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Suspect in Edwards double murder captured
Missing mom found dead near Houston, baby daughter safe, longtime friend arrested
by: KXAN Staff
Posted: Dec 20, 2019 / 04:08 PM CST / Updated: Jan 7, 2020 / 08:13 AM CST
JERSEY VILLAGE, Texas (KXAN/NBC News) — Heidi Broussard, an Austin mother who has been missing since Dec. 12, was found dead in the trunk of a car Friday near a home in Jersey Village, Texas. That’s near Houston. While Austin police would not confirm the identity of a suspect in the case, a woman who was a friend of Broussard’s was arrested on charges that match those of the suspect.
That friend, Magen Fieramusca, has since been booked into the Travis County Jail.
Broussard’s 3-week-old daughter, Margo Carey, was found alive in good condition, according to a report from NBC News. NBC News spoke with Tammy Broussard, Heidi’s mother, who told them those details.
On Friday afternoon, Harris Co. Institute of Forensic Sciences positively identified the body as that of Heidi Broussard. The cause of her death was also determined to be “ligature strangulation,” which is defined as a “type of strangulation that occurs with the use of mass that is not the body weight.” An example of this kind of death is being strangled by a rope.
In a briefing on Friday afternoon, Austin Police Department Chief Brian Manley explained that investigators are confident that the baby is Margo Carey but confirmation is still pending.
“Everyone [was] hoping for an outcome that appeared different than the one we had, and that was with a loss of life,” Manley said, after recognizing APD’s homicide division, missing persons division, special investigations unit, robbery unit, violent crimes task force and organized crime division; the Texas Department of Public Safety Rangers; the Travis County District Attorney’s Office; the FBI and its child abduction rapid deployment team; Texas Parks and Wildlife; Travis County Search and Rescue; and Child Protective Services.
The child is healthy and CPS is caring for her, according to APD. The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services said the girl is in a foster home and it is working with law enforcement to verify possible relatives.
Police are looking for Heidi Broussard and her baby Margo Carey
APD would not name the person arrested in the case, but said that person is charged with two counts of kidnapping and one count of tampering with a corpse. Manley said additional charges may be filed as investigators uncover more evidence.
The backyard of the home on Bo Jack Lane where a dead woman and an alive infant were found Dec. 20, 2019 (KXAN Photo/Todd Bailey)
A car parked at the home on Bo Jack Drive where law enforcement have been since Thursday night is registered to Magen Rose Fieramusca, who was arrested Friday by APD on two counts of kidnapping and tampering with evidence. That evidence was a human corpse, records say. She is being held on $600,000 bond.
She was arraigned on Friday morning on six different traffic citations.
On Friday night, Fieramusca was no longer listed as being in the Harris Co. Jail and cars that were seen leaving the jail were seen arriving at the Travis Co. Jail, where she also faces charges.
Fieramusca was booked into the Travis County Jail just after 10 p.m. on Friday.
Austin attorney, Jackie Wood, told KXAN that she had been appointed and she would visit with Fieramusca on Saturday. Wood’s law office website says she is dedicated to “representing those accused of committing crimes, either as adults or as juveniles.”
According to court documents, the only criminal history Fieramusca has is a felony theft charge in Harris County in 2018, which was dismissed Nov. 5, 2019 because “probable cause exists, but case cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt at this time.”
Longtime friend of suspect and victim speaks out
Caressa Potter, longtime friend of both Broussard and Fieramusca, told KXAN reporter Steffi Lee that she had been in contact with Fieramusca every day since Broussard has been missing. Potter said they talked multiple times a day, and during those calls, Potter said she could hear a baby in the background.
Potter said Fieramusca told her friends and family she also recently gave birth to a baby named Luna Mae, but wouldn’t show any pictures of her.
KXAN has found baby registries under the name Maygen Humphrey with Amazon and Target. Descriptions for both indicate a location as Houston and a due date as Dec. 1, 2019.
“Her story wasn’t too far fetched,” Potter said. “She did her research, I feel like — I feel like she really did plan this. She thought about this.”
Potter said Fieramusca used to go by the name Maygen Humphrey, but doesn’t know when she changed her name. She said the three met each other at church camp when they were pre-teens. Potter described Broussard and Fieramusca as “best friends.”
Magen Fieramusca (Harris County DA Photo)
After the story broke, Potter said she was talking to Fieramusca and another friend, and all of a sudden, Fieramusca abruptly said, “I gotta go! I gotta go!” She then hung up and Potter hasn’t heard from her since.
The camp Fieramusca and Broussard once attended is known as the Texas Bible Institute.
The sprawling, rural property is located in Columbus, Texas.
KXAN crews stopped there on our way to Houston.
A spokesperson there did confirm the pair attended Texas Bible Institute in the mid-2000’s.
“We can confirm they were students,” she said, “Unfortunately there’s nothing else we can say about her, other than our thoughts and prayers are with the family.”
Neighbors react
Neighbors on Bo Jack Drive say it’s a quiet neighborhood, and every person KXAN’s Candy Rodriguez talked to was shocked something like this could happen in the area.
“When we found out the Texas Rangers were involved, it got a little more important to us,” Darryl Ehlert said. He has lived in the neighborhood for 35 years.
“I didn’t know what to think,” he said.
Ehlert said APD asked for surveillance footage from his doorbell camera, and specifically law enforcement wanted to know if a black SUV drove by Thursday night. Ehlert said his footage didn’t show one.
Darla Bundick also lives in the neighborhood, and when she talked to Rodriguez, she got emotional.
“This is very upsetting,” Bundick said. “And that poor baby, she’s not going to have her mom. I just can’t believe it.”
Investigators were led to a home on Bo Jack Drive in Jersey Village, Texas near Houston, where reports are saying Heidi Broussard was found dead and her infant daughter Margot Carey was alive. (Adrian Montes /KPRC)
Helping the family
A group of parents in South Austin say they knew Heidi Broussard well. They sat beside her every week to watch their sons play baseball for the Oak Hill Youth Sports Association.
“I don’t think they missed a single game. They were always there,” Julie Jensen said of Heidi Broussard and Shane Carey, who frequented the baseball games to cheer on Broussard’s six-year-old. “She was always cheering for him. Even with a big, ol’ pregnant belly, she was there in her chair, cheering them on.”
A representative of the Oak Hill Youth Sports Association expressed their condolences:
The members of the Board of The Oak Hill Youth Sports Association were shocked and saddened at the tragic loss of Heidi Broussard, and our deepest condolences go to the Carey and Broussard families.
Oak Hill Youth Sports Association
Jensen’s son also plays on the same team, The Marauders. She said she and Broussard bonded by the sport. Now she wants to help out her two children.
Jensen has organized a fundraiser. She said she is collecting anything and everything for the family — that includes baby clothes, food, gift cards and of course, money.
“In the middle of grief and heartache, people are there for one another. So all we can do to make an impact on someone’s life, especially a little boy, that’s what we are going to do,” Jensen said.
If you want to help, you can Venmo Jensen @JulezA or Paypal/email at julezajensen@gmail.com to organize a gift drop-off.
HINDS COUNTY, Miss. (WJTV) - The Hinds County Sheriff's Office said the suspect in a double murder in Edwards has been captured.
Justin "Bobo" Mosley was arrested Wednesday morning by the US Marshals Fugitive Task Force at an undisclosed location.
7 Day Forecast / 2 hours ago
Coroner: Parchman inmate found dead in cell
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The City of Williams Lake is applying to the Smart Cities Challenge competition for a chance to be awarded $5 million which it would toward a water metering project. Monica Lamb-Yorski file photo
Williams Lake taps into $5 million infrastructure competition
If successful in obtaining Smart Cities Challenge funding, Williams Lake would develop a universal water metering project.
Monica Lamb-Yorski
The chances are much like winning a lottery, but Williams Lake is putting in an application for a $5 million Infrastructure Canada competition.
If successful, the Smart Cities Challenge competition with the Smart Universal Water Metering project, would bring the city one step closer to universal water metering throughout the city and to a water treatment plant in the future, said the city’s manager, utilities and fleet Joe Engelberts.
Launched in 2018, the Smart Cities Challenge encourages communities to adopt a smart cities approach to address local issues and improve the lives of their residents through innovation, data and connected technology.
There is one prize of up to $50 million open to all communities, regardless of population.
Two prizes of up to $10 million to all communities with populations under 500,000 people and one prize of up to $5 million open to all communities with a population under 30,000 people.
The #smartcitiesCanada Challenge is the Olympics of #infra. Make sure your team ends up on the podium. https://t.co/jxJsTPXTwf pic.twitter.com/3xbmFcandy
— InfrastructureCanada (@INFC_eng) February 21, 2018
Williams Lake has already tentatively planned a universal water metering project for the year 2020, so it made sense to proceed with an application for the funding.
In a report to council, Chief Financial Officer Vitali Kozubenko said the metering would be an integrated set of meters, connectivity solutions and systems that remotely and continuously monitor water usage, diagnose problems, prioritize and manage maintenance and use data to optimize all aspects of water distribution and usage.
Additionally, Mayor Walt Cobb referred to the federal legislation that could come into effect requiring communities to lower levels of manganese.
Right now, because the city draws its drinking water from an aquifer, it only needs to be chlorinated, but to filter manganese it would have to build a water treatment plant.
“If we had to put that in it would cost about $11 million,” Cobb said, noting if the city was successful in obtaining the $5 million Smart Cites funding, some of the money could go toward a treatment plant as well.
Read More: Clean water and wastewater fund invests in Williams Lake
Engelberts said the city’s aquifer is constantly being monitored for levels and quality.
“The city has also had hydro-geologists in the past do reports on their impressions of the future of the aquifer,” he told the Tribune.
“They have given the City reports that the aquifer has indeed dropped since the City started pumping water out of it in the late 60s, but it has levelled off for the past 10 years and it appears sustainable at this time.”
A good part of that sustainability can be credited to the Cariboo Chilcotin Conservation Society, said society chair Bill Lloyd.
“Thanks to our fee-for-service with the City of Williams Lake, the Cariboo Chilcotin Conservation Society has been providing Water Wise education throughout the community, especially to kids in the classroom, who in turn bring this information home to their parents, providing the perfect education stream,” Lloyd told the Tribune. “Since our partnership began with the City of Williams Lake roughly a decade ago, we have seen a 26 per cent decrease in water consumption, a number which has been adjusted to account for changes in population and precipitation.”
Describing that decreased consumption as “quite an impressive accomplishment” for the residents of Williams Lake, Lloyd said the City should be commended for their leadership and forward-thinking water conservation strategies.
“This application is just another step in the right direction,” he added.
