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Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups C. Maertens, P. Dubois, R. Jérôme, Pierre Alexandre Blanche, Ph C. Lemaire Low Tg copolymers of [11(N-carbazolyl)undecylmethacrylate] and [2,5-dimethylphenyl-[(4-nitrophenyl)azo]-phenoxyalkylmethacrylate$R B have been synthesized and the polarized light-induced birefringence of thick films (70 μm) has been investigated at a constant deducted temperature relative to Tg (T-Tg = 10 °C). The optical properties of these copolymers have been studied in relation to the azo-dye content and the length of the alkyl spacer between the azo-dye and the methacrylic backbone. They have been compared with the dispersion of (4-methoxy-2,5-dimethylphenyl)-(4-nitro-phenyl)diazene (DMNPAA)within a poly[11(N-carbazolyl)undecyl-methacrylate] and a poly[N-vinylcarbazole] (PVK) matrix. The experimental curves have been fitted by biexponentials, so emphasizing the effects of the copolymer structure on the kinetics of the writing process. The photoinduced orientation is more than three orders of magnitude higher in a grafted material compared to the dispersion version. The azo-dye concentration also has an important role in both the amplitude and the dynamics of the photo-orientation. Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H Azo Compounds Azobenzene Light polarization Birefringence polarized light copolymers Methacrylates Thick films Maertens, C., Dubois, P., Jérôme, R., Blanche, P. A., & Lemaire, P. C. (2000). Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups. Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics, 38(1), 205-213. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups. / Maertens, C.; Dubois, P.; Jérôme, R.; Blanche, Pierre Alexandre; Lemaire, Ph C. In: Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol. 38, No. 1, 01.01.2000, p. 205-213. Maertens, C, Dubois, P, Jérôme, R, Blanche, PA & Lemaire, PC 2000, 'Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups', Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics, vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 205-213. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H Maertens C, Dubois P, Jérôme R, Blanche PA, Lemaire PC. Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups. Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics. 2000 Jan 1;38(1):205-213. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H Maertens, C. ; Dubois, P. ; Jérôme, R. ; Blanche, Pierre Alexandre ; Lemaire, Ph C. / Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups. In: Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics. 2000 ; Vol. 38, No. 1. pp. 205-213. @article{cffd340a2240442388c80596e099eb2b, title = "Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups", abstract = "Low Tg copolymers of [11(N-carbazolyl)undecylmethacrylate] and [2,5-dimethylphenyl-[(4-nitrophenyl)azo]-phenoxyalkylmethacrylate$R B have been synthesized and the polarized light-induced birefringence of thick films (70 μm) has been investigated at a constant deducted temperature relative to Tg (T-Tg = 10 °C). The optical properties of these copolymers have been studied in relation to the azo-dye content and the length of the alkyl spacer between the azo-dye and the methacrylic backbone. They have been compared with the dispersion of (4-methoxy-2,5-dimethylphenyl)-(4-nitro-phenyl)diazene (DMNPAA)within a poly[11(N-carbazolyl)undecyl-methacrylate] and a poly[N-vinylcarbazole] (PVK) matrix. The experimental curves have been fitted by biexponentials, so emphasizing the effects of the copolymer structure on the kinetics of the writing process. The photoinduced orientation is more than three orders of magnitude higher in a grafted material compared to the dispersion version. The azo-dye concentration also has an important role in both the amplitude and the dynamics of the photo-orientation.", author = "C. Maertens and P. Dubois and R. J{\'e}r{\^o}me and Blanche, {Pierre Alexandre} and Lemaire, {Ph C.}", doi = "10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H", journal = "Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics", T1 - Synthesis and polarized light-induced birefringence of new polymethacrylates containing carbazolyl and azobenzene pendant groups AU - Maertens, C. AU - Dubois, P. AU - Jérôme, R. AU - Blanche, Pierre Alexandre AU - Lemaire, Ph C. N2 - Low Tg copolymers of [11(N-carbazolyl)undecylmethacrylate] and [2,5-dimethylphenyl-[(4-nitrophenyl)azo]-phenoxyalkylmethacrylate$R B have been synthesized and the polarized light-induced birefringence of thick films (70 μm) has been investigated at a constant deducted temperature relative to Tg (T-Tg = 10 °C). The optical properties of these copolymers have been studied in relation to the azo-dye content and the length of the alkyl spacer between the azo-dye and the methacrylic backbone. They have been compared with the dispersion of (4-methoxy-2,5-dimethylphenyl)-(4-nitro-phenyl)diazene (DMNPAA)within a poly[11(N-carbazolyl)undecyl-methacrylate] and a poly[N-vinylcarbazole] (PVK) matrix. The experimental curves have been fitted by biexponentials, so emphasizing the effects of the copolymer structure on the kinetics of the writing process. The photoinduced orientation is more than three orders of magnitude higher in a grafted material compared to the dispersion version. The azo-dye concentration also has an important role in both the amplitude and the dynamics of the photo-orientation. AB - Low Tg copolymers of [11(N-carbazolyl)undecylmethacrylate] and [2,5-dimethylphenyl-[(4-nitrophenyl)azo]-phenoxyalkylmethacrylate$R B have been synthesized and the polarized light-induced birefringence of thick films (70 μm) has been investigated at a constant deducted temperature relative to Tg (T-Tg = 10 °C). The optical properties of these copolymers have been studied in relation to the azo-dye content and the length of the alkyl spacer between the azo-dye and the methacrylic backbone. They have been compared with the dispersion of (4-methoxy-2,5-dimethylphenyl)-(4-nitro-phenyl)diazene (DMNPAA)within a poly[11(N-carbazolyl)undecyl-methacrylate] and a poly[N-vinylcarbazole] (PVK) matrix. The experimental curves have been fitted by biexponentials, so emphasizing the effects of the copolymer structure on the kinetics of the writing process. The photoinduced orientation is more than three orders of magnitude higher in a grafted material compared to the dispersion version. The azo-dye concentration also has an important role in both the amplitude and the dynamics of the photo-orientation. U2 - 10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H DO - 10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H JO - Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics JF - Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics 10.1002/(SICI)1099-0488(20000101)38:1<205::AID-POLB23>3.0.CO;2-H
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George Arliss – Stage & Screen Star, Filmmaker, Playwright, Author THE RULING PASSION – A Review of Mr. A’s 1922 Silent Film Comedy Typically listed as a “lost” film, Mr. A’s 1922 silent film comedy, THE RULING PASSION, may exist after all. Hope is kindled by news that one or more foreign film archives may own a print. These include the Russian Gosfilmofond, the Cinémathèque Française, and the Belgian CINEMATEK. Also on your blogmeister’s “hopeful list” is the Dutch EYE Film Institute that has led the way by posting so many of its vintage holdings online. THE RULING PASSION was based on a short story by Earl Derr Biggers, who later became famous as the creator of the “Charlie Chan” novels. Mr. A plays John Alden, an automobile tycoon who is forced into retirement by his doctor’s orders. Bored, he decides to invest in a business deal – a gas station – in partnership with a young man, Bill Merrick. Of course, Alden uses an alias so his young partner doesn’t know his colleague is practically Henry Ford. Alden and Merrick are swindled in the sale by the seller, Peterson, who competes against them with his new gas station. Complications develop when Alden’s daughter, Angie, drives in and discovers her father pumping gas. She and Merrick meet and romance blossoms. Angie agrees to keep her Dad’s secret life from her mother but Mrs. Alden eventually stops by for a fill-up and discovers the truth. Alden and Merrick plan a successful marketing campaign, taking so much business away from their rival that Peterson offers to buy them out at a huge profit on their original purchase. Bill asks Angie to marry him and he goes to her home seeking her father’s permission, unaware that his partner is Angie’s father. The ruse is happily revealed and Alden’s doctor has to admit that the adventure was healthful for Alden who can now return to work again. The film had its New York City premiere on January 22, 1922, and received mostly excellent reviews. Released through United Artists, THE RULING PASSION was independently produced through a company, Distinctive Pictures, that was formed specifically to make George Arliss films. PASSION became the third Arliss film, following THE DEVIL (1920) and DISRAELI (1921). The success of the earlier two led to making the third, which in turn led to three more films being made. A trade press story of the day: Another story for the exhibitors: Box Office tells the tale: Doris Kenyon plays the role of Mr. A’s daughter, Angie. A popular screen actress she would play Mr. A’s wife nine years later in ALEXANDER HAMILTON (1931): While THE RULING PASSION is still considered among the missing Arliss films, we are fortunate that he decided to remake the story as a talkie in 1931 renamed THE MILLIONAIRE. However, lettering on studio photos indicate that the talkie version’s working title continued to be THE RULING PASSION. An original color half-sheet (22×28 inches) for THE RULING PASSION: The Ruling Passion (1922) on June 22, 2019 at 5:53 PM Comments (1) Tags: 1922, Alexander Hamilton, arliss, Doris Kenyon, film, George Arliss, golden age, hollywood, movies, old Hollywood, silent film, stage, talkies, The Millionaire, The Ruling Passion, theater Lon Chaney – Man of 1,000 Faces Old Hollywood in Color Silent Films Today The Official 2020 George Arliss Calendar A Brief “Morphing” Video with Mr. A as Disraeli from the 1921 Silent Film A Video Tour of the Original Souvenir Program from DISRAELI (1929) with original color lobby cards Arliss Alert! THE MILLIONAIRE airs this Thursday, Nov. 7, 2019, on TCM (US) at 7:30 AM eastern time. Arliss Alert! Double Feature Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019 Beginning at 12:30 PM EDT Our Newest Book! Click on the Cover: Click on our Newest and Fifth Volume: Click on our Fourth Volume: 2014 Official George Arliss Wall Calendar 2015 Official George Arliss Calendar A Costume from THE HOUSE OF ROTHSCHILD BBC News Radio 4 Salutes George Arliss A Letter from George Arliss and one from Florence too Gala Premiere George Arliss Grave Site Restored! George Arliss in 3D George in Color in 3-D in HD Jack Benny Spoof of THE HOUSE OF ROTHSCHILD – 1934 Live! Maude T. Howell – Mr. A's Shadow Morphing the Many Moods of George Arliss Mr. A's Final Performance – World War II Radio Address New Graphic Novel: GEORGE ARLISS IN DISARELI Disraeli The Man Who Played God The Devil (1920) THE DEVIL (1920) Restored! The Green Goddess The Legendary Arliss-Zanuck Contract for 20th Century Pictures The Talkies A Successful Calamity Official DVD Release IMPRESSIONS OF DISRAELI a 1931 film of speeches Dr. Syn The House of Rothschild The Iron Duke The King's Vacation The Millionaire The Working Man Video Tour of the Souvenir Program from DISRAELI (1929) Click on our Third Volume: Click on our second Archives Book: Click on our Very First Volume:
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Back to the drawing board — Uber still using Waymo-derived self-driving technology, expert says Uber may be forced to redesign some parts of its autonomy stack. Timothy B. Lee - Nov 7, 2019 5:00 pm UTC Enlarge / Uber self-driving test vehicles. In a Tuesday filing with the Security and Exchange Commission, Uber admitted that an independent expert had determined that Uber's self-driving technology was still infringing Waymo's intellectual property. The revelation comes more than 18 months after Uber settled a high-profile legal battle with Waymo over alleged theft of Waymo secrets by Uber. It’s all over: Why the Waymo v. Uber self-driving settlement makes sense As a result, Uber says, it will be forced to either license the relevant technology from Waymo—which could be expensive—or overhaul the affected systems. The filing didn't specify which parts of Uber's technology were infringing, and an Uber spokeswoman declined to comment further to Ars Technica. Uber's disclosure was first reported by Reuters. Waymo filed a lawsuit against Uber in February 2017 after a former Waymo manager, Anthony Levandowski, left Waymo to found a self-driving truck startup called Otto. Uber bought Otto just a few months after it was founded and incorporated the company into Uber's own fledgling self-driving project. But Waymo accused Levandowski of downloading numerous sensitive documents from Waymo's network before leaving the company and then using them to build the self-driving systems at Otto and Uber. As part of the settlement, Uber and Waymo agreed to hire an independent software expert to "ensure that our autonomous vehicle hardware and software do not misappropriate Waymo intellectual property." However, Uber told the SEC, the expert they hired recently "made adverse findings as to certain functions in our autonomous vehicle software." The hype around driverless cars came crashing down in 2018 It's the latest setback for Uber's embattled self-driving project. Uber invested heavily in the technology in 2017, racking up millions of miles of on-road testing by early 2018. But then tragedy struck when an Uber self-driving car slammed into a pedestrian in Tempe, Arizona. The crash forced Uber to suspend its testing efforts for several months and then to bring it back only in a drastically scaled-back form. On the other hand, self-driving programs across the industry have been struggling to meet the inflated expectations established in 2016 and 2017. Uber is betting that it can slowly and steadily rebuild its program on more secure footings and still emerge as an industry leader. J.C. Helios Wise, Aged Ars Veteran I wonder if they are continuing to infringe to an unusual degree, or if their infringement is just as much as anyone in our crazy system of "Do whatever you like, but make sure you have a large enough patent portfolio that any attempt to sue you will result in mutually-assured destruction (unless the plaintiff is a non-practicing entity)." Like, can you imagine if Google had had to hire an "independent software expert" to certify that nothing in Android infringed on iOS at the dawn of the smartphone wars?? As Jobs said menacingly at the iPhone announcement: "We’ve been innovating like crazy for the last few years on this, and we filed for over 200 patents for all the inventions in iPhone, and we intend to protect them." Two hundred tripwires, but Google was able to brazen through anyway without independent scrutiny. 173 posts | registered 12/22/2016 t_newt Ars Tribunus Militum et Subscriptor reply Thu Nov 07, 2019 12:14 pm Considering Ars's other article is "How terrible software design decisions led to Uber’s deadly 2018 crash", maybe they should be licensing the Waymo software...-all- of the software. I am shocked. Shocked! Who would have thought that the odd set of coincidences that brought Levandowski to Uber would have found some Waymo IP stuck to his boots? Or that Uber's squeaky clean corporate culture would not have immediately detected any such accidental data leakage. "Uber is betting that it can slowly and steadily rebuild its program on Waymo more secure footings and still emerge as an industry leader." FIFY Last edited by Oldmanalex on Thu Nov 07, 2019 12:17 pm NuckFutter Wise, Aged Ars Veteran I dunno when we actually get for-real fully self driving vehicles, but I do know it ain't gonna be from Uber. 139 posts | registered Aug 31, 2015 Dilbert Ars Legatus Legionis The R&D advantage they got by leveraging stolen IP can never be fully taken away. Lessons learned are lessons learned. I'd hope the legal punishment would fit that fact, but we know it doesn't. floyd42 Ars Centurion They might be to the point in the song where they aren't going to hold 'em, fold 'em, or walk away... they should run. NuckFutter wrote: We will. It will take a while. The self driving cars will be statistically safer, but when they fuck up they will REALLY fuck up. jbode Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius et Subscriptor How does Uber still have any money to spend? Between the quarterly losses, the lawsuits, the R&D costs, etc., it just amazes me that they're still able to operate. This finding means they're going to be paying even more money somewhere (whether licensing tech from Waymo or rebuilding from scratch). Just how big is their pile? Dilbert wrote: I know we will eventually get them. I said I don't know when. And if we're being honest, humans fuck up in colossal ways all the time, but somehow many of our brains are wired to trust things we're in control of more than things we're not, even if the statistics for safety aren't in our favor. These tendencies are amplified by the reporting around novel, new ways in which things get fucked up, so for a while, we're trained to associate the new capability (e.g. self driving) with screw ups and danger. Do you remember in the 90's there were a handful of cases of children falling out of hi rise windows? Or in the summer of 2001 a spate of shark attacks on swimmers? The news was all over it, making it seem like a sudden crisis. Neither was statistically unusual - but for whatever reason the news picked up those stories, which may have unfortunately been clustered in sow news periods, and made a theme of it. Future stories of self-driving cars screwing the pooch are going to follow a similar pattern, and to some extent already do. Over time, and with exposure, people will get comfortable with the technology, as many have done with flying. Sorry for the essay, bored at work. Urist Ars Praetorian et Subscriptor Is it possible to bar Uber from pursuing this technology any further themselves? They have proved that as a company they are unable to develop this advanced tech nither legally or safely, and will lie and cheat every step of the way. At this rate their self driving cars will just have a veil hung around the driver's seat with a booming voice warning people not to look behind the curtian. Last edited by Urist on Thu Nov 07, 2019 12:46 pm Sociopaths gotta sociopath, it's the Uber way! squidgod Smack-Fu Master, in training Numerous, proprietary self-driving systems are just going to make a mess of things when it comes time for self-driving vehicles to start talking to each other and coordinating actions. Why are so many companies determined to create their own system—at a huge cost—instead of letting someone else develop it and then simply licensing it, ala PC/phone operating systems? android_alpaca Ars Centurion et Subscriptor J.C. Helios wrote: Android is open-source, so there are thousands of people who have independently scrutinized their code. Oracle bought Sun and then did sue Google for copyright infringement for allegedly copying an array range check function. Here are the 9 lines of code that Oracle said Google copied. private static void rangeCheck(int arrayLen, int fromIndex, int toIndex { if (fromIndex > toIndex) throw new IllegalArgumentException("fromIndex(" + fromIndex + ") > toIndex(" + toIndex+")"); if (fromIndex < 0) throw new ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException(fromIndex); if (toIndex > arrayLen) throw new ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException(toIndex); The original judge, William Alsup, learned Java for the case and was like "I can't think of any other way to do this." Oracle was also suing for use of the Java API. That case has gone back and forth... the the US Supreme Court to look at the case a second time this week (November 8th) according to wikipedia. Last edited by android_alpaca on Thu Nov 07, 2019 12:55 pm snowman<ca> Ars Praefectus It still am not sure why so many companies jumped so hard on designing their own vehicle autopilots, some of which seem small compared to major airlines, which I doubt many felt the need to design their own autopilots for planes (which by some in industry say is easier to do, plus given have have been around in planes for decades seems quite plausible) Last edited by snowman<ca> on Thu Nov 07, 2019 1:01 pm Drum Ars Scholae Palatinae et Subscriptor Tell Elaine Herzberg that she was "statistically safer". Oh wait, ya can't cause shes dead. the loss of even one human life shows the "statistically safer" claim is a bunch of BS. That one human life was part of the statistics too. So we have human life vs the people who say "but... but... but... its statistically safer" while a company tests its 'self-driving' capability on an unsuspecting public. Ok, pop quiz: Which is more valuable, a human life or pretending a system that is still being tested on an unsuspecting public is "statistically safer"? I don't think that's completely fair. Obviously losing any human lives in the testing phase is terrible, and the way in which Uber caused a death was a massively incompetent mismanagement of affairs. But when self driving cars truly are statistically safer than human drivers in all conditions, that means they're safer. It doesn't mean that a person dying isn't a tragedy, and it doesn't mean they should be considered just another statistic, but if every self driving car really is safer than the human driver it replaces, then, while not infallible, they'll still be preventing accidents and nominally saving some live. I don't think we're there yet, and I think we are still a long way off - both from that statistically safe point and from the actual public acceptance of the fact. But someday we'll get there, and then self driving cars will be publicly accepted, even though they won't be infallible, and they will cause deaths. Just, hopefully, less deaths than the humans that would have otherwise been driving. SPCagigas Ars Praefectus reply Thu Nov 07, 2019 1:01 pm You've made the internet dumberer today, all by yourself. I bet you think vaccines cause autism, too. squidgod wrote: Because the first one to put an effective one to market will make more money that God. itfa Ars Scholae Palatinae Is anyone the least bit surprised by this? Their entire program was theft from the start. SPCagigas wrote: I foe'd him a long time ago - haven't regretted it for a second. I don't need to see every idiot scribbling in a comment thread. wxfisch Ars Centurion et Subscriptor So what about the thousands of pedestrians killed by human controlled cars each year? The whole point of qualifying the statement as "Statistically" safer is that it is not perfect, but is objectively better than what we have today. There is a great case to be made that the first 5, 10, 15 years or more of a human learning to drive is "testing". Teen drivers are generally not good, and young adult drivers tend to also make avoidable mistakes like not seeing someone jaywalking at night, or not predicting that a car will pull out of a parking lot at that exact moment, or not being able to react to the car that slammed on their brakes for a squirrel. As a great author once wrote, "It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door." LetterRip Ars Scholae Palatinae Filing patents doesn't mean they were granted. Most of the smart phone interface features were stuff already developed in the 1970's and 1980's. The smaller form factor doesn't change the underlying patent. https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/04 ... echnology/ Most of Apple's patent portfolio are design patents, not utility patents. Last edited by LetterRip on Thu Nov 07, 2019 1:18 pm 930 posts | registered Oct 5, 2005 pug fugly Ars Centurion 737 max 8 agrees thrillgore Wise, Aged Ars Veteran I feel like the movie/miniseries about Uber's rise and fall is going to be so densely packed with these horror nuggets, nobody will ever believe this company actually existed. Not really, the systems are all mandated to communicate information with each other (all vehicles are going to be required to communicate . While the initial information being communicated is fairly sparse, I'm sure the protocol will be expanded to increase what is communicated such that maximum safety is achieved, https://www.nhtsa.gov/technology-innova ... munication The potential profits are ridiculously enormous - on the order of a trillion or more dollars per year. angrydurf Ars Praetorian You clearly don't understand the meaning of 'Statistically Safer'. That does not mean no tragedies happen, it means that collectively less harm is done by autonomous vehicles than by a comparable number of human drivers under similar conditions. Just because one persons seat-belt traps them in a sinking car does not mean that seat-belts make driving more dangerous. Uber was reckless in it's testing and it killed someone. That is tragic, it says nothing useful about autonomy as a whole (But alot about Uber as a corporation and it's leadership.) All risk mitigation leads to risk redistribution. For most people this will lead to a reduction in risk, but always there will be some unfortunates in the firing line who, sans the risk reduction would not have been there. That is just life. If you cannot deal with it, stay home 24/7. The issue here is that the risk mitigation was carried out really badly; quite possibly in a scramble to de-Waymo the technology. zarmanto wrote: So, it occurs to me that the coincidence in timing here is potentially worth some scrutiny: Uber just went through a deep-dive investigation of their software to determine exactly what happened in the Tempe fatality. Shortly after that, the "independent expert" just happens to find more of Waymo's IP in Uber's code-base. Could it be possible that the code which resulted in the death in Tempe was derived from Waymo's code? Also, wouldn't that make it conceivable that Waymo is quietly scrambling to fix that exact same bug, before their cars fail in the same fashion? I'd bet on it being the code they *didn't* steal that failed. If it was Waymo code, it would be an old snapshot from the time it was stolen, this isn't like Chromium where they can stay up to date by downloading source code updates. mmiller7 Ars Tribunus Militum so......no more fender-benders or bumper-bumping, just "perfect" or "death"? mhall1 Ars Praetorian Sure it can. Forcibly liquidate the company and give any proceeds to Waymo. Woof Ars Praetorian Drum wrote: I think its completely fair these systems should be tested to ensure they are 100% reliable 100% of the time (or as close as possible) in every conceivable situation and environment of use in context with their intended purpose before they are allowed on the roads. According to this logic, we should be riding horses still. Oh, but don’t forget those things will try to kick and bite you on purpose, so they aren’t completely safe either, are they? (Personal fact... I have known 3 people in my life who have been kicked in the head by horses. One died, one suffered permanent brain injury, and one lost their front teeth but otherwise survived.) You gotta know your argument is weak. Be honest with the people and tell us what you are really afraid of. The continued automation of everything special about humans? The fear that you may lose the ability to drive your car and make noises and squeals because the safety police are gonna take away even more fun in the name of saving lives? Just come clean, and be honest about it. I understand the whole loss of freedom thing, and many other issues with self-driving cars. I’m hoping it becomes an option and not a requirement. But it will be a great option for a lot of people. Woof wrote: No, that's not the logic. That's your logic. How about taking the whole thing in context. thrillgore wrote: In 30 years, Uber will be a horror story that we'll use to scare our kids into good grades. "Do your homework, Johnny, or the Uber will get you!" Isn't it about time for duedadew, or whatever his user ID is now, to swipe in with some random manifesto about how horrible Uber is, and how horrible we all are because we're not in proletarian lock step with him? Everyone else is taking the whole thing in context. You're refusing to do so, either intentionally or because you don't understand the concepts of statistics and are too bull-headed to listen when people do try to consider the whole issue in the whole context. Azethoth666 Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius et Subscriptor Blah blah bla, I mean do you even know that Lewandowski stole software from google, got caught and the result was a trial and this is part of the court case settlement? Why are you confusing this criminal behavior with regular patent law? Actual theft happened and apparently never stopped. There was no court case about a google engineer stealing iPhone software from Apple. Surely this is not confusing? Do you know that Uber regularly breaks the law. Willfully. Like they have a team dedicated to doing it. They even wrote software so that their illegal ride hailing software would not give rides to police and officials in places they were banned. Uber: great idea, great app, everything else is theft.
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Artist Project Share Projekt Migration Issue 7: Tourism Projekt Migration At Eschweiler’s mining union, Alsdorf, 1965, courtesy of DOMiT, Köln October 1, 2005–January 15, 2006 Three years in the making, ‘Projekt Migration’ was a large-scale exhibition held in various traditional and nontraditional sites around the city of Cologne, with the Kölnischer Kunstverein serving as the primary host venue. Organized by a team including Kathrin Rhomberg, director of the Kölnischer Kunstverein, and Zurich-based curator and filmmaker Marion von Osten, ‘Projekt Migration’ investigated the history of postwar migration to western Europe in relation to current debates that place immigrants at the center of political contestation. Part socio-historical anthology and part contemporary art exhibition, the project was one element of an — initiative by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes (Federal Cultural Foundation) that also included screenings, a symposium, performances, workshops, discussions, music, and a catalogue bigger than any produced for Documenta. ‘Projekt Migration’s’ central concern was the state of immigration patterns and associated debates in Germany today; despite its wide resonance, it remained tied to its local context. The show was theoretically dense in nature, featuring historical photographs of the circumstances of immigration alongside the work of around eighty contemporary artists and collaborative groups. Artists ranged from those who have become well known recently for their film and video work, such as Anri Sala and Ann-Sofi Sidén,to emerging video artists such as Julika Rudelius and David Blandy. Not unexpectedly, the number of artists from the Middle East or of Middle Eastern descent was high; the selection included Gülsün Karamustafa and Harun Farocki, presumably to reflect the immigrant population that exists in Europe’s German-speaking region. There was even a Ford Transit on view, highlighting the role of vans in ferrying labor immigrants in and out of Europe, and recalling the part that the Ford company played in employing as apprentices the first Turkish group to arrive in Cologne. ‘Projekt Migration’ was easy enough to navigate; the city center venues included a hotel and office buildings. One of the most notable works in the exhibition, and perhaps the least characteristic, was the off-site commissioning of Tazro Niscino’s spectacular installation Es will mir nicht aus dem Sinn (2005) at one of Cologne’s most renowned monuments, the large statue of Kaiser Wilhelm II on horseback. A staircase up scaffolding led viewers up to a furnished domestic interior built on and around the top of the sculpture, with the large head of the Kaiser appearing like an object placed on the floor near a sofa. The work referred to the waves of immigration that occurred during Wilhelm II’s reign, including the influx of Polish migrants following Germany’s industrialization, and the nation’s early twentieth century colonial activities. The strategies of display were varied greatly throughout the exhibition, offering some insight in to the meticulousness of the curatorial process. Frankfurt-based duo Anny and Sibel Öztürk presented their installation Rear Window (Story No. 6) (2004), an impressive reconstruction, from memory, of the Istanbul living room of theirTurkish great aunt. Though other contemporary artists have reconstructed rooms, their attention to detail here was affecting, and included 1950s furniture, a soundtrack of traffic outside accompanied by simulated car headlights, and wistful domestic odors of incense and must. The Zurich-based Labor k3000 media collective exhibited an archive of sorts, providing information on and analysis of transnational migration activities and locating them within contemporary discourse. Presenting maps, files, cabinets of documents, videos, and CDs in tandem with other forms of documentation, this research room required the viewer’s patience and time but its simple layout and participatory style made it highly accessible. One of the surprises of the show was Candida Höfer’s Türken in Deutschland (Turks in Germany, 1976), a slide projection of eighty portraits of Turkish migrant groups and families in various locations around Cologne. It was made in an era before the current popularity of practices guided by ethnography, and was far removed from the Düsseldorf School of technically precise, constructed photography, with which Höfer is now affiliated. The ‘Projekt Migration’ curators hand led their subject with intelligence and directness, resisting the temptations of ethnophilia. The exhibition’s synthesis of socio-scientific research, documentary projects and artworks was mostly successful, if occasionally dry. Still, ‘Projekt Migration’ offered a much-needed injection of faith into the potential of contemporary art to find strategies for engaging with current socio-historical problems associated with the various waves of migration into Europe. Originally published in: Tourism, Spring 2006 Photo by Boru O'Brien O'Connell, Prop Styling by John Mollett Next: One Day You’ll Miss Me
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Chicago Tribune Editor Kristen McQueary’s Romanticized View of Paul Vallas’ Role in Post-Katrina New Orleans | deutsch29 Chicago Tribune Editor Kristen McQueary’s Romanticized View of Paul Vallas’ Role in Post-Katrina New Orleans | deutsch29: Chicago Tribune Editor Kristen McQueary’s Romanticized View of Paul Vallas’ Role in Post-Katrina New Orleans On August 13, 2015, Chicago Tribune editor Kristen McQueary published an editorial in which she wished a “Hurricane Katrina” upon the city of Chicago. A Katrina would force Chicago to “hit the reset button,” and that is why she was “praying for a real storm” to hit Chicago. It should come as no surprise that she found herself in a storm as a result– a media storm publicly chastising her for her callousness. (See here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and here.) The August 14, 2015, International Business Times reports on the Chicago Tribune’s initial efforts to quell the resulting swift and powerful negative media response: After outrage broke out on Twitter, the Chicago Tribune quickly changed the headline of McQueary’s piece from “In Chicago, Wishing for a Hurricane Katrina” to ““Chicago, New Orleans, and Rebirth.” The article was also edited after its original publication to tone down some of the statements readers found most inflammatory. But the New Orleans Times-Picayune archived the original column, and all citations in this article come from the first release of McQueary’s op-ed. The first link in this post is also to McQueary’s original column entitled, “In Chicago, Wishing for a Hurricane Katrina.” In her original editorial, McQueary not only glamorizes Katrina’s destruction; she also Chicago Tribune Editor Kristen McQueary’s Romanticized View of Paul Vallas’ Role in Post-Katrina New Orleans | deutsch29: Posted by Mike Simpson at 10:01 PM No comments: Links to this post Alexandra Miletta: It’s All About the Bell Curve: Sheri Lederman’s Day in Court Alexandra Miletta: It’s All About the Bell Curve: Sheri Lederman’s Day in Court: It’s All About the Bell Curve: Sheri Lederman’s Day in Court I traveled up to Albany this morning to hear the oral arguments in the Lederman v. King case presented to Acting Supreme Court Justice Roger McDonough by Bruce Lederman, and Colleen Galligan representing the State Education Department. This is the first time in my life I have sat in a courtroom proceeding. I don’t even watch Law and Order. Let’s just say I was most definitely not in my element. But I’m a pretty good observer of human behavior, a decent note-taker, and I had personal reasons for caring deeply about the outcome of this case, above and beyond all the reasons we all should care about a case that may have far-reaching implications for the misguided reforms of Race to the Top (see full disclosure below). What I witnessed was a masterful take down of the we-need-objectivity rhetoric that is plaguing education. So I should begin by saying that I am hopeful, because it seems someone with the power to make a difference gets it. Judge McDonough gets that it’s all about the bell curve, and the bell curve is biased and subjective. In case you need a refresher on how test scoring works these days (and who doesn’t) I suggest you start with the excellent fact sheets from Fair Test, first on norm-referenced tests, or NRTs, and then oncriterion-referenced tests, or CRTs, and tests used to measure performance against state standards. In particular note the following important points: “NRTs are designed to sort and rank students 'on the curve,' not to see if they met a standard or criterion. Therefore, NRTs should not be used to assess whether students have met standards. However, in some states or districts a NRT is used to measure student learning in relation to standards. Specific cut-off scores on the NRT are then chosen (usually by a committee) to separate levels of achievement on the standards. In some cases, a CRT is made using technical procedures developed for NRTs, causing the CRT to sort students in ways that are inappropriate for standards-based decisions.” As you may notice, we’ve come a long way from getting a 91 out of 100 on a test and knowing that was an A-. Testing today is obtuse and confusing by design. In New York State, we boil it down to a ranking from one to four. That’s right, there’s even jargon for “ones and twos” that is particularly heinous when you learn that politicians have interests in making more than 50% of students fall in those “failing” categories. Today the state released the test score resultsfor students in grades 3-8 and their so-called “proficiency” is reported as below 40% achieving the passing levels. By design the public is meant to read this as miserable failure. The political narrative of public education failure extends next to the teachers, who must demonstrate student learning based on these faulty tests, even if they don’t teach the subjects tested, and even if they teach students who face hurdles and hardships that have a tremendous impact on their ability to do well on the tests. In Sheri’s case, her rating plunged from 14 out of 20 points to 1 out of 20 points on student growth measures. Yet her students perform exceedingly well on the exams; once you are a “four” you can’t go up to a “four plus” because you’ve hit the ceiling. In fact, one wrong answer could unreasonably mark you as a “three” and you would never know. Similarly, the teacher receives a student growth score that is also based on a comparison to other teachers. When it emerged in the hearing today that the model, also known as VAM, or value-added, pre-determined that 7% of the teachers would be rated “ineffective” Judge McDonough caught on to the injustice that lies at the heart of the bell curve logic: where you rank in the ratings is SUBJECTIVE. In his affidavits, Professor Aaron Pallas of Teachers College brilliantly explains the many flaws with this misuse of student test Alexandra Miletta: It’s All About the Bell Curve: Sheri Lederman’s Day in Court: The “turnaround” snafu–deliberately making neighborhood public schools fail? | Bob Braun's Ledger The “turnaround” snafu–deliberately making neighborhood public schools fail? | Bob Braun's Ledger: The “turnaround” snafu–deliberately making neighborhood public schools fail? The latest round of state-mandated school “reforms” imposed on the children, parents, and employees in the Newark public schools has created a bizarre situation in which virtually the entire staffs of so-called “turnaround” schools will be new and unknown to both neighborhood residents and to each other, many of these new teachers already have signaled their opposition to the changes mandated by the reform, and faculty will be working two different schedules in the same schools. That could hardly be a recipe for success. So, maybe it is a deliberate plan for failure. “It’s probably the most destructive action taken yet so far by the state,” said one teacher caught up in the turmoil who, out of fear of retribution, asked to remain anonymous. “It’s massive teacher swapping without any thought given to what the consequences are to children.” The teacher called it the “One Newark plan for teachers”–after the “One Newark” universal student enrollment plan that has scattered children to schools throughout the city without regard to family needs. The new Newark superintendent, Christopher Cerf, has refused demands to end “One Newark” and also isn’t likely to stop the destructive “turnaround.” The president of the Newark Teachers Union, John Abeigon, called the obvious screw-up an effort to impose the “shock doctrine” on schools, creating “intentional chaos” and deliberately trying to make neighborhood public schools fail. However, neither the school board, the mayor’s office, nor Cerf’s office, would comment on the bureaucratic snafu. The absurd set of circumstances was created when then state-imposed superintendent Cami Anderson announced that nine more schools would be added to the list of so-called “turnaround” schools that would–theoretically–operate on an extended day schedule with a staff of committed volunteers who had bought into the reform. But it hasn’t turned out that way. Teachers had the right to opt out of the reform although they were warned they would be transferred to other schools, no matter The “turnaround” snafu–deliberately making neighborhood public schools fail? | Bob Braun's Ledger: Standardized Test Refusals Ripple Through Statewide Results | KPLU Seattle Standardized Test Refusals Ripple Through Statewide Results | KPLU News for Seattle and the Northwest: Standardized Test Refusals Ripple Through Statewide Results New statewide test scores released Monday largely confirm what a sneak peek suggested earlier this summer: Pass rates on the new, tougher assessments have dropped, though by less than many feared. But those results come with an asterisk in one grade. Washington students outperformed the scores from a national trial run of the Smarter Balanced Assessments last year. That’s in line with preliminary results released in July. What those results didn’t show, however, was what happens when you factor in the kids who declined to take the test, whose scores get averaged in as zeroes. In grades 3-8 it was just a few percent, but in grade 11, about half the students refused the test. This year the Smarter Balanced tests are not required for those high school juniors to graduate, but they will be phased in as a graduation requirements starting next year. State Superintendent Randy Dorn says he agrees with the refusers that high school students are over-tested, but says the new Smarter Balanced assessments are still an important tool. “I think it provides kids information about where they’re at. I think it provides parents information. And it’s just an element of your educational system. It’s not theelement,” Dorn said. Test refusals brought the share of 11th graders meeting standards down to 26 percent in English, and just 14 percent in math. They also shrank the state’s overall participation rate below a threshold that could trigger sanctions by the U.S. Department of Education. Dorn says he doesn’t think the federal government is looking to act punitively, though. Standardized Test Refusals Ripple Through Statewide Results | KPLU News for Seattle and the Northwest: from a loyal teachers union member – Dear NEA Retired: HOW DARE YOU! | Reclaim Reform from a loyal teachers union member – Dear NEA Retired: HOW DARE YOU! | Reclaim Reform: from a loyal teachers union member – Dear NEA Retired: HOW DARE YOU! Today, August 17, I received the new Summer 2015 issue of neaTODAY: for NEA-Retired Members with the following cover article: NO PLANS TO RETIRE! ~ 87-year-old school counselor’s high-touch, personal approach boosts student success. NEA President Lily Eskelsen Garcia and the NEA Board continue to take funding, in spite of openly promising otherwise, from Bill Gates and other billionaire funders of Common Core State Standards. They accept that money for an NEA Foundation. Therefore they approve of CCSS which comes with attached high stakes tests. The high stakes tests are used as hire-fire decision makers for teacher evaluations. Value Added Modeling (VAM and the other alphabet soup mix of unproven teacher evaluation models) allows teachers to be fired without just cause before they become too old, too ill or too expensive by reaching retirement age. The cover story lauding a person who has no plans to retire sends a “happy” message that is redolent of Gomer Pyle as a US Marine. However, Gomer was a mere television amusement which was never meant to be even close to reality. The NEA article is meant to be what it states. I intend no personal slight or insult to the lauded counselor, Lillian Orlich, who is certainly a fine person and a fine counselor. Where are VAM points for a “school counselor’s high-touch, personal approach boosts student success.” Are we really meant to believe that a “high-touch, personal approach” boosts student success? Where is this on any teacher evaluation list? In my little county of Brevard, Florida over 350 career teachers have left teaching. The same in happening across America which is facing an accredited teacher shortage. I am a loyal NEA member and have been for over four decades. I served NEA in Illinois on our local faculty association board for years prior to my retirement. I attended this year’s NEA-RA in Orlando not as an elected delegate but to chauffeur a friend and delegate one day, to have dinner and supportive conversations with Illinois delegates another day, and to attend a BAT event on a third day. I shook hands and talked with the Illinois Education Association President. Even though I need not defend my loyalty, I want to make it very from a loyal teachers union member – Dear NEA Retired: HOW DARE YOU! | Reclaim Reform: Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 8/17/15 SPECIAL NITE CAP CORPORATE ED REFORM Should You Opt Out - The Crucial VoiceThe Crucial Voice Should You Opt Out - The Crucial VoiceThe Crucial Voice: Should You Opt Out Opting out of state tests means: You are using an effective tool to fight the unethical use of standardized testing that has, for decades, hindered real progress in providing equal access to quality education in America.United Opt OutWhen significant numbers of parents opt their children out of testing, they are statistica by mike simpson / 41min What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction | Steve Nelson What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction | Steve Nelson: What We Know, What We Do -- A ContradictionMost critics of current education reform cite political shenanigans, funding sleight of hand and concerns about privatization. Those concerns are justified, but the deeper problem is educational. Education may be the dimension of contemporary life where "what we do" is most profoundly i by mike simpson / 2h Dyett Activists Launch Hunger Strike Demanding Decision on Reopening School - Hyde Park - DNAinfo.com Chicago Dyett Activists Launch