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meiji shrine 100 years MAZDA ACADEMY. 100 Years of History in Pictures. There will also be a ritual ceremony at 10 a.m. the day of the anniversary. , Saitama, Introducing Zipair, Japan’s Newest LCC Airline, Airport “The shrine built by the people” is the title of the introductory plaque to the shrine’s construction phase. Surprisingly, this forest is not natural but was completely man-made by 110,000 volunteers. But what makes this sanctuary so special is is that relaxing park. 1 place every year. There was no snow either at the Oyashimo shrine, which I visited later in Ise, dedicated to the kami (the spirit) of love and family. 1951. Meiji Shrine (Meiji Jingu) is Tokyo’s most popular shrine and a big attraction for tourists. The shrine, situated in Tokyo’s popular Shibuya ward, is dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken. Empress Shoken strove to improve education for girls, and in 1875 established the Women’s Teaching College (presently Ochanomizu University). , Games, Working in Japan The sacred forests surrounding these shrines, called "forests of tutelary shrines," have been protected over long periods of several hundred to over a thousand years, and it is forbidden to pick even a single leaf off a tree without reason. For all the essentials in … , Historical Site On November 1, 1920, Meiji Shrine, which was founded to enshrine the emperor meiji and the empress of the empress, will be enshrined in reiwa (2020). Much loved these day as a rich sanctuary in the center of the city, it is not so well known that the forests were actually planted by hand 100 years ago. The entrances op… The shrine was built 100 years ago, upon the Emperor's death, and currently it includes a complex of buildings surrounded by a beautiful park. 100 Years Through Past Models. The iconic pebble walkway leading up to the buildings of the shrine is currently lined with large plaques and historic photographs explaining the origins and history of Meiji Jingu, as well as the life story of Emperor Meiji. PR , Monk, Nezu Shrine: 600 Years of Beauty & History, Shrines Emperor Naruhito, Empress Masako and other members of Japan’s imperial family visit the 100-year-old Meiji Shrine. Masako, 56, took part in a ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the Meiji Shrine, which is dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and his wife, Empress Shōken. [© Nippon TV News 24 Japan] This night was A-meijing. They’ve really gone all out to celebrate Japan’s most beloved Emperor, and there's never been a better chance to learn about him. Masako, 56, took part in a ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the Meiji Shrine, which is dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and his wife, Empress Shōken. … , Temples, Historical Site On November 1st, 2020, Meiji Shrine turns one hundred years old! For EU-specific policies details are here. TOKYO -- Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako paid their respects at Meiji Jingu shrine in Tokyo's Shibuya Ward on Oct. 28. Just a few decades later, World War Two ravaged the country, and the shrine was burned to the ground. Dec 20, 2016, Majoli on how he makes portraits of fine artists, Contact Sheet Print: Plants Werner Bischof, The Complete Guide to Successful Grant Writing, The Documentary Impulse: A Workshop with Stuart Franklin, Editorial Photography with Lorenzo Meloni, a special collection of prints, contact sheets and posters. This forest is a manmade forest, being aimed to be a self-regenerating natural forest, which was so planned by the forestry experts foreseeing 100 years ahead. Your email address will only be used for the purpose of sending email magazines. The shrine was destroyed during the Second World War but was rebuilt shortly thereafter. Hello! The shrine, founded on November 1, 1920, is dedicated to the Emperor Meij, who died in 1912, and his wife Empress Shoken. The caravan in front of the Meiji Shrine, Tokyo. 100 Years of … I've been living in Japan for almost seven years now, first in Gunma Prefecture and now in Kanagawa. The history of the Meiji Jingu forest project dates back to July 30, 1912 when Emperor Meiji passed away. , Flight, Tech That Measures Congestion in Indoor Areas, Technology The shrine was completed and dedicated to the Emperor Meiji and the Empress Shoken in 1920, eight years after the passing of the emperor and six years after the passing of the empress. For this event, Empress Masako was white, head to toe, with a new hat. Reportedly more than half a million people visited the shrine that day. Meiji Shrine is adjacent to Yoyogi Parkwhich together is a large forested area. Hotels near Meiji 100 Year Anniversary Observation Tower: (4.47 mi) Kannonzaki Keikyu Hotel (7.30 mi) Mercure Hotel Yokosuka (4.91 mi) Ryokan Kawana (6.50 mi) Navy Lodge Yokosuka (7.04 mi) Hotel New Yokosuka; View all hotels near Meiji 100 Year Anniversary Observation Tower on Tripadvisor Inclusive Tokyo: Josh checks out upgrades to 100-year-old Meiji Shrine. Meiji Jingu is one of the youngest shrines in Japan. 3 million people flock to this shrine for New Years so we decided to check it out for ourselves. From October 30 to November 1, there will be an uptick in activities, including a Noh performance, dances, and a light festival held after dark. , PR, PR Japan's Empress Masako leaves the main shrine after paying a tribute during a ceremony to mark 100 years since the founding of Meiji shrine in Tokyo on October 28, 2020. Emperor Meiji died on July 30th, 1912, and the Empress passed away two years later. Meiji Jingu Shrine, perhaps Tokyo’s best known Shinto shrine, has been a cultural icon for Japan for nearly 100 years. Only a select few know the secret of this restricted forest. 2020 marks the 100th anniversary of the enshrinement of the spirits of Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken at Meiji Jingu. Tokyo, Japan. This area is covered by an evergreen forest that consists of 120,000 trees of 365 different species, which were donated by people from all parts of Japan when the shrine was established. 100 Years Through Figures. In addition to the shrine itself, there are museums, a famous Meiji Picture Gallery, a few gardens, and a few venues for some important events which are taking place in the park on a regular basis. But fifty years is a long time and the shrine had changed. Japan's Empress Masako wearing a face mask leaves the main shrine after paying a tribute during a ceremony to mark 100 years since the founding of Meiji shrine … Meiji Jingu Shrine, perhaps Tokyo’s best known Shinto shrine, has been a cultural icon for Japan for nearly 100 years. Japan today just wouldn't be the same without Emperor Meiji. Thank pandaat501 . Meiji Jingu Shrine is one of Japan’s most important shrines and temples, and the inner and outer shrines are full of abundant nature, covering 700,000 square meters. , Natural Japan, Historical Site The forest is mainly composed of evergreen broadleaf trees, such as chinquapin, oak and camphor, and provides habitat to many wild birds. Besides, there was no snow! I run an international school in Kawasaki and when I'm not chasing kids around, I'm writing and shooting film. Tokyo's Meiji Shrine enshrines Emperor Meiji, who ruled from 1868 until 1912 and oversaw Japan's modernization drive, and his wife, Empress Shoken. Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken, who accomplished the modernization of Japan by way of opening up the country and leading the Meiji Restoration, are enshrined as deities at Meiji Jingu, which was built around 100 years ago through the devotion of our people. He also modernized transportation systems, starting with the opening of the Keihin Railway. The Meiji Shrine trees seems common knowledge in Tokyo, maybe in Japan, maybe it's been embellished I don't know. Isoya Shinji, who was head of the second survey committee of the Meiji Shrine grounds, wrote that the 2013 report on the forest showed that it is in line with its creators’ projections for this year and the next half-century, too. Writer. THOSE are petri dishes just waiting to explode! In the poem he expressed a sense of calm, and a feeling that he had left the capital. 2. (AFP) Shinto performers and musicians take part in a ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on Nov. 1, 2020. Architect Kengo Kuma, the man behind the New National … The shrine, which was founded on 1 November 1920 honours Emperor Meiji, who died in 1912 and his wife Empress Shoken. There is also a plaque highlighting notable women, famous foreigners, and other important Japanese figures that furthered Japan’s growth during the Meiji Era. Candles are arranged to spell out "100 years" in Japanese at Meiji Jingu shrine in Tokyo's Shibuya Ward during the "Centennial Celebration of the Establishment of Meiji … Periodic studies of the forest are finding that it is indeed growing as its creators imagined 100 years ago. The emperor ruled Japan during one of … This shrine is set in gorgeous woodland all begun around 100 years ago, when the shrine itself was built, but yet which feels utterly natural. The popular Meiji Shrine (Meiji Jingu) celebrated its centennial on November 1 as its inner precinct filled with pomp, circumstance, and plenty of festivities. 100 Years Through Episodes. The shrine, situated next to Yoyogi Park, is surrounded by trees. In the beginning, the land was a bit desolate. The carriage is part of a larger temporary exhibition showcasing possessions and other artifacts associated with the Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken, whose souls were enshrined at Meiji-jingu 100 years ago this year. Periodic studies of the forest are finding that it is indeed growing as its creators imagined 100 years ago. This shrine is set in gorgeous woodland all begun around 100 years ago, when the shrine itself was built, but yet which feels utterly natural. Beginning of the plantation of the Yoyogi forest in the center of the capital of Japan, Tokyo. These plaques have been titled “The Tale of the Eternal Forest.” In addition, there is a one of a kind outdoor art exhibition entitled Meiji Jingu Forest Festival of Art (runs until December 13, 2020). But the interesting thing is that the current complex dates from 1958. The woodland was put in place around 100 years ago, creating an inner-city oasis. The approach path surrounded by majestic nature rare in the city center makes you feel a solemn atmosphere and calm. I'm Neal, from Jacksonville, Florida. The shrine was destroyed during the Second World War but was rebuilt shortly thereafter. February 17, 2020 at 07:00 JST Empress Masako attends a ceremony during a celebration marking 100 years since the enshrinement of Emperor Meiji at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on Wednesday. Basically we it was a … These volunteers came from every prefecture in Japan, and there is a map detailing how many came from each. Limited Time Offer For Free Japanese Classes! However, most of the shrine complex was burnt down because of the air raids during World War II in 1945. However, the Chinese new year has not passed yet, so if one is born before the Chinese new year of a given calendar year, one has a different zodiac … 20201101 明治神宮 MEJISHIRIN 100年祭 100 years celebration 花火 fireworks Japan 18se, Underneath these, faster growing conifers were planted along with evergreens and black oak. Isoya Shinji, who was head of the second survey committee of the Meiji Shrine grounds, wrote that the 2013 report on the forest showed that it is in line with its creators’ projections for this year and the next half-century, too. Get premium, high resolution news photos at Getty Images But the interesting thing is that the current complex dates from 1958. ¡ã‚Š)” in Japanese. Here is my travel guide: Tokyo is generally known for its skyscrapers, its hyperactive city life, its shopping malls, its crowded subway and modern technologies. Besides, there was no snow! The Origin of the Shrine. This was a critical time in both Japanese and world history, as Western powers were all vying for power on a global stage. With easy access from Shibuya and Yoyogi Park and the nearby fashion district of Harajuku, the shrine is a Tokyo must-visit if there ever was one. Japan is home to more snow than you'd know! Fortunately, the forest survived. Meiji-jingu Shrine, in Harajuku, is one of the best places for this, but be prepared for crowds! , Kanto, Train Station Now Playing Music from 'Totoro', Music This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC. Sumo wrestlers performed a traditional entering ceremony as part of a new year's dedication at the Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on January 6, 2017. FOUNDER’S PASSION. It's a peaceful oasis in the midst of Tokyo and hard to believe that shopping culture is a short walk away! But fifty years is a long time and the shrine had changed. Beginning of the plantation of the Yoyogi forest in the center of the capital of Japan, Tokyo. Meiji Shrine visit. Empress Masako, 56, wife of Emperor Naruhito, was on hand to mark the 100th anniversary of the Tokyo shrine, which is dedicated to the late Emperor Meiji and his wife, Empress Shōken. Celebrating 100 Years of Meiji Shrine. This area is covered by an evergreen forest that consists of 120,000 trees of 365 different species, which were donated by people from all parts of Japan when the shrine was established. The various buildings are nice to visit. He did all this while preserving a unique Japanese identity in a time of immense change. They even came from Okinawa, no small feat in 1920 (before Peach Air and JetStar)! Meiji Shrine is a shrine surrounded by a forest that worships Emperor Meiji and Empress Dowager Shoken. Once the forest was put into place, construction on the shrine grounds began from what the shrine describes as “rough fields.” The spirits of Emperor and Empress were finally enshrined on November 1st, 1920 (Meiji Shrine does not actually contain the grave of Emperor Meiji’s physical remains; that lies in Kyoto). Empress Masako attends a ceremony during a celebration marking 100 years since the enshrinement of Emperor Meiji at Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on Wednesday. Today, there are 234 different kinds of trees from all over Japan. But what makes this sanctuary so special is is that relaxing park. Since the shrine was built in the area of Yoyogi in 1920, it is popular as a tourist spot where many people visit from home and abroad. Chūta Itō was the designer and construction began in 1915. Posted by 2 hours ago [November 1st, 1920] Inauguration of the Meiji shrine. In the forest beside the approach road, artificially planted trees are formed so that unchanged landscapes can be seen even after 100 years. Emperor Meiji was the first emperor of modern Japan. Please refer to our privacy policy for details. Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako attended a ceremony at Meiji shrine in Tokyo today to mark 100 years since it was founded. Talk about "super-spreader" events!" Emperor Meiji was the first emperor of modern Japan. What makes the Meiji Shrine so special is that you feel if you are 100 years back in time. [November 1st, 1920] Inauguration of the Meiji shrine. The shrine is holding a special centennial anniversary event, and is currently home to various exhibits explaining the history and traditions of the shrine, and the life of Emperor Meiji. Meiji Jingu Shrine Highlights Tour with National Licensed Guide (From $25.15) 1-Day Tokyo Bus Tour (From $120.69) Private Custom Tour: Tokyo in a Day (From $222.59) Private tour - All "Must-Sees"! In the heart of Tokyo, bristling with skyscrapers, there is a forest 700,000 square meters in area located on the site of Meiji Jingu shrine. This Monday, four couples are expected to wed at the historic Meiji Shrine. One of the biggest attractions in Meiji Jingu Shrine is the approach to the main shrine. Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako attended a ceremony at Meiji shrine in Tokyo today to mark 100 years since it was founded. , Secret Tokyo. As nature is a central part to the Shinto religion, the first step in building Meiji Shrine was the planting of red and black pines in order to make a forest. On October 26, 2019, this long-awaited exhibition space will open. The entrance to the shrine complex leads through the Jingu Bashi bridge. 100 Years Timeline. Enjoy your First-Time Visit Tokyo! LEGENDARY MAZDAS. Now is the perfect chance to celebrate the life of one of Japan's greatest emperors! Ask pandaat501 about Meiji Jingu Shrine. To say he was influential is an understatement! Situated in the heart of the capital, the forested sanctuary was … In addition, the Autumn Grand Ceremony, which celebrates Emperor Meiji’s birthday, will start on November 3! The Celebrations. There was no snow either at the Oyashimo shrine, which I visited later in Ise, dedicated to the kami (the spirit) of love and family. No brainer here, but now will the government "cancel" all the people, literally millions, who go and visit Meiji Shrine and all the other temples and shrines over New Year's. Tokyo Vacation Checklist. History Behind The Shrine. The number of worshipers of Meiji Jingu Shrine’s New Year’s visit is No. Magnum Collection Poster: Courtyard of the Meiji shrine. At his death, the people were devastated, and the construction of the shrine was meant to provide a place for the Japanese people to express their grief. Postponement of Olympics Costs Â¥300 Billion, UFOs in Japan: One Man’s Quest to Mount Takao, A 13-Year-Old's Inspiring Community Bakery, Catch These Hunky Fisherman Trading Cards, Worship Your Feline Friend with Its Own Shrine, Fugaku Reigns as World’s Fastest Supercomputer, Turning Fashion Trash to Functioning Treasure, The Association of the Most Beautiful Villages. 1941. “In 2000, at the Meiji shrine, which was photographed by Werner in 1951, I looked for the spot where his photo was taken. After the location was chosen, the next step was to gather the best forestry experts, and to the plan the surrounding woodlands. The area 100 years ago, before Meiji Shrine’s construction. When it was built 100 years ago they had a 150 year plan of what they wanted the end result to look like, how many countries governments or committees even now could boast planning an undertaking with a vision of how that will look 5 generations or more into the future. Neal Beaver's Latest. This year marks the 100th anniversary of one of Tokyo’s most renowned landmarks, Meiji Shrine. View more reviews. , Gunma. Close. While all the other shrines are almost over a thousand years old, Meiji Shrine is yet to turn 100 in the year … 2010 is the year of the tiger, so Meiji Shrine put up a large painting of a tiger at the main shrine entrance gate. Emperor Meiji was also interested in a kind of cultural assimilation, such as the Iwakura Mission; he sent approximately 60 envoys to Western countries to observe conditions overseas, prepare for ways to improve Japan’s treaties, and bring other industrial and culture knowledge back to Japan. In November 2020, there were special phoenixes to celebrate 100 years of the shrine. The seemingly primeval forest is a man-made creation, a result of a century-old grandiose experiment. Yoyogi was chosen because there was a garden associated with the Emperor and Empress. At night, fireworks were lit in both the inner and outer precincts to mark […] Candles are arranged to spell out "100 years" in Japanese at Meiji Jingu shrine in Tokyo's Shibuya Ward during the "Centennial Celebration of the Establishment of Meiji Jingu" on Nov. 1, 2020. Emperor Meiji continues to protect the newer generations of Japanese people to this day, and listens to their prayers. “Ever since Meiji Shrine was constructed, it … The shrine, founded on November 1, 1920, is dedicated to the Emperor Meij, who died in 1912, and his wife Empress Shoken. Opening Day. In the heart of Tokyo lies the sacred forest of Meiji Jingu, one of the most visited shrines in Japan. Monks Are Praying for Coronavirus Eradication, Temples The minute you step on the other side of the torii gate, a calm silence replaces the relentless bruit of crowded city and, you seem to get lost into an enchanted forest. You can opt-out at any time. Wait till … What makes the Meiji Shrine so special is that you feel if you are 100 years back in time. It is from this Shrine … We will provide information from Meiji Shrine with information about the hundred years festival of Meiji Shrine. You can currently read much more about the life of the Emperor and Empress (in English) on the walk-up to the shrine. Emperor Meiji rose to the highest seat in 1867. Shinto priests attend a ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the Meiji Shrine in Tokyo on Nov. 1, 2020. Meiji Jingu Shrine is among eastern Japan's most well-known, and Tokyo's largest shrines. Japan’s Emperor Naruhito (right) wearing a face mask attends a ceremony to mark 100 years since the founding of Meiji Shrine in Tokyo, Japan on Wednesday. Magnum Collection Poster: Photomontage. For this event, Empress Masako was white, head to toe, with… This forest was created about 90 years ago as a project with a 150-year vision. The plaques tell the story of reconstruction as well, which took until 1958 to complete. (0) Slide show Thumbnails View all. Calendula Marigold Seeds, Canned Turtle Soup For Sale, Difference Between Class Diagram And Activity Diagram, Museo Soumaya Inauguracion, Can Baby Chickens Eat Apples, Best Cody Jinks Songs,
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Thomas Hardy's “A Pair of Blue Eyes” Thomas Hardy's third novel “A Pair of Blue Eyes” is one of the few set outside his beloved Wessex, in Cornwall. I was reminded of it by author and critic David Lodge, as I am currently reading his book The Art of Fiction, in which he quotes the opening line: “Elfride Swancourt was a girl whose emotions lay very near the surface. Their nature more precisely, and as modified by the creeping hours of time, was known only to those who watched the circumstances of her history.” Apparently Hardy revised the opening page many times before coming up with one of my favourite passages of character description: “One point in her, however, you did notice: that was her eyes. In them was seen a sublimation of all of her; it was not necessary to look further: there she lived. These eyes were blue; blue as autumn distance - blue as the blue we see between the retreating mouldings of hills and woody slopes on a sunny September morning. A misty and shady blue, that had no beginning or surface, and was looked INTO rather than AT.” Elfride Swancourt, a beautiful and impulsive country girl, is the daughter if the local parson. She lives a life of seclusion until the arrival of two strangers shatters her peace and tranquillity. In A Pair of Blue Eyes Hardy explores Victorian class-consciousness, courtship and love. Hardy’s blue-eyed heroine, Elfride, is of course based on Emma Gifford, Hardy's first wife, who he married a year after the book was published in 1874. Like his character, Stephen Smith, Hardy trained as an architect and travelled to Cornwall to 'take a plan and particulars' of the dilapidated church in the tiny hamlet of St. Juliot near Boscastle, which is now forever associated with his novel. It was in St Juliot, in March 1870, that he met Emma Gifford, who was the Rector's sister in law. Emma was described as having "a rosy, Rubenesque complexion, striking blue eyes and auburn hair with ringlets reaching down as far as her shoulders" and worked towards raising funds for the restoration of the old church by selling her watercolour sketches of it. It has often been reported that there was an age difference between them, (possibly through confusion with Florence Dugdale, his second wife) but they were both aged thirty at the time. David Lodge reminded me that A Pair of Blue Eyes is credited with the origination of the term ‘cliffhanger’ and has the ultimate ‘cliffhanger’ scene. Read it for free on Kindle - and see if you agree. A Pair of Blue Eyes is available as a free Kindle download from Amazon UK and Amazon US and the full text is also available as a pdf from The University of Adelaide Library The Developing Dylan Project To mark Dylan Thomas’s centenary in 2014, Literature Wales has announced a new project, funded by the Welsh Government, called Developing Dylan. Through creative workshops, a prestigious international competition and a cutting-edge roadshow, Literature Wales will bring the wizardry of Dylan Thomas’s words to the children and young people of Wales and beyond. The project was announced at Eisteddfod yr Urdd on Monday 27 May in the company of the Minister of Education and Skills Leighton Andrews, Chief Executive of Literature Wales Lleucu Siencyn, Children's Poet Laureate Eurig Salisbury, Dylan Thomas’ granddaughter Hannah Ellis and members of Pembrokeshire’s Young People’s Writing Squad. Creative writing workshops based on the work of Dylan Thomas will be delivered by some of Wales’ top writers as part of the project. Applications for these workshops will be invited from schools across Wales. More information about this will be announced soon. Developing Dylan is supported by a range of high profile writers and cultural figures such as Philip Pullman, Owen Sheers, National Poet of Wales Gillian Clarke, Joe Dunthorne, Bethan Gwanas, Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy, Young People’s Laureate Martin Daws, DJ Huw Stephens and Dylan Thomas’s granddaughter Hannah Ellis. The project will take place between October 2013 and October 2014. His Dark Materials author, Philip Pullman wrote, “Poetic madness, intoxication, call it what you will, is something that I wish every young person could have a chance to experience. It is a real form of magic, of bewitchment. Being mastered by it was one of the great experiences of my life – it changed my life. It’s a rite of passage. Once you’ve gone through it, you’re never the same again.” You can follow the project’s developments on Twitter: @Dylanwad100 Book Launch - Unexpected Gifts by S. R. Mallery When Ancestors Come Back to Help Can we learn from our ancestral past? Do our relatives’ behaviors help mold our own? In Unexpected Gifts, that is precisely what happens to Sonia, a confused college student, forever choosing the wrong man. Searching for answers, she begins to read her families diaries and journals from America’s past: the Vietnam War, Woodstock and Timothy Leary era; Tupperware parties, McCarthyism and Black Power; the Great Depression, dance marathons, and Eleanor Roosevelt; the immigrant experience and the Suffragists. Back and forth the book journeys, weaving yesteryear with modern life until finally, Sonia begins to make the right choices. Unexpected Gifts is a work of literary fiction, laced with historical events for ages 16 and up. What’s Being Said About Unexpected Gifts “S.R. Mallery has caught the defining historic moments of one family…a rich and involving book, the author has written a gem.” ––Dorothy Salisbury Davis, A Gentle Murderer, Lullaby of Murder, The Pale Betrayer “S. R. Mallery presents a fascinating journey through flashpoints of American history in an impressive, wonderfully thought out and well-told first novel.” ––Carla Davidson, former senior editor American Heritage Magazine “In S. R. Mallery’s fine first novel each character’s distinctive voice helps make sense of the present by experiencing the past. And who mattered.” ––Dan Vining, The Quick, The Next, Among the Living S. R. Mallery Los Angeles, CA (May 26, 2013) S. R. Mallery has worn many hats in her life. Starting out as a classical/pop singer/composer, she moved onto the professional world of production art and calligraphy, followed by a long career as an award winning quilt artist/teacher and an ESL/Reading instructor. Her short stories have been published in descent 2008, Snowy Egret, Transcendent Visions, The Storyteller and Down In the Dirt. Unexpected Gifts is her debut novel. A former New Yorker, S. R. Mallery hails from a prominent writing family––her father, Jerome Ross, was a prolific television writer beginning in the Golden Age of Television, who also wrote for such shows as Mission Impossible, for which he won an Edgar Allen Poe Award, and The Defenders; her grandfather was a Pulitzer prize winner for biography and her great-uncle, a Pulitzer prize winning poet. Website: www.srmallery.com Twitter @SarahMallery1 Preview Unexpected Gifts on Amazon New Book Review - Beatha: A Badger's Story by Louise J Hastings This story of the conflict between badgers and farmers in Somerset could hardly be more topical. As I was reading it, there was an announcement on the UK news about hundreds of campaigners from Gloucestershire travelling to London to take part in a rally against the plans to cull over 5000 badgers in Gloucestershire and west Somerset. The UK government’s best plan seems to be to allow farmers to do what they like, including night-time shooting of free-running badgers, to see if this proves to be a ‘humane’ way of solving the problem of bovine TB. I’m no expert but I am prepared to bet that a lot of badgers will suffer, without any reduction in the spread of the disease. An article in yesterday’s Guardian comments that ‘Many scientists argue the cull will make matters worse, increasing movement of infected animals, as fleeing badgers take disease to new areas and vacated areas are colonised by animals from elsewhere.’ There are also reports in the news of animal rights activists targeting farmers and attempting to disrupt the night-time shooting. Louise Hastings tackles the problem of anthropomorphism in a relaxed and engaging way, so there is a sense of reading the badger’s minds rather than imagining them speaking in human voices. Farmers don’t come out of it very positively, of course, although their dilemma is explained. I watched an episode of Countryfile recently where a farmer was devastated as he watched his prize herd being diagnosed with TB. It is a very serious problem but I really hope that this new book will make people think about the issues. Beatha: A Badger's Story is new on Amazon UK and Amazon US Follow Louise J Hastings on twitter and visit her website Labels: Book Launch, Book reviews Book Launch: White Swans Revelations by Annamaria Bazzi White Swans: Revelations After attempting to accept her fate in the strange fishbowl world, Kendíka decides it’s impossible. Call her a pet, will they? Determination revived, she tempts her “master’s” fury by trying to make life better for the people of Deverow’s Duchy. She will bring technology to the Regency era or end up a swan trying. Still longing for a higher station in her new existence, Jillian sets her sights on Harry, the Count of Paddington. The only problem? Getting the man to take notice of her. Perhaps discovering some common ground—besides their rabbit-like features—will do the trick. Although born in the United States, Annamaria Bazzi spent a great deal of her childhood in Sicily, Italy, in a town called Sciacca. Italian was the language spoken at home. Therefore, she had no problems when she found herself growing up in a strange country. Upon returning to the states, she promised herself she would speak without an accent. She attended Wayne State University in Detroit Michigan, where she obtained her Bachelor of Science in Computers with a minor in Spanish. Annamaria spent twenty years programming systems for large corporations. During those years, she raised four daughters and one husband. Annamaria lives in Richmond Virginia with her small family where she now dedicates a good part of her day writing. Visit Annamaria at her blog http://annamariabazzi.com find her on facebook and follow her on twitter New Book Review - Beatha: A Badger's Story by Lou... Book Launch: White Swans Revelations by Annamaria ...
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The Bokkedoorns The Bokkedoorns is one of the oldest restaurants in the Netherlands that has been rewarded with a Michelin star and never lost them in all those years. The Bokkedoorns opened in 1961 and received its first star in 1978. In 1990 a young 28-year-old chef named Lucas Rive took over the role as chef and just one year after that, in 1991, The Bokkedoorns was rewarded with their second star. Making Lucas Rive the youngest chef to receive 2 stars in the Netherlands. Since 1991 it has kept its stars. In 2013 Lucas Rive left to open his own restaurant, Lucas Rive in Hoorn. The restaurant was left with the puzzle to find a new chef that was capable of living up to the high standards that guests were expecting from The Bokkedoorns. They found one. His name, Menno Post. Former sous chef at Ron Blaauw **. With 13 years of experience working with a 2 Michelin star chef, he was up for the challenge. Whenever a restaurant loses its chef it often results in losing their stars. Menno Post was left with the incredible job to keep those stars. This high pressure was not a problem at all for the new chef and The Bokkedoorns kept its stars. Something that is rare and worth respecting. The Bokkedoorns lies in a quiet small town, Overveen. Surrounded by nature and with a view on the dunes. Perfect for a summer afternoon lunch. The cuisine would be best described as classic and safe. Not too daring and perfect for those who want to relax and enjoy good food with good company. Creating a menu without being too daring sounds like an easy task but do not be fooled. It might be even harder than experimenting with modern and fusion twists. To still be surprising and not boring with the most classic of dishes and live up to the guest’s expectations is not at all easy. For that reason, the results so far have been outstanding. For those who visit Amsterdam on business and want to get out of the city for lunch or dinner, this is the perfect spot to do just that. Book your table here and make sure to bring your binoculars if you sit in the garden. Who knows what you would be able to spot in the dunes. Best view in Amsterdam - Ciel Bleu** Yamazato - Traditional Japanese Kaiseki Cuisine* Han Ting
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The pandemic has upended the world as we know it in nearly every aspect of our lives — our jobs, schools, and social lives have had to drastically change to fit the new normal. With the unemployment rate at a historic high, paired with legally mandated stay-at-home orders, many Americans have found themselves in a difficult situation, as paying rent has never been more difficult yet necessary. In late March and early April, many cities across the U.S. instituted measures such as eviction moratoriums and rent freezes to accommodate these extenuating circumstances. Under an eviction moratorium, landlords are prevented from evicting tenants during this public health emergency (and thirty days beyond its declared end). Rent freezes ensure that rent prices cannot increase. However, as more cities continue to re-open, these housing security measures are set to end, even as they have helped many families maintain a safe place to live. If cities with copiously high rent burdens allow their eviction moratoriums to expire, they may face a homelessness crisis compounding on an already quickly-spreading outbreak. The national discourse around rent affordability may be under the national spotlight due to stay-at-home orders, but these issues predate the pandemic and will continue to affect Americans after. According to the United States Census Bureau, both average rent prices and the number of rental properties have followed an upward trajectory within the past decade — between 2012 and 2016, four out of five U.S. metropolitan areas experienced rent increases, and the national average for median gross rent rose by $21. One potential factor in this trend is the housing market crash in 2008, which had widespread ripple effects on the real estate market and overall housing costs. However, as the quarantine era has clearly shown, the ability for many people to afford their rent is erratic, especially given that the American economy has yet to fully recover to its pre-pandemic state. The conversation around housing access in the U.S. should continue after the eviction moratoriums and rent freezes end. To that end, the data and research team at Insurify studied rent and demographic data to determine the top twenty cities whose residents are paying the most in rent, proportional to their income. National averages. Across cities in the United States, the average share of renters paying 50% or more of their household income on rent was 23.61 percent. The median gross rent was $966.27 per month. The percent of city populations below the poverty line was 16.67 percent. Greater affordability. The U.S. cities with the lowest share of renters paying 50% or more of household income on rent were Mauldin— Simpsonville (SC), Paso Robles—Atascadero (CA), and Casper (WY) at 12.34, 13.49, and 14.18 percent, respectively. Most, but not all, have high poverty rates. While the majority of the cities on this list have a greater-than-average percentage of their population living below the poverty line, not all cities on this list follow that trend. Notably, Miami (FL), Vineland (NJ), and Watsonville (CA), all have a lower-than-average proportion of their population living below the poverty line. In fact, Miami’s is 9 percent lower than the national average. That said, many of these cities’ shares of impoverished citizens greatly exceed the national average. San Marcos (TX) has 50 percent more of its population under the poverty line than the national average, at 32.8 percent. Big city dreams? Interestingly, many notoriously expensive cities such as New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle, did not make the list. An explanation for this phenomenon is the relative wealth of those cities that are always lauded to have such high rents. Many of the aforementioned cities are home to lucrative industries such as finance, entertainment, and tech. While the median rent may be higher than average, the higher volume of wealth held by city residents means that there are smaller proportions of the population where rental prices consume 50% or more of a renter’s income. The trend of gentrification in these cities, or how many former residents are being priced out by wealthier newcomers, can also account for this finding. The data and research team at Insurify, a home insurance quotes comparison site, referred to data from the American Community Survey by the United States Census Bureau to determine the twenty cities paying the most in rent. In this study, cities were designated by their status as an urbanized area by the U.S. Census Bureau. The U.S. Census Bureau defines “urbanized area” as a densely populated urban territory that encompasses 50,000 or more people. The share of renters paying 50% or more of household income on rent was calculated by taking city-level estimates of renters paying 50.0 percent or more of household income on gross rent in the past 12 months compared to the total population of renters. Median gross rent and the percent of the population below the poverty line were also taken from the American Community Survey’s most recent calculations. The U.S. Census Bureau measures poverty by subtracting the poverty threshold, or the minimum level of income deemed adequate for a family of a particular size, from the total household income, inclusive of all family members earning an income for that particular family unit. If a family’s total income is less than their designated poverty threshold, they are considered to be under the poverty line. U.S. Cities Paying the Most in Rent 20. Bellingham, WA Share of Renters Paying 50%+ of Household Income on Rent: 31.84% Median Gross Rent: $1,012 Percent of Population Below Poverty Line: 18.30% 19. Athens-Clarke County, GA Median Gross Rent: $849 18. Miami, FL 17. Vineland, NJ 16. Watsonville, CA 15. Hemet, CA 14. College Station — Bryan, TX 13. Greenville, NC 12. Chico, CA 11. Auburn, AL 10. Bloomington, IN 9. San Marcos, TX 8. Iowa City, IA 7. Corvallis, OR 6. Ames, IA 5. Boulder, CO 4. State College, PA 3. Ithaca, NY 2. Davis, CA 1. San Luis Obispo, CA Categories: Amarillo News
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Bill Belichick won't accept Presidential Medal of Freedom Mark Daniels, Providence Journal U.S. President Donald Trump, center, listens to New England Patriots Head Coach Bill Belichick deliver remarks during an event celebrating the team's Super Bowl win on the South Lawn at the White House April 19, 2017 in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/TNS) Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images North America/TNS Bill Belichick will not be accepting the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The Patriots coach was supposed to be honored by President Donald Trump in the White House on Thursday and be given the highest civilian award in the United States. Since being elected in 2016, Trump has honored athletes such as Bob Cousy, Gary Player, Tiger Woods and Mariano Rivera with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Belichick was scheduled to be next. However, controversy over last week’s violence at the U.S. Capitol prompted the longtime coach to decline the honor. On Monday night, Belichick issued a statement, explaining his decision. "Recently, I was offered the opportunity to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom, which I was flattered by out of respect for what the honor represents and admiration for prior recipients. Subsequently, the tragic events of last week occurred and the decision has been made not to move forward with the award. Above all, I am an American citizen with great reverence for our nation's values, freedom and democracy. I know I also represent my family and the New England Patriots team. One of the most rewarding things in my professional career took place in 2020 when, through the great leadership within our team, conversations about social justice, equality and human rights moved to the forefront and became actions. Continuing those efforts while remaining true to the people, team and country I love outweigh the benefits of any individual award." Belichick has had a relationship with Trump that dates back before 2016. Last month, he was appointed to the president's Council on Sports, Fitness & Nutrition for the second time. During Trump's campaign in 2016, Belichick wrote a letter of support to his friend and Trump read the letter at a campaign rally in New Hampshire. Belichick and the Patriots visited Trump at the White House in 2017 after their Super Bowl LI victory. The team did not go again after beating the Los Angeles Rams in 2019. Of course, a lot has transpired over the last four years. Last year, Belichick, his players and the Patriots organization dedicated themselves to helping with social justice issues following the death of George Floyd and the civil unrest that followed. The Patriots will also donate $500,000 to local organizations through the Players Social Justice Fund. In his final press conference of the season, Belichick explained how the team met every week to discuss ongoing issues that are happening in this country. Every Monday, the team met to discuss social issues like racism. “This was a very educational year from all the social justice meetings and things that we had in the spring, which carried over into the season,” Belichick said. "I think our team did a great job of that. We had great leadership from Jason [McCourty], Devin [McCourty], Matt [Slater] and many others — Brandon King, guys that are involved in just many, many different aspects of that. But, most importantly, just bringing the awareness within the team for each other and us getting to know each other and appreciate each other’s background, story and thoughts. “And that was very, again, educational for me, as well as everybody else. I think we all benefitted from it, and again, things that we’ve done this year that will help us going forward. That would certainly fall into that category — probably at the top of that category.” Ldcjd Raiders RB Josh Jacobs won't face DUI charge in Vegas crash LAS VEGAS — Las Vegas Raiders player and McLain graduate Josh Jacobs won’t face a driving under the influence charge in his single-vehicle cra… OU, OSU, TU players signed to NFL reserve/future contracts after regular season ends Teams not bound for the playoffs signed multiple players with local ties to reserve/future contracts after the regular season concluded Sunday. ‘Top five’: How a childhood mantra is driving Ravens TE Mark Andrews to greatness BALTIMORE — The swagger came out at dinnertime. Mark Andrews, maybe 8 or 9 years old, was talking about soccer, about where he stacked up in the sport he loved. The details of the boast that would come to define Andrews’ life are hazy now, lost to the years, but his conviction cuts through the fog of memory like a beacon. Charlie, the younger of Mark’s two older brothers, remembered Mark ... Urban Meyer reportedly weighing options on whether to return to coaching The Jaguars' head coaching search is in a holding pattern because they are waiting for Urban Meyer to decide if he wants to return to coaching. Marcus Hayes: It sure looks like Carson Wentz got Jeffrey Lurie to fire Doug Pederson as Eagles coach PHILADELPHIA — Carson Wentz will hire the next coach. It makes sense. After all, he fired the last one. Jeffrey Lurie made this plain Monday, when he ushered Pederson out the door and patted him on the back with a hand wearing the only Super Bowl ring Lurie's ever owned. Then again, considering Pederson won him that ring and not Wentz, maybe that hand performed more of a stabbing motion. To be ... Baker Mayfield warns don't count out Browns: 'Once you're in the dance, anything can happen' The odds are stacked against the Browns as they prepare for their first playoff game in 18 years. Eagles fire coach Doug Pederson after five years, including the franchise’s lone Super Bowl title The Eagles have confirmed the firing of the only coach in franchise history to win a Super Bowl championship. So far, Bucs’ signing of Antonio Brown has yielded bonus, not baggage TAMPA, Fla. — To this point, the only waves he has created in Tampa Bay haven’t been accompanied by a nefarious undertow. Antonio Brown is creating far, far more separation than scandal. In terms of demeanor and brand, outspoken has been supplanted by soft-spoken. Brown’s first tweet as a Buccaneer — featuring clips of his de facto receiving clinic Sunday against Atlanta — didn’t arrive until ...
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Home » World News » Donald Trump Tweets He’s ‘Looking Forward’ To Funeral For President George HW Bush Donald Trump Tweets He’s ‘Looking Forward’ To Funeral For President George HW Bush The President of the United States, Donald Trump will attend the funeral of former president George HW Bush later this week. Ahead of his attendance, Trump took to Twitter to express that he is looking forward to the funeral and paying his respects to the family. He tweeted, “Looking forward to being with the Bush Family to pay my respects to President George H.W. Bush.” While it may seem strange to admit to “looking forward” to something like a funeral, the tweet is relatively tame by Trump standards. CNN reported that Trump will meet privately with the Bush family ahead of the funeral privately on Tuesday at Blair House. The funeral will occur on Wednesday at the Washington National Cathedral. Trump along with all living Presidents are expected to attend. When news of the passing of the elder Bush hit last Friday, somebody also posted a statement from Trump and his wife on Twitter. Inquisitr reported that many users of the popular social media network did not believe that the president himself penned those words. They instantly read the eloquent statement and realized that it did not sound like Trump, who was at the G20 summit at the time. The tweets Trump’s made regarding the late president since the original official statement sound more like his words, even though he’s managed to keep things toned down and respectful for the most part. One Twitter user had some advice for Trump as he visits the mourning family and attends the state funeral. She replied, “Behave yourself. This is not about you but the loss of a true President.” Another pointed out that Trump’s words seemed odd at such a sad time. She asked, “How can you be “looking forward” to a funeral!??? #FootinMouth.” Finally, one commenter stated, “You finally got an invite. But it’s not a party – and not something you should be looking forward to. But carry on.” While there was some speculation that he might not be invited to the funeral due to his past disrespect to not only the 41st POTUS but also the Bush family in general, Inquisitr reported that the elder Bush asked Trump to his funeral because he did not want to “stiff” a sitting president. It is worth noting that Trump did not attend the late president’s wife, Barbara Bush’s funeral earlier this year, and first lady Melania Trump went instead. Although the McCain family specifically did not invite the president to Senator John McCain’s funeral earlier this year, Bush felt the office of the president should be revered. Douglas Brinkley, a Rice University history professor and author, explained, “For Bush 41, Trump is the president, and he does not want to stiff a sitting president, so in his own way, it is magnanimous that he is having Melania and Donald Trump come.” Tagsdonald trump George HW Bush CDC Warns Exotic Tick That Can Cause 'Massive Infestations' Is Spreading Across America Is Someone Your Roommate Dated Definitely Off Limits? An Expert Explains
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Home News Rowan Opens New Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies Rowan Opens New Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies Zach Baer Seventy years ago, Holocaust survivors Charles Middleberg and Helene Bouton were in Nazi-controlled Europe. On November 18, 2015, Middleberg and Bouton, now New Jersey residents, joined together with the Rowan community to inaugurate the new Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. The center, which will begin hosting events this year, will help serve as the academic home for Holocaust and Genocide studies in Gloucester County. The center will have an emphasis on the Holocaust, in addition to educating teachers and students on genocides in Armenia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Darfur and Rwanda. Dr. Stephen Hague, an instructor of history at Rowan, will be the center’s coordinator. The November inaugural ceremony filled Boyd Recital Hall and played host to numerous distinguished guests. Among them were Paul Winkler, Executive Director of the New Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education, and Tim Kaiser, deputy director of the Levine Institute for Holocaust Education at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. Winkler, who was once a teacher at Glassboro State College, opened the evening’s presentations by stating he believes the center will help Rowan be a part of the creation of a generation that will “stand up when they see evil is being done.” For Winkler, this center has been a dream of his for many years. “For me, in my heart, this is one of the most exciting pieces of education in the last 50 years,” said Winkler. Coming from Washington D.C. to help with the inauguration, Kaiser spoke on the importance of providing accurate, authentic, and authoritative educational experiences to young students learning about the Holocaust. According to Kaiser, the current state of holocaust education is bleak. After a survey of over 1,500 students, Kaiser and his team concluded that “a majority of students would fail when it comes to core holocaust knowledge.” “Students have a very simplistic understanding of the Holocaust, how it happened and how it affects their lives,” said Kaiser. As a result of this, Kaiser said it is of the utmost importance to create and modernize new educational opportunities for students. For Kaiser, there is no better place for this movement to occur than in New Jersey, which has consistently been a leader in holocaust curriculum development for student education. “Rowan will be a place where we can begin to help our teachers create and direct students to validated, trusted resources,” said Kaiser. According to Hague, the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies is the result of a collaboration between Rowan’s College of Humanities & Social Sciences, the College of Education and the New Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education. During the first year, the center will exist virtually, with plans to host programs and events geared towards teachers. “The goal is certainly to have an on-campus, physical center with resources available to students, as well as a robust virtual center,” said Hague. “This will include teacher curriculum guides and the development of different online courses and teacher online workshops.” Furthermore, Hague says that the center will help build a relationship between a significant portion of the community that is often neglected. “The kind of audience we can develop between students, staff, faculty, and the wider community has the potential to go right along with the university’s profile being raised,” said Hague. Paul Esposito, a junior history and secondary education major, feels the center will be advantageous to both students and teachers. “From an educational standpoint, I think it is going to be really beneficial to have a center that will offer information on genocides and how to properly utilize that information in the classroom,” said Esposito. For questions/comments, about this story, email editor@thewhitonline.com or tweet @TheWhitOnline. Previous articleSGA addresses club funding and approval Next articleEditorial: Take the Survey Rowan Community Responds to “Turkey Lives Matter” Post From Rowan Athletics Rowan Offers New BA in Health and Science Communication RIPPAC Hosts “So, What Happened?” A Virtual Conversation with Steve Kornacki
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Dan Daly, 'The Fightinest Marine' Posted by Neil F. Cosgrove on November 10, 2014 at 7:30pm In the over 150 year history of the Congressional Medal of Honor, the United States Highest award for “conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty”, only 19 men have been awarded the medal twice. Among them is Marine Sergeant Major Daniel Daly, one of only two marines to receive the Medal of Honor twice for separate acts of heroism (see note below). Daly was born in Glen Cove, Long Island, New York to Irish immigrant parents on 11 November 1873. He was slight of stature, only 5’6” in height and weighing 132 lbs, yet enjoyed an early reputation as a fighter, a reputation he would prove more than deserved. Daly was part of the U.S. Embassy Guard in Peking when the Boxer Rebellion broke out in 1900. In one of the most memorable acts of that war, the Boxers surrounded the compound of the foreign legations in Peking and laid siege to it for 55 days. At one point, when German Marines of the German embassy were forced back, Daly by himself took a position in a bastion on the Tarter Wall and remained there throughout the night. Subjected to sniper fire and numerous attacks, when relieved in the morning Private Daly was still holding his position with the bodies of numerous attackers surrounding him attesting to his bravery and fidelity to duty. During the night as he defended his position with rifle and bayonet, Daly had heard the attacking boxers yell "Quon-fay"; when he asked one of the legations Chinese personnel what it meant he was told "a very bad devil". For this bravery Daly was awarded his first Medal of Honor. Fifteen years later found now Gunnery Sergeant Daly fighting in Haiti fighting against the Cacos. While on patrol the reconnaissance company of 38 men that Daly belonged to was ambushed by over 400 of the enemy while attempting to ford a river at night. Among the casualties was the mule carrying the company’s machine gun. After getting his men to a good position, Daly returned, alone and under enemy fire, to the river and searched for the gun. He found it, and was able to bring the gun and its ammunition back to the Marine position. Daly then took command of one part of a three pronged assault on the rebel position, killing 75 rebels and scattering the rest. As one of the two officers present noted, “Had one squad failed, not one man of the party would have lived to tell the tale. Gunnery Sergeant Daly, 15th Company, during the operations was the most conspicuous figure among the enlisted men.” Daly was awarded his second Medal of Honor. However, Daly was not finished yet; there was still the incident for which he is perhaps best remembered for within the Marine Corps. In June 1918 at the battle of Belleau Wood in World War I, the Marines were under heavy artillery barrage and pinned down. At one point the now 44 year old Daly, led a counter-attack with a battle cry that has become Marine legend “Come on, you sons of Bitches, do you want to live forever?!” Later in the battle, Daly single handedly eliminated a machine gun nest with nothing more than his 45 pistol and grenades. In the course of the battle he was wounded three times. Daly was recommended through the Army for a third Medal of Honor and the New York Times reported that Daly's receipt of it was imminent. However, petty bureaucrats had capriciously decided that the recognition of extraordinary valor had an arbitrary limit of two and Daly was denied a third Medal of Honor though his actions as the most ferocious of the "Devil Dogs" of Belleau Wood richly merited it. Instead Daly was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the Navy Cross and France’s Médaille Militaire. Perhaps the greatest tribute to Daly was paid by General Smedley D. Butler, the other Marine to be awarded two Congressional Medals of Honor, who called Daly “The fightinest Marine I ever knew.” Offered promotion several times, Daly declined once remarking “I would rather be an outstanding sergeant than just another officer”. At this time when we celebrate both the Birthday of the Marine Corps and the anniversary of the ending of WW I which in which we remember the service and sacrifice of all are veterans; no one epitomizes the spirit of both days better than Dan Daly. Note: 5 other Marines received both the Army and Navy Medals of Honor for the same action. Irish Dominate Medal of Honor List Tags: American, Marines, Medal of Honor, Military History, United States, WWI Comment by Jean Sullivan Cardinal on November 11, 2014 at 12:38pm What a man! Thanks for sharing. Comment by Ryan O'Rourke on November 12, 2014 at 4:33am Thanks for this piece, Neil. Comment by Richard R. Mc Gibbon Jr. on April 30, 2017 at 10:05am Just another Marine doing his duty, who happens to be Irish and tougher than a "bag of nails". Slainte Comment by Neil F. Cosgrove on May 7, 2017 at 9:49am While I understand where you are coming form Richard, and no one has a higher respect for all Marines (staring with my father) than I, to characterize Daly as "just another Marine" is a bit unjust. One of my favorite Daly incidents, found after I wrote this article, concerned some young Marine replacements reporting to the front lines in France in WW I. When told to report to Gunnery Sergeant Daly, one of the recruits exclaimed "You mean he exists? I though it was just a story they told us in basic training like Paul Bunyan" Even heroes have heroes.
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Home News Ugandan president reappoints son as head of special forces Ugandan president reappoints son as head of special forces Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni has reappointed his eldest son, Lt Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba as the head of Uganda’s Special Forces Command, an elite unit with the responsibility of guarding the president and first family. Gen Kainerugaba has had a meteoric rise through the ranks of the army, having trained at the British academy Sandhurst and other military programmes in the US, Egypt and South Africa. He also serves as presidential advisor on special operations and regains his position as head of the special forces command, after more than a decade. The move is part of a wider reshuffle within security agencies. The former head of Uganda’s military operations in Somalia, Maj Gen Paul Lokech becomes Deputy Chief of Police. He has been credited for success in the fight against al-Shabab in 2011 and 2012. The man who oversaw recent violence in Kampala and the death of more than 50 people after the arrest of presidential candidate Bobi Wine, Maj Gen Sabiiti Muzeeyi, has been reassigned to army headquarters for redeployment. The reshuffle comes less than a month before what is expected to be a fiercely contested presidential election, in which President Museveni is looking to extend his rule to four decades. The Ugandan government has come under sharp criticism in the last few weeks with threats of US sanctions against some senior security officials following the killings. A senior minister has however defended the actions of security agencies during the protests.- BBC Government to repossess underutilised land
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Tony Harris My 12 Favorite Trade Reading Experiences Of 2012 Posted on January 2, 2013 September 27, 2019 by TJDietsch I write about a lot of trades on this site, about two a week if I’m on my game. But, I actually read a lot more than that. So, this particular list is the 12 books or runs that I enjoyed the most reading or re-reading this year. Most of them have been covered on the site, but others have not. I’ll give the latter a few more words than the former, but hope you enjoy. I read all of Judd Winick’s run of Outsiders this year, but didn’t write about it? Why? Well, it was a pretty big reading project, something that makes it harder for me to write about as a whole. But, I still really enjoyed this reading experience. Winick brings a realness to superhero comics without letting it get too in the way (if that makes sense). I know a lot of people think he forces issues into books, but I think these are the kinds of things that should be talked about and seen. Anyway, this was a fun superhero reading experience that made me remember how fun the DCU was back when this book and Geoff Johns’ Teen Titans launched. Good times. I haven’t written about James Robinson’s Starman because I haven’t finished the last omnibus yet. I haven’t finished it because I kind of don’t want to finish it and I also need quiet time to really sit down and finish it. This series is up there with Preacher and Sandman for me in my list of all time favorites. It lives in my heart and I was elated to discover that I still like it. This is what shared universe superhero comics could and should be. I know I just read the first two volumes of Grimjack, but the experience has stayed with me. I love that world and keep thinking of great ways it could be interpreted for different genres. Right now I’m thinking about a Crackdown/Amazing Spider-Man style video game set in Cynosure where you take on jobs or just spend your day drinking in Munden’s Bar. If you dig Hellboy, B.P.R.D. or 100 Bullets, I think you’ll enjoy Grimjack. I’ve had a lot of different feelings about DC’s New 52. At first I was upset that “my” versions of the characters would only survive in my trade shelves and long boxes. Then I realized that I don’t really read new issues anymore and I still have my collection (and books I’ve never read from that era) to enjoy. I also realized that I’m almost 30 and have better things to worry about. With that behind me, I was able to dive into various trades with a mostly clear head and enjoyed them for the most part. I appreciate how DC was attempting to hit all different kinds of genres and audiences, of course, not all of those attempts were successful. The least successful tries in my opinion, though, were the books that just failed to set up a basic reason why that book existed aside from “to make money.” I still have a pile of them to read and am getting a sense of the new U, which is kind of fun. Even though I read the second arc of Ed Brubaker’s Secret Avengers first and the first second, I had a great time reading this “black ops” take on superheroes. Bru writing Captain America/Steve Rogers is always aces in my book, but throwing in a lot of other street level-esque characters was even cooler. I’ve only read these first two volumes, but was satisfied with Brubaker’s ability to create an enjoyable sci-fi/spy mash-up story that felt well contained while still making me want to read more. Return of King Doug came out of left field for me. It was gifted to me by a pal and I knew nothing about it, but Greg Erb, Jason Oremland and Wook-Jin Clark reminded me so much of the kinds of stories I love from the 80s, but while also doing all kinds of new, funny things I enjoy. Read this now. I’ve said this before, but one of the things I miss most about not working at Wizard anymore is access to all of the Hellboy and B.P.R.D. comics that came out. I’m super behind, but I did get my hands on some B.P.R.D. trades this year for a little catching up (Hell On Earth: New World and Gods And Monsters). That’s still the best damn comic series around and has been for a while. I don’t mind playing catch-up on some books. I’ve been super happy re-reading things like World War Hulk and catching up on Hulk, Incredible Hulk and Red Hulk this year. Super fun, popcorn books mixed with well thought out ongoing superhero tales filled with monsters? Yeah, I’m all over that. I read the first iZombie trade in 2011, but was delighted to get my hands on the second and third volumes in 2012. I wrote about the second one here and have a post in mind talking about the third. Anyway, this series is the rare mix of intriguing characters, wacky situations, rock solid architecture and mythology I want to study PLUS one of the greatest artists the medium has ever seen. So, so, so good. I’m pretty surprised there are two Vertigo books on here. It seemed like for a while I was reading nothing from them. Now iZombie and American Vampire are two of my faves. Then again Chris Roberson and Scott Snyder are two of the best newcomer writers around, so that’s no surprise. In this case, Snyder takes two things that have become old and boring — vampires and American history — and makes them both super interesting and intense. Can’t wait to see where the rest of this series goes. Batman: Knightfall Volume 1 was pure, nostalgic joy. All of the Batman comics that got me into Batman in one place in one fat volume? Yes, yes and yes. I have the second and third volumes waiting to be read. Maybe next month after knocking off a smattering of random trades I want to check out. I don’t remember exactly why I didn’t write about Jeff Lemire’s Lost Dogs. It’s one of the few books I’ve bought through Comixology for my Kindle Fire. The long and short of it is that this story about a simpleton trying to save his family. It’s raw and rough and hits you in the gut. I don’t know if I liked the experience of reading this story, but it was certainly powerful. I can’t remember if it made me cry or not, but it came close. I’m certain I missed a few books that I didn’t write about, but this is a pretty solid list by all accounts. I should probably branch out into more diverse trades and graphic novels — and I plan to — but what can I say? I love me some superheroes. I also happen to love all kinds of other comics, so let’s continue to make and talk about awesome comics. Posted in Action, Avengers, Batman, Captain America, Comics, Dark Horse, DC, Fantasy, History, Horror, Hulk, Marvel, Mystery, New 52, Sci-Fi, Top Shelf, Trade Post, Trade Review, VertigoTagged Action, American Vampire, Avengers, B.P.R.D, Bane, Batman, Batman Knightfall, Captain America, Chris Roberson, Comics, Dark Horse, DC, Ed Brubaker, Ed McGuinness, Fantasy, Frankenstein, Frankenstein Agent of SHADE, Greg Erb, GrimJack, Guy Davis, History, Horror, Hulk, iZombie, James Robinson, Jason Oremland, Jeff Lemire, Jeph Loeb, John Ostrander, Judd Winick, Lost Dogs, Marvel, Mike Allred, Mike Deodato, Mike Mignola, Mystery, New 52, Nightwing, Rafael Albuquerque, Sci-Fi, Scott Allie, Scott Snyder, Secret Avengers, Starman, The Outsiders, The Return of King Doug, Tim Truman, Tom Raney, Tony Harris, Top Shelf, Trade Post, Trade Review, Vampires, Vertigo, Wook-Jin Clark, ZombiesLeave a comment Ex Machina Trade Post Volumes 1-10 Posted on February 16, 2011 September 27, 2019 by TJDietsch I’ve had a very on again, off again relationship with Brian K. Vaughan and Tony Harris’ political superhero adventure Ex Machina. Back when the first issue came out in 2004, I picked it up on a whim and the last page reveal that main character Mitchell Hundred’s superhero alter ego The Great Machine saved the second World Trade Center tower didn’t shock or intrigue me as much as it did lots of other people. I wasn’t hooked, so I didn’t bother getting the next issue. I think I got back into the book a few years later while at Wizard when I had access to the trades and recent issues, but I soon fell off the wagon when lateness became a huge issue. Over the years I’ve collected the trades and for my birthday this year, I got the last one I needed from my folks, so I figured it was time to read the entire series from beginning to end. If you’re unfamiliar with the book, Ex Machina stars Hundred a man who was granted the ability to talk to machines thanks to a strange device that exploded all over him. For a while, he used those abilities as a vigilante called The Great Machine, but that was short lived. He decided to unmask and run for mayor of New York City as an independent, something he had no chance of winning until September 11th happened and he saved the second tower. The majority of the series revolves around Hundred as mayor and the various political hurdles he finds himself jumping which cover the gamut of hot button issues from gay marriage and religion to the enforcement of old laws and the legalization of marijuana, but with plenty of flashbacks to his time as the Great Machine. The series jumps around in time quite a bit and has a set up that feels similar to that of Lost–which I’m sure is one of the reasons he was tapped to work on the show for a brief time. I wonder if anyone online has figured out how to tell this story completely chronologically. SPOILERS AHOY I had a pretty great time reading the series from beginning to just before the end, which frankly I’m still not sure about. I get the feeling from reading this all together and having read some of Vaughan’s other comics like the glorious Y: The Last Man and Doctor Strange: The Oath that he just ran out of steam and possibly interest when it came to Ex Machina and, as a result, just rushed the ending. After building this huge story interweaving superheroics and politics all of which had this looming mystery about where Hundred’s powers came from and why other people seemed to get different variations on his abilities for 9 volumes, the 10th just seems rushed and anti-climactic. I have no problem with the idea that a dimension hopping group created the machine that gave Hundred his powers or the idea that Hundred defied his program and wound up saving his world, but the finale had a “is that it?” quality to it. Making matters worse, it felt like Vaughan was hinting at a much bigger, crazier story that Hundred was preparing himself for as he became Vice President, as if he needed to be in a seat of power in order to save the world from future invasions (or to usher one in) which actually sounds like a more interesting story than the ending I was given. It’s all the more disappointing when remembering how moving the end of Y: The Last Man was. Not everyone got a happy ending (Ampersand’s almost made me tear up), but they were all treated with respect and they all made sense. That wasn’t the case with Ex Machina. Hundred killed one friend and another professed his love for him (which was completely out of no where) and everything just ends on a shit note. Harris’ usually fantastic art even suffers in these last few issues, which makes it all the worse. The usually robust panels look flat and have a strange effect on them that looks like Tom Goes To The Mayor episodes, which is not a good thing in my book. Harris is the rare artist who started off with one style that I really dug on Starman and completely changed his style in something else I really like and yet, like his partner, he couldn’t end on the same high notes he began on. Something I’ve come to realize over my years of talking about stories is that, for me, “disappointing” is a much worse designation than “bad.” Something that’s bad, is just bad and that’s it, but something that’s disappointing had my interest and some investment from me and didn’t deliver. It’s like a creative betrayal, but probably shouldn’t be so dramatic. In the case of Ex Machina, the book won me over even after not being too blown away by the first issue so many years ago and a shitty production schedule knocked me back off the ongoing and then completely failed when it came to the ending. The real question I ask myself after I read a trade is “Does this go on the shelf or up for Swap?” My initial feeling after finishing the last book was “dump this junk,” but I’m a little more conflicted. Is this an ending that I will never like or is it the kind of thing that, now that I know how it ends, I’ll know it’s coming and it won’t be so disappointing? It’s a tough call because I dig so much of this comic leading up to ending. It’s such a careful, well-plotted story with plenty of political and social ideas that really took center stage, a good amount of logical superhero moments and even a great mythology that seemed so deliberately paced and revealed that the hurried up ending stings even more. I think I’ll keep the books for now, but instead of the shelf, they’ll go into one of my spill-over long boxes filled with trades that can’t fit on the shelf right now to be read another day when shelf space is more plentiful. Posted in Action, Comics, DC, Drama, Fantasy, Mystery, Politics, Sci-Fi, Trade Post, Trade Review, WildStormTagged Action, Brian K. Vaughan, Comics, DC, Drama, Ex Machina, Fantasy, Mystery, Politics, Sci-Fi, Tony Harris, Trade Post, Trade Review, WildStorm4 Comments Best Of The Best Trade Post: Starman Omnibus Volume 2 Posted on August 11, 2010 September 27, 2019 by TJDietsch STARMAN OMNIBUS VOLUME 2 (DC) Written by James Robinson, drawn by Tony Harris, Craig Hamilton, John Warkiss, Steve Yeowell, Matt Smith, JH Williams, Bret Blevins, Guy Davis, Wade von Grawbadger, Chris Sprouse and Gary Erksine Collects Starman #17-29, Showcase ’95 #12, Showcase ’96 #4-5 & Starman Annual #1 For the secret history of how I got to read Starman for the first time, check out today’s Ad It Up which features an ad for the Starman Secret Files & Origins. After having my mind blown so many years ago by the adventures of hip new hero Jack Knight and his journey from 90s hipster to legitimate superhero, it’s actually been since then that I’ve read Starman because of the terrible way the comics were collected (yearly issues pulled out to make their own themed trades, etc.). I was really jazzed a few years ago when DC announced they were going to give this beloved series the same treatment as Jack Kirby comics and reprint everything (and I mean everything) chronologically. I thought about saving my reread for the day I had all the Omnibi in my hands, but couldn’t resist. I tackled the first one a while back and didn’t write about it on the blog and then much later I finally got around to reading the second volume. The task is a bit daunting and a little scary because what if I don’t like it as much this time around as I did back then? I had the same fear when I reread Preacher, but I wound up liking it even more. Would that be the same case for Starman? Mostly yes with a little bit of no. Yes because it’s still a book of amazing quality and no because it doesn’t feel quite as special because this style of storytelling has gone on to become the norm at least at DC (you can’t swing a dead cat without hitting a legacy character these days) though not always done this well. While reading through this volume it hit me why the book has resonated with me so much: it’s a book that deals with all these crazy elements like supervillains and demons and magical posters, but it doesn’t let that get in the way of the characters who, after a time, don’t consider these things to be all that crazy. I don’t mean for that to sound like they see these things as blasse necessarily, just that it’s a part of everyday life for these characters, which is something that many superhero comics seem to forget. There’s a difference between boredly talking about a supervillain threat and having a normal conversation with your dad about all the villains you’re trying to keep track of. Also, the fact remains that Starman is not really a superhero story. It’s a story about a son (Jack Knight) trying to find a relationship with his father (Ted Knight, the original Starman) and see where that relationship goes once they start having some things in common. Yes, those things happen to be fighting villains and keeping Opal City safe, but Robinson never lets that detract from the emotions and story taking place. It’s also about rehabilitation, if not redemption, especially considering the evolution of The Shade and this volume’s introduction of Bob Benetti, a villain for hire who just got out of jail and is thinking about going back to a life of crime. The volume is jam packed with goodness, including our heroes facing a demon whose domain resides inside a poster, the first meeting between Golden Age Doctor Fate and the Shade, a pirate-themed Talking With David, Jack Knight teaming up with Wesley Dodds (the original Sandman) in modern times, the Legends Of The Dead Earth annual which was actually pretty fun, Jack doing a solid for the original Mist, a Christmas issue, the trippy origins of the blue skinned Starman Mikaal and the introduction of a lot of time-displaced citizens to Opal. There’s a lot going on, but you get the feeling that Robinson had a game plan from the get go. The poster story is introduced fairly early on in the book, but not really focused on and solved until a while later. Yes there are arcs and more finite storylines, but it’s not like a comic today where it feels like every six issues something new happens because it’s supposed to. This flows like a rive and takes all kinds of twists and turns that are a delight to follow. There’s also lots and lots of references to upcoming storylines. And it’s not like just Jack Knight gets the best moments. The last two issues of this collection are some of my favorites and involved Mikaal in the 70s and Bobo Benetti dealing with a moral quandary that ends in a pretty great and unexpected way. This book contains one of the few occasions in which I didn’t want to erase the Royal Flush Gang from existence. I can’t believe I’ve gone this far without talking about Tony Harris’ art. I mistakenly thought that he did all of the issues until he eventually left the book, but there are plenty of other artists jumping in here and there to do sequences, short stories, fill-ins or random other stories like the Showcase bits. Of course, seeing earlier Guy Davis and JH Williams III is a lot of fun. There are very few art missteps in this whole volume, which is impressive considering how much ground the book covers. In addition to the reprinted comics which I love, the book also has a great deal of extras. There’s a forward by Harris (whose style has completely changed since the 90s) about his first meeting with Robinson while on a kind of press tour that’s really interesting and a nice look into the world of comic book collaboration. The back of the book has a series of journal entries by the Shade that I didn’t read through, a look at many of DC Direct’s Starman-related products (I want to get my hands on that Tim Bruckner statue) and then Robinson’s ongoing Time’s Past series of afterwards which include a story by story rundown of where he was coming from, what inspired him and/or what he was trying to accomplish with that story. I would anxiously flip to the back after finishing a story to get some inside scoop on the creative process and then jump back to read the next story. It’s almost a little sad reading this book for a few reasons. First off, Robinson doesn’t seem to have been able to get back up to this high level of writing since, though I do appreciate him using Mikaal in Justice League, but that book’s got a mountain of problems well before Robinson came along. It’s also kind of sad to think that this comic probably wouldn’t get made today. At least not by DC or Marvel, though it is kind of funny that even Starman rolled out of a big event (in this case Zero Hour). Maybe I’m being pessimistic, but a book that’s so densely packed and featuring a cast that includes a hipster, an old man, a gay blue alien, a few Golden Age villains-turned good guys and a family of Irish cops doesn’t sound like the kind of thing the Big Two would sign off on now. You might say “Well, it could be an Image book,” which is true, but what makes Starman so special is that Robinson was able to carve out this little world for himself inside the greater DCU. He pulled from what else was going on around him, using new and established elements and wove them all together into this great thing that’s hard to really describe. Sure, it would have been cool as a book set in it’s own universe, but we wouldn’t have the Shade or the Scalphunter ties or the occasional visits with other heroes and, at least to this longtime comic book fan, that makes the book all the better. Posted in Action, Best Of The Best, Comics, DC, Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Trade Post, Trade ReviewTagged Action, Best Of The Best, Bret Blevins, Chris Sprouse, Comics, Craig Hamilton, DC, Fantasy, Gary Erksine, Guy Davis, James Robinson, JH Williams, John Warkiss, Matt Smith, Sci-Fi, Starman, Steve Yeowell, Tony Harris, Trade Post, Trade Review, Wade von GrawbadgerLeave a comment
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A Thanksgiving Parade, Unfazed by Snow or Wind, Takes on a Pandemic admin November 24, 2020 No Comments Not snow, not rain, not gusting winds or the Great Depression have caused the cancellation of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in its 96-year history. On Thursday it seems poised to power through a pandemic. The other parades of New York City have fallen one by one, as city and state officials determined it would be unsafe to proceed with the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, the Pride March and the Puerto Rican Day Parade because they draw such huge crowds. The West Indian American Day Parade on Labor Day was forced to go virtual for similar reasons. But the Thanksgiving Day Parade is sailing forth, largely because the millions who typically attend have been told to stay home and the event has been scaled down to a television show, albeit one that many view as itself a ritual marker of the holiday. So the parade route will be one block long, not two miles. Those high school bands from around the country will not be marching, and instead of some 2,000 balloon handlers to coordinate, there will only be about 130. But anyone who thinks staging this year’s parade has been a layup, not a singular feat of logistical legerdemain, has been dipping too deeply into the holiday punch. Starting in March, the parade planners at Macy’s and NBC, which airs the event, had to rip up the carefully calibrated script and come up with an entirely new blueprint, one that evolved as new questions surfaced day after day. What are the physics of flying the balloons, typically handled by people, if one uses squat utility vehicles instead? How, and when, to do coronavirus tests and temperature checks for the 960 people working on the parade? How to arrange for socially distanced stage numbers that capture the magic of Broadway without endangering anyone’s health? How to break it to the balloon handlers and the marching bands, some of whom view the parade as somewhere between a lifelong dream and a religious event, that they won’t be involved this year? “What I knew about Thanksgiving Day a month ago is different from what I know now,” said Susan Tercero, who is the executive producer of the event for Macy’s. “How do you plan something in June that’s going to happen in November when you have no idea where the country is going to be at then?” History has set a high bar for canceling the parade, which has gone off every year since 1924, except for three years during World War II. “Maybe we were crazy to think this way all along, but I think we just tried to never go there,” said Doug Vaughan, executive vice president of special programs at NBC Entertainment. Instead, the planners kept in communication with city and state officials and responded as evidence of a second wave in New York mounted, reducing the number of participants a second time from 25 percent of their typical work force to 12 percent. Instead of about 8,000 people working a packed parade route in a normal year, the efforts of 960 people are being spread over three days of filming. The giant balloons were cut to 12 from 16, the floats to 18 from 26. At one point, the parade planners had imagined a shortened route that still allowed for some travel down Manhattan streets. But even that was determined to be too much of an invitation for crowds, and officials ultimately landed on a stub of parade route on 34th Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues. The result, in effect, is a broadcast set based around Macy’s flagship department store, where much of the parade has been pretaped. Macy’s is adamant that there will be nothing to see for spectators on Thursday and police officers have been assigned to disperse any crowds that might develop. Still, police officials have reduced the detail that usually works the parade by 80 percent, said Terence A. Monahan, the chief of department. “It’s a lot less work for us, that’s for sure,” he said. “But I’d rather be challenged to protect hundreds of thousands of people out enjoying the parade than protecting a show that people watch on TV.” Also disappointed are the high school and college marching bands that had been selected for the lineup. Usually, Wesley Whatley, the parade’s creative producer, flies across the country to surprise band members with the news that they had scored spots on the parade route. This year, his tour ended before it started. The parade planners toyed with the idea of sending out film crews to capture the marching bands on their home turf, but that idea was dropped because it would involve a lot of cross-country travel, and in many cases, the young band members would have been learning remotely, away from school for several months, and unable to practice in person. Eventually, Mr. Whatley called the band directors with the news that they could not come this year, but that they were saving them spots for the 2021 parade. Also staying home will be most of the balloon handlers. Typically, each giant balloon — from the 49-foot-tall Astronaut Snoopy to the 53-foot-tall Pikachu is guided by 80 to 100 uniformed handlers. Those numbers were untenable during a pandemic. So the parade team hatched a plan to offset the weight of the balloon handlers with a formation of five utility vehicles (in a typical year, each giant balloon would have just one of these vehicles anchoring it in the center). The parade’s engineering team used the weight of the vehicle plus two “standard” 175-pound people — a total of 2,985 pounds — to calculate the proper formation of handlers underneath the balloons, said Kathleen Wright, the parade’s production director. Each of the large balloons will have about 25 humans assigned to them, either walking or riding in the utility vehicles down the blocklong parade route. One handler who made the cut was Kathy Kramer, a Macy’s employee who has been on the balloon team for 36 years. She is a balloon pilot, who walks backward about 30 yards in front of the balloon and directs the handlers using hand signals and a whistle. But this year, Ms. Kramer will be wearing a mask and she discovered during practice runs that it was too difficult to operate a whistle, so Macy’s shifted to hand-held electric whistles. The balloons are being inflated overnight on the broadcast set before they fly down 34th Street. Some will make the trip live on Thanksgiving Day. Others will have had pretaped flights. “Even though it’s a short parade this year, my stomach will start to churn on Monday and it will continue to do so until we deflate,” Ms. Kramer said. In another bow to a special year, Macy’s has organized it so that some groups whose parades were canceled will now have a place in the Thanksgiving event. So parade watchers on television can expect to see the New York Fire Department’s Emerald Society band with their bagpipes and bearskin hats and the Lesbian & Gay Big Apple Corps Marching Band, in their rainbow sashes, all pretaped. The dancers, stilt walkers and steel pan players who would have lit up Eastern Parkway for Carnival are being taped on Wednesday. But they will start getting their makeup done on Tuesday night because the process can take hours, said Anne-Rhea Smith, vice president of the West Indian American Day Carnival Association. She said she hopes the makeup session will resemble the preparations and feel of a typical carnival eve in Brooklyn. “Nothing replaces that feeling,” she said, “but we’re trying our best to get as close as we can.” In replacing the absences of the parades of past months, this event will become something of an ode to New York, at one time the epicenter of the pandemic in the United States and a cultural beacon that went largely dark in recent months. So while visitors to Lincoln Center cannot see “George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker,” this year, viewers of the parade will be able to see Ashley Bouder, a New York City Ballet principal dancer, perform as the pink tutu-ed Sugarplum Fairy. Similarly, numbers from four Broadway shows, shuttered since March, were taped in Times Square in advance of Thanksgiving week and will be part of the parade. And despite the cancellation of the “Christmas Spectacular” at Radio City Music Hall, 18 of the 80 Rockettes will appear in their wooden soldiers costume with custom-made masks. (That particular Rockettes number was chosen because the dancers have limited contact with one another, which means no kickline.) Hovering over the hectic planning process has been the sense that New Yorkers, and Americans, need this spirited display of joy at a time when there is much to be sad about. That mission was also evident in 1963, six days after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, when amid nationwide mourning, Macy’s decided against canceling the parade. The parade went on again in 2001, as New York struggled to recover from the 9/11 attacks. The poignancy of the moment was noted in some patriotic touches: a Lady Liberty float replaced Tom Turkey, for example, and the red and white candy canes in Santa’s sleigh wore ribbons of red, white and blue. On Thursday, as this year’s parade ends, the planners say they will begin thinking almost immediately about next year’s parade. Will it be another pandemic version, the socially distant, mask wearing, joyous-but-scaled-down kind, or will it be something people can take their kids to? “Hopefully,” Mr. Vaughan of NBC said, “the 95th anniversary of the parade will look very different from this year.” Previous Previous post: Pope Calls Uighurs ‘Persecuted,’ Prompting Pushback From China Next Next post: Pennsylvania certifies its election results, solidifying Biden’s victory there.