Read more: CCCS welcomes new co-ordinator
news@wltribune.com
Okanagan real estate agents brace for speculation tax impact
UPDATE: Northern Health dealing with lack of 121 registered nurses
‘Critically low’ caribou population prompts wolf cull in the Chilcotin
Itcha-Ilgachuz herd numbers down to 385, from 2,800 in 2003
Emergency crews respond to MVI on Horsefly Road
One person was extricated from his pickup truck and transported to hospital
PHOTOS: Robbie Burns Night celebrates lakecity’s Scottish heritage
It was a night for Drambuie, the pipes and good company
$250,000 in arena upgrades up for grabs through Kraft Hockeyville competition
Nominate Williams Lake now
Local delicacies on the menu for this weekend’s Wild Game Banquet
The always popular, and delicious, event, goes at the Elks Hall at 98 1st Ave. S. in Williams Lake
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Diversions Money
Landlord: Renters spooked by tales of haunting
Family fled after claiming home already occupied by demon
By WND News Services
Published April 28, 2012 at 8:25pm
(New Jersey Press Media) No one among the living may ever want to reside in the house at the corner of Lowell and Terrace avenues again.
That is the fear of the landlord who has filed a new complaint in state Superior Court against a couple who fled the three-bedroom ranch in the middle of the night after living there for just one week, because they say the house is haunted.
Dr. Richard Lopez, a well-known orthodontist in Ocean County who owns the property, has filed a lawsuit against the family for at least $15,000. Among other issues, he contends they have stigimitized the property and diminished his ability to rent or sell the house in the future. Their story has received international media attention since it was first reported in the Courier-Post on April 13.
WND News Services
These reports are produced by another news agency, and the editors of WND believe you'll find it of interest.
The prisoner of the Vatican
Apple shuts store in China, restricts employee travel due to coronavirus
7.7-magnitude quake shakes Caribbean, felt in Florida
Dow rallies more than 180, rebounding from worst day since October
Menopause and memory: Hot flashes impair recollection
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Historical publications /
Regulatory Plan 2006-07
The Department of Health and Ageing's 2006-07 Regulatory Plan
The Department of Health and Ageing, like other Australian Government agencies which have responsibility for business regulation, is required to publish a regulatory plan on its web site early in each financial year.
The regulatory plan deals with changes within the Department’s area of responsibility and contains information about:
changes to business regulation which have occurred since the beginning of the previous financial year (1 July 2005 to 30 June 2006); and
activities planned in the current financial year (1 July 2006 to 30 June 2007) which could lead to changes to business regulation.
What regulation does a regulatory plan cover?
A regulatory plan covers business regulation. This includes primary legislation, subordinate legislation, quasi-regulation or treaties that directly affect business, have a significant indirect effect on business, or restrict competition.
Quasi-regulation refers to rules or arrangements where governments influence businesses to comply, but which do not form part of explicit government regulation.
A regulatory plan does not include information about the following:
regulations of a minor or machinery nature that do not substantially alter existing arrangements;
regulations that involve consideration of specific Government purchases;
regulations of a state or self-governing territory that apply in a non-self governing territory; and
anticipated activity about which it would be inappropriate to publish information on grounds of confidentiality.
In addition, there may be regulatory activities that have not been included in the regulatory plan because they could not be foreseen when the plan was prepared at the start of the financial year.
In view of these exclusions, users should not take a regulatory plan to be a comprehensive source of information on past or potential changes to business regulation.
How up to date is information in this regulatory plan?
Department of Health and Ageing Regulatory Plan 2006-07 (PDF 297 KB)
Occasional papers series
Plasma Fractionation Review
Department of Health Reconciliation Action Plan
PHERP Review Reports
Margaret River Consumer for GM Free Food Submission to the review Gene Technology Act 2000
2002 Reviews of the National HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C Strategies and Strategic Research
2006 – 2007 Jurisdictional Summary Report against the National Strategic Framework for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health (NSFATSIH)
A National Aboriginal Health Strategy: An Evaluation 1994
An analysis of research on preventing falls and falls injury in older people: Community, residential care and hospital settings (2004 update)
Anorexia nervosa: Australian treatment guide for consumers and carers, 2005
Building on success 1: a review of gay and other homosexually active men's HIV/AIDS education in Australia
Building on success 2: towards a national strategy for HIV/AIDS health promotion for gay and other homosexually active men
Building on success 3: the Commonwealth Government response to towards national strategy for HIV/AIDS health promotion for gay and other homosexually active men
COAG mental health early intervention measure - early childhood component: study to scope potential service delivery
Coping with depression: Australian treatment guide for consumers and carers, 2005
Council Of Grain Grower Organisations submission to the Gene Technology Act 2000 Review
Deakin University submission to the Gene Technology Act 2000 review
Deep vein thrombosis and air travel
Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA) - Medicare Australia Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)
Discussion Document Towards a Fourth National HIV/AIDS Strategy April 1999
Drug and Alcohol Service Report (DASR): 2006-2007 Key Results
Evidence of effective interventions to improve the social and environmental factors impacting on health: Informing the development of Indigenous Community Agreements
Falls prevention activities for older people: a national stocktake
Gene technology Act 2000 review from Guy Izzett
gettin em n keepin em
Government response to the House of Representatives Inquiry into Indigenous health: 'Health is life'
Innovative grants program: project summaries
MAIF Guidelines - Marketing Of Infant Formulas Via Electronic Media
Measuring Remoteness: Accessibility/Remoteness Index of Australia (ARIA) Revised Edition. Occasional Papers: New Series Number 14
National evaluation of the Sharing Health Care Initiative demonstration projects
National HIV/AIDS Strategy 2005-2008: Implementation Plan
National Strategic Framework for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Context July 2003
National strategy for heart, stroke and vascular health in Australia
Panic disorder and agoraphobia: Australian treatment guide for consumers and carers, 2005
Principles for the consideration of interactions with health care professionals for the purpose of interpreting the MAIF Agreement
Public discussion paper - Adoption of the Globally Harmonised System for Classification and Labelling of Chemicals in Respect to Domestic and Consumer Chemicals Including Pesticides
Quality Use of Pathology Program (QUPP) Historical Reports
Reforming the Australian health care system: the role of government. Occasional Papers: New Series Number 1
Regulatory Plan 2011-2012
Review of 2011 Gene Technology ACT (2000) - Public Submission
Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000 by Anne Goddard
Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000 from I F Turnbull
Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000 from Slater & Gordon Lawyers on behalf of The Safe Food Institute
Royal Perth Hospital Comments on the Gene Technology Review 2000
Self-harm: Australian treatment guide for consumers and carers, 2005
Strong Fathers Strong Families
Submission by Anne Goddard regarding Terms of Reference in the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission by Dr Monica Leggett to the Gene Technology Act 2000 review
Submission by the Office of the Gene Technology Regulator to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission by The University of Newcastle for the 2011 Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Bayer CropScience to the Gene Technology Act 2000 Review
Submission from AgForce to the Statutory Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Agrifood Awareness Australia Limited reviewing the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from an Individual to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from an Individual to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from AusBiotech to the 2011 Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000 (the Act)
Submission from Beatrice Ludwig to the 2011 Review of the Gene Technology Act
Submission from Croplife Australia to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Foresty to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Elizabeth Hamilton to the 2011 Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Graham Wearne to the Gene Technology Act 2000 Review
Submission from Individuals at the Institutional Biosafety Committee to the Gene Technology Act 2000 Review
Submission from Individuals to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Monsanto to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Nuseed Australia to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Peter Olson to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from Queensland Institute of Medical Research to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the Australian Seed Federation to the Statutory Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research and The Commonealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation to the 2011 Review of the Gene Technology Act (2000)
Submission from the Gene Technology Interdepartmental Committee to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the GM-free Australia Alliance to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the Grains Research and Development Corporation to the 2011 Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the National Association for Sustainable Agriculture Australia WA Inc to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the National Farmers' Federation review to the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the Producers Forum to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission from the Western Australian Farmers Federation Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000
Submission to the Gene Technology Act 2000 Review by Mary Gardner
Submission to the Gene Technology Act 2000 Review from the Minister for Primary Industries and Water
Submission to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000 from Phil Aitken
Submission to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000 from Organic and Biodynamic Meats
Submission to the Review of Gene Technology Act 2000 from Tracey Skippings
Sumbission from Individuals from the Wambyn Organic Olive Farm for the Gene Technology Act 2000
Sumission to the Department of Health and Ageing from the Pioneer Hi-Bred Australia Pty Ltd to the Review of the Gene Technology Act 2000 (the Act)
Technology, Health and Health Care. Occasional Papers: Health Financing Series Volume 5
The Ageing Australian Population and Future Health Costs: 1996-2051. Occasional Papers: New Series Number 7
The Australian Government Response to the 2002 Reviews of the National HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C Strategies
The Dairy Industry Submission to the Statutory Review of the Gene Technology Acy 2000
The National Hepatitis C Strategy 2005-2008
The National Slips and Falls Prevention Project
The Quality of Australian Healthcare: Current Issues and Future Directions. Occasional Papers: Health Financing Series Volume 6
The Use of Antibiotics in Food-Producing Animals: Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria in Animals and Humans
Using Mathematical Models to Assess Responses to an Outbreak of an Emerged Viral Respiratory Disease
Valuing the past ... investing in the future- Evaluation of the National HIV /AIDS Strategy 1993-94 to 1995-96
Trachoma Surveillance Report 2006 to 2010
Enter the first, fourth and last digits of 380305
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Changes are in route for Huntsville bus system
Changes are in route for the Huntsville Public Transit system and could be here as early as next year, but first the city is asking for your imput on what those changes should be.
Posted: Aug 28, 2018 4:07 PM
Updated: Aug 31, 2018 7:11 PM
Posted By: Sierra Phillips
The possible transit changes are all thanks to a 90,000 dollar, 9-month study run by a consulting firm hired by the city of Huntsville. Tuesday the city held an open forum where people were asked to vote on what the city's next step should be.
"We want them to improve the service," Leonard Graham.
"I think of Charlie, the Starkissed tuna, we're like driving in tuna cans," Bonnie McDowell.
Leonard Graham and Bonnie McDowell came to the city's forum on Tuesday to have their voices heard on how to improve the buses they ride everyday. Graham was focused on extending service times, but McDowell was worried about safety.
"The bus drivers have a very dangerous job," McDowell told us. She says the changes proposed are not enough.
"It's going to be a while before things improve; right now they're doing their best," McDowell.
People who came out today were given "bus bucks" to vote on how they think the money should be prioritized.
"We were so excited when the city started listening to the community around the key issue of transportation," Cathy Miller, United Way.
Cathy Miller told me a United Way study from 2014 was part of what got the ball rolling on what she says is much needed change.
"Both as a health issue. They couldn't get to doctors appointments, they couldn't get to get their medication, couldn't get to healthy food, and also as an employment issue," Miller.
Miller said this forum is a step in the right direction, but McDowell is skeptical anything will happen.
"Until I see changes then I know they're improving things," McDowell.