Hunger Strike Demanding Decision on Reopening School - Hyde Park - DNAinfo.com Chicago: Dyett Activists Launch Hunger Strike Demanding Decision on Reopening SchoolTwelve people pushing for a district-run option for reopening Dyett High School have refused to eat until the plan is approved.GRAND BOULEVARD — Twelve school activists started a hunger strike Monday morning, deman Teacher shortages, student loan debt featured topics on Capitol - WKOW 27: Madison, WI Breaking News, Weather and Sports Teacher shortages, student loan debt featured topics on Capitol - WKOW 27: Madison, WI Breaking News, Weather and Sports: Teacher shortages, student loan debt featured topics on Capitol City SundayWKOW 27: Madison, WI Breaking News, Weather and SportsMADISON (WKOW) -- On this week's edition of Capitol City Sunday, Tim Slekar, dean of Education at Madison Edgewood College and Percy Brown, director This Week In Education: Thompson: A NOLA Middle Ground This Week In Education: Thompson: A NOLA Middle Ground: Thompson: A NOLA Middle GroundJohn Merrow, in Deciphering Schooling in New Orleans, Post-Katrina, writes that he hasn’t seen enough people take the middle ground when discussing the ten year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans's school reform. He also remembers the city's schools as so bad, pre-Katrini, that one had to "stea Rauner offers CPS $200 million in pension help — with a catch | Chicago Rauner offers CPS $200 million in pension help — with a catch | Chicago: Rauner offers CPS $200 million in pension help — with a catchGov. Bruce Rauner on Monday offered up $200 million in state aid to offset Chicago Public Schools’ pension costs but said it would come only as part of a comprehensive school reform package that includes allowing the city and local towns to opt out of collective b Big Win for Opt-Out | Alan Singer Big Win for Opt-Out | Alan Singer: Big Win for Opt-OutThe Opt-Out movement in New York State and maybe across the country may have already won. In New York, 200,000 students refused to take either the Math or English standardized exam (or both) last April. This was quadruple the number of students opting out of the 2014 tests and by far the highest opt-out rate in the country.Opt-Out is a parent-l Common Core tests succeeding in labeling children as failures - Wait What? Common Core tests succeeding in labeling children as failures - Wait What?: Common Core tests succeeding in labeling children as failures“It’s only because of their stupidity that they’re able to be so sure of themselves.” – Franz Kafka, The Trail (1925)Or are we the stupid ones for letting the “education reformers” get away with undermining our children, their teachers and our public schools.Wh The Time to Act is Now! BESE election is scheduled for October 24 | Crazy Crawfish's Blog The Time to Act is Now! | Crazy Crawfish's Blog: The Time to Act is Now!It is two months and a week to the election and I am in dire need of volunteers and cash.The BESE election is scheduled for October 24.Time is running short to impact an election that will have direct statewide implications for the next four years. If we don’t win the outcome of this election will probably set our public schoo New LCFF Snapshot Available - Year 2015 (CA Dept of Education) New LCFF Snapshot Available - Year 2015 (CA Dept of Education): New Online Tool Provides Vital Data on SchoolsSACRAMENTO—Do you want to know the graduation or dropout rates at a high school or how students there performed on college readiness exams? Or the number of student suspensions or expulsions at a school? Or the percentage of English learner students who made progress toward English profici CURMUDGUCATION: Watts: Presence, Present and Future CURMUDGUCATION: Watts: Presence, Present and Future: Watts: Presence, Present and FutureNear the top of my list of not-exactly-education sites is Maria Popova's Brain Pickings, a site that consistently provides great writing and insights about how to be fully human in the world-- which of course means it really is about education after all.Here's a post that lifts from the work of Alan Watts (1915 California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP) System - Testing (CA Dept of Education) California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP) System - Testing (CA Dept of Education): California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress (CAASPP) SystemCalifornia's new statewide student assessment system.CAASPP SystemOn January 1, 2014, California Education Code Section 60640 established the CAASPP System of assessments. The CAASPP - CalEdFacts Web page provides a mor For the Record: You Ain’t Done a Thing | Recovery School District | The New Orleans Tribune For the Record: You Ain’t Done a Thing | A Tribune Editorial | The New Orleans Tribune: FOR THE RECORD: YOU AIN’T DONE A THING | A TRIBUNE EDITORIALIt’s been a tough several months on the local public education front: Let’s count the ways:First, Act 543, which captures local sales and property tax dollars for the use of the Recovery School District and charter school boards that do not answer to t WA Court Fines Legislature $100,000 a Day for Failure to Remedy School Funding | janresseger WA Court Fines Legislature $100,000 a Day for Failure to Remedy School Funding | janresseger: WA Court Fines Legislature $100,000 a Day for Failure to Remedy School FundingDespite the intrusive role of the federal government in public education imposed by the 2002, No Child Left Behind Act, “All 50 state constitutions require their state to establish and fund education for its children. These pro Luke Bronin breaking the law with illegal corporate in-kind contributions - Wait What? Luke Bronin breaking the law with illegal corporate in-kind contributions - Wait What?: Luke Bronin breaking the law with illegal corporate in-kind contributionsIf elected Hartford Connecticut’s s next mayor, Greenwich native Luke Bronin says he’ll successfully plow the streets, solve the city’s crime problems and provide jobs for the residents of Connecticut’s poorest city.In order to persuade th Coping with back-to-school stress, K-12 Coping with back-to-school stress, K-12: Coping with back-to-school stress, K-12(TNS) | Going back to school is exciting, invigorating — and stressful.It’s human nature to feel anxious in the face of change, experts say, but there’s plenty that parents can do to help kids feel prepared for school, from showing small children where the cafeteria and bathrooms are to helping high school freshmen fig What Presidential Candidates Can Learn From Spaghetti Sauce » Missouri Education Watchdog What Presidential Candidates Can Learn From Spaghetti Sauce » Missouri Education Watchdog: What Presidential Candidates Can Learn From Spaghetti SauceThe Presidential campaign is proving that Common Core is an issue that is not going to go away. Every candidate, in all political parties, is going to be asked, at some point, where they stand on Common Core. They should know that at least one segmen You’re Fired! | EduShyster You’re Fired! | EduShyster: You’re Fired!Teachers at Chicago’s Urban Prep Academies voted to form a union—then a whole bunch of them got fired…It’s back to school season, reader. Which means that all over the land teachers are returning to their classrooms, armed with the $513 worth of school supplies they purchased with their own money. Well, not all over the land. Sixteen Chicago-land teachers a Teachers claim unfair evaluations in Lawrence - The Boston Globe Teachers claim unfair evaluations in Lawrence - The Boston Globe: Dismissed Lawrence teachers fault evaluationsSeveral say feedback was inadequate, not given quickly enoughA number of teachers who lost their jobs in Lawrence public schools this year say they were unfairly evaluated, asserting that administrators failed to provide adequate and timely feedback.The Lawrence school system, taken over Academic expectations around the country, in two maps - The Hechinger Report Academic expectations around the country, in two maps - The Hechinger Report: Academic expectations around the country, in two mapsMany education experts, and lay people alike, argue that you must set high academic standards in order for students to excel at school. All too often you hear the lament that low-income minority students often perform poorly because schools don’t expect much of them. N Jeb Bush Is Trying Really Hard To Sound Like He Doesn’t Support Common Core | ThinkProgress Jeb Bush Is Trying Really Hard To Sound Like He Doesn’t Support Common Core | ThinkProgress: Jeb Bush Is Trying Really Hard To Sound Like He Doesn’t Support Common CoreFormer Florida governor and GOP presidential candidate Jeb Bush had an awkward conversation about Common Core education standards this week, calling the initiative’s name “poisonous” while attempting to appeal to conservatives who o Dollars, Details And The Devil: Top 10 Needed Charter School Reforms Dollars, Details And The Devil: Top 10 Needed Charter School Reforms: Dollars, Details And The Devil: Top 10 Needed Charter School Reforms“Oh it’s a long, long while from May to December,” Maxwell Anderson’s great lyric tells us, “But the days go short when you reach September.” And with the Ohio legislature’s inaction on anticipated charter school reform, the classic tune also reminds us that “On The (Possibly) Post-No Child Left Behind Presidency - The Daily Beast Campbell Brown The (Possibly) Post-No Child Left Behind Presidency - The Daily Beast: The (Possibly) Post-No Child Left Behind PresidencyThe issue of how to education the next generation is one that each presidential candidate needs to address.Not so long ago but at a moment whose goodwill seems far away, President George Bush signed No Child Left Behind, the bill that still guides U.S. spending on public educat Dan Walters: Rating California schools is a big battle | The Sacramento Bee Dan Walters: Rating California schools is a big battle | The Sacramento Bee: Dan Walters: Rating California schools is a big battle Students Matter, an organization created and financed by Silicon Valley entrepreneur David Welch (pictured), successfully sued the state over teacher seniority and tenure laws, contending that they shortchange “high-needs” students. Now it’s suing 13 school districts Want More Teachers? Pay More | Al Jazeera America Want More Teachers? Pay More | Al Jazeera America: Want more teachers? Pay moreRecruiting workers to a field is easy, if you’re willing to offer the market wageLast week the New York Times ran a lengthy piece calling attention to school districts across the country that are having a difficult time attracting new teachers. The piece reported that many school districts are relaxing standards in orde by mike simpson / 10h When Teachers Flunk When Teachers Flunk: When Teachers FlunkLet’s say you’re hoping to become a public school teacher in New York City. You have your master’s degree, your chosen discipline, your arsenal of dry-erase markers. Now all that’s left is to take the state’s Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST), required for certification. On that exam, you may be asked questions based on a passage about Gertrude Stein or a Global Free Market: A Perspective and Admonition - teacher/poet/musician/watch cat: teacher/poet/musician/watch cat: Global Free Market: A Perspective and Admonition: Global Free Market: A Perspective and AdmonitionFree market principles, supported by neo-conservatism or neo-liberalism and perpetuated by a “corporatists’ crusade,” are aligned with the policies of the “Chicago School” ideologues, the World Trade Organization and the International Monetary Fund. These doctrines per empathyeducates - Eleven Parents Launch Hunger Strike empathyeducates - Eleven Parents Launch Hunger Strike: Eleven Parents Launch Hunger Strike!!! Media Alert Eleven parents from Bronzeville and allies from communities across Chicago launch a hunger strike in front of Dyett High School to call out the injustice suffered at the hands of CPS and the appointed Board of Education and to demand the adoption of the Global Leadership and Green Technology p We Have A Long Way To Go With Testing, But Where To? | The Jose Vilson We Have A Long Way To Go With Testing, But Where To? | The Jose Vilson: We Have A Long Way To Go With Testing, But Where To?I’m opting out of the latest testing results discussion.Columbia University professor Aaron Pallas astutely observed that every city and state politician came to their respective podiums with some variation of “We have a long way to go” as part of their statements about the n Will New York State Flunk Most of the Class of 2022? | deutsch29 Will New York State Flunk Most of the Class of 2022? | deutsch29: Will New York State Flunk Most of the Class of 2022?The New York State Education Department (NYSED) and the NY Board of Regents are standing firm in their allegiance to the state’s Common-Core-aligned exams.Sure, there is no proof that passing a Regents exam aligned to Common Core will deliver on the ad nauseam “college and career r SPECIAL NITE CAP CORPORATE ED REFORMWhen A Budget Motel Is 'Home,' There's Little Room For Childhood : NPRWhen A Budget Motel Is 'Home,' There's Little Room For Childhood : NPR: When A Budget Motel Is 'Home,' There's Little Room For ChildhoodIan opens the door to the motel room he shares with his mother, Karen. Their living situation has exposed the 5-year-old to conditions most students his age d Chicago Tribune Editor Kristen McQueary’s Romantic... Alexandra Miletta: It’s All About the Bell Curve: ... The “turnaround” snafu–deliberately making neighbo... Standardized Test Refusals Ripple Through Statewid... from a loyal teachers union member – Dear NEA Reti... Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 8/17/15... Should You Opt Out - The Crucial VoiceThe Crucial ... What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction | Stev... Dyett Activists Launch Hunger Strike Demanding Dec... Teacher shortages, student loan debt featured topi... This Week In Education: Thompson: A NOLA Middle Gr... Rauner offers CPS $200 million in pension help — ... Common Core tests succeeding in labeling children... The Time to Act is Now! BESE election is scheduled... New LCFF Snapshot Available - Year 2015 (CA Dept o... CURMUDGUCATION: Watts: Presence, Present and Futur... California Assessment of Student Performance and P... For the Record: You Ain’t Done a Thing | Recovery ... WA Court Fines Legislature $100,000 a Day for Fail... Luke Bronin breaking the law with illegal corporat... What Presidential Candidates Can Learn From Spaghe... Teachers claim unfair evaluations in Lawrence - Th... Academic expectations around the country, in two m... Jeb Bush Is Trying Really Hard To Sound Like He Do... Dollars, Details And The Devil: Top 10 Needed Char... The (Possibly) Post-No Child Left Behind Presidenc... Dan Walters: Rating California schools is a big ba... Global Free Market: A Perspective and Admonition -... empathyeducates - Eleven Parents Launch Hunger Str...
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A view from other side of the “rogue wall” on 82nd Posted by Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor) on February 19th, 2010 at 1:41 pm View of NE 82nd showing walkers and new barrier wall. (Photo: Elly Blue/Flickr) On Wednesday, we brought you news of the first “communique” from newly formed activist group The People’s Department of Transportation (PDOT). Their video featured on-the-street interviews and commentary that was critical of a new wall erected by the Oregon Department of Transportation in the middle of NE 82nd street. The wall is in place between NE Jonesmore and Wasco streets where 82nd crosses Interstate 84. The activist group PDOT (not to be confused with the official PBOT with a “B”) characterized it as a “rogue wall” that, “divides Portland” and “inconveniences thousands.” “While we are disappointed that some people didn’t join the conversation until the project was nearing completion, we remain convinced that we have employed a public, collaborative process to achieve a well-considered remedy.” — Jason Tell, ODOT Region 1 Director After watching the PDOT film, I contacted ODOT Region 1 Manager Jason Tell for an explanation. Tell explained that the new barrier is part of a “comprehensive solution” to what he referred to as a “historically dangerous section of 82nd Ave.” According to ODOT, this barrier wall was put up to discourage people from crossing this busy stretch of 82nd mid-block and the idea is to “channel” them to marked crosswalks at signalized intersections. Ironically, this same wall that has become the ire of this new activist group (and many in the community judging from comments on their story and ours), was featured in a presentation by Tell at the recent Transportation Safety Summit and held up as a shining example of community collaboration. Tell said the wall is the result of a more than two year process working with neighborhood groups, public transit riders, community leaders, and officials from TriMet and the City of Portland. “We incorporated all voices from the community in an effort to find a solution that created a safer roadway for everyone – pedestrians, bicyclists and motorists.” The $382,000 project (funded by ODOT, City of Portland, and TriMet) also includes widened crosswalks and relocated bus stops (for more on the project visit ODOT’s website). Tell acknowledged that not everyone supports their solution, but said that’s to be expected with any project. He continued: “And, while we are disappointed that some people didn’t join the conversation until the project was nearing completion, we remain convinced that we have employed a public, collaborative process to achieve a well-considered remedy.” As evidence that the new median barrier had buy-in from locals and various stakeholders, Tell forwarded me nine letters about the project. The letters were dated between September and November 2008 and signed by representatives of TriMet, the Portland Police Bureau, the Willamette Pedestrian Coalition, Central Northeast Neighbors Inc., Madison South Neighborhood, the Portland Bureau of Transportation, and the Montavilla Neighborhood Association. Here’s a rundown of sentiment expressed in those letters: TriMet expressed “full support” for the wall. Central Northeast Neighbors said “the installation of this fence would make it safer for all modes of transportation… and will benefit everyone in the community.” Police Chief Sizer said she supports the idea because it is in line with the principals of Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (a.k.a. CPTED). “It will send a message that orderliness is expected and the environment is being cared for,” she wrote. Dave Smith, Chair of the Madison South Neighborhood said he and his neighbors support the project. “We believe that this structure can be a beautiful addition to our neighborhood as well as serve to increase safety throughout this corridor.” The Willamette Pedestrian Coalition letter expressed some reservations about the proposed fence, saying it could have “unintended effect of increasing speeds” through this area, but they stopped short of opposing the plans. “If installed, the fence needs to be high enough to remove the challenge for youth to climb over but should not be the ‘great wall’ which would partition the street setting and exacerbate other crime and safety concerns.” The letter from PBOT said they support the concept of a “pedestrian gateway treatment” and that head traffic engineer Rob Burchfield said the idea “has merit.” Sandra McDaniel from the Montavilla Neighborhood Association wrote that they do not support the fence idea. Instead, they wanted a mid-block crossing installed (she cited a 12-3 vote in favor of that idea). “We believe we can do better with changing our [neighborhood’s] image. In our opinion, the fence plan would not further that goal.” “This is not something we got to because we liked it… We got here because in the end saving people’s lives is the most important thing. No one likes to feel constrained or forced — but this was the cost effective thing to do that would save people’s lives.” — Mayor Sam Adams It’s important to note that these letters were written before the wall was actually installed. It’s also worth noting that, as the Pedestrian Coalition’s letter pointed out, crossing mid-block at this location prior to the installation of this wall might have been dangerous — but it was entirely legal (as per Portland City Code 16.70.210). The Oregonian reported today that the design of the wall was vetted through a series of workshops and written comments. ODOT community spokesperson Shelli Romero told The O’s Hard Drive blog that, “This is the one that was chosen overwhelmingly… It’s what the community said it wanted.” Elly Blue, a citizen activist who put together the PDOT video, remains steadfast in her criticisms: “It’s scandalous to see urban design used again and again, under the vague guise of “safety,” to respond to issues stemming from poverty by dividing neighborhoods with physical barriers. It’s also interesting to note that most of the people who seem to favor the wall do so because it makes it easier to drive through the area and more difficult to walk through.” I spoke with both Tell and Mayor Adams about this issue more today. I asked them if there were any measures considered that would have dealt with the speed and volume of motor vehicle traffic (the bull in this China shop as Mikael Colville-Andersen referred to it). Tell said yes, a lot of different options were looked at but none of them were viable. Since this corridor is “designed to handle traffic,” he said, they were reluctant to send this traffic onto neighborhood streets. “We want it [motor vehicle traffic] on bigger arterials.” Mayor Adams told me his was skeptical of this solution when ODOT first brought it to him. “I was skeptical at first so I brought it to PBOT staff and questioned all their assumptions and analysis. After a lot of looking at raised crosswalks, rumble strips, speed bumps, and so on, this is what it came down to.” Adams echoed Tell’s feeling that diverting traffic off of NE 82nd and onto what he called “substandard neighborhood streets without sidewalks” would be not be a good solution. Adams said both he and Tell arrived at this wall “reluctantly.” Adams said, “This is not something we got to because we liked it… We got here because in the end saving people’s lives is the most important thing. No one likes to feel constrained to forced — but this was the cost effective thing to do that would save people’s lives.” — For more on this issue, read coverage in The Oregonian, watch activist group PDOT’s video, visit ODOT’s project page, and read the Mid-County Memo’s story. Front Page, Infrastructure, News odot ODOT in hot seat as debate over 82nd Avenue safety upgrades continues April 20, 2018 High schooler clings to life after collision at notorious 82nd Avenue intersection March 4, 2019 Here's the deal on new gate at River View Cemetery July 11, 2017 Woman has life-threatening injuries after collision on SE 82nd Ave - UPDATED October 15, 2018 Jacob February 19, 2010 at 1:55 pm Why not just reduce vehicle speeds and install a signalized crosswalk (with priority given to the crosswalk, not vehicular traffic). That wall is ridiculous. as is Sizers quote: “It will send a message that orderliness is expected and the environment is being cared for,” Jonathan Maus (Editor-in-Chief) February 19, 2010 at 2:13 pm RE: dealing with motor vehicle traffic to solve this issue. i just got off a conference call with Mayor Adams and Jason Tell about that issue. i’m updating the story immediately. The wall is 0.2 miles long. The entirety of it’s length doesn’t face a single residential building. Please point out the socio-economic advantages that people on one side of the wall have over the people on the other side? In that case we better start building more bridges over I-84 because the distance between overpasses is over a mile. Would I-84 be a bigger issue with regards to creating pockets of poverty in Portland? matchu February 19, 2010 at 2:04 pm I agree with Jacob’s sentiments. By “channeling” non-motorized users – who previously could cross legally cross here – a very clear message is being sent that motor vehicles are the highest priority and thus others are inferior relatively speaking. Is 82nd Avenue to be another freeway or is it be a street in which all modes of transportation are equally respected? Is this site now pedportland.org? Where is the bike content? I realize this is not a bike-centric story… but my initial coverage of it — which was more to introduce the new activist group than to highlight this specific issue — did not present ODOT/The City’s view so I felt a follow-up was warranted. Also, I think it’s important to learn as much as we can about how ODOT/PBOT make traffic decisions… especially when they involve non-motorized traffic issues. AaronF February 19, 2010 at 2:08 pm 82nd avenue has another name: Cascade Highway 213 I don’t think the crosswalk on the corner is all that far away really… Marcus Griffith February 19, 2010 at 2:15 pm Elly Blue hit the nail on the head: the vast majority or persons and organizations supporting the wall do so because it makes driving through the area easier. Perhaps it would be better if transportation projects are viewed from other angles than a driver’s seat. Some aesthetic improvements to the area would go along way in improving livibaility in the area while encouring foot traffic. I would be interested in seeing the accident statistics for that area. The wall is pretty ugly that is for sure, but the barrier dividing the neighborhood is 82nd st. When there are pedestrian/car collisions this blog rightly protests. Too frequently these altercations are in sidewalks because despite laws, signage, lighting and marked corridors drivers do not obey rules. With this wall agencies have address the valid concern of pedestrian safety and a vocal minority protests. It seems that most readers of this blog delight in bashing “THE MAN” regardless of his action or reasoning. matchu, I guess we should put crosswalks on I-84 as well. Bob_M February 19, 2010 at 2:44 pm I posted anonymously #8 inadvertantly. Your coverage in this article did indeed give the ODOT/PBOT perspective, and it appears their intentions were to go through the proper channels and do the right thing. Malex February 19, 2010 at 3:06 pm I remain skeptical of ODOT/PBOT’s decision process on this matter. Here are two points I find interesting: 1) My coworker, who uses the 82nd Ave. station almost every day, had no idea this was happening until construction started. Are the transit users themselves not among most important “stakeholders” in this decision? Did ODOT/PBOT make a sufficient effort to listen to them? My coworker’s experience is not a good sign. 2) Mayor Adams raises the specter of traffic cutting through on smaller streets if it became congested on 82nd. This seems unlikely, given the paucity of alternatives: the crosswalk would be on a bridge over a freeway! There are not many bridges over I-84, sadly! The nearest alternate bridge is on 74th, and cutting through using it would add more than a mile to car trips. Here is a link to comment to ODOT: http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/COMM/CRO/index.shtml Corey Burger February 19, 2010 at 3:11 pm But it is such a pretty wall. Large amounts of concrete and high vehicle speeds help make a neighbourhood livable and attractive. I can’t see why people are complaining. Think of all the community artists that now have a new canvas to explore with their delightfully self-expressive spray paint art. todd February 19, 2010 at 3:18 pm tangent re “substandard neighborhood streets without sidewalks”: riding through some of the unpaved, rutted, potholed and puddled, muddy, sidewalk-free streets of the outer east side recently, an epiphany: these are probably the safest, most peaceful of all streets in portland because cars can’t exceed 15 or so MPH comfortably. children play in them, and adults walk down the middle of them. if not for all the ugly private property being stored free in the right of way (i.e., parked cars), they come closest to preserving the design and function of nearly all portland’s streets as established within a couple decades of 1900, before motorists succeeded in claiming privileged access to public resources. they are also porous so better for river health. Please depave my Mt. Tabor neighborhood. And then 82d AVENUE, AND THEN I-84! matt picio February 19, 2010 at 3:19 pm I find it interesting that out of all the letters presented, not only was only 1 of them critical of and against the project – but that the letter in question is the only letter from the people who actually USE that facility. As a former resident of that neighborhood, and one who used that facility for more than 3 years, I can say with confidence that I had no idea this project was happening, I also would have weighed in against it, and I feel that this solution will eventually only end up making things worse. Also, they’ve now channeled pedestrians and cyclists (yes, there are cyclists who run across that section when taking a bike from MAX ino the neighborhood, or onto the #72 or #77) into the crosswalks at 2 hazardous intersecions, both of which are in blind spots for oncoming traffic from the overpass. The wall sucks, and the so-called “art” that is in actuality there to prevent people from climbing over the wall doesn’t make it look nice at all – it makes it look like a prison, like many other Tri-Met facilities (Sunset TC comes to mind). cyclist February 19, 2010 at 3:34 pm I want to see if I understand the ruckus. The problem is that people leaving the Max have to walk approx 50 feet up to to the light at Halsey (or is it Jonesmore? Google maps says it’s Halsey) to cross the street and then maybe 100 feet back to the bus stop? Pardon me if I don’t shed a tear. Take a look at the map here for an idea of exactly how much of an extra walk the pedestrians now have. THIS is the fight you’re picking? What about funding for bike boulevards and off-street trails (such as the proposed Sullivan’s Gulch trail)? Shouldn’t we want people to walk an extra 200 feet a day? According to Google Maps it is 1 tenth of a mile between these two intersections, which means that’s the maximum distance you’d have to walk to get from one side of the street to the other (assuming of course that you’re starting right in the middle and ending right in the middle). The MAX and bus stops are both much shorter distances than that. I just can’t believe that you’re wasting our time on this. greenkrypto.com February 19, 2010 at 3:36 pm This type of barrier used for the same reasons in many areas of San Diego. Not pretty but either is flattened pedestrians. I think the Berlin Wall was only .1 miles long too… I think Joseph Rose nailed this one. Thanks for the update JMaus! Great reporting. Malex (#12) – Actually, that’s the second nearest bridge. The nearest bridge is Halsey, about 2 blocks away. Cut-through traffic can get to it via the lights at Wasco and at 82nd north of the bridge. It adds about 1/4 mile to the trip, not a mile. cyclist (#16) – the ruckus has nothing to do with 100 extra feet. It has to do with the following a. It’s an eyesore b. people are still going to shortcut the crosswalks if possible c. once motorists think it’ll keep the peds out of their way, average speeds in that stretch will increase d. It prioritizes car traffic above the other modes “d” is the most pertinent. Why should cars be prioritized further? They already have priority by virtue of smart signals, road width, assigned speeds, and the road design. Let’s fix the area for all modes rather than giving further preference to motorists. “d” is the most pertinent. Why should cars be prioritized further? It’s a Highway Lenny Anderson February 19, 2010 at 3:54 pm The money would have been better spent providing additional stair access to the MAX platform so transit riders would not have to cross 82nd at all to transfer between trains and buses. Noah Genda February 19, 2010 at 3:57 pm It is a highway of sorts, and they are dangerous to cross. Walk to a crosswalk, or take your chances. try running over to HUB across Powell for Happy Hour if you want to talk dangerous. I really believe the moeny could have went to more deserving avenues, but hey what do I know I live on SE 21st. Matt Picio: with regards to your post: a) That may be, however the majority of the eyesore is on a highway overpass, so unless you’re walking, biking, or driving by it, nobody’s going to see it. Besides, your eyesore is somebody else’s art, right? b) It sounds to me like the barrier is pretty darn effective, otherwise why would the geniuses at “PDOT” be complaining about it? The complaint is that the “Berlin Wall” makes an impassible obstacle right? c) PDOT changed the timing of the lights in the area in order to help calm traffic speed (similar to how they do it downtown). So long as pedestrians don’t cross against the light, they should be safer. d) Be that as it may, the argument that this wall presents a huge impediment to walking is baldly absurd. As I said, we’re talking about a 200 foot walking distance. And for those of you who’d like a little historical context, a couple of fun facts about the real Berlin Wall: The total length of the Berlin Wall was 96 miles. Sixty-six miles comprised a concrete barrier 13 feet high. It also consisted of 302 watch towers and 20 bunkers. About 3,200 people were arrested in the border area. More than 160 people were killed in the death area, and another 120 people were injured. Maybe the East Germans didn’t notice the signalized crossing 30 seconds from where they were trying to cross? What a shame! AaronF (#20) – All roads are highways. 82nd is not a limited access highway. I’ll say again, why should they be prioritized further? What gives motorists more right to access than other modes. (hint: the correct answer is “nothing”) cyclist (#23) – A: Well, that’s everybody – but I’ll concede your point. B: It’s effective now – and only at keeping people off that stretch. C: Uh… right. Downtown is a completely different situation, 82nd does not have a light every city block. This is more analagous to ODOT’s efforts on McLoughlin, where I assure you traffic speeds have not decreased. D: I never said it was a huge impediment. It’s a minor inconvenience for most and a major inconvenience for some. The basic point is sound – this road is already prioritized for cars above all other modes, despite the fact that at least 20% of the traffic through this “intersection” and possibly as much as 45% is pedestrian. It takes a car about 3-5 seconds to transit the overpass. It takes a pedestrian about 5 seconds if they cross directly, it takes them about 1-2 minutes if they use a crosswalk. Why should the cars have priority in all circumstances? Matt Picio (#19): You are correct, Halsey is the closest other bridge. However, it is definitely not a “substandard neighborhood street without [a] sidewalk” which is what Adams said would be the alternative to 82nd. Redirecting traffic from 82nd to a tiny bit of Halsey doesn’t seem so bad to me; Halsey is mostly used by speeding cars already. Adams’ excuse still rings completely hollow to me. Not to give Ms. Blue to much attention for her humorless melodrama, but the median separates a highway overpass — not disparately different social classes or neighborhoods. I think she needs to step away from her privileged white middle-class view of the oppressed and visit a place where real walls between the haves and have-nots exist. But that median sure is ugly. Jim Lee February 19, 2010 at 6:24 pm Grew up in that neighborhood. Go Elly! How can I join PDOT? Vance Longwell February 19, 2010 at 6:50 pm Ooh, that’s an interesting point. ‘Highway’ is referred to in statute dis-ambiguously. For the sake of brevity, that’s interchangeable with ‘road’ or public-right-of-way. It’s even got a definition statute. However the term ‘Highway’ is also used in ODOT policy to distinguish between a highway and something like an interstate, or freeway. Like Hwy 30 or some such. And 82nd is technically a highway right there. I forget which one. (99E, right?) But I wonder if, in fact, it is an actual highway whether or not it would be legal to cross there as a ped, if it were? Pretty sure peds are routinely, legally, banned from Highways, right? There’s probably some special provisions for Highways like that, but I doubt it regulates ped crossings. I don’t have a dog in this fight, I just thought that was an interesting question. I had presumed, like J did, that it’s legal to cross there, but it may not be. I’m with the other person up there too. I get really frustrated with peds who won’t use the crosswalks and the light. But then too, it bothers me when people go careening off the freeway to catch an off-ramp. In both cases, you missed your chance, so sorry. Why endanger a passel of people to compensate for your own mess-up? Never have been able to reconcile that type of thinking. It’s quite foreign-seeming if you’re from here. Michael Andersen February 19, 2010 at 10:03 pm On the bike-content issue, I’m a pedestrian at least as often as I am a biker and I’m grateful for such a balanced report on this. On the actual wall issue, I’m looking forward to seeing PDOT’s plans for improving the site. And on the Sizer quote issue: WTF indeed. matt picio February 19, 2010 at 10:04 pm Vance (#29) – ODOT uses the same definitions as everyone else, it’s just than all ODOT roads are either major arterials or limited access highways like 217. You’ll never see a state road looking like SE Salmon. 82nd is Hwy 213. Peds are only banned from limited access highways, and bikes are only banned from specific ones in specific areas. It’s not legal to cross mid-block on the overcrossing because there is no marked crosswalk. And I’m not saying that people *should* be allowed to cross mid-block at that location, simply that unless physically prevented from doing so, that they will. The 2 obvious solutions are a signalized crosswalk or a barrier (wall). We can see which one ODOT chose. My objections are always prioritizing motorized traffic, and that the wall will over time increase speeds on that segment of 82nd Avenue. Then again, I am not a traffic engineer, though I did use that facility for over 3-1/2 years, and have crossed that street both legally and illegally. After the first couple times of using the crosswalk, I started crossing at mid-block. Not only was it quicker, but it felt safer. West Cougar February 19, 2010 at 10:27 pm All those making light of an extra minute or two to cross the road, that can often be the difference in making or missing one’s bus connection. An extra minute crossing the road can easily turn into an extra 15 or 20 minutes waiting for the next bus. It is obvious the people who had expressed support for this horrible solution have never had to commute by bus themselves and deal with making connections. velomann February 19, 2010 at 10:34 pm As someone who lives in the neighborhood and regularly drives that stretch, I was initially in favor of the wall/fence/whatever they could come up with to encourage (OK, force) people to walk a couple hundred feet north and use the crosswalk & light. I was always on the lookout for “dashers,” especially when a bus was unloading. But I’m disappointed in the solution. That sucker is ugly and lends an East Berlin kind of vibe to the overpass now. I still get a chuckle, in a sad kind of way, every time I look up in my neighborhood and see one of the “”Avenue of Roses” signs under the “82nd Avenue” street signs. You gotta look real hard to find any roses on 82nd. It feels like the city just writes us off as the ghetto they can fix with new signage and concrete. From used car lots to drive-throughs to concrete walls, 82nd is all about the supremacy of the auto. We can do better. bring your bike plan east and tear down the wall, Mr. Mayor. shawn February 19, 2010 at 10:46 pm “Cyclist”, you’re basically saying its only 200 extra feet to use the legal marked crosswalk in this case and we should just “suck it up”. And I understand, Americans are a sedentary bunch and we should get more exercise, etc etc. But this is also a transit facility were talking about, and while most people can walk that “extra 200 feet”, what about those having mobility issues (wheelchair, cane, mobility device, or are old)? Wouldn’t you rather see a mid-block crossing for those folks, to make it easier for them to get around (and for them, it already is hard enough as it is). Or are you content with telling them to “suck it up”? And for those of you saying “82nd is a highway”, well, yeah. But it’s also a neighborhood street, with businesses and residences on or near it. So because it’s designated “Hwy. 213” we can just tell those residents to suck it up as well? To anonymous 27, who said, “I think she needs to step away from her privileged white middle-class view of the oppressed and visit a place where real walls between the haves and have-nots exist”. How ’bout going to that MAX station and the 72 bus stop and tell us about who are the haves and have-nots. It’s got to be one of the most economically underprivileged and ethnically diverse stations in the city. are February 19, 2010 at 11:10 pm people coming up from the train trying to catch a bus. not so much whether they can walk the extra fifty feet. and fifty feet back. before the bus rolls away. some maybe carrying bikes (just to keep the bike angle in here). not sure i quite get why a signalized crosswalk would not have been a better solution. but i guess middle class white folks should withhold comment. AaronF February 19, 2010 at 11:33 pm I transfer from the 75 to the 6 every morning (in the winter) on the corner of Lombard and Denver. Every once in awhile I just miss the 6, and if I had sprinted across the (very busy) highway I would have caught the transfer and saved 15-20 minutes… but instead I just leave for work a little earlier so I have time in case this happens. I don’t see the difference here. So yes, I am willing to tell everyone to just suck it up when they cross the highway. If you find yourself just barely missing a transfer, leave for work earlier or arrive at home later. I am also middle class and white, just for the record. 