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Internship Placement Stanford in New York Photos Stanford in New York Summer 2020-2021 Stanford in New York is excited to offer a full program this Summer 2020-2021. Experience the global city and this unique opportunity to live, learn, and work in New York City during a summer quarter. This full-time, in-person program will feature 4-day/week internships in areas of student interest as well as New York faculty-led courses designed to capitalize on the resources only New York City can offer. The summer program will also offer field trips, alumni networking, guest speakers, and group activities. Test the waters of living, learning, and working in a global city, while being in a Stanford academic environment. Living and Travel Conditions­­ Single bedroom dormitory style housing with private kitchenettes and bathrooms. Housing is located in Brooklyn, New York. Prerequisites and Expectations There are no prerequisites; students are expected to take all 3 of the courses offered and to remain in residence for the full 10 weeks of the quarter. Required Coursework The New York City Seminar — 5 units What are essential characteristics of cities? What makes New York New York? Taught by the program director, the NYC Seminar includes all program participants and investigates how New York, as a complex, dynamic city, shapes and is shaped by issues relevant to each quarter’s thematic lens. To do this, the seminar focuses attention on your engagement with the city through your internship, courses, and other activities, and asks you to consider what the city means to you personally. Using a structured experiential education process that includes site visits, workshops, reflective assignments, and a final portfolio project, the course ultimately aims to integrate the learning from all elements of the program and help you gain meaningful insights into work and professional life, the application of your interests and values, and your vision for the future. Rosina S. Miller is the founding director of Stanford in New York. Working for more than 20 years in experiential education, Rosina previously served on the faculty and then as executive director of The Philadelphia Center, an off-campus study program founded by the Great Lakes Colleges Association and one of the nation's earliest programs dedicated to academic internships and learning in an urban environment. Rosina is also a co-founder of a successful charter school in Philadelphia that features a Spanish language immersion program and a commitment to global citizenship. For 9 years, Rosina served in various leadership positions on the school’s Board of Trustees, including president. Rosina holds a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in Folklore and Folklife and has researched, presented, and published on urban social change efforts. She is passionate about cities, urban cultural expression, experiential learning, and helping students integrate their personal, professional, and academic development. Imaging Change: Global Arts and Social Change - 4 units Working amid great chaos, photographers, filmmakers, and contemporary artists are exploring new ways to use their mediums to advocate for social change. This course will examine some of the people, collectives, and organizations working globally that use the realm of the visual to address and advocate for human rights and social justice. Students will learn about practitioners in socially engaged art, concerned photography, cultural organizing, public art, interactive film, and more. The class will include regular visits to (or guests from) artists’ and photographers’ studios, and the esteemed foundations and organizations supporting this work. Students will gain a new understanding of the arts as a provocative and wholly vital field that actively seeks social progress. A final paper will be required. Danielle Jackson is deeply committed to bringing discrete people, ideas, and disciplines together. She is the co-founder of the Bronx Documentary Center, an internationally-recognized gallery and educational space that uses photojournalism and documentary film to create conversation on social change. Formerly, she ran the cultural department at Magnum Photos NY where she coordinated a range of lectures, traveling exhibitions and retrospectives for museums, universities, and photo festivals in more than a dozen countries. Her observations on cultural practice can be found on Twitter @Makerthinker. She holds a BFA in Film and Television and MA in Africana Studies from NYU. The Agile City - 4 units While a unique confluence of forces—largely economic, cultural and environmental—is transforming urban places globally, these forces are having extraordinarily transformative effects on New York City. As a result, the form of the city is changing as convulsively as it did in the formative decades of the late 19th and early 20th century. At such a historic tipping point, The Agile City is intended to help participants think about city form and the forces that create it as integral to the larger questions and issues society faces. The course will ground itself in the physical city: at the intersection of architecture and planning (culture, identity and innovation in built form), social impact (how to grow broad well-being) and environmental sustainability (conserving nonrenewable resources and improving the health of ecosystems that support us). Students in the course will learn to “read” the physical city as a record of the forces that act on it and as an expression of transformative vitality. The class will draw from case studies in New York and elsewhere, using guest experts and site visits or walking tours. James S. Russell, FAIA, is a journalist and consultant who focuses on architecture and cities. He has written for numerous publications as an architecture critic and journalist, including The Economist, Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times. He was the architecture critic at Bloomberg News and a long-time editor at Architectural Record magazine. He is working on a new book about the intertwining of urban culture and business success at a time of extraordinary challenges. His earlier book, The Agile City: Building Well Being and Wealth in an Era of Climate Change, was published by Island Press. Stanford in New York Center Email Stanford in New York staff at stanfordNY@stanford.edu Advising with New York Staff Reach out to NY advisors: stanfordny@stanford.edu Do you have questions about interning, studying and living in New York City? Our staff is ready to help! Advising with Student Ambassadors Find out the student perspective by chatting with one our student ambassadors. Set up an appointment to speak with our student ambassadors!
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The Vinyl Dialogues Blog Stories behind memorable albums of the 1970s as told by the artists Tag: Judy Collins With Judy Collins and Stephen Stills, ‘There were sparks right away’ By Mike Morsch In The Vinyl Dialogues Book Judy Collins and Stephen Stills were driving around one day in Malibu, California, when Stills had an idea. “He said, ‘You know, we need another song on this album,’” Collins says. It was mid-1968 and Collins was coming off the success of her sixth studio album “Wildflowers,” which reached No. 5 on the Billboard Pop Albums charts after its release in October 1967. The album featured Collins’ Top 10 hit cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now.” Stills’ band Buffalo Springfield had just broken up in May, 1968. When Collins and producer David Anderle were planning the next album, “Who Knows Where the Time Goes,” they decided to record it in Los Angeles. “This was an opportunity to go to California and I was thrilled to be able to do that,” Collins says. “My producer said, ‘I want to bring you to California to make sort of a live album.’”… Read more The Vinyl Dialogues Books Buy Your Copy in the Biblio Bookstore Vinyl Dialogues Pages
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Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood: canceled or renewed? Cartel Crew, Love & Hip Hop, Black Ink Crew: ViacomCBS Cuts Ties with Live PD Producer Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood: VH1 Series Returns in August Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood: Season Five Coming to VH1 in July Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood: Season Four; VH1 Previews July Premiere with Keyshia Cole Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood: Season Three Premieres August 15th
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What’s next for VAI in 2018 Tagsbone disease, cancer research, collaboration, Core Technologies and Services, epigenetics, Jewell, Jones, P. Brundin, Parkinson's disease, structural biology, Triezenberg, VAEI, VAIGS, VARI, Williams With the end of the year approaching, we asked the Institute’s leadership for a sneak peek into what they are most excited for in the coming year. Here’s what they had to say (spoiler alert—there’s a lot to look forward to!): Dr. Peter Jones “The past year marked a real acceleration in our growth, both in terms of recruitment and scientific capacity. There are many things to be excited about as we look toward the coming year, including an ever-expanding collaboration with Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and multiple clinical and research partnerships both in Grand Rapids and around the world. We continue to build our strengths in cancer, Parkinson’s and other neurodegenerative diseases, bone diseases and structural biology, always with laser-focus on creating real, positive change for patients. I’m particularly thrilled about the establishment of a research program in metabolism and nutrition, which we anticipate launching in 2018. Metabolism and nutrition are at the heart of human health, and can play a major role in many diseases such as cancer, diabetes and even neurological disorders. We believe this new program will generate a groundswell of research in these areas, resulting in a better understanding of human biology and a foundation upon which to build new therapies for many illnesses.” Chief Scientific Officer and Director of the Center for Epigenetics, Van Andel Research Institute Dr. Patrik Brundin “As we look forward to 2018, I’m very happy about all that we accomplished in 2017 and how it has set the stage for continued growth. Our faculty have earned an unprecedented level of highly competitive external grant support in the past year, which reinforces the fact that we’re conducting high caliber, rigorous and impactful research. Furthermore, our Center for Neurodegenerative Science already has an exciting pipeline of results that hopefully will be published in the near future. Our critical mass also is expanding—we will welcome several new faculty members to our neurodegenerative disease research program in the coming year who will bolster our existing strengths and will spur new, innovative avenues of discovery. On the collaboration front, we look forward to nurturing newly established partnerships with colleagues locally, around the U.S. and abroad with the ultimate goal of not only better understanding diseases such as Parkinson’s, but improving treatment and giving people more years with fewer symptoms.” Associate Director of Research and Director of the Center for Neurodegenerative Science, Van Andel Research Institute Dr. Bart Williams “As we move into 2018, we do so with an urgency and renewed commitment to better understand the diseases that affect so many, such as cancer, osteoporosis and rare disorders like neurofibromatosis type 1. Our goal is to markedly improve people’s lives through developing better preventative, diagnostic and treatment strategies; we believe the outstanding progress made in the past year has paved the way for the discoveries to come. In 2018, we look forward to establishing a new program in metabolism and nutrition, which aims to transform our understanding of human health and disease, as well as continuing to grow our already exceptional team of scientists. We also are thrilled about the increasing gravitational pull to Grand Rapids, which is quickly establishing itself as a hub for biomedical research and health innovation.” Director, Center for Cancer and Cell Biology Dr. Scott Jewell “We’ve spent the past year optimizing our Core Technologies and Services, which provide specialized scientific services to researchers at the Institute and beyond. We’re particularly thrilled with the collaborative growth between our team and Michigan State University, and look forward to the scientific discovery this partnership will bring in the coming years. We also are enthusiastic about continued progress on a national level; since 2015, our Biorepository has been part of the Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium (CPTAC), a National Institutes of Health-led, multi-institutional effort to better understand the biological basis of cancer. Large-scale projects like this allow us to really look at the aberrations that cause disease across many cancer types and patients, and are a critical tool for developing new therapies. Our team is thrilled to be a part of this endeavor and are excited to share even more data with the public as the project progresses.” Director, Core Technologies and Services Dr. Steve Triezenberg “VAI Graduate School (VAIGS) marked several high points in 2017. We are proud of the six Ph.D. students who completed their degrees this year—the most in any one year to date. Seven new graduate students comprise the largest incoming cohort in our short history. VAIGS students were co-authors on at least 15 scientific papers this year, including articles published in the high-impact journals Cell and Genes & Development. As new faculty are recruited to VARI, the Graduate School seeks to support their participation and to build their capabilities in teaching and in mentoring. The first-year students explored lab rotations in eight laboratories that have not previously hosted grad students. Several faculty have or will soon direct VAIGS courses for the first time. We are now looking forward to reaffirmation of our accreditation with the Higher Learning Commission, which includes a site visit in late February. We are confident in presenting our evidence that we continue to meet all of the accreditation criteria, and look forward to demonstrating that to the visitors.” Dean, Van Andel Institute Graduate School Terra Tarango “In 2017, Van Andel Education Institute (VAEI) served more than 26,000 students and 3,500 teachers. We broadened our reach locally by launching our first summer camps for students as well as our first public workshops for teachers. We also extended our reach nationally by adding significant content and functionality to our software platform, nexgeninquiry.org. The platform now includes more than 65 lessons all searchable by grade level and science standard as well as hundreds of practical teaching strategies aimed at developing an inquiry-based culture in the classroom. In 2018, we will continue to expand our reach across student programs, professional development, and instructional tools for teachers. We will offer summer camps for grades 2 through 12 and will host a teacher conference that we hope will inspire and empower educators to create classrooms where curiosity, creativity and critical thinking thrive!” Director and Education Officer, Van Andel Education Institute 10 highlights: A look back at 2017 Protecting the brain from Parkinson’s
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FAST NEW PACE The Indiana Pacers, off to a strong start, are hoping to prove they are not a fluke Hank Hersch For the Indiana Pacers, success seemed to vanish with the five-inch Afro and the red-white-and-blue ball. In their ABA heyday in the early 1970s, the Pacers won three championships in five seasons; in their 13-year NBA lifetime, they have shown up in the playoffs twice and won one game. Last year Indiana finished 28-54 and didn't get its seventh victory until it had its fourth head coach. Tracy McCaulley, an ardent if not always too sensible believer, still wears a Pacer smock to work at the team's gift shop in Market Square Arena. The words ON THE THRESHOLD OF A DREAM were ironed onto the smock at the start of last season and are beginning to peel off. "Some people would see it and say they didn't know about dreams," McCaulley says. "Seemed to them more like a nightmare." Which is why the rest of the league has been rubbing its disbelieving eyes. With a 13-7 record as of Sunday, the Pacers, in second place in the Central Division, had a victory total they didn't reach until Feb. 26 last season. Exactly how much the Pacers have improved should be determined in the next week, when they complete a five-game Western swing that began with a 121-113 loss in Portland Sunday night. Through a couple of trades, a coach who pushes basketspeak to a new level, a maturing of young talent and an attitudinal overhaul, the Pacers have quietly done an about-face. Not only that, they have become downright different, with a cast of characters that could conceivably be written up in everything from Psychology Today to Stern to The Ring to Road & Track. Indiana's climb to respectability began last season when its coaching situation finally settled down. After going 0-7 and deciding the game was no fun anymore, Hall of Famer-to-be Jack Ramsay retired in November. Mel Daniels (0-2) and George Irvine (6-14) did interim shifts until team president Donnie Walsh plucked Dick Versace off the Pistons' bench. Versace had joined Detroit in '86-87, following a winning and controversial eight-year run at Bradley, where his teams were 156-88; after Versace left Bradley, the NCAA put the Braves on probation for recruiting violations committed in 1981. As Chuck Daly's assistant with Detroit, Versace was expected to do advance scouting and catch a whatever-a.m. flight back to the Pistons for the next game. He pulled off that double 70 times a season. After interviewing 10 candidates, Walsh looked beyond Versace's combination of pink cheeks and spool of white hair and found what he wanted. "Because of his personality and charisma, people tend to undersell his abilities," Walsh says. "Dick has great communicative skills, and he has a very, very thorough basketball background." The Versace vocabulary is entertaining. For kicks, he often spouts esoteric verbiage he may have learned at the knee of his mother while she was writing The Fifteenth Pelican, the book on which the TV show The Flying Nun was based, or from his twin brother, Steve, who has a doctorate in the psychology of self-destructive behavior. On the sidelines, Versace barks out messages to his players: "The sun came up" (we will run); "Sleep nights" (we will concentrate); "If it goes, it flows" (we will react); and his favorite mantra during games, "See it" (we will find the ball and help out in transition defense). On arrival in Indianapolis Versace deemed that the Pacers' most glaring weakness. Some players have even begun to echo another of his standbys, "We're here, so we might as well do it." Says Versace with a nod to bits of Daly's phraseology, "Some were actually...purloined." Most of this was lost on the team he inherited. The Pacers had talent, but too often it got in its own way or it got lost in the fallout from finger-pointing. No chemistry—or, as Versace puts it, "no brand." He concluded that the Pacers gave up too many easy hoops on the break, so he would call timeouts to remind them to jam the outlet pass, force the ball to the perimeter or avoid what he called a "celebration lag" after a basket. This would be the Pacer brand: a commitment to transition defense. Their personnel was another matter. That was up to the 48-year-old Walsh, a lawyer and former coach of the Nuggets who became the Pacers' general manager in '86. "I realized I had to devote the rest of the season to building the team back up, and I couldn't afford any mistakes," Walsh says. The first trade came on Feb. 20, 1989, after Indiana reached loss No. 10 in a 12-game skid. Walsh peddled forward Wayman Tisdale to Sacramento for shooting guard Randy Wittman, an Indianapolis native, and power forward LaSalle Thompson. "That was a no-brainer," Walsh says. Tisdale, a prolific low-post scorer, constantly needed the ball, but the 6'10", 245-pound Thompson was content to retrieve it. He averages 8.3 boards a game and had 16 in a 106-104 victory over the Bulls on Dec. 8. Thompson is a study in contrasts, a self-described mother hen who goes by the nickname Tank. He brought a smile to the locker room and some of the menace needed by any contender. "When you set a strong pick and rattle a guy's teeth," says Thompson, grinning, "that's a great feeling." Then, while denying all interest in the Mavericks' Detlef Schrempf even to his closest confidants on other teams, Walsh obtained him on Feb. 22 for forward-center Herb Williams. The 6'10" Schrempf had been sorely miscast in Dallas as a small forward and shooting guard, and he languished on the bench. For Indiana he has bulked up 15 pounds, to 215, and plays inside, but he still has the latitude to use his rare skills: the touch to hit the three-pointer, the power to rip a rebound and the speed to run the break. He has rapidly bloomed into one of the league's top sixth men. "Arnold Schwarzenegger," Versace calls him. Most of Schrempf's family is in Leverkusen, West Germany. It's a long way from Indiana, but winning is a major consolation. "We're just a bunch of young guys, messing around and having fun," Schrempf says. Indiana is 30-22 since the acquisition of Thompson, Wittman and Schrempf. The moves unclogged the low post to provide more spacing on the floor, allowing playmaker Vern Fleming to penetrate while opening up scoring opportunities for Chuck Person and Reggie Miller. Miller has particularly benefited, averaging almost 23 points since the trades, 10 more than in his first season and a half. He has added a midrange floating jumper to his long-distance shot, and at 6'7" and a spindly 185 pounds he's surprisingly physical. When he was kidded over the off-season in his native Los Angeles by Mike Tyson, he did back down—"Indiana? Indiana what? What were you all, like 10 and 72?"—but now he willfully engages the NBA's reigning heavyweight. "Bird and Magic, that was a matchup for the '80s," Miller says. "In the '90s, it's Air versus Hollywood." For the record, Jordan out-pointed "Hollywood" on Dec. 8, 36-22. While the trades certainly have worked out, perhaps the two key adjustments Versace has made involved Rik Smits and Person. Smits, the No. 2 pick in the '88 draft after the Los Angeles Clippers' Danny Manning, figured to come along slowly in the pivot behind incumbent Steve Stipanovich. Smits grew up in Eindhoven in the Netherlands and had played the game for only a couple of years before moving to the U.S. to attend Marist College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. "When I first saw him I said, 'This guy's a dog with fleas,' " recalls Person. "He was out of shape, thin, couldn't catch it and could only shoot it if nobody was on him." Smits is a pleasant, shy fellow who brightens less at a discussion of hoops than of his fascination with Cadillacs. His first was a '76 Coupe De Ville he got in college. "A 500 engine and 8.2 liters," he says. "It was the first roomy car I ever sat in." Thanks to his penchant for fouling, he put in more time in his half-dozen vintage Caddies than he did on the court last season. Stipanovich had a history of knee problems that eventually ended his career, and when Versace arrived he had to force-feed Smits to his teammates—and force his teammates to feed Smits. Versace let Smits play through foul trouble and built an offense that wouldn't freeze him out in the low post. Though Smits still doesn't rebound or pass that well and can be muscled out of position—"You've just got to have an attitude you're not going to take any crap from anybody, and he isn't there yet," Thompson says—he has added a hook and a move into the lane to his baseline turnaround and faceup jumper. His touch is deft. In a 136-117 win over the Denver Nuggets on Dec. 6, he sank 12 of 17 field goals, and his percentage for the year is .543, despite a paltry 10 stuffs. In the locker room after the Denver game, Person made a point of whispering encouraging words in Smits's ear. Person had been an unpopular first-round pick by Walsh in 1986—Pacer fans preferred Indiana native Scott Skiles—but was named Rookie of the Year. In the two seasons since then, he has struggled with his roles on the court and as a captain this season and last. Five days after saying he wanted to assume the leadership role, he showed up late to a shootaround. He either shot too little or was selfish, spoke out too often or was silent. Person took a lot of the heat for the Pacers' prolonged funks but was still expected to bail them out in the clutch, as he did when he made a last-second jump shot to give the Pacers their two-point win over the Bulls on Dec. 8. Person admits to some errors in judgment and believes many of those came from his frustration with losing. Versace has given Person free rein offensively, and while Person's scoring average has dipped slightly from 21.6 last season to 20.4 as of Sunday, his spirits are soaring. "He reminds me all the time, every day, whatever you want me to do, I'll do it," Versace says. Adds Person, "People think we're a team of bad draft picks. We're going to take those picks and stick them up everyone's butt." How successful Person & Co. will be depends largely on the continued development of Smits and whether the Pacers can survive their cruel schedule for the rest of this month. "A lot of people think they're halfway lucky, but they're for real," says the Pistons' Mark Aguirre. At the very least, Indiana is finally on the threshold of something good. ANDREW BERNSTEIN/NBA PHOTOS Person (45) isn't afraid to make big moves as he did against the Lakers' James Worthy. PHIL HUBER The slender Smits (24) is still learning to play aggressively. Schrempf (11), acquired in a trade last season, has become a force off Indiana's bench. DALE E. TAIT Fleming (above) can be a crowd pleaser; Thompson's board work pleases Versace. [See caption above.]
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Showing 1 - 4 results of 4 for search 'University of Santa Clara' Skip to content University of Santa Clara Santa Clara University is a private Jesuit university in Santa Clara, California. Established in 1851, Santa Clara University is the oldest operating institution of higher learning in California and has remained in its original location for years. The university's campus surrounds the historic Mission Santa Clara de Asís which traces its founding to 1776. The campus mirrors the Mission's architectural style and provides a fine early example of Mission Revival architecture. The university is classified as a "Doctoral/Professional" university by Carnegie Classification. The university offers bachelor's degrees, master's degrees, and doctoral degrees through its six colleges, the College of Arts and Sciences, School of Education and Counseling Psychology, Leavey School of Business, School of Engineering, Jesuit School of Theology, and School of Law. It enrolls about 5,400 undergraduate students and about 3,300 postgraduate students. Among Santa Clara's alumni are governors, congressmen, mayors, senators, and presidential cabinet members. Santa Clara alumni founded Nvidia and Farmer's Insurance, and created JavaScript. Santa Clara's alumni have won a number of honors, including Pulitzer Prizes, the NBA MVP Award, and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Santa Clara alumni have served as mayors of San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland, San Jose, and Washington, DC. The two most recent Governors of California attended Santa Clara. Santa Clara's sports teams are called the Broncos. Their colors are red and white. The Broncos compete at the NCAA Division I levels as members of the West Coast Conference in 19 sports. Broncos have won NCAA championships in both men's and women's soccer. Santa Clara's student athletes include current or former 58 MLB, 40 NFL, and 12 NBA players and 13 Olympic gold medalists. Provided by Wikipedia Showing 1 - 4 results of 4 for search 'University of Santa Clara', query time: 0.03s Refine Results Add to Book Bag Select result number 1 Echoes of the Golden Jubilee - Santa Clara College by University of Santa Clara Location: PAHRC Library, Philadelphia Archdiocesan Historical Research Center (PAHRC) Talk at University of Santa Clara by Day, Dorothy, 1897-1980. “...University of Santa Clara....” Location: Raynor Memorial Libraries, Marquette University University of Santa Clara diamond jubilee volume 1851-1926. Location: William H. Hannon Library, Loyola Marymount University Call Number: LD4881.S32 U65 1926 History Catholic Church Catholic Worker Movement Christianity Civil rights movements Collective farms Communism and culture Education Fasting Journalism Juvenile delinquents Labor Migrant labor Nonviolence Political aspects Quakers Rehabilitation Religious aspects Social conditions Welfare state
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Ohlstrom short film & resources The Premier's ANZAC Spirit School Prize Collections - Image Galleries for Multiple Wars Victory in the Pacific – 75th anniversary Collection Remembrance Day Collection How-To Guides to Research Virtual War Memorial Australia Adding Site to Mobile Device Thomas MUSGROVE Update Details If you confirm that you want to proceed with the update, this record will be locked for editing by all other users until you have finished. You will have 7 days to complete your changes before they will be automatically submitted. MUSGROVE, Thomas Enlisted: Not yet discovered Last Rank: Last Unit: Newcastle, New South Wales, 1889 Ipswich, Queensland Schooling: Died of wounds, France, 8 August 1918 Longueau British Cemetery Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Ipswich Soldier's Memorial Hall Great War Show Relationships World War 1 Service 8 Aug 1916: Involvement Private, SN 5369, 26th Infantry Battalion Embarked Private, SN 5369, 26th Infantry Battalion, HMAT Itonus, Brisbane Help us honour Thomas Musgrove's service by contributing information, stories, and images so that they can be preserved for future generations. Add my story Make a Dedication Showing 3 of 3 images. Click images to start slideshow. Find-a-grave - Link NAA - Attestation Paper and Service Record Thomas’ Commonwealth War Graves Commission record Add a Link or Document Add a Document * Link text * URL * File Date taken Year 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950 1949 1948 1947 1946 1945 1944 1943 1942 1941 1940 1939 1938 1937 1936 1935 1934 1933 1932 1931 1930 1929 1928 1927 1926 1925 1924 1923 1922 1921 1920 1919 1918 1917 1916 1915 1914 1913 1912 1911 1910 1909 1908 1907 1906 1905 1904 1903 1902 1901 Month January February March April May June July August September October November December Day 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Enter date, or part of, if known. Attribution * By submitting this picture you agree that you either own the copyright for this image, or have permission from the copyright owner to upload the image to the Virtual War Memorial under our general terms and conditions. Please enter a reason for this report below and submit. Reason for report* AIF Project Commonwealth War Graves Commission SA State Library WW1 Photos Australians at War Serving Australia Army Museum of South Australia Veterans SA Virtual War Memorial Australia is a registered business name of Virtual War Memorial Limited ACN 613 555 347 © Virtual War Memorial LTD | Software Development by MindVision
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US Health Insurers Supress Universal Healthcare, Employee Exposes Mari Sze In a Washington Post, an anonymous employee at the insurance company UnitedHealthcare leaked a video exhibiting company’s chief, Steve Nelson, bragging about how the corporation is doing all it can to undermine efforts to support the Medicare for All campaign in the United States. In an effort to inform the public who they are up against towards universal and free healthcare, the whistle-blower told Jeff Stein of Washington Post that the video was recorded during an employee town hall in February. Although the video was not included in the post, Stein reported that the CEO expressed strong opposition towards the idea of universal Medicare as it excludes the private sector, which, he believes, does a better job of practicing healthcare services than the government. In the post, Stein explained that Nelson, in answering inquiries on how UnitedHealthcare responds to the Medicare for All movement, implied about well-thought backroom dealings. The executive’s remarks were leaked just days after 2020 presidential candidate, Bernie Sanders, introduced Medicare for All legislation that aims to advance healthcare as a right, eliminating the private insurance sector and providing a cheap healthcare system to every Americans. The bill was supported by 14 senators and 60 plus progressive organizations composed of different health practitioners, such as nurses and physicians. With the leakage of the CEO’s remarks, Sanders is quick to respond via Twitter, saying that Nelson’s greed is sure to end once his team makes it to the Whitehouse. “We will end the disgrace of millions of people being denied health care while a single company earns $226 billion and its CEO makes $7.5 million in compensation,” he stated. Up to this day, 17 developed countries, which includes Japan, United Kingdom, Norway, Brunei, United Arab Emirates, Italy, Spain, and many others have established single-payer systems, which the Medicare for All campaign advances for. Previous articleU.S. Online Lenders Prepare for a Coming Recession Next articleMultibillion Fintech M&As Are Taking Place as Competition Heats Up Life Insurance Applications Up By 7% In the US In 2020 Georgia Insurance Exchange Enrollees Surge By 10 Percent
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READ THE FOLLOWING TERMS AND CONDITIONS Wellberri, Inc. (“WB”) owns and operates the Internet site located at www.wellberri.com (the “Site”), located on servers in the United States. By accessing and browsing and/or using the pages in this Site, you agree to these terms and conditions (“Terms and Conditions”) and you attest that you are at least the minimum employment age required in the State or Province in which you are located. These Terms and Conditions contain disclaimers and other provisions that limit our liability to you. If you do not agree to these Terms and Conditions, immediately exit the Site and do not browse or use this Site. While we make reasonable efforts to provide accurate and timely description of the duties and responsibilities of the employees working for WB and its partners, which are located in the United States and may or may not be farming or manufacturing operations (“WB Partners”). 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Even though most of us in our houses are praying for a miracle to stop the spread of the contagious virus, the youngest self-made billionaire is busy expanding her real estate portfolio. If you know Kylie Jenner, then you would know that she doesn’t settle for anything less. She blew some serious cash on a brand-new mansion in Holmby Hills, California – the exclusive neighborhood explains the $36.5-million price tag! Others describe it as a resort-like property that spans .83 acres. The stunning real estate may cost an arm and a leg, but the 22-year-old got it at a steal price. The abode was originally listed for $9 million more than the amount the reality star paid for. The spectacular compound construction’s completion was in August 2019 when it was first listed in the market for a whopping $55 million, and then, it was reduced to $45.95 million just in April. Reports say the makeup mogul knows the owner personally, which may explain the bargain. The abode features a spacious pool area TMZ also claimed that the former owner also sold his Palm Springs land, where Kylie is rumored to be building another house. The mansion can house 20 cars in the parking space A source claimed that the celebrity has been enjoying her new house, which boasts a contemporary design. Her bundle of joy, Stormi, and baby daddy, Travis Scott, also spend time at the new mansion, the insider added. The expensive residence has a spacious garage that can house up to 20 vehicles, which is quite appropriate for Kylie since she has throngs of luxury cars. It also has seven bedrooms and 14 baths, perfect for when she holds parties. Stassie is spending quarantine with her BFF It has a guardhouse, a kitchen for a chef, game rooms, a home theater, a gym, a basketball court, and a pair of guest houses, perfect for her pals like Anastasia Karanikolaou, commonly known as Stassie. The modern design and features of the property are fit for the social media superstar because it screams elegance. It’s a single-level house that measures 15,350 sq ft and is considered as a compound. Another Lavish Purchase Meanwhile, the tycoon is definitely on a shopping spree because just days after her multi-million purchase, she again shelled out a whopping $15 million for a Hidden Hills vacant lot spanning 5 acres. It is said to be one of the largest in the area. Along with the sale is an approved plan for a monster house that measures 18,000 sq ft. However, it isn’t clear if Kylie will use this. Dream of Meeting Queen Elizabeth? These are the Rules You Need to Remember in Case You Do In her 67 years on the British throne, Queen Elizabeth has met her fair share of people from world leaders to... TeresaNovember 30, 2020
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Search results for "UK, Canada, USA" A rowdy, unorthodox Santa Claus is fighting to save his declining business. Meanwhile, Billy, a neglected and precocious 12 year old, hires a hit man to kill Santa after receiving… Country: UK, Canada, USA Two siblings spend the night alone with their new stepmother. Stuck in a remote mountain cabin, the trio are terrorised by a supernatural force. The Addams Family (2019) The Addams family’s lives begin to unravel when they face-off against a treacherous, greedy crafty reality-TV host while also preparing for their extended family to arrive for a major celebration. Genre: Animation, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Horror Victor Frankenstein (2015) Eccentric scientist Victor Von Frankenstein creates a grotesque creature in an unorthodox scientific experiment. The 9th Life of Louis Drax (2016) A psychologist who begins working with a young boy who has suffered a near-fatal fall finds himself drawn into a mystery that tests the boundaries of fantasy and reality. Genre: Drama, Fantasy, Mystery, Thriller When a young woman unexpectedly arrives at an older man’s workplace, looking for answers, the secrets of the past threaten to unravel his new life. Wind River (2017) An FBI agent teams with the town’s veteran game tracker to investigate a murder that occurred on a Native American reservation. Stan & Ollie (2018) With their golden era long behind them, comedy duo Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy embark on a variety hall tour of Britain and Ireland. Despite the pressures of a hectic… Eastern Promises (2007) A Russian teenager, living in London, dies during childbirth but leaves clues to a midwife in her journal, that could tie her child to a rape involving a violent Russian… Genre: Crime, Mystery, Thriller Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (2010) Accident prone teenager, Percy discovers he’s actually a demi-God, the son of Poseidon, and he is needed when Zeus’ lightning is stolen. Percy must master his new found skills in… The Legend of Tarzan (2016) Tarzan, having acclimated to life in London, is called back to his former home in the jungle to investigate the activities at a mining encampment.
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Our Journalism Report with us August 26, 2018 August 28, 2018 by Benjamin Ohio oil Pipeline Fight Pits Local Activists Against National Forces by Eilish Spear OBERLIN, OHIO — On a snowy night in Feb. 2018, the Oberlin City Council meeting was one of the liveliest rooms in the small college town, 40 minutes west of Cleveland. At issue was a $100,000 settlement proposal from the Canadian natural gas pipeline company, Enbridge Inc., regarding the proposed construction of the NEXUS Gas Transmission (NEXUS) pipeline through the town’s southern edge. Chants of “they’re breaking our laws, they’re taking our rights, but we won’t give up without a fight,” rang through the city council chambers as over 60 Oberlin College students and community members raised their voices in opposition to the settlement. City council members expressed frustration with the noise and disruption of the protestors. As tensions rose, it became increasingly difficult to see the reality: that the two seemingly oppositional forces were in almost complete agreement over the issue of the pipeline. Five years earlier, before anyone in the town had even heard of the NEXUS pipeline, the City of Oberlin passed an ordinance known as the Community Bill of Rights and Obligations, which established an explicit ban on “gas and oil extraction and related activities.” The Bill of Rights would have been groundbreaking regardless of the circumstances, but for a town of 8,000 people and just five square miles, located in the heart of Trump country (nearly every surrounding precinct voted for Trump with a margin of over 60%), the ordinance explicitly banning natural gas fracking and pipelines was unprecedented. The ordinance stated that oil and gas extraction was banned “because that extraction and that waste disposal cannot be achieved without violating the rights of the people, environment and communities within the City by endangering their health, safety, and welfare.” In order to cement its legal weight, the Bill of Rights removed “certain legal powers from gas and oil extraction corporations operating within the City of Oberlin; secures rights that supersede state laws, permits, and other authorizations which interfere with the rights secured by this ordinance; and imposes liabilities and fines for violations thereof.” The Ordinance, ultimately passed with more than 70% of the vote, stated that any “person or corporation” in violation of the Ordinance “shall be guilty of a criminal offense,” and any violation would bear no legislative weight in overturning these established rights of the citizens and environment of the City of Oberlin. When Spectra Energy (later purchased by the much larger pipeline company Enbridge Inc.) proposed the NEXUS Gas Transmission pipeline project a few months later, Oberlin’s Bill of Rights faced its first test. The proposed pipeline would run for 257.5 miles, originating at the Kensington Processing Plant in Columbiana County, Ohio, and extending to Michigan before connecting with an existing project that would carry natural gas to the Dawn Hub in Ontario, Canada. Through connections with existing pipelines managed by Texas Eastern, DTE Gas, and Vector Pipeline—a routine agreement in such pipeline developments—the NEXUS pipeline was intended to connect markets in the Appalachian Basin with Chicago , other midwestern markets, and Canada. At peak capacity, the 36-inch diameter pipeline would be able to transport 1,500,000 dekatherms (Dth)—1.5 billion cubic feet (Bcf)—of natural gas per day. The pipeline’s route. From http://radio.wosu.org/post/ohio-property-owners-sue-block-gas-pipeline#stream/0 On the surface, the NEXUS pipeline appeared to be just another natural gas pipeline in an era of rampant energy infrastructure growth and lax federal regulation on the oil and gas industry. Yet the seemingly routine pipeline proposal became contentious when news surfaced of its route through the densely populated counties of northeast Ohio: Stark, Summit, Medina and Lorain. Oberlin, a small, liberal college town with an ambitious carbon neutrality plan and a community bill of rights explicitly banning just such infrastructure development, is situated in the middle of Lorain County and almost exactly half-way along the proposed pipeline route. The City of Oberlin has a long history of progressive activism, largely because of the college that makes the town its home. The first co-educational institution of higher education and the first to allow people of color, Oberlin has been on the front lines of social change and environmental activism since its founding in 1833. Its environmental and social progressivism has extended to the town around it, culminating in the town’s carbon neutrality plan and Community Bill of Rights and Obligations. The college thus attracts student activists, and inspires them enormously once there. This history of activism has also repeatedly exposed fissures within the progressive left itself. The fight over NEXUS was no different, with deep divides in the nitty gritty process of the organizing and in the grander, more ideological questions surrounding what, exactly, was even being demanded. Rachael Hood, a lead organizer of the student group Students for Energy Justice, said that Oberlin’s history is both inspiring and educational, given the unique challenges of the process in such a small community. The challenges are completely different than in a large city because, as Hood put it, “this is a small town, and everybody knows everybody.” “If you’re in a big city, it’s really easy to just criticize a person and a platform or to criticize a group, but in Oberlin, everybody knows someone who is involved. You [always] know someone who knows the person you’re talking about, and it’s a lot more personal. I think in that way activism is challenging in Oberlin, because you are faced with a lot more of humanity. It’s about real people.” Hood said that “if you can be a strong activist here, you can be a strong activist in a lot of places. Because here you have to deal with the personal aspect of it.” The personal aspect of activism, and thus of the fight against NEXUS, combined with the unique legal circumstances of the City of Oberlin, made the town a prime candidate for a dramatic fight to come. Oberlin students and community members protesting the pipeline construction in early June. Photo courtesy of Rachael Hood. Because the NEXUS pipeline is ultimately an interstate and international project, the project required the review and authorization of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), only after which would the pipeline be licensed to continue. In response to Spectra Energy’s official application for a license in November 2015, the City of Oberlin, as well as groups including Citizens for Safe and Sustainable Energy (CSSE), the Coalition to Reroute NEXUS (CORN), Sustainable Medina, and the Sierra Club, all filed testimony in opposition to the pipeline. However, it was not until Nov. 30, 2016 that FERC approved the NEXUS pipeline. Writing in its environmental impact statement (EIS), the commission acknowledged that there would be “some adverse environmental impacts,” but justified the project by writing that “impacts would be reduced to less-than-significant levels with the implementation of NEXUS’ and Texas Eastern’s [one of the affiliated pipeline companies] proposed mitigation measures and the FERC staff’s recommendations.” FERC established an environmental compliance inspection program to ensure that SPECTRA would not violate existing environmental regulations, an action they believed was enough to ensure that the pipeline would not be a disaster. The approval process stalled when the Obama administration-appointed commissioner Norman Bay resigned in January 2017. Because the commission did not have a voting quorum, the NEXUS pipeline approval was delayed until Trump nominees Neil Chatterjee and Robert Powelson—both with ties to the oil industry and pro-pipeline policy positions—were confirmed by the U.S. Senate on Aug. 3, 2017. With a voting quorum restored, the commission granted final approval of the NEXUS pipeline on August 25th, 2017. Their appointments indicated a nation wide shift towards more pipeline approvals. But the City of Oberlin and environmentalists were not yet defeated. John Elder, founding member and vice president of Citizens for Safe and Sustainable Energy (CSSE), an Oberlin environmental advocacy group, said that his and several other groups filed for a re-hearing of the issue. The request for a review of a potential re-hearing was successful, and FERC agreed to re-examine the decision. Carolyn Elefant, an energy and eminent domain attorney hired by the City of Oberlin in 2015 to represent the town throughout the FERC proceedings, described the three primary tenants of Oberlin’s legal argument for a re-hearing. First, the pipeline was in direct violation of the city’s statutes—namely, the Oberlin Community Bill of Rights, which bars oil and gas infrastructure within city limits. Second, according to Elefant, the pipeline was not necessary. Six other pipelines in various stages of litigation and construction are within a reasonable distance of the proposed NEXUS pipeline, and could conceivably carry all of the expected capacity of the NEXUS pipeline. Indeed, the upcoming ET Rover pipeline, a 713-mile long pipeline with a 42-inch diameter, will run an almost identical route to the NEXUS pipeline in places throughout Ohio. Although the NEXUS pipeline is designed to carry 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day (in comparison to the Rover pipeline’s potential for 3.25 billion cubic feet per day), the majority of pipelines do not carry even close to their maximum daily amount, particularly after the initial contracts for extraction have expired. Because the initial contracts for many of these other, similar pipelines’ capacity requirements have already expired, capacity in many has been freed up, meaning that existing pipelines could carry the proposed expansion. Finally, according to Elefant, Oberlin’s case for a rehearing included the potential for alternative routes that would bypass the city, eliminating the legal battle altogether. It is in the numerous requests for rehearing from community groups and the City of Oberlin that the remarkable fight against the NEXUS pipeline emerges. While similar pipelines in the area like the ET Rover pipeline were pushed through the FERC licensing process without sufficient care for environmental and economic concerns—not to mention actual necessity—NEXUS was and continues to be met with emphatic opposition. On July 25 of this year, FERC denied the appeal for a rehearing in an 85-page rebuttal to the claims made by the interested parties, particularly those of Sierra Club and the City of Oberlin. The decision was not unanimous, however. Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur, who originally supported the approval of the NEXUS pipeline and again voted in favor, published a partial dissent. Although she originally believed the project was in the public interest, LaFleur argued that “the Commission erred by finding that downstream GHG emissions in this case are not indirect impacts that must be quantified and considered as part of our responsibilities under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).” FERC’s unwillingness to take into account downstream GHG emissions of the NEXUS pipeline was not an outlier. In the Tennessee Gas Pipeline approval process, FERC decided that “because it does not know where the gas will ultimately be consumed,” it was impossible to determine the exact amount of GHG emissions for the project. LaFleur’s insistence that the commission did not take climate change into account when considering the pipeline established an interesting potential precedent for pipeline fights in the future. Commissioner Richard Glick agreed with LaFleur, and also noted that the Commission did not demonstrate the necessity of the pipeline. “I do not believe,” he wrote, “the Commission can find that the Project is in the public interest without determining the significance of the Project’s contribution to climate change.” Despite this defeat, the City of Oberlin and other parties are not completely devoid of hope. According to Elefant, any or all of the parties can now file a Petition for Review in federal court. “There are 60 days to file a petition for review,” Elefant said, “so it gives people a chance to think about whether they want to take that as the next step.” Elefant said that if the case is appealed, “you’re starting out with at best a 25% chance. But if you do win on these issues, and the court were to say, ‘look FERC, there isn’t really any need for this project,’ that would mean the project violates the Natural Gas Act. The company would have to remove it.” This ruling gets to the core of FERC’s decision and raises critical challenges to the energy industry, and could ultimately result in the project’s rejection. But, says Elefant, for more procedural challenges—for instance, if NEXUS should have considered an alternative route—FERC would simply have to go back and reconsider the issues, “and if it found that they should have looked at something and it was more serious than they thought, the remedy would probably be more along the lines of additional mitigation rather than pipeline removal.” When asked if he thought there was anything that the City of Oberlin, Citizens for Safe and Sustainable Energy, or any other interested party could have done to produce a different result, John Elder sullenly replied, “probably not, given how FERC operates.” FERC is, however, undergoing an internal review. Organizations like Citizens for Safe and Sustainable Energy have urged Ohio Senators Sherrod Brown and Rob Portman to “call for hearings into FERC’s abuses of law and of power.” The open comment period closed on July 25 of this year, but it is unclear when the result will come out. John Elder, founding member and now vice president of CSSE, said thousands of comments urged FERC to take climate change into account. “The industry of course took the opposite side: speed up the process,” Elder said. “We don’t know yet how the commission will re-write the rules of its procedures. But we’ll keep pressuring.” The slow regulatory process has not halted the pipeline’s progress. According to Rachael Hood, Oberlin students observed the NEXUS construction crews starting initial pipeline construction preparation and cutting down trees in late March. Official construction work began at the end of May, despite the fact that the FERC reviewal process was not yet complete. How can a company start construction without having final authorization to the project, or any official rights to the land? The secret lies in the intricacies of eminent domain, “the power of the government to take private property and convert it into public use.” Originally intended to ensure that landowners would be justly compensated for public (government) use of their land, and thus to ensure that private property—a keystone in the maintenance of a free and democratic society—was protected, particularly in large scale transportation and infrastructure projects, eminent domain has been manipulated in every which way by the government, private landowners, and major corporations. Once NEXUS was granted a certificate, says Elefant, the pipeline company went to court with the City of Oberlin to achieve the power of eminent domain in the city. In its suit, The City of Oberlin raised several arguments for why it was premature to even exercise eminent domain. A vast majority of the challenges to the pipeline involve the very fact that it was in violation of the Constitution. Because most, if not all, of the natural gas transported through the pipeline was going not to Ohio markets, but to Michigan and ultimately Canada, the argument that the pipeline was a public utility, and thus qualified for eminent domain—private property utilized for public use—was invalid. Elefant says that “even city property under the Constitution is considered private property. For purposes of the Constitution, it can’t be taken for a private use: it has to be taken for a public use.” If land is approved for public use, there must be compensation equaling the value of the land in question. For NEXUS, this process included extensive surveying along the route of the pipeline, including entering private property without permission to prepare for construction. In some cases, armed officers accompanied these surveyors. Hood described a process in which pipeline surveyors “go door to door along the route, and try to get people to sign off their land in an easement.” If they refuse, the surveyors “will then say ‘oh all of your neighbors have already signed off, you should just sign it,’ and so then they’ll sign it. But maybe their neighbor didn’t sign it, and so now their neighbor is surrounded by people who have signed.” On the other end of this process, Elder said “the Sierra Club [was] looking for landowners who were refusing to sign leases. We couldn’t find any land owners. Even landowners who didn’t want the pipeline nevertheless had to sign leases.” The City of Oberlin continues to put up a fight. Elder says that as far as he knows, “the process of eminent domain for the City of Oberlin property is not yet complete. A court has to determine the value of the taking of the property, and NEXUS has to have paid the city that amount of money before the eminent domain process is completed.” But, because federal law overwhelmingly supports the rights of pipeline companies over those of individual land owners and municipalities, “pipeline companies have powers to go ahead and do a lot of things even before that eminent domain process is completed.” NEXUS can do all but lay the pipe across the land before ink has even dried on the decision. Elefant doubted that the City of Oberlin’s eminent domain challenge would succeed in court. “It’s nothing to do with the quality of the attorneys or anything, it’s just [with] eminent domain, once they see a FERC certificate, they will always grant the use of eminent domain.” The status of the City of Oberlin’s challenge is as of now unclear; the Law Director of the city did not respond to a request for comment. Settlement, NIMBY, and the Place of Community Activism Back in the Oberlin City Council Chambers on March 5, 2018, two weeks after the tense and dramatic session where protestors disrupted the proceedings, City Council unanimously voted against the $100,000 settlement to Enbridge, Inc., cementing the city’s commitment against the oil and gas industry, in keeping with its Bill of Rights and the will of the vast majority of the community. The decision was neither easy nor a resolution to the problem. A few weeks earlier, the neighboring city of Green, Ohio, settled with the company for $7.5 million, after spending thousands of dollars on proposed alternatives to the pipeline and in similar fights as Oberlin. Oberlin’s final decision was the result of three separate meetings for an emergency vote on the settlement. The first two ended in split votes over the issue of the settlement, apparently inspired by NEXUS’s promise to bury the pipeline underground and thus allow for the construction of a new water main. However, the company instead decided to continue with an elevated pipeline that would block the new water line despite opposition from the Oberlin community. The unanimous rejection of the settlement bore little weight against the inevitability of the NEXUS pipeline in Oberlin. Council President Bryan Burgess told The Morning Journal, “It kind of defeats the purpose of having an agreement if they jump the gun on it.” Councilmember Ronnie Rimbert agreed. “There is no doubt in my mind that we have lost our long battle with NEXUS and the Federal Regulatory Commission over the pipeline. The pipeline will go in,” Rimbert told the Oberlin Review. The vote was purely symbolic. The environmental advocacy organization Coalition to Reroute NEXUS, or CORN, was established in direct response to the pipeline, and has been one of the primary organizations in the fight against its construction. CORN’s mission statement indicates an acceptance of building infrastructure “for getting Ohio’s energy to market” while arguing for an alternative route that travels through a less densely populated area. In fact, this form of activism, known as NIMBY or “not in my backyard” has substantial scholarly backing. Political scientist Carol Hager argues that NIMBY activism actually has the potential to be a beneficial method of environmental activism and increase participatory politics. In the case of the NEXUS pipeline, many advocates, particularly members of CORN, argue that a compromise over the route of NEXUS is the best possible solution; they say it would protect vulnerable communities and population centers, move the pipeline away from crucial watersheds, prevent environmental disasters, and meet the area’s energy needs. No discussion of a pipeline fight would be complete without acknowledging Standing Rock, the Reservation in North Dakota that was a site of protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline. While NEXUS does not bear the same concerns over indigenous rights as the Dakota Access pipeline, the implications of NIMBY activism ring a familiar tune. Rachael Hood is adamant in SEJ’s disavowal of the practice, as opposed to arguing for a reroute like CORN. “Oberlin students and SEJ have never supported the NIMBY activism, we’ve always said ‘no pipeline here no pipeline anywhere.’” NIMBY, she says, is an incredibly harmful practice that “completely violates any sort of environmental justice standard and obviously targets poorer and more marginalized communities.” For instance, the Dakota Access Pipeline fight originated “because they rerouted it through the reservation because a majority white neighborhood didn’t want it,” resulting in the abuse of indigenous rights and a community that did not have the legal power or resources to fight the immensely powerful oil and gas industry. Hood continued, “NIMBY makes me very upset, because if you don’t want it in your community, and you think it’s so damaging, then why would you want it anywhere else?” Elder is equally adamant against NIMBY, despite his understanding that CSSE must be willing to work with groups like CORN to achieve their similar goals. “I made it clear that personally I did not agree with their rerouting because that means it will just be in somebody else’s backyard,” he said. But, Elder continued, “if we don’t talk with each other then we can’t learn from each other, and we’re going to need to be allies in this process.” Elder is still convinced that he was correct in this assessment, particularly as many members of CORN have begun to see the harmful results of fracking and pipelines, particularly as many similar pipelines, including the ET Rover pipeline, have resulted in enormous natural gas spills since their construction. The issue of NIMBY relates back to the settlement under consideration in the Oberlin City Council. When the city of Green settled with NEXUS, it appeared that the city had been resigned to the inevitability of the pipeline, and determined to bite the bullet and get at least a small amount out of it. But in Oberlin, the settlement became a symbol of the fight itself. Hood, at a protest earlier this summer at a site of pipeline construction in Oberlin. Photo by Ralph Orr. The incredibly human and personal aspect of activism at Oberlin—so eloquently described by Hood—makes the decision not to settle, and the decision to ask for more than a mere reroute of the pipeline, a whole lot more difficult. When asked what it means to advocate not only for a negotiation within a system where the oil and gas industry wields immense power, but rather a fight against the system itself, Hood says that winning becomes profoundly more difficult. In a fight that pits a town of 8,000 against a natural gas boom, a Fortune 500 company with $57.6 billion in assets—often rated as one of the most popular stocks for investors—and federal laws and regulatory bodies that overwhelmingly favor pipelines over environmental and economic concerns, these questions are ubiquitous. Hood, for her part, believes that radical change and big social movements are not possible if the end goal is to settle for something “slightly less upsetting or slightly less awful.” Moving the pipeline a few hundred feet away from Oberlin’s water source, for instance, doesn’t help the people who are the most vulnerable victims of climate change. “I think that SEJ believes in radical change that comes from taking down the entire fossil fuel dependency that we have and fighting for a livable world where people aren’t ripped out of their homes because they’re going under water.” “We’re not seeing the pipeline being moved as a win. The win is when the pipeline isn’t there,” she said. But she is still hopeful. “I think your wins aren’t as obvious, but I also think that when you’re building a movement your fight doesn’t end with this one pipeline. If you don’t have things exactly how you want them in this one pipeline fight, I think you can still argue that you’re making progress in this greater movement. If you see moving the pipeline route just away from your water source as the win and the end of the movement, that’s not the success that I’m looking for.” The existential angst that is evident in activism over the NEXUS, represented by the contradictions between allies like SEJ, CORN, and the cities of Oberlin and Green, and heightened by Oberlin’s long history of student and community activism, is a microcosm of the questions of environmental activism everywhere. What does it mean to ask for a complete overthrow of the existing system, while also ensuring that the poorest, most marginalized, and most traditionally silenced people do not bear the burden of the consequences for such demands? How can incrementalism and essentialism be combined for the actual, real-life people on the ground? As for the issue of the settlement, and the argument that since the pipeline was, by early 2018, essentially inevitable and thus Oberlin should simply accept the settlement, both Hood and Elder are adamant in their disdain. “I understand and I don’t minimize that $100,000 is a lot of money,” says Hood, but she pointed out that $100,000 is about .8% of the city’s total budget, and in the grand scheme of things, not at all worth the concession. For his part, Elder pointed out that since the majority of the citizens of Oberlin had voted in favor of the Community Bill of Rights in 2013, it would be in violation of their rights to even consider voting for the settlement. The ability to refuse $100,000 is nevertheless a position of extreme privilege, one that the City of Green, for instance, did not feel they had. “I agree, that’s a very privileged standpoint to have,” Hood said. But, she continued, “when you have privilege, it’s your responsibility to use that privilege to fight for people who don’t have that option. I’ve talked to people in the surrounding counties who say ‘Oh my gosh, Oberlin is an inspiration. They never gave up the fight.’” The symbolism of a small Ohio town united around a shared commitment to environmental justice and the rights of its citizens, standing up to an international pipeline is immensely powerful. “I think that we have the opportunity to keep fighting when a lot of people couldn’t,” Hood said. “I think that it meant to a lot of the people around us that those people in Oberlin, they’re not going to stop fighting.” Eilish Spear is a junior from Oberlin College and Oberlin Conservatory of Music studying politics and viola performance. The views expressed in this article are those of the writer. The Contemporary takes no position on matters of policy or opinion. The cover photo is courtesy of Rachael Hood. 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Nguyen Vu Thuc Linh PhD Student, European University Institute The writings and unpublished prison letters of Jacek Kuroń (1934-2004), one of the most Polish engaged activists after WWII, will serve as the material basis for highlighting the productive and creative side of the politics of solidarity historically exemplified by Kuroń and his collaborators. My dissertation investigates how Kuroń’s political writings, autobiography and prison letters have shaped the attitudes and practices of the political opposition. His political trajectory can be traced back from his Marxist and revisionist activism in the 1950s to his founding role in KOR (Workers’ Defense Committee) in 1976. Kuroń’s biography and writings as well as his social environment, which helped form the political and emotional habitus of many activists, epitomize the complexity and difficulties of creating a sustainable oppositional political community. Yet, Kuroń has never been easy to categorize. While being an admired and contested icon of the political opposition and its social sensitivity, his left-wing ideals have become difficult to maintain in post-89 Polish society and he remains relatively unknown beyond Poland. My research project aims at reconstructing Kuroń’s understanding of politics by linking it to the social and emotional dynamic in his closest political surrounding. In this context, understanding the role of emotions in shaping political friendships that became a social basis for political mobilization reveals the hitherto under-researched side of Solidarność.
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South Africa’s Women Team’s Captain’s Tweet On RCB is Trending Royal Challengers Bangalore suffered their fifth lose of the league yesterday. The war was between Royal Challengers Bangalore and Kolkata Knight Riders at Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore. Royal Challengers Bangalore are sitting at the second lowest position in the score table. They are probably in the same position as they were in the previous seasons. Inspite of having a star-studded team Royal Challengers Bangalore haven’t won a single tournament in all these years. Everyone had a lots of hope from the players of RCB since the start of this league, however people are left disappointed and heartbroken after the team’s failure in every match. Although every player is making a lot of efforts to win the match including the skipper of the team and AB De Villiers. Both of them have been giving exceptional performances since the start of this league but however, they have been fighting alone. In the last night’s match, Virat Kohli once again gave a heart winning performance by scoring 68 runs in 44 balls, hitting 5 fours and 3 sixes. However, once again the team wasn’t able to win the match. Once again the fans of RCB and Virat Kohli were left heartbroken. But seems like we were not the one who were disappointed by RCB’s failure last night but the captain of South Africa’s women cricket team was equally disappointed by RCB’s performance. She took to twitter to express her disappointment, here’s what she tweeted: https://twitter.com/danevn81/status/990660993721274371 Well, we all have the same expression for the team right now. Share your thoughts with us in the comments below. Related Items:DANE VAN NIEKERK, rcb 5 Players Who Played Brilliantly For Chennai But Failed For RCB Gautam Gambhir Blames Virat Kohli’s Leadership For RCB’s Exit From IPL 2020 Aakash Chopra Gave SRH’s Win’s Credit To ‘Charminar’ Watch: Ziva Dhoni’s Viral ‘Whistle Podu’ Dance ‘Universe Boss’ Chris Gayle Was In Goa With This Bollywood Beauty “No Regrets”: Rohit Sharma Opened Up About His Dismissal At The Gabba On Day 2 Indian opener Rohit Sharma has found himself at the receiving end of criticism after...