80 percent of the study's $90,000 cost is federally funded while the other 20 percent is from the cities general budget. The consulting firm told WAAY after the study is done the city will make a 5 year plan to implement changes
If you missed the meetings Tuesday and didn't get a chance to vote in person, you can vote here: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/HuntsvilleTransitStudySurvey
Huntsville City Schools making changes to bus routes
Madison County bus drivers practice routes
Huntsville City Schools remind parents, students that bus routes are updated weekly
Decatur City Schools alters bus route for upcoming school year
Changes coming for Colbert County school bus routes
Bus route changes in Madison County due to flooding
Huntsville Hospital affiliates with Lincoln Health Systems
Mercury Systems in Huntsville celebrates expansion
Huntsville bus riders upset about dirty bus stops
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Trump-Putin meeting comes at tense moment
The White House and the Kremlin announced Thursday that the two leaders would meet July 16 in Helsinki, with the White House saying they will “discuss relations between the United States and Russia and a range of national security issues.”
Trump-Putin meeting comes at tense moment The White House and the Kremlin announced Thursday that the two leaders would meet July 16 in Helsinki, with the White House saying they will “discuss relations between the United States and Russia and a range of national security issues.” Check out this story on yorkdispatch.com: http://www.yorkdispatch.com/story/news/2018/06/28/trump-putin-meeting-comes-tense-moment/36471871/
The Associated Press Published 4:35 p.m. ET June 28, 2018
President Donald Trump talks with reporters during a tour of a Foxconn facility, Thursday, June 28, 2018, in Mt. Pleasant, Wis. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)(Photo: Evan Vucci / AP)
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Finland next month comes after what will likely be a tense gathering with NATO allies and follows Trump’s repeated calls to improve relations with Russia.
Trump expressed enthusiasm for the sit-down Wednesday.
“I’ve said it from day one, getting along with Russia and with China and with everybody is a very good thing,” Trump said. “It’s good for the world, it’s good for us, it’s good for everybody.” He said they would discuss Syria, Ukraine and “many other subjects.”
Earlier this month, Trump called for Russia to be reinstated in the Group of Seven industrialized democracies. Russia was ousted from the elite group in 2014 as punishment for Putin’s annexation of Crimea and its support for pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine. In the U.S., special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia in a bid to sway the 2016 presidential election in his favor.
Trump’s support: Ahead of the Finland summit announcement, Trump tweeted, “Russia continues to say they had nothing to do with Meddling in our Election!”
Trump has continually parroted the Kremlin’s denial of election interference, a move that has put him out of step with the findings of the U.S. intelligence community, a bipartisan consensus in Congress and Trump’s own appointees who say there is clear evidence of Russian efforts to influence the 2016 presidential campaign.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., jumped on Trump’s tweet, saying: “Why do you trust Putin more than your own Republican DOJ officials and the Republican special counsel that was appointed by a Republican?” Schumer also encouraged Trump to sit down with Mueller for an interview.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told the Senate Appropriations Committee Wednesday that he was confident that when Trump meets with Putin “he will make clear that meddling in our elections is completely unacceptable.”
Pompeo also said Trump views Moscow’s return to the international fold as inevitable and that “trade-offs” could allow it to rejoin the G-7 without giving Crimea back to Ukraine.
Putin and Trump had two brief meetings on the sidelines of international summits last year, and both men spoke of a mutual desire for a full-fledged one-on-one summit during a March telephone call. But planning for the meeting was delayed amid the investigations into whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia.
The summit would offer Putin a chance to try to persuade Washington to lift some of the sanctions imposed on Russia over its annexation of Crimea, interference in eastern Ukraine’s separatist fighting and alleged meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Pompeo said the administration continues to support those sanctions.
Associated Press writer Chad Day contributed to this report.
Read or Share this story: http://www.yorkdispatch.com/story/news/2018/06/28/trump-putin-meeting-comes-tense-moment/36471871/
Police: York County judge ignored cop clearing way for ambulance carrying child, nearly hit officer
Feds: York man trafficked drugs, threatened cop, had illegal guns
York man who caused 2015 double-fatal crash back in prison on 2 new cases
'Stick a fork in it': Central York board all but scuttles later school start times
A new look planned for North George Street/Route 30 intersection
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UK unemployment falls by 63,000 to reach 2.33 million
Unemployment in the UK fell by 63,000 to 2.33 million in the three months to January, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The unemployment rate now stands at 7.2 per cent, down 0.2 percentage points from August to October 2013 and down 0.7 from a year earlier.
The ONS said the number of people in employment increased by 105,000 on the quarter and by 459,000 on the year to reach 30.19 million for November 2013 to January 2014.
Average pay including bonuses for the quarter was 1.4% higher than a year earlier, with pay excluding bonuses 1.3% higher.
Employment in the UK public sector decreased by 159,000 to 5.507 million, almost entirely as a result of the Royal Mail moving from the public sector to the private sector.
Employment rate hits record high but wage growth dips
Dire December retail sales increases the odds of a rate cut
Sharp drop in mortgages for house purchase but property prices perk up
UK unemployment falls to near-45 year low
Tagged: Office for National Statistics Royal Mail unemployment
FTSE 100: This morning’s risers and fallers
UK stock opened with small losses on Wednesday as investors reacted to escalating tensions in Crimea overnight and awaited the...
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Writing about dance
Personal musings about dance and other related topics
Dance Umbrella 2019: Lucy Guerin’s Split at The Place
Posted: October 15th, 2019 | Author: Nicholas Minns & Caterina Albano | Filed under: Festival, Performance | Tags: Ashley McLennan, Dance Umbrella 2019, John Berger, Lilian Steiner, Lucy Guerin, Paul Lim, Scanner, Split | Comments Off on Dance Umbrella 2019: Lucy Guerin’s Split at The Place
Dance Umbrella 2019: Lucy Guerin’s Split at The Place, October 12
Ashley McLellan and Lilian Steiner in Split (photo: Gregory Lorenzutti)
Lucy Guerin’s Split, performed by dancers Lilian Steiner and Ashley McLellan at The Place as part of Dance Umbrella, is an enquiry into duality that is structured on a grid laid down in white tape with a corresponding division of time. For the opening section, the dancers move within a spacious rectangle to a pulsing, driving score by Scanner for a prescribed period. When the time is up — and while the musical engine idles patiently — the dancers stop to rest, towel down and then divide the rectangle into two equal spaces with more white tape. They perform the next section in just one of the two rectangles for half the amount of time. With Paul Lim’s lighting providing an additional delineation to each section, the dancers continue in a diminishing geometric space/time structure until they have only a tiny square in which to stand and a final brief moment in which to resolve the entire choreographic puzzle. There is a strict logic to the pattern of partitions — resembling that of a Fibonacci series without the guiding Golden spiral — that appears to sublimate the agency of the dancers. Despite Guerin’s choreographic depiction of a ‘diminishing world’ that ‘induces competition, negotiation, harmony and aggression’, there is little overt emotional intent from the dancers beyond the gestural language itself.
In the first section, Steiner and McLellan perform an ever-expanding sequence of movements in unison, remaining in the same relation to each other without ever touching. The gestural expression extends out from the torso to the bodies’ extremities — especially the hands and fingers — as much as to the patterns on the floor. This harmonious relationship within an ample space can be seen as the ground of human identity, while the sheer volubility and intricacy of actions and reactions, of skipping, jumping, reclining and swirling in all directions — a tour de force for the dancers — shows the rich complexity of such ground. Within this apparent unity, Guerin introduces a singular contrast by choosing to clothe only one of her dancers. As she writes in the program, ‘Having one naked and the other clothed created a split in identity that intensified the piece. For me it gives seriousness and normality to the female body, which is such a site of commodification, exploitation, shame and shock.’ On the other hand, as John Berger wrote about the fine art tradition of the nude in Ways of Seeing, ‘She is not naked as she is. She is naked as the spectator sees her.’ While Guerin’s choice may provide an apt choreographic duality, in the context of the theatre she cannot preclude a spectator reaction that recognizes in Steiner’s naked body the very attributes she rightly deplores and allows their formal presentation to distract from the work’s rigorous construction. It is telling that the authority of Steiner’s body appears less assured than McLellan’s, suggesting she may not have come to terms with the reflection of her nakedness in the spectator’s gaze; she wears her nakedness like a costume but is not yet reconciled to revealing herself forcefully through it.
Given that Steiner remains as she is throughout Split, the polarity of naked and clothed becomes the guiding metaphor for other recognizable dualities Guerin develops — human/animal, coloniser/colonised, predator/prey, and master/slave — in subsequent sections that see an increasing inclination towards argument and examination, one memorably olfactory. Because McLellan is dressed, she comes across as the more dominant of the two women in images of aggression, while Steiner is inevitably seen as vulnerable. In their process of negotiation this works well, but when they swap antagonistic roles the duality is less convincing. Guerin’s structure and dramaturgy are most persuasive in showing that pressure from ever-diminishing space and time leads to ever-darker shades of behaviour. As Split develops, we see the individual increasingly at cross-purposes with herself — even if there are moments of respite and harmony — until Steiner’s enactment of disembowelling McLellan and eating her entrails suggests a profound existential crisis.
It is hard to read the final gesture in terms of all that has gone before. Reduced to a tiny space, there is only room for the two women to stand tightly together, with McLellan behind Steiner. As McLellan tips backwards the lights are quickly extinguished, leaving her fate suspended in space. As a powerful dramatic gesture — reminiscent of Tosca’s launch from the battlements in Puccini’s opera — it is beautifully timed and executed, but it leaves the issue of duality curiously unresolved.
Interview with Dance Umbrella’s Artistic Director, Emma Gladstone
Posted: September 30th, 2019 | Author: Nicholas Minns | Filed under: Festival, Interview | Tags: Amala Dianor, Dance Umbrella 2019, Emma Gladstone, Georgia Vardarou, Gisèle Vienne, Gregory Maqoma, Jacobsson and Caley, Jérôme Bel, Lucy Guerin, Mythili Prakash, Oona Doherty, Philippe Saire, Theaster Gates | Comments Off on Interview with Dance Umbrella’s Artistic Director, Emma Gladstone
Interview with Dance Umbrella’s Artistic Director, Emma Gladstone, September 12
Emma Gladstone (photo: Hugo Glendinning)
NM I read there’s a through-line to the 2019 Dance Umbrella festival focusing on ‘the emotional, intellectual and sensual power of the body’. I wonder if this focus is the result of the works you have chosen or if it is a pre-selected theme for this year?
EG I suppose I do like works that have structural concepts within them. Lucy Guerin’s Split is an example; it’s a pure dance piece but there’s a very clear structure of space and time in it that I think is not only a fabulous invention but also a guide to our watching. I feel there is more intellectual power and association and suggestion and connection in dance than people sometimes think. That’s why we do all the debates and talks during the festival; I think choreographers are such intelligent beings and so wide in their thinking and their invention that when they do find a way of working, or a particular discovery, it’s quite different from theatre.