🙂 Elly Blue (Contributor) February 19, 2010 at 11:42 pm PDOT’s next excursion will be February 26th in the early evening. Everyone is invited. Save the date, more details coming soon! Also, despite what you see in the video, there’s a whole crew behind this operation. Our short term goal is to see at least enough of this wall come down to make way for a crosswalk and signal. In the long term, we’d like to see human mobility and safety be the explicit priority in all transportation projects. And by that I don’t mean shunting people on foot out of the way so people in cars can avoid having to slow down a little. Thanks for the fair reporting, Jonathan! Local resident February 20, 2010 at 12:34 am As I understand it, a mid-block crossing at this location would be dangerous. Mostly because 82nd is on a really steep hill right at Jonesmore, meaning car traffic cresting the hill at 38 miles per hour would NOT have time to see and stop for peds. Any crosswalk put in at a location such as this, would have to have a signal, which ups the cost into the, what, half-millions. A crosswalk with no signal, on a four-lane high speed arterial, puts pedestrians at risk of the double-threat as it is called (where the vehicle in the nearest lane stops for the pedestrian, but the vehicle in the furthest lane doesn’t see them, and doesn’t top, therefore hitting them) and is not encouraged by the MUTCD (manual for uniform traffic control devices, which both PBOT and ODOT have no choice but to follow when designing any new traffic engineering works). I also understand, ODOT are NOT allowed to put a signal up onto this portion of road, because of A) the too-short distance to the signal at Jonesmore, and B) the fact it is on a bridge structure over the MAX line and I-84, with weight limitations, or some such thing. I’m not saying there is a right or wrong answer to the problem at this location. I’m just saying, it’s more complicated than the article here makes it out to be. One more thing. I live in the area, and can say that there WAS a lot of community consultation about this problem. PBOT came to our local neighborhood assn at least twice to talk to us about this. So, for people who are actually bothered to get involved with their communities, this project was not a bolt out of the blue. Marcus Griffith February 20, 2010 at 1:41 am Elly: Glad your staying busy with PDOT. Could you cover the pretzel like bike path from North Portland to Vancouver? Since the wall is up and there s not a lot of money floating around, why not let wall stand and see if it makes the safety improvements it is supposed to do? If it works, than people can begrudgingly pick-another battle and if the wall doesn’t work, than the data could be used to deter similar attempts at other locations. PS: completely unrelated, any one have a few spare jack hammers and a workable plan on how a group of people can remove a few hundred feet of cement wall along a busy road without being seen? Red Five February 20, 2010 at 7:26 am yeah…those barriers were paid for with OUR tax dollars…go ahead and vandalize or destroy them and PDOT will only take more of our money to replace them. Real smart. noah February 20, 2010 at 7:50 am I’ve always thought the three Banfield stations should have additional exits: underpasses under NE 82nd and 60th, and a passage to NE 39th. bobcycle February 20, 2010 at 8:37 am From Joe Rose article: “What’s more he said,” (he being ODOT project manager Robert Hopewell) “a crosswalk signal in the middle of the 82nd Avenue overpass would have created a more dangerous environment, encouraging jaywalking, creating more conflicts with motorists, and jamming up traffic between two busy signals near freeway ramps.” So in PDOT opinion pedestrian crosswalks encourage jaywalking and conflict? Near freeway ramps??? no ramps on 82nd they are on adjacent streets Halsey and Multnomah. Also from the “O” article: “The crime around those transit stops has been a problem for a long time,” said East Precinct police Commander Mike Crebs, adding that it has been too easy for purse snatchers, gang members and anyone fleeing a crime scene to get away by dodging mid-block traffic.” So now criminals will have to walk to the corner and will be apprehended while waiting for a cross walk light? On another note maybe we’ll be seeing more walls built in downtown PDX to eliminate mid block crossing conflict and reduce criminal activity? The People's Department of Artistic License February 20, 2010 at 8:37 am Local resident: Let us recall, that this wall cost $380,000 while a crosswalk (with lights and a signal) costs $260,000. That price is lower. The People have reported on this already. We understand that not all local residents have the resources and time to obtain this data so The People had to form a news team. A crosswalk might weigh less than a concrete wall. Just maybe. While we can’t go back and undo ODOT’s rogue actions here, can someone at least figure out how they obtained that funding? Noah: That’s great news! Please let us know how PDOT can get some of that transportation budget. Sorry typo. above comment should read “so in ODOT opinion” not PDOT If PDOT is serious, it should obtain a rough cost estimate on such an underpass, since it might prove that it could have been a competitive alternative to the concrete barrier. AaronF February 20, 2010 at 9:01 am If there was a crosswalk would people still bolt across unsafely to catch their bus? You betcha. Would a crosswalk help with crime associated with the max station? Nope. I’m sure there really is no crime there though, right? Sizer made that up because she’s a fascist cop or something. Right. Besides, trying to tear down a $382,000 wall right after it’s built is a fool’s errand. It just isn’t going to happen. Maybe if you had voiced an opinion about the project before it was implemented… I can’t wait to see what the People’s Republic of Histrionics will do next to save the rest of us! jim February 20, 2010 at 10:59 am why didn’t they just put out the portable concrete barriers that they allready own? This could have been done for free and saved 382K of our tax money are February 20, 2010 at 10:59 am people did voice opposing views before the project was implemented, and they were disregarded. i don’t remember much about logic 101, but i am pretty sure the premise “car traffic cresting the hill at 38 miles per hour would not have time to see and stop for peds” could support conclusions other than “therefore don’t let people cross.” sabes February 20, 2010 at 12:47 pm Give me a break, people, IT’S A HIGHWAY! The idea that people want to divert traffic off a highway to other streets is crazy. The wall is short and is meant to make it safer. Oh yeah, and did I mention that IT’S A HIGHWAY? i don’t know why they didn’t do what they’ve done at similar max stations and just install a crosswalk in the middle of the road and ped crossing signs. it’s worked else where. are February 20, 2010 at 1:40 pm you did mention that, yes, and with the all caps feature on. you did not mention that it is the only thing that crosses 84 for some considerable distance in either direction. oh, except halsey. maybe you are recommending that to pedestrians who are getting on and off the max or catching a bus at, um, 82nd. Spencer Boomhower February 20, 2010 at 4:43 pm Interesting to look at this site pre-wall via Google Streetview: http://tinyurl.com/yec56vg You can see a woman on crunches, with a girl in tow, making the crossing from the bus to the Max station mid-bridge. Looks a little scary, but in the same situation, I think I’d have done the same thing. For one thing, you can see there was a sidewalk island in the middle, giving someone on foot a place to stop halfway across. Second, the legal crosswalk down the road would make me nervous (especially if I was on crutches, with kid in tow): http://tinyurl.com/y9dw5fa Note that Jonesmore (which, confusingly, seems to be labeled Halsey in Google Streetview) is a T-junction onto 82nd, so the cars coming out of Jonesmore might have very little to discourage them from taking that turn at-speed (there being no oncoming traffic). In that kind of situation, a crosswalk feels about as safe as taking your chances mid-block. It’s for roughly the same reasons that I’ll avoid crosswalks in the Pearl, or on Hawthorne; instead I’ll cross mid-block if I can. The crosswalks near the turning cars don’t feel entirely safe, so I’ll opt to wait for a natural break in traffic. With a mid-block signaled crossing, it feels even safer: you can usually first see that cars have stopped before you cross. And because you’re mid-block you’re away from franticly turning cars. So it seems like a mid-bridge ped crossing – with a stop signal – would have been better than a “Rogue Wall” on NE 82nd. Still, Local Resident (#38) makes a good point: “I also understand, ODOT are NOT allowed to put a signal up onto this portion of road, because of A) the too-short distance to the signal at Jonesmore” I could see how that would be the regulation in a spot like this. Of course, regulations like that smack of transportation decision-making that puts cars before everything else. Decision-making Gordon Price says can be traced back to the 1942 ITE Handbook, which was dedicated to the, “efficient, free, rapid flow of traffic.” (And by “traffic,” of course, they mean car traffic.) That seems to have been the guiding philosophy with this wall. There are plenty of things to like about cars, but they shouldn’t always be given priority. That they almost always are has become commonplace to the point of being hardly being noticed, much less challenged. Thanks to Elly and PDOT for noticing, and challenging. Yes this is a highway bridge, but it’s also a transit connection, almost a de facto transit center. One where it was probably always difficult to make a quick connection between the bus and Max. Now it’s even more difficult. I see where you’re coming from, but personally I have no problem with an urban bike blog finding common cause with other self-propelled people. Brodehl February 20, 2010 at 5:38 pm So anyway. I like this new PDOT. Kevin Hedahl February 20, 2010 at 6:04 pm I was very vocal in opposing this fence when I was on the Montavilla Neighborhood Association. This money was spent on something that was NOT needed. There have been ZERO people who have been hurt crossing at that point in the past 20 years. Building a wall was a terrible waste of money and could have been spent to make walking easier instead of harder. The People's Department of Artistic License February 20, 2010 at 8:02 pm Kevin, We are working on follow up campaigns to “tear down that wall”, please get in touch with us at propaganda@pdot.org if you are interested in putting your voice on the reocrd! Local resident (#38) said “a mid-block crossing … would be dangerous. Mostly because … car traffic cresting the hill at 38 miles per hour would NOT have time to see and stop for peds. ” Then the problem is either the location of the transit facility or the posted speed limit. Since the transit facility can’t be moved, the logical solution would be to reduce speeds through that segment. If cars can’t see a threat before striking it, then they are driving too fast for conditions and are in violation of the basic speed rule. If the road is what’s causing that, then the city has a responsibility to change the speed limit on that street to what is appropriate conditions – or else ODOT needs to remedy the issue. This wall does nothing to remedy that particular problem – someone can still step into the street in front of a car. As for getting involved, thousands of people who use this facility are not part of the affected neighborhoods – where were the Tri-Met notices about this meeting? Thousands of drivers who pass this point likewise do not live in Montavilla or the adjacent neighborhoods. For most of them, even those who are active, this *was* a bolt from the blue. As someone who has done this transfer (MAX to 72 across the st.) several times, and both using and not using the crosswalk, I can tell you that: a) The crosswalk is totally out of the way b) The crosswalk takes forever to trigger c) The crosswalk triggers a “Walk” sign when auto drivers are turning left from WB Halsey to SB 82nd) at high speed; so it feels even less safe that crossing legally mid-block d) The crosswalk delay is far too short (and I’m quite able bodied) e) None of the above is conducive to trying to quickly make a train/bus connection. The proper solutions to this are: a) TriMet build access to the SE 82nd Ave MAX station from the west side. b) Build signalized crosswalk, similar to the existing one on SE 82nd for the Springwater corridor. To those of you who keep using the “it’s a highway” argument, look no further than the existing signalized intersection for bikes/peds to see how workable this could have been for everyone (including drivers). Err… excuse me, by “crosswalk delay” in (d) I meant “crosswalk ‘walk’ time” Isn’t 82nd a highway designed for cars? If people illegaly cross a highway and get hit, well whose fault is that. Look bothways people and stop bitching about the automobile. jayzer February 21, 2010 at 9:21 am Is there a single thing on 82nd that is attractive? People are acting like they put this barrier in a rose garden. Cars have to move. 82nd is one of the few n-s arteries in town that moves at all. If someone got killed crossing here people would be flippping out. When people got killed on foster everyone asked why they didn’t do anthing before. Here they are being proactive and they are getting crucified. matt picio February 21, 2010 at 9:48 am Mike (#59) – That’s EXACTLY the problem – it’s a highway designed for cars, and it needs to be a highway designed for PEOPLE, regardless of their mode of transportation. Thank you for illustrating the problem so concisely. Miss Thepoint February 21, 2010 at 9:49 am Again,when replying here, do you use this stretch of road ever? I do and since the MAX/Tri Met connection went in people jaywalking have been a huge problem. Ever come up over the top of the hill southbound only to see a group of “citizens” doing the 50′ mosey,ie; CROSSING ILLEGALLY, AT NIGHT IN THE RAIN?I have. Several times. If I slam on the brakes and get rear-ended you think the pedestrian who caused the crash would take responsibility? HA! My only complaint with the wall is that it is too short, evidenced Thursday as I watched a woman walk to the south end and cut across. Could of just as easily gone to the crosswalk at the light.I could rant on but it’s pointless. Marcus Griffith February 21, 2010 at 11:36 am The wall matter highlights a crucial concept in the bike world: how are roads prioritized to solve transportation problems. Looks like we are going to keep having these road-use priority discussion until we master instant teleportation. comment 62, i am afraid i do not understand how what you are saying means that a wall is preferable to a signalized crosswalk midblock. spare_wheel February 22, 2010 at 8:15 am 82nd is *not* a limited access freeway. Its a pedestrianized urban street. The obvious solution would have been to add another pedestrian signal. Instead we have a concrete monstrosity that encourages dangerous traffic speeds and a car-centric mentality. This wall also conveniently separates a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood from poorer neighborhoods. Apparently, redlining is cool in PDX. And irony of rosie sizer being quoted on “safe streets” is just too much. “to see a group of “citizens” doing the 50′ mosey,ie; CROSSING ILLEGALLY, AT NIGHT IN THE RAIN?I have” The above post illustrates the bigoted motivations of many wall supporters. According to Oregon law each intersection is a legal crosswalk. Its your duty to stop, even for hispanic immigrants (many of whom are more tolerant and harder working than you). Borgbike February 22, 2010 at 8:32 am My reaction to the wall when I saw it for the first time weekend before last was: 1. The artwork looks temporary and unfinished. 2. The crosswalk is out of the way and seemed dangerous because of it’s location on the hill. I suppose the visibility is better for southbound traffic but it’s bad for northbound traffic. It also seemed darker in this area for some reason i don’t specifically remember. It seems like a concrete mess. That wall is going to make it a lot louder for people waiting for buses in the area since it will reflect car and tire noise directly back at people waiting for the bus. Cutting off visibility will also contribute to making that area feel confined and unpleasant. About a year and a half ago two teenage neighbors of ours (good kids really) were ticketed for jaywalking here. They received really punitive tickets costing lots of money and/or lots of community service time. I remember it being really hard on the family, who works a lot and doesn’t have a great income. That punishment accomplished nothing towards solving the problem. It made me feel like the powers that be were going after the wrong source of the problem. Comment 62 illustrates exactly what I’ve been saying. People will continue crossing here despite the wall. The problem isn’t the jaywalkers – they are the symptom. The problem is poor design, and the only way to solve the problem is to fix the design. The wall doesn’t fix the design, it simply moves the problem a couple dozen yards away. And for the record as stated previously, I lived in Montavilla about 3 blocks from this “solution” for 3-1/2 years and used this facility on a daily basis. The big problem with this “solution” is that the engineers who designed it either did not use the facility, or are ignoring or unaware of the Law of Unintended Consequences. This design is poorly thought-out and poorly executed. As a frequent driver through this area, I do appreciate the mini Berlin wall. I have seen many close calls on this block and always feared that I would kill someone running out in front of a bus mid-block so they could cath the Max. It is too bad that it “responds to issues stemming from poverty” what ever that means… I did not realize that mid-block crossing was a socio-economic caused problem. Although one could argue that sub par schooling left these unfortunates with a lacking of self-preservation. I am interested in knowing some other examples of these “safety” projects that further divide the haves and have-nots (other than bike paths). Dan Hawk February 22, 2010 at 5:29 pm I was trying to picture where this is located and the Google map streetview captured something humorous, sad and frustrating. This is not an area where people should be crossing the street. The traffic is far too heavy most of the time. http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=jonesmore+portland+or&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=43.25835,77.958984&ie=UTF8&hq=jonesmore&hnear=Portland,+OR&ll=45.533588,-122.579033&spn=0,359.997621&z=19&layer=c&cbll=45.533506,-122.579027&panoid=KdEoUges0Bxi1qgqIMnLKA&cbp=12,32.66,,0,21.47 oh, you have to turn the view to the East…to see the pedestrians doing what this barrier prevents now. jim February 23, 2010 at 2:38 am if they did 2 rows of walls- the bikes could ride safely down the middle “…one could argue that sub par schooling left these unfortunates with a lacking of self-preservation.” do you by chance have a pointy white hat with eye slits in your closet? Spare_wheel- I don’t get it. What does the KKK have to do with the story? Are you saying that anyone in support of the wall is now a racist? (That logic does (loosely) follow along with the comparing of this safety device to the Berlin Wall, I guess.) Or is it just me for throwing out a wild correlation between people who would attempt to cross mid block and poor schooling(assuming that this is indeed a problem stemming from poverty). I would like to know how crossing in the middle of a block, cutting through on coming traffic is an “issue stemming from poverty”, and how a traffic device that encourages pedestians to use the crosswalks is a dividing a neighborhood. Elly’s comment implies that the users of this two pieces of public transit live at or below the poverty line and this device is a personal affront to them. This seems outrageous to me. For Dan Hawk — yes, they are crossing the street. You look down the street with that view and what do you see? An open lane. So, is it dangerous also when cars aren’t present? It was mentioned in the article and by another commenter — what “crime” is being controlled by this wall? Is it just the crime of jaywalking or is there something I’m missing? Lastly, the “haves and have-nots” discussion is a little bit of hyperbole but it really shouldn’t tax people’s brains too much to surmise that generally people who take public transport are doing it to save some money — they are frugal, or poor, or perhaps even disabled and need service to get around. People who drive can generally afford a car, the car payments, the auto insurance, the gas and maybe even the parking fees. So, that’s where the feeling of haves and have-nots comes in. If you’ve ever waited in the dark and the rain hoping a bus comes to your stop that has no schedule or shelter or a seat you might feel like a bit of a have-not. Whether you like it or not, in this instance, convenience for transit users has been usurped for the desires of the auto driver to move unimpeded through a transit zone. Feeling “afraid” that you might hit a pedestrian is not the same as hitting one. Dan February 23, 2010 at 1:50 pm So, a barrier has been erected to prevent jaywalking…which was dangerous and foolish( illegal?)to be doing here in the first place. Am I missing something here? Why the big fuss?…and how in the world did the concept of “dividing neighborhoods with physical barriers.” even make it this far? The barrier in question, divides two sides of a bridge over a freeway. spare_wheel February 23, 2010 at 5:35 pm “Are you saying that anyone in support of the wall is now a racist?” Absolutely not. I am saying, however, that people who make derogatory comments about “unfortunates” are bigots. BikePortland.org » Blog Archive » People’s DOT issues call to action for 82nd Avenue event February 24, 2010 at 12:51 pm […] For more background on this issue, including quotes from ODOT Region 1 Director Jason Tell and Portland Mayor Sam Adams, read my story, A view from other side of the “rogue wall” on 82nd. […] carless in pdx March 3, 2010 at 12:22 am Wow, I haven’t seen so much racist and car-centric idiocy espoused by bikeportland readers… ever. It’s pretty damn obvious that most of the posters here have never been to this crossing. I’m one of them. I think that many people should withhold comment on an issue in which they have less than zero knowledge of. On the other hand, thank you, Jonathan, for bringing light to this issue. Unfortunately, the city and Trimet sometimes fails miserably in providing good pedestrian accessibility, regardless of its rhetoric. « What the heck is a Green Street? Watch this video Silver Redline Conquest Sport 2007 »
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Facebook ban serves as stern warning for marketing firms Facebook has banned a digital marketing group in the Philippines from its platform after the agency allegedly violated spam and misrepresentation policies – something that should come as a warning for all marketing agencies who use Facebook. Twinmark Media Enterprises and its subsidiaries were banned from Facebook for repeatedly violating ‘misrepresentation and spam' policies, writes Facebook cybersecurity policy head Nathaniel Gleicher. These violations included “coordinated inauthentic behaviour, the use of fake accounts, leading people to ad farms, and selling access to Facebook Pages to artificially increase distribution and generate profit”. Facebook was alerted to Twinmark’s actions after it found out that Twinmark was selling administrator rights to Facebook Pages that it had created. It sold the rights to increase distribution and generate profit, which violates Facebook’s spam policy. A deeper investigation found a network of pages that were, according to Gleicher, “engaging in coordinated inauthentic behaviour, the use of fake accounts, leading people to ad farms and selling access to Facebook Pages.” In some cases, Twinmark changed a Page name and changed the subject matter after it had built up a large following. This, Facebook says, was in violation of Page policies because it misled followers. As part of the ban, Facebook removed 220 Facebook Pages; 73 Facebook accounts; and 29 Instagram accounts. At least 43 million accounts followed at least one of the offending Facebook Pages. The most popular page, Filipino Channel Online, had 10.4 million followers. Other popular pages included Gorgeous Me (5.7 million followers); Unhappy (4.9 million followers); Text Message (4.4 million followers); and TNP Media (4.3 million followers). “We do not want our services to be used for this type of behaviour, nor do we want the group to be able to re-establish a presence on Facebook,” says Gleicher. He adds that Facebook is continuously working to uncover abuses such as these. “We know that the people behind it — whether economically or politically motivated — will continue to evolve their tactics. Today’s announcement is just one of the many steps we have taken to prevent bad actors from abusing our platform. We will continue to invest heavily in safety and security in order to ensure that people can continue to trust the connections they make on Facebook.” Hays: Jobseekers must 'self-disrupt' their career in 2020 Q&A with Isentia: Knowing your customer base in an ever-changing media environment Big Tech firms dominating internet choices Social media a growing business risk across Asia Pacific Online users giving out social media details too freely - Kaspersky VR boom shows no sign of slowing Soul Machines raises $40m, steps closer to global aspirations “We look forward to continuing to work with Soul Machines as it scales and realises its global aspirations.”More APAC business process applications market will surpass $93bn in 2023 "Enterprises will continue to focus on the enhancement of existing IT infrastructure, by leveraging cloud, artificial intelligence and other latest technology tools."More
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Lip reader deciphers secret Royal Wedding whispers Lannin, who has worked for 7 years as a forensic lip reader for police forces and media outlets with O'Malley Communications, picked out comments from Prince William, his bride and Queen Elizabeth II in a partial transcript. Her assessment couldn't be verified. 10:20 a.m. -- Prince William: "Looking forward to it." To Harry, "shall we go in then? Prince Harry: "Sure, everyone has arrived." William (to Bishop): "Make sure everything's alright. It's beautiful the way it is." 10:25 a.m. -- William to lady in congregation: "You look very pretty, very pretty." 10:55 a.m. -- Michael Middleton to Kate Middleton as they left hotel: "You okay?" 11:00 a.m. -- Pippa Middleton to sister Kate: "You look amazing." Michael Middleton to Kate Middleton as they entered Westminster Abbey: "You okay?" Kate Middleton to her father: "Yeah." 11:05 a.m. -- Kate to Bishop before walking down the aisle: "Yes I suppose so ... I expect I'll be worn out today. Thank you." Harry to William: "Right, here she is now." William to Middleton at the altar: "You look lovely ...(unclear)... You look beautiful." William joking to Michael Middleton: "We're supposed to have just a small family affair." 12:00 a.m. -- Queen Elizabeth II to Prince Philip: "It was excellent." Prince Philip: "Yes?" 12:15 a.m. -- William to Kate Middleton: "Alright?" Kate Middleton: "Yes." William: "Wish I was out." Kate Middleton: "I'm beginning to find (unclear)." William: "Yeah, alright." Hands bouquet to Kate after they climb aboard their carriage, "here you are." Kate Middleton: "Thank you." Kate Middleton: "Now, are you happy?" William: "Yes ... (unclear conversation) ... wave to everybody." Outside abbey -- queen: "I wanted them to take the smaller carriage." Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall: "It all went very well." Queen: "Very well." In wedding carriage -- William: "I don't think you should bow quite yet. I think you should just bow your head, okay?" Kate Middleton: "Okay." William: "I hope I remember ... It's mad, it's mad! Oh my goodness it ... really loudly here (unclear) these people are clapping." Kate Middleton: "Did they?" William: "I think so. I went out here the first (unclear)." In separate carriage -- Prince Charles: "Yeah it looked nice." Camilla: "Yes, but you have to know how to do it." In wedding carriage -- Kate Middleton to William: "You look happy." 1:30 p.m -- On Buckingham Palace balcony, Kate Middleton: "Oh wow." William: "Alright? You'll be okay?" Kate Middleton: "Oh I'm fine, thank you." William: "Yeah! Yeah! There's a lot of people down here." To pageboys, "I know but look up there as well." To his bride: "Okay? Look at me, let's kiss, okay." William, shouting balcony: "Harry! Your go!" Kate Middleton: "What's next?" William: "They want more time I think." William shouting across balcony, possibly to Camilla: "You could have brought up (unclear) as well." Camilla: "Oh, very heavy." William: "Just do a bit of everything. Do you like the balloons (unclear) they go up in the air." Kate Middleton: "Look at these people." William: "I want to see the plane, I think I'm (unclear)." William to Harry: "Okay." William to pageboys: "...to stop them coming in here, to stop them coming in this side, I mean it's hard." William to Kate Middleton: "One more." The couple kiss for a second time. "That's it, come on!"
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World News Tonight ABC News Network Copyright © 2020 ABC News Internet Ventures. All rights reserved. Interest Successfully Added We'll notify you here with news about Turn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest? Palin's Endorsements Still Work With Underdog Candidates Former Alaska Governor picks winners in GOP contests. BY Shushannah Walshe Secret Service Was 'Checking Out' Sarah PalinSecret Service agent joked on Facebook before Colombian prostitution scandal. May 17, 2012 -- If you're an upstart Republican running for your life in a primary in the middle of the country and hoping beyond hope to gain traction against the "establishment" candidate, who you gonna call? Sarah Palin could be the answer. In 2010, Sarah Palin was the sought-after kingmaker for establishment and upstart candidates alike hoping to get her blessing to help them make it to Washington, D.C. She had a strong record of endorsements to wins then, but after remaining out of the spotlight after deciding against a presidential run, does she have the same influence two years later? With two wins under her belt so far and a stake in Texas ahead of a primary there next month, could Palin and her ability to help out the underdog be back? ABC News' political analyst and longtime GOP analyst Matthew Dowd described Palin as the "spark" that can light the fire of certain campaigns. "Singularly, she doesn't win these races," Dowd said. "But if there is a forest with a bunch of kindling, she puts a match and a light on it. The forest wood had to be dry, but she's a spark." He also points out her record, which has some high profile wins, such as state rep. Deb Fischer in Nebraska for that state's U.S. senate primary last week. Even some of Palin's losses have been victories of a sort. She backed Christine O'Donnell in the 2010 Delaware U.S. senate race and Sharron Angle for the U.S. senate race in Nevada in 2010. Neither woman won the seat, but they both upended establishment favorites in the primary. "If I were a long shot taking on an establishment candidate, Sarah Palin is who I would want to come and charge up the race. She would be number one or two on the list," Dowd said. "She has as much ability to charge up the race as a former president." And while her record is not perfect, she has backed two successful upstarts. The former Alaska governor backed Richard Mourdock over Dick Lugar in the Indiana U.S. senate primary. But so did many Tea Partiers and other conservatives. He beat the six-term senator by 20 points. It was more impressive last week when Palin made a late-in-the-game endorsement of rancher and state rep. Deb Fischer. Fischer sailed to victory Tuesday night, defeating both Jon Bruning, considered to be the state party favorite, and Don Stenberg, who had the backing of Tea Party groups. Fischer was actually seen as more moderate than Bruning and Stenberg, but her message of reform coming from a mom and rancher played right into Palin's mama grizzly profile for endorsees. Palin even recorded robo-calls for her. Fischer will now take on former Nebraska governor and senator back to retake his old seat, Bob Kerrey. Despite his experience, it will be a hard battle in the very red state. Palin endorsed Fischer not in person, but with a note posted to her 3.3 million Facebook fans, and it noted that Fischer was campaigning largely outside the party establishment and without outside funds, unlike the two other candidates. "Your efforts remind us of those our family put forth for Sarah's races here in Alaska," read the message from Todd and Sarah Palin. "Winning over voters through personal interactions is the way to go. People are tired of outside interests spending millions of dollars in political attack ads. We're glad to see your grassroots efforts paying off!" It's impossible to draw a bright line between Palin's endorsement and Fischer's victory. Fischer was the relative unknown in the race and Palin's endorsement, if nothing else, brought some much-needed attention to her campaign. Bruning and Stenberg were in a well-financed mudslinging contest that left Fischer largely unscathed. Bruning was dogged by questionable financial dealings. And Palin wasn't Fischer's only backer: Former Nebraska governor Kay Orr was an early supporter of Fischer and reportedly helped secure Palin's endorsement. But what probably had the most influence for Fischer was a late $250,000 ad buy by the Ending Spending Action Fund super PAC, funded by Chicago Cubs co-owner and Ameritrade founder Joe Ricketts. The New York Times reported Thursday that Ricketts is behind a proposal to start a SuperPAC that goes after President Obama in a much more aggressive way than has been done so far, stressing his ties with controversial preacher Jeremiah Wright, something John McCain prohibited in 2008. (Coincidentally, Palin wanted more of a focus on Wright during the campaign, but McCain said no.) Late Tuesday, Palin congratulated Fischer in a statement that also jabbed at those who thought Fischer didn't have a shot (Rick Santorum and Sen. Jim DeMint endorsed losing candidates), saying she was "not part of the good old boys' permanent political class" but rather one of the "commonsense conservatives .... who are bold enough to step up and run on a conservative platform to restore America and protect our children's future." But Palin's streak will be on the line in Texas later this month. Just four days before early voting began ahead of the state's May 29 U.S. Senate primary, Palin endorsed Texas solicitor general Ted Cruz. He's taking on a strong, self-financed candidate, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, who started with better name recognition and is still holding the frontrunner spot. They are running to take the place of Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, who is retiring. In red Texas it's likely that whoever wins this primary will head to victory in November. The situation in Texas is different from that in Nebraska. Palin's support for Cruz puts her on the same side as national Tea Party groups like Freedomworks and anti-tax groups like the Club for Growth, which are pouring millions of dollars into the race. James Bernsen, Cruz's communications director, said right after the Palin endorsement, they received between 900 and 1,000 online donations almost immediately. A huge boon to their campaign. Going forward, Palin will include Fischer as a notch in her belt, but some Nebraska political watchers doubt Palin's nod did anything to help Fischer. John Hibbing, a political science professor from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, believes it wasn't Palin or any of the endorsements because they just don't matter to Nebraskans. "I'm skeptical the Palin endorsement in and of itself did anything," Hibbing said, adding he was one who thought just a month ago Fischer did not have a chance. Instead he believes "it was a series of events," including the superPAC money, which Hibbing said was the first time Fischer went negative and was able to separate herself from Bruning and Stenberg. He also said to pay attention to the timing. The Palins endorsed one week ago. "Movement in the polls had already taken place," Hibbing said. "There was dissatisfaction with the frontrunner [Bruning], no one really thought anything was wrong with [Fischer], her negatives were extremely low ... she appealed to the Western part of the state, which has a strong element of the Republican Party." One big endorsement Palin hasn't made: Mitt Romney, of course. Palin clearly preferred Newt Gingrich and voted for him in the Alaska primary, but never technically endorsed him outside of her Fox News hits. It will be hard for Palin to spin the anti-establishment Mama Grizzly brand she has cultivated into vocal support for the GOP nominee. May 17, 3:46 PM Prince Harry, Meghan start 'next chapter of their lives': All your questions answered Jan 19, 3:55 AM Joe Biden’s brother cashed in on his famous family name, critics say Controversial group divides black Americans in fight for economic equality ABC News Live 24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events
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The Beggars Handmade Australian Music Downloads for DJs Sing The Seekers Songs from Home Australian Songbook Vol 1 Sing from the Heart Rockola Music – South Australia +618 82784 864 +61418 147 220 quinton.dunne[AT]gmail.com http://rockola.com.au/ 22 thoughts on “Contact” elisabeth Benn on October 12, 2011 at 5:53 pm said: to the Beggars, I am bringing a group of 9 adult students to your show at the Drum Wed 26th Oct. I teach migrant English and use songs, poetry and art to teach Australian history. May I have the list of songs you plan to perform, please, so that we can prepare? Last term we learnt 7 songs and performed them for our Narre Learning centre, accompanied by a blind violinist. Each student had to introduce a song and give its background. (waltzing matilda, click go the shears, lime juice tub, drovers dream, wild colonial boy, national anthem, road to gundagai) hope to hear from you, regards, Liz Benn Graham Wegener on November 11, 2011 at 6:22 pm said: Thanks for the invite for Sunday Nov 13 I have a bit on and also getting ready for the Folk Centre 40th next weekend My wife and I are hosting the Bushwackers for that weekend, we might find the time, you guys are so good and looking at your gig guide for the rest of the year, do you ever stop, If I don’t make it on Sunday please have a good gig and all the best for the remaining year, Graham Wegener. Richard Marman on November 30, 2012 at 1:32 am said: Caught the Caloundra show on 28 November. Love it and then downloaded 4 CDs from iTunes for $21. C Great experience all round. elisabeth benn on February 11, 2013 at 10:56 am said: Hi Quinten, I notice you are coming to Dandenong 1/11/13. I plan to take a group of migrants who are learning literacy and Australian culture. May I have a list of the songs you plan to perform, please? We need lots of time to learn the songs. Thank you, in anticipation. Elisabeth Benn Donald Garfinkel on April 28, 2013 at 3:24 am said: Will you be coming to the east coast of the US anytime soon? beggarsband on April 29, 2013 at 6:52 am said: Right now we don’t have have any touring planned for the US. Frank on August 11, 2013 at 8:54 pm said: i heard today on you tube your version of janis joplins mercedes benz…. i must say very better than the original….. (sorry for my awful english…..i am not a native Speaker ;-)) kindly regards…..Frank beggarsband on August 12, 2013 at 1:48 am said: Thanks,very much. Emma Wray on September 25, 2013 at 10:12 am said: Hey guys, I was just wondering if you were planing on coming to Perth any time soon? beggarsband on October 1, 2013 at 9:21 am said: I think we should have some shows in Perth in 2014. But no details yet. Geoff McKebery on November 18, 2013 at 11:28 pm said: We caught your show in Denham, and loved it. Bought a couple of CD’s. I have 2 questions / points – (1) do you have a Christmas Carol Album? I have searched iTunes but can’t find one. I know you do some excellent ones mixed in with other albums, but was looking for a dedicated Christmas Album. (2) Please come to Perth in 2014, as I (us) would love to see your show again. rockolaproductions on May 24, 2015 at 2:55 pm said: Hi Geoff. Sorry for the late reply but yes we do have a Christmas Album and here is a link http://smarturl.it/ufnmh0 damien hancock on July 22, 2015 at 9:43 pm said: Hi guys, I am touching base again after we spoke to you guys on Tribe FM 91.1 some time back, and was told you may send us some of your cd’s for airplay. If you have any that you would like to go on our playlist, please send them to Tribe FM 91.1, P.O Box 810 Willunga SA 5172 Thanks Damien Hancock Station Management Tribe FM 91.1 Jenny on November 19, 2013 at 5:13 am said: Hi Beggars My name is Jenny and Im a preschool teacher. My group of 4 year olds was studying pirates and we came across your song the whale. We watched the animation and learnt the words to the song which they love but I want to sing it at the Christmas concert and get the parents to join in. I have trouble syncing the words and the animation on the computer in the classroom and the monitor is a bit small. I would like to buy a copy of the song/animation to upload on my computer so that I can use it with the projector in the concert for the parents to sing along – its a long song and my kids really only know the first verse and the chorus well. hoping you will get back to me, Jenny John on September 24, 2014 at 12:02 pm said: We Have just returned from your performance in Toowoomba – GREAT —— BUT —- A BIG BUT —- PLEASE when you return can we have the sound volume down – It really was too loud JOHN beggarsband on September 25, 2014 at 11:24 am said: I passed your comment re volume on to the theater they run the technical including the sound. Bill Starr on January 5, 2015 at 7:50 am said: Hi, I heard your version of “Wildwood Flower” on CoastFM today; is it available on CD? beggarsband on February 6, 2015 at 2:08 am said: Yes its on the Desert Flower CD and at iTunes. Let me know if you want me to mail copy they are $20 + postage DAMIEN HANCOCK on February 4, 2015 at 3:11 am said: Hi there Beggars three……I am a founding member and presenter on Tribe FM 91.1 , a community radio station based in Willunga SA, on the fleurieu, and we have your music in our overnight music playlist on high rotation…..would labsolutley love the chance to haveyou in to the studio to promote your ” Seekers Tribute Show’ coming up…..please feel free to give me a call on 043 77 888 50 and we will take it from there. Keep up the great work. Barbara Webb P O Box 229 Brighton 5048 on May 11, 2015 at 2:03 pm said: Hi I have been wanting and trying to aquire more of your music tracks to play on my program, 4pm to 6pm Sundays. Please advise how this is possible. My program is called # Let The Music Lift You Up # Cheers Which CDs do you already have? I can also provide some iTunes links http://smarturl.it/igr8rv http://smarturl.it/0erz9n http://smarturl.it/ufnmh0 Saheem on January 23, 2016 at 11:31 am said: Hi, I work for an Australian charity and was wondering if we could use one of your tunes (The Whale Song) for a song we’ve written. We’d use this song for an awareness video. Please email me, I’ll wait to hear from you. GIG LIST [check times with venues] Australian Songbook Banjo Song Desert Flower Album and Tour 2019 Christmas Tour Dates Singing the Seekers I’ll Never Find Another You New recording sessions Merry Christmas from The Beggars Listen with Spotify
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← Things changed. We’ve already got a winner in the preseason happy talk contest. → “In my mind, he can definitely play in the SEC.” Meet the most intriguing walk-on in Georgia’s 2017 class. Can a six-foot tall quarterback make it in the SEC? “They love my quick release and speed,” Bennett told DawgNation. “Their main concern is obviously height but like I’ve told them I’ve been this height for two years. I’m pretty comfortable (playing football) with it.” Shades of that ball ain’t heavy… 52 responses to ““In my mind, he can definitely play in the SEC.”” Scout team getting our D ready for squirrelly QB’s I was thinking the exact same thing. Kind of reminds me of Mansel. It’s a shame that height is playing such an important role in QB evaluations. Never measure a man by height, it’s heart, intelligence and skills that count. A tall QB that can’t move is worse than a short one who can. See Lambert for further details. Agree, mobility gives you the ability to opening up/changing the throwing lanes, in addition to making the defense have to account for you. Not saying he makes it on the field given what he faces as competition, but the kid is not without talent. I am uninterested in how he projects at the next level. Surprised he didn’t take Middle TN or Ga Southern’s scholarship offer, heck of a “freebie”. Yeah. The kid could have started at Georgia Southern in a couple of years–maybe sooner. But you have to love the fact that he wanted to be at Georgia. *Southern Miss Maybe wrong but read GSU and MTSU offers as well. Hard to imagine he gets ANY playing time behind Eason and Fromm. He wont get a scholly either. He, sadly, will be a 3rd string QB paying for his own education for 4 years. Its 4 years in Athens, Georgia. I don’t think there’s anything sad about that. I doubt he does either seeing as it was his choice. Larry Wellls he will get hope money and scholer money and free food and his dads a pharmecist and he can pick up the rest and he will get to play for his favorite team , what else could you ask for ? GOD is great ! dawgfan Yep. If money was an issue, he would have been all over one of the scholarships. 30 on the ACT means he probably qualified for Zell Miller which covers 100 per cent of tuition. Offer from Columbia is VERY impressive. theredstreak Don’t count him out. He protects the ball better than Fromm, only threw 7 int’s in 399 pass attempts. Where Fromm threw 9 in 383 pass attempts. Both threw for similar td’s and yards, AND Bennett ran for more yards than Fromm and had double the yards per rush than Fromm. Bennett’s a great athlete too, playing 3 sports in High School. Bennett played in AAA while Fromm played in AAAAAAA. I’d say the talent on defense Fromm faced was a little better. That makes some sense, but then again, I think HW only played in A (which would probably be AA or AAA today). Didn’t hurt him. The kid wants a chance and to be part of something bigger than him. Dawgspeed, I say. You’re comparing a 6-foot-tall walk-on quarterback to the greatest college football player of all time. Allrighty then. Please. I didn’t say he would be as good as HW; I was responding to the ‘he played in AAA’ comment. No one knew for sure HW would be as good as he turned out because he had only played A teams. I know because I was not only alive at the time, but also had two degrees from UGA and kept up with that sort of thing. I just like a kid who has had great success at whatever level he played at and wants to do more. If Murray was over 6 foot, it wasn’t by much. Height issue aside, I thought this was another good move by Kirby. I think sooner or later a couple of these PWOs are gonna pay some nice dividends. One thing our competitors can’t match is the Hope scholly to entice PWOs. Yeah, I don’t get this. Murray was maybe 6′ when he had lifts in his cleats. This must be more about the kids weight than height. I noticed in the picture that the kid is taller than Kirby. olddawg55 You all may be too young to remember Eddie LeBaron who played QB for the Washington Redskins in the ’50s/’60s,,,ge was 5’7″ and was a helluva ballplayer…yes, the size of players has increased but Eddie showed the NFL that a little man with heart could play in the league!! Gonna be our (other) Fran “The Man” Tarkenton: He’s going to publically bash Richt all the time? Seems like a bad idea for a walk on. 😉 No pun intended, but I wouldn’t sell this kid short. He’s extremely intelligent. He sees receivers breaking open and has the ball where they will be..leads very nicely and though I don’t see a huge amount of zip on the ball, he doesn’t stand around waiting for someone to get wide open Seems to make up his mind very quickly. And he’s a slippery fish when he runs it. I hope we see him coming in to run the Wild Dog on occasion. It looks like he was made for that roll. Gave up a full ride at Southern Miss and a few other schools..even Ivy League..to walk on at UGA. So he’s not lacking in ambition. Agree, looks like the kid could be a diamond in the rough. Southern Miss was a good offer and would have been hard to turn down for most. He sort of reminds me of another great QB that come out of the state of Georgia that was undersized …..and that was Dee Dowis that played at Air Force, God rest his soul. We sure could have used him (Dawgs). Agree, really like him, he put up @4000 yards and 40 td’s, why he wasn’t a top 50 ranked qb, I have no idea, his stats were top 50, Fromm’s were like 33rd, this guy was like 52, only 150 yards and 1 td seperated them. Spring Day QBR leader now identified. Leading rusher AND QBR leader, I have see UGA’s defense against DT quarterbacks. it sounds like Kirby is actually recruiting and picking and choosing the walk-ons for the scout team rather than waiting for guys to just show up. That can’t be a bad thing can it? Now if he can hire a QA or GA guy that knows the Triple Option and teach our practice squad OLineman how to cutblock, maybe he can figure out a way to beat Yech. This kid might be special. He put up Fromm numbers without any talent around him. Sure ain’t ‘scout team’, that’s disrespectful bro. Spring game mvp? DUDES the Qb has game, ain’t no difference between his and Fromm’s stats, both threw for @40 td’s and @3750 yards. If you like Fromm, you’ll like Stetson. I love the move ! Me too, this kid outgunned other great Qb’s if you compare Senior High School seasons like Drew Brees and Russell Wilson, both guys were short for Qb’s. The kid threw for more yards and td’s than Brees or Wilson. He also ran for over, Steston also ran for 500 yards his Senior season. Playa. Fran Tarkenton, Eric Zeier, Aaron Murray (I could name more) the best QBs at Georgia in history were all about the same size this kid is. If you look back, almost all the most successful QBs in pro football were around 6 feet to 6-1. Johnny Unitas, Bart Starr, Joe Montana, Steve Young, Brett Favre–they all were about that size. NFL scouting is a self-fulfilling prophecy these days. They only want o sign QBs who are 6-5 or taller and it has rubbed off on the major colleges. I still think Aaron Murray would have been a star in the NFL a la Russell Wilson or Drew Brees if he had been drafted by another team but the Chiefs never gave him a chance–he never even played a down in a game. Then they cut him. Skill means nothing to them I guess. Between this post and suggesting that UGA and Tech are in a state of parity, I’ve decided that you’re out of your damn mind. What does Johnny Unitas and Bart Starr have to do with the NFL in 2017? John Hannah and Art Shell played both tackle in the NFL at 265. Both were beasts in their time and both are among the greatest ever. Your aren’t playing LT in the NFL at 265 because the NFL doesn’t respect “skill.” That’s just dumassery. Btw: farve, young and Montana are all 6’2″. There’s only been three qbs at around 6′ that have done anything in the NFL this century: brees, Wilson and Vick. Only Brees has done it as a pocket passer. Zeier is the closest to Murray you can find and he couldn’t make it in the early to mid 1990s and he had plenty of opportunities to do so. Offensive linemen and defensive lineman are TALL in the NFL. Hard to see and to throw over them. The reason there are a bunch of tall starting qbs in the NFL is not because the NFL folks are dumb and you’re smart. Derek I know you meant to say you beg to differ, or politely disagree. Pardon me picking, but you catch more flies with honey than vinegar. Verstehen? Capish? Ya follow? Thanks boner I had no idea that my post would come off as undiplomatic. None. I thought I was trying to make friends. Who knew? Same old Dreck. Dick like replies are your thing for sure… IF AM had NFL game, someone would have picked him up.. I don’t know how this guy compares on a talent level, but when I read his story my first thought was this guy … http://www.soonersports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?ATCLID=209397188 As an aside, doesn’t it feel like Mayfield has been in college for like 10 years? 6’0″ ain’t the issue. 175 pounds is. If your winning everybody’s happy. If you’re losing the 2nd and 3rd string QB’s are the greatest playa’s ever. Come on, dog. Short QBs have always been good for UGA. Nobody mentioned Flutie. Dudes, there’s lots of short Qb’s who did well in the NFL: Sonny Jurgensen, 5’11” Doug Flutie 5’10” Eddie Lebaron 5′ 7” Joe Theisman, Billy Kilmer, Len Dawson, Fran Tarkenton, Michael Vick 6′ 0” ToccoaDog Other than Vick and maybe Flutie, none of those guys played in the last 20 years. I called the all of Fame, they said these qb’s are good, and there is no height requirement. You have no point, Russ Wilson and Drew Brees are two of the best today. The really tall Qb’s 6’5”+ typically don’t win SuperBowls. If it’s all about how tall you are, 6’8” Brock Osweiler would have won multiple championships. Umm OK. Swanguard Glad we have this as a 3rd option. What I don’t understand is why is Ramsey coming back for his 5th year. He’s not going to play QB and we are bringing in 2 more punters. Why don’t he go somewhere that he would at least get a chance to play? If you are the emergency backup the pressure is off. I have had some #2 goal keepers who were perfectly happy not to be the starter and were great team players and played their hearts out when called upon–they just didn’t want/need to be the number 1 guy/gal. Sometimes that is a better situation than having someone buried on the depth chart that is going nuts because they want in the game so badly–it affects their attitude in practice, then when they get their chance they try too hard. Governor Milledge Ramsey graduates at the end of Spring/Summer semester and would then be able to be a graduate transfer and immediately eligible to play. Wonder if there’s room on Colorado State’s roster for Bobo to finish teaching him?