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theendoc Research News for Engineers, Doctors and other professionals Specific bacteria in the small intestine are crucial for fat absorption Although the vast majority of research on the gut microbiome has focused on bacteria in the large intestine, a new study — one of a few to concentrate on microbes in the upper gastrointestinal tract — shows how the typical calorie-dense western diet can induce expansion of microbes that promote the digestion and absorption of high-fat foods. Several studies have shown that these bacteria can multiply within 24 to 48 hours in the small bowel in response to consumption of high-fat foods. The findings from this work suggest that these microbes facilitate production and secretion of digestive enzymes into the small bowel. Those digestive enzymes break down dietary fat, enabling the rapid absorption of calorie-dense foods. Concurrently, the microbes release bioactive compounds. These compounds stimulate the absorptive cells in the intestine to package and transport fat for absorption. Over time, the steady presence of these microbes can lead to over-nutrition and obesity. “These bacteria are part of an orchestrated series of events that make lipid absorption more efficient,” said the study’s senior author, Eugene B. Chang, MD, the Martin Boyer Professor of Medicine and director of the NIH Digestive Diseases Research Core Center at the University of Chicago Medicine. “Few people have focused on the microbiome of the small intestine, but this is where most vitamins and other micronutrients are digested and absorbed.” “Our study is one of the first to show that specific small-bowel microbes directly regulate both digestion and absorption of lipids,” he added. “This could have significant clinical applications, especially for the prevention and treatment of obesity and cardiovascular disease.” The goals of the study, published April 11, 2018 in the journal Cell Host and Microbe, were to find out if microbes were required for digestion and absorption of fats, to begin to learn which microbes were involved, and to assess the role of diet-induced microbes on the digestion and uptake of fats. The study involved mice that were germ-free, bred in isolated chambers and harboring no intestinal bacteria, and mice that were “specific pathogen free (SPF),” meaning healthy but harboring common non-disease causing microbes. The germ-free mice, even when fed a high-fat diet, were unable to digest or absorb fatty foods. They did not gain weight. Instead, they had elevated lipid levels in their stool. SPF mice that received a high-fat diet did gain weight. This diet quickly boosted the abundance of certain microbes in the small intestine, including microbes from the Clostridiaceae and Peptostreptococcaceae families. A member of Clostridiaceae was found to specifically impact fat absorption. The abundance of other bacterial families decreased on a high-fat diet including Bifidobacteriacaea and Bacteriodacaea, which are commonly associated with leanness. When germ-free mice were subsequently introduced to microbes that contribute to fat digestion, they quickly gained the ability to absorb lipids. “Our at least in mice, a high-fat diet can profoundly alter the microbial make-up of the small intestine,” Chang said. “Certain dietary pressures, such as calorie-dense foods, attract specific bacterial strains into the small intestine. These microbes are then able to allow the host to digest this high-fat diet and absorb fats. That can even impact extra-intestinal organs such as the pancreas.” “This work has important implications in developing approaches to combat obesity,” the authors conclude. This includes decreasing the abundance or activity of certain microbes that promote fat absorption, or increasing the abundance of microbes that may inhibit fat uptake. “I would say the most important takeaway overall is the concept that what we eat — our diet on a daily basis — has a profound impact on the abundance and the type of bacteria we harbor in our gut,” and now an assistant professor at Midwestern University in Downers Grove, IL. “These microbes directly influence our metabolism and our propensity to gain weight on certain diets.” Although this study was very preliminary, she added, “our results suggest that maybe we could use pre- or probiotics or even develop post-biotics (bacterial-derived compounds or metabolites) to enhance nutrient uptake for people with malabsorption disorders, such as Crohn’s disease, or we could test novel ways to decrease obesity.” Declining central American frog species are bouncing back How life generates new forms Hotel Shagun Bhopal Best Luxury Hotel in Bhopal Click Here Hotel Shagun is located just away from Bhopal City Centre Market, And only 2 Km away from railway station, and bus stand; thus making it an apt location for enthusiastic explorers who are looking for convenience plus luxury. Each of the 28 well-appointed
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Username *This field is required Email Address *A valid email address is required Password *This field is required Confirm Password *Your password and comfirmation password doesn't match TheNextStream On Hotstar TOP GENRES & TAGS Explore All Categories And Services Homepage > Elizabeth Berridge Elizabeth Berridge (born May 2, 1962) is an American film and theatre actress. She is best-known for playing Constanze Mozart in the Academy Award winning 1984 film Amadeus. Berridge was born in New Rochelle, New York, the daughter of George Berridge, a lawyer, and Mary L. Berridge (née Robinson), a social worker. The Berridge family settled in Larchmont, New York, where she attended Chatsworth Elementary School, there she began to perform and sing. Due to her acting commitments, she earned her diploma through an independent-study program at Mamaroneck High School. Berridge was called in to audition for the part of Constanze Mozart after filming had already commenced in Prague on Amadeus. The actress who had begun the role, Meg Tilly, injured her leg in a neighborhood soccer game and had to quit the project. Two actresses were flown to Prague, and after a week's auditions Berridge was given the part (supposedly because the other actress was "too pretty" to play the part of an innkeeper's daughter). Berridge (and the other cast members) remained in Prague for six months to complete the onsite filming. Description above from the Wikipedia article Elizabeth Berridge, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia. Westchester, New York, USA Cult Classic Movies All Time Classic TV Shows Binge Worthy TV Shows What’s Streaming What’s on Netflix What’s on Prime Video What’s on Hotstar What’s on Voot About TheNextStream What is TheNextStream? We at TheNextStream are determined to make your life binge by providing you a Handpicked collection of Best Web Series & Movies which you can enjoy solo, with your family and friends. Design and Develop with Love by Fanatic Coders Back to top
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Media Intelligence Services Jenna Reed Joins Durée & Company as Director of Operations by Bulldog Reporter | May 31, 2018 Durée Ross, president and founder of Fort Lauderdale-based full-service public relations, marketing and special events firm Durée & Company, announced that Jenna Reed recently joined the firm as director of operations. Reed brings a wealth of diverse experience in development management, events and communications, and administration to the firm. In her position, she manages and coordinates support services of the office, including operations, human resources, recordkeeping and more; and works on special events and marketing projects for the firm. Prior to joining Durée & Company, Reed served as the development and family support manager for Cure SMA in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. She also worked as the events and communications manager for Debbie’s Dream Foundation: Curing Stomach Cancer in Davie, Florida. Before that time, she was the development director for the Greater Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce Education Foundation in Boca Raton, Florida. Prior to that, she worked as a receptionist/administrative assistance at McGraw-Hill Financial in New York City, New York. She began her career as a community affairs/special events intern with the City of Boca Raton Recreation Services. In 2016, Reed was named a Social Media Up & Comer by South Florida Business & Wealth magazine. “Jenna is an accomplished professional, and is an asset to all of us at Durée & Company,” said Ross. “On a daily basis, she ensures that our office runs like clockwork. She not only provides superb service to our clients, but also to our internal team, to ensure success.” “I’m very happy to be a part of the Durée & Company team,” said Reed. “It is a pleasure to work with such an outstanding group of professionals, as well as with the firm’s incredible clients.” Daily PR Updates Essential PR industry news, opinion, and analysis delivered to your inbox daily. Bulldog Reporter Bulldog Reporter is a leader in media intelligence supplying news, analysis and high-level training content to public relations and corporate communications professionals with the mission of helping these practitioners achieve superior competitive performance. More action than words on Martin Luther King Jr. Day Next week, the nation will observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a federal observance that honors the birth of civil rights leader Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and provides a platform for organizations to communicate their commitment to his fight for equity and... Exploring Gen Z women’s new perspectives on life, career, injustice, social media and brands Perhaps more than any other group, the ongoing COVID crisis has had a profound impact on the lives of the women of Generation Z—on their priorities for the future and their views on careers, relationships, racial injustice, social media and brands. New research from... 4 PR strategies to use when your business goes green If you're running a business and you're in the process of becoming more sustainable, don't miss out on the gigantic opportunity for some great PR. Whether you've hired a PR strategist or you're doing it on your own, there are some tried and true techniques for getting... 5 ways that well-executed branding improves PR 2021 Big Data and AI study provides progress report on state of corporate data initiatives Agility™ support documentation Agility™ online training sessions One-Time Media Outreach Top Media Outlets Top Journalists Top Influencers Press Moves © Agility PR Solutions LLC · A subsidiary of Innodata. All Rights Reserved. · Privacy Policy · Journalist Privacy Notice · Terms of Use · Accessibility We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. By continuing to navigate on this website, you accept the use of cookies. Privacy Policy
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Canadian military continues sex-misconduct fight with new guide for members, commanders In a report last November, auditor general Michael Ferguson found many victims were not supported The facade of the headquarters of the Department of National Defence is pictured in Ottawa, Wednesday April 3, 2013. The Canadian Forces have a new manual on how to respond to sexual misconduct, aiming to close many of the gaps identified in the military’s policies on abuse in its ranks. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld The Canadian Forces have a new manual on how to respond to sexual misconduct, aiming to close many of the gaps identified in the military’s policies on abuse in its ranks. But some concerns remain unaddressed — including the “duty to report” regulation, which critics say discourages victims from seeking support if they aren’t ready or willing to begin a formal complaint. The information in the 100-page document was previously spread in many places, which a Defence Department assessment published in February cited as a big reason many service members were confused and uncertain about the issue. Some had only a vague understanding of what constituted inappropriate behaviour and what to do when an incident occurred, including how to support victims. The new manual, which was developed in consultation with the military’s sexual-misconduct response centre (a counselling-oriented agency outside the chain of command) and a group of outside experts, goes to great pains to address the latter question in particular. One of the first sections talks about how and why some people affected by sexual misconduct prefer to be called “victims,” others want to be referred to as “survivors,” and still others don’t like either identifier. It also spells out the roles, responsibilities and training available for every service member as well as the additional responsibilities that commanding officers have in supporting victims and investigating incidents. READ MORE: Canadian military reports victories in war on sexual misconduct in the ranks In a report last November, auditor general Michael Ferguson found many victims were not properly supported when they did speak up because of gaps in the services available and a lack of suitable training and policies. To that end, commanders are also being given a new handout to help them wrap their heads around how sexual-misconduct cases are to be treated step by step — with a reminder at every step to check in with victims. Those check-ins are not to be one-way updates, either, but opportunities to make sure each victim is getting the support needed and has input into how the case is handled. The sexual-misconduct response centre is also working on plans to provide case workers, or victim-liaison officers, to service members affected by sexual misconduct. But the “duty to report” regulation remains. It compels military members to report inappropriate or criminal behaviour, sexual or not, and begins a formal complaint process. Defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance has said the idea is to require anyone who learns of sexual misconduct to tell authorities so cases don’t get hidden, but the effect can be to drag them into the open against victims’ wishes. Ferguson and former Supreme Court justice Marie Deschamps, who conducted an explosive analysis of the extent of sexual misconduct in the Forces in 2015, have criticized the policy as actually discouraging victims from coming forward. Vance has said the military is looking at ways to maintain the requirement while better protecting victims. Ferguson also warned that military police often failed to provide information to victims about supports they can use or give them updates on cases, and there were concerns about a lack of training for chaplains and military health-care providers to help victims. The federal victims’ ombudsman has also raised concerns about proposed legislation around victims’ rights in the military justice system, specifically that it does not require military police, prosecutors and others to inform victims that they have rights. Lee Berthiaume, The Canadian Press SpaceX launches mega rocket, lands all 3 boosters Canadians divided on banning handguns, assault-style firearms: consultation
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Home / View Point / Guest Columns / Gilkes: Deconstructing religion; Zionism, US/European exceptionalism and the rest of us Gilkes: Deconstructing religion; Zionism, US/European exceptionalism and the rest of us Corey Gilkes Saturday 25 May 2019 Guest Columns, View Point 3 Comments Back in the mid-80s, when I was in Form 3 or 4 at St Benedict’s College, a film was shown about the Rapture—an event in which the ‘righteous’ would suddenly be swept up into the clouds to be with Jesus and away from the horrific tribulations that would befall everyone else. The people who showed the film impressed on us the importance of living ‘righteous’ lives—in keeping with the narrow understandings of what is righteous and unrighteous of course. Photo: An artistic depiction of the rapture. Now that film shook me for quite a while. It, coupled with the notions of sin I was already indoctrinated with thanks to Sunday School in the Anglican Church, really scared me and continued to have some influence over me for quite a long while, even after I graduated. In fact when I began to examine African-centred history, I kept well clear of examining, let alone deconstructing, religious teachings and the influence of pre-Abrahamic belief systems and sacred sciences for years—specifically the Nile Valley African pharaonic civilisations. Evidence of African ocean voyages to the Americas before Columbus? Check. African origins of engineering, astronomy and complex medical science? No problem. The African roots of Judaism, Christianity and Islam? No eh; forget dat! Not me, ‘hoss’. I was taught, explicitly and implicitly, that the most unpardonable thing I could do was to investigate—no, just question—the idea of scriptural and sacerdotal authority. To do so was to be on a slippery slope to question and challenge the authority, the very existence, of ‘God’. It was drummed into my head that people who did that were the very worst in a society. They impressed upon me to always trust and obey. Oh well, they did try. Nonetheless, the reality is that even in this age of instant information, that mindset still retains a powerful grip among many; and that is cause for grave concern and, frankly, some sort of intervention. Photo: Be still and know… Because the concept(s) of the ‘Apocalypse’, ‘End Times’ and ‘Atonement’ need to be given very serious examinations. These concepts have been misused and manipulated not only by self-serving religious and political leaders, but also by religious and political leaders who themselves honestly, piously believe these ideas are to be taken literally. They are the ones who are the most dangerous. They are the ones who prey on the despair, the vulnerability and the anger of those dispossessed by economic, social and political systems that were created to favour only a selected few. Literal misinterpretations of ‘End Times’ is not new; that, coupled with linear notions of time has been a part of Christian thought arguably since the very early generations of the Christian Era. It should be noted here, although space doesn’t permit details, that much of this hinges on the acceptability of linear concepts of time and a cultural idealisation of pessimism and worthlessness. End Times beliefs aren’t unique to Christianity; the more ancient faiths from which Christian thinkers drew, particularly those of Africa, developed the concept, but worked it into cyclical notions of time to describe the end of an age or time period—mostly tied in to celestial observations. What seems to have set Christianity apart was that linear reckoning of time, coupled with the egregious notion of sin and mankind’s ‘inherent’ worthlessness that Episcopalian Bishop John Shelby Spong brilliantly calls out. It has also been found in certain strains of Islamic thought and this has been used, for instance, to channel the rage of criminalised youths in criminalised depressed communities in Trinidad, many of whom ended up in Syria, as former member of the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen Hasan Anyabwile pointed out. Photo: A self-proclaimed Trinidad and Tobago jihadist and ISIS fighter. (Copyright Caribbean360) I have argued elsewhere that while Western mainstream media and academics bleat on about Islamic extremism, very few ever point out that much of that is only in response to political decisions influenced by very narrow evangelical Christian ideas merged with racist white nationalism deeply embedded in US and European politics. Journalist and ordained minister Chris Hedges tells us here about how James Luther Adams, his ethics professor at Harvard Divinity School, warned his class that the new Christian Fascists—he saw the old ones in Nazi Germany—would mask themselves in the language of patriotism and pages of the Bible. That is precisely what we are seeing unfolding before us in global politics; to be more precise, globalised US ideology has simply taken up where the British left off. Christian activism and agitation revolving around the belief in the End Times as supposedly predicted in scriptural texts has been gaining traction in US politics bit by bit as I pointed out in Part I, emerging with much renewed confidence with the election of US President Donald Trump and, in particular, Vice-President Mike Pence. What prompted Hedges was when he noticed televangelist Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell speaking openly about using the United States to create a global Christian empire. To use the words of another notorious evangelist, Dr Richard Land, US Exceptionalism is understood as ‘God’ having a special claim on ‘America’. (Don’t you just love how the United States has arrogated unto itself the name of an entire continent?) Land, in the spirit of President Woodrow Wilson, stated that: “American Exceptionalism is a doctrine of obligation, responsibility, sacrifice and service in the cause of freedom. Not a doctrine of pride, privilege and prejudice. [We] believe we have an obligation and responsibility not to try to impose freedom, but to share it.” Photo: Late former US President Woodrow Wilson. By the time Hedges took notice, the process of taking over and controlling key institutions—starting at town, county, city and state level—had already been very quietly underway for quite some time. What Hedges outlines in his lecture and his book American Fascists was examined in chilling detail by historian Nancy MacLean in her book Democracy in Chains. What she and Jane Mayer, author of Dark Money, found are a small but extremely wealthy, very powerful group of arch-conservative billionaire donors and financiers who were greatly displeased with the liberal direction the United States was moving in since the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. As such they began creating and/or funding right-wing think tanks in universities, far-right White nationalist groups, neoliberal institutions and conservative lawyers and judges. Over time, they made more and more inroads into US politics through the back door via the evangelical Christian community thanks to such figures as Paul Weyrich. We in ‘post-colonial’ societies, if we’re serious at all about decolonising, need to do our own examinations of these developments and see in what ways organisations such as the Christian Zionist movement manifest itself in our own spaces. Christian Zionism emerged out of a type of evangelical theology known as Dispensationalism, which posits that you can read the future by looking at Old Testament stories and prophecies. One of the main figures behind this is Pastor John Hagee who runs a mega church in San Antonio, Texas. (Yes, that same Pastor Hagee who Flow cable TV allow to provide noise pollution in my father’s room). Christian Zionists believe in the Rapture, a literal interpretation of the Bible and are passionate about the state of Israel. They believe that ‘god’ gave the land of Palestine—all of it—to the Jews. As such, they are stoutly opposed to any two-state solution, and most definitely any one-state solution in which the Palestinians, as citizens with the rights of Israelis, can vote in elections; since, because of their numerical majority, they can vote clean out the conservatives in a one-person-one-vote election system. Photo: A Palestinian woman shows dissent to an Israeli soldier. Christianised activism, through such movements, now outstrip the Jewish lobby in the US; and that says a lot. Interestingly, although Zionism—a nationalist movement that supports the re-establishment of a Jewish homeland in what is now Israel—is often attributed to Rabbi Theodor Herzl, it actually predates him. It emerged among British evangelicals, particularly Lord Shaftesbury who followed a particularly rigid Puritanical form of Protestantism that including a strict observance of the Sabbath. Shaftesbury was president of the London Jews Society until his death in 1885. He argued fervently and helped to break the ground for the return of Jews to what he and others believed was their ancestral homeland which he believed was ‘god’s’ will. A few minor complications here. The standard narrative we are fed on is that the current state of Israel is the ancestral homeland for the Jewish people who were exiled following the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple during an uprising in 70CE. Following the Balfour Declaration of 1917 and the struggle for liberation in 1947, they regained their homeland but are struggling to survive given that they are surrounded by hostile Arab Muslims—their mortal enemies. Piecing together the works of Dr Schlomo Sand, professor of history at Tel Aviv University, historian Ilan Pappe and even the book Egypt Revisited edited by Dr Ivan van Sertima, a more complex picture emerges. Sand, having examined the archaeological, linguistic and historical evidence (and lack of same), argues in The Invention of the Jewish People that there is no evidence of any exile en masse from Palestine in 70CE. Van Sertima shows there was no evidence of any exodus from Egypt either or that they were ever slaves of the Egyptians. Additionally, as Sand points out, given that Canaan was a colony of Egypt at the time, if the exodus did occur, Moses simply moved the Jews from Egypt back to Egypt. He also tells us, as do other scholars, that the kingdoms of David and Solomon were myths and the very names were personalised generic royal/priestly titles. Photo: Moses shares the word of the God in the 1956 movie “The Ten Commandments.” Sand points out that the only people exiled in 70CE were the educated elites, not the ordinary people. He also in his book quotes no less than David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s first Prime Minister and its principal architect, who in 1918 wrote this in his book Eretz Israel in the Past and in the Present: “To argue that after the conquest of Jerusalem by Titus and the failure of the Bar Kokhba revolt, Jews altogether ceased to cultivate the land of Eretz Israel is to demonstrate complete ignorance in the history and the contemporary literature of Israel… The Jewish farmer, like any other farmer, was not easily torn from his soil, which had been watered with his sweat and the sweat of his forebears… Despite the repression and suffering, the rural population remain unchanged.” This would help make sense of the historical fact that, as this video footage from 1896 shows, there was a Jewish minority living side-by-side with Muslims and Arab Christians in Palestine for hundreds of years before the disruptions caused by the infamous Balfour Declaration. It may also make sense of the history that tells us that when the Jews were being persecuted in Europe and fled, it was Muslims who gave them sanctuary. Sand also argues that the very idea of a physical Jewish homeland in the nationalist sense would have been heretical among the ancient Jews. Even in the 19th century many European Jews regarded the idea of Judaism as a nationalist or secular movement—which is what Pappe argues Zionism is—and an absolute heresy. Sand traced the idea of a physical homeland back to Ancient Greece and Rome before it became a republic. It was known as patri or “Fatherland” but was not a concept of the ancient Jews for whom the idea of a homeland was metaphysical, not necessarily geographic. We also learn that many Jews in Europe—whose ancestors have little ties to ancient Palestine but converted to Judaism in the 10th century CE for political reasons—had no interest at all to migrate to Palestine. Even with the marginalisations and persecutions, many were content to remain European and, later on, Euro-Americans. Photo: The persecution of Jews in Europe during the Holocaust. (Copyright WND.com) Which brings us to the other aspect of Christian evangelical End Times thought, the racist aspect. One of the core ideologies linking Shaftesbury and Arthur Balfour to Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Richard Land and Hagee is a religiously (and racially) bigoted idea that the Jews must be converted to Christianity after their repatriation to Palestine. What motivated people like Shaftesbury, Balfour, Prime Minister Lloyd George and others from that period was to get rid of the Jews in their own countries, ship them off to Palestine (or anywhere else for that matter, they nearly were placed in Kenya or Uganda as I recall correctly). Through literal readings and mistranslations of select biblical texts, they sought to return the Jews to Palestine, convert them to Christianity and usher in the Second Coming of Jesus after of course a period of tribulation that is the source of this piece of madness. This is a continuation of a very old racist Eurocentric idea that the Jews are contaminants and ‘Christ’-killers. The long history of this is explored at length in James Carroll’s book Constantine’s Sword. The current union between Jews and evangelical Christians is a VERY curious one. (As curious as the cozying up of evangelicals to Saudi Arabians.) Given that that conversion eh going to happen—the reality is that many of the stoutly pious Jews in Palestine are as far-Right and as racist as their evangelical counterparts in the Midwest USA—there will be some interesting times ahead if and when the Christian Zionists eventually turn on the Jews as Martin Luther did in the 16th century. Which puts the rest of us in a very delicate position; as it always has. The land of Palestine had a slight issue of people already living on it, mostly Arabs. Not a problem really, Palestine just fell into a category articulated thus: “A land without people for a people without land.” Photo: Protesters in Palestine. This is the ‘empty land’ fabrication that has been used time and again to justify settler-colonial atrocities in North America, Azania/South Africa, Australia and Palestine. Black and brown people were routinely dehumanised and invisibilised to justify their removal and/or extermination. In Palestine, Pappe tells us that, in 1948, Jewish settlers destroyed over 500 Arab villages and imported hundreds of trees from Europe which they planted over the ruins of these villages, partly to re-create the Europe they left behind and wanted to transform Palestine into. But another reason was to cover over the fact that they had destroyed 500 villages that had people living in them. So the irony here is that they who were pushed out of a Europe that was racist towards them for centuries, did and are still doing the exact same thing to the Palestinians already living there. The main point of this nonsensical rant is that literal readings of the Bible is what Bishop John Shelby Spong calls ‘gentile heresy’ that must be curtailed with more urgency than all the previous ‘heresies’ combined. Why? Well me eh know bout allyuh, but I really eh care for people who believe in apocalyptic ending of the world; who have set convictions about denying the humanity and cultures of people who look like me and who have deep-seated anxieties about their own plummeting birth rate having access to weapons of mass destruction. Barbara G Walker in The Women’s Encyclopedia Of Myths and Secrets tells us about the ancient Christians in Rome and how they used to set fires in order to create chaos in the hope of bringing on the end of times. Imagine if they had access to nukes? I’m already extremely uncomfortable that we had a general from the elite army Delta Force who was quite open and proud of his evangelical ideology and now we have Erik Prince from the Navy side (SEALs) who runs one of the most infamous mercenary organisations chomping at the bit to get into Venezuela. Add to that the Christian worldview of Mike Pompeo and even more so Mike Pence. Photo: US President Donald Trump claims the Holy Bible is his favourite book. Catherine Ochs makes a sobering point in Behind the Sex of God when she writes: “The idea of God as father is really a manifestation of the concept of God as artist. In both cases, the role played by God is that off spiritual progenitor and external judge. This contrasts with the idea of God as mother, whose role is that of physical progenitor and source of succor, protection, and uncritical acceptance. “Noah’s flood and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah are incompatible with a mother God; they are the result of God the father judging that his creation he gone awry. This is, of course, one of the difficulties arising from the model of God as artist. The artist may destroy his work because it does not live up to his concept of what the work should be.” Isn’t that what we’ve been seeing these last 500 years? The colonising of Africa, Asia but more so the Americas was motivated by capitalistic greed in its various stages. However, it also represents an attempt by Europeans imbued with a racist, religiously bigoted ideology to destroy and create newer, ‘perfect’ societies free from the ‘impure’, ‘polluting’ elements. Pankaj Mishra, author of From the Ruins of Empire called it the great experiment. Worked out well, didn’t it? Deconstructing and dispensing with many toxic religious ideas are not going to be easy or pleasant; for many their faith is all they have left to get them through the tribulations that a harsh, impersonal and marginalising society forces them to endure. But much of the mystique, mistakes and mistranslations in religious teachings, passages and traditions—that frankly, they’ll be better off without—need to be stripped away and exposed for what they truly are. I see no other way for real progress until we begin to untangle the many chords that are preventing societies from more cohesive actions that will prevent a self-chosen few from carrying all of humanity down a destructive road. Gilkes: From Truman to Trump; how religion oppresses the post-colonial world The battle for souls: How White American Evangelicalism helped Neocolonialism separate us from ourselves Noble: Living in a messy world; God understands suicide, so help—don’t judge! Of what bloody use is (African) history anyway? Gilkes responds to trivialisation of non-Western narratives Battle for Souls (Pt II): Bullet, Beef and Bible; a look behind the mask of the unholy triad Gilkes: Why it is the LGBTQI community that’s pushing back; not the Church American Evangelicalism Barbara Walker Catherine Ochs Chris Hedges Christianity Corey Gilkes Hasan Anyabwile Ilan Pappe Israel Ivan van Sertima James Luther Adams Jane Mayer Jerry Falwell John Shelby Spong Judaism Lloyd George London Jews Society Lord Shaftesbury Mike Pence Nancy MacLean Palestine Pat Robertson rapture Richard Land Schlomo Sand Woodrow Wilson Zionism 2019-05-25 Corey Gilkes Tags American Evangelicalism Barbara Walker Catherine Ochs Chris Hedges Christianity Corey Gilkes Hasan Anyabwile Ilan Pappe Israel Ivan van Sertima James Luther Adams Jane Mayer Jerry Falwell John Shelby Spong Judaism Lloyd George London Jews Society Lord Shaftesbury Mike Pence Nancy MacLean Palestine Pat Robertson rapture Richard Land Schlomo Sand Woodrow Wilson Zionism About Corey Gilkes Corey Gilkes is a self-taught history reader whose big mouth forever gets his little tail in trouble. He lives in La Romaine and is working on four book projects. He has a blog on https://coreygilkes.wordpress.com/blog/ and http://www.trinicenter.com/Gilkes/. Vitriol can be emailed to him at coreygks@gmail.com. Previous Confessions of a World Cup addict: who against England? Next Demming: People are our only resource! Petrotrin axing and vague plans haunt T&T Noble: As USA learns cost of lies about equality, will T&T remove scales from its eyes? “The truth does not care about our governments, ideologies, religions. It will lie in wait… … Alana Abdool Friday 7 June 2019 at 4:43 pm Why is Saudi Arabia cozying up to evangelical Christians at this point curious? The author did say: That has deep religious historical meaning and directed agendas. Islamic extremism is politically useful. It’s too bad that so many repressed/marginalized minds that are easily swayed buy into the dogma. It’s just a nice big orchestrated version of that apocalyptic vision that is meant to have as much common ground amongst the major religions. People buy into the version of a religion that is given to them. Much of it is based on preplanned agendas surrounding shifts to fulfill the ‘truth’ of what they were told. There are many apocalyptic visions in Islam as well. To understand this aspect of a ‘merger’ of common interests of sorts…then you will need to understand the interpretation of religion that you aren’t taught and you need to accept that the people feeding it to you actually need you to buy into it to fulfill their own politico-religious fantasies. Rudy Paul Sunday 26 May 2019 at 8:50 pm Well researched. Unfortunately, it all comes down to one simple concept: belief. Ppl believe some absurd concepts, religion being a major one. To separate one from his/her belief is one of the biggest challenges the human species will face. To ask ppl to “review” their early teachings, especialy as it relates to the concept of god, is taboo to, i daresay, most. FB User 1798 Well written article. There’s a growing number of these churches in Trinidad. They all have ties to these mega churches I’m the US . It would be interesting to know the names of those US affiliates. I’m wondering if the people attending these churches in Trinidad know about the US political connections to Trump?
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The Lebanese Community in the Ivory Coast: a Non-native Network at the Heart of Power? DIDIER BIGO The Lebanese Community in the Ivory Coast: a Non-native Network at the Heart of Power? By DIDIER BIGO (Lebanese in the world , a century of emigration) The Lebanese Community in the Ivory Coast For a long time ignored because of its relatively low profile, the Lebanese community in the Ivory Coast has recently become the focus of increasing attention. A whole string of derogatory clichés has come to be attached to it; more often than not they consist of fantasized projections originating in the Lebanese conflict or its after-effects, whether in Europe or Africa, to the extent that one can talk of a form of anti-Lebanese discourse constructed out the stereotyped images and outright misrepresentations. On the French side, the image of the Lebanese community in Abidjan was once that of an appendage to colonization, symbolized in the figures of the Maronite Christian, the good tradesman or the civil war refugee; in little time this has changed into the supposed haven of anti-western terrorist lackeys of Hizbollah, usually Shi’i and Arabic speaking. Seen in this light the Lebanese of Abidjan now appear to be hostile to French interests in the area to the extent of becoming the sinister middlemen of attacks on French territory or of the freeing of French hostages. In the Ivory Coast itself, the Lebanese community was once seen as the indispensable middleman between town and country, whether in the trading of crops such as coffee and cocoa or of retail goods. But with the onset of the civil war in 1975, this image was to undergo fundamental transformations, through the flux of refugees which sharply increased from 1982 until the magnified economic crisis of 1986. The Lebanese now seem to qualify for a description akin to de Gaulle’s equivocal statement about Israel after its attack on Lebanon in 1968: a confident (read overbearing), domineering people; racist to boot, they now exert an undue monopoly on imports and exports, trade and a part of industry. Corruptors of others as well as being themselves corrupt, they act as a fifth column working towards the disintegration of the state under the aegis of an ailing and important Houphouet-Boigny, and to ‘palestinize’ or ‘lebanize’ the Ivory Coast by securing a hold on the key posts of the economy. The development of this theme has results in nothing short of full-blown popular paranoia. There is yet a third view, which at the intersection of the first two, sees itself as based upon rational economic discourse, and finds expression in the ranks of both the Ivorian ruling class and the local French business community. This view sees the Lebanese immigrants as intent on destroying the official trading economy and the sate itself through the bypassing of borders, non-payment of taxes and customs evasion. It follows from this view that dishonest competition has set in, with the result that French businessmen are now forced to disinvest from the country and and in longer term European influence will be eliminated to the sole benefit of the Lebanese. The Ivorians for their part complain of being unable to venture into any kind of business activity without coming up against the mafia-like solidarity and functioning of the Lebanese community. This, the argument goes, is what stands in they way of the emergence of the native (lower) middle class which is precisely needed for the development of the country. The economic crisis and prevailing uncertainty over the future have resulted in a degree of social frustration which has speedily found an ideal scapegoat in the Lebanese community whose erstwhile discretion is now but a memory of the past; its middlemen have an all too visible profile and have become too encroaching for comfort. Besides their obvious over-simplifications, it should be mentioned in passing that these clichés in fact vary according to the community or social origins of their provenance. But even allowing for this, the question remains as to the actual state of relations between the Lebanese community and other communities; the extent to which it has integrated; and finally whether it does in fact play the destabilizing part in the life of the country which is so readily attributed to it. In spite of certain gaps, this study will attempt to present an explanatory scheme of relations between the Lebanese in the Ivory Coast, the French and the Ivorians. This will also enable us to define the cross-currents which feed into the ‘representation’ of the Lebanese by others, the underlying reasons for this rapid change in perception and the social and political structures which underpin these constructs. In order to do this it will first be necessary to review the actual history of this immigration; apart from being hardly known, the history has itself been subjected to the stereotyped clichés we alluded to earlier, and this has resulted in its being rewritten in order to conform to the current representation of the Lebanese. read more:The Lebanese Community in the Ivory Coast Previous article Letter from Mr. Maher Nasser, Director of the Outreach Division of the Department of Public Information. Next article Questions and reservations on its role and expenditures Ministry of Emigrants working … without any emigration policy (By Hala Homsi)- WLCU Archives
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Cafe Metropole Coffea Greasy spoon Cafe Metropole is a 1937 American drama film directed by Edward H. Griffith, starring Loretta Young, Tyrone Power and Adolphe Menjou. Alexis (Tyrone Power) is an international playboy with a habit of writing rubber checks. Heavily in debt to cafe owner Monsieur Victor (Adolphe Menjou), Alexis agrees to pose as a Russian nobleman, Alexis Paneiev, and woo heiress Laura Ridgeway (Loretta Young), so that Victor can get his hands on the girl's money. Loretta Young as Laura Ridgeway Tyrone Power as Alexis Adolphe Menjou as Monsieur Victor Gregory Ratoff as Paul Charles Winninger as Joseph Ridgeway Helen Westley as Margaret Ridgeway Christian Rub as Maxl Schinner Ferdinand Gottschalk as Monsieur Leon Monnet Georges Renavent as Captain Leonid Kinskey as Artist Paul Porcasi as Police Official André Cheron as Croupier (as Andre Cheron) George Beranger as Hat Clerk (as Andre Beranger) Cafe Metropole at the Internet Movie Database Cafe Metropole at AllMovie This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Cafe_Metropole A coffeehouse, coffee shop, or café is an establishment which primarily serves hot coffee, related coffee beverages (e.g., café latte, cappuccino, espresso), tea, and other hot beverages. Some coffeehouses also serve cold beverages such as iced coffee and iced tea. Many cafés also serve some type of food, such as light snacks, muffins, or pastries. Coffeehouses range from owner-operated small businesses to large multinational companies such as Starbucks. In continental Europe, a café is a traditional type of coffeehouse, but elsewhere the term "café" may also refer to a tea room, "greasy spoon" (a small and inexpensive restaurant, colloquially called a "caff"), transport café, or other casual eating and drinking place. A coffeehouse may share some of the same characteristics of a bar or restaurant, but it is different from a cafeteria. Many coffee houses in the Middle East and in West Asian immigrant districts in the Western world offer shisha (nargile in Greek and Turkish), flavored tobacco smoked through a hookah. Espresso bars are a type of coffeehouse that specializes in serving espresso and espresso-based drinks. This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Coffeehouse Coffea is a genus of flowering plants whose seeds, called coffee beans, are used to make coffee. It is a member of the family Rubiaceae. They are shrubs or small trees native to tropical and southern Africa and tropical Asia. Coffee ranks as one of the world's most valuable and widely traded commodity crops and is an important export product of several countries, including those in Central and South America, the Caribbean and Africa. Cultivation and use Several species of Coffea may be grown for the seeds. Coffea arabica accounts for 75-80 percent of the world's coffee production, while Coffea canephora accounts for about 20 percent. The trees produce edible red or purple fruits called "cherries" that are described either as epigynous berries or as indehiscent drupes. The cherries contain two seeds, the so-called "coffee beans", which—despite their name—are not true beans. In about 5-10% of any crop of coffee cherries, only a single bean, rather than the usual two, is found. This is called a peaberry, which is smaller and rounder than a normal coffee bean. It is often removed from the yield and either sold separately (as in New Guinea peaberry), or discarded. This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Coffea Greasy spoon is a colloquial term for a small, cheap restaurant or diner typically specialising in fried foods. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the term originated in the United States and is now used in various English-speaking countries. The name "greasy spoon" is a reference to the typically high-fat, high-calorie menu items such as eggs and bacon. The term has been used to refer to a "small cheap restaurant" since at least the 1920s. Many typical American greasy spoons focus on fried or grilled food, such as fried eggs, bacon, burgers, hash browns, waffles, pancakes, omelettes, deep fried chicken, and sausages. These are often accompanied by baked beans, french fries, coleslaw, or toast. Soups and chili con carne are generally available. Since the 1970s, many Greek immigrants have entered the business. As a result, gyro and souvlaki meats are now a common part of the repertoire, often served as a side dish with breakfast and as a replacement for bacon or sausage. This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Greasy_spoon cafemetropole.net cafenet.com cafemetropoles.com pathcafe.com cafemetropole.org lyoncafe.com szczecincafe.com miningcafe.com helsinkicafe.com newworldnewscafe.com nepalcafe.com guiyangcafe.com leipzigcafe.com ipohcafe.com kabulcafe.com indonesiacafe.com gothamcitycafe.com gunturcafe.com cafeperformance.net the101cafe.org
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John 12:22 pm on September 20, 2012 Permalink Reply Tags: holmes ( 8 ), launius ( 24 ), murder ( 10 ), nash ( 7 ), wonderland ( 108 ) The Devil and John Holmes, by Mike Sager (May, 1989) John Holmes was a porn star. Eddie Nash was a drug lord. Their association ended in one of the most brutal mass murders in the history of Los Angeles. Deep in Laurel Canyon, the Wonderland Gang was planning its last heist. It was Sunday evening and the drugs were gone, the money was gone, the situation was desperate. They’d sold a pound of baking soda for a quarter of a million dollars: There were contracts out on their lives. Now they had another idea. They sat around a glass table in the breakfast nook. Before them were two pairs of handcuffs, a stolen police badge, several automatic pistols and a dogeared sheet of paper, a floor plan. They needed a score. This was it. There were seven of them meeting in the house on Wonderland Avenue, a jaundiced stucco box on a steep, winding road in the hills above Holly- wood. Joy Audrey Miller, 46, held the lease. She was thin, blond, foul-mouthed, a heroin addict with seven arrests. She had two daughters, had once been married to a Beverly Hills attorney. A year ago, she’d been busted for dealing drugs out of the Wonderland house. Six months ago she’d had a double mastectomy. Her lover was Billy DeVerell. DeVerell, 42, was also a heroin addict. He had a slight build, a pockmarked face, a record of thirteen arrests. “He looked like a guy in a dive bar in El Paso,” according to a neighbor. Sharing the house with Miller and DeVerell was Ronald Launius, 37. Blond and bearded, Launius had served federal time for drug smuggling. A California cop called him “one of the coldest people I ever met.” The house at 8763 Wonderland rented for $750 a month. There was a garage on the first floor; the second and third floors had balconies facing the street. A stairway, leading from the garage to the front door, was caged in iron. There was a telephone at the entrance, an electronic deadbolt on the gate, two pit bulls sleeping on the steps. Though elaborately secure, the house was paint-cracked and rust-stained, an eyesore in a trendy neighborhood. Laurel Canyon had long been a prestige address, an earthy, woodsy setting just minutes from the glitter and rush of Tinseltown. Tom Mix and Harry Houdini once lived there among the quail and scrub pine and coyotes. Later, in the Sixties, the canyon attracted writers and artists, rock stars and gurus. Number 8763 Wonderland Avenue had some history of its own: Paul Revere and the Raiders once lived there. By the Eighties, former California governor Jerry Brown was living on Wonderland Avenue, and Steven Spielberg was building on a lot not far away. The house at 8763 had passed from a raucous group of women—neighbors recall naked women being tossed from the first-floor balcony—to the members of the Wonderland Gang. Things at the house were always hopping, someone was always showing up with a scam. Miller, DeVerell and Launius needed drugs every day. They were always looking for an opportunity. Jewelry stores, convenience stores, private homes—they would try anything, as long as it meant money or drugs. “There was a lot of traffic, all day, all night,” says a neighbor. “Everything from Volkswagens to a Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. They threw brown bags of dope off the balcony. There was shouting, laughing, rock & roll twenty- four hours a day.” At the moment, on this evening of June 28th, 1981, Wonderland Avenue was quiet. Five men and two women were meeting in the breakfast nook, sitting in swivel chairs, leaning against walls. The floor plan before them showed a three-bedroom, high-end tract house on a cul-de-sac in the San Fernando Valley. It had a pool and a sunken living room, a white stone facade. Inside was a painting by Rembrandt, a jade and ivory collection, sterling silver, jewelry and, most appealing of all, large quantities of money and drugs. The man who owned the house was named Adel Nasrallah. He was known as Eddie Nash. A naturalized American, Nash came to California from Palestine in the early Fifties. In 1960 he opened a hot-dog stand on Hollywood Boulevard. By the mid-Seventies, Nash held thirty-six liquor licenses, owned real estate and other assets worth over $30 million. Nash had clubs of all kinds; he catered to all predilections. The Kit Kat was a strip club. The Seven Seas was a bus-stop joint across Hollywood Boulevard from Mann’s Chinese Theaters. It had a tropical motif, a menu of special drinks, a Polynesian revue, sometimes belly dancers. His gay clubs were the first in L.A. to allow same-sex dancing. His black club was like a Hollywood Harlem, jazz and pinkie rings and wide-brimmed straw hats.The Starwood, on Santa Monica Boulevard, featured cutting-edge rock & roll. In the late Seventies, Los Angeles police averaged twenty-five drug busts a month at the Starwood. One search of the premises yielded a cardboard box containing 4000 counterfeit Quaaludes. A sign on the box, written in blue Magic Marker, said, FOR DISTRIBUTION AT BOX OFFICE. Nash was a drug dealer and a heavy user. His drug of choice was freebase, home-cooked crack cocaine, and he was smoking it at the rate of two to three ounces a day. He always had large quantities of coke, heroin, Quaaludes and other drugs at the house. His bodyguard, Gregory DeWitt Diles, was a karate expert and convicted felon who weighed a blubbery 300 pounds. According to one eyewitness, Diles once chased a man out of the Kit Kat and emptied his .38 revolver into the man’s car. The car was on the other side of Santa Monica Boulevard, across six lanes of traffic. The time was 2:30 in the afternoon. No one was injured. Nash and Diles were well known on Sunset Strip. “Eddie Nash assumed he deserved a certain amount of respect,” says one denizen. “If somebody fucked with him . . .” Now, in the breakfast nook, a tall, gaunt man with curly hair and a sparse beard pointed to the floor plan he had sketched. “Here, this back bedroom, that’s Diles’s room,” he said. “He keeps a sawed-off shotgun under the blanket. . . . Here, this is Nash’s room. There’s a floor safe in the closet, right . . . over . . . here.” “You sure about this, donkey dick?” asked Tracy McCourt, the gang’s wheelman. “Hey, it’s cool,” said John Holmes, 36, the man with the plan. “I know Eddie. Nash loves me. He thinks I’m famous.” John Holmes was famous, at least in some circles. What he was famous for was his penis. In a career that would span twenty years, Holmes made 2274 hardcore pornographic films, had sex with 14,000 women. At the height of his popularity, he earned $3000 a day on films and almost as much turning tricks, servicing wealthy men and women on both coasts and in Europe. Since the late Sixties, Holmes had traded on his natural endowment. His penis, when erect, according to legend, measured between eleven and fifteen inches in length. Recently, however, Holmes’s biggest commodity had been trouble. He was freebasing one hit of coke every ten or fifteen minutes, swallowing forty to fifty Valium a day to cut the edge. The drugs affected his penis; he couldn’t get it up, he couldn’t work in porn. Now he was a drug delivery boy for the Wonderland Gang. His mistress, Jeana, who’d been with him since she was fifteen, was turning tricks to support his habit. They were living out of the trunk of his estranged wife’s Chevy Malibu. Holmes was stealing luggage off conveyers at L.A. International, buying appliances with his wife’s credit cards, fencing them for cash. Holmes was into Nash for a small fortune. Now Holmes owed the Wonderland Gang, too. He’d messed up a delivery, had a big argument with DeVerell and Launius. They took back his key to Wonderland, and Launius punched him out, then hit Holmes with his own blackthorn walking stick. They told him to make good. He tried to think. Addled synapses played him a picture: Eddie Nash. “So you go in,” Launius was saying to Holmes, reviewing the plan. “You talk to Nash, whatever, you tell him you got to take a piss. Then what?” “I leave the sliding door unlocked—this one,” said Holmes, pointing to the floor plan, “here, in the back. The guest bedroom. Then I leave. I come back to Wonderland. Tell you it’s all clear. Then you guys take him down.” And so the plan was fixed. At midnight, the Wonderland people scraped together $400, and Holmes, whose pretense for entrance would be buying drugs, drove off to Nash’s house. It was 1.6 miles from Wonderland Avenue to Dona Lola Place, which was fortuitous, because the stolen Ford Granada driven by the Wonderland Gang was running on empty. In the car were DeVerell, Launius, McCourt and a man named David Lind, a friend of Launius’s. Lind and his girlfriend had come down three weeks earlier from Sacramento to stay at Wonderland. An ex-convict who’d served time for burglary, forgery and assault to commit rape, Lind had been invited to town, he would later tell a court, to practice his “profession,” committing crimes. McCourt drove up the hill on Laurel Canyon Boulevard, across Mulholland Drive, over the crest of the Santa Monica Mountains, down into the Valley. The sun was warm and diffuse. Sprinklers were ticking water across lawns. Rush hour was on. It was 8:30 Monday morning. Though Holmes had left Wonderland at midnight, he had stayed at Eddie Nash’s for six hours, smoking up the $400 he’d taken to spend, helping himself to a little more of Nash’s largess. Nash was extremely hospitable. He always called Holmes “my brother.” They’d known each other for three years. As night stretched into morning, Holmes had an attack of conscience, a glimmer of an understanding that knocking over Eddie Nash might lead to a lot of trouble. Nash knew the Wonderland people. He’d never met them, but he had, through Holmes, given them a $1000 loan. Holmes muttered something to Nash about the gang. He wasn’t specific, but it really didn’t matter anyway. Nash hadn’t slept in ten days. He hardly knew what Holmes was saying. And, as Holmes’s supply of coke dwindled, his conscience was overruled by his jones. He excused himself, left the room and unlocked the sliding door. Arriving back at Wonderland just after dawn, Holmes announced the coast was clear. The time was right, he told Lind. There was one hitch. DeVerell, Launius and McCourt, all heroin addicts, were out cold. Three hours later, everyone was finally awake. Holmes drove to Nash’s again to make sure the sliding door was still open. This time, the gang decided not to wait for his return. Now, as McCourt turned right, off Laurel Canyon Boulevard onto Dona Pegita, he saw Holmes driving back toward them. Both cars slowed, pulled even in the middle of the street. Holmes rolled down his window, McCourt rolled down his. “It’s time,” Holmes said, and then he smiled and raised his fist “Get ’em, boys!” John Curtis Holmes had the longest, most prolific career in the history of pornography. He had sex onscreen with two generations of leading ladies, from Seka and Marilyn Chambers to Traci Lords, Ginger Lynn and Italian member of Parliament Ciccolina. The first man to win the X Rated Critics Organization Best Actor Award, Holmes was an idol and an icon, the most visible male porn star of his time. Holmes started in the business around 1968, a time when porn was just beginning to surface from the underground of peep shows and frat houses into mainstream acceptance. The Sixties, the pill, “free love,” communes, wife swapping, the perverse creativity of mixed-media artists who were pushing the limit, trying to shock—all of these things created an atmosphere in which porn could blossom.The pivotal event in porn history was the release of Deep Throat, starring Linda Lovelace and Harry Reems, in 1972. Though the movie, when it began to appear at theaters around the country, was branded as obscene and closed down almost everywhere it played, its producers contested the charges in the courts and eventually won. In the end, Deep Throat was massively consumed by an enthusiastic public. With the release the same year of The Devil in Miss Jones and Behind the Green Door, porn became part of popular culture. Suddenly, Johnny Carson was telling Deep Throat jokes on The Tonight Show. One day in 1970, Holmes met Hawaiian producer Bob Chinn. Up to this time, Holmes had been doing mostly photo layouts, stag films and 8-mm bookstore loops. He showed Chinn his portfolio of stills, then stripped. That evening, Chinn wrote a three-page screenplay; a partnership was born. This would lead, in the mid-Seventies, to Holmes’s most successful role, as Johnny Wadd, the hard-boiled detective, porn’s parody of Sam Spade. Holmes’s character, said Al Goldstein in Screw magazine, was “a thin, bony, trench-coated shamus, outrageously horny, bedding down with client and quarry alike.” In Goldstein’s opinion, “it was a goofy, crudely made series,” but it was wildly successful. In a way, Holmes was everyman’s gigolo, a polyester smoothy with a sparse mustache, a flying collar and lots of buttons undone. He wasn’t threatening. He chewed gum and overacted. He took a lounge singer’s approach to sex, deliberately gentle, ostentatiously artful, a homely guy with a pinkie ring and a big dick who was convinced he was every woman’s dream. Holmes went on to make more than 2000 movies. Teenage Cowgirls, Liquid Lips, China Cat and Tapestry of Passion. Eruption, a porn remake of Double Indemnity. Dickman and Throbbin, a lampoon of Batman and Robin. Hard Candy, a 3-D thriller. A porn “documentary” of his life, made in 1981, was called Exhausted. In time, Holmes became known as the Errol Flynn of porn. And like the leading men of yesteryear, what was known of him was mostly myth. According to legend—largely of his own making—Holmes was born in New York and lived with a rich aunt who’d been married fifteen times. The aunt sent him to fencing school, dancing school, a school of etiquette. They lived in London, Paris, Michigan, Florida. He lost his virginity at the Florida house, when he was six, to his Swiss nursemaid, Frieda. In high school, Holmes said, he slept with all but three girls in his class. He graduated from UCLA with majors, variously, in physical therapy, pediatric physical therapy, medicine and political sciences. His first porn film was made while he was working his way through college. A girl from the dorm recommended him. Also while in college, he said, he danced “nude modern jazz ballet” and drove an ambulance. When he became established as a porn star, Holmes said, he had a half dozen agents pulling in work for him. He made films nonstop, and he took eighty to ninety telephone calls a day. He had twenty-seven fan clubs; people wrote for locks of his pubic hair. Men asked him to autograph their wives’ breasts. Women asked him to deflower their daughters. One regular trick had him barge into her bedroom while she was watching TV, then tie her up and rape her. Her husband watched from the closet. Holmes said he’d had sex in airplanes, helicopters, trains, elevators, kitchens, bathrooms, on rooftops, in caves, storm cellars, bomb shelters in Europe, under a table in a restaurant filled with people, fifty feet underwater while wearing scuba gear. He’d been with three governors, two of their wives and one senator, who was “really a freak.” Holmes said he owned ten different businesses, that he was a gourmet cook, that he had written twenty-nine books, including a how-to manual combining cooking and sex. His penis, he said, was “bigger than a pay phone, smaller than a Cadillac.” Holmes’s voice was sly and ingratiating. He sounded a lot like Eddie Haskell on Leave It to Beaver and bore some resemblance to the actor who played him. Above all, he said, he loved his work: “A happy gardener is one with dirty fingernails, and a happy cook is a fat cook. I never get tired of what I do because I’m a sex fiend. I’m very lusty.” John Curtis Holmes was born to Mary and Edward Holmes on August 8th, 1944, in Pickaway County, Ohio, the youngest of three boys and a girl. Edward, a carpenter, was an alcoholic. Mary was a Bible-thumping Baptist. John remembered screaming, yelling, his father puking all over the kids. Holmes’s parents separated when he was three, and Mary moved the family into a housing project in Columbus. They shared an apartment with another divorced woman and her two children. When Holmes was eight, his mother married Harold, a manic-depressive who worked for the telephone company. They moved to a house on five acres in wooded, rural Pataskala, Ohio. Harold drank a lot. Once, he rammed his own hand into a harvesting machine. He lost his thumb and three fingers. At the hospital, as he came out of anesthesia, he said to Mary, “I’ll never have to work again.” He didn’t. Mary went to work on an assembly line at a Western Electric plant. John was a shy and lonely kid who kept to himself and had perfect attendance at Sunday school. He lost his virginity at age twelve to a thirty-six-year-old woman who was a friend of his mother’s. At home, Harold picked on John. There were backhands, lectures, drunken rages. By the time John’s half brother was born, John was spending most of his time in the woods, hunting, trapping, fishing, staying away from Harold. Then one day Harold threw John down the stairs and came after him. John swung and knocked his stepfather out. On his sixteenth birthday, Holmes joined the army. He served in the signal corps, spending three years in Nuremberg, Germany. He never went home again. After mustering out of the army, at age nineteen, Holmes went to work as an ambulance driver, and soon thereafter he met Sharon Gebenini. Sharon was a nurse at USC County General, working on a team that was pioneering open-heart surgery. She was twenty, an army brat. They were married in August 1965 at Fort Ord, California. One summer day in 1968, Sharon came home a little early from work. Her new boss, a pediatrician, had shut down the office for the afternoon, and she’d gone to the market, planned a special dinner for her husband. Holmes, in those days, was a string bean, six feet tall, 150 pounds, hair still cut in a military buzz. When Sharon and John were first married, she says, he was very naive, looking for the perfect relationship. “He was very possessive. He wouldn’t even let me meet the people he worked with.” Recently, Holmes had been drifting from job to job, trying to find a niche. He quit the ambulance service and got work stirring vats of chocolate at a Coffee Nips factory in Glendale. Then he sold shoes, furniture, Fuller brushes door-to-door. He drove a forklift at a meatpacking plant in Cudahy until his lung collapsed from working in the freezer. Just recently, he had begun training to be a uniformed security guard. Unbeknownst to Sharon, Holmes had also recently started in porn, following an encounter with a professional photographer named Joel in the bathroom of the poker parlor in Gardina. Holmes was doing sex pictorials, dancing in clubs. Now, home early from her office, Sharon left her purse in the foyer, squeaked down the hall on white rubber soles to the bathroom of their one-bedroom apartment in Glendale. The door was open. Inside was her husband, John. He had a tape measure in one hand, his penis in the other. “What are you doing?” she asked. “What does it look like I’m doing?” “Is there something wrong? Are you afraid it’s withering and dying?” she said, laughing. “No, I’m just curious,” said Holmes. Sharon went to the bedroom, lay down, read a magazine. Twenty minutes later, Holmes walked into the room. He had a full erection. “It’s incredible,” said John. “What?” “It goes from five inches all the way to ten. Ten inches long! Four inches around!” “That’s great,” said Sharon, turning a page of her magazine. “You want me to call the press?” Her husband fixed her with a long stare. Finally he said, “I’ve got totell you I’ve been doing something else, and I think I want to make it my life’s work.” Holmes went on to say that he wanted to be best in the world at something, and that he thought pornography was it. Sharon had been a virgin when they’d met. She wasn’t happy. “You can’t be uptight about this,” John said, a refrain she would hear for the next fifteen years. “This means absolutely nothing to me. It’s like being a carpenter. These are my tools, I use them to make a living. When I come home at night, the tools stay on the job.” “You are having sex with other women,” said Sharon. “It’s like being married to a hooker.” Holmes said nothing. And so began the loops and the stags, and then Johnny Wadd was born. Holmes let his hair grow, started wearing three-piece suits. He and Sharon settled into a strange hybrid of domesticity. She paid for food and household expenses, did his laundry, cooked for him when he was home. John kept his porn money and spent it on himself. By 1973, John and Sharon were sharing the same house, even the same bed, but they were no longer having sex. Sharon had gone so far as to stop physical relations, but she couldn’t bring herself to kick him out. “Let’s face it,” she says. “I loved the schmuck. I just didn’t like what he was doing.” John bought himself an El Camino pickup and a large diamond solitaire that became his trademark in films. Then he designed a massive gold and diamond ring in the shape of a dragonfly, and a gold belt buckle, measuring eight by five inches. The buckle depicted a mother whale swimming in the ocean, her baby nursing beneath. John was into Save the Whales. He wore the buckle when he and Sharon sold bumper stickers door-to-door. In 1974, Sharon became the resident manager of a ten-unit apartment court in Glendale. It was owned by the pediatrician she worked for; she and Holmes lived rent-free in an adjacent house. Sometimes he worked around the apartments as the handyman and gardener. He also renovated the house, outdoing himself in the master bathroom, recreating a backwoods outhouse, complete with a quarter-moon cutout, a shingled roof over the bathtub and a rough-hewn box around the commode. Holmes was an inveterate collector of junk. He picked wire out of dumpsters and sold the copper. He went to garage sales and bought old furniture. He could repair anything, liked sketching and working in clay. He also collected animal skulls. Once, Sharon says, he got a human head from UCLA. He boiled it clean in a pot on Sharon’s stove. They called it Louise. At Christmas, they decorated it with colored lights. About this time, Sharon says, Holmes began working as a courier for the Mob. “He’d come home from one of his movie premieres, take off his boots, peel down his socks and take out a wad of large bills. He’d say, ‘Count this.’ We’re talking $56,000 in two boots.” Jeana Sellers (not her real name) arrived in Holmes’s life in 1976. She was a teenager, and her parents had just divorced. She’d driven out from Miami with her father and younger sister. Along the way, in Colorado, Mr. Sellers picked up a hitchhiker who was going to Glendale to see his girlfriend. Mr. Sellers had no particular plan; Glendale sounded just fine. By the time they pulled into the apartment complex managed by Sharon Holmes, it had been decided. The Sellers would stay there. The complex had ten free-standing cabana apartments, built around a courtyard. Holmes’s half brother and his wife lived there; this little community was the personal fiefdom of John Holmes. One day, Jeana was visiting a neighbor when Holmes came by to deliver a bag of pot. Holmes talked a while, looked Jeana up and down. “Too bad you’re so young,” he said finally, then left. Soon after, the courtship of Jeana began. Whenever he returned from days or weeks away, Holmes would bring gifts: stuffed animals, roses, a ring. For her sister Terry, who was fourteen and overweight, he brought what he called “Terry food,” pounds and pounds of candy. Holmes hired the sisters to do gardening around the complex. When they’d finish work, he’d make sandwiches. John had a van by then, and soon he began organizing camping trips with Jeana, Terry and Terry’s boyfriend, Jose. “I was really charmed,” says Jeana. “I was just taken off my feet. He treated me very special.” John was thirty-one, she was fifteen. One night Holmes told Jeana to meet him at the van. They went to the beach. “I didn’t know what was going to happen, but I knew what might,” she says. “We sat on the rocks, the moon was just right. We sat for a long time, and he was very, very quiet. He just stared. I played in the water. When I got out, he said, ‘Let’s go,’ and we drove toward home. And then, just as we got to this intersection, he slammed on the brakes. It was dark, and there wasn’t any traffic. He said, ‘Would you make love to me?’ I literally shook to death. I said yes. I loved him. We did it in the van. After that I was his.” In time, Jeana’s father went back to Miami and took Terry with him, and Jeana moved in with John’s half brother and his wife, David and Karen. Jeana dropped out of Glendale High School. During the day, she worked in a nursing home. At night, she baby-sat for David and Karen. By 1978, Holmes was freebasing cocaine all the time. He’d been turned on to the drug on a movie set in Las Vegas and had been smoking ever since. Now he never went anywhere without his brown Samsonite briefcase. Inside were his drugs, his glass pipe, baking soda and a petri dish for cooking cocaine powder into rock base, a bottle of 151 rum and cotton swabs for lighting the pipe. Jeana was doing freebase too, almost every night. “When he did coke,” says Jeana, “he’d do it until it was all gone, and then he’d scrape the pipe and smoke all the resin he could find, and then he’d take a bunch of Valium. He’d have me make these peanut-butter chocolate-chip brown-sugar butter cookies. All the sugar helped him come down. He’d have a big glass of milk, and we’d turn on the cartoons, and then he’d go to bed in Sharon’s room. I’d usually fall asleep on the couch.” By this time, Sharon had befriended Jeana. “The poor girl was emaciated,” Sharon says. Sharon’s first act was to move Jeana out of Karen and David’s and into a garage apartment in the complex. A few months later, Jeana moved into the guest room of the house. “I knew the whole picture,” says Sharon. “He was picking on a kid that didn’t know any better. I had to let her know there was another world out there, that John was not God Almighty. “John was terrified that I was going to confront her. But I had no reason to confront her. Why? Why would I confront her? He meant nothing to me in that way.” Holmes was gone now more and more, making films in Europe, San Francisco and Hawaii, doing private tricks, traveling to film openings across the country. At the same time, Holmes was acting as an informant on matters of porn and prostitution for Sergeant Tom Blake, an L.A. vice detective. He began spilling to Blake in 1973, after he was arrested on a movie set. It is debatable whether or not Holmes ever told Blake anything he could use. Also during this period Holmes spent much of his time with his best and only friend, Bill Amerson, in Sherman Oaks. Amerson, a menacing six feet four, 250 pounds, tells tales of his own involvement in drug dealing and organized crime. He says he played pro football and worked as a stunt man, specializing in motorcycle crashes. He was now in porn—writing, directing, producing. Amerson and Holmes had met on a shoot in San Francisco in 1970; they were kindred egos ever after. “John was like a little brother to me,” says Amerson. Amerson named John the godfather of his children and gave Holmes his own room at his house. Holmes and Amerson went hunting, deep-sea fishing, camping. Mostly, says Amerson, he and Holmes excluded women. “John didn’t particularly care for women. At times, I think, he disliked women. He would rather be out in the woods. He was really a simple kid. He liked going to Disneyland, he liked all the rides. He was really sensitive, but he didn’t want anyone to know. A puppy getting hit by a car, a dead bird, strange things made him cry. We spent hours talking about reincarnation, about life, about God, or the lack of.” Holmes started to become erratic around 1978. On sets, he was harder and harder to deal with. He’d lock himself in bathrooms, in closets. People who worked with him joked that you had to leave a trail of freebase from the bathroom to the bedroom to get Holmes to work. Amerson would get calls from directors. He’d go to the set, usually a rented house in the San Fer- nando Valley. He’d find Holmes “going through drawers, looking for something to steal. He’d turned into a fucking burglar. “John got strange,” says Amerson. “He got wild eyed. He didn’t make a lot of sense when he talked.” Soon the man who once claimed to be making almost $500,000 a year selling his sexual charms was working as a drug delivery boy for the gang of outlaws and junkies who lived on Wonderland Avenue. He stole luggage, broke into cars, visited old girlfriends and tricks and ripped them off, charged $30,000 worth of appliances to Sharon’s credit cards. For a while, he and his half brother David tried to make a go of a combination antique store and locksmith service. Jeana ran the store, the Just Looking Emporium. It didn’t last long. The night the store closed its doors for good, says Jeana, John was strung out and paranoid. “That was the first night he punched the shit out of me,” she says, and thereafter, the beatings were regular. “One time he beat me so I’d sleep with these two black guys from his answering service. I think he couldn’t pay the bill. Then he beat me ’cause I slept with them.” By early 1980, Holmes and Jeana had moved out of the complex for good. They stayed in motels sometimes, but mostly they lived in Sharon’s Chevy Malibu. Or at least Jeana did. “I was famous for waiting in the car,” she says. “We’d drive somewhere to do a drug deal. He’d get out. I’d wait. Sometimes it would be two days. I’d have a six-pack of Pepsi and a coffee can to pee in. And my dog, Thor. He was a little Chihuahua. John and Sharon gave him to me.” So it went, until they were busted in January of 1981. At that point, Holmes had Jeana, now twenty, turning tricks. She was living in an apartment in the Valley with a porn actress and high-priced hooker named Michelle. In the early hours of January 14th, Jeana and Michelle were visiting an apartment in Marina Del Ray. While John was waiting for them in the parking lot, he stole a computer out of a car. Thus far, Holmes had been pretty lucky. His connection as an informant for the L.A. police had kept him clear of being busted. But now Holmes was committing felonies almost every day. His luck had run out. The cops got them in the parking lot. The next day, Eddie Nash bailed them out. Jeana didn’t want to go back to Michelle’s. John insisted. She refused. He punched her in the stomach, dragged her through the door. “Get some sleep,” he told her. “You gotta work tonight.” John went to take a bath. Jeana heard the water shut off, heard John get into the tub. She wasn’t going back to this. Enough was enough. “Honey!” called John from the bathtub. “Get me a cup of coffee, will you?” She was halfway out the door when she heard his voice. She froze for a moment, then took a step back inside. She took a deep breath. Then she was gone. Jeana ran, with Thor in her arms, to a Denny’s restaurant. A little old man lent her a quarter. She called her mother in Oregon, asked for a bus ticket. Mom said okay, but it couldn’t happen until tomorrow. Jeana sat down and cried. The man bought her a bowl of chili, then sneaked her into his nursing home. Jeana slept the night on the floor by his bed. The other residents thought it was the scandal of the age. In the morning, many of them brought her toast from the cafeteria. Jeana said goodbye, then called the Glendale bus station. She told the ticket agent that John Holmes, the porn star, was looking for her and wanted to kill her. Please, she said, don’t tell him anything. The agent agreed to help. Then he asked how she was getting to the station. He and his son came and picked her up. As Jeana expected, Holmes showed up at the bus station. The ticket agent played dumb. Holmes followed the wrong bus all the way to San Francisco. Tracy McCourt turned right onto Dona Lola Place, drove 100 yards into the cul-de-sac, parked, cut the engine. DeVerell, Lind and Launius pushed aside the chain-link gate to Nash’s driveway and filed around to the right, behind the house. The sliding glass door was still open, as Holmes had said. They went inside, opened the door of the guest bedroom, peered out. Lind took the lead and charged down the hall, a short-barreled .357 Magnum in one hand, a stolen San Francisco police detective’s badge in the other. Diles and Nash were in the living room. Diles was wearing sweat pants, carrying a breakfast tray. Nash was wearing blue bikini briefs. “Freeze!” yelled Lind. “You’re under arrest! Police officers!” DeVerell and Launius covered Nash. Lind made his way behind the shirtless, blubbery bodyguard. He shifted the badge to his gun hand, his left, then took out the handcuffs with his right. As he fumbled with his paraphernalia and Diles’s thick wrists, Launius came over to help, tripped, bumped into Lind’s arm. The gun discharged. Diles was burned with the muzzle flash. The right side of his back, over his kidney, began to bleed. Nash fell to his knees. He begged to say a prayer for his children. “Fuck your children!” said Launius. “Take us to the drugs.” Lind rolled Diles onto his stomach, handcuffed him, threw a Persian rug over his head. Then he joined the others in Nash’s bedroom. Everything was where Holmes had said. Lind put his .357 to Nash’s head, asked for the combination to the floor safe. Nash refused. Then Launius forced the stainless-steel barrel of his gun into Nash’s mouth. In the floor safe were two large Zip-lock bags full of cocaine. In a gray attaché case were cash and jewelry. In a petty-cash box were several thousand Quaaludes and more cocaine. On the dresser was a laboratory vial about three-quarters full of heroin. Lind taped Nash’s hands behind his back, put a sheet over his head. He found a Browning 9-mm under Nash’s bed, then went to Diles’s room, where he found more weapons. Meanwhile, Launius asked Lind for his hunting knife. He went over to Diles, pulled the rug off his head, edged the knife against his neck. “Where’s the rest of the fucking heroin?” he demanded. “I don’t know,” said Diles. Launius pulled the knife slowly across Diles’s neck. Blood flowed. Suddenly, outside, Tracy McCourt began honking the horn of the getaway car. “Forget it!” said Lind. “Let’s get out of here.” At 10:00 a.m., Lind, McCourt, Launius and DeVerell walked through the door of the Wonderland house. Holmes jumped up from the couch. “So what happened? How did it go down?” “Don’t tell him anything,” snapped Lind. Launius, DeVerell and Lind went into Launius’s bedroom. They’d decided, before leaving Nash’s, that they would short Holmes and McCourt in the division of the loot. Working quickly, Launius removed about $100,000 in cash from the briefcase and hid it in his room. Meanwhile, Joy Miller and Barbara Richardson, Lind’s girlfriend, left the house and drove down the hill to the Laurel Canyon Country Store for gas and cartons of cigarettes. When they returned, the men were at the glass table in the breakfast nook. Everyone was busy. Holmes and Lind weighed the cocaine. Launius counted the Quaaludes. DeVerell counted the money. On the table were eight pounds of cocaine, 5000 Quaaludes, a kilo of high-quality China White heroin and $10,000 in cash. The jewelry would later be fenced for $150,000. Lind, Launius and DeVerell, the three who’d carried out the robbery, were to receive twenty-five percent each. Holmes and McCourt went halves on the last share. As soon as the weighing was done, Holmes went to the kitchen to cook some cocaine powder into rock, then went into the bathroom to smoke. The rest of the Wonderland people took turns injecting heroin and cocaine. After a while, Holmes came back into the living room. He complained about his share of the money. It was only about $3000. He knew that Nash had a lot more than that lying around the house. An argument ensued. Launius punched Holmes in the stomach. “Get the fuck out of here!” he screamed. For the first few months, while she was in Oregon with her mother, Jeana had refused to take Holmes’s calls. She’d gotten a job at a nursing home and was paying her mom rent, trying to rebuild her life. But Holmes kept calling. He sent flowers, presents, photos of them with the dog. By May, Jeana began taking his calls. By June, she was thinking, “Well, I’m not doing anything here.” On June 27th, two days before the robbery at Nash’s, she flew to Los Angeles. John was carrying two suitcases when he met her. “Oh, shit,” she thought, but she didn’t say anything. “I didn’t want to believe I’d fallen for a line again,” Jeana says. “He was sweet. He was great. There wasn’t any trouble. We went to a motel, had a nice reunion. No drugs. It was really nice. He was like the old John. Then he left.” On the day of the robbery Holmes still hadn’t come back. Management asked Jeana to leave. Holmes hadn’t paid for the room. Jeana packed her suitcase, gathered up her Chihuahua. She didn’t have any money. She didn’t know what to do. She couldn’t call Sharon. They hadn’t spoken in two years. Jeana was somewhere downtown. She didn’t know where. She walked the streets, tried to think. A pimp tried to pick her up. Then another. Then she ran into a woman preaching fire and brimstone on a corner. The woman took her to her house, put her to work painting a wall. Meanwhile, Jeana called Holmes’s answering service and left the number. Holmes finally called on the afternoon of the 29th, after the Wonderland Gang kicked him out. He showed up at the house in the early evening. “He had the biggest pile of coke I’d ever seen in my entire life,” says Jeana. “He took over the kitchen. He cooked coke all night long. He even had the Holy Roller’s sister smoking.” In the morning, they went out to get food. “When we came back, the door was locked,” says Jeana. “The Holy Roller was up in the balcony, waving a Christian flag, praying and hollering, singing ‘We Shall Overcome.’ She said John had cut some coke with an old tarot card and she believed it was a sign from the devil. I said, ‘Please, just let me get my clothes and my dog and we’ll leave.’ ” Gregory DeWitt Diles, six feet four, 300 pounds, barged through the front door of the house on Dona Lola, dragging John Holmes by the scruff of his neck. “In here,” said Nash. Diles shoved, Holmes skidded across the carpet. Nash shut the bedroom door. Wednesday afternoon, July 1st, two days after the robbery. Jeana was tucked into another hotel in the Valley. An hour before, Holmes had run into Diles. Holmes was wearing a ring that had been stolen from the boss. Eddie Nash was fifty-two years old, six feet tall, gray haired, strong and wiry. His family had owned several hotels before the creation of Israel in 1948. Nash told a friend that he missed the moonlight and the olive trees of his homeland, that he’d spent time in a refugee camp, that his brother-in-law was shot by Israeli soldiers. The youngest son in the family, Nash arrived in America with seven dollars in his pocket. He worked for others for a time, then opened Beef’s Chuck, a hotdog stand on Hollywood Boulevard. Nash was on the job day and night, wearing a tall white chef ’s hat, waiting tables himself. June M. Schuyler, an elementary-school teacher from Santa Barbara, remembers meeting the “nice-looking, very-light-skinned foreign man” at Beef ’s Chuck. She was living in Hollywood while her autistic son attended the Belle Dubnoff School for Brain-Damaged Children. The school was a block away from Nash’s place. She’d often take her son there for lunch. From then, wrote Schuyler, in a letter to a judge many years later, “Ed Nasrallah began a courtship that was as old-fashioned as they come. For many months he took me out to dinner, introduced me to his mother and other relatives. There never was a sexual relationship between us. I said ‘No’ and I meant it.” Over the next year, Nasrallah brought her grape leaves, hummus, pots of Turkish coffee. Schuykir said that Ed loved her son exceedingly and that he offered to “fix it up for you to take him to a top brain surgeon. . . . No strings attached.” By the mid-Seventies, Ed Nasrallah had become Eddie Nash and had amassed a fortune. He was also a drug dealer and a heavy user. His drug of choice was freebase; sometimes he mixed the crack with heroin. Nash was missing part of his sinus cavity, one of his lungs had been removed, and he had a steel plate in his head. For the last several years, Nash had rarely left his white-stone ranch house in Studio City. At home, Nash walked around in a maroon silk robe, or sometimes in bikini briefs, his body covered with a thin sheen of sweat. His voice had a smooth Arabic lilt. “You want to play baseball?” he’d ask his ever-present guests, lighting his butane torch, offering a hit off his pipe. “The consumption of alcohol and drugs was an ongoing, everyday affair,” says an attorney who is a longtime acquaintance of Nash’s. “The cast of characters would go from two or three to ten or more. It was amazing, the haphazard way in which people would come and go. You’d walk into the house, there were various girls walking around in various states of undress. Some were quite attractive. Others looked like they’d been sucking on the pipe a little too long. “When you met with Eddie, you met at his place, on his terms. I believe that cocaine paranoia created within him the desire to stay within that closed environment that he had control over. If anything, one of the themes in Eddie’s life has always been control. He wanted to be in charge. He wanted to be the Arab man in his tent. The master, the giver of hospitality. All his lawyers—I think he had maybe six or seven working on different things— all his managers, employees, customers, everyone, would come to him. He’d have Jimmie, the cook, prepare these elaborate spreads. You could walk up, whisper something in his ear, and he’d make it available. Whatever. You just had to ask, and he’d give.” According to court testimony, Nash had a fancy for young girls, whips and a game with a revolver called Russian roulette. One woman who had sex with Nash remembers “a lot of temptation. There were piles of cocaine in front of you. Jewelry, wads of money. You’d be left in a room for hours, and then you’d be called in. There were two-way mirrors in the bedroom, any- thing you wanted would be made available. In a way Eddie would assess you on what you took or didn’t take.” In early 1981, Nash’s second wife—the mother of his two sons, aged eight and five—filed for a protection order against Nash. After she left him, according to a court affidavit, “I took the children to Oklahoma to my aunt and uncle’s farm, together with my parents. My husband hired a girl to follow us. She came to the farm to find out if a certain man was with me. After she left, my husband called on the telephone at the farm and said to come home immediately. When I refused, he said, ‘Don’t come back to California or I will have two men waiting at the airport to kill you, and I will have your parents killed.’ ” Nash is said to have had political, police and crime connections. According to one Los Angeles law-enforcement official, “Ed Nash was a very well-known figure in the Sixties around Hollywood with police, and it was never an antagonistic relationship.” One of Nash’s friends and overnight guests was, according to a law- enforcement official, an Israeli with a military background, “the so-called reputed godfather of the Israeli Mafia.” A report by the California State Department of Justice revealed that the Israeli Mafia was active in California during the late Seventies and early Eighties and was involved in drugs, arson, extortion, gun-running and a number of murders, including the death and dismemberment of two Israeli nationals at the plush Bonaventure hotel in downtown L.A. During his six or seven years of heavy drug use, said the attorney, “Nash lost over a million a year directly attributable to drugs. His business empire totally atrophied as a result of the coke. What really cracks me up is people believe he was a dope dealer. That’s bullshit. He was consuming it. At an alarming rate.” On the afternoon of Wednesday, July 1st, 1981, Eddie Nash was again consuming drugs at an alarming rate. He’d been ripped off for eight pounds of cocaine, but the Wonderland Gang hadn’t found his private stash, and now he was bubbling his glass pipe furiously. He’d sent two of his minions out to score more drugs, but they hadn’t yet returned.Two customers waited. They did hits off Eddie’s pipe, eyed the door. One of the customers was Scott Thorson. Thorson had driven from Lake Tahoe to score from Nash. Or perhaps he had flown from Las Vegas. In court testimony years later, he would say, in answer to this and many other questions, “I don’t recall. I really don’t recall.” Thorson was the live-in lover of the entertainer Liberace. He was also in Liberace’s Las Vegas act. Wearing jewel-bedecked livery, he would chauffeur Liberace onto the stage in a glittering mini-Rolls-Royce, open the door, take his master’s fur coat. Then Liberace would make a joke about having the only fur coat in the world that had its own limo. During one special engagement, Thorson danced with the Rockettes. Liberace called him Booper, treated him like a son, a lover, a pet. Thorson had been addicted to cocaine for several years. It began, according to Thorson’s book, Behind the Candelabra, when Liberace ordered him to have cosmetic surgery. First, however, Thorson had to lose thirty pounds. A doctor of dubious practice prescribed a salad of different drugs to aid the weight loss. Pharmaceutical cocaine was one of the ingredients. In time, the surgery was completed, and Thorson was made into a young vision of Liberace. He remained addicted to coke. At the moment that Diles barged through the door with Holmes in tow, Thorson was with Eddie in his bedroom, doing hits. Nash was very upset. “I’ll have them on their knees!” Nash ranted to Thorson. “I’ll teach them a lesson! They’ll never steal from anyone again!” Thorson was excused, and Nash closed the door. Diles smacked Holmes, threw him across the room, shoved him against a wall. “How could you do this thing!” Eddie Nash screamed. Diles hit him again. “I trusted you! I gave you everything!” Nash and Holmes had met three years earlier at the Seven Seas. Nash was a big fan of porn. He invested in movies, leased office space to several porn-related operations. Holmes was one of the greats in the business. Nash liked having him around. He introduced him to all his guests. “I’d like you to meet Mr. John Holmes,” he’d say. For his part, Holmes did anything he could for Nash. Frequently he brought him girls. On Christmas Day 1980, he’d even presented Jeana. Nash reciprocated with a quarter ounce of coke. Holmes thought Nash was the most evil man he’d ever met, but he couldn’t quite figure him out, so he respected him. Now things were not so friendly. Holmes was crumpled on the floor. Diles leveled a gun at his head. Nash was leafing through a little black book that Diles had taken from Holmes’s pocket. “Who’s this in Ohio?” Nash screamed. “Who’s Mary? Your mother? Who’s this in Montana? . . . Is this your brother? . . . I will kill your whole family! All of them! Go back to that house! Get my property! Bring me their eyeballs! Bring me their eyeballs in a bag, and I will forget what you have done to me! Go!” Thursday, July 2nd, 3:30 a.m. Sharon Holmes switched on the porch light, spied through the peephole. Christ, she thought, John. She hadn’t seen him in three months. His clothes were ripped, he was bloody from head to toe. He stared straight ahead, unblinking. She opened the door, folded her arms against her chest. “Well?” “Accident . . . car . . . um . . .” he stammered. “Can I . . . come in?” They went to the bathroom. Sharon, a registered nurse, rummaged through a well-stocked medicine cabinet, brought out iodine and cotton swabs. She reached up and took John’s chin in her hand, turned his head side to side. Funny, she thought, no cuts, no abrasions. Just blood. “You had an accident in the Malibu?” John looked down at Sharon. His eyes blinked rapidly. They’d been married sixteen years. Sharon always knew when he was lying. That’s probably why he always came back. “Run me a bath, will you?” he said. John eased into the tub. Sharon sat on the wood-covered commode. “What now?” she thought. He dunked his head, put a steaming washcloth over his face. Then he sat up. “The murders,” he said. “I was there.” “What do you mean you were there?” “It was my fault,” John said, his eyes welling with tears. “I stood there and watched them kill those people.” “What are you talking about?” “I was involved in a robbery,” John began, and he told the story. The setup, the robbery, Nash’s threat to kill his whole family, Sharon included. “So I told him everything,” John said. “I told where the robbers lived and how to get there. I had to take them there.” “Three men and myself.” “Okay, you took them there.” “I took them there. There was a security system at the house. I called up and said I had some things for the people inside and to let me up. They opened the security gate, and the four of us went up the stairs, and when the door opened, they forced their way inside. Someone held a gun to my head. I stood there against the wall. I watched them beat them to death.” “You stood there?” “There was nothing I could do.” “John, how could you?” “It was them or me. They were stupid. They made him beg for his life.” They deserved what they got.” “Blood! Blood! So much blood!” Holmes was having a nightmare. Tossing and moaning, punching and kicking. “So much blood!” he groaned over and over. Jeana was scared to death. She didn’t know what to do. Wake him? Let him scream? It was Thursday, July 2nd, 1981. After bathing at Sharon’s, Holmes had come here, to this motel in the Valley. He walked through the door, flopped on the bed, passed out. Jeana sat very still on the edge of the bed, watching aTV that was mounted on the wall. After a while, the news.The top story was something about a mass murder. Four bodies. A bloody mess. A house on Wonderland Avenue. Jeana stood up, moved closer to the tube. “That house,”she thought.Things started to click. “I’ve waited outside that house. Isn’t that where John gets his drugs?” Hours passed, John woke. Jeana said nothing. They made a run to McDonald’s for hamburgers. They watched some more TV. Then came the late-night news.The cops were calling it the Four on the Floor Murders. Dead were Joy Miller, Billy DeVerell, Ron Launius, Barbara Richardson. The Wonderland Gang.The murder weapon was a steel pipe with threading at the ends. Thread marks found on walls, skulls, skin. House tossed by assailants. Blood and brains splattered everywhere, even on the ceilings. The bodies were dis- covered by workmen next door; they’d heard faint cries from the back of the house: “Help me. Help me.” A fifth victim was carried out alive. Susan Launius, 25, Ron Launius’s wife. She was in intensive care with a severed finger and brain damage.The murders were so brutal that police were comparing the case to the Tate-LaBianca murders by the Manson Family. Holmes and Jeana watched from the bed. Jeana was afraid to look at John. She cut her eyes slowly, caught his profile. He was frozen. The color drained from his face. She actually saw it. First his forehead, then his cheeks, then his neck. He went white. Jeana said nothing. After a while, the weather report came on. She cleared her throat “John?” “You had this dream. You know, when you were sleeping? You said something about blood.” Holmes’s eyes bulged. He looked very scared. She’d never seen him look scared before. “Yeah, well, uh,” he said. “Um, I lifted the trunk of the car, and I gave myself a nosebleed yesterday. Don’t worry.” On July 10th, police knocked down the door of their motel room and arrested Jeana and Holmes. For the next three days, Holmes, Jeana and Sharon were held in protective custody in a luxury hotel in downtown Los Angeles. Armed guards in the lobby, in the hallway. Room service. Holmes tried to make a deal with the cops. He wanted witness protection, a new name, money, a home. He wanted new names for Sharon and Jeana, too. He offered the police secrets. Names of mobsters, drug dealers, prostitutes, pimps. The police wanted to know who killed the Wonderland Gang. Holmes wouldn’t tell. “With Holmes, it was like he was center stage and the lights and the camera were on,” says a detective who was present. “It was like he was doing a movie. Here he is, he has two women with him. All three of them are sleeping in the same bed. He stroked us, jacked us around. He told us certain things.That we were on the right track, that this is indeed what had happened, that this was the motivation, that this was how it came down. He played it for all it was worth, then he said he wouldn’t testify. We cut him loose.” The three went back to Sharon’s house. Sharon cooked dinner. Holmes picked up Sharon’s two dogs and Thor from the kennel. Later, the women dyed Holmes’s hair black. Holmes and Jeana painted the Malibu gray with a red top. They used cans of spray paint. The finish was drippy and streaked, but it didn’t matter. They were going underground. Now it was midnight in the parking lot at the Safeway in Glendale. The Malibu was idling. Jeana sat in the front seat, Thor in her arms. Holmes leaned up against the back bumper, smoking a cigarette. Sharon stood with arms crossed. “Change your mind. Come with us, Sharon.” “No way, John.” “It can be the three of us, Sharon, like old times.” “You’ve got to be joking.” “You can’t do this to me,” he said. “Why? Why can’t I?” “Because I love you.” Sharon looked at him. On their first date, he’d brought a bottle of Mateus and a handful of flowers. Sharon had watched through the window as he picked them from the neighbor’s front yard. Now she shook her head slowly, walked around the car to the passenger side. Jeana leaned out the window, and they hugged. Over the years, they’d become like mother and daughter. “Take care of him,” Sharon said. “Hello, Jeana.” “Chris? Is that you?” “How are you, Sis?” “Fine. Where are you calling from? You sound close.” “I’m here.” “In Miami?” “Well, I, I, ah, came . . . with a friend. Listen. Tell me where you are. I’ll pick you up.” Jeana hung up the phone. Her brother Chris, 16, lived in Oregon. She hadn’t heard from him in, what, six months? Not since she was home. Now it was December 4th, 1981. After leaving California, Jeana and Holmes had gone to Vegas, then Montana, then headed south, visiting the Grand Canyon, the Painted Desert. Holmes broke into cars along the way. The couple ended up in Miami, at a small run-down hotel on Collins Avenue. Everyone there was on some kind of slide. Big Rosie, the manager, let Jeana work the switchboard and clean rooms in exchange for rent. Holmes went to work for a construction company, painting a hotel down the strip. For extra money, Jeana solicited tricks on the beach. “Everybody at the hotel got to know us,” Jeana says. “We were real friendly. John was doing a lot of drawing. Drawings of the dog, of me. We’d have dinner with other people at the hotel, go to movies. We were like a normal couple. After a while, I said I didn’t want to go out on the beach anymore. We had a big fight. I ran out the door, down to the pool, and he ran after me, the fool. Everybody was down there. He beat the shit out of me, then walked back up to the room. Everybody was just shocked.” The next day, while Holmes was at work, a delegation of residents came to see Jeana. A mother and daughter offered to help. The daughter had a kid and a job. She was moving to a house. Would Jeana want to be the live-in baby sitter? Jeana packed her bag, gathered up Thor, put Holmes’ gun in her pocketbook. Now it was December 4th, and she hadn’t seen Holmes in two weeks. Her brother was in town; something weird was going on. Chris didn’t have a driver’s license. How could he rent a car? They picked up a six-pack, went to a park, sat by a pond. “Jeana, I’ve got to tell you. See that car over there? It’s the cops.” “You little . . .” Jeana stood, walked away. Chris caught up. “Listen,” he said, grabbing her elbow. “People are after John, and they think you’re with him. You’re going to get hurt. Tell the cops what they want to know, ’cause otherwise John’s going to be dead in a few days. You’re probably going to be saving him.” When the cops got to his hotel, Holmes was there. “I’ve been expecting you,” he said. He invited them in for coffee. “How you doing, John?” said the man in the gray suit, leaning over the safety rail of the bed. “John? Remember me?” February 1988, seven years after the murders. A sunny room in the Veterans Administration Hospital in Sepulveda, California. The man in the suit was Los Angeles Police Department detective Tom Lange. Behind him was his partner, Mac McClain. The Wonderland case was still open. They had a few questions for John Holmes. “We want to talk to you about Eddie Nash,” said McClain. “John? . . . Remember Eddie? . . . John? Are you awake?” Holmes’s eyelids fluttered. He weighed ninety pounds, his fingernails were two inches long. He was dying. Following his arrest in Miami, Holmes was tried for the murder of the Wonderland Gang. His defense was simple: John Holmes was the “sixth victim” of the Wonderland murders, and Eddie Nash was “evil incarnate.” “Ladies and gentlemen,” his lawyer told the jury at the outset, “unlike some mysteries, this is not going to be a question of ‘Who done it?’This is going to be a question of ‘Why aren’t the perpetrators here?’ ” In the end, the most damaging evidence the prosecution could produce was a palm print on a headboard above one of the victims. Holmes refused to testify. The jury found him innocent. Holmes remained in jail, however, on his outstanding burglary case. While awaiting that trial, he was ordered by a judge to tell the grand jury what he knew about the Wonderland murders. Because he’d already been tried, Holmes would not be able to invoke the Fifth Amendment. According to the law, he had to talk. He refused anyway. He’d underestimated Nash once, but he’d never do it again. Nash would kill him and his family if he talked, he was certain of it. He was held in the county jail for contempt. In jail, Holmes went on a hunger strike. Two weeks later, it was reported that he’d lost only seven pounds. Jailers said other inmates were giving him candy bars. Later it was reported that Holmes interrupted his fast, ate a meal, then continued his fast. Finally, on the afternoon of November 22nd, 1982, Holmes relented and testified. He’d been in jail eleven months in all, 110 days on the contempt charge. His attorney told reporters that he’d changed his mind because of “certain arrangements” that had been made and “certain circumstances” that had arisen. What he may have been referring to was the imprisonment, that very same morning, of Eddie Nash, on charges of dealing drugs. Just after the murders, Nash and Diles had found themselves in a world of shit. Nash’s house was raided three times. Each time, drugs, money and weapons were seized. Each time, Nash made bail. Then Nash was arrested with three others on federal charges of racketeering, arson and mail fraud, an insurance scam. Nash’s three coconspirators were found guilty. Nash was acquitted. In the end, both Diles and Nash went to jail. Diles got seven years on charges stemming from the drug raids. Nash was found guilty of possessing two pounds of cocaine for sale. At trial, his lawyer argued that the $1 million worth of coke was not for dealing, that it was strictly for personal use. During recesses in the trial, Nash would go out to his car and smoke freebase. Then he’d swallow a few Quaaludes and return. His lawyer hired a young associate to stick Nash with a pin whenever he nodded off in court. The judge in the case was Everett E. Ricks Jr. It was obvious from his comments that Ricks, a hard-liner, considered Eddie Nash a plague. Ricks even came in from his sickbed to sentence Nash. Coughing into the microphone, Ricks called Nash “a danger to the public” and maxed him out. Eight years in prison, a $120,350 fine. Two years later, Ricks reduced Nash’s sentence to time served, and Nash was released. Ricks cited Nash’s need for delicate surgery to remove a sinus tumor. “I wouldn’t want to be operated on in San Quentin Prison,” Ricks said sympathetically. Two years later, Ricks, himself, was ordered held against his will for psychiatric observation. The fifty-two-year-old former jurist had been arrested after he allegedly punched his eighty-two-year-old mother and threatened to kill someone if she didn’t give him keys to a car. After his release, Nash told a friend that jail had saved his life. He moved to a modest condo in Tarzana and set about rebuilding, taking college business courses at night. Drugs, inattention, back taxes and lawyers’ fees had depleted his fortune. Holmes, meanwhile, had gone back to making films. When he got out of jail, Holmes was jubilant. He greeted reporters, had dinner with his lawyer, then called Sharon. She told him to “get the fuck out of my life.” He couldn’t call Jeana. She was nowhere to be found. Holmes had nothing to do and nowhere to go. His lawyer lent him a Volkswagen Beetle and $100, and Holmes showed up at his friend Amerson’s house. While Holmes was in jail, Amerson had started a company called John Holmes Productions. He was marketing Holmes’s old films on video. Like all porn actors, John had been paid per day and had signed away the rights to his own films. His old friend was happy to pick them up. “Let’s face it,” Amerson says, “John was a product. I marketed him. That’s what it’s all about. It’s business.” With all the publicity from the murders, John Holmes had achieved almost mainstream celebrity. The video boom was just beginning, and Holmes became a kind of Marlon Brando of porn. No longer the leading man, he was now the featured oddity. In California Valley Girls, for instance, he had one scene. He came in, sat on a couch. A girl entered stage right. Then another girl, another. At the end, there were six working at once on his penis. Early in 1983, Holmes was shooting Fleshpond at a studio in San Francisco. One of the actresses in the cast was Laurie Rose. Laurie was nineteen; she came from a small town outside Vegas. In the business she was billed as Misty Dawn, the anal queen of porn. “That first time, we didn’t get to work together,” says Laurie, “but we were attracted. It sounds silly, but you know how you can meet someone for the first time and it’s like you know them already?” After the film, John and Laurie, who looked like Jeana, began dating. Usually, they smoked freebase and had sex. Then, says Laurie, “the third time I went up there, he came up to me with the mirror and said, ‘You want a hit?’ and I turned to him and said no. He looked shocked. He said, ‘Why not?’ and I said, ‘Because it makes me feel funny and I can’t talk.’ So he went in the bathroom, and he locked himself in. He stayed in there like three hours, and I’m just sitting there, you know, twiddling my thumbs. Finally he came out and said, ‘You know what? This stuff makes me feel funny too. I’m going to quit.’ ” In time, John and Laurie moved in together at Amerson’s. When Amerson raised their rent to $400, they got their own place in Encino. John continued to make films, but he made Laurie stop. “He thought one porn person in the family was enough,” she says. “And the AIDS thing was just starting to come out. Nobody had gotten it yet; but it was still in the back of our minds. He thought, ‘Well, if I’m going to take a chance, that’s enough.’ ” Apparently, Holmes had made good his promise and stopped doing drugs. John and Laurie stayed home a lot and watched videos. On weekends they went to swap meets and yard sales. “Nobody ever came over,” says Laurie. “Nobody knew where we lived. His words to me were ‘Friends can get you killed.’ We were very careful.Then, when Eddie Nash got out of jail, John was very, very worried. We went on twenty-four-hour watch. For like three weeks, one of us had to be awake at all times. It was like being in a movie or something.” By late 1984, John was working as an executive at Amerson’s VCX films. He was supposed to be doing sales and pre-production, writing and editing, in addition to acting. Amerson says Holmes spent most of his time playing cards and shooting darts. When VCX cut off Holmes’s salary, Amerson put up money to start Penguin Productions. Holmes was to run it. Laurie worked as a secretary. “John was tired of the whole industry,” she says. “He wanted to make a million dollars so we could just leave and be done with it.” Then, in the summer of 1985, John tested positive for AIDS. “He went fucking crazy” says Amerson. “He panicked, walked in circles around the doctor’s office, threw his briefcase down. He said, ‘I’m gonna die!’ and drove off.” “When he came back,” says Laurie, “he was laughing about it. We closed up the office and went to the beach. We played our favorite songs, walked, talked. John said he felt like he was chosen to get AIDS because of who he was, how he lived. He felt like he was an example.” John continued making films for a while. His last film was The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empress, starring Ilona “Ciccolina” Staller, a member of the Italian Parliament. By the time it was released, in 1987, Holmes’s health had already begun to slide. The word in the industry was that he had colon cancer. Holmes was telling people that doctors had removed sixteen feet of his large intestine. In truth, Holmes was operated on for hemorrhoids. Around that time, he also began developing complications related to AIDS. Amerson, meanwhile, accused his friend of embezzling $200,000 from the company. He cut Holmes off, canceled his insurance. “John was really sick by this point,” says Laurie. “We moved around a lot because the rent kept going up. I was working as a computer programmer. John would just stay home. He was in so much pain, you couldn’t touch him. He couldn’t walk. His legs and feet would swell up, his ears would bleed, he had infections in his lungs. His surgery wouldn’t heal up, either. He was very upset about the business. He’d made all these people millions and millions of dollars. We were really broke. He called some people, and they said, ‘We’ll help you out.’ But we’d never get the money they promised.” On January 24th, 1988, John and Laurie were married in the Little Chapel of the Flowers, in Las Vegas. It was a simple ceremony. The bride wore white. “It was a big ordeal for him,” says Laurie. “He knew he was dying. He knew we wouldn’t have a life together.” In February, Holmes was admitted to the VA hospital in Sepulveda. Soon after, Detectives Lange and McCain called the hospital. They wanted to see Holmes. After seven years, the district attorney was reopening the Wonderland case, based, in part, on testimony from Scott Thorson, Liberace’s ex-lover. Thorson, who was waiting to be sentenced on a drug-related armed robbery, had sought a deal with police. He was prepared to testify that Eddie Nash had sent Holmes and Diles to Wonderland Avenue and that Nash felt responsible for the “bloody mess” that resulted. Now the police wanted Holmes’s testimony. Laurie was standing at the door when Lange and McClain appeared down the corridor. “John, they’re coming,” Laurie said in a stage whisper. Holmes nodded his head, put out his cigarette, closed his eyes. “He was incoherent,” says Lange. John Holmes died on March 13th, 1988. “His eyes were open,” says Laurie, “and it looked like he had looked up to Death and said, ‘Here I am.’ It was the most peaceful look I ever saw in my life. I tried to shut his eyes like in the movies, but they wouldn’t stay shut.” Holmes didn’t want a funeral, but he did have a last wish. “He wanted me to view his body and make sure that all the parts were there,” says Laurie. “He didn’t want part of him ending up in a jar somewhere. I viewed his body naked, you know, and then I watched them put the lid on the box and put it in the oven. We scattered his ashes over the ocean.” Six months later, on September 8th, 1988, Diles and Nash were charged with the murders on Wonderland Avenue. After a preliminary hearing in January 1989, at which Thorson, among others, testified, Nash and Diles were bound over for trial this summer; they are currently being held without bail in the Los Angeles County Jail. Nash’s and Diles’s attorneys maintain their clients’ innocence and question the credibility of witnesses for the prosecution. “You know,” says Detective Lange, “there’s no mystery here. Every time you read something, they say it’s a big mystery. Or the local TV says it’s a big mystery. Or that show out of New York, you know, A Current Affair. Big mystery. Like aliens or something. There’s no mystery. John Holmes didn’t go to his grave with anything but a very bad case of AIDS. He told us everything initially, right after it happened.” “But it’s one thing to tell someone something,” says Lange. “It’s another thing to testify to it in court.” John, A Wonderland Library & Reading List | Wonderland1981 - The Wonderland Murders, localarts, and 7 others are discussing. Toggle Comments JadedJules 11:00 am on September 21, 2012 Permalink | Reply Hey John. I was in Glendale last week with a girlfriend of mine. We both read Road Through Wonderland and were talking about it so we decided to drive past the address where John lived with Sharon and Dawn. An apartment building was in it’s place. It was tacky enough and looked like it was probably put up in the 80s. Anyway – I will post a picture here when I am on my home computer over the weekend. John 11:58 am on September 21, 2012 Permalink | Reply Thanks, please do!! Bonnie Brae 10:07 am on September 22, 2012 Permalink John 6:25 pm on September 21, 2012 Permalink | Reply I wish that I lived there. I’d be there with you guys! And we could check out other sites. I know that it’s just another big city but I would love it! I have some time off coming, so maybe I’ll make it one day soon. It must ve great living there. Bonnie Brae 9:25 am on September 22, 2012 Permalink OMG – if you only knew John! I have a fascination for street signs. Which is how I found your blog in the first place. I love photographing the Wonderland street sign and any other remotely interesting street sign. On Monday I am planning to photograph the Cielo Drive street sign. Let me know if you have any thoughts for anything else. PS – I loved the look of your blog so much that I copied you on my FB. I used my wonderland street sign for the ‘cover photo’. And I’m constantly sharing your stories with my bestie Gayle and my sis. http://www.facebook.com/julia.arabia this is me btw – get in touch with me if you want a few friends to drive around the freaky death zones and crime scenes with in LA. I grew up in San Diego but have been here for 15 years now and I take full advantage of living here too. I wish Spawn Ranch was closer. John 12:10 pm on September 22, 2012 Permalink Cool, I sent a friend request. SoCal is so nice… But biggg!!! A lot of cool stuff to do and see. I have been to San Fran a few times but never knew anyone in SoCal. Bonnie Brae 10:09 am on September 22, 2012 Permalink | Reply I have a few links – not sure which one if any will post the pics directly. anyway – giving it a shot. John 1:05 pm on September 26, 2012 Permalink I think I have a “John St.” street sign posted in my folders somewhere. I took it somewhere in Houston. There’s a street near me here where I go on business called “Pansy Lane”. I don’t want to love there…right near Wimp Drive I’m sure! Not sure i which link to post. There is HTML code or Image code. Here is html Jill C. Nelson 10:28 am on May 16, 2013 Permalink Excerpts from the above posted Sager piece: One of the customers was Scott Thorson.” ‘“I’ll have them on their knees!” Nash ranted to Thorson. “Thursday, July 2nd, 3:30 a.m. Sharon Holmes switched on the porch light, spied through the peephole. Christ, she thought, John. She hadn’t seen him in three months. His clothes were ripped, he was bloody from head to toe.” Funny how Sager’s research is incorrect regarding the date of the murder and Holmes’ alleged subsequent visit to Sharon’s house. According to Sager’s piece, Nash is plotting and scheming on the afternoon of July 1st when we know the murders were committed in the early morning on July 1st and the bodies had already been found by the mid-late afternoon on that same day — according to homicide detecive Tom Lange who made a career of precisely documenting times and dates. Likewise, when Sager references Holmes “alleged” visit to Sharon on July 2nd wearing “bloody” clothes (supposedly immediately following the murders). Curious oversights. This is why it was so important to double check and seriously question previously reported/documented information when we researched Holmes and (particularly) the Wonderland story. John 12:00 pm on May 16, 2013 Permalink I actually subscribed to Rolling Stone when this article was published in 1989. However, I never read that article until a few years ago. I have found Sharon quoted in two articles saying he knocked at the door, the other saying John woke her at her bedside. What really happened, Jill? I’m going to order your book asap! Gayle 4:42 pm on April 2, 2014 Permalink | Reply So, where’s the picture? I never saw your photos from that visit. Gayle 4:43 pm on April 2, 2014 Permalink My comment got misplaced. I was asking about the photos of the Glendale apartments. John 2:47 pm on April 3, 2014 Permalink Jules never sent them to me Jill C. Nelson 1:33 pm on May 16, 2013 Permalink | Reply Over the years, Sharon made many contradictory statements, as has Dawn Schiller, regarding Holmes and the Wonderland events. Neither woman was present during the robbery and murders, so as far as we were concerned, anything either one said about either event is heresay — including after the fact. For example, I have always been suspicious about the story that Holmes cried out in his sleep shortly after the murders screaming “Blood! There’s so much blood!” Both Sharon and Dawn said he did this verbatim with each of them (but not together) which I personally doubt. Their stories about this incident and other elements of the overall Holmes/Wonderland saga align a little too neatly which lead us to believe that one might have manipulated the other (for whatever reason) so that their stories would be similar. Years ago we read on Dawn’s blog (in and around 2005) that she claimed to have met the Wonderland gang. In her interview with Cass Paley and Roger Jacobs for WADD in the late 1990s, she claimed that she never met the gang. Btw, we were granted use (by HUSTLER) of the complete WADD transcripts for our book, including what was not included in the documentary — in addition to the 35 interviews we conducted ourselves. When individuals (especially when connected to an infamous individual like Holmes) prove to be untruthful, it makes a biographer question everything they have said as was also (obviously) the case with Holmes which is why our book was more than four years in the making. We quickly discovered that mostly all of the participants in this story lied at one time or another. That is why our book is presented in an oral history format which allows for all parties to weigh in on a given subject. If you are planning to order the book (my offer stands to send you a copy gratis), I don’t want to spoil anything for you. I will share this though: One of the statements Sharon made to the press concerning the much talked about “Holmes confession” had Holmes divulging “everything” about the murders to her three weeks after the crime. That’s not the story she stuck with in more recent years. Go figure. John 1:41 pm on May 16, 2013 Permalink | Reply Amazing. I have always felt that she was not always pimped out by John but sometimes…maybe…a willing participant in those things. She liked doing drugs too, so… hey, I’m gonna order the book tonight! I appreciate the offer! Thanks. When I’m done reading it, eventually I’ll donate it to the library here. Jill C. Nelson 2:01 pm on May 16, 2013 Permalink We talked in depth to Julia St. Vincent for our book who was one of John’s primary girlfriends (and the director of Exhausted). She was also one of the women involved with Holmes at the same time as Schiller in 1980/’81, and knew Dawn back in the day. (She even paid for Dawn to accompany her to a wedding for a few days in Boston.) After Dawn and St. Vincent’s first meeting (the two women sabotaged Holmes who had no idea they knew one another) Dawn and her friends often visited St. Vincent in Hollywood and one of Dawn’s friends did work for St. Vincent. St. Vincent paints quite a different picture of Dawn than the one Dawn paints of herself today. I’m not suggesting at all that she wasn’t manipulated by Holmes at certain points, but according to St. Vincent, Schjller definitely had another, more street-smart side to her. Not surprisingly, St. Vincent is conveniently omitted from Dawn’s book which is ironic considering that St. Vincent is the one who helped Cass Paley and company track Schiller down for WADD. Anyway, just thought I’d share some insights. A Wonderland Library & Reading List | Wonderland1981 - The Wonderland Murders 6:01 am on September 2, 2013 Permalink | Reply […] Rolling Stone article, The Devil and John Holmes: https://wonderland1981.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/the-devil-and-john-holmes-by-mike-sager-may-1989/ […] misael 12:44 am on December 22, 2013 Permalink | Reply The first reading in english that i ever had as an exchange student in 1990 in the US right of the rolling stones edition. Fascinated by the story i just read it again and after watching the 2003 movie is such a strong (in spanish “moraleja”) or “learning” of the excesses. May excite, may disgust. But back on the reading, it’s interesting the message ‘Friends can get you killed”. Jim 11:33 am on March 31, 2014 Permalink | Reply John, appreciate all the work you’ve done on this site. I am going to be driving through Pataskala, OH in a couple of weeks. I thought I saw on this site a picture of the house in Pataskala where Holmes grew up? Is there such a picture or is my recollection simply wrong. John 3:11 pm on March 31, 2014 Permalink Thanks Jim. I posted a video of Pataskala and Jill Nelson shared some Pataskala pics she took while there. I am not sure if the house still exists or not. I believe there is a pic of the house in Jill’s book “Inches” May, 1989 – Rolling Stone Cover “The Devil & John Holmes” | Wonderland1981 - The Wonderland Murders 7:36 am on March 4, 2014 Permalink | Reply […] Click here to read the article. I only buy Playboy, High Society, and Rolling Stone for the articles […] Jim 3:24 pm on March 31, 2014 Permalink | Reply John, you are correct! I knew I saw something about a house in Pataskala. I’m probably going to have lunch somewhere in the town when I drive through. I would inquire a little bit about Holmes while I’m there but based on everything I’ve read on this site those people do not like outsiders asking questions. Mark C 11:10 am on April 4, 2014 Permalink | Reply I live est. about 150 to 200 miles or so east from Pataskala Ohio, Lot of the area people will not answer many at all questions from anybody who they may feel are outsiders or strangers for fear the stranger may try to harm or make fun of there own local community they must live in some way on a later date. Plus please remember them poor people just happen to be living in Licking County OH. That don’t help things at all when the locals hear the name John Holmes in a quick fast question from some passing stranger. That almost like a strange double blow curse has been put on the local area because of ex-local. That just how the locals been for many & many years. By the way Licking County was named because The County is on the South Fork of The Licking River. A very nice local river only. And not because of anything else. ( Late night talk show host sure could make a career over the many jokes over that name) So in a way I don’t blame the local people of always being kind of on there defense when ever the name John Holmes is asked locally by some passing stranger. But most people once you get to know them, They are hugely great, kind and wonderful people. I highly recommend getting to be good friends with some of the local people first before even asking anything about there world wide infamous ex-local citizen. You get lot more information & stories out of the few citizens that will talk about old Johnny. So my guess is we will not be seeing there longest city street be named The John Holmes Memorial Boulevard any time soon. Hope this may help explain little bit why them local people are a little cold to any stranger when it comes to the name John Holmes that may come up in any fast quick question from someone who they don’t know real good.. They done been down that road many times before of the countless jokes that been made of there local area. Jim 5:54 pm on April 4, 2014 Permalink | Reply Mark, I appreciate your insight. I will probably just walk around the town for a little bit and pretty much keep my mouth shut. Holmes hasn’t lived in the town for over 50 years and has been dead for over 25 years so I’m sure any questions about him would probably not go over well. localarts 10:38 am on April 5, 2014 Permalink | Reply There’s another thread on this blog that discusses the obituary for John Holmes mother. John was left out of the obituary all together. If his immediate family felt this way about him you can just imagine how the residence of this small town felt. I’m guessing the reason Holmes relatives omitted him was probably due to the fact they were trying shield younger members of the Holmes family for obvious reasons. Jill C. Nelson 3:05 pm on April 5, 2014 Permalink | Reply You could be right, localarts. Obviously, there are certain family member(s) who felt it necessary to protect someone or someone’s reputation. I do know however, that the family is not united about this slight. My feeling is that failing to include John as a member of the Holmes/Bowman family shows a lack of class and respect on the part of certain family member(s). A relative can easily be obliterated from an obituary, but he or she cannot be extinguished from a family tree or from existance. Personally, I think it’s rather sad. localarts 9:53 am on April 6, 2014 Permalink | Reply You’re right Jill. Holmes cannot be erased from the family tree but whoever was responsible for Mary Holmes obituary had their reasons for leaving John out of it. While neither one of us were there, you can just imagine the gossip, finger pointing & name calling members of his family experienced and it must have been devastating. The fact he was left out of the obituary shows the level of hurt and shame he brought to the Holmes / Bowman name. Clearly, we don’t know the full magnitude of what his family went through but it must have been pretty damn bad to leave a son out of his mother’s obit! Jill it’s my understanding that Holmes’ older brother still lives in Pataskala. Have you or anybody you know ever tried to interview any of the family still living in the town? Your book was very thorough but I can’t remember if it contained any interviews from people in Pataskala. Hi Jim. Yes, John’s eldest brother Dale still resides in Pataskala. I don’t know about others, but Jennifer and I attempted to contact and interview family members for the book. We were in communication with one of John’s nieces, and his half-brother David. It was complicated, but in the end, we weren’t able to disclose/publish any information they shared with us. Our experiences with John’s niece and with David were positive. Of all of his siblings, David and John were probably closest. The Devil and John Holmes, by Mike Sager (May, 1989) | Wonderland1981 – The Wonderland Murders | pop~agenda~culture 4:08 am on September 11, 2016 Permalink | Reply […] https://wonderland1981.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/the-devil-and-john-holmes-by-mike-sager-may-1989/ […] John 10:01 pm on August 16, 2020 Permalink | Reply Reblogged this on Wonderland1981 – The Wonderland Murders. ← The Wonderland Murders (Rare British TV Documentary) Memorial added to Findagrave.com for Tracy McCourt →
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Report29 Mar 2014 Bromell equals world junior 100m record at Texas Relays Trayvon Bromell on his way to a 10.01 clocking in the 100m at the Texas Relays (© Kirby Lee) His 10.02 clocking in the heats on Friday whetted the appetite for something special, and in the 100m final on Saturday (29) at the Texas Relays, USA’s Trayvon Bromell did not disappoint, equalling the world junior record* of 10.01. The 18-year-old Baylor University student has run faster before, having clocked 9.99 last year at altitude and with the significant assistance of a 4.0m/s tailwind. But this time his world-leading 10.01 clocking was achieved with the perfectly legal wind reading of 1.5m/s. It was also his first 100m competition of the year and improved his pre-2014 wind-legal PB by more than a quarter of a second, having clocked 10.02 (0.9m/s) in yesterday’s heats. Bromell, the reigning US junior 100m champion, has also impressed this year over the longer sprint, clocking a wind-assisted 20.23 last week at the TCU Invitational in Fort Worth, Texas. But this latest performance has now catapulted him into the spotlight ahead of this year’s IAAF World Junior Championships, which is being held on home soil. Three other junior athletes have previously clocked 10.01, although only one of those marks – Darrel Brown’s performance in 2003 – have been ratified as an official world junior record. USA’s Jeffery Demps registered the same mark in 2008 but it couldn’t be ratified as a record as there was no ‘zero control’ test at the start of the competition. Japan’s Yoshihide Kiryu also tied the same mark last year, but wasn’t ratified as a mechanical wind gauge was used. Nevertheless, both of those marks are still valid performances and still appear on the world junior all-time list. In Bromell’s race today in Austin, on a day when many other races were wind-assisted, the top five athletes set lifetime bests. Reggie Lewis finished a distant second in 10.15, just one hundredth ahead of Tevin Hester. World leads in the throws by Crouser and Dacres There were several other good marks across the four days of competition at the Texas Relays. Ryan Crouser, the 2009 world youth champion, set a lifetime best of 21.27m to win the shot put. The reigning NCAA champion indoors and out opened with 19.53m, then improved to 20.84m in the second round. But he saved his best for his last effort as he sent the shot flying out to 21.27m, adding 18cm to his previous PB. Another former world youth champion, Jamaica’s Fedrick Dacres, also jumped to the top of the early-season 2014 world lists. The 2011 world youth and 2012 world junior discus champion continued his great transition to the senior weight implement in his first year as a senior athlete. The 20-year-old led from the outset, opening with 63.30m, and then produced the three best marks of his life in the final three rounds, throwing 65.12m, 66.75m and 65.94m. Dacres’ winning mark is just 40cm shy of the Jamaican record set two years ago by Jason Morgan. His three best marks were also superior to Julian Wruck’s best throw of the competition as the two-time NCAA champion managed 65.01m in a competition where six men surpassed the 60-metre line. One day after setting a PB in the shot, Crouser did likewise in the discus; his 60.76m being good enough for fifth place. Kendra Harrison, a finalist in both the 100m hurdles and 400m hurdles at last year’s NCAA Championships, got her 2014 outdoor campaign off to a great start. After a wind-legal 12.94 in the heats of the 100m hurdles, the 21-year-old was denied a potential huge lifetime best of 12.68 in the final as the wind reading was an agonising 2.1m/s, just over the legal limit. In one of the few other wind-legal races of the final day, NCAA champion Ameer Webb won the 200m in a close finish from 2005 world silver medallist Wallace Spearmon, 20.38 to 20.39. For Webb it was his fastest ever season opener over his specialist distance. World junior bronze medallist Shelbi Vaughan won the discus with 60.61m, finally breaking the lifetime best she set two years ago to win the 2012 national junior title. The 60-metre line was also surpassed in the javelin by US record-holder Kara Patterson. Competing in her first competition of 2014, the 27-year-old won comfortably with her first-round effort of 60.45m, her best mark since the 2012 US Olympic Trials. World University Games champion Sam Kendricks cleared the second-best height of his career in the pole vault, winning with a world-leading 5.70m. He cleared all of his heights at the first time of asking, but ended the competition with three failures at a would-be PB of 5.82m. Logan Cunningham also cleared 5.70m to win the ‘Olympic Development’ pole vault competition, a 17-centimetre improvement on his previous best. World youth pole vault finalist Desiree Freier continued where she left off from the indoor season, setting a PB of 4.35m to go to second on the US junior all-time list. Like Bromell, she too could be a contender at this year’s World Junior Championships. Jon Mulkeen for the IAAF *subject to the usual ratification procedures. Ryan CROUSER Fedrick Dacres Trayvon Bromell Patton clocks windy 9.75 at Texas Relays... Kiryu equals World junior 100m record in Hiro...
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Movie Review – “Lord of the Flies” (1963) By paulselluloid on February 2, 2018 • ( Leave a comment ) There’s a fine line when it comes to watching the savagery of man unfold before your eyes. Films that dance this line are some of the best tales of morality and what it means to be a human and not an animal. But films that cross this line are the ones that over stay their welcome and just become grotesque tales that are more depressing and tiresome as they go on. Peter Brook’s 1963 “Lord of the Flies” crosses that line. That’s not to say “Lord of the Flies” is a bad film, but that it left a bad taste in my mouth and not for the reasons it was supposed to. The film chronicles the tale of three dozen or so little boys surviving a plane crash in the Pacific and being stranded on a deserted island with no adult supervision. While the boys start out civilized enough and try to come up with rules so they can survive, they quickly devolve into a tribe-mentality who act more like animals than humans. The film is extremely minimalistic and has an almost-documentary style to its filmmaking, like we’re watching a real tribe of all little boys. The main reason I feel “Lord of the Flies” doesn’t work as well as it could is because of these actors and their uninvested performances. Nobody here feels truly genuine, especially the leader of the group Ralph (James Aubrey), who just looks bored throughout most of the film. Most of the kids look like they don’t know what they’re doing or have any direction to go. Director Peter Brook was known as an improvisational filmmaker, simply putting the camera in front of the actors and seeing what they came up with. This style often has the benefit of making everything feel more authentic, but only works if the actors can roll with the punches, which these little kids cannot. It’s like watching an episode of “Whose Line is it Anyway?” being performed by people who have never done improv in their lives. While they are children and don’t have as much experience with acting, their performances still bring down this movie. “Lord of the Flies” is a tale about how we all have this savage instinct inside of us. That if we remove the morals of society, we’re all eventually resort to cruel, beastial acts to survive. The film does a fine job of showing this, especially since this is done using little kids, but that same strength is also a weakness. Moments like Ralph standing up to the hunters has about as much menace as an episode of “Rugrats,” so any moments of savagery just feel out of place for these uncaring children. In other words, while “Lord of the Flies” has a great message, the execution of said-message leaves a lot to be desired. Tagged as: film review, Lord of the Flies, movie review, Paul Sell Movie Review – “The Shape of Water” (2017) Movie Review – “All the King’s Men” (1949)
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Tasers Are Sold as 'Non-Lethal' -- But They've Killed 400 So Far / Tasers Are Sold as 'Non-Lethal' -- But They've Killed 400 So Far Alternet.org On Sept. 24, in Brooklyn, N.Y., a 35-year-old man named Iman Morales fell to his death after a 22-minute standoff with New York Police. Morales, who was described as "emotionally disturbed," had climbed onto the fire escape of a building in Bedford-Stuyvesant, naked and waving a metal pole. Unable to talk him down, one officer, under order from his lieutenant, shot Morales with a Taser gun, at which point he fell to the sidewalk, head-first. He was taken to the hospital, where he was declared dead. One week later, the officer who gave the order, Lt. Michael W. Pigott, drove to Brooklyn's Floyd Bennett Field, a former air base used by the NYPD, took a 9mm Glock from a locker room, and shot himself in the head. It's hard to know which are more ubiquitous at this point: stories of accidental death by Tasers, or stories of police brutality involving bullets. Just this week, in New York, a Bronx man was shot and killed after he allegedly waved a baseball bat at police officers who entered his home. In theory, these sorts of confrontations are the reason such "non-lethal" weapons as Tasers exist. But news reports tell a different tale. In the United States and Canada, more than 400 people have died after being Tasered since 2001. Apart from his suicide, what sets Pigott apart from most police officers who kill people using Tasers is that he must have realized that the order to Taser Morales could deal a fatal blow. Why he decided to do it anyway will remain unanswered. And it's impossible to know whether remorse over Morales' death was the driving factor behind his decision to take his life, or whether it was the stripping of his badge after over 20 years on the force -- or something else. Regardless, for people who carry a Taser as an alternative to a gun, the realization that they are actually deadly weapons must deal a hard blow. Despite the rather old news that Tasers can kill, the news media continue to be littered with reports of trigger-happy Taserers, many of whom should be relieved that their victims lived. This week in Oklahoma, police Tasered a man who had gone into diabetic shock while driving, which caused him to spin out of control on the road. (The officers felt "extremely bad" upon realizing that he was not drunk or high but rather in need of medical attention.) In another report, last month, undercover cops in North Carolina Tasered a man acting as a pallbearer at his father's funeral. (The local sheriff apologized for the deputies' behavior. "Family, friends, relatives. … That was a bad decision.") Appalling social behavior aside, it doesn't seem hard to unearth the psychology behind excessive Taser use. It must be easy to be quick on the draw when toting a weapon that is like a pretend firearm. Like guns, Tasers are about much more than self-defense. For civilians (and cops), the sense of power that comes from carrying a weapon is a central part of the appeal. Taser International, Inc. has capitalized on this -- a trio of new C2 Taser models, which have been aggressively marketed toward women, come in leopard print and two styles of camouflage. ("Who says safety can't be stylish?" reads the marketing tag on the Taser Web site.) Tasers fulfill a powerful, violent fantasy: the ability to shoot someone without deadly consequences. Taser's marketing coup has been to convince consumers that there is such a thing as a gun that won't kill. The number of deaths caused by Tasers cuts through this myth. Recently, a new study discovered that the most common model of Taser used by police officers are far more hazardous than the company claims, capable of firing dangerous levels of electricity that can raise the risk of heart attack by as much as 50 percent. Shortly after the release of the findings, Canadian police departments pulled Tasers from their forces. ("Police departments in the United States, however, appear to have taken no similar action," reported the Arizona Republic.) Pierre Savard, a biomedical engineer at the University of Montreal, led the study, which Taser International claims is composed of "false allegations based on scientifically flawed data". Last year, he also examined the high-profile death of Robert Dziekanski, a Polish immigrant who died after being Tasered by police at Vancouver International Airport. "At first, I thought (Taser) was a great product," Savard told the Arizona Republic. "My point of view is that police officers already carry firearms, which are definitely more dangerous. So the Taser is much less dangerous to start with. But it should be used in a cautious manner. "As a scientist … the risk is not zero."
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Debt collectors have made a fortune this year. Now they’re coming for more / Debt collectors have made a fortune this year. Now they’re coming for more Image via Shutterstock. Paul Kiel Jeff Ernsthausen ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox. Earlier this year, the pandemic swept across the country, killing 100,000 Americans by the spring, shuttering businesses and schools, and forcing people into their homes. It was a great time to be a debt collector. In August, Encore Capital, the largest debt buyer in the country, announced that it had doubled its previous record for earnings in a quarter. It primarily had the CARES Act to thank: The bill delivered hundreds of billions of dollars worth of stimulus checks and bulked-up unemployment benefits to Americans, while easing pressures on them by halting foreclosures, evictions and student loan payments. There was no ban on collections of old credit card bills, Encore's specialty. At the same time, the pandemic compelled households to cut spending. Finding themselves with enough money to settle old debts, people responded to collectors' calls and letters. Debt-buying executives couldn't help marveling at their good fortune. All this created “a perfect storm from a cash perspective," the CEO of Portfolio Recovery Associates, Encore's main competitor, told Wall Street analysts. After its record second quarter, analysts expect Encore to blow past $200 million in profit this year and reward stockholders with 40% earnings growth compared with last year. Portfolio Recovery is set for similar growth. The share prices of both have soared off their early April lows. Investors didn't even show much concern when, in early September, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau sued Encore, saying that it had broken the terms of a consent agreement struck in 2015. The agency had previously charged the company with “pressuring consumers with false statements and churning out lawsuits using robo-signed court documents," as it said at the time. (In a statement, Encore said the CFPB's recent suit was unnecessary because it had fixed the alleged problems “years ago.") In recent months, the only real bad news for debt buyers was that local courts across the country temporarily shut down. Debt collection lawsuits provide a key source of revenue for the companies, a way to extract payment from consumers, typically low-income, who don't offer it up. But now even that hiccup is over. After a bit of a lull in the spring, Encore and other debt buyers are back at it, filing suits by the thousands every week, according to ProPublica's analysis of state court filings. In August alone, Encore filed about 1,000 suits in Indiana and over 2,000 suits in the metro Atlanta area. Other debt buyers jumped back in as well. In Chicago, Portfolio Recovery filed over 3,000 suits in July, while LVNV, a major debt buyer privately owned by Sherman Financial Group, filed over 2,700 suits in Maryland in August. For all these companies, ProPublica found, the volume was well above the number they'd filed before the coronavirus arrived, in January or February of this year. No national numbers on suits exist. In statements, the companies said they have been actively working with consumers during the COVID-19 pandemic and only sue as a last resort on a small portion of accounts. Elizabeth A. Kersey, a spokesperson for Portfolio Recovery, said the company's hardship program “allows for the suspension of collection efforts for ninety (90) days upon notification of a hardship event." The company is currently not seeking new orders to seize debtors' wages or bank account funds, she said. Ryan Bell, an Encore executive, said, “We have consistently and proactively communicated to consumers the various relief options we've put in place in response to COVID-19, including temporarily stopping collections." The company said it had stopped seeking orders to garnish bank accounts. It is, however, seizing wages. Sherman Financial did not respond to requests for comment. If Congress is unable to pass any further stimulus , unemployment is likely to remain high. In that scenario, debt buying companies and the banks that sell defaulted accounts to them expect more Americans to fall behind on their credit card bills over the coming months. Even that scenario turns out to be rosy for the debt buyers. While good times can mean that Encore collects on more debt than it expected, bad times typically bring a glut of people suffering under loans they cannot repay. The result is that Encore can scoop up the raw materials for its profit machine — defaulted accounts — more cheaply. Or as Encore CEO Ashish Masih put it to Wall Street: The company is “particularly excited about the prospects for increased supply in the future." “The same giant debt buyers known for fighting consumer protection laws at every turn have been raking in cash during this pandemic," Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass, told ProPublica. “They are now licking their chops in anticipation of profiting even more off families who have their hours further cut or can't find a job, and can't keep up with their bills or their mortgage. This is disgraceful and reinforces the need for Congress to protect consumers and small businesses from this predatory behavior." In recent years, Encore has bought around 2 million to 3 million U.S. accounts per year, according to public filings. Last year, on average, the company paid 8.6 cents on the dollar for each account. For a typical debt of $3,142, Encore paid $271. To earn a profit on that investment, Encore and other debt buyers pursue debtors in near perpetuity. Encore is still collecting tens of millions of dollars each year from debts it bought in 2009 or earlier. The key to that persistence is the courts. Since the early 2000s, debt buyers have flooded local courts nationwide with suits. The companies regularly account for more than a quarter of all debt collection cases in a given jurisdiction, according to ProPublica's review of collection filings over several states. That disproportionate presence has been particularly apparent in recent months, as the banks themselves have mostly opted to suspend filing new suits. In normal times, Capital One files far more lawsuits than other banks, in numbers similar to those filed by Encore and Portfolio Recovery. But since March, although Capital One continued to seize pay via garnishments secured before COVID-19 struck, it has largely stopped filing new suits. ProPublica did find one exception among the major banks that commonly file a significant number of suits: Citigroup, which resumed filing suits at its normal levels in July. The bank, for instance, filed over 200 suits in Oklahoma in August, more than it had filed there in January and February combined. In a statement, Citi spokesperson Jennifer Bombardier said the bank has a special assistance program for customers impacted by COVID-19 and that it is not seeking to garnish the bank accounts of customers it has sued. The bank also did not sell charged-off accounts to debt buyers “for up to 120 days" in the states “most impacted by COVID-19," she said. Encore sued Nicole Campbell of Brooklyn, New York, in July. Her first task was to figure out what to do. The suit was over $3,023.76 in debt she incurred years ago with CareCredit, a card offered by Synchrony Bank to people who need to cover medical costs, such as dentistry and eyecare. She knew she should answer the complaint by going to the courthouse, but she was wary of going there during the pandemic and wasn't even sure whether it was open. Even attorneys have difficulty finding their way. “Courts have been returning to full operation, but there's so much confusion as to what's happening," said Susan Shin, legal director of the New Economy Project in New York City. “It's hard to know what to advise people on what to do with their case." With help from an attorney with the New Economy Project, Campbell responded to the suit by mail. She's not sure what to expect next but said she doesn't have much time to worry about it. She cares for three boys, 5, 11 and 14, on her own and has to figure out how to get them to school on the city's part-time schedule while helping them with online lessons when they're home. She juggles this with her own job as a customer service rep: That also has a rotating, part-time schedule in order to minimize the number of people in the office. “It's crazy to me they're filing all this during this time when there's so much going on," she said. Such collection suits are most common among workers with income under $40,000 per year and particularly common in mostly Black neighborhoods. The suits routinely result in judgments, which in turn usually result in attempts at garnishment, according to a ProPublica analysis of Missouri court filings. Past studies have put the number of workers who have their wages garnished each year at around 4 million. In most states, plaintiffs can seize up to a quarter of a worker's take-home pay or clean out their bank account. In recent years, when state legislatures have moved to protect more funds from garnishment, Encore has been there to oppose the measures. In 2018, a Connecticut bill proposed to automatically protect up to $1,000 in a bank account. An Encore executive, Sonia Gibson, argued against it, writing in a letter, “Since the average amount we collect through bank garnishments is typically around $700, an automatic exemption of $1,000 would leave us unable to use bank garnishments." The bill died. Last year in California, Encore joined with other debt buyers to combat a similar bill that aimed to protect around $1,700. “It was a really huge fight," said Ted Mermin, head of the California Low-Income Consumer Coalition and a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law. “And you've got to think, 'Why?' Who on earth thinks it's a good idea to take someone's last dollar? The only people who would do this are debt collectors who have no ongoing relationship with someone." The bill narrowly passed and became law. In Washington state, lawmakers last year sought to protect more workers from wage garnishment. Under federal law, earnings above $217.50 in a week are eligible to be seized, a level that has remained the same since 2009 because it's tied to the $7.25 federal minimum wage. The Washington bill, which ultimately passed, aimed to tie the exemption to the state's much higher minimum wage, which this year is $13.50 an hour. In 2020, about $472.50 in weekly take-home pay would be protected. That was much too high for Encore. Gibson argued in a letter that people earning that much shouldn't be “completely exempt from garnishment." As an alternative to automatic protections, Encore generally argues that consumers should have to file exemptions in court to demonstrate they really can't afford to have their money taken. Consumer advocates say that such exemptions, which often exist in state laws, are rarely invoked by debtors because they either don't know about them or don't understand the process. On paper, Randall Ward would seem to be well-insulated from garnishment. He lives in the small town of Marianna, Florida, and state law protects the wages of anyone deemed the “head of household," which is defined as someone who earns more than half the household's income and has dependents. Since Ward helps care for his 20-year-old son with Down syndrome and a granddaughter, his pay from his job as a manager at a Waffle House is eligible for protection. But when Encore, after having won a judgment against Ward the previous year, sought to garnish his wages this past February, Ward didn't understand that he qualified for the “head of household" exemption. So, starting in March, Encore began taking a quarter of Ward's take-home pay. The size of the debt, a Citibank card that had ballooned to $5,220 with interest and court costs, meant that Ward, even with what he's proud to call a “good job," was in for many lean months. The only way to make ends meet, he said, was to cancel health insurance for himself, his son and his wife, “because I could not pay the bills if I didn't do it." Then the virus forced his restaurant to close for several weeks and his pay stopped altogether. The family was without income as he waited for his unemployment claim to go through. When, finally, he could go back to work, the garnishments returned. Encore has said in public statements that it looks to work with consumers, especially those who've been impacted by COVID-19. Ward said that was not his experience. “They're just ruthless about it," he said. “I would hate to see that happen to anybody." Encore declined to comment on individual accounts. Collection suits can have a lasting negative effect on consumers. A recent study by economists from Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business and the University of California, San Diego, focused on debtors who, after being sued, agreed to pay in order to avoid garnishment. The settlements left consumers worse off: They were more likely to fall behind on other debts or end up in foreclosure or bankruptcy, the study found. The main reason was that paying up on one debt had drained those consumers' cash buffer and that left them vulnerable to falling behind on others. Even in good economic times, low-income consumers live on the edge, so the CARES Act aid was particularly helpful to them. According to a Federal Reserve survey, the temporary $600 boost to weekly unemployment insurance benefits actually resulted in higher pay for about 40% of those who received them. On top of that came the $1,200 stimulus checks ($2,400 for married couples) with an additional $500 for each child. In July, the Fed found households with income under $40,000 a year had significantly more savings than normal: Whereas last year just 39% said they would have covered an unexpected $400 expense with cash, this summer, 48% said they would. Debt collectors were a clear beneficiary of those extra funds. According to a survey by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, while most people used the stimulus payments to buy food and other essentials, about 25% used at least some of the money to pay down debts. But Felipe Severino, a Tuck School of Business professor and one of the authors of the paper on debt collection settlements, said there may be negative long-term consequences for households who used the extra money to settle older debts. The companies say they do not charge interest on the old, charged-off debts they collect so the debts are not growing. “I would argue it's not a very good use of their money," he said. With less of a safety net, those households are more likely to find themselves behind on their bills again. Furthermore, he said, stimulative government aid like the CARES Act is meant to be “spent and magnify across the economy" in the near term by, for instance, leading to increased purchases at local businesses. That doesn't happen when the money goes to debt collectors. The flood of government aid, along with the sudden contraction in spending due to COVID-19, has led to an unpredictable economy, one where unemployment has shot up without the usual tide of delinquencies, bankruptcies and foreclosures. But now, banks are predicting that tide to finally arrive in the coming months. In July, Capital One reported a loss for the quarter despite delinquencies actually going down. The reason was the bank set aside $2.9 billion as a provision for future credit losses, a kind of safety net for the future. Encore did not appear to need such precautions. “Our liquidity puts us in a strong position to capture the substantial purchasing opportunity, which we believe is sure to follow," Masih, the CEO, told analysts. The group hoping to trigger civil war
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View Picks By: Electronic-Dance Music We Like Books 2019 - Fall Cuttin' Grass - Vol. 1 (The Butcher Shoppe Sessions) (CD) CD $13.98 LP $29.98 Genre: Country Sturgill Simpson's Cuttin' Grass Vol. 1 is an album of over 20 previously recorded tracks from this wild card country artist rearranged as bluegrass numbers. Performed with artists like Sierra Hull, Stuart Duncan, and Tim O’Brien, these tracks from Metamodern Sounds in Country, A Sailor's Guide to Earth and more thrive in their new setting with exquisite, intricate picking, lively fiddle and lush backing vocals. The already lovely "Breakers Roar" is sped-up here without losing its sense of melancholy, and lifted into euphoric folk. "I Don't Mind," a straightforward country-rock number from Simpson's previous band Sunday Valley, is softer and sweeter here with its sorrowful fiddle, but there are plenty of danceable tracks like "Life Ain't Fair and the World is Mean." For fans of Simpson's ever-fluctuating sound as well as lovers of folk and bluegrass. Southern Symphony (CD) Pop-country's Russell Dickerson delivers his sophomore release, Southern Symphony, complete with a guest appearance from Florida Georgia Line on the rollickin' party single, "It's About Time." Dickerson unabashedly embraces the standard themes of cold beers and women in his smooth, twangy voice, especially on the solid, singalong-friendly track, "Never Get Old." But there's always room for a goodhearted ballad with a little boyband flair, and "Love You Like I Used To" doesn't disappoint. Recollections (CD) The legendary Wynonna Judd has recorded a stripped-down covers EP during quarantine with her husband and music partner Cactus Moser on their farm. Recollections features songs by John Prine, The Grateful Dead, Nina Simone, Slim Harpo and Fats Domino, giving fans a chance to see a playful, less polished side of the platinum-selling artist. "I Hear You Knocking," for example, shows the couple having a good time on the lively Fats number.
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Scientists Create Music to Soothe your Cat © Marshall Ross/Flickr “They are a particularly tough audience – picky, moody, often impossible to please – but cats represent an untapped music market, according to one of the world’s biggest record labels.” If you travel a lot for your job, work outside the home, and/or have a cat who seems anxious or acts out, Universal Music has just released an album created specifically to relax your finicky feline. Titled “Music for Cats”, the album features soothing cello mixed with purring and suckling noises — and apparently, cats LOVE it. I mentioned it to a client whose job takes her out of town several times a month, and she reported that her cats just adored it; they were immediately intrigued by what they heard and became much more calm, relaxed, and content. We’ve been using this as part of a rehabilitation program for some troubling behaviors, and it’s all been very positive. My client’s attitude was “well, it’s at least worth a try” but she was honestly astonished at how effective it’s been. You can read more about it at these links: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2016/sep/03/music-for-cats-david-teie-universal-purring-cello-university-of-maryland http://www.musicforcats.com/ (Dogs will unfortunately have to wait for their own version, as the scientists find breed differences in dog personalities to be more challenging than composing for the average house cat…)
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Swept Away - Thank You Card Item Number: AW59849NFCNT 1 Reviews — Write a Review Your wedding guests will love receiving a thank you card that includes your personal note and a photo from your wedding day. These simple calligraphy-inspired thank you notes can be customized in any color combination you'd like. Price Includes: Thank You Cards and Envelopes Card Type: Folded Ink Color(s) Shown: Black and Navy Font(s) Shown: Alegreya Light (ASLSC) Personalization Options: "thank you" is printed in your choice of color. 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Interview: Brian Tichy of SILVERTHORNE Mark DeanApril 26, 2020 SILVERTHORNE are the rock band that people have been searching for! Producing a bombastic yet deeply authentic sound that delivers exciting, soulful and earthy rock songs SILVERTHORNE manage to cross rock genres with ease, whilst still flowing smoothly into your They tip their hat to the classic rock bands of yesteryear as well as looking firmly to the future and that future is looking exceedingly bright. Featuring the soaring powerhouse vocals of Englishman PETE SHOULDER (Winterville, The Union) and superstar drummer BRIAN TICHY (who has played with everyone from Whitesnake, Ozzy, Slash, Billy Idol, Foreigner and many more legendary artists), along with bassist DANIEL SPREE, SILVERTHORNE recently delivered a monstrous debut single in the shape of “Tear The Sky Wide Open” The track caught the attention of fans and critics alike. With its ominous riff, huge chorus, driving bass, weighty drums and a groove that evokes the vast expanse of the Southern California canyons from where the band was born, ‘Tear The Sky Wide Open’ has already got fans salivating. The teaser video for the track received over 20,000 views in its first 24 hours of release across the band’s social media platforms. That figure doubled the second day! An amazing result for a brand-new act! SILVERTHORNE delivered their 2nd single and Video “Black River Rising” in November and it is another riff laden beast of a track. Darker and more brooding than its predecessor; ‘Black River Rising’ sees the band members dig extremely deep within and leave nothing behind on this track. SILVERTHORNE also says of its sound: “You may hear elements that are not unlike being at a Led Zeppelin concert with Cream and Free opening, while Soundgarden and QOTSA hang at the bar.” Following the band’s EP release, I was able to have a chat with Brian Tichy to discuss all things Silverthorne, his musical past, and also what lay on the road ahead for him musically. ANTIHERO: How are you doing in this very difficult time for the world? Brian Tichy: I don’t know. Doing the same as everybody. I’m at home and trying to get the studio stuff happening and all that. Where are you calling from? ANTIHERO: I’m in the UK. Brian Tichy: Oh, cool I am continuing to record. Pete is in the UK over there with you, and I’m in Los Angeles, but sometimes if we have to, if he’s not here, we just talk on the phone or we write online, and I’ll throw drums down here and send him stuff. He’ll start his vocals, we’ll start writing like that. So we were literally just going through a whole slew of ideas we have for the next LP and figuring what do we have down recorded already, what do we do to move with that, and what new stuff can we start with, and get him some drums and he could start putting ideas down. So yeah, we’re getting that going for sure. ANTIHERO: I was actually going to ask you why the band has decided just to release an EP. I mean, just wondered if there’d be any more music, but that’s basically answered that. Brian Tichy: Yeah, well, we did an EP for a couple of reasons, but the main reason was we had an LP’s worth of stuff recorded, but just as a big picture full LP, we would have wanted to have written more to just see what else we’d have to AV. You know, okay we had this stuff, now we have this stuff and let’s take the best of it. But because of time and due dates and everything, we just wanted to get a strong EP representing where we were at, at that point in time out first. Because last year when we got the record deal, we pulled all this together in the spring, and to continue recording and writing/recording, mixing, mastering while doing art work and getting everything together to make a full LP, it would have just dragged into the summer. But I was going to be in Japan working all summer, so we were just like, “Let’s just get a solid EP together so when the first single comes out in August…” so we have time to get everything together. You know, make the videos, get the art work together, mix and master the final five songs we wanted on the EP. We had just enough time to make that happen, but if we went down the road of completing a full record, I don’t know if we would have had enough time to see that through completely with the schedule that I already had booked. ANTIHERO: I was going to say, you normally sort of go from one musical project to another quite quickly. This current situation must have really messed up your schedule for at least, well the rest of this year anyway. Brian Tichy: You mean Silverthorne, balancing that with other stuff? Yeah, you know, we’re doing this because we want to because when Pete and I wrote together and started putting this all together, we thought we had something pretty solid that we were excited about. At the same time just because you have something solid or you get a record deal or whatever doesn’t necessarily mean all of a sudden the band’s going to be selling records or bringing in money to take care of the bills, it’s like you still have to work. But we believe in it, so we were like, regardless of those hurdles and all the hurdles that every new band has to take on, we want to see this through. We believe in it. So there’s no guaranteed timing when you have something that even if it is a solid product, or it’s got a record label behind it, there’s no guarantee of how long things take to move in a way where you can really dedicate full non-stop time to it, so you have to balance it out, you know? But we were prepared to do that. Whatever it takes to make this band happen. I would ultimately love, I mean, all three of us in the band would love if this was our full-time gig, but to make that a reality you have to build a band, and building a band takes time, so you know, we’d be ready to do it of somebody said, “This is all you guys are doing. This is it. You’re doing Silverthorne.” I’d be like, “Fine. Great. That’s what I want to do.” ANTIHERO: Do you prefer generally being your own boss in terms of work schedule with a degree of flexibility and freedom rather than working for a huge rigid and more structured band setup like Whitesnake or the Dead Daisies? Brian Tichy: You know, there’s the pros and cons to everything. When you commit to a big well-established band with a nice chunk of work going on annually, that’s great. Great for all musicians to be in a position where they’re in a band that can work a lot throughout the year and you have the guarantee sitting there, and that income coming in. That’s all cool. And yeah, I can’t complain about any of the bands I’ve been in. It’s always been a lot of fun and it’s all cool. Then if you’re not in one of those bands, yeah, there’s total freedom to be able to do whatever you want, when you want, which means any new things that pop up, new projects to work on or new bands to get involved in. That keeps that door open. But like I said, it’s a balance. There’s a balance of how much do you want to commit to a band, because when you do commit to a band it’s pretty much 100%. It might not be 12 months a year, but even if it’s six or eight months a year, that’s a majority of your year. So you’re really giving 100% to that band, and those months that you’re not on tour working with them, you’re trying to get your other stuff going or you’re with your family, so how many other projects can you really start in between being in a well-established band. It’s kind of hard. But I’m cool either way. My main thing is just get to work as much as I can, like all of us. Keep the bills paid and keep everything intact. But also, we’re only on this planet for so long, so you want to make the most of it. You want to kind of see how far you can push yourself to prove to yourself that all these years of being a drummer, a musician, whatever, you want to go as far as you can go with it. I’ve never been satisfied with… Whatever band, I’ve never been like, “Oh, this is it. I’ve made it. Everything is cool. I have nothing else to prove to myself.” It’s like, “No, this is cool, but if I’ve come this far, why can’t I go further,” you know? ANTIHERO: Yeah. Most of your recorded work is in the category of heavy rock. I just wondered if there are any other musical genres that you’d like to tackle and maybe you haven’t had a chance or opportunity to? Brian Tichy: Yeah. You know, I grew up as a rock drummer, but the other two angles outside of what you’d call hard rock would be more of the progressive angle just to let loose a little bit more on that side and just challenge yourself in a progressive way. And then there’s the whole funk side because I absolutely… Anything that you might consider funk or funky, for me as a drummer, I think the most important thing is the groove, and for me the most fun grooves to play are funk grooves. So even, there’s a lot of funk in rock, whether it be Zeppelin or Van Halen or whatever. If you really listen to those grooves, a lot of them come out of a more funk-based groove. They’re just done more aggressively or loudly or whatever. But yeah, man, if I had to jump in or start or be a part of other projects, I would love to be involved in stuff where I could completely become a full-blown funk drummer or progressive. ANTIHERO: Regarding drums, you mentioned there that funk groove, drums and bass are sort of the backbone of a band. I just wondered with your past, pretty extensive pedigree, who would have been absolutely the most influential bassist that you’ve ever worked with? Brian Tichy: Oh man, I won’t be able to name just one, but I’ve played with so many great bass players in so many ways. I wouldn’t even want to start naming a list right now because I know I’d go, “Oh, wait, we finished… I forgot this guy,” you know? But I’ve had the good fortune to play with so many great bass players, and yeah, they’re all my good buddies still, and hopefully, I keep playing with them. But you know, to name one, I really couldn’t because everybody’s got their own little thing. As I said, everybody’s got their own personality, and their personality comes through their playing, and it depends on what the end purpose of is, what the vibe is between me and the rhythm section. When I was playing in Billy Idol, it’s a different kind of thing than playing in Whitesnake. The bass players in those bands, Steve McGrath in Billy Idol, and Michael Devin in Whitesnake are both great for those bands. They’re great all-around bass players in many ways. But you know, as far as touring in those kinds of bands, they got the job done and we locked up, and that was the main goal. But yeah, I just had the good fortune of playing with tonnes of great bass players for sure. ANTIHERO: Your musical influences are widely reported,especially with Zeppelin and Rush, but I just wondered at what point did you actually progress from listening to those bands to actually deciding, “Music is something I want to do for my own career”? Brian Tichy: Well, those two bands are huge influences back in the day when I was learning how to play, and still are to this day, as are tonnes of other bands. You just take your influences and roll with it. Maybe over the years some influences aren’t as heavy as they were when you started, but going down the road a bit, I definitely still look up to the same major influences I had as a kid that I still look up to the same ones now, especially Zeppelin and Rush and John Bonham and Neil Peart, Alex Van Halen. I think forever my favourite drummers, the ones that affect me the most, and affected me the most and I still listen to and get most excited about even though there are hundreds and hundreds of drummers that I absolutely love. At the top of my list has always been John Bonham, Neil Peart, and Alex Van Halen, and to this day it still is for tonnes of reasons. ANTIHERO: At what point growing up listening to music did you actually decide, I’m sure you like most people tried other careers early in life. I just wondered at what point was it that you made it your primary goal to be a professional musician? Brian Tichy: Yeah, early on. I never really had any other occupations. I think I knew once I started playing drums when I was like eight years old, nine years old, I knew that was it. I didn’t know how I was going to be a drummer for the rest of my life of course, I had no clue. You buy your records and look at your posters on the wall and listen to your favourite bands and go, “I want to do that,” and here I am 10 years old, I have no clue what I’m talking about. But this is what I do the most, this is what I think I probably do best, and this is what interests me the most, and it’s never changed. There’s never been a doubt in my mind, there’s never been a time where I said, “Oh, maybe I should think of something else,” ever. And come this far, so I’m not turning back. I have no intent of changing it up. You know, I’ve just always been a drummer, just wanted to be a drummer. But yeah, somewhere in… I guess. After high school I went to Berkeley Music College, which is a full-blown music college in Boston and got completely immersed in practising and year-round thousands of other musicians you’re learning from all the time. It’s just non-stop. So the years there were huge to me as far as just getting better and learning, and not really caring about the outside world at all. You were just in this college music atmosphere and that’s all you did. But when I got a gig out of there, my first true gig of, “Okay, I’m playing drums and getting paid,” and this band I joined did some touring and stuff, it was great. It was like, okay, cool, man. I’m on a tour bus. I might not be making much money at all, but who cares? I’m out here playing drums and this is what I want to do. As soon as you get a taste of it, I think you know. You know I’m cut out for this or I’m not. But I was just like, “Hopefully this is just the beginning, because I love it. This is what I’m going to do. That’s it.” ANTIHERO: Do you remember hearing a song of yours on the radio for the first time? Brian Tichy: Yeah, yeah. That’s definitely a cool memory when you hear your drums on the radio. It’s cool as anything. When you get to meet one of your idols, or you go on tour opening up for a band that you’ve worshipped since you were a kid, or actually join a band, I mean, all those memories, those are great. I’ve told many people that’s what gets you through the “hard times” or the times where you might be struggling a bit more. Those feelings and memories are what keep you going. It’s like, “Okay, I did this.” I either heard great words of positivity from either a drum I admire or a band, or proven I can get an audition for this band and get this gig or whatever, it keeps you going. You have to rely on that stuff at times more than others. Just all those great memories, and yeah, it’s a great feeling to hear your drums or a song of yours on the radio. It’s great. It’s even greater when people take note of it, you know? ANTIHERO: What would be the pros and cons of being a professional musician? I’m sure the music business has changed a hell of a lot since you first started. What would be the pros and cons of being a professional musician in 2020? Brian Tichy: Oh, there’s probably more pros and cons in this business than any other even though I don’t know much about other businesses’ pros and cons. But the ups can be so great and the down can be so great. And that can happen within one year, you know what I mean? You could be literally down and out, and then you get a phone call or an audition, or somebody calls you for something that literally changes your life. I think that’s the beauty of doing what you love, because when it does come around, being able to take advantage of opportunities. When it does work out, man, there’s no better feeling, because there are no guarantees. You can’t go to a college and graduate as a musician and all of a sudden you have this, “Okay, I have a degree from a music college, so therefore that means I will get jobs that pay this much and are on this level.” There’s none of that, man. It’s all about you proving yourself behind your instrument. You can be seen on YouTube doing that, in a club doing that, or wherever. Any day you’re seen and heard playing can make a huge difference. We’ve all experienced that, you know? You talk to anybody, “How’d you get this gig,” or, “How did you meet this person?” or “How did you get from A to B?” and usually it’s about people hearing you. That’s the first thing. I have nothing to say when I go into new projects or new band situations. I just keep my mouth shut because nobody really cares until I prove that I can get the job done. Get the job done and people are happy, okay then you know you’re going to be around a bit, and you can talk to everybody, but before that, my main thing is just to prove myself behind the kit and get the job done. ANTIHERO: I learned earlier you have experienced many career highs. I just wondered if you still had hopes and dreams. What keeps you going? What keeps you motivated? Brian Tichy: Yeah, the same as it’s ever been. Like I said, anything you’ve done in your past, it was either a pivotal point in your career or something that made you realise this is what you’re going to do forever, or it was just a nice step in the positive direction. All that stuff, it might not be in the form of a paycheck at all. It might just be great words from a peer or someone you grew up listening to, that stuff keeps you going. Like I said, for anybody, if you got to a certain point, and you’ve experienced success, why wouldn’t you be able to go further than that? What would stop you? I’ve watched some of my friends, drummers that are coming up around me, get into huge bands and they’ve been there for a long time, and they’ve had great success, and they’re still there and that’s awesome. Nobody can necessarily say which person is going to be that person. It all gives you hope. It’s like, “Hey, man, you’ve proven yourself here and there. Why wouldn’t you be able to prove yourself in bigger ways than you have in the past?” If you talked to me 20 years ago I wouldn’t be able to say a lot of the things I’m saying now, and then a bunch of years go by, and you’re like, “Okay, cool. Got my experience and knowledge and done more of this and that.” And I guess in some ways it can make some people jaded, you know, but not for myself. I take it all as positive stuff, man. I should be in a better position than ever now to more confidently do everything I want to do and try to accomplish all that. For me, the top of that is always having your own band. Having your own band where you write the songs, it’s your ideas, it’s your vision seen through and it becomes a sustainable force. You know what I mean? It’s your full-time job a la the biggest bands in the world, whatever, Who, Queen, Rush, AC/DC. These were just guys jamming in a room. They wrote some songs and were dedicated and driven, and they stuck. Fans heard it, dug it, and they kept it going, man, and now they’re some of the most iconic rock bands in the world. Those guys were sitting in their garage like everybody else at one point in time. So it’s dedication. It’s also the art of being able to play well together, and write great music together. I mean, you can have great musicians in a starter project, maybe they didn’t write music or songs that are going to resonate in a way that keeps them moving to bigger places. But yeah, you just gotta keep believing in what you’re doing. For me, I would love to see Silverthorne being a brand new band with a little EP out and just getting started. I’d love to see us grow and grow and grow to where it’s not something I have to fit in between other things I’m doing. It is the thing I’m doing. ANTIHERO: You’ve still obviously got the fun element. I mean, you’ve got side projects and bits and pieces that you’ve done over the years, like those Zeppelin gigs, Steamroller, for example, it’s nice to obviously have those where you can step away and have a little bit of fun as well. Brian Tichy: That stuff’s always there. It’s just a matter of the people in the band, everybody’s schedules lining up. You go, “Hey, you want to do a gig or have some fun, get a little run together?” Yeah, that’s all cool. All those different variations of side projects are always fun. Some of them continue on after years, and some of them don’t. But yeah, the cool thing is it’s always been done amongst friends, you know? As you said, Steamroller was myself and Doug Aldrich and Michael Devin coming off of a Whitesnake tour. Like, “Okay, we’re not touring this year so let’s keep playing together. Let’s go have some fun.” And we had a lot of fun doing it. ANTIHERO: Okay, you mentioned there’s Silverthorne. Obviously you’ve got long-term plans, long-term goals for that band. How do you anticipate, well, before the current situation, did that going forward plan for Silverthorne actually include live shows or was that something you hadn’t actually gotten around to thinking about yet? Brian Tichy: No, we did a couple shows at the end of the year, and we had new tour dates lined up. We were booking it as this whole virus thing started. In a way I’m glad that we didn’t go and announce something and then have to cancel it before it happened, because then you’re putting more time into it, making it into a bigger deal, and then it’s like, “Oh, well, that’s put on hold. That’s going to be rescheduled.” So yeah, I mean, everything is stopped now, so once it all gets back to normal and everybody gets through this, then the goal is definitely to get out there with Silverthorne. We can’t do much now, and there’s no real date. Dates keep changing, and things are changing, and all you can do is roll with it. Then at the end of it go, “Okay, where are we at?” Because I’m also playing in Lynch Mob now, and we had a lot of dates cancelled. The February dates, nice run in the U.S. a couple weeks, then we had a bunch of work in… I’m sorry, what did I say, February? March, we had a March run, then we had all these April dates, and I don’t know what’s going to happen to May yet. But man, that’s all been pushed down the line, so once everything opens back up, I just gotta sit down and figure out what’s the time frame now? What are we doing? How much of that can we make up? What else do we have going on? And start balancing it all and trying to make it all happen. But the goal is definitely to write a new Silverthorne LP now, get on that now while we have the time, and then once all this is in the past, get back out there and start playing. ANTIHERO: Just a final question for you, I’m sure you’ve done many interviews over the years. I just wondered if the roles were reversed and you could become the interviewer, which personal hero or inspiration would you like to interview yourself? Brian Tichy: Oh, there’s so many, but off the top of my head, I would probably go to my favourite musician in the world, Jimmy Page, because I have a tonne of questions to ask him. It would probably be mainly about songwriting and recording, being in the studio and the songwriting process, because he’s my favourite music, my favourite band, and absolutely love him. So yeah, I’d start with him, and yeah, if Neil Peart was still around, I’d love to talk to him about drumming. Yeah, there are tonnes, you know? John Bonham, Alex Van Halen, Paul McCartney, James Brown, you know what I mean? All these icons with amazing stories. Yeah, they’d all be great. ANTIHERO: You mentioned Zeppelin, was there a lot of nod to Achilles Last Stand on the final track of the Silverthorne album, or was that just me picking up on something that wasn’t there? Brian Tichy: No, no, you totally picked up on it, and we didn’t try to hide it. The nice thing is we weren’t sure… We went ahead and recorded the song. We weren’t sure if it was going to end up on the EP, but people at the label reacted favourably to it, and we were like, “Screw it. Why not?” The song itself definitely came out of a Zeppelin/Achilles presence. The reason we saw it through was even if it isn’t pretty obvious, it’s like how many songs do you have from that world of songwriting? For me, it started with Achilles. You know, you never really heard a song like it before it. And then soon after you had Barracuda from Heart, which while it’s not an epic song, it’s got a similar type groove and feel, which I think came from hearing Achilles. And then somebody else mentioned Lights Out from UFO, which I forgot about, like, “Yeah, totally.” That’s in a similar world as well. But outside of that, how many songs from rock bands out there jump into that kind of vibe? There’s just not that many, and so we were like, “Screw it. Let’s tip the hat to that vibe and finish up a song in that world and go for it.” But yeah, the cool thing is that it’s been brought up a bunch that it has that Achilles influence, which is all cool. It’s like there are tonnes of songs out there that have influences from other songs, but the reaction’s been great to it. On these reviews, it’s kind of like the standout song, which I was really happy about because it’s still… While, if you know where it came from, you could say, “Oh, man, they’re just ripping that off.” It’s like, “Yeah, but if you enjoy the song, that’s all we wanted.” That was the goal, and it’s being mentioned way more than we thought it would be, so that’s really cool. I think it’s just because you don’t hear songs like that, that much these days. Brian TichyinterviewSILVERTHORNE Mark Dean I'm a 40+ music fan. Fond mostly of rock and metal - my staple musical food delights. Originally from Northern Ireland, I am now based in the UK-Manchester. I have a hectic musical existence with regular shows and interviews. Been writing freelance for five years now with several international websites. Passionate about what I do, I have been fortunate already to interview many of my all-time musical heroes. My music passion was first created by seeing Status Quo at the tender age of 15. While I still am passionate about my rock and metal, I have found that with age my taste has diversified so that now I am actually dipping into different musical genres and styles for the first time. Interview: ORIANTHI Interview: The Metal God Himself – Rob Halford of JUDAS PRIEST Interview: Don Airey of DEEP PURPLE Interview: Rock Legend David Coverdale of WHITESNAKE Interview: DEVIN TOWNSEND Interview: Brad Arnold from 3 DOORS DOWN Interview: Guitarist LANCE DOWDLE of FROM ASHES TO NEW Interview: Adam Albright of DOPESICK Interview: A Conversation with Guitarist Ryan Roxie Interview: Martin Andres of ONI at Bloodstock Open Air 2017 Interview: LIGHTERBURNS at Vans Warped Tour 2018 Interview: Barry Stock of THREE DAYS GRACE Interview: Bassist ROB DE LUCA from Spread Eagle, UFO, & Sebastian Bach
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Ignasi Monreal Interview by Pascal Moscheni Photography by Stefan Giftthaler art, interview It’s a great time to be Spanish right now (if you’re not into politics). I feel like our generation and the one coming after us are proud of taking siestas next to the Mediterranean, but we’ve also worked out how to expand our networking, cross frontiers, and achieve our goals. Sometimes you have to leave your motherland in order to realise how important it is to you; you have to taste the ‘other’ in order to realise that what you ate all your life is actually delicious. For the Spanish artist Ignasi Monreal, who’s based between Rome and Madrid, I definitely think it’s the case. Ignasi confuses me—in a good way, that is. Not only because of his trompe l’oeil plats bruts, or because he dominates the iPad’s Procreate program in such a way that it’s hard to tell what’s been done on canvas and what’s from a digital touchscreen. He confuses me because he is hardcore classical, but also ironic. I feel the heritage, but I don’t feel that heavy weight that usually comes along with it. It’s funny how you can construct your own character or opinion about someone based on what you see of that person before meeting them in real life. Especially if that person is currently working with huge luxury brands and you can tell his kitchen is cooking a lot and people are always talking and posting about his ‘food’. With Ignasi I didn’t really have any preconceived persona in mind, and when we met, I finally managed to put that persona together. We were seated close by at a Cartier dinner and had to spend the next couple of hours together. Sometimes those dinners can be heavy. Yet, thank god, I found myself with a super relaxed, easy-breezy, funny, and humble dude that could perfectly have chosen to take on the role of snobby artist. But he just isn’t that way, I guess. He’s actually the opposite; conversations flow with Ignasi. It’s relaxed, like a siesta next to the Mediterranean. You know how David Lynch is super into meditation and says it’s so important in his creative process? Do you think it’s possible to actually achieve a state of mind where you can control your creative state and say, ‘OK, I’m going in the zone now’? I’ve tried to meditate. It didn’t work. You need years of experience. But a magic creative button—boop. I wish. I mean, I’ve never meditated in my life, that’s for one. So I don’t know how it works. I just know that the closest I’ve ever got to meditation, or what I think it would be like to meditate, is through painting. I met this guy once who was able to access that state of mind completely. Just through painting? Just by will. He was like, ‘OK, now I’m going to paint’. It was like, ‘No, I’m not thinking about it. It’s just letting it go’. I thought, ‘How the fuck do you do that?’ I guess maybe he was more open and more prepared. You know, everybody has their own brain structure. I’m a Virgo at the end of the day; I’m fucking square, and I like this. But it’s a very good question, because I wish there was a way to just switch on. I’ve found it through smoking and things like this, but it doesn’t always work. Really it just comes from inside of you. Smoking can go both ways. Yeah. It’s sort of a risky one. I find it good for brainstorming, but when you have to enter that state it’s actually the opposite, because it makes me question everything I’m doing. It makes me feel more insecure. But maybe that’s the drive for your paintings, that sort of chaos or insecurity, and then it gives you the force or the good ideas. Maybe if you’re always in the same mindset you’ll get bored. Yeah, I think that’s why I also find it a good kick, because it’s not something I can always get. But my feeling is that if I were to paint every day for eight hours straight, then I would be—there are people out there, I don’t know how the fuck they do it. It’s just painting all the time. And I wish I could do that. So what is your day-to-day structure? Depends. I wake up, I have breakfast, I answer my emails and attend to my things, and then I start work. Sometimes you find inspiration and you’ll find the will to sit down and stay there for hours, and sometimes it’s impossible and you just have to do it because you have a deadline. I find it better normally at night, just because the world is sleeping, so nobody’s bothering you. I’ve found myself at a moment in my career recently where people are asking me—or not people, I guess it was myself in the end, but just finding myself in conversations where it’s like, ‘Are you an artist? Or are you a commercial artist? Are you an illustrator?’ It’s like I had to choose between doing projects for people under commission or expressing my own vision of the world. And then I came to the conclusion that I don’t want to choose. I enjoy both. And, in fact, if I were doing my own artistic expression every day for all projects, I would find it boring. Exactly. Back in the ‘70s, ‘80s, the pre-internet period, do you think artists also needed to collaborate with brands in order to survive at the beginning? Of course, right? Of course. But not all of them. That’s how art history worked up until the 20th century. The artist as a fucked-up tornado of self-expression that destroys its path through creativity and who’s a genius, that’s a 20th-century notion. Before, the Vatican paid for everything. If not the Vatican, rich families and the aristocracy were the patrons. Velázquez was painting for the king, but he was also painting people of the street in his costumbrismo. And that was his escape, his way of painting whatever the fuck he wanted. Although Velázquez is a funny one because he didn’t like painting. Is Velázquez one of your— Velázquez is my hero of all times. Not only because of his incredible technique. I get goosebumps thinking about him. It’s just—he got away with murder. Well, not murder-murder. The things he did were so outrageous, but he was so good at it that they let him do whatever he wanted. Las Meninas is the ultimate. If the king and queen had asked another artist to do a portrait and he’d painted himself painting them, that’s heresy. For one, you’re putting the audience in the place of the king and queen, which is completely unethical because they’re chosen by God, in theory. Two, you’re painting yourself at the same level as the royal family. Not only that, but there’s the dog or the infants and all the crew behind you, and he painted himself with this cross that basically meant he was part of the aristocracy. It was the ultimate ‘I’m here now’. It’s the ultimate ego trip, and it’s the masterpiece of the Prado. Did they know he was doing it as he was doing it? They were OK with it? And they were OK with it. Because he’s the boss. Any other king would have cut that guy’s head off. Also Caravaggio did that: you see Caravaggio paintings in churches, there’s one in Santa Maria del Popolo in Rome, which is a triptych and it’s all about arses. The main part of the composition is a massive horse arse. I’m sure that when people saw it back in the day, they were like, ‘Wow, that’s a big arse’. But they were also like, ‘OK, well, it’s good’. Nobody said anything. And suddenly we have these masterpieces and it’s the ultimate prank. So that’s why I love these people. They were so good that they could do anything and get away with it. That’s what I strive for in my life. For instance, painting these murals now for Club Malasaña in Madrid. It’s the first time I’ve done murals in ceramics, and I’m excited. Last time I saw you, at a wedding, you were with your partner and we were talking about how you’re going to start this ceramic project. Now it’s happening. It’s happening. We’re focusing on tiles, but the idea isn’t just to do them for a bathroom. The tile is square, meaning that you can lift it and turn it into something modular in 3D. We want to design objects and do so many things with the tiles, and also look at this Spanish tradition of ceramics and take it from there and make it fun. We want to mix it with technology, as we did with the Wi-Fi routers. Normally they’re hidden. So we decided to take that and put it in the centre of the house; we’re giving it the importance and the meaning it deserves. It’s a mini altar. It’s an altar to the internet. And there’s a neon light inspired by a mosque in London that I used to live in front of. It was this incredibly kitsch building all covered in tiles, and at night they would turn on these neon lights that highlighted the frame of the building. So the mosque was done with tiles? It was all covered in tiles. The building turned out to have been a porn cinema in the ‘70s that they refurbished as a mosque. It was beautiful, and it was right in front of my house. That’s what I saw in the morning while I was working on all these Gucci things, when I wasn’t leaving my house. My connection with the outside world was through that mosque and it became—you know, it’s a mosque, it’s God, it’s religious. I would get really stoned and look at it. It was a real obsession, and this was the final thing that came from looking at that building for three years in a row. Why did you choose Madrid? I feel in Spain now, we’re so lucky. First because of the moment we’re living in, compared to—I also moved away when I was 21. I guess we left because there weren’t really any opportunities if you were in a creative field. Now I feel like a lot of people are coming back, or enhancing the fact that they’re Spanish. Why did you choose to come back? Because I realised the same thing. I had to leave the country to realise how great we are, that only we can do certain things, and that only we can do them that good. Is there a strong art scene in Rome? Or is that a romantic thing from the past that has died? There is a scene. It’s very small. I think the problem with Rome is that there’s no nightlife. I find nightlife in Madrid, this new movement of light, comes from a lot of people meeting through parties. And this kind of culture is lacking in Rome. There are a lot of people who know each other; we all meet each other at the openings because it’s always the same exact cast of people. But there’s no real connection between us. You’re sort of stiff at openings. You don’t let go. There’s not a space where we can all meet and exchange. I think it will happen eventually. There are a lot of young artists that left, and now they’re coming back. There’s going to be a revival. Why did you go to Rome anyway? Because you went to London, then where? I wanted the opposite of London. I was in London for five years and it was a bit too much. But I closed a chapter there. I wanted to work and to do certain things and I beat my expectations. So I was like, ‘I think now is the point to move’, and I wanted a space that was more relaxed and had a better quality of life. I didn’t want to come back to Spain yet, although I’m in-between. But in Rome I found a city that I wanted to explore calmly, and it was the first time in my life that I didn’t have a goal or an idea of what I wanted to do. Did you go to Rome empty-handed? Yeah. I just arrived, like, ‘Hey’. I found Rome a very romantic place, very inspiring. Also, I thought, ‘OK, I don’t have any plans’. And then I thought, ‘Well, what did Velázquez do?’ And what did Caravaggio do? They went to Rome, and that’s where they reached their creative top, no? I was like, ‘Well, let’s try’. Why not? Nobody wants to move to Rome. And that’s why I thought it was the coolest. And it worked out? I think it’s working out, for sure. I mean, it’s a beautiful place. I don’t know how long I’m going to stay. It’s more of a visit, a chapter of my life between here and Madrid. You have a really nice apartment also, with a rooftop. I’m staying in a gallery space. So my gallerist in Rome, she used to live there for 30 years, and now she’s at a moment where she says she’s in the third act of her life. She wanted to stop being a bohemian, and she moved to a palace. I hope I get to make that choice one day also. She has a gallery? Yes, she has a gallery. She opened the first white cube space in Rome in the ‘80s and brought Marina Abramović, Yoko Ono, all these performance artists, and then she started this film festival of feminist art. It’s been 12 editions now. She was a visionary back then and she wanted to promote the female view in Rome, which is next-level patriarchal. And then she had this space upstairs and told me I could stay there. Her old house. Chapter two of her life. Exactly. There’s this little balcony on top of the gallery and that’s where I live. So I see the gallery from my house and I see the people come and they don’t see me. Is it comfortable? When summer comes it’s an oven and when winter comes it’s freezing, because there’s all this glass space. But it’s beautiful and it’s in a beautiful area, in Trastevere, but outside the tourist area. If you follow this one road, there’s the Palazzo Corsini and Villa Farnesina on the sides, and then you keep going and there’s the prison—the oldest prison in Rome—which used to be a convent. And then Napoleon turned it into a prison. Is it still operating? It’s still operating for petty crimes, and it’s incredible. I live right in front. It’s right under the Gianicolo, one of the seven hills, and at night the wives of the prisoners go up the hill and shout at them. Either the news of the day or happy birthday or I miss you. I’m home and suddenly I hear, ‘Ti amo!’ It’s from another time. It’s amazing. Right, yeah. Are there other artists also from the gallery, or it’s just you in the building? No, it’s just me and the gallery. The people from the gallery come and work in the afternoons. It’s nice to have company, because it’s such a big space. Was your flat ready to move into, or are you slowly starting to build it? Slowly. At the beginning I was sharing the space with a friend. He had his workshop on one side and I had my studio and my bed on the other side, all in the same space. Did you know him before moving in? This guy? Yeah, but he wasn’t living there. He would just come and work during the day, and I would stay and sleep there. So at the beginning it was not a house. It was a workshop with a bed. And now eventually I’m there by myself and I’ve turned it into a proper house. It was a whole year and very unsettling just living on a bed and being surrounded by workshop stuff. But now finally it’s a nice little comfy studio, and I don’t need that much space to work because I’ll either work from an iPad or a canvas. Do you have a preference between iPad or canvas? No, I like to switch. When I get bored with one, I like to go to the other. But beyond that, it’s not just with painting; it’s also with video and animation. So how does that work? You do the art and then someone animates it, or do you animate it yourself? It depends on the amount of seconds you need to animate, because each second is at least 12 drawings. You can do up to 24. So 60 seconds of animation is a lot of work. For instance, with the TV show Paquita Salas I directed the whole thing. There was a team of animators and I would paint every still and do a storyboard, and then they animated it for me and put it together. It was amazing. What time is your plane? I think 4pm. Yeah. Four? Alright, you’ll make it. Is there anything else you want your followers to know? What are your upcoming projects? What’s your inspiration? The ceramic projects, which I’m very excited about. It’s a whole new universe. I mean, we’re just starting and have just done this thing for a club, which is hilarious. It’s a bit—was it Velázquez doing the huge arses? Caravaggio. There you go, that’s the connection. I was like, ‘Can I manage to put a huge penis and a huge vagina on Instagram and not get it censored?’ And it worked. OK. So we’ve got the trick for all the influencers out there. We were asked, ‘Do we need to censor it?’ I thought, ‘Well, I’m going to try and see what happens’. We posted it and nothing happened. At the end of the day it’s painted. It was designed for the booths of the VIP area; you’re in a sort of private space with curtains and everything. I thought, ‘What am I going to put here? Imagine you had a huge vagina. You would have the time of your life’. And the tiles are like a canvas and you painted on them, right? Yeah. We worked with the guy who does all the street names in Madrid and all the restoration of the tiles. This guy’s been in the business for 40 years, and he was very happy that we were two young people, and he was willing to teach us. Does the tile company have a name? We’re calling it Alfar Ocho. Alfar Eight. Eight after Kobe Bryant, rest in peace. Because my business partner is a big, big basketball fan. I don’t want you to lose your fucking plane. Oh, I’m going to get there. Discover more Apartamento stories! Click below for more. Zebadiah Keneally Charles Perry
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Soggy neighborhoods under flash-flood warning in Mississippi by: ROGELIO V. SOLIS, Associated Press Posted: Feb 18, 2020 / 11:06 AM CST / Updated: Feb 18, 2020 / 06:40 PM CST This drone photo provided by Hardin County Fire Department, Savannah, Tenn. on Feb. 15, 2030, shows the landslide on Chalk bluff on the Tennessee River. Authorities say two homes were destroyed when a hillside collapsed near a swollen river in western Tennessee. News outlets report no one was injured in the slide, which occurred along the Tennessee River near the Hardin County community of Savannah.(Melvin Martin /Hardin County Fire Department, Savannah, Tenn. via AP) RIDGELAND, Miss. (AP) — Forecasters expected more heavy rains in parts of the flood-ravaged South on Tuesday, prolonging the misery for worried people who still can’t get back in homes surrounded by water. Some of the hardest-hit areas were under a flash flood watch, as the National Weather Service said as much as 2 inches (5 centimeters) of rain, and even more in some spots — was expected to fall in a short amount of time in central Mississippi. The national Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland, projected the greatest likelihood of heavy rains in a band from eastern Louisiana across central parts of Mississippi and Alabama and into far west Georgia. Authorities around Mississippi’s capital city of Jackson warned hundreds of residents not to return home until they get an all-clear following devastating flooding on Monday. The receding flood left muddy water marks on the sides of cars at the Harbor Pines Mobile Home Community in suburban Ridgeland, not far from where managers of the Ross Barnett Reservoir have been trying to contain the swollen Pearl River. Water still surrounded dozens of trailer homes on Tuesday, but the water level had fallen 2 feet (0.6 meters) or more since Monday. Anxious to get back into the home she evacuated on Thursday, Gloria Vera couldn’t reach her trailer because it was still surrounded by as much as 5 feet (1.5 meters) of water. She didn’t yet know if water got inside. “I took nothing from the house when I left, only the clothes I am wearing,” Vera said in Spanish. Dorothy Freeman felt fortunate because her mobile home was above water and she was able to get back in long enough to feed her cat and pick up personal items including her Bible. “I’m praying for the people in the Jackson area that were hit even harder than us,” said Freeman, 87, who has lived in the community 21 years. Crews were going lot-to-lot to check the duct work beneath mobile homes to determine how many had been inundated by water. The power remained off as a precaution and it wasn’t clear when residents would be allowed back home. A near-record rainy winter led to agonizing choices for reservoir managers, who have had to release water that worsens flooding for some people living downstream while saving many other properties from damage. The intensity and frequency of extreme rain events that fuel major flooding have increased in the Southeast, according to the most recent National Climate Assessment, released by the White House in 2018. Southern states are particularly vulnerable to increasingly heavy rains, according to the report, which cites four floods that each did more than $1 billion in damage between 2014 and 2016. In the Savannah, Tennessee, area, two houses slid down a muddy bluff just below the Pickwick Dam on Saturday as the Tennessee Valley Authority released more than 2.5 million gallons (9.5 million liters) per second, adding to the anguish for owners of about 75 flooded properties downstream. Hardin County Fire Chief and Emergency Management Director Melvin Martin said the landslide claimed not only two houses, whose residents got out safely, but also about 100 yards (91 meters) of the blufftop road. Meanwhile, most of the homes down by the river are vacation homes that were built on stilts, Martin said. Boat captain Sam Evans, who lives in a historic riverboat on Pickwick Lake, says this year’s flooding is among the worst he’s seen. Navigating the Tennessee River by boat, he’s watched the banks gradually erode, and said it was only a matter of time before the bluff gave way. “It has slowly been eroding and it finally let go,” Evans told The Associated Press on Tuesday. The area suffered a devastating flood in 2003, but then about 14 years passed without a catastrophe, and developers got busy selling riverfront properties, Evans said. He thinks the buyers weren’t fully aware of the danger. “Out-of-towners came in that didn’t do their homework,” he said. “Here comes a flood and it wipes them out … Buyer-beware when you buy below the dam. ” Things changed about three years ago, he said. “We’ve had three floods in the last three years, about the same time every year,” Evans said. Darrell Guinn, a manager at the TVA River Forecast Center, said Tuesday that the river system is now at level where it can absorb more rain without further impacting flooded areas. Sprawling fields turned into large lakes throughout West Tennessee, including in the small town of Halls, where a cold rain fell steadily Tuesday. A Tennessee Department of Transportation crew worked to close state Highway 88 outside Halls, as water began moving over the road that connects U.S. Highway 51 and the Mississippi River.