Lucy Guerin’s Split (photo: Gregory Lorenzutti)
NM Do you think dance has a place in intellectual and political discourse?
EG Yes, but I always think dance is not a good art form for facts, so you are always working more subtly and that includes the power of suggestion and connection for audiences while they are watching. There’s always going to be politics because of the body. But there are also many other things that can be revealed within the frame…
NM Do you think they are revealed during the performance or in discussing and thinking about it afterwards?
EG Well, if you take Jérôme Bel’s Gala, for example, it’s a hugely political work because of the journey on which it takes us, how it addresses our prejudices or assumptions and I love that evolution of our headspace while we’re watching. There’s also a big thing about difference, when international artists bring different worlds or different perceptions. In Gregory Maqoma’s CION for this year’s festival, you will hear an African choir singing Ravel’s Bolero and it makes you appreciate difference, hearing one of those rather hackneyed bits of music that are ‘owned’ in the western canon, how they can be used and treated and still be effective and moving and powerful from another world. To me difference is always part of the politics: looking at difference, understanding difference, not being afraid of difference. I think it’s something the art form as a whole can do very well. There’s something much more interesting for me about works that are full of politics through suggestion rather than flag waving.
Gregory Maqoma’s CION (photo: John Hogg)
NM Do you find this kind of content is more marked in works from outside the UK?
EG Oona Doherty is an interesting case for the questions of class and place she brings and reveals in her work (Hard To Be Soft at Southbank Centre and Hope Hunt and The Ascension Into Lazarus at The Yard Theatre). I think as an artform dance can also exist for its strength and beauty like music. There’s a wonderful American artist, Theaster Gates, who said in response to a question about the validity of art in a context of deprivations within society, “Beauty is a basic service”. I think there is a total validity in work that is for the human spirit alone. I don’t wish to negate that, but there is also the potential for insipid or empty works in the same way. I do search for complexity that includes intellectual ideas in the choreography, but there are so many different ways these can be realised.
NM What percentage of works that you see contain the ingredients you are looking for and find their way into your Dance Umbrella program?
EG I probably see about 180 works a year and there are usually 10 or 11 in a festival. But that 10 or 11 can include five or six commissions and then I don’t know what’s coming! These are artists I believe in who we’re keen to support and they’ll bring their work whatever it is, and we take that leap with them. For example, one of the works at the Linbury Theatre this year is Jacobsson and Caley’s reimagining of a Merce Cunningham piece, For Four Walls, and there are a couple of works in Freddie Opoku-Adaie’s Mixed Bill in his Out Of The System at Bernie Grant Arts Centre that are commissions. There are also two of the Four by Four Commissions, one chosen by Akram Khan — a new work by Mythili Prakash, Here and Now, at Croydon’s Fairfield Takeover — and the other by Anne-Teresa de Keersmaeker — Georgia Vardarou’s Why Should It Be More Desirable For Green Fire Balls To Exist Than Not? at the Lilian Baylis Theatre. I think it is part of our job to support artists and trust in them. That’s part of the fun. You’re asking people to take that leap with you and you get to see something at the start of a journey. I love those works that make me leave the theatre in a different place from where I went in; that’s what I want an audience to feel.
Mythili Prakash (photo: Jonathan Potter)
NM How do you see Dance Umbrella supporting the dance ecology in London?
EG One of the big decisions I made when I became artistic director was to bring over artists who are not already represented here. I felt liberated by the fact that most people don’t know most of the names most of the time, so it’s our reputation that we have to build through the quality of the work we present. Hopefully that means people will trust us and come to see fascinating artists because they appear under a banner whose quality audiences have come to value. Another decision was to stretch the diversity of choreographic expression as wide as possible, as with Charlotte Spencer’s Is This A Wasteland? in 2017 and Annie-B Parson’s 17c last year.
Another thing we are doing this year in Croydon and at the Opera House is working with our partners to put a mixture of work in a single frame; this is where I feel most responsible in terms of curating, figuring out what sits next to what, how will the audience see it after seeing something else. I’m excited by Amala Dianor’s work, Somewhere in the middle of infinity, at the Linbury, because he is in such an interesting place and the diverse training and styles of his three dancers contrasts with what Merce Cunningham is doing with his solid, single technique at the other end of the bill (Sounddance performed by CCN-Ballet de Lorraine). That’s why I like the title of the program, The Future Bursts In, that is taken from a 1964 Observer review of Cunningham’s first London performances. We have to look at works differently now; there are no longer those kinds of monolithic techniques.
Amala Dianor’s Somewhere in the middle of infinity (photo: Valérie Frossard)
NM How do you sift through the works you see to arrive at a Dance Umbrella program?
EG Apart from working on the diverse elements of age, culture, gender, and the geography of the city, I often invite those pieces I am not sure I liked at first, but which remain with me; they become milestones in my art journey of life. This is why I enjoy programming a festival rather than a venue; it’s the difference between the responsibility of programming year-round to develop a dance scene, with the growth over time of individual artists, and then the idea of a two-and-a-half week festival that’s about the new, the international. It’s a quite different focus, and it’s fun to play within that framework.
NM The geographical reach of the festival seems to have increased this year.
EG Yes, this is the most we have ever attempted. We have added the Royal Opera House — though it’s not a first for Dance Umbrella — because of the mix of audiences and the strength of the technique of the dancers in the program. And, of course, there’s four different locations in Croydon’s Fairfield Takeover. We are also developing our partnerships with festivals around the UK and internationally though we only tour within London; Philippe Saire’s Hocus Pocus is going to six venues around the city. I love that. This year the festival will embrace a total of 23 locations. It’s a bit mad!
NM In terms of the future?
EG This is my sixth year and I have no plans to be programming this festival years into the future. It’s a huge job, because it’s personal — art is personal; there’s no other way to do it. I love the job, and I love the team I am working with, but the scene is constantly changing and new, younger voices need to be heard. You can only reinvent your own wheel so many times.
Dance Umbrella runs from 8 – 27 October. Here’s the full program.
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Resolution 2020: Dylan Poirot Canton, SBB Dance, The Follow Through Collective
A preview of Ida Rubinstein: The Final Act at The Playground Theatre
Neus Gil Cortés’ reworking of Quimera at Jacksons Lane
English National Ballet’s Le Corsaire at London Coliseum
Unbaptised Infants: TRACKS at SET Bermondsey
Ian Abbott: Some thoughts about dance in 2019
Dance Umbrella 2019: Out of the System Mixed Bill at Bernie Grant Arts Centre
Helen Cox, Bodies in Space at the Bloomsbury Festival
MuzArts Triple Bill of Clug, Cherkaoui and McGregor at The London Coliseum
A politically correct Nutcracker for the end of 2019?
© Copyright 2020 | Writing about dance | All Rights Reserved
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Colter Anstaett, Reporter
Irisha Jones, Reporter
Magdala Louissaint, Lynchburg Bureau Reporter
Published: January 17, 2018, 4:12 pm
Tags: News, Southside, Local
Snow causes headaches for many people but is welcome sight for others
Dozens of crashes, disabled vehicles reported across Southside
DANVILLE, Va. – Between 7 a.m. and about 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Danville police responded to 19 crashes and 12 disabled vehicles.
A photo of one of the crashes, posted on the police department's Twitter account, shows a semi-truck jackknifed trying to get onto Robertson Bridge.
The roads in and around Danville were clearly less than ideal for driving on Wednesday.
Numerous crashes have also been reported in Henry County.
According to state police, troopers who cover areas in Southside as part of their jurisdiction had worked 33 crashes as of 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.
"I think, today, it hit about the time people were going to commute and go to work, so that increases the amount of traffic that's out there," Danville Police Department Lt. Mike Wallace said of the snowstorm.
"Then, of course, it was snowing pretty hard, so the visibility around dawn was really rough," he said.
Despite all of the crashes, according to the police department no one was seriously injured.
Many people chose to get around in the snow on foot.
South Boston resident James Bowman said he liked the snow so much he wanted to go for a walk in it.
"Just getting out and getting a little exercise this morning. Probably won't go to work, like I said. Just walking out here, viewing the city. It feels pretty good out here this morning," Bowman said.
Danville residents Scott Adams and Brian Terry also enjoyed the snow.
"Because it's beautiful," Adams said when asked why he likes the snow.
He said he was looking forward to getting to work after the snow stops, though.
"Go shovel snow," Adams said happily when asked what he'll do when the snow stops.
Terry said the snow is peaceful and he enjoys taking walks in it.
"It's part of life. It's alright," Terry said. "(I walk) no more than a mile anymore."
Danville and South Boston were forecast to receive 3-6 inches of snow.
Earlier Wednesday, there didn't seem to be too many people driving on the roads in Montgomery County.
The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office has been working a significant increase in minor crashes and fender benders because of the amount of snow that came across the area.
"We have a normal amount of folks out on the roads, so it increases the amount of calls they are responding to. We take them as quickly as we can get them. With the schools closed today, it has reduced traffic a little bit as far as with the busses and things of that nature. So that has helped us quite a bit," said Lt. Mark Hollandsworth with the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office.
As temperatures drop overnight, the Sheriff's Office is asking people to use caution both Wednesday night and Thursday morning.
Copyright 2018 by WSLS 10 - All rights reserved.
Colter Anstaett
Colter Anstaett joined WSLS in January 2016 as the station’s Southside bureau reporter.
Magdala Louissaint
Magdala Louissaint is an award-winning journalist who joined WSLS 10 in July 2017 as the Lynchburg bureau reporter.
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Turkish anarchist on background to Gezi Park...
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Solidarity Times leaflet for August 29th Water Charges march
We are the crisis of Irish Water! We do not want to have our water commodified, metered, and privatised. We know why this is happening – to increase the wealth and privilege of a global financial capitalist class and their political servants in the EU and Ireland.
We refuse to bow to them. We have gotten up before dawn to stop water meter installation on our streets. We have organised meetings in our communities. We have marched in our thousands and in our hundreds of thousands, shouting “Enough!” and “No way, we won’t pay!” and “Shove your meters up your arse!” We are not just angry, we are determined.
We have forced this government into climb-downs and concessions, and we will do the same to the next one. We have decided to boycott Irish Water. We are encouraging our friends, co-workers and neighbours to do the same. Our community of communities is strong and growing stronger. We will keep on growing. When we break Irish Water, we will clear the rubble and grow real solidarity, real co-operation and real community in its place.
“It is in our homes with the decision not to pay and in the streets through public protest that water charges will be abolished, not within the walls of Dáil Éireann - no matter who is in government”.
-Gregor Kerr, Dun Laoghaire's Not Paying *
"When they came for our water they stepped into our homes and our children's futures. It was time to fight and let No be the defining chant of this generation. I will not be a pawn for foolish men anymore."