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Libros Libros 1 - 10 de 165 sobre ... the said prince and princess during their lives and the life of the survivor... ... the said prince and princess during their lives and the life of the survivor of them; and that the sole and full exercise of the regal power be only in and executed by the said prince of Orange... The English Constitution: A Popular Commentary on the Constitutional Law of ... - Página 157 por George Bowyer - 1841 - 712 páginas The history of the desertion: or, An account of all the publick affairs in ... Edmund Bohun, Jeremy Collier - 1689 - 168 páginas ...the Crown s(nd Royal Dignity of the faid Kingdoms and Dominions,to them the faid Prince and Princefs during their Lives, and the Life of the Survivor of them ; and that the fb!e and fiill exercife of the Regal power be only in, and executed by the faid Prince oi Orange, in... The Political Writings of Sir Richard Steele Sir Richard Steele - 1715 - 308 páginas ...the Crown and Royal Dignity of the laid Kingdoms and Dominions, to them the faid Prince aad Priacefs during their Lives, and the Life of the Survivor of them: and that the fole and full Erercife of the Regal Power be only in, and executed by the faid Prince of Orange, in... Medulla Historiae Anglicanae: The Ancient and Present State of England ... William Howell - 1742 - 647 páginas ...Crown and ' Royal Dignity of the faid King' doms and Dominions, to them ' the faid Prince and Princefs during ' their Lives, and the Life of the ' Survivor of them ; and that the ' Sole and Full Exercife of the Re' gal Power be only in, and exe' cuted by the faid Prince of O' range in the Names... The history and proceedings of the House of commons of England, with the ... Parliament commons, proc - 1742 ...Crown and Royal Dignity °f ^c (aid Kit1 gdoms and Dominions, tp them the faid Prince and Princels during their Lives, and the Life of the Survivor of them ; and that the fble and full Exercife of the Regal Power be only in, and executed by the faid Prince of Orange, in... History of Great Britain, from the Revolution, 1688, to the ..., Volumen1 William Belsham - 1806 ...of England, France, and Ireland, and the dominions lliereuntp belonging, to hold the crown and royal dignity of the said kingdoms and dominions to them...and princess during their lives, and the life of the suryivorof them ; and that the sole and full exercise of the royal power be only in, and executed by,... Commentaries on the Laws of England: In Four Books, Volumen1 Sir William Blackstone - 1807 ...and " princess of Orange, be, and be declared king and queen, to "hold the crown and royal dignity during their lives, " and the life of the survivor..." full exercise of the regal power be only in, and executed b I.-.w of forfeit. 118, 119. c Com. Journ. 12 Feb. 1M8. (4) The preamble to the bill of rights... The Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year ... William Cobbett - 1809 ...belonging and appertaining, shall be and continue to their said majesties, and the survivor of them, during their lives, and the life of the survivor of them : and that the entire, perfect, and full exercise of the regal power and government be only in, and executed by his... Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Chancery, During the Time ... George Cooper - 1815 - 347 páginas ...two sisters, Frances Edgill and Maria Eyre, jointly, and the survivor of them, to receive the same during their lives, and the life of the survivor of them, and after the decease of the survivor of them, in trust for the said Thomas Eyre, his heirs, and assigns... ...Princess of Orange, be, and be declared king and queen of England, &c. &c. to hold the crown and royal dignity of the said kingdoms and dominions, to them...and Princess during their lives and the life of the survivor, and that the sole and full exercise of the regal ' power be only in and executed by the said... Pantologia. A new (cabinet) cyclopædia, by J.M. Good, O. Gregory, and N ... John Mason Good, Olinthus Gilbert Gregory - 1819 ...Orange, be, and be declared king and queen, to hold the crown and royal dignity durlnç their lives, and the life of the survivor of them ; and that the sole...and full exercise of the regal power be only in, and executed by, the said prince of Orange, in the names of the said prince and princess, during their...
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Fall Concert Preview: Tobi Lou, The Bus and Morrison ’20 By Danielle Quezada As the temperature plummets and finals season approaches, the end of the fall season heralds the Bowdoin Entertainment Board (E-board)’s annual Fall Concert. This year, Bowdoin will be welcoming Nigerian-born, Chicago-raised artist Tobi Lou, a hip-hop rapper and singer. E-board member Mamadou Diaw ’20 describes Lou as an up-and-coming artist. “He has a very unique and very creative vibe,” Diaw said. “And he just has … music you can bump to on a regular basis.” Diaw explained the difficult process of inviting musicians to campus each year. “It’s very hard to get artists, depending on [the] time frame and timeline. So this was a conversation that happened before the school year started,” he said. Over the summer, the E-board began to connect through group chats to brainstorm a list of artists that could be a good fit for the occasion, trying to make a decision that best considered everyone’s voice. Members had brainstormed at least 15 artists for the Fall Concert. Lou’s performance has been on the E-board’s radar for some time. He released his most popular song, “Buff Baby,” just over a year ago. It gained attention and praise through social media and now has over 15 million views on Youtube as well as over 30 million streams on Spotify. Some of his other hit songs include “Just Keep Goin’,” “Darlin’” and “I Was Sad Last Night I’m OK Now.” He has an upcoming tour in Europe starting in early January. The fall concert this year will include two student performances: Ari, Blaine and the Bus as well as Alana. The Bus, a student group that typically alternates between singers, has made its mark this past semester, performing at different campus events including Greenstock, Reed House’s Fall Fest and MacMillan House’s Macoween. Alana Morrison ’20 is an established pop music singer-songwriter on campus who released her first EP last fall. The Fall Concert will take place tonight in Morrell Lounge of David Saul Smith Union. Student opening acts will begin at 10 p.m. with Tobi Lou following immediately thereafter. ‘The Baltimore Waltz’ sheds light on the AIDS epidemic By Kate Lusignan • November 15, 2019 Eveningstar embraces new ownership By Lucie Nolden • November 15, 2019 Cohen ’20 performs an intimate set with Them Airs By Sebastian de Lasa • November 15, 2019 ‘African/American’ reflects on artistic achievement By Annika Moore • November 8, 2019
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Sarah Palin to launch 9-day, 16-stop signing tour for new book By ANI WASHINGTON - Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin is set to launch a nine-day, 16-stop signing tour for her new book ‘America by Heart: Reflections on Family, Faith, and Flag’ later this month. Palin’s strategic schedule includes a stop in Tulsa, Okla., on ‘Black Friday’ - the day after Thanksgiving - and then four more stops during that big shopping weekend, reports the Politico. The venues include the giant book chains - Borders, Barnes and Noble and Books-a-Million. But Palin will also sign books at all-American locations like Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club, Costco and Kroger. Her publisher, HarperCollins, released this description of ‘America by Heart’: “Framed by her strong belief in the importance of family, faith and patriotism, the book ranges widely over American history, culture and current affairs … America By Heart will include selections from classic and contemporary readings that have moved her - from the nation’s founding documents to great speeches, sermons, letters, literature and poetry, biography and even some of her favourite songs and movies.” (ANI) Tags: Washington
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Getting older, becoming invisible On July 31, 2019 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, domestic life, family, Health, life, seniors, women21 Comments I live in a building dominated by older people. Here’s my essay published this week about it on nbcnews.com: If you really want to know what old age looks like and feels like and sounds like — forget playing around with FaceApp, whose AI technology can age your appearance in seconds on your phone. Simply plug in a current photo and the app will generate a falsely wrinkled face, sagging jowls and wispy white hair. But while the app has quickly gone viral, with artificially aged photos of celebrities and friends alike popping up all over social media, such images have almost nothing in common with the true experience of aging in America. You just can’t imagine old age. You have to live it firsthand. I was prompted to write it after our next door neighbor, Flo, died last week, at 91, after a final year at home bed-ridden. All we ever saw were visits from her daughters and the Russian woman who was her in-home aide. Flo was deeply private, with a head of thick white curls and bright eyes. Only at her funeral did I learn she’d been widowed at 44 with three daughters to raise, aided by a large and supportive family. Living in a place surrounded by seniors — a word I dislike (we don’t call people juniors!) — has shown me what aging really looks like. The same week my first husband walked out, some 25 years ago, was the week L’s husband had a stroke and never spoke again. He later died and she dated a jaunty older man who wore cool sneakers. He died. She is now so impossibly frail, sitting with her aide. It’s sobering. It’s instructive. As someone with no children, I’m acutely aware, should I live into old age, I will need money and physical help to live well, safely and independently, if lucky enough to do so — my 90-year-old father does. I lost my grandmothers the same year, when I was 18 and never met my grandfathers. So this is what I know. But we also have people here in their 80s looking great and living an active life. You can’t understand what you don’t see. What’s your legacy? On July 20, 2019 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, domestic life, family, Health, life, love, parenting, seniors32 Comments Few events will raise this thorny question as powerfully as a funeral. Who came? Who spoke and what did they say about the deceased? I spent an hour Thursday morning at the funeral of the 91-year-old woman who shared a wall with us for 17 years. We didn’t know her well. We knew her name, and that she was a local, and that she had several adult daughters in town. She was always friendly, but deeply private. I learned a lot about her and her life — widowed at 44 with four daughters — when I listened to the eulogy. The pews were filled with friends and neighbors, children and grand-children, including a very small baby. This time last year, we attended a funeral for a much beloved and eccentric New York Times colleague, who worked, literally, side by side for eight years with my husband Jose. They weathered the storm of the crash of 2008, fought, made up, laughed and became close. Zvi, who played tennis every week into his 70s and was lean and fit, was hit by a rare and aggressive cancer and dead within months of his diagnosis. Jose was asked to give the eulogy. When you sit in the pews attending someone’s funeral, it’s natural to wonder what those left behind would say of you and how you chose to live your life. Did you give back? Were you generous and kind? Did you laugh often? Did you mentor? If you don’t have children or close younger relatives — and I do not — this question of legacy is a real and pressing one, and only grows with every year I’m still alive. Am I leaving a good life behind? Am I doing enough for others? Legacy isn’t only about your family or your work or whatever financial assets are left in your estate. Nor need you be wealthy enough to be an official philanthropist or have your name on a building, as most of us never will. Every day we create our legacy. Yes, including weekends! Do you ever think about this as well? When age becomes a four-letter word On April 7, 2019 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, blogging, business, culture, journalism, life, Media, seniors8 Comments I’m now in that fabulous place where I’m at the top of my game professionally —- and fewer and fewer terrific work opportunities, certainly full-time jobs with affordable health insurance, are available to me because of my age. Speaking by phone, I recently had a new/potential PR strategy client — a man — ask me directly: “How old are you?” I was a bit stunned and finally, laughing, replied: “Over 45. That’s enough.” I could have said over 50 but imagine….all those extra years! Here’s a recent New York Times op-ed on the double standard women in politics face regarding their age: The Democrats vying for 2020 run a remarkable age gamut. Mr. Buttigieg is the youngest and Bernie Sanders, at 77, is the oldest. The prominent female candidates cluster more in the middle: Kirsten Gillibrand is the youngest at 52, and Elizabeth Warren is the oldest at 69, with Kamala Harris (54) and Amy Klobuchar (58) in the middle. But whether a youngish candidate is bright, brilliant and promising or inexperienced, off-putting and ruthlessly ambitious depends on whether the young thing in question is male or female… Unfortunately for women, age poses an unsolvable problem: They are seen as too young and inexperienced right up until they are branded too old and tedious. Ms. Warren, for example, finds herself put in the same “old” category as Mr. Sanders and Joe Biden, even though both men are nearly a decade older than she is. Men who are more or less the same age as Ms. Warren — Sherrod Brown (66), John Hickenlooper (67), Jay Inslee (68) — are not lumped in with the white-hairs. If women in their 40s are “in a hurry,” and women in their 50s are old news, and women in their 60s are just old, when, exactly, is a woman supposed to go to the White House? I probably use social media more often than most women in their 30s or 40s — who are already swamped climbing the career ladder, commuting and/or parenting. Yet, here we go, also in the NYT: “We don’t want to lean out of that, we want the Cami-stans to want to pick it up,” one editor piped in. (For those over the age of 40: a “stan” is a kind of superfan.) Seriously, enough with this bullshit. Like anyone north of 40, let alone beyond, doesn’t read? Watch TV, YouTube, Insta? I have no kids or grand-kids, so if I want to talk to someone decades my junior, it’s going to be social and/or professional, not familial. Luckily, I still have friends in their 20s, 30s and 40s and really enjoy their companionship. I’m delighted when they choose to hang out for an afternoon or catch up for a long phone or Skype chat. I offer advice when asked (and sometimes when not!) but our concerns are hardly wildly different — where’d you get that fantastic lipstick? How’s work? How’s the new house? What are you reading these days? Mammos hurt! Friendship, in my world, need know no boundaries. Work, illegally and so annoyingly, does. I don’t Venmo (I use PayPal) but I actually do know what it is. The next time you assume someone older than you is de facto ignorant of a word or phrase or reference, ask. Then be pleasantly surprised — or have a useful conversation in which you share your knowledge. The careless years On November 27, 2018 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, domestic life, family, life, women16 Comments How much time do we really have? How much of our lives do we waste? It’s not carefree. It’s “I don’t care.” It’s a by-product of getting older, having less time to do what I really want to do, not keep meeting endless, endless financial obligations. It’s getting a crappy diagnosis that instantly — however much a cliche — changes your perspective on life and what matters most. It’s not rushing to people-please. It’s cutting out chatter and acquaintances who suck up your energy and return little of value. It’s avoiding activities that simply don’t offer sufficient pleasure. It’s adding those that do. We spend our lives working and working and working and trying our best to please everyone. Those are noble sentiments and we all have bills to pay. Nor am I arguing in favor of total disengagement or disinterest in the needs of others. But, at this point in my life — and that of other women I know who’ve faced recent health issues — we really don’t care about the usual rules anymore. When you really realize how little time we’re given and how quickly it can all change or disappear, caring about things that actually mean very, very little just….stops. On November 19, 2018 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, domestic life, family, life, parenting, seniors, women13 Comments Time off matters a lot to me! My past two posts here have been about two talented, driven American journalists — photographer Peter DaSilva and the late Marie Colvin. I’d say Peter, with whom I’ve also had a personal friendship for years, is to some degree defined by his attention to detail and compassion, while she was clearly driven, among other things less visible, by ambition and adrenaline. As the decades pass, as work becomes less (one hopes!) an uphill climb and plateaus out to a succession of accomplishments, large or small; as one begins and grows one’s family (or doesn’t), our essential values and character become ever clearer to ourselves and to others — the words or phrases used to sum you up. Are they what you want(ed)? I think about this a lot, maybe because I work as a journalist and my role, often, is to observe a stranger and make some decisions about who they are and why they are that way. I’m endlessly fascinated by what people do and how they enact their values — or don’t. A few things that define me: A passion for story-telling Whether here or in print or through the photos on my Insta account or sitting around a table with friends, I love to find and tell stories. Maybe it’s the Irish in me. A momma-bear instinct to protect people I care about Do not ever mess with someone I care about. I don’t have children, but those I love get a fierce loyalty. An endless desire to travel and explore new places I have already been to 40 countries and have so many more experiences I’m eager to try: Morocco, Japan, Greece and the Amazon, to name only a few. Never a very political animal Journalists are expected professionally to remain fair and objective, and so can’t be seen favoring one side or another (although I tend to be liberal.) I can’t vote in Canada since I left years ago and can’t vote in the U.S. as I’ve chosen not to become a citizen. I pay fairly careful attention to political issues but generally don’t have a dog in each fight. A lover of luxury Guilty! I wear cashmere and silk, drink champagne when there’s an occasion, and my favorite words ever just might be “Taxi!” and “room service.” Growing up watching my maternal grandmother run through her huge inheritance gave me absurdly expensive tastes, impossible to satisfy on lousy journalism wages. Challenging! Also cheap as hell Which is how one can afford some luxury, even if not earning a huge salary or income; I’ve stayed in the same unexciting 1960s building, in the same one bedroom apartment, for 30 years. I don’t love either of these things but I do love our view, our town and a 38-minute train commute to midtown Manhattan. Staying put and not splurging on a larger home and all its furnishings and maintenance and taxes and repairs has helped me save for retirement and travel, my two key priorities. I work to live, not live to work I wrecked my 20s being a workaholic and made several people quite miserable as a result — whether some of my editors, friends or boyfriends. It was all I cared most about. By 30, I was a burned-out wreck. I enjoy the work I do, but would happily stop tomorrow, having done it since I was 19. I have so many other interests — music, books travel, art, design, sports — and have accomplished enough in my career I don’t feel compelled to add notches to my belt nor be (uuuugggggghhhhh) “productive”, the great American obsession. Zero tolerance for the pompous, whiny and entitled Voracious reader I never leave home without a book or magazine or pile of unread newspapers. Reading is my oxygen. What are some of the qualities or values that define you? The only body we have… On September 27, 2018 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, Health, life, seniors, sports, women18 Comments This is a heartbreaking essay, by a woman writer, about 50 years of hating her own body, from Medium: Sandwiched between two ruthless brothers in a household where verbal cruelty was a competition sport, I was easy game. My parents — the should’ve-been referees — were, instead, the audience. With the rebuttal they should’ve been providing to my brothers’ barrage of relentless brutal nowhere to be found, I had nowhere to go, nowhere to hide. In the void of any contradiction, every harsh word became truth. Few events will make you as deeply, weepingly grateful for your body’s health and strength than than the loss of some of it — or the potential loss of all of it. I say this with the hindsight of someone who, before the age of 40, never saw a damn doctor for anything more intense (ouch!) than an annual mammogram and Pap smear. Since then I’ve had both knees “scoped” — i.e. arthroscopy — which removed torn cartilage (the price of decades of squash games, now verboten), a right shoulder repaired (minor) and my left hip fully replaced. It’s a funny moment when — as I was being wheeled into our local hospital’s OR for my breast lumpectomy in July — the female, Hispanic (so cool!) head of anesthesiology recognized me and vice versa. That’s comforting, but also a bit too much surgery. I really hit my limits in March 2017 when I arrived at the hospital with chest pain so intense I could barely tolerate the seatbelt worn for only 20 minutes to get to the ER. Turned out I had a 104 degree temperature and pneumonia I had been ignoring. That meant three days in the hospital on an IV and coughing so hard I thought I might pass out. I sweated so much I was thrilled to be able to shower there. I apologized out loud to my exhausted body, the one I’d been abusing and taking so for granted. As someone who came of age during second-wave feminism and in Canada, I never spent a lot of time fussing about my body and how it looked. I like to be stylish and attractive and have always loved fashion. But freaking out about the shape or size of my body? I care most, still, about being healthy, strong and flexible. I love being able to hit a softball to the outfield and savored my four years being a nationally ranked saber fencer — in my late 30s. I hope to get back to downhill skiing, horseback riding, hiking. Social media has made the endless and relentless scrutiny of our bodies even worse than it’s always been — policing our size and shape is such a useful way to distract us from essential issues like the size of our paycheck. Shaming women for being fat(ter) than someone would prefer us to be (MDs only, thanks) is just another way to undermine us in a culture that demands insane “productivity” and only makes beautiful clothes for women smaller than a size 10 — when the average American woman is now a size 14. Some of the most “beautiful” women I’ve met — those externally chic and spotless — have been ruthless and unkind. So my definition of beauty, and human value attached to a body, isn’t only rooted in what we see on the outside. How do you feel about your body? View this collection on Medium.com How do you feel about aging? On August 18, 2017 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, domestic life, Health, life, seniors69 Comments I met this guy — fellow Canadian, actor/comedian Mike Myers — recently at a party in Manhattan. We’re near the same age, still working, still laughing! This is a powerful video, and one worth watching — 11 minutes of a recent TED talk in Vancouver by activist Ashton Applewhite. In it, she raises the essential unfairness of treating people who are older — whether they’re in their 40s, 50s — or 80s — as “other” and as lesser, people with less economic, physical, emotional and spiritual value to the larger culture. And, as many women know, or soon learn, getting older is often a disaster in North America. If you’re still working, you’re supposed to pretend to be much younger and get every bit of cosmetic/surgical aid possible to make sure you appear that way. I work in a field dominated by people in their 20s and 30s, eager to make their name, get ahead and claim a spot. I also work in an industry — journalism — divided against itself in some deeply unhelpful ways. Digital media have claimed the lion’s share of audience and ad dollars, leaving “legacy media” (i.e. newspapers and magazines) with shrinking staff and budgets. That also means many newsrooms and offices are hemorrhaging people like me and my husband, professionals with decades of experience and insight into how to do these jobs with excellence, integrity and efficiency. Yet, now hundreds of newbies are also crying out for mentors, and finding none. Because those of us who would have become their mentors by working together have been bought out or fired, blocked by age discrimination from acquiring the new jobs we need, dismissed as being “digital immigrants”, both illegal and unfair. It’s a pervasive prejudice that weakens every workplace that indulges in it; diversity of age, wisdom, skills and experience also matters. And I hate the word “seniors”, as if an entire group of people were an undifferentiated mass of old. We don’t call younger people “intermediates” and, usually only within an athletic context, do we call them juniors. I also live in an apartment building where everyone owns their home, and a building dominated by people in their 70s, 80s and 90s. It’s always been like this, even when I was 30 and moved in there. Some people would hate this and flee as soon as possible — all those walkers and canes and even, very occasionally, wheelchairs. All that white hair! All that…age. It’s not an unusual sight to have an ambulance pull up or to get to know someone’s aide. It’s never really bothered me. Consider the alternative! I lost both grandmothers the year I was 18 and never even met either of my grandfathers so I enjoy talking to people a few decades further along than I am, seeing how they cope and enioy life, whether off on a cruise to Alaska or just sitting with me beside our shared swimming pool in the sunshine. Several are still working. They know my name. They commiserate when my arthritic knee puts me back in a brace or physical therapy. As I’ve said here, I have no close relatives and poor relationships with my own parents. As I age, I have slightly less energy than a decade ago, but it means I’m more thoughtful about when, how and for whom I work. Drama is something I eschew. I go to spin class and lift weights. I pray, daily, for continued good health. Love this Swedish TV show about a cop who’s definitely not young Jose and I are also very lucky to have friends in their 20s and 30s, people whose company we really enjoy and who seem to genuinely enjoy ours as well. They don’t just pump us for contacts and job help, but we talk about politics and travel and books and music and money — all the things friends talk about. It’s a great pleasure to watch our younger friends navigate life and, when asked, (and sometimes when not!), we’ll share our own experiences and strategies. Since we have no children or grandchildren, we really value this emotional connection with those younger than us. It’s also a benefit of older age to have left much of early adulthood’s angst and anxiety behind. We’ve been lucky and careful, and have saved enough to retire. I just pray for a few more decades to enjoy it all. Here’s a lovely “Vows” column from The New York Times, about a couple who recently married at 98 and 94. They met at the gym: “Age doesn’t mean a damn thing to me or to Gert,” he said. “We don’t see it as a barrier. We still do what we want to do in life.” Remember this famous image? President Kennedy in the Oval Office… Aging is a great privilege denied to so many! Do you feel uncomfortable around people much older or younger than you? Do you work with people much younger or older than you? How is it? Do we need role models? On April 9, 2017 April 17, 2017 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, domestic life, education, family, life, seniors, US, women145 Comments A favorite TV series, about an older Swedish detective Once you become an adult, certainly if you’re female and choose an unconventional life — maybe not marrying or not having children or working in a creative field — you might crave a role model. Someone who took the path less traveled by, and thrived. As American poet Robert Frost wrote, in 1916: Mainstream, mass market American women’s magazines are too generic, hence unhelpful. Impossible to relate to corporate warriors like Sheryl Sandberg or Arianna Huffington in their $4,000 sheath dresses and multi-million-dollar lives. I hope to keep traveling! In North America, older women are typically offered a depressingly bifurcated path — turn dumpy and invisible or spend every penny on Botox, fillers and plastic surgery. Look younger, or else! Neither appeals to me, so I’m forever in search of inspiration, i.e. role models. In June — where I’ll be celebrating in Paris — I’ll hit a milestone birthday. Since my mother and I don’t speak and my stepmother died nine years ago, I don’t have many older women to talk to intimately about what lies ahead. So it was a great pleasure recently to run into a friend from my dance classes — I was out walking in our small town in the sunshine — and catch up with her, a woman about to hit her next milestone birthday, a decade beyond mine. She really is an inspiration to me, about to fly to Japan, again, where she’ll be teaching writing and staying with her partner, who has a home there. Last time we met up, she was off to Barcelona to visit one of her daughters. She always looks terrific, trim and fit, wearing flattering colors and — most importantly — has a real infectious joy and spirit of adventure. I lost both my grandmothers the year I turned 18, so it’s been a long, long time without a much older woman in my life to talk to. Members of my team, Softball Lite taking a CPR class, March 4, 2017 in Hastings, NY. But our apartment building is pretty much an old age home, the sort of place people move into at 65 or 75 or 85 after they’ve sold the family house. So I watch people decades older than I navigate their lives, whether romantic, professional or personal. We don’t hang out, but we do socialize and chat in the hallways or lobby or driveway, our shared spaces. One woman — in her late 80s, maybe older — on our floor, has a fab new Barbour tweed jacket and looks amazing, even with her walker. I told her so, and as I walked away, heard her say, happily: “That made my day!” Older people get ignored. They aren’t listened to. Their needs and desires get dismissed. That’s not what I want! That’s not what anyone wants. My father, at 88, is still blessed with enough income and health to be traveling internationally and deciding where to live, still on his own. In his own way, he’s a role model — my husband, a late-life surprise baby, lost both his parents when he was still in his 20s. Fleece came in handy when playing golf in 19 mph winds; Cruit Island, Donegal, Ireland I know the elements of a happy later life, especially after retirement, will be many of the same things as today: good health, enough money to enjoy some pleasures, intimate friendships, a strong sense of community, a well-tended marriage. I’m also deliberately trying new-to-me things and learning new skills, like CPR and how to play golf. I debated trying to learn German, but I admit it — I wimped out! Like both of my parents, I enjoy knowing several much younger friends — people in their 20s, 30s and 40s, each of us at a different stage of life, perhaps, but often struggling with similar, life-long issues, whether intimacy, work or how to handle money well. We don’t have children or grand-children, (putting us very much out of step with our peers.) So we enjoy others’ when we can. I like having chosen the road less traveled, with its many twists and turns. But a compass and a guide are helpful. Do you have role models to help you figure out your life? Who, and how? Caitlin Kelly, an award-winning non-fiction author and frequent contributor to The New York Times, is a New York-based journalist. Her practical tips, offered through one-on-one webinars and individual coaching, have helped many other writers and bloggers worldwide, quickly increasing their sales, reader engagement and followers; details here. Contact: learntowritebetter@gmail.com. Take good care of yourself On October 14, 2015 By broadsideblogIn aging, beauty, behavior, culture, domestic life, Health, life, work23 Comments Beauty helps! Button up your overcoat, when the wind is free, Oh, take good care of yourself, you belong to me! — Ray Henderson lyric, 1928 After a few decades of running around — and four orthopedic surgeries within 12 years — I’m finally treating my body with a little more respect. I grew up in Canada, but now live in the U.S., and near New York City, the epicenter of a workaholic, gogogogogogogogogogo culture, one that solely encourages and rewards “productivity”. We’re all exhorted daily to move faster, do more, sleep less, earn more money, get the promotion. Watch a great movie! Vacation? Hah! Even the few Americans who get paid vacations beyond 10 days a year are too scared to take the time off. The notion of actually nurturing our souls, bodies and minds is anithetical to the industrial mindset of production. There’s no profit (for anyone else) in it! Here’s a thought-provoking essay from The New York Times on the subject: On my last day of work at the American ad agency, something strange happened: I was smiling. A weight had been lifted, and I felt like a prisoner about to be freed. And despite my fear that no one would hire me, I soon found a job in Zurich doing exactly what I had been doing in the United States: copywriting for an ad agency. My job title was the same, but I worked part time — and for a higher salary than I had received working full time in the United States. When I was politely asked to work additional days beyond the ones specifically mentioned in my contract, the agency paid me for that extra work. Not only that, but instead of two weeks of vacation, I had five. And I was encouraged to use every single day of it, guilt-free. Once, when I went to Spain for “only” 10 days, my Swiss colleagues chastised me for not going away long enough. Instead of worrying about working weekends and holidays the way I had in the United States, I planned trips like the rest of my colleagues: Paris. Prague. Zermatt. For the first time in my working life, I was living, too. Because of this, my creativity flourished. I had both time and money, and because I had real time off, I was more productive when I was at work. In my spare time I wrote blogs and essays and I swam in the lake. I’m firmly and decidedly out of step with American values in this regard. A bushel of freshly-gathered clams, mid-coast Maine In 2015, I’ve spent 3 weeks in Europe in January, another three weeks in June in Ireland, 10 days in Maine and 10 days in Ontario. Because my husband and I are, as of this year, now both full-time freelancers, (he’s a photo editor and photographer, I write for a living), we can work from anywhere there’s wi-fi and can take as much time off as we can afford. We’re not wealthy and we live a fairly frugal life, with a small apartment and a 14-year-old car. Nor do we have the financial responsibilities of children or other dependents. We’ve had terrific careers and won awards and the respect of our peers and while we still need to work for income…it’s time for us. I’m not fond of the word “self-care” but it’s a concept I believe in strongly, especially for women who are socially encouraged to give everyone else their time, energy and attention — but often feel conflicted or guilty when they stop long enough to take equally thoughtful care of themselves. Stay hydrated! Self care can take many forms: — massage, manicures, pedicures, facials — dressing well — a barbershop trim or shave — regular medical and dental checkups –– cooking or baking something delicious, especially “just” for yourself — a pot of tea in the afternoon, possibly with a biscuit or two (no sad little teabag in a cup!) — naps! — drawing, painting, taking photos, nurturing your creative self — doing yoga — playing music — singing, alone or with others — dancing (check out this amazing early morning event I go to) — keeping a calm, clean, lovely home, (or at least a dedicated space within it) — the company of dear friends — reading for pure pleasure — visiting a gallery or museum — wearing a lovely scent — taking a luxuriously long bath or shower — spending time in nature — silent solitude — listening to music — candlelight — unplugging from all devices and social media — attending a religious service — volunteer work — coloring (have you seen the latest trend — adult coloring books?) — cuddling and/or caring for your pet(s) –– handiwork like knitting, crochet, quilting, sewing embroidery — or woodwork — meditation Making art can be a way to decompress Do you take good care of yourself? Would you rather buy more stuff — or have more fun? On August 17, 2015 By broadsideblogIn aging, behavior, business, culture, domestic life, entertainment, Money53 Comments This piece in The New York Times piqued my interest: American consumers are putting what little extra money they do have to spend each month into eating out, upgrading their cars or fixing up their homes, as well as spending on sports gear, health and beauty. Spending at restaurants and bars has jumped more than 9 percent this year through July compared with the same period last year, and on autos by more than 7 percent, according to the agency. Analysts say a wider shift is afoot in the mind of the American consumer, spurred by the popularity of a growing body of scientific studies that appear to show that experiences, not objects, bring the most happiness. The Internet is bursting with the “Buy Experiences, Not Things” type of stories that could give retailing executives nightmares. Millennials — the 20- and 30-something consumers whom marketers covet — would rather spend their hard-won cash on out-of-town vacations, meals with friends, gym memberships and, of course, their smartphones, many surveys suggest. More stuff! I’ve been thinking about this a lot as we’re finally, gratefully, at a point in our lives we need very little additional stuff. We’ve renovated two rooms of our apartment and own an array of sports gear, art supplies, camera equipment, the things we use for pleasure and for work. (We do need to replace our old car.) It’s a huge relief. I’ve never been a mall rat, the sort of person whose favorite activity is shopping. I enjoy it and sometimes take an entire day to do it, but rarely come home with more than one or two things, and usually nothing huge or expensive. Like everyone, I have specific weaknesses — anything seriously antique, jewelry and lovely things for setting a pretty table. One of the most fun things you can possibly do — dance at 7am! Daybreaker, in NYC We’ve also saved really hard for years for our retirement, so can now release a bit more of our income for pleasure; saving 15 per cent a year is no fun, but — yes, really — it adds up. I’m more eager now to spend what extra money we earn on travel, dining out, enjoying the many plays, concerts, dance performances and conferences available to us in and near New York City. We do not have children or grandchildren, nor, as many of our younger friends do, huge student debts to discharge. Frankly, we feel like outliers — we are very far from 1%ers but we’re not panicked about money the way many people are; the average American has saved stunningly little for retirement. A ticket to the theater is a joy — and privilege In the next few months, we’ll attend a weekend workshop (for business purposes); travel back to Canada (by car), attend a few shows and concerts. We hope to be back in Europe after Christmas for several weeks. My Dad heads off soon for a month sailing with a friend in Greece; at 86, with a new hip, he’s lucky enough to have the good health, strength and finances to keep enjoying his life. In this regard, he’s very much a role model. How many things do you want to own? How many experiences would you like to enjoy? Unless you’re wealthy, every expenditure of money means making a choice — the time needed to invest in earning the taxable income to buy the stuff, store the stuff, clean and polish and upgrade the stuff — or an amazing afternoon/evening/week/month/year creating indelible memories. We spent a recent Sunday in Manhattan (a 40 minute trip into the city from our home) seeing a show, On The Town, on Broadway, and splurged on box seats, at $101 each. I felt like royalty — they offered amazing sightlines and no squished knees; we sat in comfortable elegant Louis XIV-style armchairs. Before the show, we stopped in at Sardi’s, the classic, old-school bar and restaurant, for a Bloody Mary and a snack. What a lovely, lovely day, creating memories we’ll cherish for years to come. I’ve never once regretted any of the money I’ve spent on travel or meals or a day of skiing or a game of golf. But I’ve deeply regretted the money I’ve wasted on a pair of too-high heels (worn once!), clothing that just looked like hell or a really boring book that was, after all, a best-seller. Sunrise from our friend’s bedroom window in Maine Nothing that arrives in a box or bag is ever as pleasurable and satisfying to me as walking down a Paris street or having tea with a friend in London or catching up face to face with my sister-in-law in Toronto over a very long lunch. What makes you happier — stuff or experiences? Any good ones you can share?