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Need free advice? Get in touch 0800 038 6767 | Live Chat Asbestos Claims Calculator Mesothelioma Claims Asbestos-Related Lung Cancer Claims Pleural Thickening Claims Asbestosis Claims Pleural Plaques Claims Pleural Effusion Claims Witness Appeals About Mesothelioma Mesothelioma Treatments Mesothelioma Prognosis & Life Expectancy Mesothelioma Support Diffuse Mesothelioma Payment Scheme Asbestos Diseases Pleural Thickening Pleural Plaques Asbestos Disease Symptoms Asbestos Disease Treatments Macmillan Fundraising Companies We Have Pursued Slowing pleural mesothelioma with gene targeting For years in the UK, asbestos was used in the construction industry thanks to its versatility and fire-proofing properties. Although the dangers to health started to become known as early as the 1920’s, the use of asbestos continued and peaked in the 1960’s and 1970’s. It was not until 1985 when blue and brown asbestos were banned in the UK, and white asbestos was not banned until 1999. Asbestos causes a number of conditions including: Despite decades of research into the treatment of these conditions, they are very difficult to treat and there are currently no cures for the conditions. Most research has focused on mesothelioma; this is a cancer that affects the lining of the body’s organs and most commonly affects the lining of the lungs or abdomen. Although treatments have progressed and patients are living for longer after diagnosis, the prognosis is still poor for mesothelioma diagnoses. The key to long survival after a diagnosis of mesothelioma is reducing the size of the cancer and stopping or slowing the spread of the disease. Recent research has looked at using gene targeting to slow the growth of pleural mesothelioma Aggressive pleural mesothelioma There are different forms of mesothelioma and there is a particularly aggressive form of pleural mesothelioma that researchers in Vienna have been trying to treat. The type of mesothelioma is aggressive in people who have a genetic mutation involving the TERT gene. This gene regulates an enzyme, telomerase, which helps with the growth and division of cells. Researchers have found that the majority of people with mesothelioma produce higher levels of the enzyme than healthy people, however, mesothelioma patients with a mutation of the TERT gene have even higher levels of telomerase. If someone has high levels of telomerase, the mesothelioma cells are able to grow and divide faster and spread quicker. Therefore, controlling the TERT mutation could help slow the growth and spread of mesothelioma. Blocking gene activation Researchers in Vienna have developed a way to block the activation of the mutated TERT gene so that it is unable to send a signal to produce more telomerase. If this is successful, the biomarker could be used to select suitable patients, as well as being a therapeutic target. If you require assistance in pursuing an asbestos compensation claim for mesothelioma or other asbestos disease then please contact us today on our freephone number 0800 038 6767. Alternatively, head over to the ‘Contact Us’ page, complete the form and we will be in touch. Pirker, C., et al. (2020) Telomerase reverse transcriptase promoter mutations identify a genomically defined and highly aggressive human pleural mesothelioma subgroup. Clinical Cancer Research. https://clincancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/26/14/3819 “Researchers identify targeted treatment strategy for malignant pleural mesothelioma”, Life Sciences Medical News, https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200730/Researchers-identify-targeted-treatment-strategy-for-malignant-pleural-mesothelioma.aspx Awarded to Mr. Frayn Elliott for his Mesothelioma Claim Awarded to Mr. T for his Pleural Thickening Claim Awarded to Mrs. T for her Mesothelioma Claim Awarded to Mr. S for his Pleural Thickening Claim Awarded to Mrs. L for her Mesothelioma Claim Awarded to Mr. W for his Asbestos Related Lung Cancer Claim Awarded to Mr. C for his Mesothelioma Claim £237,500 Awarded to Mr. C for his Asbestosis Claim What is your condition? Lung Cancer Asbestosis Pleural Thickening Mesothelioma How severe is your condition? Minor Moderate Major Add your details below to calculate your claim By ticking this box, you confirm that you have read, understood and accept our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy. Your compensation award could be: To receive a thorough and individual assessment, please contact us on 0800 038 6767 *The above figure is only an estimate of the value of the claim for your condition and is based on the Judicial College guidelines, with an additional amount for care and assistance. In addition there will be a claim for loss of income/financial dependency along with any travelling and miscellaneous expenses which will increase the value of your claim further. You may also be entitled to relevant state benefits. For further information on the value of claims or your entitlement to state benefits, please contact us on 0800 038 6767. ©2017 Oliver & Co Solicitors Ltd, Douglas House, 117 Foregate Street, Chester, Cheshire, CH1 1HE. 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Home > Moving with Atlas > Local Movers / Find an Agent > Belgrade, MT > Belgrade City Guide Moving to Belgrade, MT With a population of 7,389, Belgrade is the largest city in Montana that isn’t a county seat. The city was named after the capital of Serbia as a gesture of thanks to the Serbian investors that helped finance the building of the North Pacific Railroad. Want to find local movers in Belgrade? View the list of local Atlas® Agents here. Find Belgrade movers Find movers in another city Belgrade History The city was founded by Thomas B. Quaw, who applied for Belgrade’s incorporation with Montana’s Gallatin County Courthouse in 1881. After the construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad, Belgrade grew and became an established community from 1900 to 1930. It became a quiet farming community after the Great Depression, but became more prosperous after World War II, and it experienced a population boom from 1980 to 1990. Belgrade Montana History City of Belgrade Belgrade Weather Belgrade receives very little rainfall – only 14 inches per year, compared to the United States average of 39 inches. There is very little humidity, and winters are exceptionally cold and snowy. The typical high temperature in July is 84 degrees, while the typical low temperature in January is a frigid 13 degrees. Belgrade Climate Weather Forecast for Belgrade Belgrade Transportation The primary mode of transportation in Belgrade is by car, and the city is accessible via Interstate Highway 90. Public bus transportation around Belgrade and surrounding cities is provided by Streamline Bus. The Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport is conveniently located just outside of town, and provides nonstop flights to 15 destinations in the United States. Streamline Bus Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport Belgrade Cost of Living While utilities and transportation are less expensive in Belgrade than average, residents pay more for groceries, healthcare, and especially housing. However, the cost of living is only marginally more expensive than the national average. Are you considering relocating to Belgrade? Want to know how far your salary can go in Montana? Use the resources below to find out. Cost of Living Wizard (Salary.com) Cost of Living Calculator (Money.cnn.com) Belgrade Hospitals The nearest hospital is run by Bozeman Health, which also manages a VA Clinic and a Women’s Specialists Clinic. Bozeman Health has received recognition for its treatment of heart failure, COPD, pneumonia, sepsis, and many other conditions for several years in a row. Bozeman Health Best Hospitals Near Belgrade Belgrade Schools The city’s students are served by Belgrade School District #44, which consists of three elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school. Montana State University, the largest university in the state with average enrollment of over 16,700, is only about 10 miles away in nearby Bozeman. Belgrade School District Belgrade has a robust, steadily appreciating housing market. The median home cost is $235,690, about $50,000 more than the national average. The property tax rate, however, is several dollars lower than average at $8.49. Typical rent per month for a two-bedroom apartment is only $788, nearly $300 less expensive than average. Apartments for Rent in Belgrade Belgrade Hotels Many of the local lodging options are charming and rustic, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t every bit as comfortable as a luxury hotel. The Gallatin River Lodge in nearby Bozeman, for instance, is rated one of the top 25 hotels in the country by TripAdvisor. If you prefer a more modern and trendy experience, you’ll enjoy The Lark, a beautifully decorated hotel in downtown Bozeman. The Lark Belgrade Restaurants The restaurants in Belgrade are well-established and enthusiastically supported by the community. The Mint, a traditional Montana steakhouse, was established over 100 years ago. However, steak isn’t the only thing you can find on the menu in Belgrade. The city is also home to eateries serving Vietnamese, Italian, Mexican, Chinese, and many other types of cuisine. Best Restaurants in Belgrade Things to Do in Belgrade One of the best parts about Montana is the gorgeous natural scenery, and Belgrade offers plenty of it. Yellowstone National Park is only about an hour and a half away. If you love to fish, the Montana Trout Wranglers will give you the best fly fishing experience of your life with enough knowledge to suit every level of fishing experience. Montana Trout Wranglers
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An Evening Of Laughter And Reflection Where The Audience Asks The Questions 7:30PM Sunday, November 11, 2018 Click here to view details for Carol Burnett’s March 22, 2019 return engagement. Carol Burnett, award-winning actress and best-selling author, is widely recognized by the public and her peers for her work on stage and screen, most notably The Carol Burnett Show. Named in 2007 by TIME magazine as one of “100 Best Television Shows of All Time,” The Carol Burnett Show ran for 11 years, averaged 30 million viewers per week, and received 25 Emmy Awards, making it one of the most honored shows in television history. But it is Ms. Burnett’s artistic brilliance, her respect and appreciation of her fans, and her graciousness, integrity, warmth, and humor on and off screen that have made her one of the most beloved performers in entertainment and one of the most admired women in America. During “An Evening of Laughter and Reflection,” Burnett will take questions from the audience ,show video clips from her shows in a format that harkens back to the legendary openings of The Carol Burnett Show where her studio audience had an unfiltered opportunity to engage Carol with questions and receive spontaneous answers. “I love the spontaneity of these evenings,” said Carol. “I never know what anyone is going to ask, or say, or do, so it keeps me on my toes!” As a highly acclaimed actress, Ms. Burnett has been honored with Emmys, Golden Globes, People’s Choice Awards, the Horatio Alger Award, an Ace Award, and the Peabody. A Kennedy Center Honoree, she has also been honored with the Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for Humor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame, and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Dates 7:30PM Sunday, November 11, 2018
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Penn State aims to end skid vs. struggling Michigan Michigan has faced Penn State 23 times during the schools' storied football histories. The 24th meeting could be the least anticipated matchup in the series. Both teams are struggling through shockingly poor seasons and they'll bring a combined 2-8 record into Saturday's game at Michigan Stadium.The Wolverines (2-3, 2-3 Big Ten) ended a three-game skid on Saturday by surviving a 48-42, triple-overtime shootout with Rutgers, a program that has dropped 25 of its last 26 Big Ten games. Their outlook looks rosy compared to the Nittany Lions, who have lost their first five games for the first time in the program's 134-year history. Perhaps the most positive development in Michigan's win in New Jersey, other than breaking the losing streak, was that it may have found a starting quarterback. Sophomore Cade McNamara replaced starter Joe Milton late in the first half and threw four touchdown passes and 260 yards without a turnover. He also notched a rushing touchdown during the second overtime period. Coach Jim Harbaugh refused to name McNamara as the starter against Penn State, though it would be surprising if he didn't make a change. Milton was intercepted four times in the previous two games and the team went scoreless against Rutgers until McNamara provided the spark. Harbaugh praised McNamara's approach. "His mindset is very good, very solid," Harbaugh said. "He's very good, confident. He's got faith in his ability, works extremely hard and (is) tough, too. So really, good mindset in all those areas." The Wolverines also had struggled to run the ball since a season-opening victory at Minnesota. They may have found their No. 1 option against the Scarlet Knights. Hassan Haskins had 23 carries for 111 yards and the winning touchdown. There's a sense of relief around the Michigan locker room as it enters the final three weeks of the regular season. The Wolverines will host Maryland next Saturday before their annual showdown with arch-rival Ohio State. "The mood is just, we're happy, but we're not content," defensive tackle Donovan Jeter said. "Everybody is more upbeat, more energetic, but I think there's a better vibe around the building. I still think we have that same mentality -- we have to build on this win and just keep improving and getting better." The Nittany Lions have given up an average of 36 points this season. Penn State was no match for Iowa last Saturday, trailed by as much as 24 points in a 41-21 loss. Turnovers have been a major factor in Penn State's demise. Quarterback Sean Clifford has been picked off eight times and the Nittany Lions have also lost five fumbles. Their quarterbacks have been sacked 20 times. "We have to protect the football on offense," coach James Franklin said. "That is obviously going to be emphasized all week long." Will Levis started at quarterback against the Hawkeyes but was ineffective. Clifford replaced him and threw two touchdown passes, then was picked off twice. Franklin says he'll continue to use both quarterbacks. He insists that his players haven't tuned him out. "Obviously there's disappointment, obviously there's frustration," he said. "But I see how our guys are in the locker room after the game, I see how our guys are at practice and I see how our guys have competed late in games."
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The death of Dr. Amanda Cook Zivic from COVID-19: A loss for family and friends, for psychiatry, in some way for us all | COMMENTARY Lamar Jackson and Josh Allen polarized draft experts. Now they meet in the playoffs as NFL stars. When will I get my coronavirus vaccine? What to know about Maryland’s updated rollout plans. Trump’s impeachment trial pending, Republican leader Mitch McConnell calls it a ‘vote of conscience’ Outcome of officers' trials could impact prosecutor Marilyn Mosby's political career, observers say By Luke Broadwater The Baltimore Sun | Eyes across the country were on Baltimore Police Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. as he was acquitted of all charges Thursday in the death of Freddie Gray. Another person drew similar attention: Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby. Mosby gained national prominence in May 2015 when she announced charges against six Baltimore officers on the steps of the War Memorial building, days after arson and looting rocked the city. Goodson judgment should force Mosby to reconsider charges State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby needs to recognize that her evidence against the officers in the Freddie Gray trials isn't as strong as she thought. Through three trials, Mosby's senior prosecutors have yet to gain a conviction against the officers charged in Gray's arrest and death. Goodson, the driver of the police van in which Gray suffered fatal spinal injuries in April 2015, faced the most serious charges in the case. Freddie Gray case: Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. not guilty on all charges A Baltimore judge is expected to issue a verdict in the second-degree murder trial of police Officer Caesar Goodson, Jr. on Thursday morning. By Justin Fenton and Kevin Rector Mosby was in the courtroom Thursday when Circuit Judge Barry G. Williams found Goodson not guilty of the seven counts against him, ranging from second-degree depraved-heart murder to reckless endangerment. While Williams read the verdict, Mosby shook her head. She did not speak publicly afterward; Williams has imposed a gag order in the case. The acquittal means it will likely be difficult for Mosby's prosecutors to be successful in any of the other trials against the officers should Williams continue as judge in those cases, legal observers said. "This is their Waterloo. This is their Gettysburg," said attorney Warren A. Brown, a critic of Mosby's who predicts that she will face several challengers for re-election in two years. "She is virtually persona non grata in the white community, and her support is waning in the black community and will continue to wane if she continues to lose these cases." Charles D. Ellison, host of "The Ellison Report" on WEAA radio, agreed that the trial's outcome is significant for Mosby's political future but said she's savvy enough to survive Goodson's acquittal. "This is the case that everyone has been watching," he said. "There are going to be some who see Mosby as being ineffective. It's not just a verdict on a Goodson. It's a verdict on her performance. But that's something she can pull through. She's a very talented lawyer and talented politician." Mosby surprised many in Baltimore when she unseated incumbent State's Attorney Gregg L. Bernstein in 2014 despite a notable fundraising disadvantage. She has landed high-profile convictions of killers, rapists and gang members, but those have been largely overshadowed by the charges she brought against the officers in the Gray case. While critics have accused Mosby of a rush to judgment in the Gray case, some residents have hailed her as a hero who is trying to bring justice despite the odds. Opinion polls show that she has remained popular in Baltimore. Democratic primary voters surveyed last fall said they supported her handling of the case by a 3-to-1 margin. "There are going to be a political repercussions, but I don't believe this will be a death knell," said former state Sen. Clarence M. Mitchell IV, who hosts the "C4" show on WBAL. "What the citizens of Baltimore wanted was a prosecutor who would have the courage to bring charges when it appeared that the police had done something wrong. She will get credit for that." Attorney Richard C.B. Woods, a Mosby supporter, said the failure to secure convictions against police officers in the case could have repercussions for Chief Deputy State's Attorney Michael Schatzow, who was accused of not turning over exculpatory evidence to the defense team. Document: Full verdict in the trial of Officer Caesar Goodson "If there's a failure in this case in overcharging, I don't think that should be laid at her feet," Woods said. "You don't go after the state's attorney for that; you go after the trial team." In West Baltimore, many residents said they continue to support Mosby's efforts. William Gibson, 55, of Sandtown-Winchester, said Mosby "did the right thing" by bringing charges against the officers. He compared the Gray case to that of Rodney King. Four Los Angeles officers were acquitted in that high-profile police brutality case in the 1990s, leading to riots in that city. Ebony Elliott, 39, of Sandtown-Winchester said Mosby does not deserve blame for Goodson's acquittal. Breaking News Alerts Newsletter Get updates on the coronavirus pandemic and other news as it happens with our free breaking news email alerts. All the same, Elliott said, "She's got to feel discouraged." Investigation and medical examiner reports say Freddie Gray's death a homicide. Baltimore City State's Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby will file charges against all 6 officers involved in the arrest. (Baltimore Sun) "She reassured people that justice would be served, and it isn't." Baltimore Sun reporter Colin Campbell contributed to this article. lbroadwater@baltsun.com Latest Crime Maryland Senate votes to override Gov. Hogan’s vetoes of crime prevention bills Among the first in line for COVID-19 vaccines, Maryland law enforcement officers aren’t rushing to sign up twitter.com/lukebroadwater Trials and Arbitration Marilyn J. Mosby Caesar Goodson Jr. Clarence M. Mitchell IV
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Home > news international > Revealed: Bloodhound Land Speed Record desert-spec car Revealed: Bloodhound Land Speed Record desert-spec... Revealed: Bloodhound Land Speed Record desert-spec car by Autocar Pro News Desk , 22 Oct 2019 The Bloodhound Land Speed Record car, now seen for the first time in completed desert spec as it begins its high-speed testing programme in the Hakskeenpan desert, Northern Cape, South Africa. The car gets precision machined solid aluminium wheels, made specially to withstand the stresses of traveling at supersonic speeds. For first test session, they will be tested up to 500+ mph (800kph). The Bloodhound LSR car is the world’s fastest straight-line car, powered by a state-of-the-art EJ200 Eurofighter Typhoon jet engine. The Bloodhound Land Speed Record (LSR) team has revealed the car, aiming to claim a new World Land Speed Record next year. The car is now seen for the first time in completed desert spec as it begins its high-speed testing programme in the Hakskeenpan desert, Northern Cape, South Africa. It’s the first time the car has been seen with its precision machined, solid aluminium wheels, made specially to withstand the stresses of traveling at supersonic speeds. For this first test session, the wheels will be tested up to 500+ mph (800kph). The high-speed tests will see the Bloodhound LSR car blasting along the Hakskeenpan desert racetrack for the very first time, providing a spectacular showcase of British engineering to a global audience. The Bloodhound team’s primary objective is to engage and inspire people of all ages through the most extreme application of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The world’s fastest straight-line car, powered by a state-of-the-art EJ200 Eurofighter Typhoon jet engine, was rolled out at the Bloodhound Technical Camp on the edge of the Hakskeenpan desert, and presented to Premier Dr Zamani Saul of the Northern Cape Provincial Government. Slowing down to go faster One of the key objectives of the high speed testing programme is, counterintuitively, to evaluate how the car behaves when slowing down and stopping from a number of target speeds, building up to and beyond 500mph (800kph). Only once engineers and driver Andy Green are satisfied they understand the drag and stopping ability of the car will they push to the next run profile, building speed in each run by increments of 50mph (80kph). The Bloodhound LSR team will examine how much drag the car creates in a number of scenarios and at various speeds, using the wheel brakes, one or both of the drag parachutes, and with the giant airbrakes locked into position. Data from 192 pressure sensors on the car will be monitored and compared against the predicted CFD (computational fluid dynamic) models to ensure they marry up. Bloodhound’s engineers will be working with Assistant Professor Ben Evans and Jack Townsend, from Swansea University, to check the data, which will reveal the amount of drag experienced by the car on each run. This data is critical to determine the size of the rocket that will be fitted to the car for the attempt to set a new World Land Speed Record in 12 – 18 months’ time. Mark Chapman, Bloodhound LSR Engineering Director, said: “Newquay was all about getting up to speed and finding out how quickly we could get the engine to full power and accelerate using max reheat. Andy was on the throttle for two seconds to reach 200mph (322kph) in eight seconds. Here at the Hakskeenpan on a 10-mile (16-kilometre) track we can accelerate for much longer, achieve higher speeds and investigate the car’s stability, performance and drag, all crucial as we move towards setting a new world land speed record.” Pioneering cutting-edge innovation One of the most cutting-edge pieces of technology employed by the Bloodhound team in the desert will be the Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) IoT remote sensor array. Remote micro-climate weather stations will be located every 1km along the 16km track. These are battery-powered devices which record wind speed, gust speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity and barometric pressure. Since they send back data over a wireless network, they can be located anywhere and still operate, which is crucial in the desert with very little infrastructure. Data is transmitted from the IoT sensor stations via a low power, long range radio network to a specially made data platform created by tech innovation company Digital Catapult, which converts the data into relevant and useable information used to understand changes in the weather which may affect the car. This is vital in keeping Andy Green and the Bloodhound car safe. Cross winds in particular will affect the stability of the car at such high speeds. Peter Karney, Digital Catapult spokesperson, explained: “The car is aiming to go faster than any other land-based machine built thus far. At the speeds hoped for, unexpected cross wind could significantly affect the stability and direction of the vehicle and are therefore a key decision point on when to run the car. We will be measuring and storing accurate data at 1km points along the track and therefore this info can be used by the team to plan the run.” Tags: Bloodhound Land Speed Record, World Land Speed Record, Hakskeenpan desert, Bloodhound LSR, Swansea University, Mark Chapman, Andy Green /news-international/revealed-bloodhound-land-speed-record-desertspec-car-44444 Revealed: Bloodhound Land Speed Record desert-spec car One of the key objectives of the high speed testing programme is, counterintuitively, to evaluate how the car behaves when slowing down and stopping from a number of target speeds, building up to and beyond 500mph (800kph) https://www.autocarpro.in/Utils/ImageResizer.ashx?n=http://img.haymarketsac.in/autocarpro/3da11c03-2895-4bb7-a954-0d7b3a0b3317.jpg
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Aug 22, 2018 - World Germany calls for global payment system independent of U.S. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas. Photo: Thomas Imo/Photothek via Getty Images Germany's foreign minister Heiko Maas urged Europe to rethink its partnership with the U.S. in an op-ed in German newspaper Handelsblatt, calling for the establishment of independent payment channels in response to the Trump administration's unilateral withdrawal from the Iran deal. The big picture: Later this year, the U.S. is expected to cut Iran off from SWIFT, an essential financial network that connects more than 11,000 banks around the world and allows countries to facilitate payments abroad. Maas' call to circumvent the system in order to preserve the Iran deal signals growing tensions in the alliance, recently aggravated by the Trump administration's rejection of a joint European request to be exempted from sanctions. 3 mins ago - Economy & Business
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Famous People Who Found Success Despite Failures A very interesting and inspirational article about people who failed a lot but kept going forward to finally become historical success story. Originally published on getbusylivingblog.com by an unknown author. I've added my personal touch to it. Sylvester Stallone, centimillionaire movie star. His Rocky script was rejected 44 times before being finally accepted. But his fight was over, since he had to convince the producer to be the star of the movie. Then he had to train several hours a day for several month to look like a pro Boxer. J.K Rowling, the author of Harry Potter, spoke to the graduating class of Harvard in June 2008. She didn’t talk about success. She talked about failures. Her own in particular. I absolutely love her quote. “You might never fail on the scale I did,” Rowling told that privileged audience. “But it is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all—in which case, you fail by default." She should know. The author didn’t magically become richer than the Queen of England overnight. Penniless, recently divorced, and raising a child on her own, she wrote the first Harry Potter book on an old manual typewriter. Twelve publishers rejected the manuscript! A year later she was given the green light by Barry Cunningham from Bloomsbury, who agreed to publish the book but insisted she get a day job cause there was no money in children’s books. What if she stopped at the first rejection? The fifth? Or the tenth? The measure of success can be shown by how many times someone keeps going despite hearing only no. The following people are not the only ones who have succeeded despite failure and rejection. I thought they would be the most interesting to you. People who found success despite failures Colonel Sanders: The founder of KFC. He started his dream at 65 years old! He got a social security check for only $105 and was mad. Instead of complaining he did something about it. He thought restaurant owners would love his fried chicken recipe, use it, sales would increase, and he’d get a percentage of it. He drove around the country knocking on doors, sleeping in his car, wearing his white suit. Do you know how many times people said no till he got one yes? 1009 times! Walt Disney: The man who gave us Disney World and Mickey Mouse. His first animation company went banktrupt. He was fired by a news editor cause he lacked imagination. Legend has it he was turned down 302 times before he got financing for creating Disney World. Albert Eistein: He didn’t speak till he was four and didn’t read till seven. His parents and teachers thought he was mentally handicapped. He only turned out to win a Nobel prize and be the face of modern physics. Richard Branson: He’s a billionaire mogul of Virgin but has had his share of failures. Remember Virgin Cola or Virgin credit cards? Probably not. He’s lost hundreds of millions of dollars but has not let failure stop him. When you’re rich like him you can rent his private island for $53,000 a night. Mark Cuban: The billionaire owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks got rich when he sold his company to Yahoo for $5.9 billion in stock. He admitted he was terrible at his early jobs. His parents wanted him to have a normal job. So he tried carpentry but hated it. He was a short order cook but a terrible one. He waited tables but couldn’t open a bottle of wine. He says of his failures, “I’ve learned that it doesn’t matter how many times you failed,” Cuban says. “You only have to be right once. I tried to sell powdered milk. I was an idiot lots of times, and I learned from them all.” Vincent Van Gogh: He only sold one painting in his lifetime! Just one to a friend. Despite that he kept painting and finished over 800 pieces. Now everyone wants to buy them and his most expensive painting is valued at $142.7 million. Theodor Seuss Giesel: Dr. Seuss gave us Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham. Books every child reads. At first many didn’t think he would succeed. 27 different publishers rejected Dr. Seuss’s first book To Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. John Grisham: The American author first was a lawyer who loved to write. His first book A Time to Kill took three years to write. The book was rejected 28 times until he got one yes for a 5,000 copy print. He’s sold over 250 million total copies of his books. Steven Spielberg: He applied and was denied two times to the prestigious University of Southern California film school. Instead he went to Cal State University in Long Beach. He went on to direct some of the biggest movie blockbusters in history. Now he’s worth $2.7 billion and in 1994 got an honorary degree from the film school that rejected him twice. Stephen King: His first book Carrie was rejected 30 times and he threw it in the trash. His wife retrieved it out of the trash and encouraged him to resubmit it. The rest is history. He has sold more than 350 million copies of his books. (He’s also made many adults fear clowns too.) Stephenie Meyer: The author of the crazy Twilight series said the inspiration from the book came from a dream. She finished it in three months but never intended to publish it until a friend suggested she should. She wrote 15 letters to literary agencies. Five didn’t reply. Nine rejected. One gave her a chance. Then eight publishers auctioned for the right to publish Twilight. She got a three book deal worth $750,000. In 2010, Forbes reported she earned $40 million. Tim Ferris: The man behind the 4 Hour Workweek, who changed how many people view work and life, was rejected by 26 publishers before one gave him a chance. It’s been on the bestseller’s list for years, sold all over the world, and last year published The 4 Hour Body that went to #1 on the New York Times bestsellers list. The Beatles: They were rejected by many record labels. In a famous rejection, the label said,“”guitar groups are on the way out” and “the Beatles have no future in show business”. After that the Beatles signed with EMI, brought Beatlemania to the United States, and became the greatest band in history. Michael Jordan: He’s famous for being cut from his high school basketball team. He turned out to be the greatest basketball player but never let failure deter him. I love this quote… “I have missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to take the game winning shot, and I missed. I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.” Thomas Edison: No list of success from failures would be complete without the man who gave us many inventions including the light bulb. He knew failure wouldn’t stop him. "If I find 10,000 ways something won’t work, I haven’t failed. I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward." There is no success without failure Decide what is important to you and take huge steps everyday even though it doesn’t seem like it’s working. Success doesn’t happen without failures. It’s reality. How bad do you want to achieve your goal? It better be so bad that rejection won’t derail you. How much do you believe in what you’re doing? Colonel Sanders did despite 1009 rejections! “Fall down seven times, get up eight.” – Japanese proverb http://getbusylivingblog.com/famous-people-who-found-success-despite-failures/ Interesting links: https://inspiringpersonalities.wordpress.com/2012/10/11/sylvester-stallone/ http://www.evancarmichael.com/Famous-Entrepreneurs/1439/A-Little-Colonel-Of-Truth-How-Sanders-Turned-KFC-Into-A-Global-Success.html http://www.bulletproofmusician.com/the-secret-of-highly-successful-people/ http://fr.slideshare.net/bright9977/my-10-life-lessons-rocky-balboa-7583489 https://www.google.ca/search?q=colonel+sanders+determination&safe=off&rlz=1C1NCHB_enCA593CA593&espv=2&biw=1024&bih=653&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAWoVChMIyIW_yI2kyAIVhHY-Ch3rdgBd&dpr=1#imgrc=ebLB1drRurbZAM%3A Posted by PYGOD at 12:47:00 PM Labels: Col Sanders, dedication, determination, failure, J.K. Rowling, reject, resilience, success
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District of Columbia ➝ Washington ➝ Best Bankruptcy Law Firms in Washington, DC https://www.akingump.com Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered http://www.caplindrysdale.com/ Arent Fox LLP. http://www.arentfox.com Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP https://www.arnoldporter.com Covington & Burling, LLP https://www.cov.com/ https://www.foley.com/ Groom Law Group, Chartered http://www.groom.com/ Jones Day. http://www.jonesday.com http://www.klgates.com https://www.kirkland.com Latham & Watkins LLP. http://www.lw.com/ McGuireWoods https://www.mcguirewoods.com Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP https://www.orrick.com https://www.paulweiss.com/ http://www.sidley.com https://www.skadden.com/ Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP http://www.weil.com https://www.whitecase.com/ http://www.zuckerman.com Bailey & Ehrenberg PLLC http://www.becounsel.com Barnes & Thornburg LLP http://www.btlaw.com Blank Rome LLP http://www.blankrome.com https://www.dentons.com Holland & Knight LLP https://www.hklaw.com/ Bankruptcy Attorney Jobs in Washington Financial Restructuring Associate Attorney District of Columbia - Washington Washington D.C. office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks financial restructuring associate attorney with 1+ year of relevant experience. The candidate must have major law firm experience. Legal Handled by: Washington, D.C. Bankruptcy and Creditors' Rights Associate Attorney Washington D.C. office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks a bankruptcy and creditors' rights associate attorney with 3-6 years of experience. The candidate must have a strong and sincere interest in bankruptcy practice. Should preferably have 3-5 years of bankruptcy/creditors' rights experience or relevant experience. The ability to.... Legal Bankruptcy Associate Attorney Washington, D.C. office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks bankruptcy associate attorney with 4-9 years of restructuring experience. The candidate should preferably have Am-Law Top-100 Law-Firm experience in bankruptcy and restructuring. Law-clerk experience for a bankruptcy judge in a U.S. Bankruptcy Court or other federal-court cl.... Legal Junior to Mid-level Litigation Associate Attorney Washington, D.C. office of a BCG Attorney Search Top Ranked Law Firm seeks junior to mid-level litigation associate attorney with 2-5 years of experience. The candidate should have prior law firm, government or clerkship experience. Exposure to bankruptcy and/or creditors� rights is preferred. Legal Most viewed Bankruptcy Jobs in Washington, DC Location: District of Columbia - Washington
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patient refers patient_refers clinicals breast screens breast_screens fact_sheets About Westmead BCI Breast Cancer Information About Breast Cancer Breast Cancer Research Breast Cancer Education Research for Health Care Professionals Education for Health Care Professionals Breast Screen Appointments Clinical Care Appointments Reschedule an Appointment 2016 Pink Ribbon Motor Cycle Ride 9:00AM - 12:00PM Sunday 16th Oct, 2016 - Sunday 16th Oct, 2016 Celebrating the 16th anniversary of the Sydney Pink Ribbon Motorcycle Ride in support of Westmead Breast Cancer Institute Subscribe to our newsletter and updates This site contains information, data, documents, policies, procedures, guidelines, images and general health promotion material pages prepared by Westmead Breast Cancer Institute ("the Information") for and on behalf of the Western Sydney Local Health District. Westmead Breast Cancer Institute wishes to make available the Information to better inform the community. The information is protected by copyright. The information also includes information derived from various third parties ("the third party Information") which is neither endorsed or supported by Westmead Breast Cancer Institute, and/or Western Sydney Local Health District and/or State of New South Wales and does not necessarily reflect any policies, procedures, standards or guidelines of Westmead Breast Cancer Institute, Western Sydney Local Health District or the State of New South Wales. Whilst the Information and the third party Information contained on this site have been presented with all due care, Westmead Breast Cancer Institute and/or Western Sydney Local Health District and/or the State of New South Wales do not warrant or represent that the information or the third party information are free from errors or omissions. The information and the third party information are made available on the understanding that Westmead Breast Cancer Institute, and/or Western Sydney Local Health District and/or the State of NSW and their respective employees and agents shall have no liability (including liability by reason of negligence) to the users for any loss, damage, cost or expense incurred or arising by reason of any person using or relying on the information and/or the third party information and whether caused by reason of any error, negligent act, omission or misrepresentation in the information or the third party information or otherwise. Further, whilst the information and the third party information are considered to be true and correct at the date of publication, changes in circumstances after the time of publication may impact on the accuracy of the information and the third party information. The information and the third party information may change without notice and Westmead Breast Cancer Institute and/or Western Sydney Local Health District and/or the State of NSW are not and will not be , in any way, liable for the accuracy of any information printed and stored or in any way interpreted and used by a user. Westmead Breast Cancer Institute and/or Western Sydney Local Health District and/or the State of NSW take no responsibility for the accuracy, currency, reliability and correctness of the information and/or the third party information nor for the accuracy, currency, reliability and correctness of links or references to information sources (including Internet Sites) outside of this site. Links to other Internet Sites are not under the control of Westmead Breast Cancer Institute or Western Sydney Local Health District or State of New South Wales and are provided for information only. Although care has been taken in providing these links as suitable reference sources, due to the changing nature of the Internet content, it is the responsibility of the users to make their own investigations, decisions, enquiries about the information retrieved from other Internet Sites. Provision of these links does not imply any endorsement, non-endorsement, support or commercial gain by either Westmead Breast Cancer Institute, Western Sydney Local Health District or the State of New South Wales. Westmead Breast Cancer Institute, Australia Patient Information: Latest Stories Westmead Breast Cancer Institute Westmead Hospital Hawkesbury Rd & Darcy Road Westmead NSW 2145
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Will AOC Take on Chuck Schumer? | Beaufort County Now | He would beat her. | lifezette, chuck schumer, AOC, senate, minority leader, new york, december 31, 2020 Commissioner Hood Richardson Better Governing Practices Will AOC Take on Chuck Schumer? Published: Saturday, January 2nd, 2021 @ 2:32 am By: LifeZette ( More Entries ) Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the LifeZette. The author of this post is David Kamioner. Will Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Democrat of New York, take on Senator Chuck Schumer, Senate Minority Leader and Democrat of New York, in the 2022 Democrat Senate primary in New York state? Probably not. But enough Democrats are worried about it in New York that some are urging her not to do it. Which means she's a threat. Which could also mean she recognizes the backhanded compliment and is encouraged to run by it. For Republicans it means a whole lot of schadenfreude. Even the party boss is telling her not to jump in. Methinks the hack doth protest too much. FNC: "That's a warning New York's Democratic party boss has for the sophomore congresswoman, who is rumored to be mulling a primary challenge to US Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer. 'I think it would be a primary driven by ambition more than by need,' Jay Jacobs told The New York Post. 'Chuck Schumer has been a progressive force in the state for decades,' added Jacobs, the chairman of the state Democratic committee. 'She has a constituency that admires her and supports her, and they're in her community, and I think it would be a loss for them if she were to do that. And he would beat her', he said. 'We've never met. I would look forward to doing that,' Jacobs said of AOC. "I am open to that at any time.' " He's never met a party star in his home state and in the national sense? That speaks volumes. He's scared to death of her. Asked about challenging Schumer, AOC responded "I don't know," according to Politico. In October, Ocasio-Cortez told Vanity Fair, "I don't know if I'm really going to be staying in the House forever, or if I do stay in the House, what that would look like. I don't see myself really staying where I'm at for the rest of my life...I don't want to aspire to a quote-unquote higher position just for the sake of that title or just for the sake of having a different or higher position. I truly make an assessment to see if I can be more effective." Why all the kerfuffle? Because AOC recently said this. Politico: "Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez argued in a new interview that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer should no longer lead Democrats in Congress, and complained that the party had failed at grooming a 'next generation' of younger lawmakers to succeed them. 'I do think that we need new leadership in the Democratic Party,' Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) told The Intercept in an interview published Wednesday. She went on to say, 'The hesitancy that I have is that I want to make sure that if we're pointing people in a direction, that we have a plan. And my concern — and this I acknowledge as a failing, as something that we need to sort out — is that there isn't a plan. How do we fill that vacuum? Because if you create that vacuum, there are so many nefarious forces at play to fill that vacuum with something even worse." President Trump has even commented on a possible Ocasio-Cortez-Schumer battle, saying AOC would "kick his ass," in a primary. US Military Stands Guard Against Iranian Attack Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Will it be duty and honor to country today?
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Mark Shapiro gets 5-year extension as Blue Jays' CEO Jan. 13, 2021 Updated: Jan. 13, 2021 10:23 a.m. TORONTO (AP) — Mark Shapiro has been given a five-year contract extension as the Toronto Blue Jays' president and chief executive officer. Rogers Communications, which owns the team, made the announcement Wednesday. Shapiro worked for the Cleveland Indians before becoming the Blue Jays' president on Oct. 31, 2015. Rogers chairman Edward Rogers said Shapiro’s leadership and commitment over the last five years have been critical to the team’s growth and development. The Blue Jays returned to the playoffs last season for the first time since 2016. Toronto was 32-28 during the pandemic-shortened season, earning a wild card in the expanded playoffs. The Blue Jays were swept over two games in the first round by eventual AL champion Tampa Bay. FILE - Toronto Blue Jays President and CEO Mark Shapiro watches the first official spring training baseball workout in Dunedin, Fla., in this Feb. 22, 2016, file photo. Mark Shapiro has been given a five-year contract extension as the Toronto Blue Jays’ president and chief executive officer. Rogers chairman Edward Rogers says Shapiro’s leadership and commitment over the last five years have been critical to the team’s growth and development. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press via AP, File)Frank Gunn/AP
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Jungle Tales of Tarzan By Edgar Rice Burroughs Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) was an American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan, although he also produced works in many genres. His first story Under the Moons of Mars was serialised in All-Story magazine in 1912. Burroughs soon took up writing full-time and by the time the run of Under the Moons of Mars had finished he had completed two novels, including Tarzan of the Apes, which was published from October 1912 and went on to become his most successful brand. Burroughs also wrote popular science fiction/fantasy stories involving earthly adventurers transported to various planets, lost islands, and into the interior of the hollow earth in his Pellucidar stories (1915), as well as westerns and historical romances. Along with All-Story, many of his stories were published in the Argosy Magazine. Among his most famous works are: A Princess of Mars (1912), The Return of Tarzan (1913), The Gods of Mars (1913), The Warlord of Mars (1913-14), The Beasts of Tarzan (1914), At the Earth's Core (1914) and The Land that Time Forgot (1918). 1. 1 Tarzan’s First Love 2. 2 The Capture of Tarzan 3. 3 The Fight for the Balu 4. 4 The God of Tarzan 5. 5 Tarzan and the Black Boy 6. 6 The Witch-Doctor Seeks Vengeance 7. 7 The End of Bukawai 8. 8 The Lion 9. 9 The Nightmare 10. 10 The Battle for Teeka 11. 11 A Jungle Joke 12. 12 Tarzan Rescues the Moon The Beasts of Tarzan Tarzan the Terrible Tarzan &Jewel of Opar Tarzan the Untamed The Son of Tarzan Pellucidar Warlord of Mars The land that time forgot The People That Time Forgot Gods of Mars
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About BoomerCafé David Henderson Boomer Life Boomer Fun Time Boomer Voices Boomer Culture Boomer Work Boomer Fitness Boomer Books Many boomers have grown up mindful of our roots March 15, 2015 Boomer Culture7 Comments Thanks in part to the groundbreaking television series of the same name, we boomers are the generation that grew up mindful of our roots. Not that a lot of us have dug very deep, but BoomerCafe’s co-founder and publisher David Henderson did. And learned some lifelong lessons in what he found. It was the Israeli-made documentary, The Flat, that again got me thinking about my late grandmother. As I was growing up, I always saw her as a respected businesswoman, a strong woman. But I also thought she had a secret side of her life. In the film, director and screenwriter Arnon Goldfinger takes on the real-life task of helping his mother clean out his grandmother’s apartment in Tel Aviv after her death. In the process, he realizes that neither he nor his mother nor any other family member knows much about his grandparents. Yet in the process of going through old papers, he becomes aware that his grandparents had lived a remarkable life in pre-World War II Berlin before moving to Israel. Fay H. See My own maternal grandmother, Fay H. See, lived through an impossibly difficult time in her own life. She had received a helping hand through the kindness of strangers, and had risen to become a highly respected woman in her community. Through my eyes, she was a woman who defined dignity. But few people in my family knew much about her past. What was her story? “Sometimes we realize that we miss quite a lot of knowledge about the life of our parents,” Arnon recently wrote to me from Tel Aviv. How true his words. Genealogy never interested me because I saw it as dry and lifeless, just family trees with names of people and their birth and death dates. I thirsted to actually know those people, not just read their statistics. What kind of people were they? What did they do in their lives? If we baby boomers fail to gather the family stories, who will? Will all those lives be lost to time and memory? My sister and I spent a lot of time visiting our grandmother while growing up. It was after my parents divorced. Our grandmother lived in the small village of Louisa, Kentucky, on the Big Sandy River. Louisa was on the still fairly prosperous edge of eastern Kentucky’s coal region. And even though it was cultural worlds apart from my home in the Washington, D.C. area, I watched, listened, and learned. The Bargain Store in Louisa, Kentucky. Circa 1946. My grandmother was the manager of a discount clothing store — it was referred to as “dry goods” back then — called The Bargain Store, and I was amazed at her business savvy. She always knew precisely how much cash was in the till, who among clerks or customers was stealing, and she always made me turn away when she dialed in the combination of the large safe at the close of business each day. Most of all, she had the grace to know who was in dire need. If a workman came in to look at coveralls or boots, she would tell him to just take them and pay when he could. Even though the worker might live in a mountain shack with a large family and scrap to make a living on a tiny piece of land, the debt would be repaid. There would be no piece of paper, just honor to “Mrs. See,” as she was called. On Saturdays, she would have her hair done. On Sundays, she would attend the Baptist Church and always walk by the post office to get her mail from box number 3. To this day, people who knew my grandmother speak of her dignity and add, with a smile, that she made outstanding cornbread. A remote train line in West Virginia. But none of it came easily. What I have learned about her life, mainly her earlier struggles, is that she was born in 1895 in the tiny town of Kermit, West Virginia. Kermit was desperately poor then and is still poor today. If as a young girl she wanted to get to the next town, she would hop abroad a passing Norfolk and Western freight train. Grandmother married Samuel David See when she was 17 and had three children during the years of the First World War. My grandfather was a civil engineer who worked in Rising Sun, Indiana, on the Ohio River locks. He died in July, 1924, in a freak accident: he touched a power line that had fallen in their front yard, the result of an overnight storm. My grandmother, my mother, and two of her siblings were standing on the front porch and saw it happen. Downtown Louisa, Kentucky, today is neglected and mostly out-of-business. I cannot imagine what might have gone through my grandmother’s mind. I do know that she brought his body back to Louisa, his hometown, for burial. And there she stayed. I have thought about my grandmother and about the challenges of life in the mid-1920s— the eve of the Great Depression— for a widow with three children, no college education, no profession, limited resources, few close family members, and living in a humble town. She never remarried because … well, in those days, few men were interested in a widow with three children. But, a stranger named Jake Isralsky brought new opportunity to her life. A full-page 1914 ad in The Big Sandy News in Louisa, Kentucky, for the store, Jake the Jew. It seems that Jake was always having a “closing out sale.” Isralsky was born in 1875 in Poland and, like so many Eastern European Jews at the time, immigrated with his family to America. Early records indicate that he spoke English when he arrived in this country in 1900. The family settled in Cincinnati. Isralsky apparently saw opportunity in Louisa and eastern Kentucky. He moved to the region and opened a low-priced dry goods store. He called his store, “Jake the Jew.” I don’t know how they met but Isralsky not only gave my grandmother a job but he really taught her the retail business. In doing so, he gave hope to my mother’s family after unspeakable tragedy. A man who no doubt had struggled much of his own life, he offered the kindness of a stranger, and my grandmother never forgot him. Tears would come to her eyes whenever I’d ask her to share a story about those days, long ago. I believe they were tears of gratitude for Jake Isralsky. She worked in Louisa for Isralsky until his death in 1935. Then, as I understand it, she sold his store to a chain of department stores and delivered all of his financial resources to his relatives in Cincinnati. Even though she went back to square one in her own life, he had taught her the retail business and from that time until she retired in the 1960s, my grandmother worked at what had been Jake’s dry goods store, renamed The Bargain Store. She passed away in 1991. She was 96. There are many other chapters in her life story that I may never know. As the director of the Israeli documentary wrote, “Sometimes we realize that we miss quite a lot of knowledge about the life of our parents.” I learned much from my grandmother about acts of kindness and the enduring value of offering a helping hand. David Henderson, Featured, Kentucky, Louisa Ed Kirkpatrick says: When Marti and I downsized our home in preparation to travel we spent months going through papers and photos my grandmother left to me. The family was at the forefront of the home picture taking frenzy in the late 1800’s and they took hundreds and hundreds of photos. Many of which I have. My ancestors kept such meticulous business records and most of the letters they wrote to each other. In reading them I learned so much. My great-great-great uncle Ethbert Newland left Webster NY in 1849 at the age of 16 for the gold fields in the west. On his own. There’s a good bit more to the story in letters but that’s too long for here. Wonderful stuff. Just this morning a friend was saying how important grandparents were to a child’s development and how today for a variety of reasons, the grandparent-grandchild connection is not so strong anymore (people live apart from the their families, interests and careers pull them assunder, etc.). I know in my own case my grandmother gave stability and direction to my upbringing. Grandparents fulfill a unique role. I do remember Mrs. See and I recall her being strong and kind, a trait your dear mother also possessed. Great women, they were ! Thanks for sharing this beautiful piece. CK says: A well-written and touching story about a remarkable woman. People were tough and resilient in those days, weren’t they? And they had that quaint quality known as “honor,” a concept alien to today’s businessmen, bankers and politicians. I’m happy to say I know all about my own roots, thanks to my parents, and especially my mother’s mother who wrote me letters about living in a sod hut back when Indians were still around and unhappy about settlers. Wild Bill Hickok figured in her accounts as well. Thanks for the article and congratulations. Terri Lynn Merritts says: What a nice tribute to your grandmother! She sounds like a top-notch lady with a lot of integrity and strength. Dear Terri and other friends, Thank you for your expressions of gratitude for my grandmother. She was a lady of great integrity and grace. Michael Coburn says: A story well-begun! Thanks for involving me in your research because I truly enjoyed learning about this chapter in her life. I lived two and one half blocks from her store when I was very young, and in the store undoubtedly a number of times. When my great aunt was in a hospital in her old age, a nurse commented about the ‘little old woman’ and her daughter took offense. She was way more than that. The daughter of a town medical doctor, she graduated from college at a time when most women would not have considered that option. Stories of people overcoming what life throws at them gives us all hope and the courage to press on. Strong character, often born in strong faith, proves that its not what happens to us, but how we deal with it, that tells our story. Thanks for the article. We are all cousins, if not brothers in that quest for writing our respective legacies. Well-said, Michael. Thank you. Comments for robots Please remove this comment to prove you're human. An American Baby Boomer in Paris One stone upon another HOW ARE YOU FEELING ABOUT 2021 SO FAR? Write about it. Share your stories. Share photos. Just click here. Connie Julien on Boomer Voices: Sad and Angry at the same time: “Well said Mr. Petrie. I hope all Americans sitting at home and seeing that happen to our Capitol will take…” Jan 15, 16:47 Dr. Frank Sinsheimer on Boomer Voices: Sad and Angry at the same time: “Mike, It could not have been better said. I have been to DC several times and experienced the same feelings…” Jan 15, 14:45 Sharon on Boomer Voices: Sad and Angry at the same time: “Well done. I especially appreciated your perspective from different times, and how those experiences shaped your life. I have only…” Jan 15, 14:15 Ardath Weaver on Boomer Voices: Sad and Angry at the same time: “Thanks for stating so well and sharing. I can only hope your voice helps more people transfer allegiance from a…” Jan 15, 12:37 Penn on Boomer Voices: Sad and Angry at the same time: “Well written and reflects what many, if not most, of us were feeling as we watched the unsettling news that…” Jan 15, 12:37 Laura on Boomer Voices: Sad and Angry at the same time: “Well said. I had the same feelings , anger and tears. Was truly a sad day. One that will be…” Jan 14, 20:56 It’s a world of love and light. Veteran journalist Mort Rosenblum writes from Tucson about something strange in the air. Read More » Get BoomerCafé via Email A prominent boomer fears, our moral compass is out of whack In this excerpt from his new book Rise Up, Reverend Al Sharpton, a controversial boomer in American politics but who, as head of the National Action Network, is a highly respected civil rights leader nationwide, writes of his personal encounter with perhaps the best of those exceptional people. Read More » A boomer looks at Christmas, 2030 San Francisco humor columnist Nick Hoppe is looking ahead to Christmas 2030… ten years from now. Artistic expression as a wonder drug Holly Gordon says art needs no prescription, can’t be overdosed. It’s a way of life for her. A boomer’s best bet for the vaccine… like… tomorrow? Humor columnist Nick Hoppe explores the question of the day — what to do about a Covid vaccine. A boomer asks, How about a fun argument for a change? Bill Cushing’s found a book that opens the door to arguments that can be fun! For this boomer, Wackos Create an Identity Crisis Popular humorist Jerry Zezima has had enough of identity and credit card theft. BoomerCafé’s Archive of Stories BoomerCafé’s Archive of Stories Select Month January 2021 December 2020 November 2020 October 2020 September 2020 August 2020 July 2020 June 2020 May 2020 April 2020 March 2020 February 2020 January 2020 December 2019 November 2019 October 2019 September 2019 August 2019 July 2019 June 2019 May 2019 April 2019 March 2019 February 2019 January 2019 December 2018 November 2018 October 2018 September 2018 August 2018 July 2018 June 2018 May 2018 April 2018 March 2018 February 2018 January 2018 December 2017 November 2017 October 2017 September 2017 August 2017 July 2017 June 2017 May 2017 April 2017 March 2017 February 2017 January 2017 December 2016 November 2016 October 2016 September 2016 August 2016 July 2016 June 2016 May 2016 April 2016 March 2016 February 2016 January 2016 December 2015 November 2015 October 2015 September 2015 August 2015 July 2015 June 2015 May 2015 April 2015 March 2015 November 2014 August 2014 June 2014 June 2013 June 2012 Health benefits of walking for people over age 50 Walking is healthy, especially if you are over 50, and... The 50 best songs of our boomer generation Alan Paul on the extent to which music has shaped and d... Former pro basketball player, and boomer boosts youth sports Former NBA player Bob Bigelow says, “just let the kids... Boomer Opinion: How do you explain Donald Trump? BoomerCafé’s Greg Dobbs writes there is no lucid explan... A boomer sees the seeds of age Writer Liz Flaherty has found things aren't as easy as... BoomerCafé is powered by Veerotech. BoomerCafé is a partner of the PBS website NextAvenue.org. ©2020 BoomerCafé. Site crafted by Michael D. Pollock.
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Family of murdered Jon-Jo Highton told to remove tributes from his grave Posted on - 25th August, 2016 - 4:49pm | Author - Rachel Smith | Posted in - Deepdale, Politics, Preston Council, Preston News, Ribbleton Jon-Jo’s grave at Ribbleton Cemetery The mother of a murdered teenager has been ordered to remove tributes from her son’s grave, in the week which marks the anniversary of his death. Jon-Jo Highton, 18, was murdered by a street attack by gang members armed with machetes, knives, an axe and a samurai sword. His devastated mother Tracey, 43, who regularly looks after Jon-Jo’s son Taylor, now four, visits his grave at Preston Cemetery almost daily to spend time with her son. She has even bought the burial plot beside Jon-Jo’s so that when her time comes she can be laid to rest beside her tragic son. Read more: Alison Threlfall jailed for lying about whereabouts of her son in Jon-Jo trial But this week she has been dealt a bitter blow after receiving a letter from Preston City Council ordering her to remove the monuments from Jon-Jo’s grave. What the letter says A letter sent to Tracey at her home in Deepdale, Preston, states: “During a routine survey of the cemetery it has come to our attention that the memorials placed on the grave you own do not comply with the cemetery and crematorium rules and regulations.” The letter, which arrived on August 20 but is dated August 4, gives Tracey 28 days to remove the memorials, after which they may be removed by the council. Jon-Jo and his mother Tracey Speaking on the second anniversary of Jon-Jo’s murder, heartbroken Tracey says: “If they dig this up it will destroy me. They are just going to destroy the last little bit of heart I have left. “When Jon-Jo was killed, half of me died too. “Coming here and making his resting place as beautiful as I can is one of the few things that keeps me here. “I keep it tidy and we spend a lot of time and money looking after the grave. I bring my trimmer down for the grass. “This is all we have got left of Jon-Jo. If I come here and they have touched this grave it will destroy me. “I’ll lie down and I’ll sleep here at night if I have to.” September 15 marks the date Jon-Jo would have celebrated his 21st birthday. Jon-Jo and his son Taylor To mark the occasion Tracey has been organising a fundraiser for Knife Crime and Victim Support She says: “I am trying to help people. I can’t believe they are doing this to me after everything I have been through. “I only received the letter on Saturday, a couple of days before his anniversary. I’m worried I’ll run out of time to do anything.” Read more: Nine men jailed for stabbing of Jon-Jo Tracey is one of a number of bereaved families to have received letters about their graves at Preston Cemetery in recent weeks. The family of Liam Hewitson, 22, who died when he was mauled by a dog as he was suffering an epileptic seizure, have also been told Liam’s grave does not comply and they must remove memorials from the plot. What the council say A spokesman for Preston City Council said: “We understand that tending the grave of a loved one can be a treasured and sensitive time, and some people want to add personal touches as part of this process. “At the same time, this is a lawned cemetery and we need to maintain the cemetery for the benefit of all users. “Where there are a large number of memorials on a grave this causes difficulties for people attending burials at adjacent graves and also makes it difficult to carry out maintenance tasks such as grass cutting.
