The Pioneer in the Hamlet--the Mills of the Past--the Flush Days Along the River
Title Page. Volume II
- ii
List of Portraits. Volume II
- iii
The History of Winnebago County (continued)
Chapter LIV. The Extensive Manufacturing Industries of Menasha
Chapter LXIX. The Medical Profession
- 847a
- 847b
- 847c
- 847d
- 847e
- 847f
- 847h
Chapter LV. The History of Factories and Mills that have Flourished in their Day and Gone Out Forever
Chapter LVI. Civic Organization of Town, Village and City of Menasha
Chapter LXXI. Press of Oshkosh
- 1206a
- 1206b
- 1206c
- 1206d
- 1206e
- 1206f
Chapter LVII. The Iron Horse, and Iron Rail--the Coming of the Railroad
Chapter LVIII. The Organization of Church Societies and the Building of Chruches in Menasha
Chapter LIX. Menasha City Schools--Their Old and New School Houses, the Scholars of Long Ago, and Today--the Teacher Past and Present--Some Prominent Graduates
Chapter LX. The Old Lighthouse and Its Beacon Light from a Great Iron Latern
Chapter LXI. Banks, Bankers and Banking Wealth
Chapter LXII. The United States Land Office; Its Officers; the Land Office Aristocracy, and the Jenny Linders
Chapter LXIII. The Spirit of the Press Then and Now
Chapter LXIV. The Lawyer and the Doctor
Chapter LXV. Old Ben of Yorktown, a Famous Cannon
Chapter LXVI. The Mails, the Post Office and the Postmaster
Chapter LXVII. The Coming of the Germans
Chapter LXVIII. Menasha and Neenah in the Civil and Spanish Wars
Chapter LXIX. Biography
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CoraHarrington.com
Cora Harrington Artist
Cora Harrington: Profile
Cora graduated with a First Class Honours in Art and Design from the Belfast College of Art, in 1970. While a student she won several awards including Student of the Year and 1st, 2nd and Highly Commended in a National Competition at the R.D.S. in Dublin. She was commissioned by British Enkalon to produce a large panel for their London headquarters.
After living in Africa for three years, where she continued to produce collages and oil paintings, Cora returned to live in N.Ireland. Over the next twenty or so years part time work and raising a family prevented Cora from furthering her art career until the 1990s.
Cora has received numerous private and public commissions, including several from Newry and Mourne Council, N.I. Fire Authority, and Royal Mail. She has often exhibited in the Laing National Art Competition, several times reaching the London Finals and has won First Prize in the Laing N.I. Region. Cora was also awarded the Perpetual Silver Medal by The Arts Society of Ulster for a portrait.
Having had a successful career painting to commission, subjects such as animals, landscapes, townscapes, portraits etc, Cora’s aim now is to concentrate on and develop her more creative work. She is mainly concerned with how the imagination transforms memory and the way memory informs vision. A fragment of memory or a glimpse of something may be enough to inspire the creative process. She often develops these small beginnings into exciting finished pieces, using her personal response to the subject, rather than a factual representation. Her love of colour and pattern is evident in all her work
Over the years Cora has become an accomplished painter in all media. Now she is using this knowledge in a more searching and experimental way to create works, which are gaining interest in the Irish Art world.
Cora has paintings in public and private collections in Ireland, U.K, Canada. U.S.A and S. Africa.
mail@coraharrington.com
Link to Albums on Flickr
flickr.com/photos/coraharrington
See my latest work on Instagram
@coraharringtonartist
A price guide is on my contact page.
coraharrington.com/price-guide
Most of these images are available as high quality archival prints in small editions of 50.
Unframed A3 £60 mounted £85
A2 £80 mounted £105
Each print numbered and signed by the artist.
Postage for unframed prints rolled and packed in a tube, free within the UK £10 outside UK
To order contact Cora mail@coraharrington.com
All images © Cora Harrington
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