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Kinda Late Show with BAS Artist you should knowNew ShitPerformer You Should KnowPress Alex Mak - Managing Editor 2019-12-09 09 Dec 2019 Alex Mak - Managing Editor 2019. J’Nai Bridges as Carmen, seducing Spanish soldiers, and her audience, at the San Francisco Opera For over 92 years Georges Bizet’s Carmen has carried on a great love affair with San Francisco. Carmen made her debut with the San Francisco Opera in 1927 at the Civic Auditorium. Over the decades, she’s continued to sing and seduce her way through some 192 performances in San Francisco, and through the years she’s changed her style, her look and her sirens, who in turn have reflected the eras they performed in. 1931. San Francisco Opera gypsy dancers in Carmen. You may be asking yourself, “Why her? Why is Carmen such an indelible, inseparable part of the San Francisco stage? Why not some other opera?” Well, the answer may be quite simple, Carmen and San Francisco get along so well because they have so much in common. Like San Francisco, Carmen is beautiful, expressive, stubbornly independent, openly hedonistic, and in constant revolt against her federal government. Sound familiar? And like San Francisco, the gypsie Carmen might steal your heart, your wallet, and leave you to wake up in the morning, smiling, shrouded in a fog, and ready for more. It’s the story of a gorgeous gypsie woman who seduces her world while demanding her free will…and dying to preserve it. 1981. Carmen as Hanna Schwarz, performing with Plácido Domingo, SF Opera We asked San Francisco Opera expert, Dramaturg, and all around mensch, Dr. Clifford “Kip” Cranna about the history of Carmen in San Francisco, and about his favorite performances over the years. So let’s take a ride down operatic memory lane, shall we? 1934. French soprano Ninon Vallin as Carmen, SF Opera. (BAS)Are there any stories/anecdotes about certain performers through the years that you would like to share? Dr. Cranna: “In 1991 we were rehearsing Carmen with a sexy newcomer named Denyce Graves. I recall that in the piano dress rehearsal she made a false step off a raised platform, and out in the house we could hear a slight crunching sound. She winced and uttered an audible expletive. She had broken her ankle, we later learned. But there was no way she was going to cancel. She performed wearing a cast, and was no less sexy than before!” 1991. Denyce Graves as the title role in Bizet’s Carmen, at SF Opera. When was Carmen first performed at the SF Opera House? 1927 was San Francisco Opera’s first Carmen, performed at Civic Auditorium, which was our home for most of our first 10 years. Carmen was in the season again in 1928, when we performed at Dreamland Auditorium at Post and Steiner, an ice skating rink and music venue later known as Winterland, which became a venue for Bill Graham’s rock concerts. Carmen was in the 1931 season back at Civic Auditorium. The first Carmen to come along after the War Memorial Opera House opened in 1932 was in the 1934 season. 1981. Act I of Bizet’s Carmen, sets by Jean-Pierre Ponnelle Ponnelle, at SF Opera. Photo Ron Scherl What are the biggest differences between the first performance and today’s performance? Those early performances featured the sung recitatives that had been composed by Ernest Guiraud shortly after Bizet’s death, replacing the original spoken dialogue. This was the standard way of doing the opera here until 1981 where the spoken dialogues become the norm. How many performers, crew, & musicians are working on Carmen now? The forces required for each performance are impressive, including 105 performers (cast, chorus, children’s chorus, dancers and supernumeraries), 62 musicians in the pit, 5 onstage or backstage musicians, and 43 stage crew. Of course, there are also many others who contribute immeasurably to each performance from wardrobe, wigs and make-up, wardrobe, the costume department, and the crew who prepared the stage for Carmen, among others. It takes a village! 2016. Carmen with a modern look, a Calixto Bieito production. Photo by Cory Weaver Why is Carmen a good choice for San Francisco? Besides its captivating and colorful score and great tunes, the story of Carmen resonates now as it originally did, as a vivid musical and dramatic portrait of a headstrong, free-spirited, passionate, and brave woman whose determination not to be dominated by men causes her downfall as she defiantly stares down her fate. Who are some of your favorite Carmens over the years and why? I loved Teresa Berganza’s sophisticated vocalism (1981), basked in Denyce Graves’ sultry sexiness (1991 and 1998), and was impressed by Olga Borodina’s sheer vocal power (1996). How are you enjoying J’Nai Bridges’ performance so far? I think J’Nai was born to sing Carmen. She has the looks, the voice, and especially the dramatic flair. You can’t take your eyes off her. J’Nai Bridges singing the Habanera We agree! Favorite year for costumes? When the Ponnelle Carmen was new in 1981, I thought the costumes designed by Werner Juerke, evocative of the Spanish Civil War era, were very striking. 2019. J’Nai Bridges as the title role in Bizet’s Carmen. Photo by Cory Weaver Most interesting set design over the years? The Jean-Pierre Ponnelle production, new in 1981, is hard to forget. It was strikingly huge, taking 3 intermissions for the set changes. It seemed to me very Spanish. Most impressive was Act III with the smugglers lowering a huge canon with a crane over a big mountain cliff that formed the backdrop for the entire act. We did this original Ponnelle in four different seasons before it was replaced by a new Lotfi Mansouri production designed for the vast expanse of the Civic Auditorium, where we returned for 1996-97 while the War Memorial Opera House was undergoing seismic retrofit and renovation. The Mansouri production was revived in June 1998 when we were back in the Opera House, but it didn’t look as good on the stage here as it had at the Civic, so we purchased a scaled down clone of the Ponnelle (the original had been discarded) which was created for a smaller stage in Geneva. It worked fine on our stage, and we did it in three seasons, but missed the grand scale of the “Big Ponnelle.” 1875 lithographic poster for the first première of Georges Bizet’s Carmen in Paris. This writer was lucky enough to catch Carmen at San Francisco Opera this past Friday. It’s aria, design, and music was as stunning as ever. J’Nai Bridges as Carmen is gorgeous and captivating, Matthew Polenzani as Don José is debonair, Anita Hartig as Micaëla is magical, and Kyle Ketelsen as Escamillo is invigorating. For more information, meet the cast here. And of course for tickets (before they’re all gone) look here. This Carmen will run in SF until 6/29/19, and future Carmens may run for many, many years to come. Tags:Best ArtBizet's Carmen by PonnellCarmencarmen SF operaDenyce Graveshistory of carmenhistory of sf operaKip CannanOpera San Francisco The War on Clap: How the Allies Fought VD Why is Makeup and Beauty YouTube Dominated by Men? Alex Mak - Managing Editor I'm the managin' editor here at Broke-Ass Stuart. When we're not writing, editing, or publishing articles, Stuart and I are promoting the good things in SF & NYC. If you're a writer, artist, or performer who would like to get your work seen by our audience, or if you're a cool business and would like us to introduce you to our 120k social followers in a creative and engaging way, contact me at alex@brokeassstuart.com. Get Our Daily Digest Screw algorithms, get a daily digest of all our new articles each morning Putin Gives Trump a ‘Full Pardon’ on New Year’s A Brief History of NYC Islands Used to Banish People from Manhattan What the Hell is Blockchain, and Why Won’t Men Stop Telling Me About it? SIGN UP FOR NEWS, FREEBIES AND GIVEAWAYS site by Go Web Smarty
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Molecular features that predict the response to antimetabolite chemotherapies Mahya Mehrmohamadi1,2,3,4, Seong Ho Jeong4 & Jason W. Locasale ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0002-7766-35021,2,3 Antimetabolite chemotherapeutic agents that target cellular metabolism are widely used in the clinic and are thought to exert their anti-cancer effects mainly through non-specific cytotoxic effects. However, patients vary dramatically with respect to treatment outcome, and the sources of heterogeneity remain largely unknown. Here, we introduce a computational method for identifying gene expression signatures of response to chemotherapies and apply it to human tumors and cancer cell lines. Furthermore, we characterize a set of 17 antimetabolite agents in various contexts to investigate determinants of sensitivity to these agents. We identify distinct favorable and unfavorable metabolic expression signatures for 5-FU and Gemcitabine. Importantly, we find that metabolic pathways targeted by each of these antimetabolites are specifically enriched in its expression signatures. We provide evidence against the common notion about non-specific cytotoxic functions of antimetabolite drugs. This study demonstrates through unbiased analyses that the activities of metabolic pathways likely contribute to therapeutic response. Cancer cells adapt their metabolism to meet the requirements of inappropriate growth, survival, and proliferation [1,2,3]. Since these demands are often not present in normal cells to the same extent, there is considerable interest in exploiting metabolic alterations for therapeutic advances [4, 5]. Antimetabolite chemotherapies are one of the most commonly used therapeutic strategies for the treatment of neoplastic disease [6]. Historically, some of the first successful chemotherapeutic agents were derived from intermediates in the synthesis of folates [7, 8]. Subsequently, there are now at least 17 agents approved in the USA that target a specific metabolic enzyme [9]. These agents can often be tolerated and can achieve remarkable responses in advanced-stage cancers leading to complete remission in many cases. However, the clinical responses to these agents are heterogeneous with patients exhibiting varying degrees of sensitivity or resistance. To date, there is little molecular information that is used clinically for prognostication for these agents. For instance, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is a widely used antimetabolite chemotherapy that interferes with pyrimidine biosynthesis by targeting the enzyme thymidylate synthetase (TYMS). Previous studies that have associated the expression levels of TYMS and tumor response to 5-FU have been controversial, and currently, TYMS expression is not used as a biomarker in clinical decision-making [10]. Other studies have found TP53 mutational status a predictor of 5-FU therapy [11, 12]. However, it remains unclear whether the activities of specific pathways that are targeted by 5-FU associate with anti-tumor responses. Notably, a recent metabolomics study provided evidence that pyrimidine homeostasis is disrupted in response to 5-FU suggesting metabolic specificity in determinants of response to this drug [13]. A recent study used a large panel of cell lines from the catalog of somatic mutations in cancer (COSMIC) collection and characterized molecular markers of response to hundreds of different drugs [11]. This drug panel included a number of antimetabolite chemotherapies together with a number of other agents grouped as “cytotoxic drugs.” This study comprehensively evaluated thousands of molecular features in their ability to act as predictive markers of sensitivity and found the TP53 mutational status as the most dominant marker for antimetabolite agents such as 5-FU and Gemcitabine. For 5-FU, a handful of copy number variants (CNVs) was also found to be predictive of cell line resistance [11]. However, this study did not explore gene expression beyond only 11 common pathways, which found no significant predictors. It remains to be investigated whether any differences among antimetabolite agents can be captured in gene expression signatures of response and whether such gene expression signatures can add to our power of distinguishing subtypes with heterogeneous therapeutic outcome. Previous assessments of molecular markers of response to chemotherapy have mostly been carried out in cancer cell lines. The wealth of genomic information on annotated human tumors now publically available through the cancer genome atlas (TCGA) allows for these questions to be addressed in patients in a more systematic way than previously possible. We and others have successfully utilized the TCGA to decipher novel aspects of cancer metabolism using computational approaches that integrate genomic information on thousands of human tumors [14,15,16,17,18]. A previous study applied an unbiased investigation of genomic data on ovarian cancer tumors from the TCGA and specifically looked for prognostic markers of response to Cisplatin using progression-free survival of recipients [19]. Despite difficulties in studying drug response in human patients in the presence of numerous confounding factors and heterogeneity in therapeutic regimens, the unbiased framework introduced in that study provided useful insights on novel genetic and epigenetic subgroups with variable outcome [19]. This motivated us to apply a similar approach to identify gene expression subgroups of response to antimetabolite chemotherapies. Here, we carry out an investigation of a set of antimetabolite chemotherapies that target metabolic enzymes. These agents target different pathways including folate synthesis, nucleotide metabolism, and glutathione biosynthesis. Instead of analyzing target enzyme expressions, we develop an unbiased approach to identify gene expression signatures of response. Subsequently, we assess specificity and heterogeneity in cell line sensitivities to various antimetabolite agents. Together, our results introduce specific metabolic determinants of response to these agents. Discretizing gene expressions and defining favorability scores We considered TCGA’s COAD and PAAD cohorts. Level-3 RNA-seq RSEM gene-normalized counts were downloaded for each tumor through the GDC portal (https://gdc.cancer.gov/). The values were log2 normalized, and in each data set, genes with a count of 2 or smaller in over 80% of the samples were removed as low-count genes. We used the following criteria to discretize the signature gene expression matrix and label expressions “favorable” or “unfavorable” based on their relationship with progression-free survival (PFS; time-zero is date of diagnosis in the corresponding plots). A gene was assigned a value of 1 and was considered favorable if its high expression (higher than median plus half of the standard deviation for that gene) co-occurred with better prognosis (i.e., patient exhibited both high expression and good prognosis based on Cox survival test on the values of expression of a given gene), and a value of − 1 (unfavorable) if its high expression co-occurred with poor prognosis in univariate Cox regression: $$ F\left\{\begin{array}{l}=1,\mathrm{if}\ \mathrm{Eij}\ge \mathrm{med}+\mathrm{s}/2\ \mathbf{and}\ \mathrm{j}\in \mathrm{good}\ \mathrm{survival}\hfill \\ {}=-1,\mathrm{if}\ \mathrm{Eij}\ge \mathrm{med}+\mathrm{s}/2\ \mathbf{and}\ \mathrm{j}\in \mathrm{poor}\ \mathrm{survival}\hfill \\ {}=0,\mathrm{otherwise}\hfill \end{array}\right. $$ where Eij represents expression of gene “i” in individual tumor “j.” For discretizing cell line expression data, the following modified scheme was used where cell lines were labeled either “sensitive” or “resistant” to a drug if their IC-50 value was at either extreme of the distribution of IC-50 values for that given drug across all cell lines. $$ F\left\{\begin{array}{l}=1,\mathrm{if}\ \mathrm{Eij}\ge \mathrm{med}+\mathrm{s}/2\ \mathbf{and}\ \mathrm{j}\in \mathrm{sensitive}\hfill \\ {}=-1,\mathrm{if}\ \mathrm{Eij}\ge \mathrm{med}+\mathrm{s}/2\ \mathbf{and}\ \mathrm{j}\in \mathrm{resistant}\hfill \\ {}=0,\mathrm{otherwise}\hfill \end{array}\right. $$ where Eij represents expression of gene “i” in cell line “j.” Genome-wide identification of survival-associated expression Progression-free survival times for TCGA’s COAD and PAAD cohorts were obtained through the cBioPortal for cancer genomics. We used cancer progression or patient death as “events” in Cox models and used the last day of follow-up to right censor the data in cases where no event was documented. R packages “survival” was used for univariate survival analyses independently for all genes (Fig. 1a and Fig. 3a). Combined gene expression signatures of response to 5-FU in colon cancer identify novel subgroups. a Schematic of the step-wise filtering used for gene selection in colon cancer (TCGA COAD). b Hierarchical clustering of heatmap of the discretized gene favorability scores. Columns represent genes and rows represent individuals. Favorable scores are shown by the color red (F = 1), unfavorable by blue (F = − 1), and neutral by yellow (F = 0) (see the “Methods” section). c Pathways enriched in the unfavorable gene set. Enrichment p values are calculated using Fisher’s exact test (see the “Methods” section) Survival analysis using gene signatures When considering survival analysis for subgroups identified by our favorability scoring method (described in the following), we used the subgroup assignments based on the k-means clustering of favorability matrix in each case to label samples as “favorable signature group” and “unfavorable signature group.” Subsequently, Cox regression was performed to assess the significance of the difference between PFS of the two groups as shown in Fig. 2a and Fig. 3d. Relationship between target enzyme expression and response to 5-FU in colon cancer. a Kaplan-Meier plot showing progression free survival in the two tumor subgroups identified in Fig. 1b. b Kaplan-Meier plot compares progression free survival in high-TYMS expression vs. low-TYMS expression subgroups of TCGA COAD patients. c Kaplan-Meier plot compares progression free survival in high-TYMS expression vs. low-TYMS expression subgroups of stage III TCGA COAD patients Combined gene expression signatures of response to Gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer identify novel subgroups. a Schematic of the step-wise filtering used for gene selection in pancreatic cancer (TCGA PAAD). b Hierarchical clustering of heatmap of the discretized gene favorability scores. Columns represent genes and rows represent individuals. Favorable scores are shown by the color red (F = 1), unfavorable by blue (F = − 1), and neutral by yellow (F = 0) (see the “Methods” section). c Pathways enriched in the unfavorable gene set. Enrichment p values are calculated using Fisher’s exact test. d Kaplan-Meier plot showing the progression free survival in the two tumor subgroups identified in part (b) Cross validation To assess potential over-fitting of our approach for stratifying response subsets, we repeated the favorability scoring and the subsequent clustering using 5-fold cross validation as follows: we divided the cohort of COAD tumors into five independent test subsets. For each round of cross validation, we left one of the test subsets out and performed the survival analysis as described above only on the remaining four subsets (the training set). We next performed the survival analysis on the test subset using the training set gene expression data to determine “high” and “low” expression thresholds for each gene. The median log likelihood test p value for the significance of the difference between survival rates of the two subsets was p = 5.706671e-06 (with standard deviation of 0.003) on the training and p = 0.019 (with standard deviation of 0.017) on the test sets. Cell line sensitivity analyses For the COSMIC cell lines, RMA-normalized gene expressions were obtained through the Sanger Institute (http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cosmic). Genes with a coefficient of variation of 0.05 or smaller were removed. To test association with drug response, inhibitory concentration (IC-50) values were correlated with gene expression values and a Kendal tau was calculated. Genes with a correlation of over 0.2 and an associated p value of 0.01 or less were selected for subsequent discretization step (Fig. 4a and Additional file 1: Figure S2A). Combined gene expression signatures of response to 5-FU across colon cancer cell lines identify novel subgroups. a Schematic of the step-wise filtering used for gene selection in colon cancer (COSMIC COAD-READ). b Hierarchical clustering of heatmap of the discretized gene favorability scores. Columns represent genes and rows represent individuals. Favorable scores are shown by the color red (F = 1), unfavorable by blue (F = − 1), and neutral by yellow (F = 0) (see the “Methods” section). c Box-plots comparing the resistance to 5-FU (log IC-50 values) between the two cell line subgroups identified in part (b) (error bars show the range of the data points in each group) Gene selection approach Genes that passed our first filter, i.e., showed a significant association with PFS (Cox p value < 0.05), were subsequently evaluated by additional clinical and genetic attributes. To eliminate genes whose expression levels were significantly affected by TP53 mutational status, we compared expression levels in TP53 mutant with TP53 wild-type samples, and a Wilcoxon non-parametric test was used to assess statistical difference. This test allowed filtering out genes significantly associated with TP53 mutation. For other clinical attributes, such as cancer stage, patient age, tumor grade, and nodal status, the Spearman correlation was used to test associations between gene expression and these clinical factors across samples. Finally, genes that passed all of the above filters were used for subsequent discretization analyses. Survival analysis using expression of target enzymes To assess the strength of direct target enzymes of 5-FU and Gemcitabine as markers of PFS, we considered expression levels of TYMS and RRM1 (RRM2), respectively. We first used the function “cutp” in the R package “survMisc” to find the best cutting point in the continuous gene expression. We then used this cutting point as a threshold to divide the samples into two groups of “low” and “high” expression for samples below and above the cut point, respectively. Independent cross validation for pancreatic cancer To validate the clinical significance of the gene signatures comprised of 665 genes in pancreatic cancer, we looked at publicly available datasets (Accession: GSE17891) of a pancreas cohort comprised of 27 patients. First, we clustered the patients based on their 665 gene signatures by Spearman Rank Correlation Clustering, and there were two distinct clusters. We performed Kaplan-Meier survival analysis based on the clustering, and we found that the gene signature was able to stratify the cohort into two groups with distinct survival outcomes despite the small cohort size (n = 27). To compare this result to those of using single gene expression levels, we performed Kaplan-Meier analysis for RRM1 and RRM2. We divided the cohort into half according to RRM1 and RRM2 gene expression levels (n = 14 for high gene expression and n = 13 for low gene expression). Pathway enrichment analyses Pathway enrichment analysis was performed on the resulting gene list for each cancer type using Enrichr [20]. P values from the Fisher’s exact test are reported for significant (p < 0.05) KEGG pathways (and HumanCyc (https://humancyc.org/) pathways for potential metabolic signatures not defined by KEGG pathways in detail). Analyses of non-gene expression cell attributes We obtained IC-50 values for the 17 antimetabolite compounds across a panel of 60 cell lines from the National Cancer Institute (NCI-60) [21]. To complement our gene expression analyses, we took advantage of the NCI-60 cell line panel where in addition to the comprehensive annotation of cell lines, a previous study has quantified the consumption and release rates (CORE) of hundreds of metabolites by each of these cell lines. We obtained cell volumes, proliferation rates, CORE values, and dose-response sensitivity information (IC-50 values) for 17 antimetabolite drugs across this cell line panel (https://dtp.cancer.gov/discovery_development/nci-60/). CORE values are positive if a metabolite is released into the media by cancer cells and is negative if the metabolite is consumed. The list of these antimetabolic agents is as follows: Gemcitabine, Methotrexate, Pemetrexed, Thioguanine, Thiopurine, Fluorouracil, 5-Fluorouracil deoxyriboside, Hydroxyurea, Ara-C, Azacytidine, Cladribine, Decitabine, Pentostatin, Cytarabine, Fluodarabine phosphate, Clofarabine, and Capecitabine. Growth rate calculations We obtained growth rate by correcting proliferation rates for volumes. At time zero—right after the cell division, the cell volume (V 0) is the minimum. At time T 1, the cell gets bigger to V 1. If we define growth rate (k g) as the increase of cell volume per time it takes, we can come up with the equation below: $$ {V}_1={V}_0+{T}_1{k}_{\mathrm{g}} $$ At doubling time (T d), the cell will divide into two, and we assume two divided cells will have the same volume as the initial volume, V 0. $$ {V}_2=2{V}_0={V}_0+{T}_{\mathrm{d}}{k}_{\mathrm{g}} $$ $$ {V}_0={T}_{\mathrm{d}}{k}_{\mathrm{g}}\kern2.25em $$ $$ {T}_d=\frac{\mathit{\ln}2}{k_p}\kern2.75em $$ $$ {V}_0=\left(\frac{\mathit{\ln}2}{k_p}\right){k}_g $$ We then solved the above equation to obtain the following equation for growth rate: $$ {k}_g=\frac{V_0{k}_p}{\mathit{\ln}2} $$ Gene expression signatures of patient response to antimetabolite chemotherapies are enriched for metabolic pathways To identify gene expression signatures associated with patients’ response to chemotherapies, we undertook an unbiased genome-wide selection approach adapted and modified from a previous framework [19] (Fig. 1a). We used the TCGA as the source of our clinically annotated genomic data on human tumors [22]. Progression-free survival (PFS), a readily available metric of clinical outcome, was used as a measure of patient response to chemotherapy. TCGA cancer types in which patients were treated with a common antimetabolite agent were considered if both RNA-seq gene expression and follow-up data were available for a large enough cohort of patients (N > 50) that would allow quantitative analysis. Since our goal was to identify subtypes of cancer patients with “good response” and “poor response,” we considered each cancer type separately. These criteria limited our analyses of human data to 5-FU treatment in colorectal cancers and Gemcitabine treatment in pancreatic cancers (see the “Methods” section). Both of these agents target one-carbon metabolism, a metabolic pathway that has previously been shown to play diverse critical roles in cancer initiation, progression, and pathogenesis [4, 14,15,16, 23, 24]. A total of 109 colon cancer patients were considered who received adjuvant 5-FU therapy as part of their chemotherapy regimen [22]. For this genome-wide study, we considered all of the genes in the genome after filtering out low-count mRNA expressions (see the “Methods” section). We first calculated association between expression of each gene with PFS using univariate Cox regression (see the “Methods” section) and excluded genes that did not show a significant (p < 0.05) association (Fig. 1a). Next, we considered the remaining 446 genes and further filtered out stage-, age-, TP53 mutation-, and nodal status-associated genes to eliminate confounding factors that might affect the association of genes with 5-FU response (see the “Methods” section). This filtering leads to a set of 299 genes that were each individually significantly associated with patient response to 5-FU in colon cancer, and their relationship to PFS was independent of stage, age, TP53 mutation, and nodal status of the tumors (Fig. 1a). Notably, this set included TYMS—the direct target enzyme of 5-FU. We next set out to assess the combined power of the 299 genes in separating response subgroups. For this, we used a scheme previously proposed by Hsu et al. for DNA methylation [19] and modified the method to apply to gene expression analysis (see the “Methods” section). First, we converted the gene expression matrix into a discretized matrix of “favorability scores,” where a gene with high expression in a patient in the better prognosis subgroup was assigned a score of 1 (“favorable”), and a gene with high expression co-occurring with poorer prognosis subgroup was assigned a score of − 1 (“unfavorable”), and all other cases were assigned a score of 0 (“neutral”) (see the “Methods” section). The clustered heatmap of the favorability scores discovered distinct subsets of genes (favorable vs. unfavorable) as well as distinct subgroups of patients (Fig. 1b). To assess the functional relevance of the favorable and unfavorable gene signatures, we performed gene set enrichment analysis based on the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathways. The unfavorable gene set was enriched for the following KEGG pathways: circadian entrainment (p = 7e-03); nucleotide sugar metabolism (p = 7e-03); Notch signaling (p = 7e-03); and one-carbon metabolism (p = 1e-02) (Fig. 1c). TYMS, SHMT2, GALT, RENBP, and AMDHD2 were among the metabolic genes that had an unfavorable expression in colon cancer, meaning that their high expression in patients treated with 5-FU was associated with poorer prognosis. Consistent with our results, one-carbon metabolic fluxes have previously been shown to correlate with sensitivity to 5-FU in vitro and in mice [13]. These observations illustrate the importance of specific metabolic target pathways of 5-FU in explaining part of the variability in patient response to this drug. Enrichment analysis on the favorable gene cluster showed enrichment of lipid metabolic KEGG pathways (synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids (p = 4e-04) and fatty acid metabolism (p = 2e-03)), with SCD and ACOX1 fatty acid de-saturases being among the metabolic genes in this group. Lipid synthesis has long been known to increase upon carcinogenesis, producing cellular membrane subunits for rapidly proliferating cells [25]. However, lipidome analyses have shown that the role of fatty acids in cancers are more complex, with an enrichment of saturated fatty acids causing the loss of membrane fluidity, increase in drug resistance, and increase in malignancy of cancer cells [26]. Our results confirm previous studies by identifying fatty acid oxidases and de-saturases SCD and ACOX1 as favorable enzymes, suggesting a role for fatty acid metabolism. To compare the two patient subgroups identified by our approach, we performed k-means clustering on the matrix of favorability scores and identified a distinct subgroup enriched with favorable genes (group 1 in Fig. 1b) and a second subgroup enriched with unfavorable gene expression (group 2 in Fig. 1b) (see “Methods” section). When PFS was compared between these two subgroups, we found a highly significant difference (Cox p = 3.46e-07, hazard ratio (HR) = 6.7; Fig. 2a). Interestingly, when limiting the gene expression signatures to 17 metabolic genes among the 299, we could still see a significant separation (Cox p = 1.3e-03) suggesting that the metabolic genes alone are predictive of outcome. To control for potential bias, we repeated this procedure using 5-fold cross validation. We found the difference between the two subgroups to be significant in all five testing subsets (see “Methods” section). Next, we assessed the power of TYMS expression alone in distinguishing response subgroups. For this, we divided tumors into two groups based on their TYMS expression level: “low-TYMS” and “high-TYMS” (see “Methods” section). We then compared PFS between the two groups using Cox regression and found a modestly significant difference in response between the low-TYMS and high-TYMS groups (p = 4.9e-02; Fig. 2b). Given that adjuvant 5-FU therapy is usually administered in stage III colon cancer, we repeated this analysis in stage III tumors only (N = 59) and found a slightly stronger association (p = 6e-03; Fig. 2c). In both analyses, we found that higher expression of TYMS is associated with poorer response to 5-FU therapy, consistent with previous reports [27, 28], possibly explained by larger doses of the drug needed to achieve TYMS inhibition in high-expressing tumors. These results show that our scheme of discretizing combined gene expression signatures followed by favorability scoring and clustering is able to identify prognosis subgroups that are significantly more distinct than the subgroups identified based on TYMS expression alone, despite TYMS being the direct target of 5-FU and gene strongly correlated with drug response. Importantly, our gene expression signatures are not associated with other prominent clinical predictors of prognosis (e.g., age, stage, nodal status, and TP53 mutation), as we controlled for these confounding factors in the gene selection step (see the “Methods” section; Fig. 1a). This suggests that the gene expression signatures identified here offer additional information about prognosis beyond what is already captured by commonly used clinical metrics. Since metabolism is an interconnected network of reactions that work in concert; thus, the combined activity of multiple connected genes and pathways results in a better reflection of the biological state of a tumor than the activity of individual enzymes. We next set out to apply our gene expression analysis method to an independent TCGA cohort consisting of pancreatic cancer patients (N = 100) who were treated with adjuvant Gemcitabine chemotherapy as part of their chemotherapy regimen. Gemcitabine is another chemotherapeutic agent that targets nucleotide and glutathione metabolism. Gene selection and filtering steps resulted in a set of 665 genes associated with PFS in this cohort after controlling for patient age, tumor grade, and TP53 mutational status (Fig. 3a). Visualization of a discretized expression heatmap made apparent subsets of favorable and unfavorable genes (Fig. 3b). Pathway analysis of the favorable gene set showed Glycerophospholipid metabolism (p = 1e-04) pathway being enriched, while the following KEGG pathways were enriched in the unfavorable expression signature: mitotic cell cycle and nuclear division (p < 10e-9), viral carcinogenesis (p = 2e-04), mismatch repair (p = 2e-04), apoptosis (p = 8e-03), and Pyrimidine metabolism (p = 1e-02) (Fig. 3c). Notably, the unfavorable gene set included ribunucleotide reductases RRM1 and RRM2—direct targets of Gemcitabine— as well as DTYMK and TK1 in thymidine metabolism and NT5E in purine degradation pathways, demonstrating a role for specific target pathways of Gemcitabine in explaining the response to this agent. The favorable gene signature included the following metabolic genes: PLA2G2D, PLA2G4A, PLA2G4C, and PLD2 phospholipases, LPGAT1, PNPLA6, AGPAT1, and AGPAT4. This observation further supports previous cancer profiling studies that have established important structural and signaling roles for phospholipids in the pathogenesis and malignancy of cancer cells [25]. We next performed k-means clustering on the matrix of favorability scores across these 665 genes and identified clear subgroups of patients. Comparison of the subgroup enriched with unfavorable gene expression with that of the favorable subgroup showed a significant difference in PFS (Cox p = 1.8e-04, HR = 3.5; Fig. 3d). When limited to 39 metabolic genes among the 665, we still observed a significant separation of response subgroups (Cox p = 1.3e-04). Notably, when considered individually, RRM1 and RRM2 each had far less distinctive power (Cox p = 6e-03 for RRM1 and p = 5e-03 for RRM2; Additional file 1: Figure S1A, B) than the combined gene sets, further confirming the advantage of our approach by considering pathways rather than individual genes. Together, these results show the relevance of metabolic states of tumors in predicting drug response and also confirm the generalizability of this approach in identifying clinically distinct subgroups of cancer patients using gene expression signatures. Finally, our signature of 665 genes was used in a cross validation test from an independent study on 27 pancreatic cancer patients (see “Methods” section) [29]. In this cohort as well, while RRM1 and RRM2 expression were not capable of subdividing patients with respect to survival on Gemcitabine (Additional file 1: Figure S1A, B), our gene signature identified two survival subgroups significantly different in response (Likelihood ratio test = 4.57 on 1 df, p = 0.0326 Additional file 1: Figure S1C; see the “Methods” section). Analysis of gene expression signatures of response to antimetabolites in cell lines confirms metabolic specificity Due to limitations in the availability of sufficiently annotated human data with gene expression and follow-up information, we next turned to cancer cell line collections to further test the applicability of our method. We used the catalog of somatic mutations in cancer (COSMIC) cell line set as the largest collection of annotated cancer cell lines and obtained microarray gene expression data as well as drug sensitivity information in the form of 50% of maximal inhibition of cell proliferation (IC-50) for the same agents we had previously tested in human samples (i.e., 5-FU and Gemcitabine). In the case of cell lines, we considered a gene favorable if its high expression co-occurred with higher sensitivity to drug treatment (lower IC-50) and unfavorable if its high expression co-occurred with lower sensitivity (higher IC-50) (see the “Methods” section). A set of 44 cell lines from colorectal origin was considered. For the gene selection step, we calculated the correlation between expression of every gene in the genome with IC-50 value for 5-FU and selected genes with a Kendall’s tau value of 0.2 or larger and a corresponding p value of 0.01 or smaller. A total of 364 genes passed this filter (Fig. 4a). Subsequently, the discretization and favorability scoring approach as described in the previous section was applied to this matrix and the clustering heatmap was visualized (Fig. 4b). Distinct subsets were immediately obvious, with favorable genes enriched in protein processing (p = 4e-05), arginine and proline metabolism (p = 7e-03), and glutathionie metabolism (p = 8e-03), while the unfavorable genes were not significantly enriched in any of the KEGG pathways. Notably, Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPYD) was the only metabolic gene identified in the unfavorable set, consistent with its biological function [23] and previous reports of its predictive power in 5-FU treated rectal cancers [30]. Next, we compared response to 5-FU between the two subgroups of cell lines identified by k-means clustering of the favorability matrix. The subgroup of cells enriched with the unfavorable gene expression signature had a significantly higher IC-50 for 5-FU (higher resistance) than the subgroup enriched with the favorable signature (Wilcoxon test p = 1.96e-11; Fig. 4c). Together, these results confirm the generalizability of this method for identification of novel subgroups with distinct response to 5-FU and also find a specific metabolic target (DPYD) as a marker of cell line sensitivity. We next considered all COSMIC cell lines derived from pancreatic origins regarding their sensitivity to Gemcitabine. This set included only 17 cell lines, limiting the statistical power of this analysis. Only 201 genes passed our initial filtering (Additional file 1: Figure S3A). A visualization of the favorability heatmap illustrated two distinct clusters of genes, one with a mostly favorable expression score, but the second one with heterogeneous scores across the cell lines (Additional file 1: Figure S3B). Pathway analysis of the favorable set identified chemical carcinogenesis (p = 7e-03), glutathionie metabolism (p = 2e-02), and drug metabolism (p = 4e-02) KEGG pathways significantly enriched, while the unfavorable set was enriched in adherens junctions (p = 5e-03), cacterial invasion (p = 6e-03), and glycophospholipid synthesis (p = 7e-03). Finally, comparison of sensitivity to Gemcitabine between two of the cell line subgroups with distinct signatures revealed a significant difference in IC-50 (Wilcoxon p value = 8e-04; Additional file 1: Figure S3C), showing the power of this approach even when applied to very small data sets. Overall, our analyses of response to 5-FU and Gemcitabine in cell lines also confirmed relevance of metabolic determinants of response; however, we did not observe a perfect correspondence between the markers identified in human studies and those identified in cell lines. This result is important given that the majority of experiments aimed at drug response are typically performed in cell line settings. Our results suggest that cell line IC-50 values do not perfectly mimic cancer outcome in response to chemotherapies in patients. This is perhaps partly due to culture conditions and other limitations with using cell lines as models for cancer and partly explained by the fact that unlike the controlled experimental settings, the majority of patients underwent combination chemotherapies that could partially confound statistical analyses. Signatures of response to antimetabolite agents exhibit specificity and variability So far, our results have shown considerable contribution from the metabolic gene expression network in distinguishing drug response subsets within human tumors as well as cancer cell lines. Careful consideration of two nucleotide metabolism inhibitors—5-FU in colon and Gemcitabine in pancreatic cancers—revealed subtle differences in gene expression signatures associated with favorable and unfavorable response in each case, suggesting antimetabolite agents exert their function through different cellular pathways in these tissues and therefore be associated with different clinical markers. Our approach utilized gene expression levels of metabolic enzymes as surrogates for metabolic fluxes or enzyme activities in tumors. Next, we attempted to complement our results by taking advantage of direct metabolite measurements across a panel of 60 cancer cell lines (NCI-60). We calculated correlation between the metabolic activities in the form of consumption or release rates (CORE) as previously reported [31], and IC-50 values of 17 antimetabolite compounds (see the “Methods” section; Fig. 5a). Interestingly, the release rate of phosphocholine showed a strong negative correlation with sensitivity to six of the antimetabolite agents tested (Fig. 5a). This result suggests that cells that have a higher rate of phosphocholine production are less sensitive to drug treatments, consistent with our gene expression results showing the enrichment of phospholipid metabolic genes in response signatures. Previous studies have shown that an increase in phosphatidylcholine affects cancer cell membrane dynamics and correlates with higher tumor malignancy and poorer overall survival [25]. Our results agree with previous reports suggesting high activity of enzymes that degrade phosphatidylcholine renders cells more sensitive to drug treatments, potentially contributing to a more favorable outcome for chemotherapy [25]. An example of a specific interaction that was detected at the level of metabolite consumption and release was the case of Fludarabine—a purine analog—that was significantly associated with CORE of 2-deoxycytidine (Fig. 5a). Together, these results identify relationships between directly measured metabolic signatures of cancer cells and their sensitivity to antimetabolite chemotherapies, and also demonstrate variability among the 17 antimetabolites tested regarding their interaction with cellular metabolism. Analysis of additional determinants of sensitivity to antimetabolite agents demonstrates variability among these agents. a The significance of association between metabolic profiles (consumption and release rates (CORE)) and sensitivity to drugs (− log (IC-50)) was assessed using Spearman correlations (SC) across the NCI-60 cell line panel. The y-axis shows negative log-10 of the corresponding correlation p values for only the significant associations found (q value < 0.05). b Hierarchical clustering of the Pearson similarity matrix between the IC-50 values of 17 antimetabolite agents across the NCI-60 panel. The diagonal shows correlation of each drug with itself (= 1). The yellow boxes show three distinct clusters of drugs. c Spearman correlation coefficient (SCC) between proliferation rate (kp) and sensitivity to each drug (− log (IC-50)) is shown. Solid bars show significant correlations (FDR-corrected q value < 0.05). d Spearman correlation coefficient (SCC) between cell volume (V) and sensitivity to each drug (− log (IC-50)) is shown. Solid bars show significant correlations (FDR-corrected q value < 0.05). e Spearman correlation coefficient (SCC) between growth rate (kg) and sensitivity to each drug (− log (IC-50)) is shown. Solid bars show significant correlations (FDR-corrected q-value < 0.05) The gene expression results suggest that despite common cytotoxic effects of antimetabolite agents, they might have distinct biological markers in cells that are specific to their functions. Furthermore, the analysis of metabolic CORE profiles in cell lines suggested that markers of sensitivity to antimetabolite agents might be more variable than previously appreciated. This motivated us to further assess specificity of determinants of response across a large set of antimetabolite agents. We considered a set of 17 antimetabolite chemotherapeutic compounds (see the “Methods” section). These agents target enzymes involved in a number of metabolic pathways including de novo nucleotide metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and glutathione metabolism. To assess the extent of correlation in the sensitivities of cell lines to these compounds, we computed a similarity matrix of pairwise Pearson correlations between the IC-50 values for antimetabolite. Three distinct clusters were identified by hierarchical clustering: a cluster including Thiopurine and Thioguanine, a cluster for an anti-folate Methotrexate (MTX) and pyrimidine analogs (5-FU and 5-FUDR), and a cluster for other purine analogs (Fig. 5b). The antimetabolite compounds in the second cluster shared TYMS as a target enzyme. This analysis suggests that in general, compounds with common mechanisms of action tend to have similar sensitivity profiles across cell lines, suggesting some degree of specificity in response to antimetabolites. A common notion is that cytotoxicity of antimetabolite chemotherapies occurs in all rapidly dividing cells and thus lacks specificity. It has also been proposed that cell size, cell proliferation, and cellular metabolism are invariably coupled [21]. Given that data on proliferation rate, cell size, and metabolic profiles are readily available for the NCI-60 cell lines, we sought to re-investigate these relationships in the context of association with cell line sensitivities to antimetabolite agents. Spearman rank correlations between IC-50 and proliferation rate were computed and revealed significant positive correlations (q values < 0.05 in all cases except Capecitabine and Fluodarabine phosphase; Fig. 5c). When the cell volumes were correlated with responses to antimetabolites, all compounds except for Capecitabine showed a negative correlation (four compounds had q value < 0.05) (Fig. 5d). Together, these results confirm that cytotoxicity, as defined as the concentration of drug needed to achieve toxic dosages, is lower with smaller cells that also tend to divide more rapidly due to their size [21]. The significant negative correlation between proliferation