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"I feel very blessed and inspired by the beauty, the trees and the garden here. I can walk around. I love where I live." Alysza B. Van Til Vinecrest Senior Apartments, Windsor Alysza B. Van Til is a bubbly and friendly resident of Vinecrest Senior Apartments who is in her late 70s. She has lived there for four years. Before moving to Windsor, Alyzsa lived in Crescent City, a long distance away from her family in Sonoma County and the East Bay. The apartment she could afford there was old and thin walled. “You had to listen to everything,” says Alysza. Alysza retired from her second career as a minister about five years ago, and before that she was “one of the few female high school teachers in the 1950s.” When asked how affordable housing changed her life, Alyzsa responded: “This place is so beautiful. I get to visit my family more, and see my niece in Petaluma for holidays.” Alysza also participates in many of the services offered at Burbank Housing. She is taking a memoir class where she is recounting her childhood and youth years. “At the age of three I was in the Netherlands when Hitler invaded Poland and my family had to leave Europe. Dad was getting a doctor’s degree. I was the only one who did not get sea sick,” she mentioned with a chuckle. “I feel very blessed and inspired by the beauty, the trees and the garden here. I can walk around. I love where I live.” Alysza also knits prayer shawls in her spare time and has made over 1,000 shawls in the last ten years. “Everyone at Vinecrest has one with the exception of the new residents,” she says. ← BACK TO STORIES FIND A HOME VIEW PORTFOLIO
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PGIM Short Duration High Yield Opportunities Fund declares initial distribution for January and monthly distribution for February 2021 NEWARK, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PGIM Short Duration High Yield Opportunities Fund (NYSE: SDHY) declared today its initial distribution of $0.108 per common share payable Jan. 29, 2021. Based on the Fund’s initial offering price of $20.00 per share, this equates to an annualized distribution yield of 6.48%. The Fund also declared today monthly distributions of $0.108 per common share for February 2021. The distribution schedule appears below: These distributions are the first declared by the Fund following its successful initial public offering in November 2020 that raised approximately $542 million, assuming full exercise of the underwriters’ overallotment option, which may not occur. The Fund’s investment objective is to provide total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation. The Fund seeks to achieve its objective by investing at least 80% of its assets in a diversified portfolio of high yield fixed income instruments that are rated below investment grade. The Fund focuses on a sub-style of the high yield bond market, investing a majority of its holdings in shorter duration, higher-rated high yield bonds. Shorter duration higher-rated high yield bonds have historically offered investors the income-generating potential of high yield bonds and attractive risk-adjusted returns with lower credit and interest rate risk than longer duration broad market high yield bonds. The Fund primarily invests in fixed income investments rated BB or B or deemed equivalent by the Fund’s subadvisor and has a 10% limit on investments rated CCC+ and below. The Fund generally seeks to maintain a weighted average portfolio duration, including the effects of leverage, of approximately three years or less and a weighted average maturity of approximately five years or less. The distribution amounts are forward-looking and may include net investment income, currency gains, capital gains and a return of capital, but such a determination cannot be made at this time. This press release is not for tax reporting purposes but is being provided to announce the amount of the Fund’s distributions that have been declared by the applicable Board of Directors. In early 2021, after definitive information is available, the Fund will send shareholders a Form 1099-DIV, if applicable, specifying how the distributions paid by the Fund during the prior calendar year should be characterized for purposes of reporting the distributions on a shareholder’s tax return (e.g., ordinary income, long-term capital gain or return of capital). If applicable, and when available, a current estimate of the distribution’s composition can be found in the Section 19 notice section of the website. Please consult your tax advisor for further information. About PGIM and Prudential Financial, Inc. PGIM, the global asset management business of Prudential Financial, Inc. (NYSE: PRU), ranks among the top 10 largest asset managers in the world* with more than $1.4 trillion in assets under management as of Sept. 30, 2020. With offices in 16 countries, PGIM’s businesses offer a range of investment solutions for retail and institutional investors around the world across a broad range of asset classes, including public fixed income, private fixed income, fundamental equity, quantitative equity, real estate and alternatives. For more information about PGIM, visit pgim.com. Prudential’s additional businesses offer a variety of products and services, including life insurance, annuities and retirement-related services. For more information about Prudential, please visit news.prudential.com. *Prudential Financial, Inc. (PFI) is the 10th largest investment manager (out of 527 firms surveyed) in terms of global assets under management based on Pensions & Investments’ Top Money Managers list published on June 1, 2020. This ranking represents global assets under management by PFI as of March 31, 2020. Data and commentary provided in this press release are for informational purposes only. PGIM Investments LLC, the Investment Manager of the Fund, and its affiliates do not engage in selling shares of the Fund. The Fund is subadvised by PGIM Fixed Income, a business unit of PGIM, Inc. and an affiliate of the investment manager. The Fund is a diversified, closed-end management investment company managed by PGIM Investments LLC and subadvised by PGIM Fixed Income, a business unit of PGIM, Inc. and an affiliate of the investment manager. Investing in the Fund involves certain risks and the Fund may not be able to achieve its intended results for a variety of reasons, including, among others, the possibility that the Fund may not be able to successfully implement its investment strategy because of market, economic, regulatory, geopolitical and other conditions. The Fund invests in high yield (“junk”) bonds, which are subject to greater credit and market risks, including greater risk of default; derivative securities, which may carry increased risk of principal loss due to imperfect correlation between the values of the derivatives and the underlying securities or unexpected price or interest rate movements and be subject to other risks such as market, credit, counterparty, leverage and liquidity risks; foreign securities, which are subject to currency fluctuation, political uncertainty and different regulatory standards than those of U.S. companies; emerging markets securities, which are subject to greater volatility and price declines; structured products, which are subject to issuer repayment and counterparty risk, and are also subject to credit risk in that the assets backing the structured product may be insufficient to pay interest or principal; smaller capitalization companies, which are subject to special risks because those companies may have narrower product lines, more limited financial resources, fewer experienced managers, dependence on a few key employees, and a more limited trading market for their securities, as compared with larger companies; bank loans, which are subject to the financial condition of the borrower and the Fund’s ability to receive payments of principal and interest and other amounts in connection with loans (whether through participations, assignments or otherwise). The Fund is a newly organized, diversified, closed-end management investment company with no history of operations or public trading and is subject to all of the business risks and uncertainties associated with any new business. Fixed income investments are subject to interest rate risk, where their value will decline as interest rates rise; issuer risk, where the value of fixed income instruments may decline for a number of reasons that directly relate to the issuer; duration risk, which can determine the security’s sensitivity to changes in the general level of interest rates; floating-rate and fixed- to floating-rate securities risks; prepayment risk, where the issuer of an instrument may exercise its option to prepay principal earlier than scheduled, forcing the Fund to reinvest the proceeds from such prepayment in lower yielding instruments, which may result in a decline in the Fund’s income and distributions to shareholders; extension risk, where an issuer could exercise its right to pay principal on an obligation held by the Fund later than expected; reinvestment risk or the risk that income from the Fund’s portfolio will decline if and when the Fund invests the proceeds from matured, traded or called fixed income instruments at market interest rates that are below the portfolio’s current earnings rate; spread risk; and refinancing risk where one or more issuers of fixed income instruments in the Fund’s portfolio may not be able to pay off their debt upon maturity. There are fees and expenses involved with investing in the Fund. Diversification does not assure a profit or protect against a loss in declining markets. There is no guarantee that the Fund’s objective will be achieved or that dividends or distributions will be paid. An investment in a closed-end fund’s common stock may be speculative in that it involves a high degree of risk, should not constitute a complete investment program, and may result in loss of principal. Each closed-end fund will have its own unique investment strategy, risks, charges and expenses that need to be considered before investing. This material is being provided for informational or educational purposes only and does not take into account the investment objectives or financial situation of any client or prospective clients. The information is not intended as investment advice and is not a recommendation. Clients seeking information regarding their particular investment needs should contact a financial professional. Please consult with a qualified investment professional if you wish to obtain investment advice. PGIM Fixed Income is a unit of PGIM, Inc., which is a registered investment advisor and Prudential Financial company. © 2020 Prudential Financial, Inc. and its related entities. PGIM and the PGIM logo are service marks of Prudential Financial, Inc. and its related entities, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Investment products are not insured by the FDIC or any federal government agency, may lose value, and are not a deposit of or guaranteed by any bank or any bank affiliate. 1043597-00001-00 Expiration: 12/31/2021 kylie.scott@pgim.com $Cashtags $PRU
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Ed Millard Group Client Vice President Ed’s career in marketing spans a variety of client-side and consultancy roles over the last 15 years, across a range of industry sectors. He started his career in the entrepreneurial spirit of the New Covent Garden Soup Co, in both brand and innovation roles, before moving onto Burtons Foods to manage the growing portfolio of Cadbury biscuit brands, with responsibility across strategic planning, communications and NPD. Ed then jumped the fence into consultancy, joining The IPCRESS Consultancy as Strategy Director, where he was able to indulge his passion for insight-driven brand development with clients such as Reckitt Benckiser, Unilever, Hammerson, and Sainsbury’s. Since joining Brand Learning in 2011, Ed has led capability programmes for a number of our global clients across a diverse range of sectors including Financial Services, Pharmaceuticals, Healthcare & Consumer Packaged Goods. Ed has a degree in Music from Bristol University, and was heading towards a career as an opera singer before coming to his senses and realising singing was probably best left as a hobby. He is married with 3 young children, who keep him on his toes in the quest for entertainment.
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Quebec town of Asbestos votes to change name to Val des Sources THE CANADIAN PRESS | posted Tuesday, Oct 20th, 2020 The Quebec town synonymous with the cancer-causing fibre asbestos has voted for a new name: Val-des-Sources. Mayor Hugues Grimard said Monday night during a live-streamed council meeting that Val-des-Sources won with 51.5 per cent of the vote after three rounds. Asbestos residents over the age of 14 and local property owners were eligible to cast their votes for the new name of the town, located about 130 km east of Montreal. The name Val-des-Sources was officially adopted by council and Grimard said it will be proposed to the provincial government for approval. Asbestos helped make Canada one the world’s leaders in asbestos exports. The Jeffrey mine, once Canada’s largest, closed in 2012. The town of over 7,000 residents has been looking to shed its association with the toxic mineral due to its negative impact on people’s health.
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You are here: Home › Seminars › Grae Worster Grae Worster Fluid dynamics of marine ice sheets Colloquia Seminar 9th March 2020, 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm Fry Building, LG.02 Marine ice sheets flow on bedrock that is below sea level and terminate in floating ice shelves. Fluid dynamics controls the location of the grounding line, where the ice sheet detaches from the bed rock and starts to float, which in turn determines the rate at which grounded ice is transported into the ocean and contributes to sea-level rise. I will describe some simple laboratory experiments and associated mathematical models that capture the dynamics of marine ice sheets, highlighting the role of the floating shelves in buttressing the grounded ice sheet. I will also describe a novel fluid-mechanical instability of shear-thinning, radially extensional flows that may describe certain longitudinal fractures in ice shelves. Grae Worster is a Professor at the Deparment of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics (DAMTP), University of Cambridge. He is a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, the American Physical Society and the European Mechanics Society, and an associate faculty member of the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences. Organiser: Ayalvadi Ganesh Other Colloquia seminars Jolanta Marzec Ollie Clarke
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Victoria County History - Middlesex A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 6, Friern Barnet, Finchley, Hornsey With Highgate Finchley: Local government A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 6, Friern Barnet, Finchley, Hornsey With Highgate. Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1980. LOCAL GOVERNMENT. Parish government to 1837. Local government after 1837. Manorial government. In 1294 a jury upheld the bishop of London's claim to view of frankpledge, assizes of bread and ale, infangthief, outfangthief, felons' goods, and gallows over his men in Finchley as members of his manor of Fulham. (fn. 1) Freeholders owed suit of court every three weeks at Fulham although it is improbable that courts met so frequently. (fn. 2) By 1384 a view of frankpledge and court leet was held for the bishop's Finchley tenants annually at Fulham on the Sunday after Hokeday. In 1491 it was moved to Highgate, where it was held on Monday in the fifth week after Easter. (fn. 3) Occasionally a second court was held, as on 9 Oct. 1396, (fn. 4) and from the 18th century extra courts authorized land transfers. (fn. 5) The common fine of 6s. 8d. was paid at the main court each year until 1840. (fn. 6) From 1792 the parish made an additional payment of £1 a year, raised in 1828 to £3 3s. (fn. 7) Only freeholders, who numbered 10 in 1406 and at least 21 in 1612, owed suit of court. Most paid fines rather than attend and many more inhabitants, 63 in 1612, were amerced for not being in tithing. (fn. 8) Perquisites of court, which included the common fine, varied between 12s. 8d. in 1404-5 and £9 13s. 4d. in 1606. (fn. 9) Early courts were mostly concerned with enforcing the assizes of bread and ale and with ditches, encroachments on the waste, strays, and occasionally with affrays. There were stocks by 1577. (fn. 10) From the 17th century abuse of the common became a major concern and land transactions, including the granting of waste as copyhold, became increasingly important. Enfranchisements took place from 1843 to 1938. (fn. 11) Officers elected at the Finchley court included two ale-tasters (until 1681), two headboroughs, and two constables (from 1423). (fn. 12) A constable existed by 1377. (fn. 13) The court elected a beadle during the 14th and early 15th centuries. In 1396 it named three, possibly for the bishop to make a final choice. (fn. 14) From the mid 15th century the beadle's function, which was mainly to collect rents and fines, was exercised by the bailiff, an appointed official, or one of the demesne lessees. (fn. 15) Officers were sometimes reprimanded, presentments of ale-tasters being very common in early court rolls. The beadle was presented in 1396 for not having a rod in his hand, a constable was fined in 1654 for non-attendance, (fn. 16) and the surveyors of the highways were presented in 1659 for not rendering their accounts. (fn. 17) No officers were elected at the court after 1840; the last view of frankpledge was held in 1848 and the last court in 1938. (fn. 18) With occasional gaps, the court rolls and books are extant from 1384 except for the period 1492-1602, which is represented by a single roll for 1577. (fn. 19) Some of the rolls may have been lost during the stewardship of Hugh Stewdley in the mid 16th century. (fn. 20) For Bibbesworth manor, whose tenants were subject to the Finchley leet, a single court roll, listing tenants and their rents and services, survives for 1364-5. There is also a record of a court held in 1597 which was concerned with breaking hedges and cutting wood. (fn. 21) Court books exist for the years 1716 to 1830 and 1847 to 1936 and mostly record encroachments and admissions. (fn. 22) Courts baron were held usually once a year but often less frequently, with occasional special courts, at the Queen's Head in Church End and in 1869 at the Railway tavern. The parish emerged early as the unit of government. The churchwardens already had charge of property on behalf of the parish in 1488 (fn. 23) and the clerk, mentioned in 1379 as the rector's clerk, was in 1536 associated with the rector in the administration of money. (fn. 24) The church house was said in 1547 to have been built by the parishioners and to be used for their common assembly 'for matters of the king as for the church and parish'. (fn. 25) By 1561 the church and clerk's houses had become part of the charity estates, which in turn were closely associated with the parish government and officers. (fn. 26) The parish may have been divided about that time into two wards, called Finchley and Whetstone in 1577, East and North later. (fn. 27) Overseers, mentioned in 1586, assisted the churchwardens in dealing with the poor by 1614 and four surveyors of the highways existed by 1659. (fn. 28) Parishioners, acting in concert, appointed two of their own number as attorneys in a dispute over the quartering of Parliamentary troops in 1644. (fn. 29) A general vestry mentioned in 1648 apparently consisted only of the charity estates' feoffees, headed by Sir Thomas Allen. The parishioners gained more financial powers during the Interregnum: in 1656 they were invited to see the charity accounts and in 1659 they were supposed to inspect the surveyors' accounts at the church house. (fn. 30) The first extant vestry minute book begins in 1768 and is marked 'no. 6', (fn. 31) earlier records probably having been lost in a fire of 1836 which destroyed the Queen's Head. (fn. 32) Meetings in theory were held once a month, from 1796 on the last Wednesday in the morning and from 1798 on the last Sunday after evening service, but were usually more frequent, varying from 8 a year in 1838 to 63 in 1835. They took place in the vestry room at the church, at the church house, which from 1718 was the Queen's Head, or, if business concerned East End, at the Five Bells. A new room was built at the church in 1841 but could not accommodate the large meetings of the 1850s, which often adjourned to the National school. In addition to nominating and supervising the parish officers, and dealing with church-, highway-, and poor-rates, repairs to the church, drainage, and policing, the vestry was also concerned with the common and grants of waste. In 1803 it provided eight militia men. In 1818 it set up a savings bank and in 1819 it began to enforce temperance, ensuring that public houses did not open during Sunday services. During the 18th century the vestry was dominated by the lessee farmers but by c. 1819 the rector usually took the chair. In 1832 a committee of fifteen was set up to make by-laws, although the rector denied that the parish had a select vestry. (fn. 33) The vestry usually chose the churchwardens and overseers in March or April and the surveyors of the highways in September. From 1794 the rector appointed one of the churchwardens. From 1804 anyone refusing to serve in those offices had to pay £10 to the parish. Although constables and headboroughs continued to be elected at the manor court until 1840, control gradually passed to the vestry, which paid them. When there was a dispute or an unsuitable appointment, the vestry had to settle it or make a new appointment, as it did in 1773, 1774, 1794, and 1818. In 1811 a constable refused to serve and was prosecuted by the vestry. There was one constable for each of the two wards, and a special constable was named in 1803 in anticipation of a French invasion. Other officers appointed by the vestry included a common driver, (fn. 34) vestry clerk, beadle, sexton, parish doctor (1782), organist (1801), apothecary (1804), church clerk (1812), and collector of the poor-rates (1813), who were all salaried, and a pew opener, who in 1796 was to wear a greatcoat and hat. The issues of property left to the parish in the 15th and 16th centuries were administered by the churchwardens before they became vested in the feoffees of the charity estates. (fn. 35) Another source of income was the rent roll, half the rent from grants of waste from 1588, (fn. 36) which by 1776 brought in £16 17s. a year. (fn. 37) Quarterly contributions for the poor were levied in 1614 (fn. 38) and 67 people were indicated for not fulfilling their statutory obligations to mend the highways in 1616. (fn. 39) In 1690 justices returning from meetings of the charity feoffees became stuck in the mud, (fn. 40) and in 1694 the surveyors petitioned for an assessment to be made because statute labour was insufficient to keep the main road in repair. (fn. 41) A highway-rate was levied by 1703 (fn. 42) and a composition in lieu of statute labour was levied in the late 18th century, with an occasional highway-rate, usually of 4d. or 6d. in the £. (fn. 43) Poor-rates were levied between one and three times a year, varying between 6d. and 5s. for the period 1768 to 1836 (fn. 44) and raising usually under £500 a year before the 1790s, between £1,000 and £2,000 from 1800 to 1830, and over £2,000 by 1836. (fn. 45) In 1684 the overseers applied to the justices for an inquiry, alleging that a considerable sum assessed for poor-relief had been mis-spent by a previous overseer, (fn. 46) and in 1705 another overseer took the money for his own use. (fn. 47) Seven leading farmers appealed against the poor-rates in 1753, (fn. 48) and in 1831 the assessment was reduced because of the great depreciation of property. By that date many officers had business interests in London and in 1832 a salaried assistant overseer, John Tattam, was appointed. The parish was c. £600 in debt in 1833 and solvent by 1838 but again in trouble in 1840, when Tattam was dismissed for misapplying funds. In 1614 £31 18s. 6d. was spent on monthly contributions to sixteen poor people and quarterly contributions to another four. (fn. 49) Pensions continued to be paid to paupers: 14 in 1768, 27 in 1785, 36 in 1796, and 28 in 1819. By 1834 the parish supported 15 bastards and relieved 36 labourers. (fn. 50) The vestry also made ad hoc payments, for clothing girls in service in 1768, to send a man to the East Indies in 1820, and for clothes, medical expenses, food, or fuel. In 1796 recipients of parish relief were to be badged. Pauper children were apprenticed, in 1793 in London, in 1796 to cotton-and calico-printing factories in Lancashire, and in 1804 in Derbyshire. In the 16th century many paupers who had used the Great North Road were buried in Finchley and in the early 17th century strangers often had to be removed. (fn. 51) In 1656 the headborough complained that he had spent 50s. in conveying vagrants and cripples along the road from London to the north of England (fn. 52) and in 1681 the magistrates answered a complaint from Finchley by ordering the Highgate constable to pass his vagrants northward directly to Whetstone and not through Finchley town. (fn. 53) There were similar disputes with Friern Barnet at the end of the 17th century, (fn. 54) when the Finchley constables were paying between £8 and £14 a year in conveying vagrants through the parish. (fn. 55) Numbers rose during the Napoleonic wars: in two days in March 1798 134 soldiers' wives and 447 children were relieved and given passes. In 1614 Finchley paid 30s. a year to keep a man and his wife in Friern Barnet's alms-houses. (fn. 56) From 1684 Finchley's alms-houses accommodated some paupers (fn. 57) and the parish bought or leased poorhouses for others. One such in Blackhorse Lane, Whetstone, was leased by the parish at least from 1773 to 1803. (fn. 58) Another was a wooden cowhouse on the common, which was bought by the vestry in 1797. (fn. 59) There were two parish cottages by 1817, for which rent was charged in 1822. A workhouse existed in 1768, when four adults and four children occupied a leased building near Fallow Corner. Said in 1777 to accommodate eighteen people, (fn. 60) it was two-storeyed in 1782 and presumably had a garden, since vegetable seeds were bought in 1796. The workhouse held 25 inmates in 1785 and was so full in 1788 that consideration was given to 'putting out' some of them. When the lease expired the vestry took a 21 years' lease of the Five Bells in East End Road from the feoffees of the charity estates. Two rooms for the sick were added in 1805 but in 1808 the vestry, which had suggested that the inmates could receive weekly out-relief or be moved into the small poorhouse purchased in 1797, leased a house in Green Lane as a new workhouse. In 1813 regulations forbade 'spiritous liquor', except for medicinal purposes, and substituted coffee for beer. Further regulations in 1825 enjoined sobriety and attendance at Sunday service and required that inmates be in the house by 7.0 in winter and 8.0 in summer. The workhouse usually held between 10 and 12. (fn. 61) Despite proposals to build a larger one in 1833, it remained until it was superseded by the Barnet union workhouse. The poor were farmed from 1768 to 1816. Initially £160 a year, the cost rose to £280 a year in 1788, 3s. 9d. (a week) a head in 1798, and 5s. a head in 1806. In 1774 the farmer was to live in the workhouse and keep the poor employed. Care was transferred from the farmer to the overseers in 1816 and salaried managers or matrons attended the workhouse from 1822. The two decades following the Napoleonic wars saw a rising number of unemployed and a tightening of regulations on poor-relief in an attempt to control expenditure. In 1818 the able-bodied poor were set to work by the overseers on the 17 a. allotted to the parish at inclosure. (fn. 62) During 1831 27 a. were leased out as allotments and the large number of unemployed were paid a daily wage to cultivate them, the crops being sold. In 1832 Finchley set up a rudimentary employment exchange, urging parishioners to employ the poor of their own parish. The vestry, led by John Verrall, tried to curb drunkenness. In 1819 a list of those receiving out-relief was sent to all the public houses with instructions to refuse to serve them, in 1820 a pauper was committed to the cage for applying for relief while drunk and 'grossly insulting' the vestry, and in 1826 a drunkard was ejected from the vestry. Relief was refused to anyone who kept a dog in 1825. Under the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 Finchley became part of Barnet union. A meeting of the ratepayers in 1836 condemned the Act as 'an atrocious Whig measure' (fn. 63) and the parish, considering its representation inadequate, refused until 1837 to nominate its guardian of the poor, to the astonishment of the Poor Law Commissioners. A second guardian was appointed in 1839 and a third in 1855. The parish continued to resist the union, refusing proposals to sell the two cottages leased to paupers in 1827 and to set up a fund to aid emigration in 1849. The parish and vestry clerks and the sexton received their salaries from the churchwardens until 1857, and a parish constable was still being elected in 1863. (fn. 64) A salaried collector of the highway-rate was appointed in 1840 and a salaried surveyor in 1856. Elected surveyors were increased from two to four in 1865 and six in 1870, reflecting the importance of highways in the work of the vestry. Churchrates were abolished in 1863. (fn. 65) As general meetings became larger during the 1850s, the vestry began to appoint committees: on roads, charities and bequests, nuisances, closing the churchyard, assessment for rates, and audit. A committee was appointed in 1866 to undertake the duties of the Sewage and Sanitary Acts of 1865 and 1866 but it was dissolved in the same year, as the vestry waited to see what neighbouring parishes were doing, and again formed in 1868. The six surveyors of the highway were described as a highway board in 1871, although a regular highway board was not appointed until 1874. In 1872, fearful that it would completely lose control of its affairs to Barnet, the vestry decided to adopt the Local Government Act of 1858 which it had hitherto opposed on the grounds of expense. From 1873 until under the Act a local board of health was formed in 1878, Barnet rural sanitary authority exercised powers in Finchley. Finchley local board (fn. 66) consisted of twelve members and first met in 1878, when it elected Edward Sayer (d. 1897), a local landowner, as chairman and appointed a salaried clerk. (fn. 67) The board set up highways, sanitary, and finance and general purposes committees and appointed a medical officer of health. A works committee had been added by 1881 and legal and fire committees by 1890. Other salaried officers by 1884 included a surveyor and an inspector. Sewerage proved controversial and featured in a conflict between Fredrick Goodyear of North Finchley and H. C. Stephens of Church End. Stephens, described by Goodyear as 'the uncrowned king of Finchley', was never chairman of the board but enjoyed considerable influence. He was elected Conservative M.P. for Hornsey in 1887 and advocated ratepayers' control, seeking in 1893 to introduce a Bill to restore 18th-century parish government and citing Finchley vestry minutes as evidence. (fn. 68) Stephens was probably behind the resistance to union with Friern Barnet in 1881. (fn. 69) His opponents objected that government was in the hands of the ratepayers of Church End, who could command more property and voting power than those in northern and eastern Finchley. After the local board became an urban district council in 1895, with Goodyear as chairman, the opposition began to gain strength. (fn. 70) Finchley ratepayers' association, which had been formed in 1882, had pressed unsuccessfully in 1890 and 1894 for a division into wards, in an attempt to break the control of Church End. There were similar applications by five ratepayers' associations in 1896 and by the Whetstone ratepayers and the U.D.C. itself in 1897, when an inquiry led to the division of the district in 1898 into approximately equal East, North, and West wards, each with four councillors. (fn. 71) The U.D.C. met every third Monday at offices in Bibbesworth House, Church End, (fn. 72) until in 1902 it moved to Finchley Hall, built after 1836 on the site of the church house. (fn. 73) At first the committees of the local board were retained and expenditure was mainly on highways and sanitation. After acquiring responsibilities in other fields, the council and its committees held 206 meetings during 1902. (fn. 74) In 1921 control of finance passed from the clerk to a new department and by the end of the 1920s housing had become the chief expense, followed by electric lighting. In 1909 the council decided to set up a distress committee for the unemployed and offered work on the sewage farm and private roads. (fn. 75) In 1914, when the road employees were dismissed, there was uproar in the council chamber and the police were called. (fn. 76) Controversy was also caused in 1914 by a townplanning scheme for Finchley and part of Totteridge and by the proposed building of council houses at Woodhouse. Finchley continued to oppose outside bodies, clashing with Finchley Electric Light Co. over cables and with Barnet District Gas & Water Co. over the water-rate in 1901 and with the Post Office over the installation of telephones in 1913. (fn. 77) H. C. Stephens provoked further controversy by his bequest of Avenue House, whose grounds were opened to the public in 1918; no endowment was left for the house itself, (fn. 78) which Church End ratepayers' association resolved to retain in 1923 and which was opened to the public and used for the housing department in 1928. (fn. 79) Although a charter of incorporation was sought in 1926, when the council feared threats to its identity from Middlesex C.C. and the L.C.C., (fn. 80) it was not until 1933 that Finchley became a municipal borough. (fn. 81) The borough was divided into the three wards of the old U.D., each with six councillors. (fn. 82) By 1951 there were eight wards (Glebe, Manor, Moss Hall, St. Mary's, St. Paul's, the Bishop's, Tudor, and Whetstone), each with three councillors, (fn. 83) who elected eight aldermen and a mayor. Administration was by the departments of the town clerk, treasurer, surveyor, medical officer of health, education officer, housing officer, and librarian. (fn. 84) Borough Of Finchley Vert, on a chevron raguly, between in chief two bugle horns stringed or and in base a mitre argent garnished or, a rose gules surmounted by another argent. [Granted 1933] In 1965, under the London Government Act of 1963, Finchley became part of Barnet L.B. Four of Barent's 20 wards (Finchley, East Finchley, St. Paul's, and Woodhouse) lay within the old parish, the eleven departments being housed in the former council offices of the constituent authorities. (fn. 85) London Borough of Barnet Azure, a paschal lamb proper standing upon a grassy mount; on a chief per pale argent and gules a Saxon crown or between two roses counterchanged barbed and seeded proper. [Granted 1965] The offices at Finchley Hall were extended in the 1930s. (fn. 86) Avenue House became the chief municipal office after Finchley was bombed in 1940 but by the 1950s there were also departments in Hertford Lodge, next to Avenue House in East End Road, and Regent's Park Road. (fn. 87) New council offices were built at Gateway House in Regent's Park Road in 1974. (fn. 88) The borough council was predominantly Conservative before the Second World War and again, after a period of control by Independents, from 1949. (fn. 89) Finchley became a separate parliamentary constituency in 1919 and has usually returned Conservative members, (fn. 90) including, since 1959, Mrs. Margaret Thatcher. 1. Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), p. 475. 2. St. Paul's MS. A 62; C 135/140/6. 3. S.C. 2/188/66 m. 5; S.C. 2/189/10 m. 2d. 4. S.C. 2/188/67 m. 7. 5. Guildhall MSS. 10465/55; 118, p. 372. 6. St. Paul's MS. B 80; Guildhall MSS. 10465/155, p. 217; 156, p. 177. 7. B.L.H.L., P.A.F. 1/2, 6. 8. St. Paul's MS. A 62; S.C. 2/191/5. 9. St. Paul's MS. B 78/43; S.C. 2/189/9 m. 2; Guildhall MSS. 10312/76, 79. 10. Guildhall MS. 10312/92, m. 6. 11. Church Com., S3 survey, pp. 57 sqq.; M.A.F. 9/169. 12. Guildhall MSS. 10312/116, 66. 13. E 179/141/23/13. 14. S.C. 2/188/67 m. 5. 15. e.g. S.C. 6/1140/24 m. 5d.; S.C. 6/Hen. VIII/2109; Guildhall MSS. 10123/1-18. 16. S.C. 2/188/67 m. 5; St. Paul's MS. B 68. 17. S.C. 2/191/12. 18. Guildhall MSS. 10465/156, p. 177; 164, pp. 194-8; 228, p. 140. 19. The ct. rolls are divided, with no apparent logic, among the P.R.O. (S.C. 2/188/65-81; S.C. 2/189/270; S.C. 2/191/4-12, 16); the Guildhall Libr. (MSS. 10312/61-117) and St. Paul's Cathedral (MSS. A 62; B 68, 80). The ct. bks. (MSS. 10465/1-228) and indexes (MSS. 10475/1-12; 10465/230-1) are in the Guildhall Libr. 20. C 2/Eliz. I/L11/18. 21. W.A.M. 4818; M.R.O., Acc. 351/146. 22. M.R.O., Acc. 351/276, 375. 24. Guildhall MS. 9171/1, f. 68v.; B.L.H.L., Acc. 6416/8. 25. E 301/34 m. 30d., no. 157. 26. 10th Rep. Com. Char. H.C. 103, pp. 318 sqq. (1824), xiii; see below, p. 98. 28. Guildhall MS. 9537/6, f. 4; M.R.O., Acc. 351/150, f. 4; S.C. 2/191/12. 29. Cal. S.P. Dom. 1644, p. 119. 30. B.L.H.L., Acc. 9131 (notes from the 'church bk.', since lost); S.C. 2/191/12. 31. Except where otherwise stated, the following paras. are based on the vestry mins. 1768-1873: B.L.H.L., P.A.F. 1/1-9. Minutes for 1769-70, 1798-9, and 1825-6, together with a table of rates and mtgs. 1780-1841, are printed as App. to H. C. Stephens, Parochial Self-Govt. in Rural Dists. (1893). 32. Stephens, op. cit. 65; Home Cnties. Mag. v. 269-72. 33. Rep. from Commrs. on Poor Laws, H.C. 44 (1834), xxxv, App. B 2, pt. 1, p. 95 f. 34. For the common driver, see p. 48. 35. See p. 97. 36. S.C. 2/191/9. The other half went to the lord both on the bishop's and on Bibbesworth man. 37. B.L.H.L., Banks Colln. xvi (rent roll 1776). 38. M.R.O., Acc. 351/150. 39. Mdx. Sess. Rec. iv. 32-4. 40. Passmore, 'Finchley Par. Rec.' i, f. 37. 41. Mdx. Cnty. Rec. Sess. Bks, 1689-1709, 113. 42. Mdx. Cnty. Rec. Sess. Bks. 1689-1709, 263. 43. B.L.H.L., P.A.F. 3/1 (surveyors' acct., 1780-1840). 44. A rate bk. for 1756, giving £87 as the rate raised by 6d. in the £, was found in New York by Ald. V. Wells and still in his possession in 1938. There is a copy in B.L.H.L., Banks Colln. xvi. 45. B.L.H.L., Acc. 6140/1-2 (Poor-rate bks. 1784- 1830); Rep. from Sel. Cttee. on Poor Rate Returns, H.C. 556, p. 99 (1822); H.C. 334, p. 133 (1825); 2nd Rep. of Poor Law Commrs. H.C. 595-II, p. 213 (1836), xxix. See Stephens, Parochial Self-Govt. 183 sqq. for assessments. 46. M.R.O., MJ/SBB 416, p. 46. 47. C 8/367/27; Mdx. Cnty. Rec. Sess. Bks. 1689-1709, 309. 48. M.R.O., MJ/SBB 1098/34. 50. Rep. from Commrs. on Poor Laws, H.C. 44 (1834), xxxvi, App. B 2, pt. iii, pp. 95h, k. 51. B.L.H.L., Banks Colln. xvii (Finchley par. regs.); S.C. 2/191/4; Guildhall MS. 10312/122. 53. Ibid. 387, p. 46. 54. Mdx. Cnty. Rec. Sess. Bks. 1689-1709, 19, 177. 55. Ibid. 69, 81, 97, 112-13, 115, 121. 56. Mdx. Sess. Rec. ii. 33. 57. See pp. 98-9. 58. It was used as a chapel in 1830: M.L.R. 1773/4/291-2; M.L.R. 1830/1/528. 59. Except where otherwise stated, the following paras. are based on vestry mins.: B.L.H.L., P.A.F. 1/1-9; Rep. from Commrs. on Poor Laws, H.C. 44 (1834), xxxv-xxxvi, App. B 2. 60. Abs. of Returns made by Overseers of Poor (1777), p. 100. 61. e.g. 3 sick women and 1 old woman, 1 old and 1 idiot man, and 4 children in 1833. 62. M.R.O., EA/FIN, nos. 40, 117. 63. The Times, 29 Apr. 1836. 64. Lond. Gaz. 7 July 1857, p. 2376. 65. Finchley Press, 6 Oct. 1933. 66. Except where otherwise stated, the information is based on Finchley local bd., min. bks. i-xiv (1878-1894) in Hendon town hall; B.L.H.L., Banks Colln. xiii (press cuttings on local govt.). Cf. also B.L.H.L., P.A.F. 4/1 (Sanitary inspectors' rep. bk. 1889-93); P.A.F. 4/2 (acct. bk. 1881-4). 67. B.L.H.L., Banks Colln., biog. s.v. Sayer. 68. Stephens, Parochial Self-Govt. The Bill was not introduced probably because it was overtaken by the Local Govt. Act, 1894. Stephens played an active part in the debates on that measure. 69. B.L.H.L., Acc. 10111. 70. U.D.C. records until 1923 in Hendon town hall, after 1923 at B.L.H.L. 71. M.R.O., Reps. of Local Inqs. (1889-97), 175-87, 189- 216; (1895-1907), unpag.; Biggers, Finchley, 19-20. 72. Not the manor-ho. 73. Kelly's Dir. Mdx. (1908); Barnet Press, 7 Oct. 1933; see below, p. 98. 74. M.R.O., Reps. of Local Inqs. (1895-1907), 1903 inquiry. 75. The Times, 8, 31 Dec. 1909. 77. The Times, 17 Oct., 19 Dec. 1901; 8 Jan. 1913. 78. Ibid. 11 Sept. 1918. 79. Ibid. 12 June 1925. 81. Barnet L.B. Official Guide [c. 1973]. 82. Finchley Press, 6 Oct., 7 Oct. 1933; The Times, 18 Sept. 1933. 83. Census, 1951. 84. Finchley Boro. Official Handbk. (1955). 86. The Times, 30 Nov. 1932; 19 Dec. 1934; 29 Sept. 1936; 23 Feb., 19 June, 7 Aug. 1937. 87. Finchley Boro. Official Handbk. (1955); B.L.H.L., Banks Colln. ix. 4376. 88. Finchley Soc. Newsletter, Mar., Oct. 1973; Evening Standard, 21 Oct. 1977. 89. Election results in The Times, e.g. 2 Nov. 1938, 14 May 1949, 12 May 1950. 90. Whitaker's Almanack (1915 and later edns.).
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Emergency Tree Removal Residential Tree Services Commercial Tree Services Tree Bracing & Cabling Arborist Consultations Deep Root Injection Palm Tree Removal Palm Tree Trimming Tree Doctor Tree Healthcare Tree Assessments Broward County FL Tree Trimming and Stump Grinding Services CALL US: (954)-329-0445 CLICK HERE FOR A FREE QUOTE! Best Tree Trimming Company in Hallandale Beach FL! Hallandale Beach (formerly simply referred to as Hallandale) is a town in Broward County, Florida. The city is named after Henry Flagler’s Florida East Coast Railroad’s son, Luther Halland. The population was 37,113 as of the 2010 census. The city is known as the home of Gulfstream Park (horse racing and casino) and Mardi Gras Casino, a World Classic greyhound racing track. It also has a large financial district, with offices for a number of banks and brokerage houses, plus a number of restaurants. Hallandale Beach has one of the fastest-growing populations in Broward County and Metro Miami due to the large number of visitors who eventually retire in the area. Hollywood is north of Hallandale Beach, Aventura is south of the city in Miami-Dade County, the Atlantic Ocean is east, and Pembroke Park is west. Hallandale Beach is at 80 ° 08′46′′W at 25 ° 59′12′′N. The city has a total area of 4.55 square miles (12 km2) according to the U.S. Census Bureau. 4.21 square kilometers (11 km2) of land and 1.34 square kilometers (1 km2) of water (7.47%). By the year 2000, 59.66% of the population spoke English as a first language, while 19.50% of the population spoke Spanish. The “southernmost Canadian city” also had French spoken by 5.23 percent of the population, with the majority coming from French Canadians as Canadian French / Quebec French. If you live in the city and want to plant a large number of trees, you need a top company’s support. A top company will assist you in planting trees in the right way and in a short time. But when you’re looking for the best company to help you with this operation, you need to be careful. There are so many incidents where businesses involved in this system ended up doing the wrong thing. Whether you are planting a particular tree, you need a company to help you in the right way with this process, if you don’t then you may need to redo the process. Broward County Tree Trimming and Stump Grinding Services it’s a top company you can count on for these services. Since in the past, the company has experienced so many kinds of this projects. In all regions, the company knows how to plant all kinds of trees. The company knows how to plant all types of trees in all regions. The business is not just good at planting trees on its own. It also has expertise from all regions in the care of trees. For example, if your trees need to be removed or pruned, that process will also be helped by the company. The company uses top-of – the-line equipment to ensure the success of its operations. Nothing will go wrong with them, at your job. Whether you are planting a significant number of trees, you need a top company to assist you in the process. One company you can rely on for this process is the Broward County Tree Trimming and Stump Grinding Services . The company also has major responsibilities in other services such as those listed below. There are so many areas or regions where we offer these services with most of them being cities. However, if you need any of these services, you need to contact us. The list below comprises of the areas where we offer these services. Best Email: * Best Phone Number: * What City Are You Located In? * How Soon Do You Need Our Services? * How Can We Serve You? * To Protect Against Spam, Enter Answer Below: * What is 29+12? Yes, I’d Like a Free Quote! Powered by Broward County FL Tree Trimming and Stump Grinding Services.
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Motivational, Celebrity, After Dinner & Guest Speakers Enquire about a speaker Joan Baker Michele A'Court Gilbert Enoka Kevin Biggar Pauline Grogan Amazing woman who has battled through some huge life obstacles and come out the other end. One of the most inspiring speakers you'll hear. An amazing lady with a story of courage and fortitude and amazing achievement. Pauline entered the convent at the age of 17 and at the age of 29 found herself back within the secular world, having to begin her life all over again. Her daughter Mary had a stroke whilst still at primary school and Pauline talks about the effect that had on her and on Mary’s siblings. Whilst visiting Mary in Tauranga hospital she met a severely disabled man who changed her life. Her recent book and play ‘500 Letters’ tells the story of her 17-year friendship with him. Pauline is a remarkable life survivor turned motivational speaker, celebrant and amateur actor, among many other things. A brave woman with a moving story to tell. At the age of seventeen, Pauline entered the convent and several years later took her final vows. At age 29, desecrated and bewildered, she found herself back within the secular world, having to begin her life all over again. “Beyond the Veil” is the sometimes shocking account of how faith survives even its own worst abuse, but it is much more than that. It is the story of a nun who becomes a wife and mother and then as happiness seems secure, is cast back down into the deepest regions of despair. It is a story that anyone who has ever feared for their own personal safety, their sanity, and above all the health and well-being of their children, will readily understand. It tells of the small but glorious triumphs of love and faith in the face of apparently insurmountable odds. In 1994, Pauline became Head of the Foundation Studies Department at Kristin School in Albany, where she taught full time. She had a staff of 22 teachers who were involved in the teaching of Foundations for Life to 850 students from Year 7 to Year 13. Prior to working at Kristin School Pauline was Assistant Principal at the Wilson Home school in Takapuna. In 1993 Pauline decided that she wanted a degree before she turned 50, so she began studying towards a Bachelor of Social Sciences Degree. She graduated in 1995, a year before her autobiography – “Beyond the Veil” was published by Penguin Books. Pauline has done excellent community work with her 15 years association with the Stroke Foundation. She was a specialist section writer for the rehabilitation manual Life After Stroke and has been spokesperson for young people who have had strokes over the years. In this capacity she has spoken on the radio, at conferences, to professional groups and many community groups. Her passion is to set up a support system to provide on-going support for the victims of stokes. Her recent book and play ‘500 letters’, tells the true-life story of a severely disabled man, immobile and confined to a hospital bed. His laughter and strength spin the wheels of all around him and he inspires Pauline to step where she fears to tread. Together they risk the consequences of exposing truth and how powerful these consequences can be. Pauline delivers an outstanding performance and the play, after premiering in Auckland in October 2005 has enjoyed a return season and national tour finishing to rave reviews in November 2006. In 2009 she was voted North Shore Womens Centre Woman of the Year. Pauline is a great speaker, a lovely person and is articulate, passionate and inspiring. “We found Pauline Grogan’s delivery innovative and entertaining, leaving a powerful message with our top corporate audience. Her empathy with real life experiences that she manages to incorporate into her presentation bring a warmth and sincerity to the message. Pauline is a gifted speaker and we highly recommend her.” Terry Buchanan, Facilitator, The Admiral’s Breakfast Club, Auckland “Pauline Grogan has an amazing story to tell and she tells it as a public speaker in a manner which is confident, delicately balanced, forthright and truly inspirational. Serving the City of Newcastle, Australia as its Lord Mayor for 9 years, member of the Newcastle Rotary Club for organising guest speakers over 40 meetings a year, service to the Institute of Surveyors in Australia and membership of Newcastle business clubs for 30 years, I can say that I may have heard a guest speaker as inspirational and polished as Pauline Grogan although none come to mind. I recommend her to any person or organisation requiring the services of a speaker who is interesting, educational and inspirational, as well as being most entertaining.” John McNaughton AN-FIS Aaust. Hon D Eng NCLE AIN “Pauline inspired the audience with her enthusiasm and passion for life. Having organised numerous national conferences in the past which have attracted over 600 people, I would strongly recommend Pauline Grogan to any company as a professional speaker.” Marianne Sheehy, Taradale Developments “This presentation had the audience spellbound and throughout various times, many women were moved very deeply. Pauline’s honest and open descriptions were listened to avidly, the delivery was clear, concise and dignified, and her visual appearance was groomed to perfection. She received a standing ovation and nearly every woman in the room went up to her afterwards. We highly recommend Pauline to any audience as a speaker with presence and top professional speaking skills.” Debbie Wilson, Club President, Women Working for Women, North Harbour Business and Professional Women’s Club Inc. “Pauline Grogan can be described as a true orator. She held the audience of professional educators and school Board of Trustee members in awe as her true story unfolded. Pauline is a woman to be admired and respected, a woman of substance, a woman of faith and woman of courage.” Alan McIntyre, Principal’s Association, Auckland “Pauline Grogan is a fresh breeze in the motivational speaking arena. Pauline has a true message that comes from a real journey of emotional pain through to self awareness and fulfilling victory. From the moment she walks onto a stage until the lights go out, Pauline’s story will challenge you to be what you are destined to be. If you are looking for someone who can reach out and touch your life, and inspire your team to overcome the traps in their personal and business life, you need to experience Pauline Grogan.” Eugene Moreau, Professional Speaker, Coach and Author “Pauline’s presentation was a true triumph that had many Rotarians who have heard many fine speakers, comment that Pauline was the best. It was presented with humility and absolute conviction. Pauline Grogan is the very best storyteller, one that can entrance any audience. I recommend her to anyone who needs inspiration to overcome adversity.” Dr Ray Thorburn, Chief Executive, Northland Polytechnic “Pauline is one of those people that one always looks forward to hearing talk again. She is articulate, passionate, always well prepared and always a good balance of hard material and anecdotal asides to keep her audience interested. One is always impressed by what she says and clear about the messages imparted. I have no hesitation in saying that Pauline Grogan is an excellent speaker, intelligent and articulate, and very consistent.” Dr Jonathon Basket, Hon. Medical Director, Stroke Foundation New Zealand “Your talk to the Ground Round, Starship Children’s Hospital, was excellent in stimulating discussion on how we can make our services more appropriate to consumer needs. I cannot remember another occasion when a speaker at the Ground Round has received spontaneous applause from the audience as you did.” Dr Rosemary Marks, Development Paediatrician “I am sure you could tell that we were all very much moved and at least one person is going to change the way she practices. Thank you for your wonderful presentation to the Masters Class.” Dr Jan Pryor, Auckland Medical School, Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioural Science “Ladies Business Club strongly endorses Pauline as a compelling speaker with an amazing story to tell. Her life experiences provide a role model to everyone in demonstrating how the power of faith can ultimately lead to power over adversity.” President Ladies Business Club “The Committee has been very pleased with the feedback and we achieved the “wow” intended. We did not do it alone. What we would like to say is thank you Pauline. Without your help, this event would not have been anywhere near as dynamic. Your presentation moved and inspired many people. Wow, Pauline, you really made a difference!” International SWAP Convention, Rotorua, NZ “We were delighted with the inspirational, very sincere and moving presentation. Pauline created an instant and strong rapport with her audience. She is a speaker of the highest quality. She held us spellbound as she shared with us many personal moments that I have no doubt left all members of the audience inspired and reflected. I would highly recommend the services of Pauline Grogan.” Nigel Grondin, Principal “Pauline made a considerable impression on the delegates at our conference. Her story was moving, sincere and I believe helpful to many who have experienced similar events in their own life. We all appreciated her courage and triumph through her adversities.” Dennis D Dufty, Director, Community Services, St John Ambulance “Pauline’s presentation was very well constructed and her real life story formed a credible base for some very strong messages. The audience was totally engaged and enjoyed mood swings from laughter to tears. When talking to awardees immediately following her presentation and several days later, their feedback was most positive and referred to Pauline’s session as one of the highlights during their week at RYLA Rotary Youth Leadership Awards.” Russell Topliss, RYLA Conference, Auckland “I am still receiving comments about how great your presentation was, what a different night it was, being both magical and fascinating. I know you challenged many in the audience and gave our women’s networking group a new view on life and gave strength to help make decisions which often seem daunting.” Joanne Buxton, Events Coordinator, Chamber of Commerce, Tauranga “I thank you for our riveting address at our conference. I want to thank you for your message of tolerance and I know you made a huge impact. Many people have told me how impressed they were with your presentation and about how much it made them think. My goal was for people to leave the conference moved and inspired, and they were.” Sandra McKersey, Rotary International “Amazing, excellent” Epilepsy Association MC's Musician or Band Copyright © Captive Audience. All rights reserved.
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Caroline McAlister John Ronald's Dragons Brave Donatella and the Jasmine Thief Review of The Librarian of Auschwitz by Antonio Iturbe and Translated by Lilit Thwaites I have found blogging discouraging. I write and post and then nobody responds. However, I recently received an intriguing message from the other side of the world (Australia) to one of my earliest posts. I had read a New York Times Op-Ed by Alberto Manguel about a secret library at Auschwitz. I was haunted by the idea of children in a concentration camp seeking comfort in books. Here is the blog I posted. It turns out I was not the only person haunted by Alberto Manguel's mention of a secret library at Auschwitz. In 2011 a Spanish journalist, Antonio Iturbe, read Manguel's book, The Library at Night, and using his considerable journalistic skills, he went in search of information. He found the actual librarian, the older girl, in charge of the eight threadbare books. Her name was Dita Kraus and she was then 80 years old and living in Israel. He wrote a novel in Spanish based on her story. The English translation, elegantly done by Lilit Thwaites, was just published to great acclaim this October by Henry Holt. Lilit's husband came across my blog post and contacted me. I promised to read and review The Librarian of Auschwitz, which I stayed up finishing last night, with a box of kleenex at my side. The Librarian of Auschwitz is the perfect follow up to Anne Frank for the young adult and adult reader. It details the horrors of the camps, the inhumanity of genocide, and the amazing spirit and light of those individuals whose names and stories we must never forget. Here in the US, where fascists chanting "blood and soil" march with tiki torches through the lovely town of Charlottesville, we especially need to be reminded. But, The Librarian of Auschwitz is not just about the holocaust. It is also a story about the magic of books. Iturbe describes eloquently the power of books to transport readers to other places and times. What could be more important than to escape metaphorically for an hour from the horrors of a concentration camp? As Iturbe explains, for Dita this magical power inhered not just in novels, but even in H. G. Wells's A Short History of the World: A Short History of the World is the library book borrowed most frequently because it's the closest thing to a regular schoolbook. And there's no question that when she buries herself in its pages, she feels as if she were back at her school in Prague, and that if she were to raise her head, she'd see in front of her the blackboard and her teacher's hands covered in chalk. (114) Here Wells' book returns her to the comfort of her life before it was interrupted by war. But it also carries her far, far away. That's why she prefers to return to the pages about ancient Egypt, which immerse her in the world of pharoahs with mysterious names and allow her to board the boats that navigate the Nile. H. G. Wells is right. There really is a time machine--books". (116) Dita is in charge of not just books on paper, but also living books, the stories narrated by gifted tellers. One of the most moving scenes in the novel is when a fellow inmate tells Dita the story of The Count of Monte Cristo. She is drawn to the figure of Edmond Dantes. She also wonders if, were she successful [in escaping], she'd dedicate her life to taking revenge on all the SS guards and officers, and if she'd do it in the same methodical, implacable, and yes, even merciless, manner as the Count of Monte Cristo. Of course she'd be delighted if they suffered the same pain they inflicted on so many innocent people. But nevertheless, she can't avoid feeling some sadness at the thought that she liked the happy and confident Edmond Dantes of the beginning of the story more than the calculating, hate-filled man he became. (278) Here books give her a way to explore the ethics of revenge and to sort through the immensely complicated emotions of her experience. It was through the magic of books, specifically Alberto Manguel's book, The Library at Night, that Iturbe came across Dita's story. I am thankful to him. I am thankful to Iturbe for writing the novel that has brought the story to life, and I am thankful to Lilit Thwaites for making the novel available to English speaking audiences. I am thankful to Lilit's husband to reaching out to me. Books have ripple effects. One cannot anticipate how and where these ripples will expand. It is my hope that the waves from The Librarian of Auschwitz will reach far and wide for a long time to come. The Summer of the Somme and the TCBS Before Tolkien was a member of the Inklings, he was a member of the TCBS. TCBS stood for Tea Club and Barrovian Society, so named because the members had surreptitious tea parties in the school library and also drank tea together at the Barrows Store. The core members of the club were four young men who had attended King Edward's School in Birmingham together, Robert Gilson, the son of the school's headmaster, Christopher Wiseman, J. R. R. Tolkien, and G.B Smith. ​The young men all wrote poetry, painted, and drew. They were intellectually ambitious. As a club, they hoped to spur each other on to great accomplishments. However, their youthful ambitions were tragically upended by World War 1. In the summer of 1916, exactly one hundred years ago, all four of them had shipped out to France. They spent their days marching through mud, dodging bullets and shrapnel, and crawling through trenches filled with vermin and lice. Robert Gilson was the first to die at the Somme on July first, 1916. After receiving the news, Tolkien wrote in a letter to the remaining members of the club, dated August 12, 1916 : "So far my chief impression is that something has gone crack. I feel just the same to both of you--nearer if anything and very much in need of you--I am hungry and lonely of course--but I don't feel a member of a little complete body now. I honestly feel that the TCBS has ended . . . . Still I feel a mere individual at present--with intense feelings more than ideas of powerlessness"(Letters 10). G.B. Smith was wounded by a shell on November 29 and died of his wounds on December 3. Throughout the fall of 1916 Tolkien fought in the trenches, seeing notable action at the battle of Thiepval. He served as a signalman for the Lancashire Fusiliers sending out signals of troop movements, calls for more grenades, etc. On October 25 he visited the medical officer, complaining of a fever. He had contacted trench fever, which was caused by bites from the lice. He was sent home. Since the fever allowed him to escape from the front, it almost certainly saved his life. Already an orphan, Tolkien lost two of his closest companions that summer. The club they had created with so much youthful energy and hope, was no more. Tolkien only saw Christopher Wiseman a few times over the course of the rest of his life. Perhaps it was too sorrowful for the two of them to meet without the others. If there is something elegaic about the male friendships in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, that sadness is the result of the summer and fall of 1916. Tolkien's old school, King Edward's has a gallery of photos on the great war as well as a movie about Tolkien's experiences at the front made by students at the school. There is also a film about Robert Gilson. I also recommend Joseph Leconte's excellent article published this June in the New York Times about how Tolkien found Mordor in 1916 during the deadly summer of the Somme. A Secret Children's Library At Auschwitz In “Reinventing the Library,” an Op-Ed in the New York Times dated October 23, 2015 Alberto Manguel describes a collection of children’s books at Auschwitz-Birkenau: Libraries come in countless shapes and sizes. They can be like the Library of Congress or as modest as that of the children’s concentration camp in Auschwitz-Birkenau, where the older girls were in charge of eight volumes that had to be hidden every night so that the Nazi guards wouldn’t confiscate them. ​http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/24/opinion/reinventing-the-library.html?ref=topics I don’t know where to start to research this story. I wonder what the eight volumes were. What books brought comfort to children in the midst of hopelessness and horror? Did the books have pictures? Did the older girls read them to the little girls at night? Did a book possibly save a child’s life, give a single child the strength to endure until the liberation? Did a book remind a child of normalcy, of family, of love? Does anyone out there know where Manguel got this story from, where I could read more about it? Where did the children hide the books? The article also resonated with me as we had to decide what to do with my father’s books as we moved my parents into a rest home. My father grew up in a small town in Arkansas that did not have a library. He never had books as a child. As an adult he collected them feverishly, coffee table art books, cookbooks with beautiful photographs, gardening books, books about opera, and dictionaries and reference books. We couldn’t explain to him why the dictionaries and reference books were no longer valuable. His collection for him was symbolic, symbolic of the life he had built as a professor, as a lover of art, and as a family man who passed his love of books on to his daughters and grandchildren. Books provide comfort to the young and the old and become a part of one’s identity. Postscript: I ordered Alberto Manguel’s book, The Library at Night. I discovered that the secret library was in B lock 31, an extension of Auschwitz set up for propaganda purposes that housed five hundred children in a “family camp” to demonstrate that the Germans were not killing deported children. Books contained in the library were, H.G. Wells’s A Short History of the World, a Russian school textbook, and an analytical geometry text. Manguel also mentions the importance of stories that children memorized and told each other at night. Alberto Manguel discusses reading as an act of resistance to oppression. I dream about the children at Auschwitz reading to each other at night. I dream about my father trying to hold on to his library as he loses the ability to hear, the interact, to remember his past. Caroline is an avid reader, children's writer, and teacher. She lives in North Carolina with her husband and dog. Check out her bio for more! Adam Gidwitz Alice Medinger A Secret Vice Boo Review Caucus Race Dita Kraus Eliza Wheeler Emily Jenkins Every Campus A Refuge Fantasy Writers G. B. Smith Hobbit Food Katherine Rundell King Edward's School Lilit Thwaites Maphead Our Lady's School Quenya Rachel Bachman Robert Gilson Rooftoppers Scuppernong's TCBS Tennis Seeding The Art Of The Lord Of The Rings The Inquisitor's Tale The Kilns The Librarian Of Auschwitz The Shadow Man Thror's Map Tolkien Reading Day Tolkien's Letters Tolkien's Lost Poems Tolkien's Poetry Victorian England Warren Hamilton Lewis Writing Technology
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How it Works Start a Campaign Customers Support Beit Theresienstadt Your support helps us to fullfill the historic mission to commemorate & preserve Ghetto Theresienstadt’s victims Enter an amount to give Check here to indicate that you have read and agree to the terms of the PEF Terms & Conditions You MUST agree to the terms in order to continue Month 01 January 02 February 03 March 04 April 05 May 06 June 07 July 08 August 09 September 10 October 11 November 12 December Year 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 DO NOT click “back” or “refresh” while your contribution processes Give Once Monthly Your card was declined. If you are making a donation with Amex and the card is being declined, please contact Amex (1‑800‑954‑0559) directly to approve your contribution. Also, please feel free to contact CauseMatch customer support and call 1-720-538-5419 Please note that you are about to make an online tax-deductible donation to PEF Israel Endowment funds, Inc. (PEF) with the recommendation to grant your gift to Beit Theresienstadt. While PEF does not charge for processing your contribution, third-party fees such as credit card and platform fees may apply for online contributions. In addition, please see our standard terms and conditions below: By making a donation to PEF, the donor thereby agrees and acknowledges as follows: PEF has the sole and absolute discretion to use the donated funds as it sees fit in accordance with its tax-exempt charitable purpose. Although PEF considers a donor’s advice with respect to grant recommendations, PEF at all times retains the sole and absolute discretion over the use and disbursement of all donated funds. To the extent a donor wishes to make a grant recommendation and PEF is willing to consider the recommendation under the circumstances, the donor represents that such recommendation will be solely for tax-exempt purposes described in Section 170(c)(2)(B of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”), and for organizations that are described in Section 170(b)(1)(A) of the Code. A donor making a grant recommendation further represents that neither the donor nor any family member or affiliate will receive more than an incidental benefit as a result of PEF making the recommended grant and that the recommended grant, if made by PEF, would not satisfy any legal obligation of the donor or any family member or affiliate. New York law shall govern the terms and conditions of the donor’s grant made to PEF, without regard to conflict of law provisions. I have read the terms and agree DONATING BY CHECK? Please wait for your donation to be processed... Thanks! Your donation was successful. We still need your support! Please share on Facebook
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Carmelo Anthony is back in the NBA. But signing him proves the Trail Blazers' desperation, and will prove why he should have retired. | Source: Harry How / Getty Images / AFP Carmelo Anthony’s NBA Comeback Will Make Him Regret Not Retiring September 23, 2020 UTC: 1:16 PM. November 15, 2019 UTC: 9:05 PM. by Jack Winter Against all odds, Carmelo Anthony is back in the NBA. His signing is an indication of the Portland Trail Blazers’ desperation. Anthony could quickly come to realize he should have retired. It has been just over a year since Carmelo Anthony last played in the NBA. He left the Houston Rockets’ blowout loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder early last November, retreating to the bench with two points after missing ten of his 11 field goal attempts. One week later, less than a month into the regular season, the Rockets announced they were “parting ways” with Anthony. He spent the next calendar year as the most high-profile, hot-button vagabond in basketball. No longer. Finally, Anthony is back in the NBA. If the most recent stops on his Hall-of-Fame career are any indication, though, Anthony will learn that he’d have been better off retiring from the league than returning to it one last time. Anthony’s Signing Proves Blazers are Desperate This says more about the Blazers than Carmelo Anthony. | Image: AP Photo/Kathy Willens The Portland Trail Blazers’ wide-eyed, preseason championship hopes have quickly been dashed. They currently sit at 4-8, near the bottom of a loaded Western Conference, reeling from a rash of injuries that exposed their lack of high-level talent and quality depth – especially at forward. Zach Collins will miss at least the next four months with a dislocated shoulder. Rodney Hood has already sat out two games due to back spasms, while franchise center Jusuf Nurkic, recovering from a gruesome compound fracture to his left leg, won’t debut until February at the earliest. As a result, Portland coach Terry Stotts has been forced to dole out significant minutes to journeyman big man Skal Labissiere and rookie Nassir Little, one of the rawest players in his class. The Blazers are in need of bodies right now, basically, and a potential offensive jolt provided by a proven scorer like Anthony could be useful. Still, Portland clearly isn’t expecting much from a 35-year-old who hasn’t played in over a year, and hasn’t been an effective player for far longer. Not only is Anthony’s contract non-guaranteed, but the Blazers even admitted they’re doing a collective shoulder shrug during desperate times by bringing him in. Carmelo’s Defense Makes Him a Minus Anthony’s sustained unemployment wasn’t an example of the league black-balling one of its all-time greats. The game is much different now than when Anthony entered the NBA in 2003, a reality supported by his immense struggles to make a positive impact in recent years. Houston was 4-6 when Anthony played his last game in a Rockets uniform, and went 49-23 over the season’s remainder. The Rockets were outscored by 9.9 points per 100 possessions with Anthony on the floor, an unsurprising dynamic given his abjectly negative influence on the Thunder the previous postseason. Carmelo Anthony explains why he wasn't successful in Oklahoma City: "It wasn’t a good fit…. Everything was just so rushed" pic.twitter.com/PrBcL9rdr0 — For The Win (@ForTheWin) July 29, 2018 Donovan Mitchell exploded in the Utah Jazz’s first-round victory over Anthony and the Thunder in April 2018. It was Anthony whom Mitchell did most of his scoring against, not only establishing himself as a future star, but exposing the sweeping effects of Anthony’s porous individual defense to a national audience. Donovan Mitchell has scored the last 12 for the Jazz. Billy Donovan has to get Carmelo Anthony out of this game. #TwitterNBAShow https://t.co/Gwlg3eOyvE pic.twitter.com/U3GjiW5Tb4 — Nate Duncan (@NateDuncanNBA) April 28, 2018 Blazers Gamble Is Low Risk, Even Lower Reward Anthony, who has balked at a reduced role in the past, seems ready to accept his new NBA circumstances. The Blazers wouldn’t have signed him if they weren’t given assurances of Anthony’s willingness to be a cog in the machine rather than the wheel itself. For Anthony, that means launching open threes and occasionally going to work in the post against smaller defenders. But even if his shot drops at a higher rate than it did with Houston and Oklahoma City, he won’t be much help for Portland. He’ll still be relentlessly attacked one-on-one, and could prove more damaging within the team defensive construct. LeBron James entered this season as the only member of the 2003 draft class still active. If his tenure with the Blazers goes half as poorly as his time with the Rockets and Thunder, don’t be surprised when Anthony comes to regret becoming the second. Antonio Brown Tries to Wiggle His Way Into Colin Kaepernick’s Workout Myles Garrett & Mason Rudolph Killed Their Teams’ Slim Playoff Hopes
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Cargolux celebrates 50 years of success posted on 4th March 2020 by Eddie Saunders Today marks a remarkable milestone for Cargolux as the all-cargo carrier celebrates its 50th anniversary. Exactly half a century ago, Luxembourg’s national carrier Luxair, Iceland’s national carrier Loftleiðir, the Swedish shipping company Salén and some private investors, founded Cargolux. With a single aircraft and a handful of employees, these ambitious investors created what was to become one of the world’s leading all-cargo carriers. Since its inception, Cargolux has lived up to its now famous slogan ‘You name it, we fly it’ – the embodiment of the Cargolux spirit. Throughout its history, the company has been a pioneer in the air freight industry. The first airline to fly the 747-400F, Cargolux was also the launch customer for the 747-8F and the first to operate both aircraft-type simulators. Even 50 years after its foundation, Cargolux remains frontrunner in its field, continuously looking for innovative and effective ways to carry out its mission. In addition to setting high standards in the industry, the airline has also contributed to the diversification of Luxembourg’s economy. This year marks a remarkable achievement for Cargolux, a success that will be celebrated all year long with special events for our customers and staff worldwide. “It is a remarkable achievement for an all-cargo operator to celebrate 50 years in existence and I think I speak on behalf of the whole company when I say we are proud of how far our airline has come. We have weathered many storms over the years and this celebration shows the world how committed and dedicated our employees are. In addition, I would also like to thank all of our customers and business partners in helping us get to commemorating this memorable occasion.”, says Richard Forson, Cargolux’s President and CEO. A month ahead of its official anniversary date, Cargolux welcomed a specially branded aircraft to mark the occasion. LX-VCC, one of the company’s iconic 747-8 freighters, sporting a new livery emblazoned with a jubilee design and a new name “Spirit of Cargolux”. It now proudly tours the world conveying the message of our success. The rest of the fleet also dons a commemorative emblem to mark the occasion and celebrate the milestone.