-Rachael O’Sullivan, Mahon Says No *
"The water struggle has brought people together through communities fighting back. The housing struggles should also be the same but with direct action as it revolves around family life. Direct action allows those to have a voice and be heard as ordinary people stand together in order to find a solution to the housing crisis".
-Aisling Hedderman, North Dublin Bay Housing Crisis Committee *
*(all activists quoted speaking in a personal capacity)
WE MARCH FOR CHOICE
Approximately 12 women with addresses in the Republic of Ireland travel to access abortion abroad per day. Each woman must carry the entire financial, practical and emotional burdens of doing so. Practically, Irish women travelling abroad are likely to avail of the more invasive surgical rather than medical abortions as they cannot afford to remain near the clinic for 3-4 days. Irish women are also less likely to receive pre- and post-abortion medical and psychological care due to the time limitations and stigma. Increasingly, women are ordering medication online to self-induce abortions. These burdens fall most heavily on minors, women on low incomes, and women who cannot travel freely to another state.
Public opinion supports the amendment of Irish abortion laws. A recent poll found that 81% of people polled were in favour of widening the grounds for abortion, 66% of people surveyed believed the Government should decriminalise abortion and, just 7% were opposed to abortion in all circumstances. Unsettlingly, however, the same poll found that popular awareness of abortion legislation was low. Only 1 in 10 surveyed were aware that the penalty for an unlawful abortion in Ireland is up to 14 years imprisonment.
An anarchist society is one in which all people are free to make choices about their own lives. This includes the option of whether or not to become pregnant, remain pregnant or to have children by any means.
We support the 4th Annual March for Choice. It will take place in Dublin on Saturday September 26th marking the Global Day of Action for Access to Safe and Legal Abortion.
More info at www.abortionrightscampaign.ie.
IRISH WATER FAILS – WE ADVANCE
Why is the Eurostat decision significant for our Water War? It suggests we are winning.
In July, Eurostat, the EU statistics agency, announced that the Irish State’s spending on Irish Water will stay on the exchequer balance sheet. The government has consistently argued that Irish Water would pass the Eurostat test and - through an accounting trick - keep the costs off the books. Now, thanks to all our boycott actions, it turns out that the government was wrong. Less than half of Irish Water’s revenue comes from customers. Charges collected in the first three months of the year suggested, at best, a compliance rate of 43%.
WATER METER FAIRIES OUTFOX THE DARK OUL’ BOY
The Gardaí have started to chase the 'water meter fairies' but have failed to catch the slippery folk. According to ancient legend these fearsome foes of the monster known only as the Dark Oul’ Boy (or DOB for short) emerge at night to scoop up the nastiness dropped in housing estates all over the country by his hirelings. The DOB is said to be in a terrible rage and the screams of his Goblin Kenny have been heard echoing way beyond the gates of the Dáil. It's said that at midnight last night the hounds of Garda were dispatched to run slavering all over Co. Louth but the fairies were faster and long gone before they arrived.
WE SQUAT TO CREATE NEW HOMES
Squatting could be a way to solve the housing problem in the short term and would help to reducing the levels of homelessness. The people that are homeless due to the financial crash could be using the 270,000 houses, flats and apartments which now lie vacant.
Increasingly, homeless people and those affected by the housing problem are starting to take the situation into their own hands. All over Dublin, people have come together for advice and support to change the housing problem within their communities. On May 5th, homeless families and homeless individuals led an occupation of the Dublin City Council offices. They were supported by other housing and homeless groups, which included North Dublin Bay Housing Crisis Community, the Hub, the Barricade Inn, An Spréach and Housing Action Now. Many of these groups were later involved in squatting the Bolt Hostel on Bolton Street.
Housing demonstrations will take place on 6th September, 2.00PM in Darndale and on the 22nd September at the Dáil.
THE WORKERS SOLIDARITY MOVEMENT – WHAT WE ARE FIGHTING FOR
We argue for anarchism and for a revolutionary change in society. Like most socialists, we share a fundamental belief that capitalism is the problem. We believe that as a system it must be ended, that the wealth of society should be commonly owned and that its resources should be used to serve the needs of humanity as a whole and not those of a small greedy minority.
Just as importantly, we see this struggle against capitalism as also being a struggle for freedom. We believe that socialism and freedom must go together, that we cannot have one without the other. Anarchism has always stood for individual freedom – freedom from oppression in all guises, including on the grounds of gender, race, ethnicity and sexual orientation.
Anarchism stands for democracy. We believe in democratising the workplace, in workers taking control of all industry and communities taking control of their localities and environments.
Capitalism will continue to destroy the world’s ecology and to foster hierarchy, exploitation and oppression in people’s lives. It doesn’t have to be this way. We believe that by actively growing, organising and resisting through social movements - like the fight against Irish Water - we can really change our communities and our lives.
So: - Organise! Organise! Organise! We have a world to win!
This four page A4 booklet was produced for the August 29th 2015 anti-water charges demo in Dublin.
Download and print off copes for distribution.
Solidarity Times Water Charges leaflet aug2015.pdf 287.6 KB
Subject: Water charge
Topics: Community
Geography: National
Multimedia: PDF, Video
Source: Leaflet
Author: Brian Ancom
March - April 2009 Edition of the Workers Solidarity freesheet.
Workers Solidarity Issue 100
The 100th issue of the Irish anarchist paper Workers Solidarity for Nov / Dec 2007
PDF of Workers Solidarity...
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Protest takes place against homophobic attack in...
Hundreds arrested, beaten and tear gassed as...
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Who do you think will win the SmackDown Women's Championship Match in Glasgow, Scotland, next week?
WWE Hell in a Cell
Which Hell in a Cell Match did you think won the night at WWE Hell in a Cell?
What other Raw Superstar would you like to see Goldberg Jackhammer and/or Spear?
What was your favorite Survivor Series moment from the past five years?
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Date and location
Sunday, May 22 | 8 PMET/5 PMPT
Prudential Center
Get the WWE Network
WWE Tag Team Champions The New Day def. The Vaudevillains
NEWARK, N.J. — It has been said that those who don’t learn from the past are doomed to repeat it — but what about those who live in the past? That theory was put to the test at WWE Extreme Rules 2016, when The New Day defended the WWE Tag Team Championship against The Vaudevillains.
After weeks of verbal warfare between the two sides, primarily centering around The Real Men from a Bygone Era’s flair for the historical, WWE Extreme Rules would be the litmus test to see if The Vaudevillains’ old-school principles would hold up against The New Day, both figuratively and literally.
Xavier Woods & Big E go old school in the New Era against Aiden English & Simon Gotch: Courtesy of the award-winning WWE Network.
The New Day addressed the crowd with their usual antics prior to the match, seemingly not amusing The Vaudevillains as they made their way to the ring. Seeing the two teams’ styles clash in the early goings of the contest was a fascinating dynamic to follow, with The Vaudevillains attempting to keep the pace at a methodical rate while The New Day injected their kinetic energy into the contest at every opportunity.
Aiden English & Simon Gotch refused to wrestle The New Day’s match, however. Making the most out of every slight opening Xavier Woods & Big E gave them, the Bygone Era’s elite mounted some serious offense against the champions. They looked to close the deal several times over, even hitting their signature Whirling Dervish maneuver, but — as they have done since securing the WWE Tag Team Championship all the way back at SummerSlam 2015 — The New Day refused to relinquish their grip on the titles. Weathering the storm, The New Day rallied to mount a comeback, finishing The Vaudevillains off with a quick assist from Kofi Kingston at ringside.
As Kofi Kingston, Big E and Xavier Woods celebrated their victory after the match, one thing was incredibly clear: The past was behind them, and it was a new day, indeed.
Check out images from The New Day's battle against The Vaudevillains for the WWE Tag Team Championship at WWE Extreme Rules 2016.
Ryan Pappolla
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The New Day massacres Tom Phillips' shirt: WWE.com Exclusive, March 22, 2016
WWE: Network: The New Day vs. The Vaudevillians - WWE Tag Team Title Match: 2016 WWE Extreme Rules
WWE Tag Team Champions The New Day vs. The Vaudevillains: photos
Prev match
Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson def. The Usos (Tag Team Tornado Match)
Rusev def. United States Champion Kalisto
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Grandmother found dead; 3-year-old safe after golf cart crash, deputies say
Pair last seen near Sullivan Road Wednesday morning
Anne Newman
STOPPERS AT 23-CRIME. WE HAVE NEW DETAILS INTO THE NEWSROOM ABOUT HOW GRANDMOTHER DIED AFTER SHE ENTERED GRANDSON WENT MISSING IN SIMPSONVILLE. CRASHED, AND WAS FOUNDED AN EMBANKMENT. THE THREE-YEAR-OLD WAS FOUND SAFE AND IS REUNITED WITH HIS FAMILY
A missing 3-year-old boy was found safe Wednesday night, but his grandmother was found dead after a golf cart crash, according to Greenville County deputies. Deputies said Bernette King, 60, and Carter Bernhagen, 3, were last seen around 11 a.m. Wednesday.Deputies said the pair left on a golf cart and headed to visit a nearby creek. Investigators told WYFF News 4 that search crews found the golf cart on the banks of the Reedy River, down an embankment on a trail around 8:45 p.m. Wednesday.Deputies used K-9s and air support during the search efforts that were spearheaded by fire crews. A swift water rescue and dive team also aided in the search.Lt. Ryan Flood said Thursday that deputies believe the golf cart the two were riding in crashed. The coroner responded to the search scene around 10:30 p.m. on Sullivan Road, near West Georgia Road, in Simpsonville. Crews soon found Carter safe outside the water, deputies said.Carter received medical attention, but deputies said he is expected to be OK. A short time later, crews found King and later confirmed she had died. WYFF News 4's Madeleine Hackett was with King's husband when he was told by the coroner that his wife may have suffered a heart attack.King's daughter has set up a GoFundMe page to help pay for funeral expenses.
A missing 3-year-old boy was found safe Wednesday night, but his grandmother was found dead after a golf cart crash, according to Greenville County deputies.
Deputies said Bernette King, 60, and Carter Bernhagen, 3, were last seen around 11 a.m. Wednesday.
Deputies said the pair left on a golf cart and headed to visit a nearby creek.
Investigators told WYFF News 4 that search crews found the golf cart on the banks of the Reedy River, down an embankment on a trail around 8:45 p.m. Wednesday.
Deputies used K-9s and air support during the search efforts that were spearheaded by fire crews. A swift water rescue and dive team also aided in the search.
Lt. Ryan Flood said Thursday that deputies believe the golf cart the two were riding in crashed.
The coroner responded to the search scene around 10:30 p.m. on Sullivan Road, near West Georgia Road, in Simpsonville.
Crews soon found Carter safe outside the water, deputies said.
Carter received medical attention, but deputies said he is expected to be OK.
A short time later, crews found King and later confirmed she had died.