rate and cell volume suggested that to obtain an overall growth rate corresponding to the rate of synthesis of macromolecules, the proliferation rate should be corrected for cell volume (see the “Methods” section). We next correlated dose responses with the volume-corrected proliferation rate, referred to hereinafter as the “growth rate” (Fig. 5e). The strong correlations that were observed between IC-50 values and proliferation rate were absent when considering the growth rates (Fig. 5e). This suggests that although cytotoxicity of antimetabolite agents appears highly non-specific with selectivity pertaining only to proliferation rate, these effects are completely removed when considering an overall growth rate. Importantly, a recent study independently demonstrated that growth rate inhibition normalizations correct for confounders in measuring cell line sensitivity to cancer drugs [32]. Together, our results provide evidence that unlike the common notion, variation in response to antimetabolite agents is not explained solely by differences in the rates of production of macromolecules in cells (i.e., growth rate), but is also explained by specific factors related to the functions of these agents in cells. The specificity of antimetabolite chemotherapeutic agents has unclear, and previous reports have been controversial around prognostic values for expression levels of target enzymes for most of these agents. Given that the metabolic network is composed of complex interactions between multiple enzymes and pathways, we hypothesized that perhaps by defining gene signatures instead of individual enzyme markers, we would gain power in distinguishing subgroups of tumors with differential response to therapy. Here, we introduced an unbiased approach for the assessment of combined prognostic power of expression of multiple genes and used this platform to define favorable and unfavorable signatures. Notably, we showed that these signatures allow for distinguishing novel “poor prognosis” (high progression rate) from “good prognosis” (low progression rate) subgroups far more robustly than individual target genes. Importantly, since the gene selection steps control for expression differences related to other important clinical and genetic attributes of response, we are assured that the gene signature analysis captures information about response subgroups beyond the already established markers. In both studied cases of 5-FU in colon cancer and Gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer, we found that expression of metabolic pathways related to direct targets of the drugs is enriched in the unfavorable gene set. This confirmed that tumors with higher activity of target pathways require higher doses of drug to elicit the inhibitory response and are therefore more resistant to treatment. However, our results discovered that metabolic state of cells are not fully reflected in the expression levels of individual target enzymes but rather captured more robustly in the collection of functionally and chemically linked enzymes in pathways. Although we were only able to illustrate the applicability of our method in two independent cohorts of human tumors due to data limitations, results suggest generalizability of this method to other antimetabolite agents as well. Gene signatures associated with favorable and unfavorable response to 5-FU and Gemcitabine exhibited functional similarities overall, but distinct markers for each drug were also discovered. In both cases of 5-FU and Gemcitabine, high expressions of the target metabolic pathways (i.e., nucleotide metabolism) were associated with unfavorable outcome, while high expression of lipid metabolizing pathways was associated with favorable outcome. These results point to common general mechanisms of cellular response to these drugs. However, a deeper look into specific genes and pathway within the signatures for 5-FU and Gemcitabine identified some differences. For instance, while “One-carbon metabolism” and “Nucleotide sugar metabolism” were identified as the unfavorable signature for 5-FU, “Pyrimidine metabolism” was discovered in the case of Gemcitabine. Furthermore, TYMS was among the unfavorable genes for 5-FU, while RRM1 and RRM2 were among the unfavorable genes for Gemcitabine. Together, these results suggest that despite similarities in overall mechanisms of action, antimetabolite agents have specific biological markers that have not been very well characterized and appreciated in the past. Our complementary analyses of cancer cell line sensitivities to the same chemotherapeutic agents also proved useful in identifying distinct subgroups using the gene signature approach. Other than lipid metabolic genes, the gene sets identified as favorable and unfavorable signatures in cell lines did not completely match those identified from the analysis of response in patients. The main sensitivity predictor in vitro seemed to be “Glutathione metabolism” and “Drug metabolism” that were found in cases of 5-FU and Gemcitabine to be associated with favorable outcome (i.e., higher sensitivity of cells to drug treatment). This observation is consistent with previous reports showing a critical role for glutathione metabolism in detoxification and protection against drugs in vitro [33]. These results illustrated that despite the availability and convenience of using cell lines as models of human tumors for drug response studies, analysis of patient tumors is advantageous in that it provides insights that are not fully reflected in cancer cell lines, potentially due to unwanted effects of culture media. This lack of concordance between in vitro and in vivo gene signatures can be interpreted as either differences in resistance mechanisms or differences in the gene expression correlates of resistance in vivo and in vitro. Together, our analyses of human tumors and cancer cell lines elucidated considerable variability among different antimetabolite agents, as well as specificity in metabolic markers of sensitivity to them. These demonstrate that despite the common notion, different classes of antimetabolite agents vary according to their distinct cellular functions. Our results suggest that potentially important biological markers of response to antimetabolite compounds exist, and a better understanding of these factors will provide useful insights for clinical decision-making. Notably, we showed that gene expression signatures have significant power to capture part of the previously unexplained variation in patients’ responses to 5-FU and Gemcitabine in colon and pancreatic cancers, respectively. Future studies using larger cohorts of human tumors with well-annotated patient follow-up information can provide valuable additional insights about antimetabolite response signatures. Importantly, metabolism can not only be targeted with new drugs, but also by repurposing approved metabolic drugs for cancer therapy [34]. In general, drugs that target cellular metabolism are of new clinical interest [35], and future studies similar to this work are needed to shed light on identification of patient subgroups that are likely to benefit from antimetabolite therapies. This study demonstrates through unbiased analyses of multiple independent datasets that the activity of metabolic pathways likely contributes to the therapeutic response to antimetabolite chemotherapeutic agents that target these pathways. Importantly, we show that information captured by the metabolic network has the potential of stratifying patients beyond the ability of common markers currently used in the clinic such as tumor grade and cancer stage. Areas of translational relevance of these findings include novel biomarker design based on the metabolic network, and also identification of patients who are likely to benefit from antimetabolite chemotherapies. Together, results presented in this manuscript are of significant interest to the cancer and metabolism research communities and have important and immediate clinical implications for treatment decision-making. 5-FU: CNVs: Consumption and release rates COSMIC: Catalog of somatic mutations in cancer IC-50: Inhibitory concentration MTX: PFS: Progression-free survival TCGA: The cancer genome atlas TYMS: Pavlova NN, Thompson CB. The emerging hallmarks of cancer metabolism. Cell Metab. 2016;23:27–47. DeBerardinis RJ, Chandel NS. Fundamentals of cancer metabolism. Sci Adv. 2016;2:e1600200. Locasale JW. Serine, glycine and one-carbon units: cancer metabolism in full circle. Nat Rev Cancer. 2013;13:572–83. Hirschey MD, et al. Dysregulated metabolism contributes to oncogenesis. Semin Cancer Biol. 2015;35(Suppl):S129–50. Chabner BA, Roberts TG Jr. Timeline: chemotherapy and the war on cancer. Nat Rev Cancer. 2005;5:65–72. Farber S, Diamond LK. 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Targeting one carbon metabolism with an antimetabolite disrupts pyrimidine homeostasis and induces nucleotide overflow. Cell Rep. 2016;15:2367–76. Nilsson R, et al. Metabolic enzyme expression highlights a key role for MTHFD2 and the mitochondrial folate pathway in cancer. Nat Commun. 2014;5:3128. Mehrmohamadi M, Mentch LK, Clark AG, Locasale JW. Integrative modelling of tumour DNA methylation quantifies the contribution of metabolism. Nat Commun. 2016;7:13666. Mehrmohamadi M, Liu X, Shestov AA, Locasale JW. Characterization of the usage of the serine metabolic network in human cancer. Cell Rep. 2014;9:1507–19. Madhukar NS, Warmoes MO, Locasale JW. Organization of enzyme concentration across the metabolic network in cancer cells. PLoS One. 2015;10:e0117131. Hu J, et al. Heterogeneity of tumor-induced gene expression changes in the human metabolic network. Nat Biotechnol. 2013;31:522–9. Hsu FH, et al. Reducing confounding and suppression effects in TCGA data: an integrated analysis of chemotherapy response in ovarian cancer. BMC Genomics. 2012;13(Suppl 6):S13. Chen EY, et al. Enrichr: interactive and collaborative HTML5 gene list enrichment analysis tool. BMC Bioinformatics. 2013;14:128. Dolfi SC, et al. The metabolic demands of cancer cells are coupled to their size and protein synthesis rates. Cancer Metab. 2013;1:20. Cancer Genome Atlas, N. Comprehensive molecular characterization of human colon and rectal cancer. Nature. 2012;487:330–7. Shaul YD, et al. Dihydropyrimidine accumulation is required for the epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Cell. 2014;158:1094–109. Kottakis F, et al. LKB1 loss links serine metabolism to DNA methylation and tumorigenesis. Nature. 2016;539:390–5. Beloribi-Djefaflia S, Vasseur S, Guillaumond F. Lipid metabolic reprogramming in cancer cells. Oncogene. 2016;5:e189. Rysman E, et al. De novo lipogenesis protects cancer cells from free radicals and chemotherapeutics by promoting membrane lipid saturation. Cancer Res. 2010;70:8117–26. Hu YC, et al. Thymidylate synthase expression predicts the response to 5-fluorouracil-based adjuvant therapy in pancreatic cancer. Clin Cancer Res. 2003;9:4165–71. Wakasa K, et al. Dynamic modulation of thymidylate synthase gene expression and fluorouracil sensitivity in human colorectal cancer cells. PLoS One. 2015;10:e0123076. Collisson EA, et al. Subtypes of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and their differing responses to therapy. Nat Med. 2011;17:500–3. Huang MY, et al. DPYD, TYMS, TYMP, TK1, and TK2 genetic expressions as response markers in locally advanced rectal cancer patients treated with fluoropyrimidine-based chemoradiotherapy. Biomed Res Int. 2013;2013:931028. Jain M, et al. Metabolite profiling identifies a key role for glycine in rapid cancer cell proliferation. Science. 2012;336:1040–4. Hafner M, Niepel M, Chung M, Sorger PK. Growth rate inhibition metrics correct for confounders in measuring sensitivity to cancer drugs. Nat Methods. 2016;13:521–7. Traverso N, et al. Role of glutathione in cancer progression and chemoresistance. Oxidative Med Cell Longev. 2013;2013:972913. Liu X, Romero IL, Litchfield LM, Lengyel E, Locasale JW. Metformin targets central carbon metabolism and reveals mitochondrial requirements in human cancers. Cell Metab. 2016;24:728–39. Chan AT. Metformin for cancer prevention: a reason for optimism. Lancet Oncol. 2016;17:407–9. This work was supported by grants R01CA193256 and P30CA014236 to J.W.L. from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). MM was supported by F99 CA212457 from the NCI and a Graduate Fellowship from the Duke University School of Medicine. All data are, and material available as supplementary information, on our laboratory website (jlocasale.duke.edu), or by request. Duke Cancer Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, 27710, USA Mahya Mehrmohamadi & Jason W. Locasale Duke Molecular Physiology Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, 27710, USA Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, 27710, USA Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Field of Genetics, Genomics and Development, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA & Seong Ho Jeong Search for Mahya Mehrmohamadi in: Search for Seong Ho Jeong in: Search for Jason W. Locasale in: JWL and MM designed the study. MM performed all human analyses and wrote the manuscript. SJ performed the analyses of drug response in cell lines. JWL supervised the project and revised the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Correspondence to Jason W. Locasale. All analyses were performed on publicly available data. All authors approve of publication of this study. Supplementary Figures. Figure S1. Relationship between target enzyme expression and response to Gemcitabine in TCGA pancreatic cancer. A) Kaplan-Meier plot compares progression free survival in high-RRM1 expression vs. low-RRM1 expression subgroups of TCGA PAAD patients. B) Kaplan-Meier plot compares progression free survival in high-RRM2 expression vs. low-RRM2 expression subgroups TCGA PAAD patients. Figure S2. Relationship between target enzyme expression and survival in an independent pancreatic cancer cohort. A) Kaplan-Meier plot compares overall survival in high-RRM1 expression vs. low-RRM1 expression subgroups of patients. B) Kaplan-Meier plot compares overall survival in high-RRM2 expression vs. low-RRM2 expression subgroups of patients. C) Kaplan-Meier plot compares overall survival in subgroups of patients divided based on our gene signature (see Methods). Figure S3. Identifying gene expression signatures of sensitivity to Gemcitabine in pancreatic cancer cell lines. A) Schematic of the step-wise filtering used for gene selection in pancreatic cancer (COSMIC PAAD). B) Hierarchical clustering heatmap of the discretized gene favorability scores. Columns represent genes and rows represent individuals. Favorable scores are shown by the color red (F=1), unfavorable by blue (F= -1), and neutral by yellow (F=0) (see Methods). C) Box-plots comparing the resistance to Gemcitabine (log IC-50 values) between the two cell line subgroups identified in part B (error bars show the range of the data points in each group). (DOCX 225 kb) Mehrmohamadi, M., Jeong, S.H. & Locasale, J.W. Molecular features that predict the response to antimetabolite chemotherapies. Cancer Metab 5, 8 (2017) doi:10.1186/s40170-017-0170-3 Antimetabolite chemotherapies Molecular determinants of response to chemotherapy
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Login · Signup Silicon Prarie News Giglink Brain Exchange Interface Web School Heartland Developer Conference IT Leadership Academy Exchange Building Jobs & Talent Set Your AIM Find Tech Talent Careerlink Profile Whether you are looking for a new career opportunity or finding the right talent for your business AIM is here to help. Use AIM Careerlink’s job search to find your new career. Learn more about how AIM’s memberships can help your organization. We offer specialized services for organizations looking to acquire tech talent. Take a look at some of our incredible membership partners. A Careerlink account is a powerful tool to connect you with new career opportunities. BX Youth Programming College Access Programs Tech Career Coach Tech Education for K-12 AIM offers a variety of programs and educational opportunities for youth in our community. Come experience our free workshops and explore technology in new ways. Mentoring programs for college preparation and success. 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Get connected and educated at one of the area’s amazing community events. CareerHub Home Tech Exploration Your connection to Tech Education and Career Development news. Brilliant People of Omaha: Joe Olsen, CEO, Phenomblue Photo courtesy of Digital Marketing Conference Joe Olsen is the CEO of Phenomblue, a company that specializes in strategic consulting and ad agency work. Phenomblue helps clients focus on business strategy, development, implementation, planning and assessment. The company also has a shared services group that does creative and technology work in addition to tactical execution. This week we caught up with the Infotec headliner to talk about his business, and what he is going to bring to Infotec next week. AIM: What do you have in store for Infotec 2016? JO: The Infotec presentation is about eCommerce and online retail. It’s a tips and tricks session, but I’m really going to focus on the key differences between e-retail operations that are successful today as opposed to those that came before. It’s not going to be tips and tricks for how to run an eCommerce site, but rather how to run a great e-retail organization. AIM: What skill are you most proud of? JO: I think my biggest skill is not really having an ego, and being self-aware. It makes it easier to push and challenge clients when there isn’t an agenda. You have to have your client’s best interest in mind, regardless of what that means for you. AIM: What’s the best perk of your job? JO: The freedom to do what you want to do, and I mean that in every sense of the word. Beyond running the business and literally being able to do whatever you want, it extends down the ladder of working with people who have the freedom to be able to do what they want too. It creates an environment of working with people rather than people working for you. 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Europechain Education Program delivers EOSIO with the University of Geneva By Jillian Godsil Dec 06, 2019 2 Min Read Europechain is amongst the world’s first to teach blockchain technology at a global university. Europechain has delivered an advanced EOSIO course at the University of Geneva as part of its official Certificate of Advanced Studies (CAS) on blockchain and Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT). The EOSIS Blockchain is considered Blockchain 3.0 because of its zero transaction fees, TPS rates of 10,000 per second and fast scaling ability. The teaching of EOSIO at Geneva marks a further step in the adoption of blockchain as a new and vibrant digital technology. Blockchain, in general, offers a paradigm shift for traditional businesses, governments, and non-profit organizations. The first stage of adoption is always education, demonstrating the next wave to professionals and enthusiasts of the potential benefits. The EOSIO lectures were given at the Geneva campus by the CTO of EOS Amsterdam, a member of Europechain. He is well known under the nickname "cc32d9" in the EOSIO community. The blockchain CAS at the University of Geneva delivers 12 official European (ECTS) credits and is led by Dr. Jean-Marc Seigneur, who has published more than 100 scientific peer-reviewed papers in the field of decentralized trust. The CAS covers several DLT such as Ethereum, NEO, Hashgraph Hedera, Libra, Komodo, Hyperledger, Binance Chain and of course EOS. The main focus of the certificate is to design and prototype a DLT system covering the main technical solutions, as well as business and legal aspects. Europechain’s CTO, aka‘Cc32d9’, is a senior software architect working in the industry of software and telecommunications for more than 20 years. He started working in EOSIO space in June 2018, shortly after the EOS mainnet launch. Europechain is a GDPR compliant blockchain platform. Powered by the EOSIO protocol, it is managed and governed by experienced block producers registered in the European Union. Europechain brings together an ecosystem of technology providers, system integrators and commercial partners enabling global enterprises to deploy scalable, resilient and EU compliant applications. Jillian Godsil Blockchain Advocate, Founder, Conference Chair, Women in Blockchain Advocate, Keynote Speaker, Crypto Journalist, Broadcaster, CEO, Writer, Homelessness Advocate, Former European Parliament Candidate, Law Changer, Mother, Choir Member, Hill Walker, Dreamer Jillian has held senior positions with global PR companies in Sydney, Singapore, London and Dublin. She was PRO of Iona Technologies (Ireland’s first company to float on NASDAQ). She changed the law in Ireland in 2014 and is a former European Parliamentary candidate (as an independent). She is a co founder and journalist in the Blockleaders.io. She freelances for Irish Tech News, Irish Central, The Irish Independent and The Irish Times. She has her own radio shows on DublinCityFM and EastCoastFM. Her first job after graduating from Trinity College was as a systems analyst with JP Morgan. She is advisor to a number of ICOs, has been named a Crypto Queen by In Zero Conferences as well as listed in the 50 most influential women in the global blockchain rollcall. She is named amongst the top 10 people in Blockchain in Ireland. She was voted into the top 20 global Hedera Hashgraph Ambassadors in 2018. She is a board member of EOS Dublin. She is a community leader for Algorand. She is chain agnostic while she loves blockchain. She has been shortlisted for the Image Business Woman of Year and also shortlisted for Woman of the Year by Women in IT. She is passionate about getting women into blockchain – democratising opportunity for all women. She keynotes and chairs blockchain events around the world – including Kiev, Austin, Muscat, Columbo, Dubai, Capetown, Dublin and London. EUROPECHAIN
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E-Poll Market Research Blog Setting the Standard in Media and Entertainment Research E-Score Products This Week’s Research March 9, 2017 December 5, 2017 E-Poll Market Research #Summer17: The Artists Fans Want to See in Concert. Sign up for our weekly research brief here and receive the latest research like this from E-Poll direct to your inbox. Concerts and festivals are more important than ever given today’s streaming and shared music climate and the resulting decline in recorded music revenues. With the summer concert/ festival season around the corner, we used E-Score Music to understand which artists older millennials (ages 26-34) and younger audiences –comprised of younger millennials (20-25) and the Insta-generation (13-19), want to see in concert most. We noticed that younger millennials have more in common musically with Insta-gens than with older millennials. Looking at who older millennials want to see in concert, we see a top twenty list that is dominated by rock music. Over half of the list (55%) are artists in the Rock music genre, with the remaining 45% split between Pop (25%), R&B (15%), and Country music (5%.) Although Rock anchors the older millennials list, younger audiences (younger millennials and Insta-gens) want to see Pop artists in concert most. Hip Hop and R&B artists’ concerts are in demand among this group also. There are six artists that are common to both lists. Of those six, Adele is the artist millennials and Insta-gens want to see most with the highest average rank among them. Interestingly, while millennials and Insta-gens are very interested in seeing artists from their lists in concert, few actually have. According to E-Score Music, over three-quarters of artists on both lists score below 10% for the artist participation attribute Attended Concert. This could mean great turnouts for festivals featuring these artists as these groups look to scratch concerts off their summer bucket lists. Merchandise: The Money Maker Concerts and festivals are important opportunities to sell merchandise, which is a huge moneymaker for today’s artists. Using E-Score Music, we found which musicians on the Artists Fans Most Want to See in Concert lists have the highest interest from fans for clothing and accessories, which could have a significant impact on merchandise sales at upcoming festivals and concerts. This summer will be bitter sweet for the Bey-hive. While the hive was desperately awaiting Beyoncé’s scheduled performance at this year’s Coachella festival, Queen Bey had a surprise of her own, canceling her appearance due to being pregnant with twins. Beyoncé ranks #2 among 13-25 year-olds, and #4 among 26-34 for musicians fans want merchandise from. Her replacement at Coachella, Lady Gaga, won’t do too badly herself as she makes the top ten for merchandise interest among 13-25 year-olds, a group that includes Coachella’s core audience. Although Queen Bey will not be in action this summer, there are plenty of others on the lists that will. With the release of dual albums late last year, Frank Ocean has re-inserted himself into the music world after a four-year absence. The Blonde and Endless albums’ creator should have a successful festival season this summer, especially with younger skewing festivals such as Sasquatch! Music Festival. Younger fans are eager to see him in concert (#2) and buy his merchandise, as he tops the merchandise list for 13-25 year olds. While Frank Ocean is making a comeback from a layoff, Bob Dylan appears to never stop working. In fact, looking at the numbers from older millennials, Bob Dylan appears to be on track to continue decades of success, as he is the #3 artist they want to see in concert, and the artist they most want to buy merchandise from. His merchandise sales should be good given the desire among this group to see him in concert and his continuing world tour and upcoming US tour. There will be dozens of concerts and festivals featuring hundreds of artists this summer. Understanding which artists are in demand among your target audience is beneficial to creating strategic brand partnerships with musicians. E-Score Music unlocks consumer sentiments surrounding multiple aspects of a musician’s brand, and helps you understand where they fit into your marketing mix. Lists were created using data from E-Score Music data fielded after 1/1/16 among respondents ages 13-34. Lists do not include deceased artists. Respondents ages 26-34 represent older millennials. Respondents ages 20-25 represent younger millennials. Respondents ages 13-19 represent Insta-gens, or the Insta-generation. The Insta-generation includes people 19 and younger who grew up with constant access to technology. Feel free to utilize these infographics in your social shares or other uses. To download, simply click the image and right-click, or pull the full sized image. E-Score Music Extendibility Insta-Gen Interested in Concert Previous The Most Passionate Fans on Cable Next Platforms to Spread Your Message DynaTrack E-Score Brand E-Score Celebrity E-Score Character E-Score Programs E-Score Sports MRI / E-Score Celebrity Fusion Archives Select Month 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 December 2015 November 2015 October 2015 September 2015 August 2015 April 2015 February 2015 January 2015 December 2014 September 2014 July 2014 June 2014 January 2014 December 2013 October 2013 September 2013 August 2013 July 2013 June 2013 May 2013 April 2013 February 2013 December 2012 October 2012 September 2012 August 2012 July 2012 June 2012 May 2012 April 2012 March 2012 February 2012 January 2012 December 2011 November 2011 October 2011 September 2011 August 2011 June 2011 May 2011 April 2011 March 2011 February 2011 January 2011 December 2010 November 2010 October 2010 September 2010 August 2010 July 2010 June 2010 May 2010 April 2010 March 2010 February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 August 2009 December 2008 April 2008 January 2008 Esurance never matched up to parent Allstate in terms of consumer Awareness (32% vs 62%), Appeal (13% vs 24%), or p… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…_ 4 weeks ago Do you want to measure the successes/failures of your advertisements? Learn how to evaluate advertising effectivene… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…_ 5 months ago Generational groups seek varying attributes when it comes to #luxury brand purchases. Take a look at what the upcom… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…_ 5 months ago Follow @epollresearch
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Federal Defenders of New York Blog Serving the Second Circuit and the Eastern and Southern Districts of New York FDNY website Document Bank Comparing Defendants with Different Criminal Histories Did Not Give Rise to Procedural Error at Sentencing UNITED STATES V. JOHNSON, NO. 12-5094-cr (2D CIR. DEC. 16, 2013) (KATZMANN, WINTER, AND CALABRESI) (SUMMARY ORDER), AVAILABLE HERE The defendant in this appeal challenged his sentence as procedurally and substantively unreasonable. He pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of firearms and received 3 years’ prison. At sentencing, the district court compared him to another defendant with a less serious criminal history and stated that their sentences had to be similar because both were equally involved in the offense. The Court held that no procedural error occurred as a result of the comparison made between what the defendant contended were differently situated defendants. Relying on United States v. Williams, 524 F.3d 209, 216 (2d Cir. 2008), the Court reiterated that a district court can consider “factors beyond the scope of § 3553(a), as long as the outside factors ‘are not inconsistent with those listed in § 3553(a) and are logically applied to the defendant’s circumstances.” According to the Court, the comparison was not inconsistent with sentencing factors and was logical according. Moreover, the district court carefully considered Johnson’s individual circumstances under § 3553(a), tying the sentence to these factors. The Court also denied the substantive unreasonableness claim. The sentence was the result of a significant downward departure based upon substantial assistance and in light of the defendant’s criminal history and his conduct was reasonable. Posted by Jason Ser About Jason Ser View all posts by Jason Ser → Internally Inconsistent Testimony by Defendant at Fatico Hearing Supported Adverse Credibility Finding Failure to Order Competency Hearing Was Not Abuse of Discretion Get the Latest from Federal Defenders Allegra Glashausser Anthony O'Rourke Barry Leiwant Colleen Cassidy Daniel Habib Darrell Fields David Patton Deirdre von Dornum Edward Zas Eunice Lee Jason Ser Matt Larsen Peggy Cross-Goldenberg Philip Weinstein Sarah Baumgartel Thea Johnson Yuanchung Lee Sentencing Law and Policy Blog Legal Ethics Blog U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York Circuit Holds That New York Offense of Possession of a Sexual Performance By a Child (N.Y. Penal Law §263.16) Categorically Matches 18 U.S.C §2252(a)(4)(B) and Is an Aggravated Felony Under the INA. EDNY: Attempted Hobbs Act Robbery Is Not A § 924(c) Crime of Violence. Circuit Vacates Sentence Based on District Court’s Misunderstanding of Authority to Impose Anticipatory Concurrent Sentence; Declines to Enforce Appeal Waiver Where Government Consents to Partial Remand. Circuit Panel Affirms Fraud Convictions, Over Dissent A two-judge majority finds a 17-year sentence “shockingly low” © 2020 Federal Defenders of New York Blog. All Rights Reserved.
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StudioSix Facebook and Instagram are to Restrict Ads and Posts that Promote Weight Loss Products Oct 1, 2019 11:35:21 AM If you’re in the health and supplement industry or run ads for businesses that sell products in this industry, then you already know how difficult it can be to run ads on Facebook for these types of products. Facebook and Instagram are now restricting organic posts and paid ads that promote weight loss products to certain users after several followers questioned the integrity of the products being promoted by influencers, such as laxative teas and lollipops that suppress hunger. In this article I’ll discuss the new policy and provide context on how supplement businesses should promote and post organically on both platforms. Users under the age of 18 can no longer see content about weight loss products As the headline says, Facebook and Instagram have introduced a new policy that will keep posts that promote weight loss or cosmetic procedures hidden from users under the age of 18. This includes organic and paid ads that come with a discount or voucher to try the product, in order to protect them from thinking they need to lose weight or should look a certain way. A study carried out by Common Sense Media found that 70% of teenagers between the ages of 13 and 17 visit social media multiple times a day – that’s no small number. Many of the products being promoted are not FDA approved and some believe that by showing them to impressionable teenagers they can reinforce unhealthy body types and diets. Anybody who’s in the media-buying industry knows how difficult it is to promote these products on Facebook or Instagram already, so why is Facebook and Instagram making a big deal about it now? Over the past few months some of the world’s biggest social media influencers, including Kim Kardashian, have been promoting the use of these products to their followers. Since the backlash, Kim Kardashian has removed the caption from the photo discussing the benefits that the lollipop had on suppressing her appetite. The original caption read: “#ad You guys… @flattummyco just dropped a new product. They’re Appetite Suppressant Lollipops and they’re literally unreal. They’re giving the first 500 people on their website 15% OFF, so if you want to get your hands on some…you need to do it quick! #suckit” Emma Collins, who is Instagram’s public policy manager, had this to say: “We want Instagram to be a positive place for everyone that uses it and this policy is part of our ongoing work to reduce the pressure that people can sometimes feel as a result of social media.” How to promote your supplements on Facebook From an ethical standpoint, you shouldn’t target teenagers with any type of health or cosmetic product as their bodies and minds are still developing. Going down this route will typically lead to bad publicity, which in the day of social media can undermine your entire brand. If you have a product that you believe is beneficial to others, then go through the appropriate channels to get your products FDA approved and anything else needed to show potential prospects that your claims are valid. Facebook and Instagram are already doing a lot to stop these types of products (which have not been proven to work) being advertised on their platforms through paid ads. It’s great to see that they are taking the next step forward by reducing the reach that organic posts have from influencers and businesses that are promoting these types of products too. Topics: Facebook Ads, Instagram Ads, Facebook Ads Agency Handcrafted in sunny California. ©2019 MuteSix Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Accessibility
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Condo Insurance Premiums Are Spiking In Canada, Threatening Resale Prices Daniel Tencer HuffPost Canada December 5, 2019 (Photo: AndreyPopov via Getty Images) TORONTO ― The cost of insuring a condo building is rising rapidly in Canada, and that could be bad news for owners’ resale values. Faced with increased climate-related disasters and rising reconstruction costs, some insurers are backing out of the condo market, and that in turn is causing premiums for condo building insurance to spike. Commercial insurance policies for condo buildings as a whole shouldn’t be confused with insurance policies for condo owners ― although those premiums are also on the rise. Watch: Canadians and Americans are now totally different, financially. Story continues below. British Columbia condo buildings are facing insurance premium hikes of between 50 per cent and 300 per cent, Condominium Homeowners Association executive director Tony Gioventu recently said. On top of that, “deductibles are going from the conventional $10,000 or $25,000 to $100,000, $250,000 or $500,000,” Gioventu said in a Global News article. One core reason is an increase in unexpected weather-related events that have caused insurance payouts to spike, explained Pete Karageorgos, director of consumer and industry relations at the Insurance Bureau of Canada. “There are more and more severe weather events that are resulting in more insured losses, things from wildfires to flooding,” he told HuffPost Canada. He noted that B.C. has experienced large wildfires, while the 2016 fire in Fort McMurray, Alta., was a “record-breaking event.” The Ottawa region has seen two floods and two tornadoes in the past two years. Toronto Real Estate Study Discovers City Still Has Affordable Neighbourhoods Canadian House Prices ‘Set To Surge’ In 2020, Forecasts Say Toronto, Vancouver Housing Markets See Dwindling Supply As Sales Accelerate Insurance payouts for severe weather jumped to between $1 billion and $2 billion in recent years, from around the $400-million range just five years ago, Karageorgos added. The result is that some insurers are discontinuing condo coverage, meaning the remaining insurers can charge higher premiums ― which they are using to cover not only weather events but also increased repair costs. A shortage of skilled labourers across the country is pushing up the cost of reconstruction projects. Materials costs are also rising, further raising the payouts insurers are on the hook for. In one extreme example, a condo complex in Ottawa recently found its insurance premiums rising by 730 per cent because of wind and fire damage. “Some people are suicidal,” condo board president Marie Weerasooriya-Epps told CBC News. “Some people are headed for nervous breakdowns.” ‘A downward spiral’ While not every case is as extreme, rising insurance costs can take a bite out of property values. In general, the rule is that condo values are the inverse of monthly fees ― the higher the fee, the lower the resale value. And the worst-case scenario could indeed be bad. In a recent book, author Randy Lippert warned that condo corporations in Toronto and New York City are at risk of going bankrupt over rapidly rising costs. Lippert noted that condo fees have been rising faster than homebuyers’ incomes for years. Because condo developers often promise unrealistically low condo fees when they launch projects, buyers often find themselves facing higher costs than they’d expected, and will sometimes allow buildings to fall into disrepair. That in turn increases costs in the long run, becoming a downward spiral for those buildings. “I think there will be a number of condos where those fees will become unsustainable and people will want to get out, and there’s a point at which it (all) becomes unsustainable,” Lippert told HuffPost Canada earlier this year. However, not all condo buildings are in poor financial shape, and buyers can still find reliable buildings to buy condos in, Lippert added. Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. #real-estate #home-prices #condo-fees #condo-insurance Jays' Grichuk wants Astros stripped of 2017 World Series championship amidst sign-stealing scandal Vince Vaughn chatted up Donald Trump and Melania at a college football game — and people have opinions Burger King Offered Prince Harry a Job in Their "Royal Family" After He and Meghan Announced Their Split from the Monarchy
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November 29, 2018 / 9:05 PM / a year ago Michelin awards first U.S. female chef with three stars Richard Leong (Reuters) - Dominique Crenn became the first woman in the United States to receive Michelin’s highest distinction of three stars in its annual ranking of top restaurants in the San Francisco area released on Thursday. FILE PHOTO: A chef holds a Michelin Guide 2018 during the Michelin Guide 2018 award ceremony at the Seine Musicale center in Boulogne-Billancourt near Paris, France, February 5, 2018. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo The French-born chef’s restaurant, Atelier Crenn, has been praised for its innovative and artistic dishes since it opened in 2011. Atelier Crenn’s elevation from last year’s two-star status was unanimous among Michelin reviewers for its “consistently top-quality experience,” said Gwendal Poullennec, Michelin Guide’s international director. Crenn’s cuisine, he said, “displays a wonderful balance of grace, artistry, technical ability and taste.” Crenn, whose small restaurant has only eight tables and offers a tasting menu for $335, is the fifth female chef currently in the world, helming a Michelin three-star establishment. Other women who achieved this Michelin accolade are Carme Ruscalleda in Spain, Anne-Sophie Pic in France, Nadia Santini in Italy and Clare Smyth in Britain. Atelier Crenn and Single Thread joined Benu, The French Laundry, Manresa, Quince, The Restaurant at Meadowood and Saison in Michelin’s top rating of San Francisco-area restaurants in its 2019 guide for their “exceptional cuisine, worth a special journey.” “The talented couple behind this powerhouse project has shown consistent commitment to the highest standards of ingredient quality and exceptionally refined cuisine,” Poullennec said of Single Thread’s chef Kyle Connaughton and his wife and farmer, Katina Connaughton. Michelin’s latest San Francisco guide will go on sale on Dec. 4. For a second year in a row, San Francisco and its neighboring wine-producing regions of Napa and Sonoma have more three-star restaurants than New York City, which has five. The Big Apple is still a top-notch global dining destination, according to Poullennec. “New York has a lot of diversity and overall has more star restaurants than San Francisco,” he said. Michelin awarded stars to 76 New York City restaurants earlier this month, compared with 57 in the Bay Area. In San Francisco, Coi lost a star and returned to Michelin’s two-star category for establishments with “excellent cuisine, worth a detour.” Other two-star San Francisco-area restaurants in the latest ranking include Acquerello, Baumé, Californios, Commis and Lazy Bear. Five eateries made one-star debuts, bringing the total of 43 restaurants. Last year, there were 41 in this category that anonymous reviewers or “inspectors” agreed on their “high quality cooking, worth a stop.” Bar Crenn, a wine bar that serves classic French dishes next door to Atelier Crenn, made the cut as did Birdsong, whose chef Christopher Beidorn worked at Atelier Crenn and Saison. Madcap, Nico and Protégé each earned one star for the first time. Reporting by Richard Leong; Editing by Leslie Adler
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Cameron Diaz Source Posted on March 9, 2008 Written by adminNo Comments on Poster from “What Happens in Vegas”! Poster from “What Happens in Vegas”! The poster from the upcoming romantic comedy – starring Cameron & Ashton (as the poster says) – is here! A big thanks to WorstPreviews.com for the very clean, yet funny, movie poster. Cameron looks great, and I can’t wait to see the movie when it hit theaters on May 9th (which is exactly two months away)! A preview of the poster can be seen to the right, click on it to see the full version. Once a poster in better quality is released, I’ll be sure to post it! For now, though, enjoy! Gallery Link • What Happens in Vegas > Posters Filed under: What Happens in Vegas Share on Twitter on Facebook on Tumblr by email New “What Happens in Vegas” trailer Co-stars announced for “Vegas” New photos from the set of “Vegas” Previous PostMagazine scans from 2000! Next PostJason Patric joins “My Sister’s Keeper” Who Is Cameron Diaz? Cameron Michelle Diaz (born August 30, 1972) is an American actress, producer, and former fashion model. She rose to stardom with roles in The Mask (1994), My Best Friend's Wedding (1997) and There's Something About Mary (1998), and is also known for voicing the character of Princess Fiona in the Shrek series (2001–10). Other high-profile credits include Charlie's Angels (2000) and its sequel Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003), The Sweetest Thing (2002), In Her Shoes (2005), The Holiday (2006), What Happens In Vegas (2008), My Sister's Keeper (2009), Knight and Day (2010), The Green Hornet (2011), Bad Teacher (2011), What to Expect When You're Expecting (2012), The Counselor (2013), The Other Woman, Sex Tape, and Annie (all 2014). Previous Owners: Filip, Sam Contact Information: Email / Form Established on: 2006 Fans online: 1 User Online Most Users Ever Online Is 186 On November 2, 2018 @ 1:09 am Annie 2014 Miss Hannigan Out on DVD A foster kid, who lives with her mean foster mom, sees her life change when business tycoon and New York mayoral candidate Will Stacks makes a thinly-veiled campaign move and takes her in. Sex Tape 2014 Out on DVD/Blu-Ray A married couple wake up to discover that the sex tape they made the evening before has gone missing, leading to a frantic search for its whereabouts. The Other Woman 2014 Carly Whitten After discovering her boyfriend is married, Carly soon meets the wife he's been betraying. And when yet another love affair is discovered, all three women team up to plot revenge on the three-timing S.O.B. First Feature Film: The Mask Top Affiliates=================Wes Bentley ♥Affiliationally You? Apply for affiliation | View Affiliates Cameron Welcomes Baby Girl Cameron Diaz Was ‘in a Panic Rushing’ to Find Cocktail Glasses for Jennifer Lawrence’s Wedding Happy Birthday Cameron! [Video]: Diaz Looks Back At Her Past InStyle Covers Cameron Talks Acting Return: “I Don’t Miss Acting” Cameron Diaz isn’t telling us what she’s working on ‘The Sweetest Thing’ Blu-Ray Captures + Stills Added Charlie’s Angels Reunion! Lucy Liu Joined by Drew Barrymore, Cameron Diaz at Walk of Fame Ceremony Drew Barrymore Gushes That Cameron Diaz Is Her ‘Bestie, Sister’: ‘She’s in My Life Every Day’ Diaz Is ‘Over’ Acting Full-Time But She’s Still Open to Taking ‘Some Roles’: Source Feature GIFS Listen to Cameron Sing Cameron Diaz- Little Girls (Annie Soundtrack) CameronDiaz.Org is in no way affiliated with Cameron Diaz, her manager, or any person/company related to her or her projects. All written content and graphics are copyright to CameronDiaz.Org unless otherwise stated. This site was created purely for entertainment purposes ˗ by fans, for fans ˗ and the staff do not profit from this site in any way. Any images and multimedia are copyright to their rightful owners. No copyright infringement is intended. Please do not take any legal action. If you have any issues with the published material please contact us directly to be credited or have the item removed from the site. Removals do require PROOF that you are the original copyright owner. Unless specified otherwise, CameronDiaz.Org does not claim any ownership to anything found on this site. CameronDiaz.Org does not knowingly intend or attempt to offend or violate any copyright or intellectual property rights of any entity. © 2006 Cameron Diaz Source • Theme by MonicaNDesign • Privacy Policy • DMCA • Powered by WordPress Cameron Diaz Source is a non-profit fansite. All graphics and original content are being used under the Fair Copyright Law 107 and belong to Cameron-diaz.net, Camerondiaz.net & Camerondiaz.org. Other images and text belong to their respective owners. No copyright infringement intended. This is an unofficial fansite.