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Apr 08, 2019 10:52 AM International Arctic Forum Exhibition to Feature Leading Arctic Development Designs and Investment Projects More than 20 organizations will take part in the ‘Arctic: Territory of Dialogue’ 5th International Arctic Forum exhibition, including the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment of Russia, PJSC Gazprom, PAO NOVATEK, the Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation, PJSC MMC Norilsk Nickel, JSC Concern VKO Almaz-Antey, Rosmolodezh, and the Damen Shipyards Group. The Russian Ministry of Science and Higher Education stand will acquaint visitors with successful innovative developments from Russian universities and institutes of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS) aimed at solving various kinds of problems in the extraction and transportation of hydrocarbons, environmental protection, and the creation of new Arctic infrastructure solutions. The Ministry will be presenting a model airship for a round-the-world expedition across the Earth’s two poles, a dynamic arctic station model with a visualization of energy supply methods, and an automated Rescuer medical module, which is a medical evacuation life support device for people injured in accidents. NRC Kurchatov Institute has prepared models of the following projects: the Arkhangelsk production and logistics complex, a kilowatt generator employing renewable energy sources and electrochemical fuel cells, and an autonomous eco-settlement model. The JSC Central Research Institute for Automation and Hydraulics stand will introduce guests to exhibits focused on the development of Russia’s Arctic zone and will present a model of the control post of a ship moving along a narrow sea channel with the use of a ship Automated Radio Navigation System (ARNaS). The system guarantees high-precision vessel navigation regardless of the quality of satellite navigation system signals, as demonstrated by video recording of the simulated movement of the vessel and the corresponding indication of the onboard equipment. The Consulate General of Sweden, with the support of Swedish companies, will dedicate its exhibit to the fate of northern indigenous women. The exhibition has been completed by photo artists Sarah Cooper and Nina Gorfer in the style of photo collage. The artists travel to remote and inaccessible places in Swedish Lapland, Greenland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands, explore the culture and way of life of the inhabitants there, collect stories, and create vivid, expressive portraits. A rich and diverse programme has been prepared by representatives from the regions of the Russian Federation. The Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) will present a model of the high-tech Zhatay Shipyard. One can also get acquainted at the stand with the main investment projects of Yakutia’s Arctic zone with the aid of a multimedia card. The Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug will present projects for the construction of the Novy Urengoy airport and the Northern Latitudinal Railway – a major project for the development of Russian Arctic railway infrastructure and a key element of the unified Arctic transport infrastructure being created. The Murmansk Region will talk about major projects aimed at developing offshore hydrocarbon production infrastructure, transport and energy infrastructure, and the resource base and production facilities of existing mining and ship repair facilities, and at creating new mining, chemical and metallurgical facilities, coastal fish processing and aquaculture enterprises, and at updating the fishing fleet. The International Arctic Forum exhibition programme also includes cultural and historical projects. Guests will be able to learn more about the history of the Krasin Icebreaker, a ship that has become a symbol of our country's leadership in the development of the Arctic Ocean. The Arkhangelsk Region will present the Library of the Russian North collection, which includes the greatest pre-revolutionary publications on the history of the region, including significant examples of domestic cartography, books by Russian and foreign travellers, unique statistical and bibliographic materials, and works by famous scientists on natural science, geography and much more. The Bauman Moscow State Technical University will feature experimental samples of ecosystem-preserving vehicles, remote-controlled robotic complexes, monitoring systems, and Arctic airfield support systems at the stand. Official Forum website: forumarctica.ru Contact Caixin Global Intelligence About CGI Email: CGI@caixin.com Twitter: @caixin_intel Tel: +86 (10) 85647151 About Caixin Events Customer Support Contact Us Work with Caixin Press FAQ The Wall Street Journal CNBC MarketWatch The Australian Financial Review The Straits Times 東洋経済オンライン Nikkei Asia
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Home » About us » Who we are and what we do The Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) commissions health services on behalf of the patients it serves. The CCG and its GP member practices work together collaboratively to fulfill the purpose of the CCG. The CCG’s Constitution sets out how the organisation is governed and how commissioning decisions are made. We are one of the largest CCGs in England judging by patient population. We re a membership organisation and we have 85 GP practices as members, which covers all GP practices in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, as well as two practices in North Hertfordshire (Royston) and two in Northamptonshire (Oundle and Wansford). We have a patient population of over a million which is diverse, ageing and has significant inequalities. We manage a budget of £1.3 billion to spend on healthcare for the whole population of this area, which is £1,125 per person. The CCG has to work within a local budget from the NHS for local health services and work closely with other NHS colleagues and local authorities to ensure local people receive the best possible care. What does a CCG do? CCGs are responsible for commissioning (planning, buying and monitoring): the care and treatment you may need in hospital and community health services, including district nurses, physiotherapy and other therapies urgent and emergency care (including out-of-hours) the medicines you may be prescribed support and services for people living with learning disabilities. Importantly we are not responsible for dentists and opticians – these areas are commissioned by NHS England. Cambridgeshire and Peterborough CCG will work in partnership to improve quality of care, to develop healthy communities through change and innovation, making wise decisions about how we use the resources available to us. We are committed to being: compassionate. Local practices
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A New Day for Ferguson, Missouri Ella Jones Wins Election as Ferguson, Missouri’s First Black and Female Mayor—Congratulations! June 9, 2020 Yes, much of the news after the brutal Minneapolis, MN police murder of African American George Floyd has been awful. While many peaceful demonstrations have occurred throughout the nation, looters have caused far too much havoc. Our “Supreme Leader,” authoritarian wannabe Donald, has taken a blowtorch to both the Constitution and his fellow citizens he “claims” to govern. He has uttered provocative racist phrases and viciously yelled at governors trying to keep the peace. “I could care less about civil liberties” Donald made sure that peaceful D.C. demonstrators were fired on with tear gas so that he could have an absurd photo op in front of famous St. John’s Church awkwardly holding a Bible, a book Mr. “Two Corinthians” has never read and certainly does not understand. However, most of this nation is horrified by his behavior. He has been rightfully condemned by both Episcopal and Catholic clergy in D.C. and other religious leaders nationwide. Many police officers have joined demonstrators by kneeling and hugging them throughout the nation. Much of white America is beginning to understand how too many times blacks have been mistreated by the police solely because of the color of their skin. Democratic nominee Joe Biden eloquently spoke against Trump’s horrible behavior during these times. He promised, “I won’t traffic in fear and division. I won’t fan the flames of hate. I’ll seek to heal the racial wounds that have long plagued our country, not use them for political gain.” In a challenge to all Americans, Biden added, “Is this what we want to pass on to our children and grandchildren—fear, anger, finger-pointing, rather than the pursuit of happiness? Incompetence and anxiety, self-absorption, selfishness? Or do we want to be the America we know we can be, the America we know in our hearts we could and should be (cnn.com, Bradner, E., 6/02/20)?” Many pundits “discovered” that Biden had found his voice, IMHO, a voice he has never lost. Yes, Biden’s stirring words and those by many in the military condemning Donald’s actions give us hope. However, something even more hopeful occurred on 6/02/2020 in a nation wracked by racial turmoil. On that very date, where many political contests were held throughout the country, City Councilwoman Ella Jones won her race as Mayor of Ferguson, Missouri. Her election occurred while that city held protests over Floyd’s murder and a state of emergency and curfew were invoked there (nytimes.com, Medina, 6/03/20). Jones becomes the first woman and African American to win that post in a city that was torn by racial violence after the 2014 fatal shooting of a young black by a white police officer. That shooting made Ferguson notorious, and gave force to the Black Lives Matter movement that strongly challenges police misconduct against African Americans (nytimes.com, Medina, J., 6/03/20 ,2014, Yancey-Bragg, N., usatoday.com, 6/03/20, stltoday.com, 6/03/20, Schlinkmann). Let’s look at Ferguson, MO and its Mayor-elect Ella Jones. Ferguson, MO, founded in 1855, has a current population of 21,000 and is located about 10 miles up Interstate 70 from St. Louis’ famous Arch. Ferguson is part of St. Louis County (booksgoogle.com, Fox, T., 1995, Cohen & Cook 2020 Political Almanac). Emerson Electric’s headquarters are located in Ferguson (fortune.com, 8/18/14, Snyder, AP, 11/24/14). Currently, two-thirds of Ferguson’s population is African American and it is part of MO’s 1st Congressional District (CD) represented by black Cong. Lacy Clay with a Cook Partisan Voting Index (PVI) of D+29 (Cohen & Cook, 2020 Almanac). However, until the 1960’s, Ferguson was a “sundown town” where African Americans were not allowed to remain after nightfall. After the 2000 U.S. Census, blacks became the majority (latimes.com, Pearce, M. 4/05/17, Fowler, D., 7/28/15, asanet.org). In 2014, although Ferguson was majority black, the white minority had kept control of the local government and the police department. The local government was funded by fines and fees imposed on the mostly black population. The entire Ferguson municipal structure had an incentive to oppress African American residents (See latimes.com, 6/04/20). On 8/09/2014, African American Michael Brown (18) was fatally shot by white Ferguson Police Department Officer Darren Wilson. Brown, unarmed, had been videotaped a short time earlier with a friend in a local convenience store, apparently stealing cigars. The next day, 8/10/14, the county police chief said that Brown had assaulted Wilson. The incident sparked acts of looting of businesses, arson, vandalism, and violent clashes between protestors and police. Police used tear gas and arrested dozens of protestors. On 8/18/2014, Gov. Jay Nixon called in the MO National Guard. There were widespread cries for investigating the incident. A fragile calm was eventually restored until 11/24/14 when the county prosecutor announced that the grand jury had decided not to indict Officer Wilson. Peaceful protests as well as rioting followed (Cohen & Cook 2020, star-telegram.com, Scher, Z.A., nytimes.com, Davey, Eligon, & Blinder, 8/20/14, Darcy, theblaze.com, 11/25/14). On 3/04/2015, the U.S. Justice Department, after conducting its own investigation, cleared Officer Wilson of violation of civil rights in the shooting and concluded that he had acted in self-defense (latimes.com, Phelps & Muskal, 3/04/15). However, on 6/20/2017, the City of Ferguson’s insurance company paid Brown’s family $1.5 million (webarchive.org, 6/23/17). On 5/09/2016, Delrish Moss of Miami, FL was sworn in as Ferguson’s first African American police chief and stated he planned to diversify the police force and improve community relations (AP, 5/09/16). In 2016, the Justice Department reached a consent decree that required Ferguson to make significant changes. These included municipal court reforms, community policing efforts, hiring more minority officers, and improved policies in areas such as use of body cameras and search and seizure practices (usatoday.com, Yancey-Bragg, N, 6/03/20). Since the 2014 Ferguson killing of Brown and the subsequent riots, black political influence has steadily increased. According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “in 2014, there was just one black council member. Now (at the time of Jones’ election), there are four out of six, including Jones, who will move up soon to the mayor’s seat.” And in 2015, the MO legislature enacted a law to curb the use of traffic fines as a revenue stream that disproportionately affected many poor and had inflamed racial tensions (Cohen & Cook 2020 Almanac). Ella Jones (65), a widow with one daughter, has been a Ferguson resident for more than 40 years. Jones graduated from the University of Missouri at St. Louis with a B.A. Degree in Chemistry. She was certified by the American Chemical Society as a high-pressure liquid chromatographer and completed training as a pharmacy technician. She was employed by the Washington University School of Medicine and KV Pharmaceutical Company. Jones completed training in municipal leadership at the Shear Institute for Women in Public Life at the University of Missouri at St. Louis. Jones was a Mary Kay Sales Director for 30 years and served as a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) for 22 years. In 2015, Ms. Jones became the first black woman elected to the Ferguson City Council and criticized that city’s law enforcement. She told protestors, who did not then enthusiastically back her, “I don’t get along to go along. If I see something that needs to be addressed, I will address it (Medina, nytimes.com, 6/03/20, City Council Member Ward 1 Jones bio).” After being elected to the City Council, Jones took additional courses in governing, sponsored by the MO Municipal League. On the Ferguson Council, Jones has served on the Human Rights, Traffic, Landmarks, and Senior Citizens Boards and Commissions as well as on the West Florissant Business Association. She is Chair of the Annual UNITY Weekend which provides school supplies and support services to families with children attending schools in the districts that serve Ferguson. Jones is a member of the St. Louis MetroMarket. MetroMarket is a decommissioned bus that was retrofitted as a mobile farmers’ market to provide fresh fruits and vegetables to underserved communities (Jones bio, nytimes.com, Medina, ksdk,). When she becomes Mayor, Jones will succeed James M. Knowles III, who defeated her in the 2017 mayor’s race. Knowles, who was mayor since 2011, could not run again because of term limits. In the 6/02/2020 Ferguson Mayor’s race, Jones defeated fellow City Councilmember Heather Robinett (49) by eight points, 54%-46%. Both Jones and Robinett agreed that if elected, they would help Ferguson continue implementing the changes outlined in the consent agreement worked out with the former Obama Justice Department (usatoday.com, Yancey-Bragg, 6/03/20, nytimes.com, Medina). After winning the mayor’s race, Jones told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “It’s just our time. It’s just my time to do right by the people.” When asked what her historic election would mean for Ferguson’s black residents, Jones replied, “One word: inclusion (usatoday.com, 6/03/20, Yancey-Bragg).” Mayor-elect Jones later added in a video posted by a reporter online, “I’ve got work to do—because when you’re an African American woman, they require more of you than they require of my counterpart. I know the people in Ferguson are ready to stabilize their community, and we’re going to work together to get it done (usatoday.com, Yancey-Bragg, AP, Madhani, 6/03/20).” True, the city manager in Ferguson has more governmental power than the mayor, but the mayor has the power to shape public perceptions and is, in effect, the “face of the city (ksdk.com, Clancy, 6/03/20).” And there is no doubt whatsoever that Ms. Jones intends to be just that with her words and actions. The rest of America should take Mayor-elect Jones’ words to heart, “It’s just our time to do right by the people and include all of the people.” And how do we “do right and include all of the people?” Eloquent words are not enough. It requires, as the citizens of Ferguson and other localities are gradually learning, repeatedly voting for the right people and policies. You want to change policing policies? You want to change an authoritarian minded White House and its Senate enablers? The only way to do it--vote, vote, and always vote in local, state, and national elections. Again, congratulations Mayor-elect Ella Jones!
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EDITORIAL: Teen Gambling: The Invisible Addiction By Timothy C. Morgan| April 8, 1996 Last year, a 19-year-old youth from a small Iowa town, unable to face his large gambling losses, penned a short note, saying, "I'm out of control." Then he killed himself. Last spring, three New Jersey high-schoolers were arrested for running a $6,500 per week sports betting operation. In another case, a 16-year-old paid off his gambling debts by turning his girlfriend into a prostitute. These and other published accounts illustrate how exorbitant a price American teens are paying for our ill-fated social experiment with legal gambling. As more teens are being drawn into the culture of chance, gambling is influencing American society in deep and unexpected ways. Robert Goodman's new book "The Luck Business," while mostly an economic analysis of the gambling explosion, spells out how the pervasive worship of Lady Luck—on riverboat casinos, televised live lottery drawings, and at tempting theme-park casinos—alters our perspective on life. The idea that "hard work pays off" is now believed by only one of three people surveyed. In the 1960s, nearly 60 percent believed in the work ethic. We can count on this attitudinal sea change to affect our youth (and our nation's future). Some experts believe problem gambling has become the fastest-growing teen addiction, suggesting there are as many as 1.3 million teens with problem gambling behavior. "We will face in the next decade or so more problems with youth gambling than we'll face with drug use," says the director of the Harvard Medical School Center for Addiction Studies. The $480 billion lottery, wagering, and casino industry has spared few dollars in cultivating a cheery public persona. In Atlantic City, the gambling establishment's enticements have proved so irresistible that 30,000 ... Our digital archives are a work in progress. Let us know if corrections need to be made. April 8 1996, Vol. 40, No. 4, Pg 12 More From: Timothy C. Morgan @tmorgan815 Facebook This article is from the April 8 1996 issue. This article is from the April 8, 1996 print issue. Subscribe to continue reading.
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Panthers' Wiethop voted C&P Player of the Week Kyle Sokeland EVANSVILLE – Eli Wiethop has never had the best eyesight. The Reitz junior started wearing eyeglasses in the seventh grade but didn't opt for a pair of sports goggles on the field. But when football season rolled around this fall, he decided to try one out. See if it would help. Safe to say the dark blue specs are working out just nicely. The Reitz Panthers are 4-0 and ranked No. 1 in Class 4A after a 28-21 road victory over then-No. 2 Central last Friday night. Wiethop played a big part in the win, completing 18-of-33 passes for 194 yards and a touchdown. For his efforts, the junior quarterback was voted the Courier & Press Player of the Week. Wiethop received 52.57 percent (911 votes out of 1,733) of the ballot. "Back when I was a kid, I always saw Reitz players up there and I wanted to be them," he said. “Now that it is happening, it’s awesome. I loved the support from all of the fans, especially my schoolmates." GAME STORY:Wiethop, Sargent lead Reitz's final drive as Panthers stay unbeaten Making just his fourth varsity start in front of an estimated 8,000 fans, Wiethop didn’t fold under the pressure against the Bears. Trailing 21-20 with a little over two minutes remaining, he led the Panthers down the field for the winning score. Wiethop completed several big passes on the drive, including a beauty to tailback Da’Ziaun Sargent to put the Panthers inside the 5-yard line. “We knew that we had to get close enough for field goal range or put one in,” said Wiethop. “We always practice the one-minute offense. We knew that we could do it.” When he got to school Monday morning, Wiethop said the atmosphere was great. He had several classmates and teachers congratulate him on the victory. Through four games, the Reitz signal-caller has completed 43-of-75 passes for 675 yards and four touchdowns and only a single interception. He is also second on the team in rushing with 184 yards on 31 carries. “(Playing varsity) is fast-paced, but my teammates help me out a lot,” said Wiethop. “They calm me down and keep me cool throughout the game.” More:Reitz shows why its offense can't be overlooked Reitz is on the road again Friday with a trip to Romain Stadium to face Harrison (1-3). The Warriors picked up their first win of the season last week, defeating North 17-14. Harrison quarterback Tre Hales ran in a touchdown with 17 seconds remaining. But after back-to-back road wins over Class 5A No. 6 Castle and 4A No. 3 Central, the Panthers can’t wait to get back on the field. “The team is feeling great after two hard wins,” said Wiethop. “The team is just ready to keep playing and keep on rolling.”
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Privacy Policies and Terms of Use: What You Gave Away Data PrivacyInsights Privacy Policy and Terms of Use: What You Gave Away Sarah Meyer· August 8, 2017 How many privacy policy and terms of use agreements have you just clicked ‘Accept’ without giving them a second thought? Just to illustrate the fact that almost no one ever reads these lengthy and tedious documents, US technology company Pitstop candidly promised a $1000 reward in their terms of use agreement, but it took months before someone actually noticed it and claimed their reward. It’s quite understandable why people generally don’t bother reading through the privacy policy, terms of use and the like. According to a study conducted by a pair of Carnegie Mellon researchers back in 2012, the average consumer would need to spend 76 days (1824 hours) reading all of the policies they’ve agreed to. Consequently, you’ve probably sold your soul to a big business on more than one occasion. #1. Giving away your personal photos When it comes to sharing photos with friends, family and other parties, the Internet is the obvious place to turn. For many, image-sharing networks like Instagram and Flickr are the go-to options for sharing photo albums. However, with many such sites, signing the terms of use also gives them complete ownership of your photos, allowing them to do with them as they please. Twitpic, Twitter’s photo-sharing service, generated a great deal of controversy back in 2011 when it updated its terms of service to claim ownership of any photos people shared on the social network. By accepting the privacy policy, people were agreeing to have their photos shared among Twitter’s affiliates for the purposes of advertising without you even getting paid for it. #2. Giving away your location information As far as marketing is concerned, a person’s location is one of the most important attributes to know, and many companies will stop at nothing to get hold of your location information. Oftentimes, they claim that these geo-tracking methods are used to provide things like more relevant search results but, in reality, they’re used for advertising. In the digital age, collecting troves of personal information from websites to mobile apps is the cornerstone of a data-driven business model. You clicking ‘Accept’ makes all these information collection lawful. For example, when you agree to Apple iTunes laughably long 56-page privacy policy, you’re also giving them position to track everywhere you go using everything from the IP address you use to connect to the Internet to the GPS in your smartphone to the beacons installed in various high-street stores. To make matters worse, you’re also agreeing for this information to be shared with any of Apple’s affiliates. #3. Giving up your right to legal protection Most terms of use agreements these days include an arbitration clause, which is intended to offer another level of legal protection to the business while providing absolutely none to the end user. When agreeing to a policy that includes such a clause, you are giving up your right to holding a trial by jury in the event that you want to sue the company for whatever reason. Given the prevailing compensation culture that we live in, it’s perhaps hardly surprising that many companies in the western world are taking extra measures to protect themselves from being sued. Arbitration agreements are now found in almost everything from mobile phone to employment contracts, and they are popular in both the US and the UK. #4. Giving permission to be billed recurrently Subscription-based payment models are nothing new, and there’s not necessarily anything wrong with them either. However, when a company sneakily tries to get your unwitting permission to charge your debit or credit card on a recurring basis, things get a lot shadier. In fact, some companies rely on the fact that people will simply forget to cancel their payments by deliberately making it ambiguous. Free trial services are often guilty of deliberately trying to exploit legal loopholes to get their customers to unwittingly agreeing to recurring billing. Amazon is one of the most high-profile examples of recent times, when its advert for the Amazon Prime service was finally pulled in the UK for failing to adequately inform customers that their trials would automatically be followed by a £79-per-year subscription. #5. Giving up control of your data Contrary to what a lot of cloud-storage services might claim, your data is not necessarily safe in their hands. In fact, it’s often stated in the service agreement that your data may be lost or deleted at any time without any hope of receiving compensation. Google’s own terms of use, for example, claims that, if it decides to close down your account, you will lose access to any data associated with it, such as the content of your emails, calendar or address book. What are we giving away when we accept those pesky #privacy policies and terms of use agreements? Click to Tweet Privacy policies often ask that you forgo control over your information to varying degrees, even extending to ownership altogether. For example, if you use the Home or Student editions of Microsoft Office 2010, you’re not allowed to use any documents you create in it for commercial purposes. Read that pesky privacy policy and terms of use Most privacy policy and terms of use agreements require you to agree to some pretty dubious things and, worse still, companies can change the rules whenever they want without even notifying you. Often without knowing it, today’s consumers are giving up their personal lives for the purposes of advertising and also paying for things that they will never really own themselves.
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CPSC Commissioner Newman Announces Staff Additions Release number: 74-058 Mr. Brodsky, 29, will serve as a special assistant to Commissioner Newman. Prior to joining her staff, he served as an attorney for Consumers Union, in Washington, D.C. He has also served as Court Law Clerk for the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and Senior Law Clerk to U.S. District Judge Thomas A. Flannery. Mr. Brodsky earned a B.S. Degree in Electrical Engineering, Cornell University (1967, A M.S.E.E., Columbia University 1968), and a J.D., Georgetown University Law Center (1972), where he was editor of the Georgetown Law Review. He and his wife, Marian, and their two children reside in Bethesda, Maryland.
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Language Corner Be careful when using the word ‘depose’ By Merrill Perlman Many people are saying that President Trump should be “deposed.” But please don’t alert the Secret Service of a coup. When a New York state court refused a stay requested by President Trump in a defamation suit filed by a former contestant on The Apprentice, The Washington Post said that an attorney for the contestant “did not immediately respond to requests for comment about what her team would do next, including whether they would proceed with discovery or seek to depose Trump in the case.” ICYMI: Eleven newsletters to subscribe to if you work in media In the Nexis database, that citation is close to one reporting that “the United States was not seeking to depose” the Korean leader Kim Jong-un; one discussing a political maneuver called “the ‘Libya model’ (in which its leader was deposed and then killed in rebel custody)”; and one discussing Nicaragua, where “a popularly elected president, Manuel Zaylaya, had been deposed in a military coup in 2008.” You’ve probably figured out by now that there is more than one way to “depose” a head of state. The earliest recorded use of “depose” was as a verb around 1300, the Oxford English Dictionary says, in this somewhat enigmatic sentence: “Theo kyng dude him [a justise] anon depose.” The OED lists that as “To put down from office or authority; esp. to put down from sovereignty, to dethrone. (The earliest and still the prevailing sense.)” The discussions of Kim, “the Libya model,” and Nicaragua all relate to that kind of “depose.” Later in that same century, that usage of “depose” gained the added sense of “To put down, bring down, lower (from a position or estate)” and “To take away, deprive a person of (authority, etc.); also to remove (a burden or obligation).” That last was considered an opposite of “impose”: I can “impose” a burden by giving it to you, then “depose” it by taking it away. Sadly, that usage is now considered obsolete. Then, between 1475 and 1500, the OED says, the verb “depose” took on another meaning: “To testify, bear witness; to testify to, attest; esp. to give evidence upon oath in a court of law, to make a deposition.” Where does that come from? Latin, of course. “Deponere,” to be precise, which means “to put down.” ICYMI: Newspaper editor behind rebellious series loses his job Indeed, the second definition of the verb “depose” in Merriam-Webster is “to put down: deposit.” (And how many of you are now recognizing the “deposit” in “deposition”?) “Depose” rose to the top of M-W lookups in 2017 after reports that the special prosecutor, Robert Mueller, wanted to “depose” Trump. The noun “depose” showed up at the end of the 14th century, the OED says, meaning “The state of being laid up or committed to some one for safe keeping; custody, keeping, charge.” Stay with us. There’s more sense in this than might appear at first. The legal “deposition” is effectively a deposit of one person’s version of events, put down to be kept safe and used in legal proceedings. Now think of what happens with the sovereign being removed from office. He or she is also being “put down.” The verb “to put down” is almost as old as the verb “depose,” showing up in the late 14th century with the meaning “To move to or bring into a lower position; to lower,” the OED says. “To put down” also meant “To depose from office or authority; to dethrone; to diminish in status or dignity.” And lest you think that the slang “to put down” meaning to disparage is a modern invention, sorry: It also traces to olden times, where around 1440 it meant “To bring down the presumption, pride, or self-esteem of (a person); to snub; to better in argument, to reduce to silence. Also (now chiefly): to disparage, find fault with, esp. in a humiliating or belittling manner.” In other words, a sovereign who is “deposed” is both deposited on a lower level (taken down a peg or two, if you will) and disparaged by those who “deposed” him. Most of the time, the legal “depose” is used far more often than the one indicating a coup. But in the current political climate, it’s important to make clear which form of “depose” is being applied. “Depone,” meanwhile, lives on in law, the American Heritage Dictionary notes, as the transitive verb meaning “to depose” and the intransitive verb meaning “to give testimony by affidavit or deposition.” More often, its noun form “deponent” shows up, referring to the person making the “deposition.” That makes more sense than calling the person a “depositor,” especially because a bank has nothing to do with. ICYMI: A big day for The Denver Post newsroom staff Merrill Perlman managed copy desks across the newsroom at the New York Times, where she worked for twenty-five years. Follow her on Twitter at @meperl. TOP IMAGE: Photo by Gage Skidmore, via Flickr
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In wake of chaotic day on Capitol Hill, talk turns to expediting Donald Trump’s exit Overnight Congress ultimately certified Joe Biden as U.S. president-elect As an uneasy peace settles over Capitol Hill, talk in the U.S. capital has turned to expediting Donald Trump’s departure. Overnight, just hours after Trump supporters forced their way into the building and terrorized lawmakers, Congress ultimately certified Joe Biden as U.S. president-elect. And Trump, his Twitter account frozen, staffers resigning their posts and critics accusing him of inciting a riot, has finally promised an orderly transfer of power on Jan. 20. He continues to defiantly claim that he was the rightful winner in November, citing unfounded conspiracy theories of a stolen presidential election. Wednesday’s pandemonium marked another low point in a four-year term full of them for Trump, and is fuelling talk of an even more ignominious departure. At least one member of Congress has promised to draw up articles of impeachment, while media reports suggest cabinet members have discussed the possibility of removing him from office. Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, best known as a member of the progressive wing of the Democrats, says she intends to seek to impeach Trump — an indignity he has already endured once. “Donald J. Trump should be impeached by the House of Representatives and removed from office by the United States Senate,” Omar tweeted Wednesday. “We can’t allow him to remain in office, it’s a matter of preserving our republic and we need to fulfil our oath.” VIDEO: World leaders are appalled by storming of U.S. Capitol Within an hour of Trump airing familiar conspiracy theories and phoney grievances to a sprawling crowd outside the White House, supporters swarmed the outside of the building, mobbed Capitol police and began flooding in. Members of Congress were promptly evacuated from the area as officers, some with weapons drawn, confronted the mob. Protesters looted and vandalized offices, and even gained access to the Senate and House chambers. The images that ensued were jaw-dropping: a man in a Make America Great Again hat, his feet up on Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s desk. Another striding through the rotunda with a Confederate flag over his shoulder. The speaker’s dais occupied by a man with a Trump flag as a cape. Protesters brandishing trophies swiped from offices. Outside, as police sirens echoed and helicopters pulsed overhead, thousands upon thousands of others who were massed on the Capitol steps cheered and celebrated news of the breach, waving flags, firing flares and popping smoke grenades from atop the balcony. Less than eight hours later, however, with the Capitol fully secured, lawmakers reconvened their joint session, determined to send the message that they wouldn’t be cowed. D.C. police Chief Robert Contee confirmed that shots were fired inside the Capitol. Four people died, including a woman who was shot by police. The woman was shot earlier Wednesday as the mob tried to break through a barricaded door in the Capitol where police were armed on the other side. She was hospitalized with a gunshot wound and later died. The three others died in “medical emergencies,” Contee said. Biden, whose election win two months ago was ultimately certified in the wee hours of Thursday morning, pleaded for calm. “Our democracy is under unprecedented assault,” Biden said, calling the protesters “extremists” who are “dedicated to lawlessness.” “This is not dissent, it’s disorder, it’s chaos. It borders on sedition, and it must end — now.” National Guard reinforcements were called in to help restore a sense of order, while D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser imposed an overnight curfew beginning at 6 p.m. ET in an effort to disperse the crowds. B.C. records 625 more COVID-19 cases as holiday results come in ‘A historic time’: 18 remote First Nations communities in B.C. get COVID-19 vaccine
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Indian Farmers Continue Historic Protests After 250 Million People Rise Up Against Modi's Neoliberal Policies "The government side [was] not ready to listen to any of our demands and they have left us with no choice but to protest on the streets," said one farmer-organizer. Brett Wilkins, staff writer Communist Party of India (CPI) Amritsar members participate in a nationwide strike called by trade unions against the government's economic policies, at Bhandari Bridge on November 26, 2020 in Amritsar, India. (Photo: Sameer Sehgal/Hindustan Times via Getty Images) In what is being called the largest protest in human history, over 250 million Indians have taken to the streets nationwide over the past week to protest agriculture deregulation and other neoliberal policies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's right-wing Hindu nationalist government. "This government has pushed us into hell. We are barely able to survive, ground down between price rises on the one hand and low wages on the other." —Sukhdev Prasad, farmer Despite being attacked by police and security forces with water cannons, chemical agents, batons, and other weapons, the peaceful farmer-led demonstrators on Thursday vowed to continue their protests after talks in the capital New Delhi with the central government—which is refusing to bow to the protesters' demands—broke down. The farmers are being barred from entering the capital; however, hundreds of thousands of them have massed at entry points to the city, where many of them are encamped. "The government did not agree to our points and rejected our demands outright," Chanda Singh, a farmer and protest organizer who on Tuesday met with Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh, told Al Jazeera. "The members of the delegation from the government side were not ready to listen to any of our demands and they have left us with no choice but to protest on the streets." "We will continue our protest unless our demands are met," Singh vowed. Amid multiple crises—including an economic recession that has seen GDP plummet by a staggering 23.9% and unemployment soar to an unprecedented 27% this year, as well as the ongoing coronavirus pandemic—hundreds of millions of Indians rose up on November 26, Constitution Day, to protest their shared hardship in a massive general strike. The strike—which was led by farmers and labor unions and joined by allies including student activists, industrial and transportation workers, women's rights organizations, domestic servants, and civil society groups—was held to demand a set of actions by the BJP-led government. These include: Withdrawal of all "anti-farmer laws and anti-worker labor codes." Payment of 7,500 rupees (USD$101) to each non-tax paying family. Monthly food distributions to needy families. Expansion of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act of 2005 (MGNREGS) to include 200 workdays each year, higher wages, and the act's extension to urban industries. Stopping the "privatization of the public sector, including the financial sector," and halting the "corporatization of government-run manufacturing and service entities like railways, ordnance factories, ports, etc." Withdrawal of the "draconian forced premature retirement of government and PSU (public sector) employees." Pensions for all, the scrapping of the National Pension System, and the reimposition of the earlier pension plan with amendments. "This government has pushed us into hell," fumed Sukhdev Prasad, a lathe machine operator from Ghaziabad who took part in the strike. "We are barely able to survive, ground down between price rises on the one hand and low wages on the other," he told People's World. "Now, they have changed labor laws so that employers are sitting on our chests." Economic inequality was a central theme of the protests. P. Sainath, a veteran journalist and founder of the People's Archive of Rural India (PARI), told Democracy Now!: The entire protests, driven by a deepening agrarian crisis, are very fundamentally tied to the larger structural inequalities... In just four months of the pandemic, just up to July... Indian billionaires, dollar billionaires—there's about 120 of them—added 35% to their wealth... and it's now around $485 billion cumulatively... At the same time, there are new studies showing us 76% of the rural population... cannot afford a nutritious meal. They cannot afford a basic nutritious diet, even if they spend two-thirds of their income on food... So you're seeing these unbelievable gaps, phenomenal gaps. India ranks fourth or fifth in the list of dollar billionaires in the world, and 129th on the U.N. Human Development Index. Others protested the government's response to the coronavirus pandemic. In a statement, the Bombay University and College Teachers' Union said that "this strike is against the devastating health and economic crisis unleashed by Covid-19 and the lockdown on the working people of the country." "This strike is against the devastating health and economic crisis unleashed by Covid-19 and the lockdown on the working people of the country." —Bombay University and College Teachers' Union "This has been further aggravated by a series of anti-people legislations on agriculture and the labor code enacted by the central government," the union said. "Along with these measures, the National Education Policy (NEP) imposed on the nation during the pandemic will further cause irreparable harm to the equity of and access to education." Modi has dismissed the farmers' concerns, calling the protesters "misled" and blaming the opposition for the crisis. "The farmers are being misled on these historic agriculture reform laws by the same people who for decades have misled them," Modi said at a Monday rally, adding that his "intentions are as holy as the water of river Ganga." Rahul Gandhi, head of the opposition Congress party, responded by accusing Modi of crony capitalism and serving foreign corporations at the expense of his own people. "Our farmers are standing up against the black laws and have reached Delhi leaving their farms and families behind," he said. "Do you want to stand with them or with Modi's capitalist friends?" Get our best delivered to your inbox
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SSTL back on the ropes as March auction falters A second attempt to auction off India’s wireless spectrum has fallen at the first hurdle, with a sole operator applying to participate in the sale. Business Line writes that Russia’s Sistema Shyam TeleServices (SSTL) was the only operator to register to take part in the auction by the deadline yesterday. Industry lobby group the Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) reiterated its stance that, despite reducing the base price of spectrum since the November auction, the cost was still too high: ‘We have been saying all along that the pricing for 1800MHz is too high. The entire re-farming of 900MHz is fraught with legal issues, so who wants to buy?’ As previously noted by CommsUpdate, SSTL was obliged to participate in the auction to keep providing services, after the Supreme Court rejected its appeal against the cancellation of its licences. India, Sistema Shyam TeleServices (SSTL, MTS India), Wireless
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BSNL financial crisis escalates A senior official at state-owned telco Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) has sent an urgent request to the government for a cash infusion to ensure that the company can continue to operate, warning that its various liabilities have made business ‘unsustainable’, the Economic Times writes. Puran Chandra, senior GM at BSNL’s corporate and banking division, said in a letter to the telecoms ministry that ‘the gap between monthly revenues and bare expenses to continue operations as a going concern has reached to a level where continuing with the BSNL operations would be nearly impossible without immediate infusion of adequate equity.’ Revival plans for the loss-making telco have been discussed by the government for several years but have yet to be finalised or put into effect and despite repeated pleas the company has still not received new spectrum for 4G services. Consequently, during a period of rapid industry development – both in terms of technology and commercial practices – BSNL has lacked the funds or resources to keep pace with its privately-owned competitors, causing its financial difficulties to escalate further. The developing crisis has left the company struggling to maintain operations, with the paper stating that BSNL was facing salary payments of INR8.5 billion (USD122 million) for June, whilst creditors and suppliers are finding it increasingly difficult to secure payment from the telco. The paper quotes a spokesperson from one of the company’s suppliers as saying: ‘BSNL just doesn’t pay. It is a task to recover dues’. In a related development, the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has unveiled plans to sell off BSNL’s underutilised fibre infrastructure to help raise funds for a voluntary retirement scheme (VRS) that would help reduce the firm’s outgoings. Under the plans, BSNL would utilise a sale and leaseback model to finance its CAPEX, with the assets potentially being pooled with fibre assets from other companies. India, Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL), Corporate/Financial, Wireless, Wireline, Broadband
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Apple, CEO Tim Cook double down on privacy demands By Kyle Brasseur2019-01-22T12:45:00+00:00 While Facebook and Google continue to come under fire for bungling users’ data privacy, Apple and its CEO, Tim Cook, remain on the offensive regarding the push for federal privacy legislation in the United States. Cook recently wrote an op-ed for Time Magazine, once again stressing the need for the United States to address privacy on a national level. “In 2019, it’s time to stand up for the right to privacy—yours, mine, all of ours,” Cook begins. “Consumers shouldn’t have to tolerate another year of companies irresponsibly amassing huge user profiles, data breaches that seem out of control and the vanishing ability to control our own digital lives.” “This problem is solvable—it isn’t too big, too challenging or too late,” Cook continues, adding that he and others are “calling on the U.S. Congress to pass comprehensive federal privacy legislation—a landmark package of reforms that protect and empower the consumer.” Cook previously spoke out on the need for the U.S. to enact legislation similar to the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) at a conference in Brussels in October. There, his message was “privacy is a fundamental human right,” and he laid out four principles he believes should guide legislation: The right to have personal data “minimized,” with the idea that companies challenge themselves as to whether they actually need the information in the first place; The right to knowledge. Users should know what data is being collected and why; The right to access. Companies must recognize that data belongs to users; and The right to security. “But laws alone aren’t enough to ensure that individuals can make use of their privacy rights,” Cook wrote for Time. “We also need to give people tools that they can use to take action.” As part of his op-ed, Cook proposes that the Federal Trade Commission should establish a data-broker clearinghouse, “requiring all data brokers to register, enabling consumers to track the transactions that have bundled and sold their data from place to place, and giving users the power to delete their data on demand, freely, easily and online, once and for all.” He believes that could help defend against the many data privacy violations that are invisible, such as the data an online retailer collects when you purchase a product from its website. Apple as a company hasn’t shied from mocking its contemporaries in its promotion of its privacy campaign. The company earlier this month took out a billboard outside the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas that read, “What happens on your iPhone, stays on your iPhone,” a not-so-subtle shot at other giants in the tech industry. Of note, Apple does not attend the event. Despite the apparent trolling and Cook’s continued campaigning, Apple’s ledger regarding privacy rights might not be squeaky clean. The company—specifically, Apple Music—was one of eight in the tech industry named in a complaint filed last week on behalf of 10 users in Austria by privacy rights group None of Your Business (noyb), led by privacy campaigner and lawyer Max Schrems, regarding failure to comply with the GDPR. In the complaint, which also names Amazon, Netflix, Spotify, and YouTube, noyb states “no service fully complied” when put to the test regarding “right to access,” as stated in Article 15 of the GDPR. “Many services set up automated systems to respond to access requests, but they often don’t even remotely provide the data that every user has a right to,” said Schrems of larger services like Apple in the group’s statement. “In most cases, users only got the raw data, but, for example, no information about who this data was shared with. This leads to structural violations of users’ rights, as these systems are built to withhold the relevant information.” Of the companies named in the complaint, Apple, whose European headquarters is based in Ireland, faces the largest potential maximum penalty at €8.02 billion (U.S. $9.12 billion), as determined by noyb with regard to the fine of up to 4 percent of global revenue GDPR allows for violating companies. Such raises the stakes for Cook and his company to stay at the forefront of the privacy conversation. “We cannot lose sight of the most important constituency: individuals trying to win back their right to privacy,” Cook concludes in his op-ed. “Technology has the potential to keep changing the world for the better, but it will never achieve that potential without the full faith and confidence of the people who use it.” We are not responsible for the content of external sites Tim Cook op-ed for Time Magazine noyb complaint against Apple Apple, Walmart among compliance winners of 2019 Strong social stances, a dedication to doing what’s right, and leading by example highlight the qualities exemplified by our list of ethics and compliance winners of 2019. European Commission still gunning for Big Tech Coming on the heels of big enforcement actions against Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon, the European Commission is vowing to keep fighting against technology giants profiting at others’ expense.
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115 (2017-2018) 103 (1993-1994) 100 (1987-1988) 94 (1975-1976) — 95 (1977-1978) 85 (1957-1958) 76 (1939-1941) — 77 (1941-1942) Amendment agreed to Committee of the Whole Party : Republican 1-100 of 729 Results per page: 25 per page50 per page100 per page250 per page of 8Next Page Search Results 1-100 of 729 1. H.Amdt.960 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 6 printed in Part A of House Report 115-919 to encourage institutions of higher education to have students att end in-person loan counseling sessions. Amends Bill: H.R.1635 Sponsor: Rep. Hartzler, Vicky [R-MO-4] (Offered 09/05/2018) Latest Action: 09/05/18 On agreeing to the Hartzler amendment (A006) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 2. H.Amdt.959 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 5 printed in Part A of House Report 115-919 to provide that nothing prohibits institutions from providing additional financial counseling. Amends Bill: H.R.1635 Sponsor: Rep. Allen, Rick W. [R-GA-12] (Offered 09/05/2018) Latest Action: 09/05/18 On agreeing to the Allen amendment (A005) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 3. H.Amdt.958 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 4 printed in Part A of House Report 115-919 to clarify all payment options for Parent PLUS loans and notify Parent PLUS borrowers that their dependent may qualify for and should consider scholarships, grants, and federal work-study jobs prior to borrowing. Amends Bill: H.R.1635 Sponsor: Rep. Lewis, Jason [R-MN-2] (Offered 09/05/2018) Latest Action: 09/05/18 On agreeing to the Lewis (MN) amendment (A004) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 4. H.Amdt.955 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in Part A of House Report 115-919 to provide all students with an explanation of how to seek additional assistance from the financial aid office should they experience a change of financial circumstance. Additionally, the amendment would specify that a borrower receives the loan amount they requested. Amends Bill: H.R.1635 Sponsor: Rep. Stefanik, Elise M. [R-NY-21] (Offered 09/05/2018) Latest Action: 09/05/18 On agreeing to the Stefanik amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 5. H.Amdt.948 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 85 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the funds from being used to seize property as a means of enforcing the liability provisions of the District of Columbia individual mandate. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Rothfus, Keith J. [R-PA-12] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Rothfus amendment (A079) Agreed to by recorded vote: 231 - 184 (Roll no. 361). (All Actions) 6. H.Amdt.947 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 84 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit Federal Funds from being used by the Office of Personnel Management to administer the Multi-State Plan program. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Meadows, Mark [R-NC-11] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Meadows amendment (A078) Agreed to by recorded vote: 223 - 192 (Roll no. 360). (All Actions) 7. H.Amdt.946 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 83 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit funds from being used to carry out the District of Columbia's Health Insurance Requirement Amendment Act of 2018. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Palmer, Gary J. [R-AL-6] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Palmer amendment (A077) Agreed to by recorded vote: 226 - 189 (Roll no. 359). (All Actions) 8. H.Amdt.945 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 82 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit funds from being used by the GSA to market or sell Plum Island, NY. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Zeldin, Lee M. [R-NY-1] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Zeldin amendment (A076) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 9. H.Amdt.941 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 78 printed in House Report 115-830 to increase funding to the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas program by $5 million and reduces the General Services Administration's rental of space allocation by a similar amount. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Kustoff, David [R-TN-8] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Kustoff (TN) amendment (A072) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 10. H.Amdt.937 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 74 printed in House Report 115-830 to designate a $25 million increase to CDFI programs. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Palazzo, Steven M. [R-MS-4] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Palazzo amendment (A068) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 11. H.Amdt.935 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 72 printed in House Report 115-830 to increase funding for the Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund Account by $2 million and allocates the increase to the Native American CDFI Assistance (NACA) Program. Offsets the increase by decreasing funding for GSA rental space by $2 million. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Young, Don [R-AK-At Large] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Young (AK) amendment (A066) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 12. H.Amdt.933 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 70 printed in House Report 115-830 to prevent the payment of attorney's fees as part of any settlement the Federal Government enters into under the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Smith, Jason [R-MO-8] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Smith (MO) amendment (A064) Agreed to by recorded vote: 215 - 199 (Roll no. 357). (All Actions) 13. H.Amdt.929 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 66 printed in House Report 115-830 to prevent the enforcement of limitations or prohibitions on the use of genetically modified crops in commercial agricultural operations conducted on National Wildlife Refuges. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Abraham, Ralph Lee [R-LA-5] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Abraham amendment (A060) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 14. H.Amdt.928 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 65 printed in House Report 115-830 to prevent federal funds from being used to implement the State of California's Bay-Delta Plan. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Denham, Jeff [R-CA-10] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Denham amendment (A059) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 15. H.Amdt.927 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 64 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the use of funds in contravention of Federal Acquisition Regulation 6.101(a) with respect to aviation helmets. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Posey, Bill [R-FL-8] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Posey amendment (A058) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 16. H.Amdt.925 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 62 printed in House Report 115-830 to prevent funds from being used to carry out any rule-making on the status of the Lesser Prairie Chicken. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Pearce, Stevan [R-NM-2] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Pearce amendment (A056) Agreed to by recorded vote: 216 - 199 (Roll no. 354). (All Actions) 17. H.Amdt.923 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 59 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the EPA from using funds to give formal notification under, or prepare, propose, implement, administer, or enforce any rule or recommendation pursuant to section 115 of the Clean Air Act. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Perry, Scott [R-PA-4] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Perry amendment (A054) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 18. H.Amdt.922 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 58 printed in House Report 115-830 to prevent funds from being used to change existing placer mining plan of operations with regard to reclamation activities. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Young, Don [R-AK-At Large] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Young (AK) amendment (A053) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 19. H.Amdt.918 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 53 printed in House Report 115-830 to place a funding limitation on the EPA's ability to utilize the Title 42 special pay authority. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Burgess, Michael C. [R-TX-26] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Burgess amendment (A049) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 20. H.Amdt.917 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 52 printed in House Report 115-830 to prevent the re-purposing of Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act funds. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Byrne, Bradley [R-AL-1] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Byrne amendment (A048) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 21. H.Amdt.915 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 50 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency from using any funds to take retaliatory, or EPA described backstop actions, against any of the six states in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed in the event that a state does not meet the goals mandated by the EPAs Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Goodlatte, Bob [R-VA-6] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Goodlatte amendment (A046) Agreed to by recorded vote: 213 - 202 (Roll no. 351). (All Actions) 22. H.Amdt.914 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 49 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the use of funds to implement or enforce the threatened species or endangered species listing of any plant or wildlife that has not undergone a review as required by section 4(c)(2) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Lamborn, Doug [R-CO-5] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Lamborn amendment (A045) Agreed to by recorded vote: 213 - 201 (Roll no. 350). (All Actions) 23. H.Amdt.913 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 48 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the use of funds to implement or enforce the threatened species listing of the Preble's meadow jumping mouse under the Endangered Species Act. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Lamborn, Doug [R-CO-5] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Lamborn amendment (A044) Agreed to by recorded vote: 213 - 202 (Roll no. 349). (All Actions) 24. H.Amdt.912 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 47 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit funds from being used to regulate trailers under the Clean Air Act. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Loudermilk, Barry [R-GA-11] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Loudermilk amendment (A043) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 25. H.Amdt.911 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 46 printed in House Report 115-830 to limit funding for the implementation of Washington State's revised water quality standard. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. McMorris Rodgers, Cathy [R-WA-5] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the McMorris Rodgers amendment (A042) Agreed to by recorded vote: 227 - 185 (Roll no. 348). (All Actions) 26. H.Amdt.909 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 44 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit funds from implementing the Social Cost of Carbon rule. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Mullin, Markwayne [R-OK-2] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Mullin amendment (A040) Agreed to by recorded vote: 215 - 199 (Roll no. 347). (All Actions) 27. H.Amdt.908 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 43 printed in House Report 115-830 to prohibit the use of funds for enforcing the Obama Administration's EPA Methane Rule. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Mullin, Markwayne [R-OK-2] (Offered 07/18/2018) Latest Action: 07/18/18 On agreeing to the Mullin amendment (A039) Agreed to by recorded vote: 215 - 194 (Roll no. 346). (All Actions) 28. H.Amdt.900 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 34 printed in House Report 115-830 to increase funding to the National Forest System account for purposes of eradicating, enforcing, and remediating illegal marijuana grow operations on National Forest System land. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. LaMalfa, Doug [R-CA-1] (Offered 07/17/2018) Latest Action: 07/17/18 On agreeing to the LaMalfa amendment (A031) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 29. H.Amdt.893 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 26 printed in House Report 115-830 to increase the WIFIA administrative expenses account by $2 million and decrease the DOI Office of the Secretary account by the same amount. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Denham, Jeff [R-CA-10] (Offered 07/17/2018) Latest Action: 07/17/18 On agreeing to the Denham amendment (A024) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 30. H.Amdt.884 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment comprised of 2 amendments numbered 16 and 17 printed in House Report 115-830. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Johnson, Bill [R-OH-6] (Offered 07/17/2018) Latest Action: 07/17/18 On agreeing to the Johnson (OH) amendments (A015) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 31. H.Amdt.879 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 11 printed in House Report 115-830 to reduce by $20,000,000 and then increase by the same amount the National Recreation and Preservation account with intent to use the funds for the National Maritime Heritage grant program. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Olson, Pete [R-TX-22] (Offered 07/17/2018) Latest Action: 07/17/18 On agreeing to the Olson amendment (A010) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 32. H.Amdt.872 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 4 printed in House Report 115-830 to increase funding for the Delaware River Basin Restoration Program by $1 million. Amends Bill: H.R.6147 Sponsor: Rep. Lance, Leonard [R-NJ-7] (Offered 07/17/2018) Latest Action: 07/17/18 On agreeing to the Lance amendment (A003) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 33. H.Amdt.866 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 12 printed in House Report 115-815 to enhance oversight by augmenting existing semiannual reporting requirements regarding disciplinary actions. Amends Bill: H.R.6237 Sponsor: Rep. Davidson, Warren [R-OH-8] (Offered 07/12/2018) Latest Action: 07/12/18 On agreeing to the Davidson amendment (A012) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 34. H.Amdt.854 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 11 printed in House Report 115-786 to reward the elimination of lionfish from United States waters by allowing individuals to exchange lionfish for tags authorizing fishing for certain species in addition to the number of such species otherwise authorized to be taken by such individuals. Amends Bill: H.R.200 Sponsor: Rep. Gaetz, Matt [R-FL-1] (Offered 07/11/2018) Latest Action: 07/11/18 On agreeing to the Gaetz amendment (A011) as modified Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 35. H.Amdt.852 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 9 printed in House Report 115-786 to lift the ban on striped bass fishing in the Block Island transit zone between Montauk, NY and Block Island, RI. Amends Bill: H.R.200 Sponsor: Rep. Zeldin, Lee M. [R-NY-1] (Offered 07/11/2018) Latest Action: 07/11/18 On agreeing to the Zeldin amendment (A009) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 36. H.Amdt.851 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 8 printed in House Report 115-786 to require NOAA to conduct a study on all fees it charges the lobster industry and report those findings to Congress. Amends Bill: H.R.200 Sponsor: Rep. Poliquin, Bruce [R-ME-2] (Offered 07/11/2018) Latest Action: 07/11/18 On agreeing to the Poliquin amendment (A008) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 37. H.Amdt.849 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 6 printed in House Report 115-786 to require the Comptroller General to submit a report to Congress on resource rent of LAPPs in the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Fishery Management Councils, ways to the Treasury can reclaim that resource rent, and ways to eliminate fiduciary conflicts of interest in the South Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Councils. Amends Bill: H.R.200 Sponsor: Rep. Graves, Garret [R-LA-6] (Offered 07/11/2018) Latest Action: 07/11/18 On agreeing to the Graves (LA) amendment (A006) as modified Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 38. H.Amdt.848 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 5 printed in House Report 115-786 to waive compensatory mitigation requirements for maintenance dredging projects in certain inland waterways, inlets, or harbors. Amends Bill: H.R.200 Sponsor: Rep. Webster, Daniel [R-FL-11] (Offered 07/11/2018) Latest Action: 07/11/18 On agreeing to the Webster (FL) amendment (A005) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 39. H.Amdt.844 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in House Report 115-786 to strike sections 302(c) and 307, and modifies sections 205, 207, 304, 30 6, 406, and 408. The amendment also includes a new section regarding voting procedures for the Western Alaska Community Development Quota Program's administrative panel. Amends Bill: H.R.200 Sponsor: Rep. Young, Don [R-AK-At Large] (Offered 07/11/2018) Latest Action: 07/11/18 On agreeing to the Young (AK) amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 40. H.Amdt.839 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 26 printed in House Report 115-785 to strip the limiting language of `CVN-80' from the text which would allow funding for both CVN-80 and CVN-81 and thereby enable dual-buy. Amends Bill: H.R.6157 Sponsor: Rep. Wittman, Robert J. [R-VA-1] (Offered 06/27/2018) Latest Action: 06/27/18 On agreeing to the Wittman amendment (A035) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 41. H.Amdt.833 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 16 printed in House Report 115-785 to reduce Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide by $1,000,000 and increases it by the same to be used for explosive ordnance disposal equipment upgrades and technology enhancements. Amends Bill: H.R.6157 Sponsor: Rep. Crawford, Eric A. "Rick" [R-AR-1] (Offered 06/27/2018) Latest Action: 06/27/18 On agreeing to the Crawford amendment (A029) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 42. H.Amdt.826 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 9 printed in House Report 115-785 to increase Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide funds by $5 million to provide for additional training of Special Operations Forces. Amends Bill: H.R.6157 Sponsor: Rep. Hudson, Richard [R-NC-8] (Offered 06/27/2018) Latest Action: 06/27/18 On agreeing to the Hudson amendment (A022) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 43. H.Amdt.810 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 7 printed in Part A of House Report 115-783 to increase A-10 wing replacement funds to House-passed NDAA level. Amends Bill: H.R.6157 Sponsor: Rep. McSally, Martha [R-AZ-2] (Offered 06/26/2018) Latest Action: 06/26/18 On agreeing to the McSally amendment (A006) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 44. H.Amdt.809 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 6 printed in Part A of House Report 115-783 to transfer $10,000,000 to the Defense POW/Missing Persons Office to assist in identifying unclaimed remains missing since the Korean conflict. Amends Bill: H.R.6157 Sponsor: Rep. Allen, Rick W. [R-GA-12] (Offered 06/26/2018) Latest Action: 06/26/18 On agreeing to the Allen amendment (A005) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 45. H.Amdt.800 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 4 printed in Part B of House Report 115-766 to require a report from HHS on opioid prescribing practices and opioid misuse during pregnancy, and evaluating non-opiate pain management practices during pregnancy. Amends Bill: H.R.6 Sponsor: Rep. Curtis, John R. [R-UT-3] (Offered 06/22/2018) Latest Action: 06/22/18 On agreeing to the Curtis amendment (A004) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 46. H.Amdt.799 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 3 printed in Part B of House Report 115-766 to direct the Commissioner of Food and Drugs to develop high-quality, evidence-based opioid analgesic prescribing guidelines for the indication-specific treatment of acute pain. In developing such guidelines, it requires the Commissioner of Food and Drugs to gather input through a public workshop and comment period, and to provide a report to Congress on how such guidelines will be used to protect the public health. Amends Bill: H.R.6 Sponsor: Rep. Barton, Joe [R-TX-6] (Offered 06/22/2018) Latest Action: 06/22/18 On agreeing to the Barton amendment (A003) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 47. H.Amdt.797 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in Part B of House Report 115-766 to call for Medicaid, Medicare, and public health reforms to help combat the opioid crisis. Amends Bill: H.R.6 Sponsor: Rep. Walden, Greg [R-OR-2] (Offered 06/22/2018) Latest Action: 06/22/18 On agreeing to the Walden amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 48. H.Amdt.791 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 4 printed in Part A of House Report 115-751 to specify the factors to determine whether a controlled substance analogue is intended for human consumption, thus making it easier for law enforcement and health officials to take action against synthetic drug manufacturers, distributors, and sellers. Amends Bill: H.R.2851 Sponsor: Rep. Thornberry, Mac [R-TX-13] (Offered 06/15/2018) Latest Action: 06/15/18 On agreeing to the Thornberry amendment (A004) Agreed to by recorded vote: 223 - 158 (Roll no. 267). (All Actions) 49. H.Amdt.788 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in Part A of House Report 115-751 to incorporate an inter-agency agreement transmitted to Congress by the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). Specifically, the amendment clarifies when the Attorney General can temporarily and permanently schedule a drug or substance to the newly created schedule A and prevents the Attorney General from permanently scheduling that drug or substance if the Secretary of HHS determines that there is not sufficient potential for abuse. The amendment also clarifies under what circumstances an applicant for a schedule A registration may continue to conduct research with such schedule A substance while their application is pending, among their research accommodations. Amends Bill: H.R.2851 Sponsor: Rep. Griffith, H. Morgan [R-VA-9] (Offered 06/15/2018) Latest Action: 06/15/18 On agreeing to the Griffith amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 50. H.Amdt.787 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 4 printed in Part B of House Report 115-751 to remove a requirement to include recommendations for further continuation and expansion of the voucher program in a report to Congress. Amends Bill: H.R.5735 Sponsor: Rep. Biggs, Andy [R-AZ-5] (Offered 06/14/2018) Latest Action: 06/14/18 On agreeing to the Biggs amendment (A004) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 51. H.Amdt.785 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 2 printed in Part B of House Report 115-751 to alter the application section to require eligible entities to provide proof to the Secretary that the supportive housing facilities to which they provide financial assistance have authorization to operate by the local government with jurisdiction over that zone. Amends Bill: H.R.5735 Sponsor: Rep. Rohrabacher, Dana [R-CA-48] (Offered 06/14/2018) Latest Action: 06/14/18 On agreeing to the Rohrabacher amendment (A002) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 52. H.Amdt.784 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in Part B of House Report 115-751 to clarify selection requirements for eligible entities, removes recovery treatment time limits, and makes additional technical changes. Amends Bill: H.R.5735 Sponsor: Rep. Barr, Andy [R-KY-6] (Offered 06/14/2018) Latest Action: 06/14/18 On agreeing to the Barr amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 53. H.Amdt.782 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 38 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to prohibit funds from being used to propose, plan, or execute a new round of Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC). Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Ratcliffe, John [R-TX-4] (Offered 06/08/2018) Latest Action: 06/08/18 On agreeing to the Ratcliffe amendment (A069) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 54. H.Amdt.779 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 35 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to prevent funds from being used to implement, administer, or enforce a proposed rule by the VA to limit an injured or amputee veterans ability to choose a prosthetist or orthotist who meets his or her needs whether employed by the VA or on contract with the VA. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Walberg, Tim [R-MI-7] (Offered 06/08/2018) Latest Action: 06/08/18 On agreeing to the Walberg amendment (A066) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 55. H.Amdt.771 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 27 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to transfer $5 million from the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Administration's (VHA) Medical Community Care Account to the Medical Services Account for the explicit use for the Va's Adaptive Sports Grant (ASG) program, equine assisted therapy. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Barr, Andy [R-KY-6] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the Barr amendment (A058) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 56. H.Amdt.769 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 25 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to mandate that no less than $225,000,000 may be appropriated for VA mental health and suicide prevention programs. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. McSally, Martha [R-AZ-2] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the McSally amendment (A056) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 57. H.Amdt.767 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 23 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to call on the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to develop a standard of hospice care tailored to the unique needs of combat veterans, including Vietnam-era veterans. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Johnson, Bill [R-OH-6] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the Johnson (OH) amendment (A054) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 58. H.Amdt.760 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 15 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to reestablish a semiannual Government Accountability Office financial review of obligated expenditures from the Independent Counsel permanent indefinite appropriation, and requires the report's findings to be submitted to the Committees on Appropriations of the House and Senate, the Committees on Oversight and Government Reform and Judiciary of the House, and the Committees on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Judiciary of the Senate. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Meadows, Mark [R-NC-11] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/08/18 On agreeing to the Meadows amendment (A047) Agreed to by recorded vote: 207 - 201 (Roll no. 254). (consideration: CR H4997-4998) (All Actions) 59. H.Amdt.757 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 10 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to prohibit the use of funds to prepare, propose, or promulgate any regulation or guidance related to the social cost of carbon. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Gohmert, Louie [R-TX-1] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/08/18 On agreeing to the Gohmert amendment (A044) Agreed to by recorded vote: 212 - 201 (Roll no. 253). (consideration: CR H4996-4997) (All Actions) 60. H.Amdt.756 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 9 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to prohibit the use of funds for enforcing the EPA's abandonment criteria for prior converted cropland. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. LaMalfa, Doug [R-CA-1] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the LaMalfa amendment (A043) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 61. H.Amdt.754 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 7 printed in Part B of House Report 115-712 to provide $24 million for construction of critical infrastructure in NNSA, with an offset from NNSA Federal Salaries and Expenses. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Rogers, Mike D. [R-AL-3] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the Rogers (AL) amendment (A041) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 62. H.Amdt.748 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 38 printed in Part B of House Report 115-711 to prohibit funds from being used to purchase heavy water from Iran. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. DeSantis, Ron [R-FL-6] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the DeSantis amendment (A035) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 63. H.Amdt.744 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 33 printed in Part B of House Report 115-711 to prohibit the use of funds to sell the transmission assets of three Power Marketing Administrations and the Tennessee Valley Authority. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Newhouse, Dan [R-WA-4] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the Newhouse amendment (A031) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 64. H.Amdt.714 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in Part B of House Report 115-711 to increase funding for Army Corps Investigations account by $1.2 million, for a total of $129.2 million, offset by a reduction of $1.2 million in the Army Corps Expenses account. Amends Bill: H.R.5895 Sponsor: Rep. Collins, Chris [R-NY-27] (Offered 06/07/2018) Latest Action: 06/07/18 On agreeing to the Collins (NY) amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 65. H.Amdt.711 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 52 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to expedite the completion of a disposition study and requires the Secretary to report on the feasibility of preserving and uenhancing recreational opportunities and the health of the ecosystem of Upper St. Anthony Falls Lock and Dam. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Paulsen, Erik [R-MN-3] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Paulsen amendment (A051) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 66. H.Amdt.708 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 49 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to Requires the Secretary to conduct an assessment of dams classified as Class III under the Dam Safety Action Classification of the Corps of Engineers. This amendment requires the Secretary to provide a report to Congress describing anticipated impacts on the local communities if the Secretary no longer assumes responsibility of the Class III dam, or what the effects would be if the Secretary continues to assume responsibility of the dams over a period of 15 years after the date of enactment of this Act. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Young, Don [R-AK-At Large] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Young (AK) amendment (A048) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 67. H.Amdt.707 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 48 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to ensure prompt restoration and rebuilding in the event of an activation of any floodway or backwater feature within the Mississippi Rivers and Tributaries system. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Smith, Jason [R-MO-8] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Smith (MO) amendment (A047) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 68. H.Amdt.703 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 44 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to require the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to carry out flood and storm damage reduction studies expeditiously in order to reduce the risk of damage from future floods and hurricanes in the Houston and Coastal Texas areas. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Culberson, John Abney [R-TX-7] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Culberson amendment Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 69. H.Amdt.702 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 43 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to look to expedite already authorized U.S. Army Corp of Engineers projects in the declared disaster areas of Texas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, South Carolina, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Olson, Pete [R-TX-22] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Olson amendment (A042) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 70. H.Amdt.701 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 41 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to encourage the Secretary to consider reasonable alternative agreements between state or local entities, private partners, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineering to dispose of dredged material. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Lewis, Jason [R-MN-2] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Lewis (MN) amendment (A041) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 71. H.Amdt.698 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 39 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to authorize a land transfer between the Port of Whitman and the Army Corps of Engineers. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. McMorris Rodgers, Cathy [R-WA-5] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the McMorris Rodgers amendment (A038) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 72. H.Amdt.696 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 37 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to expedite the completion of the Cedar River flood risk management project authorized in 2014. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Blum, Rod [R-IA-1] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Blum amendment (A036) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 73. H.Amdt.694 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 35 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to require the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to complete its Chief's Report for the Brandon Road Study by February 2019. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Joyce, David P. [R-OH-14] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Joyce (OH) amendment (A034) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 74. H.Amdt.690 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 31 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to direct the Secretary to expedite the completion of a feasibility study for the Warren Glen Dam Removal Project in the Musconetcong River, New Jersey. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Lance, Leonard [R-NJ-7] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Lance amendment (A030) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 75. H.Amdt.689 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 30 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to direct the secretary to expedite reports for the navigation project for San Juan Harbor, Puerto Rico, per the study authorized by resolution of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure on September 20, 2006. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Gonzalez-Colon, Jenniffer [R-PR-At Large] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Gonzalez-Colon (PR) amendment (A029) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 76. H.Amdt.688 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 29 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to clarifiy that operation and maintenance of any project authorized under the Chief's Report for the Brandon Road Study is done at an 80/20 Federal/non-Federal cost share. Also requires the Corps, following construction of any project authorized under the Chief's Report for the Brandon Road Study, to consult with the governor of the state where the project is located and seek Congressional approval prior to implementing any additional technologies at the project. Also, it adds to the list of feasibility studies in the base bill the USACE must expedite completion of the Great Lakes Mississippi River Interbasin Study Brandon Road Study. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Davis, Rodney [R-IL-13] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Davis, Rodney amendment (A028) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 77. H.Amdt.687 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 27 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to instruct the Secretary to expedite the DMMP process in order that studies reach completion within two years of their initiation and shall make maximum use of existing information and studies and avoid all redundant information collection and studies for purposes of Dredged Material Management Plans initiated in fiscal year 2018 and afterward. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Gibbs, Bob [R-OH-7] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Gibbs amendment (A027) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 78. H.Amdt.686 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 26 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to express the sense of Congress that the Corps of Engineers should consider urgently and favorably projects and proposals pending before them for flood control, dam repair, beach erosion, harbor navigation in Puerto Rico, as well as for repair and mitigation required by natural disasters in 2017-2018; and that the Secretary should advance the project for ecosystem restoration at Caño Martin Peña, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Gonzalez-Colon, Jenniffer [R-PR-At Large] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Gonzalez-Colon (PR) amendment (A026) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 79. H.Amdt.684 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 24 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to permit a non-federal flood control project sponsor to pay, or contribute to, the difference between the cost of repairing a damaged flood control project and its projected economic benefits. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Bost, Mike [R-IL-12] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Bost amendment (A024) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 80. H.Amdt.683 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 23 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to express the sense of Congress stating the importance and benefits of projects to improve 2-way traffic safety on high volume, deep draft navigation channels. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Babin, Brian [R-TX-36] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Babin amendment (A023) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 81. H.Amdt.682 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 22 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to direct the Secretary to prefer acquiring the minimum interest necessary in real property needed to support a project or action. Requires consideration of the use of a temporary easement estate or other interests designed to reduce overall costs, reduce project time, and minimize conflict with property owners related to such project or action. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Higgins, Clay [R-LA-3] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Higgins (LA) amendment (A022) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 82. H.Amdt.679 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 19 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to state that in regards to WRDA funding determinations, the Corps of Engineers may consider operation and maintenance of the locks on Allegheny River for purposes of recreational boat traffic levels and related economic benefits. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Kelly, Mike [R-PA-3] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Kelly (PA) amendment (A019) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 83. H.Amdt.678 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 18 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to require the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to pay back the Federal cost share for projects carried out under section 593 of the Water Resources Development Act of 1999 in the next fiscal year. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Pearce, Stevan [R-NM-2] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Pearce amendment (A018) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 84. H.Amdt.677 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 17 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to clarify the Secretary's authority under WRDA 2000 to provide credit for Comprehensive Everglades Restoration in-kind work completed during design or construction, including work after a partnership agreement is signed. The Secretary and non-Federal sponsor must agree to the terms and conditions for in-kind work not expressly defined in the partnership agreement and the Secretary must determine the work is integral to the project. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Mast, Brian J. [R-FL-18] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Mast amendment (A017) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 85. H.Amdt.676 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 16 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to prioritize the operation, maintenance, and improvement of existing infrastructure. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Meadows, Mark [R-NC-11] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Meadows amendment (A016) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 86. H.Amdt.673 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 13 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to ensure timely payback for advanced funds paid for by a non-federal sponsor. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Sanford, Mark [R-SC-1] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Sanford amendment (A013) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 87. H.Amdt.667 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 7 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to extend authority of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to enter into cost recovery agreements for evaluation and processing of permits. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Denham, Jeff [R-CA-10] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Denham amendment (A007) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 88. H.Amdt.666 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 5 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to authorize Army Corps to give technical assistance to regional coalitions as they prepare for water resources development projects with potential connections to Army Corps projects or properties. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Royce, Edward R. [R-CA-39] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Royce (CA) amendment (A006) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 89. H.Amdt.665 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 4 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to add flexibility in Section 120 so that future projects can also qualify for the pilot program. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Royce, Edward R. [R-CA-39] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Royce (CA) amendment (A005) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 90. H.Amdt.662 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 6 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to direct the Secretary to provide technical assistance on construction to a state agency that is carrying out congressionally authorized projects. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Shuster, Bill [R-PA-9] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Shuster amendment (A002) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 91. H.Amdt.661 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 1 printed in Part A of House Report 115-711 to make technical changes to the bill, as well as additional provisions relating to Corps of Engineers projects and reports. Additionally, it addresses a direct spending issue in sec. 306. Amends Bill: H.R.8 Sponsor: Rep. Shuster, Bill [R-PA-9] (Offered 06/06/2018) Latest Action: 06/06/18 On agreeing to the Shuster amendment (A001) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 92. H.Amdt.660 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 168 printed in House Report 115-702 to ensure competition in the commercial e-commerce portal procurement program to foster a marketplace that provides the best products at the best prices. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Ferguson, A. Drew, IV [R-GA-3] (Offered 05/24/2018) Latest Action: 05/24/18 On agreeing to the Ferguson amendment (A027) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 93. H.Amdt.659 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment comprised of the following amendments printed in House Report 115-702 as En Bloc No. 7: Nos. 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, and 167. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Thornberry, Mac [R-TX-13] (Offered 05/24/2018) Latest Action: 05/24/18 On agreeing to the Thornberry amendments (A026) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 94. H.Amdt.658 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment comprised of the following amendments printed in House Report 115-702 as En Bloc No. 6: Nos. 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, and 144. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Thornberry, Mac [R-TX-13] (Offered 05/24/2018) Latest Action: 05/24/18 On agreeing to the Thornberry amendments (A025) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 96. H.Amdt.656 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment comprised of the following amendments printed in House Report 115-702 as En Bloc No. 4: Nos. 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, and 109. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Thornberry, Mac [R-TX-13] (Offered 05/24/2018) Latest Action: 05/24/18 On agreeing to the Thornberry amendments (A023) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 97. H.Amdt.655 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment comprised of the following amendments printed in House Report 115-702 as En Bloc No. 3: Nos. 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91 and 92. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Thornberry, Mac [R-TX-13] (Offered 05/23/2018) Latest Action: 05/23/18 On agreeing to the Thornberry amendments (A022) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 98. H.Amdt.654 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment comprised of the following amendments printed in House Report 115-702 as En Bloc No. 2: Nos. 31, 32, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75 and 76. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Thornberry, Mac [R-TX-13] (Offered 05/23/2018) Latest Action: 05/23/18 On agreeing to the Thornberry amendments (A021) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 99. H.Amdt.653 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 55 printed in House Report 115-702 to add the use of immigration programs and visas by the Chinese Communist Party to enter the United States for the purposes of political, academic, or social influence efforts to the strategy required in Section 1252. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Gallagher, Mike [R-WI-8] (Offered 05/23/2018) Latest Action: 05/23/18 On agreeing to the Gallagher amendment (A020) Agreed to by voice vote. (All Actions) 100. H.Amdt.647 — 115th Congress (2017-2018) Description: An amendment numbered 8 printed in House Report 115-702 to address mine permitting issues in relationship to minerals deemed critical for national security and the nation's infrastructure. The amendment is consistent with EO 13604 and EO 13817 from 2012 and 2017 respectively which ordered federal agencies to reduce the time required to make permitting and review decisions for critical mineral projects. Amends Bill: H.R.5515 Sponsor: Rep. Amodei, Mark E. [R-NV-2] (Offered 05/23/2018) Latest Action: 05/23/18 On agreeing to the Amodei amendment (A014) Agreed to by recorded vote: 229 - 183 (Roll no. 223). (All Actions) 12345Next PageSkip Ahead Five PagesLast Page Legislation [729] 99 (1985-1986) [325] House [729] Amendments (H.Amdt. or S.Amdt.) [729] Status of Amendment Amendment agreed to Committee of the Whole Remove House amendment agreed to [729] House amendment offered [729] House amendment offered/reported by [729] Roll call votes on amendments in House [181] Amendment agreed to by House [39] Amendment failed by House [4] House amendment not agreed to [4] Walker, Robert S. [R-PA] [38] Thornberry, Mac [R-TX] [27] Solomon, Gerald B. H. [R-NY] [18] Kasich, John R. [R-OH] [13] Hunter, Duncan [R-CA] [10] Democratic [846] Republican [729]
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IrelandHistory “The Grand Egyptian Museum is the most important cultural project in the world in the twenty-first century. It will be the greatest and largest... Irish Female Artists You Should Know Ireland has a rich creative history. From literature to theatre, from music to art, Ireland’s innovative and imaginative output has had a major impact... The island of Ireland has had an assortment of nicknames over the years. From the Emerald Isle to the Land of Saints and Scholars, there is one thing that has become synonymous with the latter nickname – Irish literature. Irish literature is considered some of the most intelligent and popular prose with several Nobel prize winners hailing from Irish shores. Irish writers like James Joyce have left a literary legacy that has solidified Ireland’s place on the globe as a literary powerhouse. With some of the best poets reminiscing over the green pastures of Ireland, the literature has allowed for people to romanticise the space, promoting tourism in the island. With an array of Irish novels to read, find your favourite today. The Irish Emigrant (Source: The Early Novels Database) James Joyce: The King of Irish Literature Arguably the most famous and nuanced of Irish writers, James Joyce was famed for his experimental use of language, developing new literary techniques that have become canon today. After attending University College, Dublin, James Joyce intended to study medicine as a means of supporting his writing. This plan was soon abandoned and he left Dublin for Paris and wrote book reviews for an income while studying in the Sainte-Geneviève Library. His mother requested his return due to her decline in health and so he returned to Dublin. Joyce began writing his novel based on his life experiences but was still in need of money. Noticing an advert for short stories with an Irish background in a farming magazine, James Joyce sold stories to the editor, George Russell, for a pound each. These first three stories were published, and eventually would be known as his work ‘Dubliners’, appearing in print in 1914, published under the pseudonym Stephen Dedalus. After finally settling in Trieste with his partner, Nora Barnacle, and children, Joyce became more serious about his literary endeavours. After starting a novel in his youth based on his life experiences, he decided his protagonist and working title, Stephen Hero, were lacking and he rewrote the work into five chapters under the title A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. Struggling to get his work published, he eventually saw A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man in print in 1916. Tracing the emotional and intellectual development of a young Dublin man, it recounts his move to Paris to dedicate his life to the arts. James Joyce’s legacy also incorporates two of the most complex and intellectual novels of the 20th Century, Ulysses and Finnegan’s Wake. Considered one of the most influential Irish writers of the 20th Century, Joyce continues to inspire writers and poets of later generations. James Joyce playing the guitar. (Source: C. Ruf) Irish Writers and Landscape: Seamus Heaney The most beloved of Irish poets, Seamus Heaney is one of Ireland’s greatest writers, winning the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995. Published in 1966, Heaney’s first work, Death of a Naturalist, won critical acclaim for its beautiful descriptions of natural wonders and rural landscapes. Beginning his career as a school teacher, Heaney eventually made his way into academia. Renowned for how his work deals with memory, he wrote eloquently about Northern Ireland’s civil disputes. This commentary was documented in his popular work ‘Whatever You Say, Say Nothing” Not to be content with being a stellar poet, Heaney was also an incredible scribe and translator. Most famous for his translation of Beowulf, published in 2000, he was awarded the Whitbread Prize. As well as being a Nobel Prize winner, Heaney also received the T.S. Eliot Prize – the ultimate poetry award in the United Kingdom. Working as a Professor of Poetry at Oxford and Harvard, Heaney was critically acclaimed throughout his career. His pastoral poetry that dealt heavily with the themes of love, nature, and memory, Heaney’s work is considered some of the best Irish literature. Seamus Heaney at UCD. (Source: Sean O’Connor) Irish Literature of Forgotten Times: Jennifer Johnston Despite being a Dubliner, the Irish writer Jennifer Johnston has spent most of her life in the North Coast of Northern Ireland, honing her craft and is known as ‘the quiet woman of Irish literature’. Despite her moniker, Johnston is an acclaimed novelist, publishing her first novel, at the ripe age of 42, in 1972. A prolific writer, she has also a collection of radio and stage plays. Famous for her use of the Big House, she has used her work to narrate the fall of the ascendancy of Ireland. Johnston’s work is filled with a diverse set of characters from outsiders to absent parents, with her language being inspired by the Church of Ireland liturgy. Interestingly, her work also employs alternating or multiple viewpoints which seems inspired by her writing for the theatre. Winning the Whitbread Prize in 1979, she has also had one of her novels adapted for the screen – The Old Jest. This novel became the acclaimed film The Dawning, starring Anthony Hopkins in the lead role. Despite being a lesser-known Irish writer, Jennifer Johnston’s work has gone on to shape multiple literary genres. Jennifer Johnston relaxing (Source: The Irish Times) Innisfree Poets: W.B. Yeats Considered one of the greatest poets to have lived, William Butler Yeats, or W.B. Yeats, has made an impact on the poetry world that can be seen today. Winning the Nobel Prize for literature in 1923, Yeats was renowned for his poetry and his work with the Abbey Theatre. His famous unrequited love with the revolutionary Maud Gonne haunted his work, with his dedications being mostly to her. In 1902, Yeats went on to help found the Irish National Theatre Society with Lady Gregory and John Millington Synge. They produced and directed his play, Cathleen Ni Houlihan, to critical delight. After the Irish Civil War, Yeats went on to serve as a senator for the new Irish Free State. His first love always being poetry, he wrote beloved works such as ‘The Wild Swans at Coole’ in 1917 and arguably his best work, ‘The Tower’ in 1928. Heavily quoted and a prolific member of Irish writing, his legacy has stood the test of time. A portrait of W.B. Yeats (Source: National Portrait Gallery) Irish Writers: Novels, Poetry, and Plays There is an undeniable influence of Irish literature on modern works from across the globe. Irish writers and poets have been inspiring writers, politicians, lovers, musicians, amongst others for hundreds of years. The strong love of the Arts on the island of Ireland and the incredible output that the small island has attained is nothing short of spectacular. With an incredible amount of budding artists who are continuing to create great works of literary art, that influence doesn’t appear to be finished quite yet. Previous articleEveryone Is A Scholar: Best University Courses Online Next articleChetham’s Library: Britain’s Oldest Free Public Reference Library Fanad Head Lighthouse: A Maritime Icon in Ireland Ireland ConnollyCove - April 15, 2019 Situated between Lough Swilly and sandy bay of Mulroy, on the Northern coast of the Fanad Peninsula in North Donegal Fanad Head lighthouse has... Game of Throne’s Door 8- Mary McBrides Bar, Cushendun Northern Ireland Connolly Cove - June 14, 2018 Game of Thrones doors! Not the episode from Game of Thrones itself (episode 5 , season 6) but the amazingly crafted doors created from... Dublinia Viking Museum – Dublin, Ireland Dublinia Viking Museum in Dublin is an interesting museum to visit on any trip to the capital. It contains an amazing array of displays... Tubbercurry, County Sligo, Ireland Tubbercurry - or as it is sometimes pronounced "Tobercurry" - is the second largest town in the county of Sligo in Ireland Ballintubber Abbey: Famous Irish Abbey, Mayo Ballintubber Abbey is an abbey two kilometres northeast of the village of Ballintubber, County Mayo in Ireland that was founded by King Cathal Crobdearg... 360 Degree Video of Narnia Trail in Rostrevor, Co Down Join us on the 360 Degree Video of some of the famous characters from Narnia in a trail dedicated to the famous story by... Phoenix Park, Dublin, Ireland Dating back to the Norman times - Phoenix Park (Irish: Páirc an Fhionnuisce) is an urban park in Dublin, Ireland, lying 2–4 km west... Famous Haunted Houses in Egypt: Spooky Stories for Halloween 2018! ConnollyCove - October 24, 2018 Halloween is almost upon us and its time we explore some of the spooky stories going around the world. We've written before about the... Woodvale Park – Belfast Attractions Connolly Cove - August 9, 2018 The Lovely Woodvale Park Woodvale park has recently been refurbished as part of the investment programme that includes new facilities such as football pitches, a... Carrickfergus Castle, County Antrim Carrickfergus /Carrick Castle in county Antrim, Northern Ireland, is one of those different castles that could be visited in the country. Carrick Castle is... How to Make a Killy Kiss Cocktail By Killyhevlin Hotel We have been to the Killyhevlin Hotel to meet Steve from the Lakeside Bar & Grill who got us informed with different recipes for...