WYFF News 4's Madeleine Hackett was with King's husband when he was told by the coroner that his wife may have suffered a heart attack.
King's daughter has set up a GoFundMe page to help pay for funeral expenses.
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About ADEA GoDental
ADEA GoDental®
Dentistry 101
Why be a dentist?
Is dentistry right for you?
Need for diversity
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Deciding where to apply
As part of the application process, it is important to decide which schools you will apply to. While there are many publications that rank the dental schools, they are often inaccurate, as there is no level playing field to rank one against another since they all offer programmatic and mission-based differences. This is why it is so important to determine what you are looking to get from your dental education and how you want it to be structured.
There are many factors to consider when deciding which schools to apply to, including geographical location, student body, curriculum type, clinical or research focus, community-centric or larger clinical experiences and many more. Use the map and dental school preferences sheet below to help you determine what schools you want to designate on your ADEA AADSAS® application.
University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry
Arizona School of Dentistry and Oral Health
Midwestern University College of Dental Medicine - Arizona
Loma Linda University School of Dentistry
Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry of USC
University of California, Los Angeles, School of Dentistry
University of California, San Francisco, School of Dentistry
University of the Pacific, Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry
Western University of Health Sciences College of Dental Medicine
The University of Colorado School of Dental Medicine
University of Connecticut School of Dental Medicine
Howard University College of Dentistry
Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine School of Dental Medicine
Nova Southeastern University College of Dental Medicine
University of Florida College of Dentistry
Dental College of Georgia at Augusta University
Midwestern University College of Dental Medicine-Illinois
Southern Illinois University School of Dental Medicine
University of Illinois at Chicago College of Dentistry
Indiana University School of Dentistry
University of Iowa College of Dentistry
University of Kentucky College of Dentistry
University of Louisville School of Dentistry
Louisiana State University Health New Orleans School of Dentistry
University of New England College of Dental Medicine
University of Maryland School of Dentistry
Boston University Henry M. Goldman School of Dental Medicine
Tufts University School of Dental Medicine
University of Detroit Mercy School of Dentistry
University of Michigan School of Dentistry
University of Minnesota School of Dentistry
University of Mississippi Medical Center School of Dentistry
Missouri School of Dentistry & Oral Health
University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Dentistry
Creighton University School of Dentistry
University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Dentistry
University of Nevada, Las Vegas School of Dental Medicine
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, School of Dental Medicine
Columbia University College of Dental Medicine
New York University College of Dentistry
Stony Brook University School of Dental Medicine
Touro College of Dental Medicine at New York Medical College
University at Buffalo School of Dental Medicine
East Carolina University School of Dental Medicine
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Adams School of Dentistry
Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine
The Ohio State University College of Dentistry
University of Oklahoma College of Dentistry
Oregon Health & Science University School of Dentistry
The Maurice H. Kornberg School of Dentistry, Temple University
University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine
University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine
Medical University of South Carolina James B. Edwards College of Dental Medicine
Meharry Medical College School of Dentistry
University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Dentistry
Texas A&M College of Dentistry
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Dentistry
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Dentistry
Roseman University of Health Sciences College of Dental Medicine
University of Utah School of Dentistry
Virginia Commonwealth University School of Dentistry
University of Washington School of Dentistry
West Virginia University School of Dentistry
Marquette University School of Dentistry
University of Puerto Rico School of Dental Medicine
*University of Alberta School of Dentistry
University of British Columbia Faculty of Dentistry (DMD Program)
*University of Manitoba College of Dentistry
Dalhousie University Faculty of Dentistry
University of Toronto Faculty of Dentistry
*Western University Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry
*Université Laval Faculté de Médecine Dentaire
*McGill University Faculty of Dentistry
*Université de Montréal Faculté de Médecine Dentaire
*University of Saskatchewan College of Dentistry
Note: An asterisk (*) indicates schools that do not participate in ADEA AADSAS.
How to determine what dental school is right for you
With so many institutions to choose from, how will you find the best fit school for you? This video will go over some of the many factors you need to consider before deciding where to apply.
Besides a few exceptions, the majority of dental students possess a bachelor’s degree before they enter dental school.
Is dentistry my true calling? Ensure you do some soul searching before embarking on the challenging but extremely rewarding path to becoming a dentist.
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In First Footage Of Kashmir Protests Under Lockdown, Live Fire Rings Out
Despite Indian-administered Kashmir now on a complete communications blackout and security lockdown after its autonomy was revoked last Monday, videos of major protests and clashes with Indian troops in the Muslim stronghold have begun to emerge.
One video from the Jammu and Kashmir's (J&K) largest city and capital of Srinagar appears to show live gun fire used by security forces to disperse demonstrators, at the end of a protest which western media described as initially involving tens of thousands.
Amid troops dispersing tear gas, automatic fire can also be heard in some of the early videos to come out.
The BBC witnessed tear gas being used to disperse the largest protest since a lockdown was imposed in Indian-administered Kashmir – a protest the Indian government said didn’t happen
[Tap to expand] https://t.co/lPudV9uez3 pic.twitter.com/aUhwWRkqme
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) August 10, 2019
Though it's unclear whether gunfire clearly heard in the video could involve riot control measures like rubber bullets, pellets, or possibly Indian troops discharging their weapons in the air, The New York Times this weekend reported multiple wounded by gunshot following the weekend protests.
Interestingly, consistent with the information and communications blackout, Indian authorities overseeing the tens of thousands of Indian military which surged into J&K over the past week have denied the protests ever happened.
This as The Guardian reports there's been a slight ease in curfew and travel restrictions places on Srinagar. Landlines, cell phones, and the internet remain blocked, however. This means little information, including of protests in the restive region, has come out.
A Times report cited eyewitnesses to say Indian troops are in some instances suppressing mass demonstrations through live fire:
Afshana Farooq, a 14-year-old who was nearly trampled in a stampede when Indian forces opened fire on demonstrators, in a hospital in Srinagar, Kashmir, on Friday. “We were just marching peacefully after prayers,” her father said. “Then they started shooting at us.”
An Al Jazeera correspondent currently on the ground in the region also reported that, "Despite the unprecedented security lockdown, thousands of people demonstrated in Srinagar and were met with live fire, tear gas and rubber-coated steel bullets," according to an account of prior Friday protests in Srinagar.
So it begins.Kashmiri Eagles & Tigers break the curfew across occupied Kashmir and chant "We Want Freedom".Protests reported in Srinagar,Kargil, Ladakh, Doda,Jammu, AnnantNag/Islamabad.
Foreign Occupation Army of India using live fire, pallet guns and tear gas.#KashmirFightsBack pic.twitter.com/lDTmK3ujwz
— Shining Pearl (@iShiningPearl) August 10, 2019
As we reported previously, local reports are describing a total communications blackout that's so bad many don't even know New Delhi revoked the region's political autonomy early this week. The region has essentially been cut off from the rest of the country and the outside world, with a security blockade and checkpoints also set up by the military, and schools shuttered and all public assemblies banned.
Preceding Monday's unprecedented revocation of the over 50-year old constitutional Article 370 which gave Indian-administered Kashmir special autonomous status, a massive Indian troop surge had been observed entering the country's most restive and politically sensitive Muslim-majority region, with estimates putting it close to 40,000 additional soldiers deployed.
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Geneva Model Cinema review
Best soundbase £400+, Awards 2015. If you've got the budget for a premium soundbase, then the Geneva Model Cinema won't disappoint - it's a brilliant buy for the money. Tested at £550
By What Hi-Fi? Posted 2015-05-19T09:32:03Z
It might be pricey, but this is the best soundbase experience money can buy
Big, authoritative sound
Clear dialogue
Expressive and insightful
Tonally balanced
Well built, stylish design
No HDMI ports
We’ve always been rather fond of products from Geneva, and the company’s first soundbase isn’t about to break that trend.
At £550, there’s no doubt this is one of the priciest soundbases we’ve tested. But after just a few minutes in its company it’s easy to see where the money has been spent.
Build and design
The Model Cinema generates a big, open and authoritative sound
For a start, the build quality is a notch above some of its cheaper rivals. The cabinet is built from MDF but with a smooth metallic finish in a choice of black or white. A stylish matching metal grille adorns the front of the unit, while a simple silver logo and a number of touch sensitive controls sit along the top.
A suitably stylish remote is included in the box too, offering volume and tone controls (we left the default settings, but it’s worth playing with them to suit your room), input selection, power, some EQ settings and a Bluetooth pairing button.
It’s well built and clearly labelled, plus the buttons have a reassuring click to them. Sometimes, it’s the little things that count.
No HDMI inputs, but you do get coaxial/optical digital and analogue ones
Behind the grille, there’s a total of five drivers in three acoustic chambers – four 5cm tweeter/mid-range drivers and one 13cm woofer, totalling 120W of power.
There’s also a handy LCD display, hidden behind the grille in the top right hand corner, to display some information to support your remote commands. This will adjust itself automatically to suit the room’s lighting conditions so it can always be seen clearly.
We’re finding it a bit of habit, even at this price, for soundbases to go pretty basic on their inputs, and there are no HDMI ports available here either.
Instead there’s one each of optical and coaxial, a pair of analogue ins and a 3.5mm jack for attaching a portable device. There’s also Bluetooth A2DP on board for streaming music from a phone, tablet or laptop.
Settle in for the final battle scene in Fury and you realise the scale the Geneva is capable of. It’s a big, wide sound from a box that measures just 70cm across, with a level of authority unlike any soundbase we’ve heard.
Dynamically it puts much of the competition to shame; in one breath it’s powerful and full-bodied, and the next, subtle and considered.
It approaches Fury’s high-octane final scene with poise and confidence, attacking the low-end blasts of guns and grenades with a rich, detailed tone, while still remaining nimble enough on its feet to deliver the tension in a demanding soundtrack.
Make sure you play with the tone controls to get a sound to match your room
The midrange is open and spacious. It offers an expressive, agile performance and there’s stunning clarity through dialogue - voices are filled with depth and texture.
There’s no thinness at the top end either, and even at volume the Geneva remains composed, with a clear treble that isn’t put under pressure by the constant zinging of gunfire.
Detail levels are top-notch too, and we’re impressed at the precision with which the Geneva organises its soundfield.
It brings together most of our favourite things in the competition into one, and doesn’t compromise at any point, which is refreshing to say the least.
When there are great soundbases out there for £250, it can be hard to see the benefit in spending an extra £300 on the Geneva. But it only takes a quick comparison to make it clear.
The whole experience here is just a notch above the rest. Yes, it’s among the priciest soundbases we’ve tested, but you’ll hear the difference every time you use it.
If your budget can stretch a little, the Geneva Model Cinema will transform your TV sound better than any soundbase we’ve tested. An easy five stars.
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Razorbacks Report:
Published: Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Photo by Ben Goff
Arkansas receivers Trey Knox (left), Mike Woods (center) and De'Vion Warren are shown during practice Saturday, March 9, 2019, in Fayetteville.