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MORTGAGE FRAUD NEWS May 24, 2011 May 24, 2011 CARY POWELL MOSELEY Leave a comment http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/16/foreclosure-fraud-audit-false-claims-act_n_862686.html WASHINGTON — A set of confidential federal audits accuse the nation’s five largest mortgage companies of defrauding taxpayers in their handling of foreclosures on homes purchased with government-backed loans, four officials briefed on the findings told The Huffington Post. The five separate investigations were conducted by the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s inspector general and examined Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial, the sources said. The audits accuse the five major lenders of violating the False Claims Act, a Civil War-era law crafted as a weapon against firms that swindle the government. The audits were completed between February and March, the sources said. The internal watchdog office at HUD referred its findings to the Department of Justice, which must now decide whether to file charges. The federal audits mark the latest fallout from the national foreclosure crisis that followed the end of a long-running housing bubble. Amid reports last year that many large lenders improperly accelerated foreclosure proceedings by failing to amass required paperwork, the federal agencies launched their own probes. The resulting reports read like veritable indictments of major lenders, the sources said. State officials are now wielding the documents as leverage in their ongoing talks with mortgage companies aimed at forcing the firms to agree to pay fines to resolve allegations of routine violations in their handling of foreclosures. The audits conclude that the banks effectively cheated taxpayers by presenting the Federal Housing Administration with false claims: They filed for federal reimbursement on foreclosed homes that sold for less than the outstanding loan balance using defective and faulty documents. Two of the firms, including Bank of America, refused to cooperate with the investigations, according to the sources. The audit on Bank of America finds that the company — the nation’s largest handler of home loans — failed to correct faulty foreclosure practices even after imposing a moratorium that lifted last October. Back then, the bank said it was resuming foreclosures, having satisfied itself that prior problems had been solved. According to the sources, the Wells Fargo investigation concludes that senior managers at the firm, the fourth-largest American bank by assets, broke civil laws. HUD’s inspector general interviewed a pair of South Carolina public notaries who improperly signed off on foreclosure filings for Wells, the sources said. The investigations dovetail with separate probes by state and federal agencies, who also have examined foreclosure filings and flawed mortgage practices amid widespread reports that major mortgage firms improperly initiated foreclosure proceedings on an unknown number of American homeowners. The FHA, whose defaulted loans the inspector general probed, last May began scrutinizing whether mortgage firms properly treated troubled borrowers who fell behind on payments or whose homes were seized on loans insured by the agency. A unit of the Justice Department is examining faulty court filings in bankruptcy proceedings. Several states, including Illinois, are combing through foreclosure filings to gauge the extent of so-called “robo-signing” and other defective practices, including illegal home repossessions. Representatives of HUD and its inspector general declined to comment. The internal audits have armed state officials with a powerful new weapon as they seek to extract what they describe as punitive fines from lawbreaking mortgage companies. A coalition of attorneys general from all 50 states and state bank supervisors have joined HUD, the Treasury Department, the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission in talks with the five largest mortgage servicers to settle allegations of illegal foreclosures and other shoddy practices. Such processes “have potentially infected millions of foreclosures,” Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chairman Sheila Bair told a Senate panel on Thursday. The five giant mortgage servicers, which collectively handle about three of every five home loans, offered during a contentious round of negotiations last Tuesday to pay $5 billion to set up a fund to help distressed borrowers and settle the allegations. That offer — also floated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in February — was deemed much too low by state and federal officials. Associate U.S. Attorney General Tom Perrelli, who has been leading the talks, last week threatened to show the banks the confidential audits so the firms knew the government side was not “playing around,” one official involved in the negotiations said. He ultimately did not follow through, persuaded that the reports ought to remain confidential, sources said. Through a spokeswoman, Perrelli declined to comment. Most of the targeted banks have not seen the audits, a federal official said, though they are generally aware of the findings. Some agencies involved in the talks are calling for the five banks to shell out as much as $30 billion, with even more costs to be incurred for improving their internal operations and modifying troubled borrowers’ home loans. But even that number would fall short of legitimate compensation for the bank’s harmful practices, reckons the nascent federal Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection. By taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans, the nation’s five largest mortgage firms have directly saved themselves more than $20 billion since the housing crisis began in 2007, according to a confidential presentation prepared for state attorneys general by the agency and obtained by The Huffington Post in March. Those pushing for a larger package of fines argue that the foreclosure crisis has spawned broader — and more costly — social ills, from the dislocation of American families to the continued plunge in home prices, effectively wiping out household savings. The Justice Department is now contemplating whether to use the HUD audits as a basis for civil and criminal enforcement actions, the sources said. The False Claims Act allows the government to recover damages worth three times the actual harm plus additional penalties. Justice officials will soon meet with the largest servicers and walk them through the allegations and potential liability each of them face, the sources said. Earlier this month, Justice cited findings from HUD investigations in a lawsuit it filed against Deutsche Bank AG, one of the world’s 10 biggest banks by assets, for at least $1 billion for defrauding taxpayers by “repeatedly” lying to FHA in securing taxpayer-backed insurance for thousands of shoddy mortgages. In March, HUD’s inspector general found that more than 49 percent of loans underwritten by FHA-approved lenders in a sample did not conform to the agency’s requirements. Last October, HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan said his investigators found that numerous mortgage firms broke the agency’s rules when dealing with delinquent borrowers. He declined to be specific. The agency’s review later expanded to flawed foreclosure practices. FHA, a unit of HUD, could still take administrative action against those firms for breaking FHA rules based on its own probe. The confidential findings appear to bolster state and federal officials in their talks with the targeted banks. The knowledge that they may face False Claims Act suits, in addition to state actions based on a multitude of claims like fraud on local courts and consumer violations, will likely compel the banks to offer the government more money to resolve everything. But even that may not be enough. Attorneys general in numerous states, armed with what they portray as incontrovertible evidence of mass robo-signings from preliminary investigations, are probing mortgage practices more closely. The state of Illinois has begun examining potentially-fraudulent court filings, looking at the role played by a unit of Lender Processing Services. Nevada and Arizona already launched lawsuits against Bank of America. California is keen on launching its own suits, people familiar with the matter say. Delaware sent Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems Inc., which runs an electronic registry of mortgages, a subpoena demanding answers to 75 questions. And New York’s top law enforcer, Eric Schneiderman, wants to conduct a complete investigation into all facets of mortgage banking, from fraudulent lending to defective securitization practices to faulty foreclosure documents and illegal home seizures. A review of about 2,800 loans that experienced foreclosure last year serviced by the nation’s 14 largest mortgage firms found that at least two of them illegally foreclosed on the homes of “almost 50″ active-duty military service members, a violation of federal law, according to a report this month from the Government Accountability Office. Those violations are likely only a small fraction of the number committed by home loan companies, experts say, citing the small sample examined by regulators. In an April report on flawed mortgage servicing practices, federal bank supervisors said they “could not provide a reliable estimate of the number of foreclosures that should not have proceeded.” The review of just 2,800 home loans in foreclosure compares with nearly 2.9 million homes that received a foreclosure filing last year, according to RealtyTrac, a California-based data provider. “The extent of the loss cannot be determined until there is a comprehensive review of the loan files and documentation of the process dealing with problem loans,” Bair said last week, warning of damages that could take “years to materialize.” Home prices have fallen over the past year, reversing gains made early in the economic recovery, according to data providers Zillow.com and CoreLogic. Sales of new homes remain depressed, according to the Commerce Department. More than a quarter of homeowners with a mortgage owe more on that debt than their home is worth, according to Zillow.com. And more than 2 million homes are in foreclosure, according to Lender Processing Services. Rather than punishing banks for misdeeds, the administration is now focused on helping troubled borrowers in the hope that it will stanch the flood of foreclosures and increase consumer confidence, officials involved in the negotiations said. Levying penalties can’t accomplish that goal, an official involved in the foreclosure probe talks argued last week. For their part, however, state officials want to levy fines, according to a confidential term sheet reviewed last week by HuffPost. Each state would then use the money as it desires, be it for facilitating short sales, reducing mortgage principal, or using the funds to help defaulted borrowers move from their homes into rentals. In a report last week, analysts at Moody’s Investors Service predicted that while the losses incurred by the banks will be “sizable,” the credit rating agency does “not expect them to meaningfully impact capital.” Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail; bookmark his page; subscribe to his RSS feed; follow him on Twitter; friend him on Facebook; become a fan; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 917-267-2335.
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860 NOSTRAND ASSOCIATES LLC v. WF KOSHER FOOD DISTRIBUTORS LTD 860 NOSTRAND ASSOCIATES, LLC, Respondent, v. WF KOSHER FOOD DISTRIBUTORS LTD., Appellant. No. 2008-1672 KC. Present: PESCE, P.J., WESTON and RIOS, JJ. Appeal from an order of the Civil Court of the City of New York, Kings County (Sidney Goodheartz, J.H.O.), dated July 29, 2008. The order, insofar as appealed from as limited by the brief, denied the branch of a motion by tenant seeking to vacate a default final judgment. ORDERED that the order, insofar as appealed from, is affirmed without costs. In this commercial nonpayment proceeding, tenant, within the time prescribed for it to answer, served and filed a motion to dismiss the petition on the ground that the rent demand was defective. That motion, which was made returnable after the return date of the petition (cf. CPLR 406 [requiring that a motion “in a special proceeding, made before the time at which the petition is noticed to be heard, shall be noticed to be heard at that time”] ), was ultimately denied on the merits. While tenant's motion to dismiss was pending, a final judgment was entered based on tenant's failure to answer. Thereafter, tenant moved to, among other things, vacate the default final judgment on the ground that it had been erroneously entered while the motion to dismiss was pending, but setting forth no excuse for its default in answering the petition and no meritorious defense to the proceeding. Tenant now appeals from so much of the Civil Court's order as denied the branch of its motion seeking to vacate the default final judgment, arguing that it did not have to demonstrate an excusable default and meritorious defense because the default final judgment had been erroneously entered while its motion to dismiss was pending. In the City of New York, a tenant's time to answer a nonpayment petition is governed by the special provisions of RPAPL 732 (see Uniform Rules for New York City Civ Ct [22 NYCRR] § 208.42[d] ). These provisions require a respondent to answer before the clerk within five days after service of the notice of petition, and require the court to render judgment in favor of the petitioner if the respondent fails to timely answer. The statute makes no provision for an extension of the time to answer if a respondent moves to dismiss. Moreover, while CPLR 404(a), which applies to special proceedings generally, provides that a respondent in a special proceeding may move to dismiss within the time allowed for answer and that, if the motion is denied, the court may permit the respondent to answer, this provision, unlike CPLR 3211(f), which is applicable in plenary actions, does not automatically extend the respondent's time to answer (see Matter of Dodge, 25 N.Y.2d 273, 286-287 [1969]; Eklecco Newco, LLC v. Chagit, Inc., 12 Misc.3d 143[A], 2006 N.Y. Slip Op 51421[U] [App Term, 9th & 10th Jud Dists 2006] ), and the court, upon deciding tenant's motion, did not extend tenant's time to answer. Thus, even assuming, in favor of tenant, that CPLR 404(a) is applicable in proceedings governed by RPAPL 732, and even assuming further that a court, upon a motion not made returnable as provided in CPLR 406, may extend the time to answer, issues we need not reach here, the final judgment entered herein was at most premature and tenant showed no basis to set it aside. Accordingly, the order, insofar as appealed from, denying so much of tenant's motion as sought to vacate the final judgment, is affirmed. PESCE, P.J., WESTON and RIOS, JJ., concur.
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(Fictitious character) Potter, Harry England Fiction Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry (Imaginary organization) Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry (Imaginary organization) Juvenile fiction Magic Magic Fiction Schools Schools Fiction Wizards Wizards Fiction Kronzek, Allan Zola. Rowling, J. K. Folio junior 899 Harry Potter 2 Harry Potter 4 bibliography Children's stories. Exhibition catalogs. Fantasy fiction. Fiction. Juvenile works. Series. Summary: Harry Potter wants to get away from the pernicious Dursleys and go to the International Quidditch Cup with Hermione, Ron, and the Weasleys. He wants to dream about Cho Chang, his crush (and maybe do more than dream). He wants to find out about the mysterious event involving two other rival schools of magic, and a competition that hasn't happened for a hundred years. He wants to be a normal,... Publisher / Publication Date: Scholastic Inc. 2019 1 available in Juvenile Fiction, Call number: J FIC ROW Harry Potter à l'école des sorciers Summary: Rescued from the outrageous neglect of his aunt and uncle, a young boy with a great destiny proves his worth while attending Hogwarts School for Wizards and Witches. Publisher / Publication Date: Gallimard Jeunesse 2007 1 available in Adult Non-fiction, Call number: 448.4 FIC ROW 1 available in Juvenile, Call number: J468 ROW FRENCH Harry Potter y la cámara secreta Summary: When the Chamber of Secrets is opened again at the Hogwarts School for Witchcraft and Wizardry, second-year student Harry Potter finds himself in danger from a dark power that has once more been released on the school. Publisher / Publication Date: Ediciones Salamandra 2015 1 available in Juvenile, Call number: J 468 Row Harry Potter : a journey through a history of magic. Summary: Complementing the British Library exhibit, provides an overview of the Hogwarts curriculum, covering thousands of years of magic history and displaying artifacts released from the Library's archives, previously-unseen materials, and items from throughout the world. Publisher / Publication Date: Arthur A. Levine Books, an imprint of Scholastic Inc. 2017 2 available in Juvenile Nonfiction, Call number: J 823 HAR 1 available in Juvenile, Call number: J823.92 HAR The sorcerer's companion : a guide to the magical world of Harry Potter Kronzek, Allan Zola. Summary: Explores the true history, folklore, and mythology behind the magical practices, creatures and personalities that appear in J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter books. Publisher / Publication Date: Broadway Books 2001 1 available in Juvenile, Call number: J 823 KRO
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Classroom, music, StoryBots, TV Show Happy New Year from the StoryBots! Happy New Year from the StoryBots! This past year was our biggest yet. Here are some of our favorite moments from 2017: We kicked off 2017 with the launch of a new all-in-one app for the iPhone, which brought together books and videos in one place and topped Apple’s New Apps We Love list. Netflix’s Ask the StoryBots won an Emmy Award (with five additional nominations) and was also recognized by the British Academy Children’s Awards, Annie Awards and Kids !magination Awards. Plus, it was one of just two children’s programs honored by the prestigious Peabody Awards! The first-ever StoryBots channel for Roku was launched, giving kids more opportunities to view their favorite StoryBots videos on TV. We partnered with Random House for a collection of early reader books. Our latest, ABC Jamboree, comes out on January 9th. The StoryBots apps and website were honored by the Webby Awards in the family-and-kids category, while StoryBots won Learning Magazine‘s Teachers’ Choice Award for the second year in a row and the first-ever Tech Edvocate Award for best early childhood educational app. We released all full episodes of StoryBots Super Songs on our YouTube channel and eventually surpassed 400 million video views overall! We introduced Twitter teacher chats and offered educator sharing resources and classrooms printables like bookmarks certificates, posters, hallway passes and more. We also passed more than 40,000 teachers using StoryBots Classroom! We premiered A StoryBots Christmas on Netflix. This holiday special guest starred the legendary Ed Asner as Santa Claus and received a five-star review from Common Sense Media, which called it “a dynamic and positive special” that will delight StoryBots fans of all ages. StoryBots was available in more places than ever, with our Learning Videos now airing everywhere from Sprout to museums, hospitals and even up in the skies (on American Airlines, that is!). We kept kids and families singing our songs wherever they go, releasing new StoryBots music on all major platforms, including iTunes, Spotify, Apple Music and Amazon Music. Team StoryBots ended the year by introducing a newly redesigned website that lets kids discover content more easily and gives teachers the ability to share their StoryBots Backpack with families at home for free. There are plenty of new cool things in the works for StoryBots in the new year, and we can’t wait to share them with you. In the meantime, we wish you and your loved ones the very best in 2018! December 31, 2017 December 31, 2017 new year, recap, storybots Previous Previous post: Holiday Activities from the StoryBots Next Next post: New to StoryBots Classroom?
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Mill Ave Local Favorites to Check Out Before the Alison Hawthorne Deming Reading Tomorrow April 12, 2011 April 21, 2013 Tyler Hughes For a literary mind there’s not much that can top good reads, except maybe good eats, and if you’re going to be in town for tomorrow’s Alison Hawthorne Deming reading you’re probably going to want a little of both. We’ve put together the short, short list of local favorites around ASU for you to check out while you’re in Tempe. Four Peaks Brewery is less than a mile from campus and boasts great craft brews and really good food. Originally built in 1892, the building that Four Peaks occupies used to be Pacific Creamery and then later Bordens Creamery. Despite the fact that cows used to live there, the exposed red brick, wooden beams and a thirty five foot high glass clerestory is a very appealing place to hang out with friends. Try the Italian Beef Beer Bread or the Salmon BLT, both local favorites. Map here. 1340 East 8th Street #104, Tempe, AZ 85281, (480) 303-9967 ‎ photo by metromix.com The Cartel Coffee Lab is a favorite local hangout for ASU students. Located just a half mile West of ASU’s Tempe campus, you can sometimes smell the aroma of roasting coffee, roasted in house, wafting down the streets. Cartel offers a great cup of coffee or a light snack, if you’re not hungry enough for a full meal. It can be a little bit hard to find though. It’s on the Southwest side of Ash Ave behind Buffalo Exchange. Don’t worry if you can’t find it at first, just follow your nose. Map here. 225 West University Drive, Tempe, AZ 85281, (480) 225-3899 House of Tricks is just a block away from campus. In fact, you can sit on their spacious photo by domesticbliss patio and watch ASU students come and go. They have a great lunch and dinner menu that you can enjoy from one of the two converted houses on the property, or on their comfortably shaded patio, the highlight being the bar constructed around an old tree between the houses . And when you’re done with you’re meal you’ll only have to walk about a block to campus. Map here. 114 East 7th Street, Tempe, AZ 85281-3711, (480) 968-1114 If none of these places entice you there is always Mill Ave just two blocks from campus. Mill is home to numerous restaurants and eateries, such as RA Sushi, Corleone’s for Philly Cheesesteaks, Irish pub Rula Bula, Gordon Biersch, La Boca pizzeria, My Big Fat Greek Restaurant, P.F. Chang’s, Z-Tejas Southwestern Grill and Robbie Fox’s Public House. Map them all here. Don’t forget to check out the Facebook page for the Alison Hawthorne Deming reading tomorrow on the Tempe campus at 7 p.m. Events Alison Hawthorne Deming, ASU Tempe, Cartel Coffee Lab, Four Peaks Brewery, House of Tricks, Local, Mill Ave, Reading, Restaurants Leave a comment Local Event: Black Pearl Poetry March 27, 2010 April 26, 2013 Superstition Review Back in December, after spending an evening at the monthly downtown Phoenix street fair known as First Fridays, I wandered into Fair Trade Cafe near the LightRail station at Roosevelt and Central in search of a hot beverage. What I found (in addition to coffee) was a slam poetry show. As an English major, my definition of poetry has been shaped by classes spent examining poets with diverse styles, but I had never encountered spoken word poetry except in a disclaimer from a creative writing professor that we would be discussing written word poetry and not spoken, because slam poetry is “a whole different ball game.” Watching spoken word, I did find it to be an entirely new experience that challenged my conception of poetry, and I was surprised by how much I enjoyed it. I was drawn in by the blending of sets of words that fit into my definition of poetry and the stylized vocal delivery that turns slam poetry into a performing art and a category of its own. If you’re interested in trying a new way of experiencing poetry, you should check it out: Ed Mabrey, the 2007-2008 Individual World Poetry Slam Champion, is the founder of Black Pearl Poetry, which runs two shows in Phoenix per week: Black Pearl Poetry Tempe Thursday: Every Thursday 8-10:15 p.m., $5.00 admission, MADCAP Theaters (the former Harkins theaters) at 730 S. Mill Ave in Tempe. Black Pearl Poetry Phoenix Friday: Every Friday (except 3rd Friday) 7:45-10 p.m., $5.00 admission, Fair Trade Cafe at 1020 N. 1st Ave. in downtown Phoenix. *Every 3rd Friday instead of the evening show, there’s a poetry workshop in the same venue from 5:30-7 p.m. This week’s lineup: April 1 (Tempe): The National Poetry Slam Finals for Team Selection, an open mic, special guest performers, a farewell to the ASU SunDevilSlam Team, and featured performer Taalam Acey. April 2 (downtown Phoenix): The Youth National Poetry Slam Finals for Team Selection, an open mic, special guest performers, and featured performer Taalam Acey. These shows are both once a year events and two of the biggest shows that Black Pearl will host all year, which makes them perfect opportunities to get a feel for what slam poetry is all about. Don’t forget to say hi if you see me there! News Black Pearl Poetry, First Friday, MADCAP Theaters, Mill Ave, Phoenix, Poetry, slam poetry, Tempe Leave a comment
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Traveling friends Tubillete.com advantages Financing: Enjoy the trip of your dreams Flexible Ticket and Flex Exchange Option Improve my reservation Traveling Friends: Tell us your trips! Flights & Hotel Trips to Tenerife. Discover paradise! Travel to La Gomera. A story island! Travel to London. The great European capital! You are here: Home / Traveling friends: @silviajes_ Traveling friends: @silviajes_ Participate in our “Traveling Friends” section! Write to us and tell us about the place you like so much and which you would love to return to, that funny anecdote that happened to you during your holidays, which are your favorite books or travel guides, the typical international dishes that you like the most… And if you don’t travel… You can also write us to show us your favorite corners of the place where you live, show us photos of your city or town, explain the popular festivals that take place in it or the museums, squares or parks that we can visit. We will put your links to social networks and blog (if you have one) so that everyone can get to know you better. For more information on how to participate, you can leave a comment at the end of this post or email to marketing@tubillete.com This is a space created by and for travelers! A great showcase to express ourselves, get to know each other and learn from each other! Dare to participate! Be one of our traveling friends!😍 Our traveller friend of today @silviajes_ tells us about the places that captivated her the most in a country that has stolen her heart: Costa Rica. Discover the nooks and crannies she visited during the two weeks of volunteering in Latin America… A great experience that has amazed us! Costa Rica: a paradise between the Caribbean and the Pacific Hello! Let me introduce myself: my name is Silvia, I’m from Tenerife and you can find me on instagram as @silviajes_ In recent years I have travelled to various places in the world, with each one having their own charm, but today I want to share briefly my experience in the wonderful country of Central America, Costa Rica, a paradise between the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean. Parque Nacional Cahuíta. / Cahuíta National Park The main reason that led me to visit this country was to volunteer for 2 weeks in a rural school in a poor neighborhood in the municipality of Escazú, a few kilometres from San José, the country’s capital. Colegio rural en Escazú. / Rural school in Escazu. Volunteering in Costa Rica My experience as a volunteer in Costa Rica was gratifying, I will always recommend it, because it opens your mind, fills your soul and nurtures you as a person. I have many memories and experienced moments that will forever stay with me, people and situations that mark you and remain within you. I would be lying if I said that everything was beautiful, I inevitably had to witness family situations that weren’t pleasant, but the balance shifts towards the positive when you see that the little you do generates a smile on many people’s faces and that’s when you realize that it’s you who’s lucky to be having such an experience. After this volunteering, my scale of values and priorities in life has changed and I appreciate what I have more than what I lack. But this was not the only reason for the trip, I also wanted to get to know and enjoy the incredible places that nature has given us throughout the country: national parks, natural reserves, beaches, flora and fauna. The first visit outside the municipality in which I was staying was to San José, the capital. The centre of the city is quite small, with many people and cars on its streets and avenues, where most of the museums, shopping centres, markets, hotels, restaurants, parks and squares are located. San José, capital de Costa Rica. / San José, capital of Costa Rica. A little further outside the capital, in Santa Ana, I had the opportunity to visit the Herpetological Refuge of Costa Rica, a wildlife refuge where they rescue, rehabilitate and release back most of the cases they receive to the environment. In this place you can find monkeys, crocodiles, caimans, iguanas, turtles, owls, parrots and toucans, among others. Tucán en el Centro de Recuperación Animal de Escaz. / Toucan at the Escaz Animal Recovery Center. The incredible Old Port The next visit was to Puerto Viejo de Talamanca, a town located in the province of Limón, on the Caribbean coast. To get to Puerto Viejo you have to take a bus from San José and it takes about 4.30 hours if there is no traffic (it took me almost 6 hours to get there on Friday). A majority of the shops, restaurants and night bars are located in the main street of Puerto Viejo, many of them have live music. Puerto Viejo is characterized by its surfing and reggae atmosphere. Calle principal de Puerto Viejo. / Main street of Puerto Viejo I stayed in a beautiful place with direct access to the white sandy beach Cocles. If you are traveling to Costa Rica, especially to this area of the Caribbean, you should not forget to take mosquito nets to protect yourself, not only from mosquitoes, but from any bugs (beetles, dragonflies, lizards, etc.) that sneak into your room… Playa Cocles en Puerto Viejo. / Cocles Beach in Puerto Viejo. Cahuíta National Park In Puerto Viejo I was also able to visit the Cahuíta National Park, the place that impressed me the most among those I visited. Along the park you can walk along a path parallel to the coast where you can see the jungle with its animals (squirrels, monkeys, sloths, raccoons, insects, crabs, lizards, etc.) and the spectacular pristine and white sand beaches. The Park has two accesses and the complete route between both accesses is about 10 kilometres. Una de las playas del Parque Nacional de Cahuíta. / One of the beaches of the Cahuíta National Park. Animal en el Parque Nacional de Cahuíta. / Animal in the Cahuíta National Park. Another visit was to the Arenal Volcano National Park, in the province of Alajuela. Not only did I see the volcano (somewhat covered by clouds that day), the second most active volcano in Costa Rica, but also the 14 hanging bridges (8 fixed and 6 suspended), some of which are up to 60 metres high from where you can observe the flora and fauna typical of the place. I was particularly struck by the constant sound of monkeys jumping from one tree to another. Volcán Arenal. / Arenal Volcano. Puentes colgantes del Arenal. / Arenal suspension bridges. Another of the spectacular place I visited in the Arenal National Park was the Fortuna River Waterfall, which is about 70 metres high. In order to get to its base and take a dip you have to go down (and then go back up) about 530 steps through a forest of trees, but it is really worth it. Catarata Río Fortuna. / Fortuna River Waterfall. And there’s more! And in this province you should not miss a visit to one of the thermal pools of hot water that flow from the Arenal Volcano with temperatures between 33 and 67 degree Celsius. I was able to visit the Baldi Hot Springs which in addition to access to the pools offers a buffet dinner at the end of the tour. Baldi Hot Springs. The last place I visited in Costa Rica was the beach of Puntarenas, on the coast of the Pacific Ocean, a gray sand beach with a parallel boulevard full of shops and cafes. Playa Puntarenas. / Puntarenas beach. Many are the places and national parks, including Tortuguero and Manuel Antonio, that I could not visit so I will undoubtedly return as soon as I can. It is worth mentioning that, due to its tropical location, Costa Rica has two well-defined seasons: the dry season, which runs from December to April, with less rainfall; and the rainy season, from May to November, with heavy rains and tropical storms. I travelled in June and most days in the mornings I found myself enjoying a splendid sunny day and in the afternoons with heavy rains, so if you travel to this country it is advisable to always take a raincoat. Interesting facts about Costa Rica: – Costa Ricans are called ‘ticos’. – Pura Vida’ (Pure Life) is a phrase used by the Ticos to respond to the greeting How are you? But for them it symbolizes the simplicity of good living, affection, humanity, abundance, well-being, joy, satisfaction, contentment, happiness and optimism. – The most typical dish in Costa Rica is the ‘casado’, which consists of rice, beans, fried bananas, salad, and a selection of meat from chicken, beef, shredded meat, meat in sauce or fish. – The typical breakfast is the ‘gallo pinto’, which consists of rice and beans mixed together, fried or scrambled eggs, minced meat, fried bananas and tortillas. Lema de los costarricenses escrito en una de las playas del Parque Nacional de Cahuíta. / Costa Rican motto written on one of the beaches of the Cahuíta National Park. INSTAGRAM: @silviajes_ Nuestra comunidad de Amigos Viajeros Amigos viajeros de diferentes nacionalidades nos cuentan sus viajes y destinos favoritos, así como sus experiencias más increíbles, reflexiones, vivencias y opiniones. Además, nos muestran con sus fotografías y vídeos los bellos rincones de nuestro planeta que han visitado. Our community of Friends Travelers Traveling friends of different nationalities tell us about their favorite trips and destinations, as well as their most incredible experiences, reflections, experiences and opinions. In addition, they show us with their photographs and videos the beautiful corners of our planet that they have visited. 24 September, 2019 /0 Comments/by Amigos Viajeros Tags: America, Arenal Volcano, Cahuíta National Park, Celeste River, Costa Rica, Manuel Antonio National Park, Old Port, San José, Volunteering https://blog.tubillete.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Foto-7.jpg 739 1030 Amigos Viajeros https://blog.tubillete.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Logo-TuBillete-ese-amigo-que-sabe-de-viajes-1-300x138.png Amigos Viajeros2019-09-24 21:41:232019-09-25 05:50:24Traveling friends: @silviajes_ What to see in Buenos Aires in two days El Caminito of the La Boca neighborhood in Buenos Aires Where to dance in Saint Dominic. Move your body! Traveling Friends @rodcar_life 9 curious things to do in New York Traveling Friends: @rodcar_life Traveling Friends: @pasaporte_a_la_tierra Where to eat the best Peruvian food in Lima IRRESISTIBLES OFFERS FOR YOUR TRAVEL! GIVE UNFORGETTABLE EXPERIENCES! FINANCE THE TRIP OF YOUR DREAMS! VIDEO: ESE AMIGO QUE SABE DE VIAJES MUSIC TO TRAVEL THE BEST OFFERS IN HOTELS! VERY ECONOMIC FLIGHTS! YOUR VEHICLE RENTAL AT THE BEST PRICE! GREAT DISCOUNTS ON FLIGHT + HOTEL! INCREDIBLE ACTIVITIES IN YOUR DESTINY! PHOTOS, VIDEOS AND MUCH MORE! Subscribe to receive Great Offers! By subscribing to our newsletter you accept our privacy policy and the sending of commercial communications. Query here our privacy and data protection policy. Activities America Asia Baleares Barcelona Beach Beaches Berlin Britain Calas Canary Islands Culture Destinations El Hierro Europe Food France Fuerteventura Gastronomy Germany Gran Canaria Holidays Hotels Ibiza Italy Kids La Gomera Lanzarote La Palma Lisbon Londres Madrid Mallorca Museum Music New York Paris Portugal Romantic Rome Spain Tenerife Travel Typical plates USA DO NOT MISS OUR PHOTOS IN INSTAGRAM! All Rights Reserved by Tubillete.com 2003-2019 The Jameos del Agua and their magical nights 6 things to see in Madrid in a short time.
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Carbon Capture Storage Archives - State of the Planet Climate, Earth Sciences, Energy, General Earth Institute Climate Change Innovator Elected to National Academy Peter Kelemen, a geologist at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory who studies rocks from the deep earth and, recently, their possible uses in battling climate change, has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences. by Kim Martineau |April 30, 2014 Climate, Earth Sciences, Energy Photo Essay: High Desert, Deep Earth In the Arabian peninsula nation of Oman, geologists are studying the Hajar mountains–a range containing rocks that have been thrust up from the deep earth. Accessible to humans in only a few places on earth, these kinds of rocks offer clues to the planet’s deep history–and possible ways that natural processes may be harnessed to combat modern climate change. by Kevin Krajick |July 8, 2013 Ancient Rocks, Modern Purpose The desert sultanate of Oman is home to some of the weirdest—and possibly most useful—rocks on earth. The stark Hajar mountains, near the border with Saudi Arabia, contain a chunk of earth’s mantle—a zone that makes up most of earth’s mass, but normally lies inaccessible to humans, far below the surface. Here, though, a sliver of mantle has made its way up to where we can see and touch it. The outcrop has drawn scientists looking for clues to the dynamics of the deep earth; the origins of life; and, most recently, ways to fight climate change. Climate, Energy Artificial Trees: Giving Us Time to Act? Soon after Klaus Lackner met Allen Wright at Biosphere 2 in Arizona, they began dreaming up a way to pull CO2 out of the air. After years of work, the two have come up with a working laboratory-scale prototype… by Guest Blogger |October 18, 2011 Carbon Capture, Policy Change, and My First Assignment Lecture on UK Policy of Carbon Capture Storage with Dr. Tim Fox of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers is happening on February 2, 2011 at 4:00pm in Alfred Lerner Hall, Room 555. This event is free and open to the public with light refreshments. by Tamara Plummer |January 13, 2011
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The Windows Phone games of summer By Microsoft Devices Team If you live in the Northern Hemisphere, summer vacation is almost here! While you’re relaxing, these new games can keep you entertained no matter how much time you have. I play games on my Lumia almost everywhere I go. Whether it’s taking the subway to work, flying on a plane (in airplane mode, of course), or eating lunch, my Lumia 1520 is usually close at hand for a round of gaming. Now that summer is finally here, our gaming opportunities may vary even more. I’ve heard folklore about people “reading” while at the beach. But for me, that’s an hour or so I can invest in shooting aliens. The problem I usually run into is: Which game should I play? It may only take three minutes to reach my next stop. That’s not enough time to start a strategy-game match, but it could be a perfect amount to complete a puzzle-game level. Several new games have hit the Windows Phone app store lately, just in time for these relaxing and/or hectic summer months. See which ones can fit into your busy schedule. Jewel Tree: Match It ($1.99 with a free trial) What it is: A match-three puzzle game in which you string together chains of chips vertically, horizontally, or diagonally to clear them from a board. It has more than 90 different levels to clear, with numerous modes and challenges. When to play: Expect to spend about one to three minutes on each level, making “Jewel Tree” a good fit for waiting in line for airport security. Panda Pop (free) What it is: A bubble-bursting puzzle game in which you strategically burst bubbles that have trapped Panda’s kidnapped cubs. (Don’t worry, the game is adorable.) “Panda Pop” boasts more than 550 levels with challenging obstacles. When to play: Each level can take less than two minutes to complete, so play this between bus or train stops. Smash Champs (free) What it is: An action game in which you train a fighter to challenge opponents. What’s different about “Smash Champs” is that you don’t actually control your fighter during matches; instead, your job is to train him beforehand by swiping the screen to toss balls that he blocks. When to play: “Smash Champs” is mostly played online against other players, so an Internet connection is a must. Training sessions and accompanying matches can be relatively short (two to four minutes) so it’s best played while waiting for your latte at a café with free Wi-Fi. Monster GO! (free) What it is: A platform-style roleplaying/endless runner hybrid game in which you pick a monster, then fight your way through a quest filled with enemies. When to play: “Monster GO!” Is endless, so it’ll eat up as much time as you’ll allow. With its focus on hacking and slashing, play it to quell your nerves while standing in a long line at a theme park. Bloons TD 5 ($2.99) What it is: A tower-defense game in which you build awesome towers and then defend them from the invading Bloons. It has more than 250 random missions and 10 special missions to work through. When to play: Missions run around five minutes to complete, but it depends on how much time it takes you to configure your towers and upgrades. Try playing “Bloons TD 5” at the beach or wherever you have a few minutes to focus on strategy. Jungle Heat (free) What it is: “Jungle Heat” is a cross-platform war game in which you battle over riches like oil and gold in a tropical landscape. Build your military base and then attack other players and take the loot for yourself. When to play: Since it’s a strategy game, matches are variable depending on your opponent. Count on spending at least 10 minutes per match–this is a good game to play on a long car trip or lounging at home–as long as you have a good Internet connection. Which games are you looking forward to playing this summer? Tell us about them in the comments below. Tags games Surface Pro X available today Surface Pro 7 and Surface Laptop 3 available now Surface reveals new holiday lineup and introduces a new category of dual-screen devices built for mobile productivity
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ShopClean FeedTooth and Nail Tooth and Nail Joe Morris/ Nate Wooley Joe Morris (g), Nate Wooley (t), Tooth and Nail quantity SKU: CF190. TagsJoe MorrisNate Wooley After previous partnerships with Anthony Braxton and Barre Phillips in the Clean Feed catalogue, here we find the guitarrist in another duet, this time with Nate Wooley. We could expect such a natural gathering between the two innovators of their respective instruments, both devoted to the “expansion of technique and aesthetics”, as Joe Morris puts it on his liner notes – one redifining the use of the electric guitar in jazz, going back to a fingerpicking approach to open a new path, and the other taking the trumpet beyond its lexical and even physical limits, exploring the most basic of all performative factors, like breath, use of spit, and tongue positioning. This kind of association indicates us, from the start, that we’re going to testify something very special, a journey of puzzling discoveries, mutual challenges, brilliant spontaneous solutions, dynamic interchange, and close interaction. If the free-form, avant jazz tendencies had only one guitar hero in its golden years, Sonny Sharrock, Morris is the most representative player of the instrument in these present days, renewing the language and the procedures but staying faithful to what Braxton calls the “African-American continuum”. Like Axel Dorner in Europe, Wooley can be one of the most radical and revolutionary of the new generation of trumpeters, but his roots are in the jazz tradition coming from Louis Armstrong. “Tooth and Nail” is not to be missed – this is, indeed, a glimpse of the future. Be the first to review “Tooth and Nail” Cancel reply Thunder Reminded Me Waiting for You to Grow
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Business News Deals Labels & Publishers SRD allies with Proper on physical distribution By Andy Malt | Published on Tuesday 10 October 2017 Proper Music Group has signed one of those global fulfilment deals that all the cool kids are talking about with Southern Record Distributors, meaning Proper’s distribution division will now manage logistics and physical distribution on behalf of its fellow music distributor, which in turn reps around 200 indie labels. The deal comes as Proper gets ready to open its previously reported new warehouse facility in Dartford. It also follows the announcement last month that SRD has allied with French firm IDOL on its digital distribution. Name-checking SRD’s co-MDs Andy Slocombe and Steve Collins, Proper MD Drew Hill confirming the new deal by saying: “It is a pleasure to start work with Andy and Steve, and we are happy to help protect the independence of one of Europe’s biggest distributors. We are proud to expand and develop our client roster as the opening of our new warehouse draws ever closer”. SRD’s Slocombe added: “Steve and I have a responsibility to our labels and to the business to make the best decisions for our future. Handing over responsibility for logistics to a third party is a tried-and-tested model, and we are entirely confident that working with Drew and his team at Proper is the right road to pursue”. READ MORE ABOUT: Proper Music | Southern Record Distributors
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Conservation Advocate Donate | Updates | Contact You are here: Home / Act 154 of 2006 Act 154 of 2006 link to act | link to legislative history Act 154, signed into law on 11/29/2006 by Governor Rendell, facilitates local government partnerships with land trusts. The Act empowers local government units to: appropriate money to a land trust “for the acquisition or conservation and preservation of interests in real property for the purpose of achieving open space benefits…” (including costs of appraisals, legal services, title searches, document preparation, title insurance, closing fees and survey); transfer open space property interests to a land trust with or without consideration; and create a “Local Land Trust” subject to various accountability measures. While a number of local governments and land trusts have found ways to partner on projects, Act 154’s authorization for the above activities will greatly facilitate partnerships. Additionally, the Act enables local governments (excluding counties in this case) to use voter authorized millage and earned income tax rate increases—previously confined for purchase of open space interests and retiring indebtedness incurred in acquisitions—to be used for incidental transactional fees such as appraisals and legal services. Additionally, the Act enables local governments (excluding counties in this case) to use voter authorized millage and earned income tax rate increases—previously confined for purchase of open space interests and retiring indebtedness incurred in acquisitions—to be used for incidental transactional fees such as appraisals and legal services. 2019 Budget Wrap-Up In the depths of winter, the Administration proposed repurposing the Keystone Recreation, Park and Conservation Fund and the Environmental Stewardship Fund (ESF): $30 million of Keystone Fund monies that would normally be invested in on-the-ground projects would instead be redirected to pay for the general operations of DCNR. Likewise, $16 million of ESF monies would […] Land Trusts, Trail Groups, Local Governments, and Other Landowners Get New Liability Protection On October 24, 2018, Governor Wolf signed Act 98 into law. Act 98 amends the Pennsylvania Recreation Use of Land and Water Act (RULWA) to better protect from liability those who open their properties to the public for recreation without charge. Improvements to the law include: Explicitly listing paths, paved and unpaved trails, fishing and […] Governor Signs HB 2468 Governor Wolf quietly signed HB 2468 (and several other bills) into law on Sunday, June 24. The bill is now Act 45 of 2018. A correction to the previous PALTA communication: Act 45 should apply retroactively to McCormick Farm, so, hopefully, the Cumberland Valley School District will cease its pursuit of the farm. The district […] Public Investments in Conservation Protection of Public Parks & Open Space Conservation Incentives PA Constitution and the Environment PA Conservation-Related Laws Become a Conservation Advocate Legislative Outreach Tutorial Rules for Nonprofits About Us | Archive ConservationAdvocate.org is administered by the Pennsylvania Land Trust Association.