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ConnollyCove - April 15, 2020 Music is good for the soul and there are plenty of options of easy listening from the island of Ireland. Renowned for their traditional... The island of Ireland has had an assortment of nicknames over the years. From the Emerald Isle to the Land of Saints and Scholars,... Ireland is home to dozens of art museums and galleries. Ireland’s best art museums and galleries are unique hubs that expose visitors to aesthetical and educational works created by talented professional and amateur artists. The purpose and goal of art museums and galleries is to display, preserve, and interpret artistic creations including pencil sketches, paintings, sculptures, and photography. They are often divided into individual showcase spaces, often based on one of the following: artistic style and/or medium, subject, theme, artist, geographical region, culture, or time period. Although trips to Ireland usually focus on the natural beauty of its landscape, its history, its music and dance, and its recreational alcohol culture, it houses many art museums and galleries that demonstrate the imaginative talent of its homegrown artists and the work of artists from around the world. These include must-see well-knowns and local, hidden gems. The National Gallery of Ireland: Best Art Museums Merrion Square W, Dublin 2, Ireland Opening times: Monday 11.00am – 5.30pm, Tuesday – Wednesday 9.15am – 5.30pm, Thursday 9.15am– 8.30pm, Friday – Saturday 9.15am – 5.30pm, and Sunday 11.00am – 5.30pm The National Gallery of Ireland is perhaps the most well-known and popular art gallery in Ireland. Founded in 1854 and opened to the public in 1864, it was formed by William Dargan, the father of the Irish rail system. He hoped to imitate Crystal Palace in London’s great exhibition which had ceased in 1853. Public response was open and enthusiastic, demonstrating a craving for art in Ireland. The Gallery has been open to the public ever since and is considered one of the best art museums. The National Gallery of Ireland currently has over 14,000 artworks, including 5,000 drawings, 2,500 oil paintings, 5,000 prints, as well as photographs, sculptures, furniture, metal and glasswork. They have an extensive collection of Irish artworks, including a Yeats collection – this collection includes works from Jack B. Yeats (1871 – 1957), artist, Olympian medallist and brother of renowned poet W. B. Yeats (1865 – 1939), and their father John Butler Yeats (1839 – 1922). The National Gallery of Ireland also has a wide range of European artworks from Spain, France, Italy, German, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. Some of their most prized possessions include A Ship against the Mewstone by J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851) and Landscape with the Rest on the Flight into Egypt by Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669). Their mission statement is ‘to care for, interpret, develop and showcase art in a way that makes the National Gallery of Ireland an exciting place to encounter art. We aim to provide an outstanding experience that inspires an interest in and an appreciation of art for all. We are dedicated to bringing people and their art together’. They specialise in art conservation and curation, which involves research and exhibiting the works in their collection. They also provide an all-embracing archive library available for supporting art history research. Inside The National Gallery of Ireland (Source: The National Gallery of Ireland) Best Art Museums: Crawford Art Gallery Emmett Place, Centre, Cork, Ireland Opening times: Monday – Saturday 10.00am–5.00pm (2nd floor closes at 4:45 pm), late opening Thursdays until 8.00 pm (2nd floor closes at 7:45pm) and Sundays and Bank Holidays 11.00am–4.00pm Crawford Art Gallery, known by the locals as The Crawford, is a public art gallery and museum in Cork. It is housed in Cork’s stunning red-bricked former Custom House building, constructed in 1724. In the 1830s it was the Royal Cork Institution, a space for scientific works and a museum for old stones and manuscripts, before being renamed the Crawford School of Art in 1885. The school was active for over a century before moving to a new location in 1979, enabling the building to become an exclusive gallery and museum. The Crawford is a fascinating blend of the old and the modern, their 3,000 strong collection featuring works that embrace the style of the ancient Greeks and Romans – including sculpture casts by Italian Neoclassical artist Antonio Canova acquired from the Vatican Museum in Rome in 1818 – to contemporary video art. The gallery is home to a wide range of art by Irish and European artists, but they particularly prize works completed by former students of the Crawford School of Art. These include works by Henry Jones Thaddeus (1859 – 1929), realist and portrait painter, and William Gerard Barry (1864 – 1941), and even a former headmaster, James Brenan (1837 – 1907). One of the most prolific artists of the nineteenth century, Brenan specialised in recording Irish provincial life, and became the headmaster of the Crawford School of Art in 1860. Inside Crawford Art Gallery (Source: Clayton Hotels) Irish Museum of Modern Art: Best Art Museums in Ireland Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Military Rd, Kilmainham, Dublin 8, Ireland Opening times: Monday – closed, Tuesday – Friday 11.30am – 5.30pm, Saturday 10.00am – 5.30pm, Sunday 12noon – 5.30pm, Bank Holiday Monday 12noon – 5.30pm (last admission to any individual exhibition gallery is 5.15pm) The Irish Museum of Modern Art, otherwise known as IMMA, is Ireland’s hub for modern and contemporary art. Relatively new, it was established by the Irish government in 1990 and opened to the public in 1991. It is housed in a 17th-century building that formerly served as the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, a historic Irish site. Modern and contemporary art, understood in this context, refers to works of the present day and the recent past. IMMA, in particular, focuses on artwork from the 1940s to today. The Irish Museum of Modern Art currently houses over 3,500 pieces of art in various mediums. Their website states that their collection is ‘firmly rooted in the present and important contemporary works are added each year’. Outside the Irish Museum of Modern Art (Source: NewsTalk) The Hugh Lane Gallery Charlemont House,22 Parnell Square North, Dublin 1, Ireland Opening times: Closed Mondays, Tuesday – Thursday 9.45am– 6.00pm, Friday 9.45am – 5.00pm. Saturday 10.00am – 5.00pm, and Sunday 11.00am – 5.00pm The Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane, better known as Hugh Lane Gallery, is an art gallery run by the Dublin City Council. Formerly the Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, Hugh Lane Gallery is housed in the historic Charlemont House, built in 1763 for the 1st Earl of Charlemont, James Caufield. The gallery was founded in 1908 and is the first known gallery of modern art in the entire world, making it a significant stop for art lovers and art historians. The gallery’s collection is mostly modern and contemporary art, as well as additions from Irish artists. They showcase a unique stained-glass room which, according to their website, ‘remarkable and ever popular Harry Clarke piece The Eve of St. Agnes and the recently acquired ‘Mr Gilhooley by Liam O’Flaherty’ for the Geneva Window, 1929, by Clarke. The room also features work by Wilhelmina Geddes, Evie Hone, Paul Bony and James Scanlon’. Their room dedicated to the work of abstract artist Sean Scully is also popular. The most famous part of their collection relates to Francis Bacon, an Irish-born British artist whose works depicted intense, emotionally charged, and raw images. In 1998, the Hugh Lane Gallery secured the rights to Bacon’s art studio, and it was moved from its home in London to the Gallery. Opened to the public in 2001, it is an exact replica of Bacon’s workspace, and a catalogue of every item is featured in the Gallery’s online database. Inside The Hugh Lane Gallery (Source: Conde Nast Traveller) Best Art Museums, Ireland: The Carol Cronin Gallery Green St, Dingle, Co. Kerry, Ireland Opening times: by appointment This small gallery is a hidden gem in Ireland’s County Kerry, exclusively featuring the work of Irish artist Carol Cronin. Carol works mostly with oil paint on canvas to portray the natural and sublime beauty of the sea: according to her website, her paintings ‘capture the power and ever-changing moods of the Atlantic Ocean and the rugged West Kerry coast’. Carol’s work has been exhibited around Europe, including Dublin, London, Paris, and Dusseldorf. It is greatly influenced by her Irish heritage and her time living in the Netherlands. She has been commissioned several times by places wishing to showcase her work, including The National Archives of the Netherlands and University College of Cork. Carol opened The Carol Cronin Gallery in 2005 as a permanent home for her art. Carol inside The Carol Cronin Gallery (Source: Flickr) The Jorgensen Art Gallery 35 Molesworth St, Dublin 2, D02 A023, Ireland Opening times: Monday – Friday 10.00am – 5.30 pm, Saturday 12noon – 4.00 pm, closed Sunday The Jorgensen Art Gallery in Dublin was originally established by IB Jorgensen, one of Ireland’s top fashion designers, on the upper floor of his fashion salon on Molesworth Street in Dublin in 1992. After expansion and several moves, the Gallery now spans the entirety of a beautiful Georgian building. Now one of the most popular fine art galleries in Ireland, The Jorgensen Art Gallery showcases paintings and sculptures from modern and contemporary Irish, British, and European artists. The Gallery is home to works of significant contributors to Irish art, including Impressionist landscape and portrait painter Walter Osborne (1859 – 1903), Sir John Lavery (1856 – 1941) who was best known for his raw depictions of war, William Scott (1913 – 1989), the most celebrated 20th-century Ulster abstract and still-life painter, and Mary Swanzy (1882 – 1978), one of Ireland’s first abstract artists to experiment with and master the likes of cubism, futurism, and orphism. The Jorgensen Art Gallery is also unique in that it sells a wide-ranging selection of antique furniture, vases, lamps, and collectables. Evie Hone, HRHA (1894-1955) “Study for Stained Glass” (Source: Jorgensen Art Gallery) Olivier Cornet Gallery 3 Great Denmark Street, Dublin 1, Ireland Opening times: closed Mondays, Tuesday – Friday 11.00am – 6.00pm (8.00pm on Thurs), Saturday and Sunday 12noon – 5.00pm The Olivier Cornet Gallery, located in The Wooden Building in Temple Bar, was opened by French-born artists’ agent, fine art consultant, and independent curator Olivier Cornet in 2005. It was established because Olivier wished to have a permanent display space for the Irish art exhibitions he had organised and curated in the past. According to their website, Olivier Cornet Gallery’s collections ‘represents a small group of very accomplished contemporary artists, working in a variety of media such as painting, sculpture, ceramics, fine prints and photography’. They encourage an open and informal environment for experts and amateurs alike. Their exhibitions often showcase the work of individual local artists, as well as themed, collaborate exhibitions such as Drawing on Joyce, celebrating Irish writer James Joyce, and Concerning the Other, where ‘ten contemporary artists working together on one hundred pieces of art, to promote diversity and concern for minorities in these days of mounting racism and intolerance’. Inside the Olivier Cornet Gallery (Source: DublinTown) The Doorway Gallery 24 South Frederick Street, Dublin 2, Ireland Opening times: Monday – Saturday: 10.30am – 6.00pm The Doorway Gallery is a small, independent gallery in Dublin. Their collection features fine art from Irish and international artists, and their main aim is to encourage individual artist recognition: ‘the primary focus of the Doorway Gallery is to support artists in achieving international recognition for their work. This is achieved through their presence at a number of annual international art fairs at which a selection of artworks is promoted. There is an independent ethos to The Doorway Gallery. Patrons are encouraged to develop their own concepts in appreciation of art. This is evident through the gallery’s regularly hosted ‘Solo Shows’. Such events are organised in an effort to promote the artist.’ The Doorway Gallery exhibits art in a variety of mediums, including canvas oil paintings, pencil drawings, and sculptures. Their main style of exhibition is an intimate ‘Getting to know’ approach, encouraging local artists to reveal both their well-known works and previously unseen art. Inside The Doorway Gallery (Source: The Doorway Gallery) The Chimera Gallery 32 Oliver Plunkett St, Commons, Mullingar, Co. Westmeath, Ireland Opening times: closed Mondays, Tuesday – Saturday 12.00noon–6.00pm, and Sunday by appointment only Located on the historically named ‘Gas Lane’, now known as ‘Spoutwell Lane’, The Chimera Gallery in Mullingar was established by David O’Shea and Hazel Revington Cross in 2014, alongside The Purple Raven Gallery. The Chimera Gallery is a small gallery dedicated to showcasing what is unique about Irish art and supporting new up-and-comers in the business, most of whom are painters. Still in its infancy, having opened only six years ago, The Chimera Gallery is slowly but steadily building its collection. One of its leading exhibitions is French artist Nick Lighten, who is debuting his art in Ireland for the first time at The Chimera Gallery. Lighten’s art is strongly influenced by ‘street art and pop art’ and his career ‘for 20 years as a photographer, art director and motion designer’. Artist Kyle Barnes (Source: The Chimera Gallery) Previous articleBest Irish Artists to Stream Next articleWriters’ Worlds: Ireland’s Top Attractions for Literature Lovers The Amazing Game Of Thrones Tapestry – Full Tapestry Northern Ireland Connolly Cove - August 10, 2018 Full Game of Thrones Tapestry - AMAZING!! Check out this video of the Game of Thrones Tapestry in its full glory located at the Ulster... Clement Wilson Park, Newforge, Belfast, N.Ireland Northern Ireland ConnollyCove - July 17, 2017 Clement Wilson Park in Newforge Belfast is an impressively popular park due to its location near the centre of Belfast. It is in a... CS Lewis Square – Belfast – Chronicles of Narnia Belfast Narnia ConnollyCove - March 29, 2017 A corner of Narnia from Belfast's CS Lewis has been created on the Newtownards Road in Belfast with a £2.5million square dedicated to characters... On the Road to Galway -A Quick Stop Near Dromahair and Ballintogher On our recent trip to Galway/Connemara - as we crossed the border from County Leitrim to County Sligo - we took a break to... The Origins of the Celtic Tree of Life Ireland Connolly Cove - July 30, 2019 The Irish culture embraces a wide range of symbols that signify their beliefs and notions. While there are many of them, this time, we’re... Religious Community, Cairo, Egypt Religious Community, Cairo, Egypt - The old city of Cairo is the place where the three different religions are found through the historical sites... 24 Hours in Belfast: Experience the Best of Northern Ireland’s Capital City Belfast, the capital city of Northern Ireland, is a completely different place to the one that has been told in the history books. The... Sir Thomas and Lady Dixon Park-South Belfast, Northern Ireland ConnollyCove - July 17, 2017 Sir Thomas and Lady Dixon Park is one of the most popular parks within Belfast. It is situated in South Belfast covering a staggering... Binky’s – Coffee, Sandwiches and Cakes (Breakfast Review) Are you looking for a great breakfast lunch or amazing dessert – well then this is the place for you located In Dundonald Binkys... Where was Titanic Built? TITANIC QUARTER BELFAST-Harland & Wolff "Icebergs loomed up and fell astern and we never slackened. It was an anxious time with the Titanic's fateful experience very close in our... Grianan Of Aileach – County Donegal Beautiful Stone Fort-Ringfort Connolly Cove - February 24, 2017 The Hidden Gem of Grianan of Aileach Hidden away on the road outside of Letterkenny in County Donegal is the Grianan of Aileach. Perfectly placed...
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Who are the Convicts and what is roller derby? the convicts CCR was formed in 2009 by a group of women who had a passion to bring roller derby to Tasmania. We were the first roller derby club in Hobart, holding our first public event in 2010 in front of a crowd of over 1000 spectators. From that time, we have grown from strength to strength. In 2014 we became the first club in Tasmania and one of a handful in Australia to be an apprentice of the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association (WFTDA). We now have our full membership. The club is more than 100 members strong. We run programs for juniors, adults and recreational classes. Our teams include: Travel teams: Orange Thunder (A Team) Black Lightning (B Team) Home teams: The club is 100% owned and operated by its members who are all volunteers. We are made up of skaters, skating and non-skating officials and other volunteers who are all passionate about the sport of roller derby. While roller derby is a full contact sport for female teams, we encourage guys to join and actively skate to become referees, coaches and/or officials. All members are able to opt to participate in these important roles rather than actively compete as well. Regular skater intakes are held throughout the year to the Club’s Introduction to Roller Derby course. The current recruits – the Alpha Birds – are the 27th intake of skaters since the club’s inception. The Convicted Panthers are our group of dedicated officials (both skating and non-skating). The Convicted Panthers assist with a range of game-day roles including refereeing, score-keeping, penalty tracking and jam timing. Our Head Official, ShipWreckt runs regular training for officials, so contact us if you want to know more. We follow the WFTDA rules for flat track roller derby. Want more game stats? Visit the Flat Track Stats CCR page Want more WFTDA info? Visit the WFTDA rankings page Roller derby is one of the fastest growing sports in the world, with thousands of teams worldwide. It is a fast paced, full contact team sport played on quad skates on an oval ‘track’ which requires speed, strategy and athleticism. Referees control the game and enforce the rules to ensure a fair and safe game. So what is roller derby all about? Well, you’re in luck! We’ve put together a little info below to explain the history of roller derby. We’ve also provided the essentials of game play, so that you can better enjoy a game or ’bout’ at one of our upcoming events. We follow the WFTDA rule set, so if you’d like to dig deeper into the finer points of our game, then head on over to their rules section to get the low down. We’ve highlighted the basics here for you. To see video of the game in action, head on over to YouTube, pop in a search for roller derby and enjoy! If watching a game isn’t enough for you and you’d love to get your skates on or help out in some way, we’d love to welcome you! Head on over to our get involved info to learn more. The History of Roller derby first appeared in America in the 1940’s when it was played on a banked track largely for spectacle with set-up fights and tumbles and was telecast to millions across America. Today it has evolved into a fully-fledged sport with regional, state, national and international competitions and groups working to have it included into the Olympics in the future. The modern day version of the sport was originally played only by women but has now grown to include men and juniors. There are 2 types of roller derby – flat track and banked tracked. Flat track roller derby is played by all of the leagues in Australia and banked track is mostly restricted to the USA. This is in large part due to the ease of setting up a flat track – it can be done on any flat surface that is suitable for skating, such as skating rinks, basketball courts, parking lots, and even airplane hangars. The flat track version of the sport evolved in 2001 in the United States, and has quickly grown to encompass more than 400 leagues worldwide. There are presently about 150 leagues in the Pacific including Australia and New Zealand. This will be the area to explain Every Contribution Helps Click here to make a donation
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Take It Slow (Gotta Say Hey) Viewed: Over 150,000 times Uploaded On: 11/03/18 Description: Take It Slow (Gotta Say Hey) is a funky, fun alternative EDM song about life in the fast lane, a reminder to slow down, live in the moment and take it slow. The song and video are dedicated in loving memory of my Dad, Robert Raymo, who passed away in May of 2018. One of my Dad's favorite sayings from the 1970's was Take It Slow so I wanted to honor him with a fun song about enjoying every precious moment of our lives because my Dad always had a great sense of humor and he always enjoyed life to the fullest. The scene towards the end of the video of me standing in the lake in front of a giant piece of driftwood was shot in Cranberry Lake, NY. It is the lake my Dad lived on with my Stepmom Kathy for many years. The home my brothers and sister always spent our summers. My Dad will always live on in my heart. Take It Slow (Gotta Say Hey LYRICS) Viewed: Over 4,000 times December Rain Carol Of Love Viewed: Over 14,000 times Description: December Rain (Carol Of Love) is a classic ballad about unrequited love that is dedicated to anyone who has ever loved someone that didn't love them back. The song and video are released in loving memory of my Mom, whose maiden name was Carol Love, because she was always there for me through all my heartbreaks in life. I love you more Mom. One Love One World (We Are One) Viewed: 19,084 times Uploaded On: 01/06/16 @ 12:05 AM Description: A reggae pop anthem for equality and world peace. Please share this video on your social media pages. Together we can help make the world a better place for all of us. Be Myself (Anti-Bullying Anthem) Description: An alternative pop/rock anti-bullying anthem about embracing your individuality, giving you the courage to just be yourself, no matter what anyone else thinks. This song is dedicated to anyone who has ever been bullied, teased or made fun of. Be Myself Description: An inspirational anti-bullying anthem about embracing your individuality, giving you the courage to just be yourself. Dedicated to anyone who has ever been bullied, taunted or teased for being different. One Love One World (We Are One) Part 1 Official Description: We are all the same, we are one human race. An uplifting summer anthem electronic pop reggae song about equality, tolerance, anti-bullying, brotherhood, human rights, hope and peace. May we all live in a world of love without hate. Uploaded On: 10/08/08 @ 12:05 PM Description: A song about life in the fast lane. A reminder to 'Chill, kick back and take it slow!' Description: Live version of Take It Slow recorded at the Whiskey A Go Go! Craymo © 2020
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Crown Castle Announces Certain Contractual Terms Related to Sprint and T-Mobile HOUSTON , Dec. 16, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE:CCI) today announced certain contractual terms in light of press reports regarding a potential acquisition by Sprint Corporation ("Sprint") of T-Mobile US, Inc. ("T-Mobile"). Crown Castle Announces Fourth Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call Details HOUSTON , Jan. 13, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) ("Crown Castle") plans to release its fourth quarter 2020 results on Wednesday, January 27, 2021 , after the market closes. In conjunction with the release, Crown Castle has scheduled a conference call for... Crown Castle to Present at the Citi 2021 Global Technology, Media and Telecom West Conference HOUSTON , Dec. 29, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) ("Crown Castle") announced today that Dan Schlanger , Crown Castle’s Chief Financial Officer, is scheduled to present on Thursday, January 7, 2021 at 12:00 p.m. Eastern Time at the Citi 2021 Global Technol... Crown Castle Releases 2019 Corporate Sustainability Report HOUSTON , Dec. 18, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) (“Crown Castle”) announced today the release of its 2019 Corporate Sustainability Report (“CSR”). The CSR is posted in the “Investors” section of Crown Castle’s website at http://investor.crowncastle.com .... Crown Castle Appoints Kevin A. Stephens to its Board of Directors HOUSTON , Dec. 01, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) (“Crown Castle”) today announced that, as part of its previously announced Board transition plan, its Board of Directors has appointed Kevin A. Stephens as a director, effective immediately, and has determ... Crown Castle to Present at the UBS Global TMT Virtual Conference HOUSTON , Nov. 25, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) ("Crown Castle") announced today that Dan Schlanger , Crown Castle’s Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer is scheduled to present on Tuesday, December 8, 2020 at 11:10 a.m. Crown Castle to Present at the Barclays Global TMT Conference HOUSTON , Nov. 25, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Crown Castle International Corp. (NYSE: CCI) ("Crown Castle") announced today that Dan Schlanger , Crown Castle’s Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer is scheduled to present on Wednesday, December 9, 2020 at 1:30 p.m.
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CITGO Petroleum Announces Proposed Private Offering of $750 |Jun 2| 11 min read HOUSTON, June 2, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- CITGO Petroleum Corporation (the "Company") today announced that it has commenced a private offering exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act"), of $750 million aggregate principal amount of senior secured notes due 2025 (the "notes"). The notes offering is subject to market and other conditions, and there is no assurance that the offering will be completed or, if completed, as to the terms on which it will be completed. The Company intends to use the net proceeds from the sale of the notes to repay all $614 million outstanding under the Company's term loan B due 2021 and accrued and unpaid interest under the term loan B due 2021, pay all fees and expenses in connection with the offering, and for working capital and general corporate purposes. This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy the notes, nor will there be any sale of the notes in any state or other jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful. The offer and sale of the notes have not been and will not be registered under the Securities Act, or the securities laws of any other jurisdiction, and may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an applicable exemption from registration requirements. The notes are being offered only to qualified institutional buyers under Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions in compliance with Regulation S under the Securities Act. About CITGO Petroleum Corporation Headquartered in Houston, Texas, CITGO Petroleum Corporation owns and operates three large-scale, highly complex refineries, with a combined crude capacity of approximately 769,000 barrels-per-day, located in Corpus Christi, Texas; Lake Charles, Louisiana; and Lemont, Illinois, has ownership/equity interest in 41 active refined product storage and transfer terminals, and has access to over 120 third-party and related party terminals through exchange, terminaling and similar arrangements. Certain information included in this release may be deemed to be "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements relate to, among other things, expectations regarding the proposed notes offering and the use of proceeds therefrom. These statements also relate to our industry, business strategy, goals and expectations concerning our market position and future operations. We have used the words "anticipate," "believe," "could," "estimate," "expect," "intend," "may," "plan," "predict," "project," "will," "would" and similar terms and phrases to identify forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this release. Any forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual events, developments and business decisions to differ materially from those contemplated by these forward-looking statements. These statements are based on assumptions and assessments made by our management in light of their experience and their perception of historical trends, current conditions (including current market conditions), expected future developments and other factors they believe to be appropriate. Although we believe the assumptions upon which these forward-looking statements are based are reasonable, any of these assumptions could prove to be inaccurate, and the forward-looking statements based on these assumptions could be incorrect. In addition, our business and operations involve numerous risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, which could result in our expectations not being realized or could otherwise materially affect our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows. We caution readers that these forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from the results that are projected, expressed or implied. These risks and uncertainties include, among others, risks related to the proposed notes offering, including the effect of the debt markets on the proposed notes offering, our ability to finalize definitive documentation with respect to the proposed notes offering and our ability to satisfy the closing conditions to the proposed notes offering, as well as general economic activity, developments in international and domestic petroleum markets, and refinery turnarounds and operations. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this release are made only as of the date of this release. We disclaim any duty to update any forward-looking statements. View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/citgo-petroleum-announces-proposed-private-offering-of-750-million-of-senior-secured-notes-301069312.html SOURCE CITGO Corporation CSO Magazine Sustainability Magazine is a ‘Digital Community’ for the global sustainability space that connects the world’s most sustainable brands & projects and their most senior executives with the latest trends as the sustainability market pivots towards technology and digital transformation.
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Wise-Tenure-Track-Position-Stacey-Jeffery Stacey Jeffery of CWI WISE tenure track position for Stacey Jeffery Four women have been given a position in the first round of the NWO Women In Science Excel (WISE) programme, including Stacey Jeffery from CWI. https://www.cwi.nl/news/2017/wise-tenure-track-position-stacey-jeffery/default-page https://www.cwi.nl/news/2017/wise-tenure-track-position-stacey-jeffery/default-page WISE tenure track position for Stacey Jeffery Four women have been given a position in the first round of the NWO Women In Science Excel (WISE) programme, including Stacey Jeffery from CWI. Four women have been given a position in the first round of the NWO Women In Science Excel (WISE) programme, including Stacey Jeffery from CWI. The others are Elisabeth Adams (ASTRON), Barbora Hola (NSCR) and Anja Spang (NIOZ). The tenure track programme provides these talented female scientists with the opportunity to continue or develop their own research group and ultimately advance to a top position at the institute in question. Quantum algorithms CWI researcher Stacey Jeffery studied computer science at the University of Waterloo, Canada and was a postdoc researcher at Caltech, USA. She is interested in quantum cryptography and in quantum algorithms for the near future. Jeffery explains: "We do not only want to have algorithms for perfect quantum computers in, say, 30 years, but also want to use quantum computers in maybe 5-10 years". She is also interested in new cryptographic problems arising from quantum computers: "When we have quantum computers, they might be expensive and therefore be owned by companies who do the computations for you. I’m interested in the case that you don’t want to reveal your data and also want the owner of the quantum computers to prove that they did the correct computation". Jeffery has been working at the Algorithms and Complexity research group at CWI in Amsterdam since 1 January 2017. Her research will also be part of QuSoft, the Dutch research centre for quantum software. Jeffery: "I’m very glad to get this WISE position. It’s nice to have a long-term perspective for my research." The WISE tenure trackers were selected from a pool of 106 applicants. "It’s an impressive number and shows once again that there's more than enough female talent out there,’" says professor Vinod Subramaniam, rector of VU Amsterdam and independent chair of the selection committee. The WISE programme aims to improve the gender balance among NWO’s own scientific staff. WISE was launched in June 2016 and will provide twenty positions in the coming five years at NWO research institutes, including ARCNL, the Advanced Research Center for Nanolithography. The evaluation committee, consisting of distinguished and international scientists is very enthusiastic about the NWO initiative. "With these four tenure trackers in this first round, we have achieved the programme's aim of attracting talent to the Netherlands and keeping talented scientists here and providing them with opportunities. WISE is thus make a real difference in attracting and promoting the advancement of top female researchers," says Subramaniam. Highly talented researchers Each of the WISE tenure trackers has an impressive international career. The NWO website mentions: "Dr. Jeffery is receiving a position at CWI for her clear research plan on the use of quantum computers in terms of computation and data security, among other reasons, as well as her extensive academic record". The tenure trackers will start their work at the institute of their choice this year, which coincides nicely with the 'Westerdijk Year', named after the first female professor in the Netherlands, during which various organisations, including NWO, will focus on the position of women in science. With a focus on guidance and the right facilities, the programme will provide talented international and national researchers with a great career path towards a tenured position. The tenure track positions target female researchers who have started their careers and obtained their PhD at least three years ago. They will have to submit a research proposal and indicate at which NWO institute they would like to work. Successful candidates will be offered a five-year tenure track position at the institute of their choice. Following a successful tenure track, researchers fellows will receive a tenured position at the institute of their choice. www.nwo.nl/wise Text: NWO and CWI. Picture: Stacey Jeffery. Source: S. Jeffery. Algorithms & Complexity
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1 DEAD, 3 CRITICAL IN I-64 ACCIDENT David MacaulayDaily Press One person was killed and three were in critical condition Thursday night after a sport utility vehicle overturned on Interstate 64 in Newport News. The single-vehicle accident occurred at 7:52 p.m. westbound on the interstate just before the 255 exit onto Jefferson Avenue, state police spokeswoman Sgt. Michelle Cotten said. She said the 2004 Ford Explorer turned over "several times" on the interstate. The SUV contained seven people and a dog. All of them were ejected. One passenger died at the scene. Three others were taken to a local hospital in critical condition. Cotten said two other passengers received serious injuries. One passenger walked away with minor injuries. "We do not know the extent of the injuries," Cotten said. She said the cause of the accident was unknown. Emergency workers had been trying to cope with getting the seriously injured passengers off the road and to local hospitals. Cotten said the dog was also injured and taken to a veterinary hospital. The Virginia Department of Transportation announced the closure of exits 255 A and B onto Jefferson Avenue just after 8 p.m. Cotten said the exit ramps had been "closed down until further notice." Drivers leaving the interstate were being advised to use the 250 exit at Fort Eustis.
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Harding doctor accused of failing to pay millions in taxes A plastic surgeon from Harding is accused of failing to pay about $2.7 million in taxes and allegedly using the money to buy jewelry, art, and designer apparel. David Evdokimow, 54, whose practice is in Basking Ridge, was charged with one count of conspiring to defraud the United States, four counts of personal income tax evasion and three counts of corporate tax evasion. He appeared in court Thursday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Joseph A. Dickson in Newark federal court. Evdokimow conducted his medical practice through a corporate entity known as De'Omilia Plastic Surgery and allegedly paid his personal expenses directly from De'Omilia's corporate bank accounts while falsely attributing these expenses to De'Omilia's corporate operations, according to a press release from the office of U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman. By falsely characterizing personal expenses as corporate expenses, Evdokimow allegedly received an additional $3,123,721 in personal income from the De'Omilia accounts, which he failed to report to the IRS on his federal income tax returns. Evdokimow had other conspirators form shell corporations and list themselves as sole signatories in order to conceal any connection with Evdokimow. The conspirators made stamps with their signatures and gave them to Evdokimow so that he had full access to the shell corporations' bank accounts, the release said. The names of the conspirators were not released. He allegedly funneled and diverted millions of dollars in De'Omilia income into the bank accounts of the shell corporations without reporting it to the IRS on his federal income tax returns. Evdokimow used the shell corporation bank accounts to pay for $2,407,165 in personal expenses including designer apparel, jewelry, vacations, artwork, and multiple residences, the release said. Evdokimow also opened bank accounts at several banks and then used these accounts to cash checks received directly from patients for professional medical services. Evdokimow cashed out $339,465 in income from patients, which he failed to report on his federal income tax returns, the release said. Evdokimow's attorney, James Kridel, said Friday that his client was the victim of an unscrupulous fake accountant — who also is being prosecuted and may be used as a witness against Evdokimow. Once he discovered what was wrong, Evdokimow paid the government the taxes that he owed, his lawyer said. Evdokimow and his company sued his former accountant in 2012 in U.S. District Court. The lawsuit says Ginger Sweeton, a Tennessee resident, misrepresented herself as an accountant and gave Evdokimow bad advice, which led him to run afoul of the IRS. The lawsuit has been placed on hold because Sweeton accepted a plea deal from the U.S. Attorney's Office, according to court records. The seven substantive counts of tax evasion charge Evdokimow with attempting to avoid paying taxes on $7,305,994 in income, causing a loss to the government of $1,580,155. Three additional years of income – which are included in the conspiracy count, but could not be charged as substantive counts because the statute of limitations has expired – bring the total amount on which he allegedly attempted to avoid paying taxes to $10,800,174, costing the United States a total of $2,760,676 in tax revenue. Each of the counts with which Evdokimow is charged carries a maximum potential penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
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Iowa Caucus race still unsettled with 2 weeks to go David Redlawsk About this series: The Iowa Caucuses, which are the first in the country, play an outsize role in selecting the next president. University of Delaware professor David Redlawsk, an expert in the caucuses, is spending several months observing and studying them this year — he is sharing his observations with Delaware Online readers. He also tweets regularly @DavidRedlawsk. With about two weeks to go until the Iowa Caucuses on Feb. 3, I sometimes feel like Iowa is a parallel universe. There is an intense presidential campaign going on here, with at least one Democratic candidate in the state nearly every day, and more than one on most days. There is even an occasional Republican. But in Washington, D.C, and in the national media, it is the impeachment of President Donald Trump that is attracting most of the attention. Here in Iowa, not so much. In fact, it has been rare that an Iowan actually asks about impeachment in town hall Q&A sessions. It’s about to get more bizarre. Beginning Tuesday, Jan. 21, we will get a historically unique test of whether candidate appearances in Iowa actually matter. Why? Because three of the top five candidates — plus Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet — are about to be stuck sitting at their Senate desks six days a week as Trump’s impeachment trial begins. The theory is that candidates need to meet voters and give them their closing arguments in the next two weeks. Pete Buttigieg and Joe Biden will be able to do that seven days a week. Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders, and Elizabeth Warren will be stuck in D.C., except for the next two Sundays, when I presume they will make fast trips to Iowa. So where are we with just two weeks to go? It depends on whose poll you read. The Iowa Poll, sponsored by CNN and the Des Moines Register, is considered the gold standard. Their results, released on Jan. 10, resulted in screaming headlines: Sanders has taken the lead! But just three days later, the Monmouth Poll came out. Monmouth is also considered a very good poll. And what did it say? The CNN/Register Poll put Joe Biden at 15%, last among the top four. Monmouth said wait a minute, Biden is at 24%, at the top, with a 6-point lead over Bernie! The answer is actually kind of simple. The top four candidates remain closely bunched together. How they are doing partly depends on when people are asked, partly on random variations that happen in polls, and party how the pollster decides to estimate voter turnout. The Register tweeted a graph of all of its polling; we can see candidates rising and falling, but for the most part the differences among the top four in Iowa are within margins of error, meaning we can’t really say with certainly that one or the other is leading. We wait for the caucuses themselves, when the votes will actually be cast and the results reported. Then we will know what voters are really thinking. It may be also worth knowing Iowans are well known for making late decisions, especially when there are many choices. It is likely that as many as 30% won’t make up their minds until the last week; some will even wait for Caucus night. Caucus voters are reported, but it takes research to learn what the vote actually represents. Part of my time in Iowa has included preparing a Caucus night survey, to be distributed in every precinct in the stay — nearly 1,680 of them. One voter in each will be randomly asked to fill it out. When I get the results back, I will have a detailed picture of what motivated their year’s Caucus vote. We did the same in 2016 and back in 2008; the 2008 results fed into the book I and two colleagues wrote about Iowa, called Why Iowa? We used these data to make the case that Iowa Caucusgoers are ideologically similar to members of their parties nationally, and thus, at least on policy and issues, represent their parties well. More:Report from Iowa: How the Democrats' Caucus campaign looks on the ground as 2020 closes Candidates in Iowa A couple things to note as we get close to the first votes of 2020. One is that Biden’s apparent swoon in October and November was overstated. Anyone writing him off at that point was just wrong. Yes, his numbers decline in Iowa over time, but that’s because before the campaign really started, he and Sanders were by far the best known, and early polls are more about name recognition than anything else. Second, candidates have spent a lot of time in Iowa, and it is not always clear what they get from it. Here’s an interesting way to think about it, using the Des Moines Register candidate tracker looking at total visits to Iowa through Jan. 11, 2020 and two polling numbers: The Iowa Poll and the average from 538.com. John Delaney has all but lived in Iowa for the past two years. The result? Literally nothing. The Iowa Poll put him at 0%, and only an occasional other poll has given him any support at all. Andrew Yang is also not getting the love we might expect if simply being in Iowa drives votes. And among those who have dropped out, Booker, Castro, and Bullock were all in the state more than three of the four frontrunners. It’s clear that simply being in Iowa is not enough. But not being in Iowa is also not likely to pay off all that well either. Finally, where the vote comes on Feb. 3, the 15% threshold matters. That is, unless a candidate gets at least 15% of the vote in a precinct, he or she wins no delegates at all. Historically, that meant they were reported as getting no votes either, because the Democrats never reported the actual vote, only the delegate counts. But this time we will know a lot more, since the Democrats will report the actual vote totals as well as delegates. So we will see how well candidates do even if they fail to meet the 15% threshold. That may have some effect on media reports of what happens in Iowa. The crowds are still coming Crowds continue to come to candidate events, no matter what. It’s cold and snowy. And we often have to stand in line outside, waiting for doors to open for candidate events. Yet Iowans continue to show up in droves. Case in point. There was a HUGE Yang rally Jan. 13 at Drake University, the night before the Democratic debate, which happened to be his birthday. There is no polling that shows Andrew Yang anywhere close to the top. And he did not qualify for the debate stage. And yet, well over 600 people showed up to hear him talk about the freedom dividend, robot trucks, and how data is the new oil, as he puts it. More:Biden didn't win the New York Times endorsement, but he went viral for this moment Quick thought about the Bernie/Elizabeth debate dustup Assessments of the Jan. 14 debate have been done to death. So I won’t do one. I watched the debate at Drake University with about 250 or so Amy Klobuchar supporters. In the days before the debate the media began reporting that Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders had a non-aggression agreement that was breaking down. First came a report that the Sanders campaign had provided a script to volunteers that attacked Warren. I wasn’t particularly surprised; the campaign in general has been less negative than I expected. We’re at the final weeks, and if you don’t win, you lose. So the incentive is there to attack one’s rivals. There were a few attacks here and there in various debates and in other contexts, but it’s been otherwise pretty positive so far. Until this. Then the story appeared that Sanders had told Warren in a meeting that a woman could not win the presidency in 2020. Sanders denied he said it, Warren reported that he did say something along those lines. CNN made it a focus of its coverage ahead of the Jan. 14 debate. That night, a moderator asked Sanders why he said it, presuming he did, rather than asking if he said it. An exchange between Sanders and Warren ensued, which Warren got the better of, at least according to the Amy Klobuchar fans I was watching the debate with. I’m pretty sure this campaign will get more negative as it goes on, but I’m not overly concerned. Negativity has its place, as my co-author Kyle Mattes and I detail in our book, "The Positive Case for Negative Campaigning." Cory Booker is out. And so is Julian Castro Cory Booker, Julian Castro, and Marianne Williamson all dropped their presidential bids in January. Booker kept hoping for a breakthrough, but the Des Moines Register/CNN poll was clear evidence it wasn’t going to happen. Apparently we are not looking for a “happy warrior” bringing the politics of hope this cycle. I saw Booker in North Liberty, Iowa, just before he dropped out. His stump speech was always about where we could be as a country, even though we’re not there. And it was explicitly less about issues — he routinely said go look them up on his website — and more about a vision of love for one another. You cannot love America if you do not love all of its people, was a frequent refrain. Another earlier tweet about Booker for old time’s sake. He was the original selfie candidate, not Elizabeth Warren, and in his case he actually takes the selfies (a Warren staffer does hers; they’re not really selfies.) Julian Castro had spent the last few weeks of his campaign slamming the Iowa Caucuses for a number of reasons, especially issues of accessibility — there are no absentee ballots — and the fact that Iowa is much less racially diverse than many states or the country as a whole. Castro argued that because of this Iowa is not where the campaigns should start. To his credit, he spoke directly to Iowans about this in December. But, oddly enough, the attacks on Iowa did not make Castro any more popular here. A few weeks later he was out of the race. Go figure. But he came back quickly, now in support of Elizabeth Warren, appearing at a number of her events. And there are some Republicans running Two GOP candidates are running against Donald Trump. One is former Illinois Congressman Joe Walsh. The other is former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld. Neither has been in Iowa much, but I did manage to catch Weld in Newton, the former home of Maytag Corporation, which left taking thousands of manufacturing jobs with it. Weld stopped to have lunch at a local café, which I was told is actually a Democratic hangout. There was no one really waiting for him, except one local resident and a local newspaper reporter who had an interview scheduled. Weld arrived with his wife, and a woman from Alaska also sat down at the table we were at. When we were done eating and the reporter was done with his questions, his wife took a picture of us and Weld wandered over to another table and sat for a few minutes. Then he was out the door to something else. I also tried to see Joe Walsh at an event in Dubuque, but the weather conspired against me. So it’s almost time for the voters to do their thing, with just over two weeks to go as I write this. I expect there will be many more events to cover, although the senators in the race will have to run back to Iowa either at night or on Sundays while tied up with the impeachment trial. I am sure they will do so, and I will try to be there as well. I’ll keep tweeting @DavidRedlawsk if you want to watch what happens as I see it.
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China has over 100 more supercomputers than US, Top500 says But the two most powerful supercomputers are in the US. Corinne Reichert June 18, 2019 4:20 p.m. PT IBM owns the world's two fastest supercomputers in the world. Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images China is home to 219 of the world's supercomputers while the US houses 116, the latest report from Top500 says. But the two highest-powered supercomputers are still Summit and Sierra, owned by IBM in the US. Supercomputers, massive computing machines, are used for power-intensive programs like quantum physics, forecasting global climate change effects, designing engines and aircraft, reconstructing the history of the universe and examining whether old nuclear weapons could still explode. Only petaflop systems made the list for the first time ever, Top500, which ranks the highest-performing computer systems in the world twice a year, said. "The total aggregate performance of all 500 system has now risen to 1.56 Exaflops," Top500 said. China took the third and fourth most powerful supercomputer spots, with Sunway TaihuLight and Tianhe-2A (Milky Way-2A). They were developed by China's National Research Center of Parallel Computer Engineering & Technology, and China's National University of Defense Technology, respectively. Another US supercomputer took out the fifth spot, with Dell's Frontera in Texas becoming the newest member of the global top 10. Switzerland, Japan and Germany also house supercomputers ranked in the top 10. There are 29 of the top 500 supercomputers in Japan, 19 in France, 18 in the UK, 14 in Germany, 13 in Ireland and Netherlands, eight in Canada and five in Singapore. Intel now provides 96% of all supercomputers with processors, Top 500 said. In terms of "green" supercomputers, Japan's Shoubu system B was ranked the most power efficient. 25 best battery life laptops The fastest ever supercomputer is expected to come to the US in 2021 in the form of a new entrant called Frontier, a $600 million machine with Cray and AMD technology. Frontier should be able to perform 1.5 quintillion calculations per second, a level called 1.5 exaflops and enough to claim the performance crown, the US Energy Department announced in May. Since then, Hewlett Packard Enterprise announced it would acquire Cray and consolidate their supercomputer power. Cray is responsible for 39 supercomputers on the list, while HPE has 40. Combined, they would outnumber second-placed maker Inspur, which has 71 supercomputers on the list, but not first-placed Lenovo, which has the majority by far at 173. On Monday, Nvidia also unveiled the DGX SuperPOD supercomputer, which will be the 22nd fastest in the world. It will be used to train the algorithms and neural networks used for autonomous vehicle development. Now playing: Watch this: We landed on the moon with NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine Computers Sci-Tech Supercomputers Dell HP Intel Discuss: China has over 100 more supercomputers than US, Top500 says
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James Holmes murder trial: Case goes to the jury By Ana Cabrera, Greg Botelho and Steve Almasy, CNN Updated 11:37 AM EDT, Sat July 25, 2015 The public gets its first glimpse of James Holmes, then 24, the suspect in the Colorado theater shooting during his initial court appearance July 23, 2012. With his hair dyed reddish-orange, Holmes, here with public defender Tamara Brady, showed little emotion. He is accused of opening fire in a movie theater July 20, 2012, in Aurora, Colorado, killing 12 people and wounding 70. Holmes faces 166 counts, almost all alleging murder or attempted murder. He has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. More photos: Mourning the victims of the Colorado theater massacre PHOTO: RJ Sangosti-Pool/Getty Images Colorado movie theater shooting Prosecutor says James Holmes "needs to be held accountable for what he did" Defense says Holmes was psychotic when he killed 12 people and wounded 70 Closing arguments in the lengthy murder trial wrapped up Tuesday evening The facts of that horrible night in July 2012 are not in debate. James Holmes went to an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater and gunned down 12 people. Scores more were wounded or injured. But was he psychotic, unable to comprehend the consequences of his actions? Arapahoe County District Attorney George Brauchler and defense attorney Dan King disagree. During closing arguments in Holmes’ trial Tuesday, Brauchler painted a picture of a villain who meticulously and carefully planned a mass murder. “Look at the evidence then hold this man accountable,” Brauchler said as he finished his remarks. “Reject this claim that he didn’t know right from wrong when he murdered those people and tried to kill the others. … That guy was sane beyond a reasonable doubt, and he needs to be held accountable for what he did.” King blamed the shootings on a longstanding mental illness. “The evidence is clear, that he could not control his thoughts, that he could not control his actions, and he could not control his perceptions,” the defense attorney said. King said psychosis had obscured Holmes’ ability to think about things the way a rational person does. “Only the mental illness caused this to happen and nothing else,” he said. The two attorneys spoke to the jurors for almost the entire allotted two hours each. Judge Carlos Samour then named from the pool of 19 people who have sat through the lengthy trial the 12 jurors who will begin deliberating the case Wednesday. Their decision on 165 charges will come about six months after jury selection began and more than 11 weeks after the trial’s start. Prosecutors alone called more than 200 witnesses to the stand, among them investigators, students who knew Holmes and his ex-girlfriend. By virtue of his pleading not guilty by reason of insanity, the now 27-year-old Holmes – who didn’t testify – has never denied he was behind the killing. But given his mental state, his lawyers argue that he should not be found culpable. Who commits mass shootings? Packed courtroom There were no empty seats in the courtroom. Victim Micayla Medek’s grandmother began weeping when her granddaughter’s name was read aloud in court along with all 12 victims who were killed and the 70 names of the wounded. It was the most emotional part of the jury instructions for those in court. Survivors in court included Caleb Medley and Joshua Nolan. James Holmes’ parents were there. The grandparents of Veronica Moser-Sullivan, a 6-year-old who was killed that night, also were there. They told CNN the tragedy has weighed heavily on them for three years. They said they keep on thinking about the “what ifs?,” especially: What if Veronica hadn’t gone to the movie that night? In just minutes, 12 died Having bought a ticket 12 days earlier, Holmes on July 19, 2012, walked into the theater No. 9 screening of “The Dark Night Rises” like other patrons. He then walked out through a rear door, which he left propped open. Just after midnight, some 18 minutes after the movie began, he returned wearing a ballistic helmet, a gas mask, black gloves and protective gear for his legs, throat and groin. Cynthia Davis, center, visits the roadside memorial set up for victims of the Colorado shooting massacre across the street from the Century 16 movie theater on Monday, July 30, 2012, in Aurora, Colorado. Twelve people were killed in the theater early July 20, 2012, during a screening of "The Dark Knight Rises." Suspect James Holmes was taken into custody shortly after the attack. More photos: Colorado movie theater shooting Colorado massacre: Mourning the victims A tear gas canister exploded in the theater, then gunfire erupted from an AR-15 rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun and at least one .40 caliber handgun. The real-life horror story ended with Holmes’ arrest outside the theater about seven minutes after the first 911 calls were made to police. But it wasn’t in time to save the lives of Jonathan Blunk, Alexander Boik, Jesse Childress, Gordon Cowden, Jessica Ghawi, John Thomas Larimer, Matthew McQuinn, Alex Sullivan, Alexander Teves, Rebecca Ann Wingo, Medek, and the youngest victim, Moser-Sullivan. Who was James Holmes? Prosecutors painted a picture of a once-promising neuroscience student who knew exactly what he was doing, both carrying out the attack and rigging his apartment with makeshift explosives ahead of authorities’ arrival. “Nothing was random,” said FBI Special Agent Christopher Rigopoulos, who was part of the evidence collection team who saw how Holmes’ apartment contained pickle jars filled with napalm and bullets linked together, plastic soda bottles filled with gasoline and other dangerous concoctions. Those who spent time with Holmes as a PhD student at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora described him as quiet and socially awkward, but seemingly not “detached from reality.” Mother: ‘Mentally ill … need treatment, not execution’ If the jurors decide to convict Holmes on multiple murder charges, the next question would be what price he’ll pay. Inside the mind of James Holmes In 2013, the prosecution signaled it would seek the death penalty. “It is my determination and my intention that in this case, for James Eagan Holmes, justice is death,” Brauchler said then. Holmes’ lawyers have argued that he wasn’t in his right mind at the time of the shootings. And his parents, Robert and Arlene Holmes, haven’t spoken publicly, but they have written two open letters and published a prayer book detailing the family’s internal struggle and pleading for their son’s life. Wrote Arlene Holmes, “Severely mentally ill people need treatment, not execution.” CNN’s Ana Cabrera reported from Centennial, Colorado, and Greg Botelho and Steve Almasy reported and wrote from Atlanta. CNN’s Michael Martinez and Sara Weisfeldt contributed to this report.
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Darrow Klein Irving Berlin’s WHITE CHRISTMAS Opens Tonight at The Arvada Center The Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities will open Irving Berlin‘s White Christmas directed by Gavin Mayer tonight, November 24 at 7:30 p.m. The musical will run through December 23 in the Main Stage Theatre. Previews are November 20 – 22 at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Performances are Tuesday through Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday at 1:00 p.m., Saturday and Sunday at 2:00 p.m. Please note: There will not be a performance on Thursday, November 26 due to the Thanksgiving holiday. The performance has been moved to Sunday, November 29 at 7:30 p.m. Additional performances have been added December 20 at 7:30 p.m., December 22 and 23 at 1:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Talkbacks will be offered Friday, December 4 after the 7:30 p.m. performance and Wednesday, December 9 after the 1:00 p.m. performance. Ticket prices start at $53. To purchase tickets and for additional information go to arvadacenter.org/on-stage/irving-berlins-white-christmas-2015 or call 720-898-7200. 50% off tickets for children under 12 are available by calling the box office and are not available online. The Arvada Center is located at 6901 Wadsworth Blvd. and provides free parking for all its patrons. For general information go to www.arvadacenter.org Spotlight Theatre’s TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD to Run 10/10-11/7 Review: The Diary of Anne Frank a Triumphant Tearjerker at Arvada Center Arvada’ Center’s ‘White Christmas’ a wonderful production Teen performers raise $13,000 for Denver Actors Fund Related Press/News It’s 1935, and racial tensions are high in Maycomb, Alabama. Nonetheless, young Jean Louise Finch — or Scout, as she is fondly called — manages to live Almost everyone knows the story of Anne Frank, the young Jewish girl who hid from the Nazis with her family in the secret annex of a Harriet Hunter Ford “Irving Berlin’s White Christmas” is “must-see” theater at The Arvada Center. Directed by Gavin Mayer, the musical plays through Dec. 2 in Young people under 18 have now raised $35,000 for the grassroots nonprofit that serves local artists Watch the announcement as it happened on Facebook Live Visitors: 47 Today: 1 Total: 15982 If you tremble with indignation at every injustice then you are a comrade of mine.
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Grand Theft Auto IV GTA What does the American Dream mean today? For Niko Bellic, fresh off the boat from Europe, it is the hope he can escape his past. For his cousin, Roman, it is the vision that together they can find fortune in Liberty City, gateway to the land of opportunity. As they slip into debt and are dragged into a criminal underworld by a series of shysters, thieves and sociopaths, they discover that the reality is very different from the dream in a city that worships money and status, and is heaven for those who have them and a living nightmare for those who don’t. Beginning with the 1997 release of the original Grand Theft Auto, the GTA series has been one of the most prolific, controversial and down right entertaining franchises in video games history. This pedigree of success guarantees that the highly anticipated eleventh game in the series, Grand Theft Auto IV, will garner at least as much attention if not more. Grand Theft Auto IV is a brand new adventure in the GTA universe following the experiences of Nikolai ""Niko"" Bellic, a new immigrant from an undisclosed eastern European country whose troubled past and the persuasion of his cousin Roman have brought him to the fictional Liberty City. Unfortunately, Niko’s search for the American Dream and a much needed fresh start, hits an immediate snag when the rags to riches story Roman spun to pique Niko's interest is exposed as not only a complete fabrication, but a ploy to enlist Niko’s well-known skills as a tough guy against the ample list of enemies clamoring for Roman’s debt-ridden blood. Because Roman is the only person Niko knows in Liberty City he begrudgingly accepts his role as Roman’s protector despite the deception. But as time goes on Niko comes into his own, and his experience on the wrong side of the tracks proves more valuable than he could have ever imagined as he fights for survival and later supremacy on the crime ridden streets of Liberty City. Game Environments Based on several of the boroughs of New York City and parts of New Jersey, Liberty City, familiar to players of previous games in the series, has been entirely redesigned for GTA IV. Players can expect visible detail down to the weeds growing in the cracks in the sidewalk, cars and buildings of visibly different ages and a much greater level if verticality in the buildings and bridges that they are able to explore as Niko moves through the city streets. In addition, pedestrians in GTA IV are much more realistic. No longer simply moving cardboard cutouts, these NPCs are intelligent, modern, human representations that laugh, cry, eat, drink, use cell phones and ATMs, and talking amongst themselves regardless of Niko’s interaction with them. Historically GTA games have focused heavily on mission-based play, requiring successful completion of fixed tasks in order for players to progress through the game, but this has changed to a great extent in GTA IV. Players will experience an entirely new and exciting emphasis centered on the blending of on-mission and off-mission play, resulting not only in an increased sense of realism, but more interesting and unrestricted gameplay. Aside from the car jacking and a detailed city environment here are the new features for GTA IV: Improved combat system - Now you can use cover and also a target lock system, which allows you to take out targets with greater ease and accuracy. Plus, you can engage in some hand-to-hand combat if you can't get your hands on a piece quick enough. Cell phone - Not just for basic phone calls anymore. Use your in-game cell phone to receive missions via SMS, snap photos. Free time - In between missions you can take advantage of ""me"" time. There are gentleman's clubs, comedy clubs, bowling alleys, and bars, which all house unique activities. Take a break from the storyline - A variety of side missions allow you to help run a car service, ""borrow"" cop cars, assassinate targets, help solve problems for those on the street, or take to the air with stunt jumps that are scattered all over the city. Control your own fate - Throughout the game choice moments will arrive causing you to make a decision that will affect relationships and money. Give Niko a rest and create your own multiplayer ""hero."" GTA has added multiplayer modes allowing you to take your creation out to play online in competitive, co-op, and free form modes. Competitive mode has you fighting against the cops, jacking cars, or racing to finish odd jobs. Co-op challenges you and your friends with various tasks including Hangman's NOOSE where you are responsible for escorting a wanted kingpin to a safe extraction point. Freeform lets you and 15 others lose on Liberty City. Use this mode to hit up the bar and play virtual darts versus each other or head out to the streets and set up your own drag races. If you can dream it, you can do it in Freeform mode. Most excitingly, Grand Theft Auto IV for the PC offers players the chance to become the Cecil B. Demille of Liberty City via the all new Video Editor feature. Capture in-game footage (whether from single-player or multiplayer gameplay) and make real-time edits using a built-in suite of tools that can change the camera angle, audio, speed and depth-of-field or apply special effects to alter colours and add filters. Add in-game music, custom titling and transitions to polish off your masterpiece.
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People Jan 15th 2021 - 6pm Community remembers longtime Mesabi Daily News publisher History Nov 10th 2020 - 11am 45 years after sinking, last communications from Edmund Fitzgerald still haunt Transportation Jan 15th 2021 - 8am Put to bed: Winter layup brings 4 ships to port of Duluth-Superior Reader's View: Jan. 6 a black day in the Northland Twins’ Rocco Baldelli prepares for 162-game season but uncertainty reigns Baldelli and the Twins are preparing for a full season beginning April 1 in Milwaukee, all while knowing that might not happen. Written By: Betsy Helfand / St. Paul Pioneer Press | Dec 16th 2020 - 5pm. Minnesota Twins manager Rocco Baldelli looks during an Aug. 19 game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Target Field. Baldelli didn’t know it at the time on Thursday when his team voted against playing, but when the Twins showed up to the field on Friday, Aug. 28, they were all set to wear the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson, who broke MLB’s color barrier back in 1947. David Berding / USA TODAY Sports In less than two months, Twins pitchers and catchers are scheduled to report to Fort Myers, Fla., with the dawn of the new season and all its possibilities in front of them. But if manager Rocco Baldelli has learned anything from 2020, it’s to not get too attached to anything. The 2020 baseball season, which was 60 games and began in late July, required a lot of flexibility and adapting on the go from all involved. And while things are progressing in the right direction as COVID-19 vaccinations have just begun, it’s impossible to predict what the 2021 season will look like. As it sits in mid-December, Baldelli and the Twins are preparing for a 162-game season beginning April 1 in Milwaukee, all while knowing that might not happen. “I’m planning on playing 162 games and being in spring training at the typical early-February time, but if we have to adjust, we’re going to adjust,” Baldelli said. “That’s the way we’ve had to approach everything. If we get really attached to anything in the 2020-2021 seasons, you’re setting yourself up for some kind of disappointment.” USA Today’s Bob Nightengale reported earlier this week that the league’s executive and owners would like the season to be delayed, allowing time for players to get vaccinated before beginning while the MLB Players Association would like to move ahead with a 162-game schedule, something it feels confident can happen after adapting to all the health and safety protocols put in place in 2020. Nightengale sourced two owners — an American League and a National League owner — both of whom expressed skepticism that spring training would begin in February on schedule. The two sides had a drawn-out negotiation earlier this year about the length of the 2020 season and compensation, which ultimately ended after the MLBPA rejected a proposal from the league and the commissioner unilaterally set a 60-game schedule. No matter what happens with the length of the season or the start date, many questions must be answered surrounding the vaccine in the coming months: Will players be required to get one? What will procurement of vaccines look like? And what happens if a player (or multiple players) refuses? Though he doesn’t know when it will be, Baldelli said he planned on getting vaccinated. “In a very straightforward sense, we know different people think very differently about vaccinations, but we also know that the world is a much safer place because of vaccinations in a lot of ways, and this may be one of those instances,” Baldelli said. “And truthfully, I hope that it’s completely safe and allows us to function and improve our lives in a lot of different ways.” While next season likely will begin with many of the same protocols as the 2020 season had in place, there’s hope that by later in the season, things will start to look more normal in many respects. As more of the population starts to get vaccinated, teams will once again be able to let fans back into ballparks. And for players, coaches and staff, some of the tight restrictions that were put into place to control potential outbreaks might start to be eased as the country’s public health situation improves. “I’m optimistic and smiling at the thought of our country going in a better direction with better health and vaccinations coming into play and not having to function exactly the way we did last year,” Baldelli said. Baseball Jan 13th 2021 - 3pm Twins, Saints planning to have (some) fans in seats when seasons start 5 questions for the Twins in 2021 Baseball Jan 8th 2021 - 12pm Former LA Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda dies at 93 Baseball Jan 5th 2021 - 10am Baseball: Gerl a chip off the old block for Duluth Huskies Baseball Dec 30th 2020 - 5pm 2020: The Twins’ year in review
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DVDizzy.com: DVD & Blu-ray Release Schedule | UltimateDisney.com | DVD and Blu-ray Reviews | Upcoming Cover Art | Search This Site The Diving Bell and the Butterfly DVD Review The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (Le Scaphandre et le Papillon) US Theatrical Release: November 30, 2007 / Running Time: 112 Minutes / Rating: PG-13 Director: Julian Schnabel Cast: Mathieu Amalric (Jean-Dominique Bauby), Emmanuelle Seigner (Céline Desmoulins), Marie-Josée Croze (Henriette Durand), Anne Cosigny (Claude Mendibil), Patrick Chesnais (Dr. Lepage), Niels Arestrup (Pierre Roussin), Olatz López Garmendia (Marie Lopez), Jean-Pierre Cassel (Père Lucien, Lourdes Vendor), Marina Hands (Joséphine), Max von Sydow (Papinou Bauby) Never does one appreciate his or her health more than immediately after overcoming a spell of illness or injury. The recent film The Diving Bell and the Butterfly produces a similar experience, driving us to celebrate life's blessings by depicting a man who is suddenly and severely reduced in nearly every way. The man is Jean-Dominique Bauby (Mathieu Amalric), a 42-year-old editor of France's Elle magazine who awakens from a stroke-induced coma to learn he's immobile and speechless, paralyzed head to toe with a rare condition known as Locked-In Syndrome. The viewer discovers this information as Jean-Do (as he's known by friends); the camera grants us his limited perspective, complete with blurred vision and a voice that can't be heard by others. It's a device that your typical film might run with for a few seconds, but here director Julian Schnabel and decorated cinematographer Janusz Kaminski persist for about forty minutes to great effect. Rather than testing audience endurance, they convey Jean-Do's new phase of "life", a label his interior monologue questions. Save for some details regarding what brought on this state, the patient's mind is utterly intact. But as far as his body goes, his only sign of being out of vegetation is that his left eye can still move. As Jean-Do poetically puts it, two other parts of him remain functional: his imagination and his memories. Accordingly, these tools are the same ones with which we're equipped on this journey of arduous rehabilitation. The major obstacle Jean-Do aims to surmount is communication. He is able to blink his good eye in response to yes/no questions. Meanwhile, a speech therapist (Marie-Josée Croze) at his Berck hospital introduces him to a more complex method of conveying his thoughts, with an alphabet arranging letters by frequency of use and a system of blinks. The film makes clear how frustrating and time-consuming such a process is, yet only this demanding form of communicating gives the former journalist a voice. With a protagonist who can't move himself or speak, you might suspect that Diving Bell wears out its welcome once you've grown accustomed to Jean-Do's plight. That's far from the truth. The movie keeps the viewer arrested throughout, with surprisingly sparse reliance on Jean-Do's standby outlets of flashbacks and fantasies. It does this by gradually presenting insights into Jean-Do's life. There are visits from friends, acquaintances, and, most importantly, his three children and their mother (Emmanuelle Seigner). A few encounters from Jean-Do's past are recalled, taking on considerable dramatic weight in spite of their ordinary nature. And we hear the thoughts of the man, out of the blue sidelined to a bed and wheelchair, unable to rectify troubling issues in his life or to even satisfactorily express himself. Somehow, words like "difficult" and "burdensome" don't begin to do justice to Jean-Do's predicament. And yet, some light emerges from the darkness when the middle-aged victim thinks to honor an existing contract with a publishing company. With the assistance of an indefatigable interpreter (Anne Cosigny), Jean-Do is able to share his many thoughts in print, occupy and exercise his mind, and see some hope in his bleak paralysis. Diving Bell is a great film. As a critic, I feel obligated to point out that I'm not someone who is easily won over by subtitles or eager to trumpet something off the mainstream radar. Though the writer (Ronald Harwood, The Pianist) and director (Julian Schnabel, Before Night Falls) worked in English, Diving Bell is performed in French. As someone who doesn't speak that language, I suppose the film has an advantage; it can appear to be cool and smooth and have fewer opportunities for falsities to be detected. Accepting that, I have to recognize that the film excels in its examination of a life and what it means to be alive. There isn't a frame that undermines reality or wavers into pretentiousness despite ample opportunity. The visual ingenuity that seems inherent to a film hanging onto consciousness is realized sensibly and effectively. The performances ring true, the focus is sharp and clear, and the themes are more compelling than just about anything found in the films of last year. Making The Diving Bell all the more remarkable is the fact that it's based on a true story, something I hadn't realized going in. The conclusion and certain elements seem like the stuff of fiction, but some research confirms they're not. In fact, the few dramatic licenses the film takes (detailed in this well-researched Salon.com article to be read after viewing) seem unnecessary but somewhat forgivable. Originally at DreamWorks and Universal before ending up at Pathé, The Diving Bell was ultimately distributed in North America by Miramax Films. The art house division of Disney appears to be doing fine since separating from its founders, the Weinstein brothers (still fledgling on their own), over two years ago. At one point, Schnabel's Before Night Falls cast member Johnny Depp was to hold the lead role in what apparently would be an English language production. Thanks to the demands of his commitments to the Pirates of the Caribbean series, we instead get this wonderful, authentic, flavorful French feast. Though not the biggest draw in the US, where its widest theater count was 213 and final gross was $6 million, the film fared better with international audiences (where its $11 M came chiefly from Central Europe and Japan). It also scored extremely well with critics. At award shows, the movie racked up dozens of accolades including Golden Globes for Best Director and Best Foreign Language Film. It received four Academy Award nominations, but didn't win any and wasn't considered (or apparently eligible) for Best Foreign Language Film (France nominated the animated Persepolis). Riding high on acclaim, if not public awareness, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly comes to DVD next Tuesday. DVD Details 1.85:1 Anamorphic Widescreen Dolby Digital 5.1 (French, English, Spanish) Subtitles: English, English for Hearing Impaired, French, Spanish; Closed Captioned; Extras Subtitled Suggested Retail Price: $19.99 (Reduced from $29.99) Single-sided, dual-layered disc (DVD-9) Black Keepcase housed in Cardboard Slipcover Both the 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen picture and Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound are quite satisfactory. Much like the just-released Cloverfield, the sights and sounds are marked by manufactured shortcomings that serve a greater good. When needed, though, the two senses are sufficiently dazzled. The thorough English subtitles do a great job of making the film accessible. There are a few instances where what's heard doesn't seem to align with what's seen, but that's inevitable on moments where words are being spelled out one letter at a time. Dolby 5.1 dubs are also provided in English and Spanish, as are subtitles. BONUS FEATURES, MENUS and PACKAGING The first of four included supplements, "Submerged: The Making of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (12:40) is a general production featurette that allows a number of principal cast and crew members to sound off on the film and director Julian Schnabel. "A Cinematic Vision" (7:12) discusses the unorthodox filmmaking techniques used to convey Jean-Do's point of view, from cameras with latex faces attached to letting its leading man react naturally in a soundproof room. Next is an audio commentary by director Julian Schnabel, which is highly unusual because it pairs a great film with a nigh-unbearably bad commentary. Slow, dull and reticent without questions to prompt him, Schnabel makes about two comments per minute. Almost all of these can be classified as obvious observations, actor identifications, or information that actual people or places from Jean-Do's life are used. Inevitably, a few production anecdotes and revelations emerge, but they account for about 3% of the track. You'll consider the other 97% of the time wasted and much better spent with the film's default soundtrack selected. Last but not least is "Charlie Rose interviews Julian Schnabel" (20:42), a relevant segment from a 2007 episode of Rose's PBS talk show. Identifying himself as a painter, the director speaks openly and at length about the film and his personal interest in it, while Rose encourages him with his customary highbrow tone and evident admiration. It's a worthy inclusion and much easier to enjoy here than buying the full episode (a whopping $24.95 from Amazon) or watching freely online. An added bonus is that the film's full U.S. theatrical trailer is found near the start of the Charlie Rose excerpt. Greeting you at the head of the disc are an anti-smoking commercial and a trailer for The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. The menus run with the opening credits' motif of X-ray imagery, with piano instrumentals instead of Charles Trenet's "La Mer." The bonus features' looped vision of the alphabet recitation is sure to drive a slow selector mad. Illustrating just how far the cardboard slipcover craze has gone, Diving boasts one which serves little purpose, merely reproducing the artwork below. A scene selections and extras list occupy one side of the only in-case insert, which doubles as a Becoming Jane ad. You can select just about any favorable adjective in the dictionary and I'd be more apt to apply it to The Diving Bell and the Butterfly than any of the several dozens of other movies from last year that I've seen. Poignant, haunting, relevant, daring... take your pick. This is a film which made a strong impression on me, someone reluctant to hop on the critical bandwagon and celebrate small off-radar works over mainstream fare. Despite its great artistic and critical success, Miramax treats the feature to a pretty ordinary DVD. While we can reasonably assume that picture and sound are as they should be, the bonus features are a bit of a mixed bag. The 40 minutes of rewarding supplemental video make it fairly easy to overlook an unusually lifeless audio commentary. In the end, the film holds much more worth than bonus materials and it is the obvious reason you should check out this disc. More on the DVD / Buy from Amazon.com / Buy the Book from Amazon.com 2008 Best Director Oscar Nominees: Juno (Jason Reitman) • There Will Be Blood (P.T. Anderson) • No Country for Old Men (Joel & Ethan Coen) New to DVD: Saludos Amigos & The Three Caballeros: Classic Caballeros Collection • Cloverfield Foreign Films: The Chorus (Les Choristes) • Tsotsi • Eagle vs Shark • Shall We Dance? Academy Award Nominees: Into the Wild • Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street • In the Valley of Elah Miramax Films: Blindness • Becoming Jane • Gone Baby Gone • The Hoax • The Queen • Venus • Chicago • The Lookout Set in France: Mr. Bean's Holiday • Ratatouille • Rush Hour 3 • Monkeys, Go Home! • Bon Voyage! • Renaissance UltimateDisney.com/DVDizzy.com Top Stories: Reviewed April 25, 2008. Text copyright 2008 DVDizzy.com. Images copyright 2007 Miramax Films, Pathé Renn Productions, France 3 Cinema, CRRAV Nord-Pas De Calais, and 2008 Buena Vista Home Entertainment. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
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