FAYETTEVILLE -- The Arkansas Razorbacks worked inside the Walker Pavilion on a gloomy afternoon Tuesday, and their precision and speed on offense stood in stark contrast to the previous Tuesday's work.
A week ago, there were a bunch of dropped and off-target passes in the swirling wind during the high-tempo early passing periods on the outdoor practice fields.
The incomplete passes were very minimal Tuesday, with overcast skies, periodic rain and lower temperatures moving the workout inside.
The receivers ran sharp, crisp routes, and the quarterbacks delivered on time, with zip on the football.
The Razorbacks (2-6, 0-5 SEC), who host Mississippi State on Saturday at 3 p.m., are responding to the "November to remember" mantra preached by Coach Chad Morris this week.
"We're trying to fly around," sophomore receiver Mike Woods said. "We're trying to move around. Like Coach Morris said, all the losing stops right now. We've got to change something right now. So we're just trying to fly around every day."
Said offensive tackle Dalton Wagner: "Coach Morris said, 'The new season starts today.' "
Senior quarterback Ben Hicks' left shoulder looked markedly better during the periods of practice open to the media.
Junior Nick Starkel ran at the front of individual quarterback drills while Hicks was at the back.
When the full offense came together to match up against the scout-team defense, redshirt freshman John Stephen Jones took the first set of snaps. Jones went 6 of 7 for 49 yards, including an 8-yard touchdown strike to Cheyenne O'Grady, while playing the second half plus a few other snaps in Saturday's 48-7 loss at No. 1 Alabama.
Coordinator Joe Craddock called KJ Jefferson over from the offensive scout group, and the 6-3 true freshman -- wearing the No. 6 jersey of Mississippi State's Garrett Shrader -- took work with the second group, repping the Hogs' run-pass option game.
Morris and Craddock said Monday the starting quarterback job was up for grabs.
On the first snap of fifth period, as media members were leaving Walker Pavilion, Hicks came on and threw a rope to Trey Knox on a flag route for about a 15-yard completion.
No quarterbacks were brought in for media interviews Tuesday.
Jackson love
Center Ty Clary delivered kudos to line mate Colton Jackson, who announced Monday he was stepping away from football after suffering chronic injuries.
"It's super sad to see him go away," Clary said. "Awesome teammate, great player. I'll definitely miss him more. I mean, he's an awesome guy. It's the decision he kind of needed to make but didn't want to make. Sometimes it happens."
Jackson thanked the current and previous coaching staffs in a social media post announcing his decision Monday.
"Ever since my back surgery last year I have been pushing myself through pain in order to play the game I love," Jackson wrote, in part. "It's disappointing when you put in countless hours of training, practice and rehab each week for it to not even come close to being reflected through your performance and on film and there is nothing you can do about it. But I know God has a plan for me and my future.
"I've had an amazing experience in my 5 years at this University, even though it hasn't ended as planned. I can't complain knowing all it has blessed me with."
Concussed
Based on post-practice and postgame reports from Coach Chad Morris, the Razorbacks have had 10 players in concussion protocol during the season, with a heavy representation of offensive linemen.
Senior Colton Jackson missed two games while in protocol before retiring this week. Other offensive linemen to engage in the protocol (in chronological order): Ty Clary, Austin Capps and Kirby Adcock. Capps missed the Alabama game due to his head injury, while Adcock is doubtful for Saturday's game against Mississippi State.
In camp, tight end Hudson Henry, defensive tackle Isaiah Nichols and running back T.J. Hammonds all spent time in concussion protocol. Since the season began, Jackson, receivers Treylon Burks and De'Vion Warren, running back Chase Hayden, Clary, Jackson, Capps and Adcock were reported to be in it.
Morris said the athletic training staff, with David England as director and Dave Polanski as head trainer for football, is continually studying and monitoring the team's concussions.
"Are they in games or in practice? If you're in practice, what part of practice? So we're on that," Morris said. "Our medical staff does a tremendous job of supplying the information.
"We've had quite a few occur during the course of a game, more than I can remember. Once that happens, we immediately go into the protocol and start that process. But we're definitely on top of it and analyzing a lot of things on it."
Shoulder ding
Junior center Ty Clary came out of last week's loss to Alabama with a shoulder injury, but he was back at practice Tuesday.
"We were running a screen, and I came out to go fit up the linebacker, which is my assignment, and then I lowered my shoulder into him," Clary said. "I already wear a brace on that shoulder, because I kind of banged it up in fall camp. It just kind of came loose."
One WR catch
The Arkansas receivers combined for one catch -- Treylon Burks' 15-yard grab in the first quarter -- in last week's 48-7 loss to Alabama.
"Yeah, the football didn't go our way," sophomore wideout Mike Woods said. "We had a lot of plays that were real close to going, but just didn't bounce our way last week."
That marked the first time Razorbacks' receivers had one reception in a game since a 52-7 loss to South Carolina in 2013 in which Javontee Herndon had one catch for 20 yards.
Brandon Allen, the former Fayetteville High School and Arkansas quarterback, is scheduled to make his NFL debut on Sunday as the Denver Broncos' starter against the Cleveland Browns.
Bobby Allen, Brandon's father and a longtime Arkansas assistant coach who is now the Razorbacks' director of high school and NFL relations, said a family contingent of more than 10 will attend the game in Denver.
"We're really excited for him," Bobby Allen said. "Obviously, he's worked hard to get this opportunity.
"I don't like the fact a guy got hurt to get the opportunity, but in the game of football you've always got to be the next guy up."
Allen is starting in place of Joe Flacco, who is out with a herniated disk in his neck.
"I think he's ready. He's prepared," Bobby Allen said. "In his mind, each week he's prepared himself to get out there and play."
Radio guys
Coach Chad Morris will be joined by junior offensive tackle Myron Cunningham and sophomore linebacker Bumper Pool at his weekly radio show tonight.
On the Air with Chad Morris airs Wednesdays at 7 p.m.
Cunningham, of Warren, Ohio, has made six starts, three at right guard and three at left tackle, and has permitted one sack in 255 pass protection plays out of his 445 snaps.
Pool, of Lucas, Texas, has 54 tackles, fourth on the team, while starting all eight games. Pool has 3.5 tackles for loss, with 3 pass breakups and a hurry.
Bulldogs see worst stretch since 2005
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Kyrie Irving, Gordon Hayward ready for camp, can go ‘full speed’
August 30, 2018 cheap nfl jerseys
Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward will return to Boston next week and are expected to join their teammates in informal workouts as Celtics players begin pickup play in advance of the late-September start of training camp.
Irving and Hayward have been rehabbing this summer from follow-up procedures on the injuries that shortened their 2017-18 campaigns and prevented them from playing in Boston’s surge to the cusp of the NBA Finals.cheap nike jerseys nfl
Celtics president of basketball operations Danny Ainge told ESPN on Monday that both Irving (knee) and Hayward (ankle) appear at full health and are ready for the new season.
“I don’t want to hype it up too much, but I’m saying that if our training camp were starting today that they would be here today going full speed,” Ainge said. “It’s not like they need an extra month. I think that they know they have an extra month, so they are sort of pacing themselves. They’re playing as if to build up to that opening day of training camp [Sept. 26].”
Celtics players have expressed excitement in starting 5-on-5 work after Boston brought back much of the same roster from last season’s squad that, even without Irving and Hayward, took the Cleveland Cavaliers to seven games in the Eastern Conference finals.
“They’ll both be here within the next week or so; by the time Labor Day is over, they will all be playing 5-on-5,” Ainge said of Irving and Hayward. “I think it’s just a matter of, if they’re not playing 5-on-5 now, then it’s only because they want it more of a controlled environment, I guess. They’re doing everything — dunking the basketball off both legs and playing one-on-one live and jumping and cutting and defending. I’m excited for them.”
Ainge said the team will carefully ramp up activity for Irving and Hayward during camp and that the emergence of Boston’s younger players should ease the burden on the returning stars early in the new season.cheap nfl nike jerseys free shipping
But there’s an obvious excitement for the Celtics in having their team whole again for the first time since the 2017-18 opening night in Cleveland.
“I’m really excited about the upcoming season with [Irving and Hayward],” Ainge said. “Obviously, there’s a transition from rehabbing to playing one-on-one to playing 3-on-3 to 5-on-5 and then playing NBA basketball, so I don’t want to build up expectations too high. I think there will be a little bit of an adjustment once that last phase is made.
Kyrie Irving has no problem with Collin Sexton wearing No. 2 for Cavs Terry Rozier took Kyrie’s shoes, now he’s filling them during Boston’s run Raptors-Spurs, Lakers-Celtics among NBA schedule release highlights Premier League helped by early deadline but were teams ready to play?
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Explore the Path Less Traveled
First-time visitors will be enchanted by a number of hidden gems and sanctuaries found throughout Wrightsville Beach and its nearby barrier islands, while repeat visitors will have a chance to discover something new each and every visit.
Hidden Beach Escapes
Wrightsville Beach and the surrounding areas are ideal spots for visitors looking to get some peace and quiet beachside with a splash of scenic beauty. Only accessible by boat, kayak or canoe, Masonboro Island Reserve is home to the longest undisturbed barrier island ecosystem in southern North Carolina, as well as birds, fish, sea turtles and more that use the island for habitat and foraging. The reserve protects these coastal habitats for long-term research, education and stewardship, giving visitors a firsthand look at pristine examples of barrier island, salt marsh and tidal creek ecosystems.
Epic Excursions offer half- or full-day boat charters for up to six people on its 23-foot catamaran deck boat to Masonboro Island, as well as sunset cruises, island dining excursions and camping and glamping trips for an unforgettable night’s stay on the uninhabited island. The company also conducts excursions to Mason’s Inlet, known for its clear water and sand bars, and Lea Island, the perfect destination for those who enjoy shelling and spending the day on a secluded beach. Wrightsville Beach Scenic Tours offer a variety of charter options to Masonboro, including a daily cruise from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. that highlights the natural history and ecology of Wrightsville Beach’s waterways and a half-day eco-tour that focuses on the fascinating and complex ecosystem of the barrier island.
Back on Wrightsville Beach, park at the last beach access on the north end of the island and continue northward on foot along the shore, keeping your eyes peeled for a solitary mailbox and bench surrounded by sand. Visitors to the Wrightsville Beach Mailbox can write anonymous letters, share stories and memories about their trip or read through the notes and musings left by others. The mailbox is filled with a constantly evolving collection of romantic poems, prayers for peace, letters to those long gone and more. Here on the north end, the ocean collides with Mason's Inlet, making it a perfect location for shelling or lounging in tidal pools during low tide.
Find a spot on one of Wrightsville Beach’s piers as the sun begins to set, then watch as the full moon rises over the island into the night sky. Bask in the moonlight from Johnnie Mercers Pier or the Crystal Pier at the Oceanic Restaurant, where full-moon rising celebrations are legendary.
Quiet Gardens
Stop and smell the flowers at one of Wrightsville Beach’s tucked away gardens. Situated on the west end of Wrightsville Beach Park, Harbor Way Gardens is a one-acre garden that allows visitors to rest in the shade on benches set among paved paths, surrounded by large trees and seasonal flowers in bloom. Children can cool off and play in the Children's Fountain.
Nearby Airlie Gardens is home to more than 67 acres of formal gardens and walking trails, 10 acres of lakes, the majestic nearly 500-year-old Airlie Oak and hundreds of species of local flora and fauna. Open year-round, Airlie Gardens features a number of hidden oases and structures, including the Bottle Chapel, Pergola Garden and seasonal Butterfly House.
Sound-Side Haven
Hop aboard a boat, kayak or stand-up paddleboard and explore a different kind of salt water in Wrightsville Beach’s active sound to engage both the mind and body. Thanks to its location between the ocean and Intracoastal Waterway, the waves are calm and the breezes are steady in this unique body of water.
From birdwatching on scenic islands to taking in Intracoastal views on The Loop and strolling through immaculate gardens, explore more with eco-adventures.
Watersports and Wellness
Get out and active on the crystal blue waters of Wrightsville Beach or enjoy a variety of land-based activities like yoga, jogging The Loop and more.
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Home / News / July 30 polls best in 54 years, says Cross
July 30 polls best in 54 years, says Cross
June 19, 2018 News
Lawson Mabhena Assistant News Editor
Zimbabwe’s new Constitution, Government and Electoral Commission have put the country on the right path towards the most “reasonable” elections since 1964, former MDC-T policy advisor and Bulawayo legislator Mr Eddie Cross has observed.
Mr Cross, who took up his first job in 1957, was probably using the referendum in which white residents of Southern Rhodesia voted overwhelmingly for independence from Britain on November 5, 1964, as the first election in his 54-year timeline.
In an article posted on his website last Friday, Mr Cross said while 38-year-old Zimbabwe was not a perfect democracy, it took older states like Britain 600 years to get where they are today.
“My concern about the real freedom of the voter to exercise their democratic rights in secrecy in a polling station and not face retribution afterwards, remain and whatever happens, will be an unseen factor. Still, this is Africa and we must allow for a gradual assumption of such rights — after all it took Britain 600 years to get there and we could argue that many older States are still not there in all respects. The one thing that is true, is that we are in a much better place to hold a reasonable election than at any time since 1964,” Mr Cross wrote.
“The great difference this time is that international observers and the media are now welcome guests and not ‘enemies of the State’. We do not have to smuggle them in as ‘golfers’ or to smuggle their footage out once it is captured. The interaction with ZEC, as opposed to that secretive old man at the Registrar General’s Office, Mudede, is completely different — they listen, may not do anything, but at least we have access and get a hearing.”
The observations by Mr Cross — an MDC founder member —come as egg in the face of MDC Alliance presidential candidate Mr Nelson Chamisa, who has been saying “it’s either a free and fair election or no election”, while demanding so-called electoral reforms.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission has since responded to a petition by Mr Chamisa and his Alliance partners saying some of the demands are misdirected as they cannot be legally dealt with by the commission.
The commission also said it could not accede to the Alliance’s demands to delay the elections as that was the duty of the courts. The electronic copy of the voters’ roll, the Alliance was demanding, is now available, while State media has been covering all political parties.
Mr Cross, a trained economist, also spoke of change in the conduct of the police and how for the first time he managed to inspect a “reasonably clean” voters’ roll.
“Then there is the politics — yesterday was nomination day for tens of thousands of aspiring candidates for the 2 500 odd seats up for grabs in the elections now due on the 30th July. There are now 23 candidates for the Presidency and on average there will be any number for individual seats. The MDC called for a march the other day and a near record crowd turned out.
Zanu-PF Youth announced a rival march, but the Police banned it and said they could hold it the following day. On the day there was no interference although the riot Police were in evidence.
“Is this real democracy? I inspected the voters’ roll in my District and found my face on a page with all the details correct. It’s brand new and contains 5,5 million voters and should be reasonably clean. Previous rolls were maintained in secret under military control at a barracks in Harare and were constantly manipulated. There were millions of dead voters on it and it was used to ensure victory after victory for the ruling Party. Having a Constitutional right to inspect the roll or buy an electronic version meant nothing,” wrote Mr Cross.
“There are still problems — no access to the ZEC servers and we all know what that can mean. The Opposition had to go to the Courts to get electronic access to the roll, but that may now happen and will be a first since Independence. But many essential reforms to ensure a free and fair election are still not implemented. However, despite that, my friends in Zanu-PF tell me with a big smile — this election will be better that those in Kenya! They also say that it may not be free and fair in the classical sense, but it will be ‘smart’.”
Previous Zivhu comes to school’s rescue
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2020 year of fighting slavery: ZCTU
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BY JAIROS SAUNYAMA Scores of Apostolic Faith Mission (AFM) church worshippers in Marondera were yesterday …
Consumer Protection Bill to Be Reactivated
Newspapers fuelling racism
Marriage won’t hinder my artistry: Lady Tshawe
Govt reconfiguring Zim education system: Murwira
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Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung
The ZfL
Research and Staff
Dr. Dirk Naguschewski
Linguist and cultural critic, Knowledge transfer and Communications, managing editor of the ZfL BLOG, and ombudsperson of the ZfL
since november 2005 communications manager at the ZfL, managing editor of the journal "Trajekte" until 2015
contributions to newspapers such as Tagesspiegel, Die Welt, Frankfurter Rundschau, and Neue Zürcher Zeitung
translator of scholarly texts from French and English into German
MA in French language and Literature, Comparative Literature, Library Studies, FU Berlin 1994, Ph.D. in Romance Philology, FU Berlin 2002
2002-2005 research associate at the ZfL in the project "Africa/Europe. Literary transports, translations, and migrations"
1997-2002 research associate and lecturer for French linguistics at the Institute of Romance Philology, Freie Universität Berlin
1995-1997 research associate at the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, interdisciplinary research group "Challenges of Otherness"
2010 Visiting scholar, Stanford University, USA
Visual Culture and Communication (particulary philately, collage art)
Contemporary Literature in Africa and African Cinema
History of Romance Philology (Max Leopold Wagner, Leo Spitzer)
English publications only. For publications in German and French see the German entry.
Jorge Chamorro. Lust & Luster. In: S. Opitz, Landeshauptstadt Erfurt (Hg.): Zwei Räume für sich allein. Maria von Gneisenau und Schloss Molsdorf (Ausstellungskatalog). Berlin: Revolver Publishing 2016: 210-211.
Arrangements of Knowledge. Ruth Hommelsheim’s Pictures from a Private Archive (übers. v. Japhet Johnstone). In: Trajekte 30, 2015: 38-39.
Contesting African-ness in African Film Criticism: Djibril Diopl Mambéty’s "Hyenas". In: J. Heinicke/H. Heister/T. R. Klein/V. Prüschenk (Hg.): Kuvuka Ukama. Building Bridges. Heidelberg: kalliope paperbacks 2012: 337-347.
Body, Sexuality, and Gender. Versions and Subversions in African Literatures 1 (= Matatu. Journal for African Culture and Society 29-30), ed. with Flora Veit-Wild, Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi 2005
Reading Foreign Films: African Images and the German Audience. In: P. Stegmann/P. C. Seel (Hg.): Migrating Images: producing ... reading ... transporting ... translating. Berlin: Haus der Kulturen der Welt, 2004: 78-93.
Book Review: Sada Niang: Djibril Diop Mambety. Un cinéaste à contre-courant. Paris: L’Harmattan, 2002; Anny Wynchank: Djibril Diop Mambety ou le voyage du voyant. Ivry-sur-Seine: Editions A3 2003. In: Wasafiri 43 (Global Cinema, Hg. Sukhdev Sandhu), 2004: 65-66.
+49 (0)30 20 192 - 180
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The Press and Communications Department is happy to assist representatives of the media with queries.
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If you wish, we will be glad to inform you by Email about our events, publications and news [in German].
Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung
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Tel.: +49 (0)30 20 192 - 155
© 2020 Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung, Berlin | Legal notice | Privacy policy | Intranet | Login
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South-Australia 天气地图
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降雨量其它时期的地图
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Everything should be fair
28th June 2019 Randall G. Lucchesi
The so-called review of Vasily Senatorov, published under the heading “From the publisher” in the just published, the July issue of Yacht Russia.
Anyone of you heard about a series of seven won races in the regatta world Cup level? I think, no. This is an absolute record in sailing. Perhaps someone sometime will be able to repeat but to exceed this miracle is impossible. Its author was a member of the national team of Russia Vladimir Krutskikh. Hero essays our magazine, winner of the award “Yachtsman of the year 2018”.
The world Finn Masters championship was held in Denmark, on a very difficult waters with variable winds and a strong irregular flow. Among rivals in more than 300 apparent the Navy had a lot of Olympians, winners of the regattas of any rank. So attributed the lack of competition that victory is impossible. So what happened?
– I carefully worked out with the coach all the features of the currents in SKOVSHOVED, – said Volodya. – The speed was good. So all our tactical plan failed.
Add to this excellent start, when the yachtsman not only knew where to go, but could implement its plans in a giant fleet.
I heartily congratulate Vladimir Krutskikh, on behalf of the magazine and the sailing community!
But what’s next?
As you know, while in Russia the license for Games-2020 in a class “the Finn” no. But we are first in the queue. In Europe there is still one license, and it will be played in April next year in Genoa at the world Cup. There is still a chance that someone will refuse to go to the Olympics.
Unlike other classes, where Russia for years do not change the unconditional leaders in the “finne” no kind of competition going on there. It is therefore necessary to not later than the calendar year before the Olympic games ryf developed and published selection criteria with a moratorium on any revisions and Desk games.
Volodya after the phenomenal success inspired and determined to fight himself, not only to coach his young teammates. At his side experience, including the Olympic, which no one else vinnista team. Age? So you see how works on the “Laser” of the same age Krutskikh, a living legend of the sail Robert Sheidt gathered in 46 years to go for a medal in Japan! He’s a worker no less! So everything has to be fair!
And let the individuals in the WFTU insists that the team needed rejuvenation. In “Finn” – definitely not, because, despite all the efforts of the sailors, this class will not be represented at the Games in 2024. (By the way, a certain role in this played a roll in athleticism caused by the permission to pull the sail!) And if Enoshima among the medal will be our veteran – this will be a decisive argument for critics of modern politics World Sailing, has made the emphasis on the young. And an example for many generations.
Vasily Senatorov,
There are eight!
November issue of the World Sailing Show
Novikova and Sabirova: from 37th place to 14th
everything, should
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