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Off the Record: Comet record does not reflect performance By Joel Umanzor, Sports Editor The latest in a series of storms to hit the Bay Area has given the baseball team (3-18 overall and 3-5 in the Bay Valley Conference) a makeshift bye week to close out the month of March and a chance to reflect on the 2019 campaign so far. Observing this year’s Comets inside the vacuum of the BVC season is important because when all variables are taken into consideration, this team may be better than its record indicates. Since the start of conference play, the Comets have become a much more competitive team, but have still fallen short of reaching their full potential. Contra Costa College has been in almost every BVC game, however mental lapses by the pitching staff and on defense have kept the team from winning conference games on multiple occasions. Consider the game on March 14 when CCC gave up nine runs in the top of the ninth inning to Solano Community College. The team trailed by just one run before the late game meltdown. Coach Brian Guinn used the preseason to test the waters with his pitching staff. During the preseason, in which the Comets went 0-13, CCC faced top opponents from around Northern California in preparation for BVC play. Pitching, in baseball, can either mask defensive deficiencies or spotlight a lack of focus in critical moments resulting in errors that extend innings. The Comets have been affected by this in many instances through their season resulting in a team ERA of 12.43 in their 18 losses compared to the 3.10 ERA in their three victories. After an underwhelming preseason in which the team lost 13 straight games, CCC earned its first win of the season on a windy afternoon at Los Medanos College in Pittsburg. The Comets won by a 6-3 margin behind a strong effort from starting pitcher Conner Rudy (1-3, 8.93 ERA). Riding this wave of success, the Comets strung together back-to-back wins against LMC with a 6-5 home victory in extra innings (10). The starting pitching was strong during these games and remains the formula for the Comets to claw back into the win column. The Comets improved OBP from .268 in the month of February to .314 in March can be attributed to their increasing patience at the plate. In the extra inning win over LMC, the Comets five-run, fifth inning rally began by drawing consecutive walks with two outs, which put pressure on the opposing pitcher. Similarly, the Comets have been victims of opposing teams’ two-out rallies, which remove the possibility of keeping the score close. CCC has all the tools to compete in the BVC, however, the team fails to execute at critical moments in a game. For this team, consistency will be key for finding success during the rest of this season. Tumultuous soccer season concludes Positivity absorbed in the D-line Young squad ends season winless Full season, small squad bonds team Mariners shutout extends Comet losing streak Squad loses on sophomore day Wide receiver finds stability far from home Early lead squandered after error Aerial bombardment stifles Comets Small team suffers sixth BVC loss
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Carbon Recycling Network Members Privacy Notice This privacy notice is for registered members of the Carbon Recycling Network (CCnet). It sets out the ways in which your data is gathered, used, stored and shared. It also sets out how long we keep your data and what rights you have in relation to your data under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). What is CCnet? CCnet is a Network in Industrial Biotechnology and Bioenergy funded by a research grant awarded to Professor Nigel Minton of the University of Nottingham by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) (grant code BB/S009833/1). Where do we get your data from? If you choose to register as a member of CCnet, the University of Nottingham will ask you to provide certain personal data at the time of registration. What data do we have? The personal data we require you to provide are: full name, email address, the organisation you work for and your position within that organisation, your regional location, your gender, your area of expertise and your expected contribution to the Network. We will also maintain records of any Network activities you choose to take part in and any Network funding you are allocated. If you register to attend a Network event, we will ask for a contact telephone number and will give you the option of providing us with information relating to any dietary and accessibility requirements you may have. What is our legal basis for processing your data under GDPR? The legal basis for processing your personal data on this occasion is Article 6(1a) consent of the data subject and also Article 6(1e) processing is necessary for the performance of a task carried out in the public interest. Special category personal data The basis for processing your sensitive personal data on this occasion is Article 9 (2a) the data subject has given explicit consent to the processing. How we process your data? Your data will be processed for the following purposes: To create a searchable database of registered members which is stored on the Network website’s secure UK-based web server in a manner which makes it accessible to other Network members, some of whom may live outside of the European Economic Area (EEA), but not to non-members. You will be able to search other member’s profiles with a view to exchanging research ideas and establishing research consortia. To allow the CCnet Network Manager to keep you up to date by email with relevant Network activities and funding opportunities and maintain a record of your involvement with CCnet . This will include regular newsletters sent by email to all registered members and occasional emails containing details of Network activities and opportunities where this is considered relevant to your interests. To provide BBSRC with a record of registered CCnet members, as a required output of grant BB/S009833/1. BBSRC may use the information provided on the BBSRC NIBB Extranet for research related activities, including but not limited to, statistical analysis in relation to evaluation of the BBSRC NIBB, study of trends and policy and strategy studies. Retained statistical data will be anonymised. BBSRC will not have access to your email address or contact telephone number, and will not contact you directly. How long we keep your data The University will retain your data in line with legal requirements or where there is a business need. Your data will only be processed during the period of time that the grant is active (1st April 2019 – 31st March 2024). After 31st March 2024, records required for audit purposes will be retained by the University of Nottingham for a minimum of 10 years in accordance with the BBSRC Statement on Safeguarding Good Scientific Practice https://bbsrc.ukri.org/documents/safeguarding-good-scientific-practice/ and any records of personal data which are no longer required will be deleted within six months. Who do we share your data with? Your personal data is provided via and stored on the CCnet website which was developed by Hallam Internet Ltd, and is supported, maintained and hosted by Hallam Internet Ltd. The personal data you provide to the University of Nottingham when you register as a member of CCnet (with the exception of your email address) will be subsequently uploaded to an area of the secure BBSRC NIBB extranet which is only accessible by authorised representatives of CCnet and BBSRC. All personal data provided to BBSRC, as part of UK Research and Innovation, via the registration form will be processed in accordance with current UK data protection legislation and the EU General Data Protection Regulations 2016/679 (GDPR) where appropriate. Further information on how BBSRC, as part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), uses personal data, and how you can exercise your rights as a data subject, can be found in the UKRI Privacy Notice (https://www.ukri.org/privacy-notice/). BBSRC-UKRI may use the information transferred from CCnet to BBSRC for research related activities, including but not limited to, statistical analysis in relation to evaluation of the BBSRC NIBB, study of trends and policy, and strategy studies. Retained statistical data will be anonymised How do we keep your data secure? For details on the University of Nottingham’s Information Security Visit: https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/it-services/security/strategy/it-security.aspx BBSRC-UKRI data protection policy is available at https://bbsrc.ukri.org/documents/ukri-data-protection-policy-pdf/ Where your data is held Your data will be held electronically in the UK. Where we are setting up international conferences will we invite you to attend and should you accept at that point we will need to share your data with the relevant conference centre. What rights do you have in relation to your data? Under GDPR, you have a right of access to your data, a right to rectification, erasure (in certain circumstances), restriction, objection or portability (in certain circumstances). See https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/governance/records-and-information-management/data-protection/data-subject-access-request.aspx for further information. You can terminate your membership of the CCnet Network at any time. 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Users are advised that if they wish to deny the use and saving of cookies from this website on to their computers hard drive they should take necessary steps within their web browsers security settings to block all cookies from this website and it’s external serving vendors. This website might use tracking software to monitor it’s visitors to better understand how they use it. This software is provided by Google Analytics which uses cookies to track visitor usage. The software will save a cookie to your computers hard drive in order to track and monitor your engagement and usage of the website but will not store, save or collect personal information. You can read Google’s privacy policy here for further information [ http://www.google.com/privacy.html ]. Other cookies may be stored to your computers hard drive by external vendors when this website uses referral programs, sponsored links or adverts. Such cookies are used for conversion and referral tracking and typically expire after 30 days, though some may take longer. No personal information is stored, saved or collected. Twitter Privacy Policy Facebook Privacy Policy Google Privacy Policy Linkedin Privacy Policy Mailchimp Privacy Policy Become a member of CCnet – Carbon reCycling: Converting waste derived GHG into chemicals, fuels and animal feed Network with biological, chemical, mathematics and process engineering specialists. Apply for funding and gain critical mass in your field. Gain access to useful resources and documentation.
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January 31 – Inspire Your Heart with Art Day Posted by Kath Carroll Celebrating art is always a great thing! Today we champion that feeling you get inside when you create or experience art—no matter what kind is your favorite. Paintings, books, music, sculpture, quilts, photography, and other arts show you a bit of the world in a new way—a way, perhaps, you’ve never thought of before. Art can inspire, gladden, sadden, anger, teach, and compel action. It can also provide joy and inspiration when you need it most—as you’ll see in today’s book. Celebrate today’s holiday by visiting a museum, bookstore, library, concert, or gallery. The Hiding Game Written by Gwen Strauss | Illustrated by Herb Leonhard It was October of 1940, and after moving from place to place to stay “one step ahead of the German soldiers,” Aube and her family had found a home where they could “live together until it was their turn to flee to safety. The Villa Air-Bel was rented by Varian Fry—a magician—and his assistant Danny Bénédite and served as a place to hide those looking to escape the war-torn country. On Sundays, the house was full of “thinkers, artists and writers who had to hide from the German soldiers because of their ideas of freedom and liberty” like Aube’s parents. On those days, everyone played games, danced and made collages. One of Aube’s favorite games was Cadavre Exquis, in which a piece of paper was folded and each participant drew a design on one fold. When the whole paper was unfolded, amazing, artistic pictures emerged. These games and entertainment, Aube’s father told her, were their ways of fighting against fear. Because of the danger, many things had to be hidden at the Villa, including the radio and the cow that provided milk. Many ingredients for cooking were scarce. But even then Aube’s father used art to lighten the mood, leaving a drawing of a roast beef in the pantry where a real roast should have been. Because the authorities were reading Varian and Danny’s mail and were listening to their phone calls, they had devised a way of hiding messages in toothpaste tubes that escaped the guard’s searches. The messages went to other people helping along the escape route to tell them who to expect next. Everyone in the house also had to have a special hiding place in case the police came. Aube chose the an old cabinet in the kitchen. Image copyright Herb Leonhard, 2017, text copyright Gwen Strauss, 2017. Courtesy of Pelican Publishing Company. Whenever a new group of people were scheduled to “make the dangerous journey to a new country, they held a Sunday party and art sale to raise money.” Canvases painted by famous artists were hung among the branches of a large tree on the Villa grounds. When winter came, the Villa was so cold everyone had to wear all of their clothes to stay warm. They kept their spirits warm, too, by singing their favorite songs. During the winter Danny visited camps where people were being held under terrible conditions. “Aube understood now that the danger was that they would be sent to the camps,” where people were dying of starvation and disease. They had little clothes and no blankets even though it was snowing. The people, Danny said, were going to freeze. Aube thought of the game freeze tag and worried about all of those “people freezing, waiting for someone to set them free.” One day in December, the police raided the Villa. They took away all the men, including Danny, Varian, and Aube’s papa. Aube cowered in the kitchen cabinet with their dog in fear. The next week, the men were released, but they knew that the police would be back. Danny and Varian began to plan their escape. Before they all left, Aube’s father devised one more game. Each artist would paint their own version of a playing card to create a collective work of art. “The cards would remind them that they had laughed together and stayed free in their hearts even during the darkest times.” Aube’s family were placed on a ship sailing to South America, and on February 18, 1941 they left the Villa and Danny and Varian behind and made the one-month-long journey to freedom. Several months later, Varian was “forced to leave France and return to America.” Danny went underground and “helped another 300 people escape France.” In 1943, however, Danny was “arrested by the Nazis and sentenced to death.” Just as he was facing the firing squad, soldiers fighting the Nazis burst through the gates of the camp and freed him and the other inmates. Image copyright Herb Leonhard, 2017, courtesy of Pelican Publishing Company. Gwen Strauss includes extensive backmatter on this true-life story about her great-uncle Danny Bénédite. A detailed account of the work by Varian Fry, Danny Bénédite, and the American Rescue Committee, complete with photographs, as well as short biographies of some of the artists who visited the Villa (and a compelling list of others) plus resources for further study round out this compelling book. Clearly written and with details from a child’s point of view that will resonate with readers, The Hiding Game is an absorbing tribute not only to two men involved in the Nazi resistance movement but to the resilience that uplifts people during the darkest times. This fascinating true story also offers a glimpse into the important role that artists and writers play in shining a light on history, interpreting it, and fighting against forces that destroy. Rich with the atmosphere of intrigue, suspense, and simple pleasures enjoyed, Strauss’s dynamic storytelling will thrill children. The Hiding Game will prompt them to learn more about this time period and will inspire in them their own acts of heroism. Herb Leonhard’s realistic drawings of the Villa Air-Bel, the families who stopped there on their way to freedom, the moments of joy that sustained them, and the secret measures necessary for people’s safety take readers into the heart of the story and allow them to witness the danger and the creativity that swirled side-by-side within the Villa and the people living there. Largely depicted in somber tones of gray and green, the pages brighten with glowing yellows during times of laughter, games, and creativity. An illustration of the mammoth tree hung with canvases by famous artists will impress children, and the final image will leave an indelible and thought-provoking impression on young readers and adults. An excellent book for facilitating discussions about World War II and the Holocaust with children at home and in the classroom as well as offering opportunities for cross-curricular learning in history, art, reading, and more, The Hiding Game is a superb choice to add to home, school, and public libraries. Pelican Publishing Company, 2017 | ISBN 978-1455622658 Discover more about Gwen Strauss and her books on her website. To learn more about Herb Leonhard, his books, and his art, visit his website. Inspire Your Heart with Art Day Activity I Love Art! Word Search Puzzle Art has a language all its own! Have fun finding the twenty-five art-related words in this printable puzzle. I Love Art! Word Search Puzzle and I Love Art! Word Search Solution You can find The Hiding Game at these booksellers Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Books-a-Million | IndieBound Picture Book Review Posted in Art, Art History, Artists, Biographies, Book Related Puzzles, History, Holocaust, Social Studies, War, World War II for Children Tagged Gwen Strauss, Herb Leonhard, Pelican Publishing, Picture Book Biographies, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Art, Picture Books about Art History, Picture Books about Artists, Picture Books about History, Picture Books about the Holocaust, Picture Books about World War II, Picture Books for Social Studies, The Hiding Game January 30 – It’s Creativity Month This month we celebrate all things creative! There are so many ways to be creative, from the arts to how you organize and manage your life at home and at work. Sometimes, special events, unusual problems, or particular people inspire—or necessitate—creative thinking. Today’s sweet story is one example! Mr. Goat’s Valentine Written by Eve Bunting | Illustrated by Kevin Zimmer When Mr. Goat read in the newspaper that it was Valentine’s Day, he jumped up, grabbed his phone and favorite hat, and headed out, determined to show his first love how much she meant to him. On the way he stopped off at Miss Nanny Goat’s weed stall and bought a “mixed bouquet” of “crabgrass, pigweeds, and ragweed” beautifully arranged in a “nice, rusty can.” Mr. Goat knew his first love liked ragweed salad, and Miss Nanny Goat assured him that she would like the can too. Mr. Goat agreed. There was nothing like a rusty can with a pinch of salt. Image copyright Kevin Zimmer, 2018, text copyright Eve Bunting, 2018. Courtesy of Sleeping Bear Press. The aroma from Mr. Pygmy-Little Goat’s stand enticed Mr. Goat to stop and look over his treats. The sample rotten egg looked so yummy—black and oozing on the plate—that Mr. Goat bought four. They have been “rotted for two years” and are “guaranteed foul and disgusting,” Mr. Pygmy-Little Goat boasted as he placed the four eggs carefully into a red, heart-shaped box and tied it up with a red ribbon. Not only would the eggs make the perfect dinner, the red bow would be a delicious dessert. Mr. Goat walked on, passing up the fruit and vegetable stand with its fresh oranges, apples, and pears, but made time to talk to Miss Skunk when she approached him with her Eau de Skunk perfume cart. As she spritzed Mr. Goat with a sample of her special perfume, she reminded him that a Valentine’s card would be just right for his first love. Mr. Goat continued on with just the faintest alluring reek and thought about what Miss Skunk had said. He didn’t have a card, but, he decided he could “‘compose a song and serenade her.’” It didn’t take long for Mr. Goat to write his ditty. He hurried on to his first love’s house. Standing at the door, he “burst into song. When I was a little kid / It didn’t matter what I did. / If I climbed too high and fell / You’d kiss the hurt and make it well. / You have loved me from the start / I love you with all my heart!” Suddenly, the door opened, and Mr. Goat’s first love smiled at him. Mr. Goat handed her the bouquet and red box and exclaimed, “‘Happy Valentine’s Day, Mother!’” Eve Bunting’s exceptional flair for engaging children is on full display in her funny, ewww-ful tribute to Valentine’s Day. The hearts of little ones swell with love around this holiday, and Bunting taps into their enthusiasm to get just the right gift for Mom. Readers will laugh at what might seem unusual gifts while also appreciating Mr. Goat’s thoughtfulness. Young children may wonder who Mr. Goat’s “first love” is as he shops from stall to stall, but as he makes up his song, most will figure it out and be happy to be in on the twist ending. Kevin Zimmer’s cheery digital art showcases the sweet emotions that Mr. Goat has for his first love. His eyes grow wide at the delectable weed bouquet and rotten eggs, he contemplates the perfect words for his song, and smiles adorably when his mom opens the door. The less-than-fresh take on the idea of a Farmers Market will delight kids familiar with these types of stands. The other goats out shopping on this Valentine’s Day are equally as cute as Mr. Goat and provide camaraderie among this community that likes things a little bit rotten. As the door opens in the final spread, revealing Mr. Goat’s first love, children will be happy to know that the love between parent and child continues even when a “kid” is no longer a kid. Mr. Goat’s Valentine is a sweet, original story for Valentine’s Day and throughout the year that is perfect for humorous home, classroom, and library story times. Sleeping Bear Press, 2018 | ISBN 978-1585369447 Learn more about Kevin Zimmer and his art on his website. Creativity Month Activity Entangled Hearts Matching Puzzle These friends are collecting valentines! Can you help them follow the paths to find more in this printable puzzle? You can find Mr. Goat’s Valentine at these booksellers EnPicture Book Review Posted in Book Related Puzzles, Family, Feelings, Gift-giving, Humor, Love, Mother's Love, Mothers, Valentine's Day Tagged Eve Bunting, Humorous Picture Books, Kevin Zimmer, Mr. Goat's Valentine, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Family, Picture Books about Giving Gifts, Picture Books about Love, Picture Books about Mothers, Picture Books about Valentine's Day, Sleeping Bear Press, Valentine's Day Matching Puzzle for Kids January 29 – Curmudgeon’s Day You know how gray days (literal and metaphorical) make you feel—grumpy, irritable, standoffish. Today is a day when it’s ok to indulge—and maybe even celebrate—those feelings. Remember, grouchiness can lead to change, so take control and do what you can to alleviate the situation. Whether you choose to stay home today and do nothing or get out there and make the best of it, have a happy Curmudgeon’s Day! Grumpy Monkey Written by Suzanne Lang | Illustrated by Max Lang Jim Panzee woke up feeling pretty rotten. “The sun was too bright, the sky was too blue, and the bananas were too sweet.” Jim didn’t know why he was feeling this way. Norman the gorilla, Jim’s next-door neighbor, suggested that he might be grumpy. But Jim insisted that that wasn’t the problem. As the two walked along, they met Marabou, a long-legged bird. Norman explained that Jim was grumpy, but Jim denied it. Marabou pointed out that even Jim’s hunched posture showed his grumpiness. Jim wiggled his arms and shook his legs to prove how un-grumpy he was. Image copyright Max Lang, 2018, text copyright Suzanne Lang, 2018. Courtesy of Random House Books for Young Readers. Next, they met Lemur, and Norman told him all about Jim’s grumpiness. Lemur couldn’t understand it, especially since it was “‘such a wonderful day.’” “‘Grumpy! Me? I’m not grumpy,’ said Jim.” Lemur said Jim’s grumpiness was obvious from the way he furrowed his eyebrows, so Jim raised them. They continued walking until Jim “tripped over Snake.” Norman gasped; this would only make Jim grumpier, he thought. Jim reminded Norman that he wasn’t grumpy in the first place. Snake wanted to know then, if that was true, why Jim was frowning. Jim obliged and put on a big smile. Now Jim looked happy, but he still wasn’t happy. Everyone, it seemed, “wanted Jim to enjoy this wonderful day.” The birds wanted him to sing along with them, but Jim just scowled. The other monkeys wanted Jim to swing with them, but he just swatted their welcoming hands away. The zebras invited him to roll in the dust with them, and the peacocks wanted him to stroll along with them, but Jim didn’t feel like doing these things either. Everyone had an idea on how to make Jim less grumpy, but Jim simply hunkered down and exploded: “‘I’M NOT GRUMPY!’ And he stormed off.” Jim felt bad for shouting at everyone, but he felt even worse for himself. He decided that maybe he was grumpy and he began to feel really sad. Just then, though, he saw Norman. “Norman was slumped. His eyebrows were bunched up, and he was frowning.” Jim asked him if he was grumpy. It wasn’t that, Norman replied. He was sore from getting quills stuck in his behind while dancing with Porcupine. Jim asked him if he was okay, and Norman said, “‘It hurts but I’ll probably feel better soon enough.’” Then Norman asked Jim if he was still feeling grumpy. Norman admitted he was, but said, “‘I’ll probably feel better soon enough, too. For now, I need to be grumpy.’” The two friends agreed that it was a good day to be grumpy, which made them feel a little better already. Suzanne Lang’s funny story belies an important truth about feelings for kids and adults: sometimes you just feel grumpy, and the best way to assuage it is to acknowledge the feeling, stew a bit, and let happiness return. Well-meaning Norman is a true friend who, after trying to cheer Jim up and suffering his own grumpiness-inducing mishap, comes to understand that like physical pain, sadness takes time to heal too. Readers will laugh at Jim’s attempts to embrace his friends’ suggestions while understanding that these surface “fixes” don’t get to the root of what’s bothering Jim. Children will also giggle at Norman’s sticky situation but show him plenty of empathy too. The pair’s final camaraderie is heartwarming. Max Lang’s lush illustrations overflow with style and humor that kids will love. Little Jim with his surly glower tries to make his friends happy, but readers will recognize his half-hearted attempts—from wiggling his arms to raising his eyebrows to forcing a smile—as things they’ve probably done themselves. As more and more of Jim’s friends get in on the act, their cartoony expressions will make kids laugh. When Jim just can’t take it anymore and beats his chest while shouting, both children and adults will have a chuckle over how spot-on this portrayal is. The quiet companionship between Norman and Jim that follows is a welcome image of acceptance. A book that offers a humorous way for kids and adults to talk about not only sadness but other emotions that can sometimes overwhelm, Grumpy Monkey is an excellent choice for home, classroom, and public libraries. Random House Books for Young Readers, 2018 | ISBN 978-0553537864 To learn more about Max Lang, his books, and his art, visit his website. Curmudgeon’s Day Activity How Do You Feel? Emotions Storytelling Bear With this Emotions Storytelling Bear, you and your child can talk about different emotions and feelings while changing the expressions on the bear’s face. Use the templates and/or make your own facial features. You can also use the bear to make up stories or play a game. Printable Bear Head Template Printable Eyes and Noses Template Printable Eyebrows and Ears Template Light brown felt or fleece (or color of your choice), 8 ½ x 11 inch piece Dark brown felt or fleece(or color of your choice), 8 ½ x 11 inch piece White felt or fleece, 8 ½ x 11 inch piece Black felt or fleece, for pupils 1 playing die (optional) Cut bear head from light felt or fleece Cut eyes from white felt or fleece Cut nose and inner ears from dark brown felt or fleece Cut pupils from black felt or fleece Glue pupils onto white eyes Alternatively: Color and play with the paper set For a Fun Story Time Give the bear different faces and make up stories of why he looks that way! To Play a Game Roll the die to collect parts of the bear’s face. The first player to collect all of the bear’s facial features is the winner. Die dots correspond to: 1—one eyebrow 2—second eyebrow 3—one eye 4—second eye 5—nose 6—inner ears You can find Grumpy Monkey at these book sellers Posted in Book Related Crafts, Book Related Games, Feelings, Friendship, Humor, Kindness, Social Skills Tagged Grumpy Monkey, Humorous Picture Books, Max Lang, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Feelings, Picture Books about Friendship, Picture Books about Social Skills, Random House Books for Young Readers, Suzanne Lang January 26 – National Seed Swap Day If you love to garden, you may want to get involved with National Seed Swap Day! The first Seed Swap Day was held in Washington DC in 2006. Since then it has grown to be a nation-wide event as gardeners get together to trade the seeds from their best plants. Not only does this improve the biodiversity in your local area, it’s a great way to make new friends! To learn more about what events are planned in your area, visit the official National Seed Swap blog. The Bad Seed Written by Jory John | Illustrated by Pete Oswald A sunflower seed stares straight off the page and admits it: “I’m a bad seed. A baaaaaaaad seed.” He knows that all the other seeds would agree. They point him out and mumble, “There goes a baaaad seed.” You might wonder just how bad a seed he can be. Well…pretty bad. In fact, he’ll tell you himself. Are you ready? Take a listen: “I never put things back where they belong. I’m late to everything. I tell long jokes with no punchlines.” Image copyright Pete Oswald, 2017, text copyright Jory John, 2017. Courtesy of HarperCollins. Heard enough? Still think this seed may not be so bad? Well, what if you knew he was unhygienic, a little untruthful, and sometimes a lot inconsiderate. Why does he do this stuff? You know why: he’s “a bad seed. A baaaad seed.” You might ponder if he was always this way. The answer’s No. In fact, he “was born a humble seed on a simple sunflower in an unremarkable field.” He just hung out with his big family of seeds until the flower began to droop, the seeds scattered, and then…he found himself in a bag. In a terrifying moment, he was almost eaten by a giant with a big, scary mouth, but he was “spit out at the last possible second.” He landed under some bleachers, and when he woke up he found his life changed forever. He had “become a different seed entirely.” He’d “become a bad seed.” He was in unknown territory, and all by himself. He’s happy to share the sad details: “I stopped smiling. I kept to myself. I drifted. I was friend to nobody and bad to everybody. I was lost on purpose. I lived inside a soda can. I didn’t care. And it suited me.” That is it did suit him until recently. This seed did some soul searching, and decided to be better. So now he still does some of that bad stuff (did you hear someone talking during a movie? That was probably him), but he does some good stuff too—like having good manners and smiling at people. Now, he says, “even though I still feel bad, sometimes, I also feel kind of good. It’s sort of a mix.” He’s just going to keep trying, and thinking, and readjusting his behavior and view of himself. Now when he’s walking down the street, he still hears, “There goes that bad seed.” But he also hears, “Actually, he’s not all that bad anymore.” Jory John’s sly look at bad behavior is a sophisticated psychological thriller for the youngest set. With a light touch, John explores some of the events that can cause sadness, loneliness, and even personality changes. As the once-happy seed loses his home, scatters from family, and ends up a bit bruised and battered, he sees his once sunny life turn dark. With a hardened heart, he goes about his days, acting badly and letting the comments of others define him. To his credit, however, this seed has the presence of mind—and enough honesty—to recognize his bad behavior and also to know that only he can change it. The niceties that the seed foregoes will have kids and adults laughing out loud as his reputation seems more roguish than the reality. And the authentic ending holds a reassuring kernel of truth—life is a bit of a mix, but happiness often wins out. Looking at Pete Oswald’s adorable illustrations, it’s understandable if you don’t quite believe the sunflower seed when he says he’s a baaaad seed. Sure, he scowls and furrows his brow, butts in line, and gets a bit stinky, but underneath that hard shell, lies the heart of a softie. The other seeds in the neighborhood—pistachios, peanuts, almonds, chestnuts, cashews, and more—are fed up with him, though, registering fear, dismay, and even anger over the sunflower’s behavior. When the sunflower seed has a change of heart, however, others take note, and he gets another crack at life. The Bad Seed is a funny book that kids will love to hear again and again. It also provides many teachable moments for those times when life gets a little discouraging. If you’re looking for an original book that has a bit of everything to add to a home, classroom, or public library, The Bad Seed is a good—no, great—choice. HarperCollins, 2017 | ISBN 978-0062467768 Discover more about Jory John and his books on his website Learn more about Pete Oswalk and view a portfolio of his artwork on his tumblr. How good is this The Bad Seed book trailer? Take a look! National Seed Swap Day Activity Seed Packet Coloring Pages All of your favorite veggies come from seeds, of course!, and those seeds come in packets that are little bits of art. Grab your crayons or pencils and color these printable Seed Packet Coloring Pages. Carrots Seed Packet | Peas Seed Packet | Broccoli Seed Packet | Corn Seed Packet You can find The Bad Seed at these booksellers: Posted in Book Related Coloring Pages, Concept Books, Empathy, Feelings, Happiness, Humor, Identity, Manners, Overcoming Fears, Self-Esteen, Social Skills Tagged HarperCollins, Humorous Picture Books, Jory John, Pete Oswald, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Empathy, Picture Books about Feelings, Picture Books about Happiness, Picture Books about Identity, Picture Books about Manners, Picture Books about Overcoming Fears, Picture Books about Self-Esteem, Picture Books about Social Skills, The Bad Seed January 25 – National Florida Day and Interview with Author B. J. Lee Today, we recognize Florida—the 27th state to enter the Union. Did you know that Florida is home to the oldest established city in the country? Founded by Spanish explorers in 1565, St. Augustine remains a fascinating city that combines an intriguing history of religious settlements, pirate treasure hunters, and a tug of war over ownership among Britain, Spain, and France with the modern beauty of a thriving community. Of course, Florida is well-known as an international tourist destination for its theme parks, wide open beaches, and warm weather. The state is also home to animals, insects, and reptiles unseen in the rest of the United States—a fact that today’s book riffs on. There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth Written by B.J. Lee | Illustrated by David Opie “There was an old gator who swallowed a moth. I don’t know why he swallowed the moth. It made him cough.” And with this culinary choice, readers are off on a wild jaunt full of suspense, humor, and big, sharp teeth. To catch that moth, the gator gobbled down a crab, but that scuttling bugger just filled his tummy with pain. To “nab the crab” the gator decided to “swallow an eel. / Quite an ordeal to swallow an eel!” Image copyright David Opie, 2019, text copyright B.J. Lee, 2019. Courtesy of Pelican Publishing Company. But the eel didn’t help, and the cough persisted. What could the old gator do? He swallowed creature after creature to resolve a cascading number of problems until “he swallowed a manatee.” It was clear “he lost his sanity to swallow a manatee!” Because now that old gator’s stomach was getting pretty cramped. There wasn’t a lot of nabbing or catching going on in there, and there was still that moth to take care of. The distressed gator then spied just the enforcer that might get the job done and gulped it down too. After such a big meal, the gator needed a bit of a drink, and the lagoon looked so refreshing! Just then, when that old gator was fully…well…full, that pesky moth fluttered its wings and made the poor guy “cough! Cough! Cough!” And what did that one little last cough do? Well, let’s just say the story has a splashing…I mean smashing…ending! B.J. Lee gives the favorite cumulative rhyming There Was an Old Lady story a reptilian remodeling that kids will find irresistible as the old gator guzzles down a host of Florida denizens with hilarious results. Lee, an award-winning poet, has an engaging way with words and phrasing that creates surprising rhymes and rib-tickling rhythms. Clever alliteration and action-packed verbs move the story along at a clip that mirrors an alligator’s voracious appetite and will keep young readers on the edge of their seat to see which animal becomes the gator’s next snack. Kids may even enjoy trying to come up with their own rhyming line to add to the story. David Opie’s illustrations of the anguished alligator and his unsuspecting “remedies” are a hoot. Opie accomplishes just the right combination of suspense and humor with his juxtaposition between realistic depictions of the coastal animals and gut-busting portrayals of these creatures crammed into the gator’s belly. As the gator grows rounder and rounder, readers will be wondering how it will all end. The final spreads of the tormented gator are sure to elicit an “Oh!” or “Ew!” or two and plenty of guffaws. There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth is a fun and funny choice for story time, and its comical repetition will prompt enthusiastic read-alongs. The book would be a sunny choice for home, classroom, and public libraries. Discover more about B.J. Lee, her books, and her poetry on her website. To learn more about David Opie, his books, and his art, visit his website. Meet Author B. J. Lee Thank you, Kathryn, for having me on your blog! There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth is getting a lot of love and I appreciate that! I also appreciate that you asked me about my poetry since, even in my picture books, I try to incorporate some aspect of poetry, such as lyrical language, rhyme and, in the case of Gator, cumulative rhyme. There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth is your debut picture book. What drew you to creating a Florida-themed version of this well-known classic? It wasn’t so much that I set out to write a Florida themed version of There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly, it was more that I had a gator character in mind and he pretty much chose this classical structure. Have you always loved to write? When did you publish your first poem? Can you tell readers a bit about your journey to becoming a published writer? Yes, I have always enjoyed writing. My sixth-grade teacher encouraged me to write plays! But I didn’t really realize I was a writer until, as an adult, I started writing a novel, which I never finished because my health intervened. In 2006 I had a shoulder operation which left me with severe bicep tendinitis, and for two years I couldn’t write, couldn’t even hold a pencil. My husband said “Write something shorter. Write poetry.” But I didn’t know how to write poetry. He had planted something in my mind, though. I started studying poetry and then began to write it. My first poem was published in the SCBWI Bulletin in 2010. And so, I became a poet quite by accident. In a way I’m almost grateful for the bicep tendinitis, because I would not have become a poet without that hiccup in my journey. And I’ve picked up the novel again, resurrecting it as a verse novel. I wasn’t surprised when I saw that you worked as a librarian at the Boston Conservatory at Berklee and play the piano since your poetry has such a musical quality to it. Did you ever consider becoming a musician or songwriter? How does your musical background influence your poetry? Thank you for saying that my poetry has a musical quality. I have heard that before but I am unaware of trying to incorporate any musicality into my poetry. I am a pianist, jazz singer, and even enjoyed a brief stint as lead singer in a local rock ‘n’ roll band. Recently, I have written some songs for a current work in progress in which the main character is a singer-songwriter. What is your favorite form of poetry to write and why? Do you write poetry for adults as well as children? What do you find satisfying about both? I enjoy writing many forms of poetry but I guess I like the challenge of writing in repeating forms, such as the villanelle, the triolet, the pantoum and the roundel. I blog at Today’s Little Ditty, where I am an authority on poetic forms. However, I am continually challenging myself to write new forms of poetry, like free verse and performance poetry such as rap. I have written poetry for adults; however, since I am a children’s author, I try to stick with children’s poetry, including work for very young children through young adult and have over 100 poems published in anthologies and magazines. The breadth of subjects you’ve written about—from sea glass to termites to naughty poodles and so many more—is truly inspiring! Can you talk about how and why certain subjects spark your creativity and how you follow that to a completed poem? As far as subject matter, I’m very interested in the natural world and animals, so those subjects often show up in my work. Sometimes I write to prompts from anthologists. Once I have a subject that begs a poem, I simply try to find the best form to present it. Sometimes the poem may not work at all, and I’ll have to select a new form. Sometimes poems just start in my head and I have to be very quick to capture them. Your poetry appears in children’s magazines, including Highlights and Spider, in publications for schools and many others, and in anthologies such as those published by National Geographic and Wordsong. Do you ever hear from young readers about your work? Do you have an anecdote from a letter or reading event that you’d like to share? Yes, I do hear from young readers, which is very gratifying. In one case a Vietnamese teacher contacted me telling me that her phonics students are using my poem, A Garden Prayer, to learn English. That was when I realized that my poetry has gone around the world. In another case, a woman contacted me from St. John’s, Nova Scotia, to ask me if they could use my poem, Moored, on a sculpture in Bannerman Park for a woman who died at a young age and who had always loved sailing. Of course I said yes! The proposed sculptor is Luben Boikov. I’ve read some of your very clever poems that have been finalists—and winners!—in the Think, Kid, Think! Madness Poetry Tournament held in April on thinkkidthink.com. Can you talk a little about the tournament and being an authlete? Yes, the Think Kids Think March Madness poetry tournament is a wonderful event for children’s poets. I loved being an authlete and competing but it’s very difficult to write a quality poem in a short amount of time. It was like pulling college all-nighters! Do you have any advice for aspiring poets—children or adults? My advice for aspiring poets, both children and adults, is: find the metaphor. What’s up next for you? I’m currently writing a verse novel as well as picture books and poetry collections. What is your favorite holiday and why? My favorite holiday is Valentine’s Day because: love. Can you talk about one of your poems that incorporates a holiday theme? I’ve written a few holiday poems including “Groundhognostication,” which appears in National Geographic’s Poetry of US. Thanks for this wonderful chat, B.J.! I’ve loved learning more about your poetry and other work. I wish you all the best with There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth! You can connect with B.J. Lee on: Her website | Facebook | Twitter National Florida Day Activity Fabulous Florida! Word Search Puzzle Find the names of twenty mammals, birds, reptiles, and insects in this printable puzzle. Fabulous Florida! Word Search Puzzle | Fabulous Florida! Word Search Puzzle Solution You can find There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth at these booksellers Posted in Alligators, Animals, Author Interviews, Book Related Puzzles, Fables, Fairy Tales, Humor, Moths Tagged B. J. Lee, David Opie, Fairy Tales, Humorous Picture Books, Pelican Publishing, Picture Book Fables, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Alligators, Picture Books about Moths, Picture Books Set in Florida, There Was an Old Gator Who Swallowed a Moth January 24 – National Compliment Day Getting a compliment can make the world seem brighter. Maybe this is what inspired New Hampshire residents Kathy Chamberlin and Debby Hoffman to create National Compliment Day in 1998. How to celebrate today’s holiday is simple. Take a look around and when you see something about someone that you like, tell them! Does your friend’s sense of humor always lift your spirit? Tell them! Did your employee do a great job today? Tell them! Are your kids the light of your life? Tell them why! You don’t have to limit your compliments to friends and family either. Giving a compliment to someone you don’t know may just make a big difference in their day. So, today, be generous with those nice comments! Giraffe Problems Written by Jory John | Illustrated by Lane Smith Giraffe was self-conscious about his neck—and why not? After all, it just seemed “too long. Too bendy. Too narrow. Too dopey” and “too” so many other things. All-in-all, he summed it up this way: “Yes, my neck is too necky.” Giraffe could feel everyone staring at it. He’d tried “dressing it up,” and hiding, but nothing made it better. No other animals had such a ridiculous neck. Zebra’s was stylishly striped; Elephant’s was “strong and powerful, yet graceful”; and Lion’s was “adorned with a glorious mane of flowing locks.” Even the reassurances Giraffe’s mom gave didn’t make him feel better. In despair, Giraffe laid his long neck on a rock and sighed. But the rock turned out to be a turtle shell—with a turtle inside. Image copyright Lane Smith, 2018, text copyright Jory John, 2018. Courtesy of Random House Books for Young Readers. What luck! Turtle had been watching Giraffe from afar and thought his neck was pretty spiffy. Turtle said, “Oh, how I wish my neck looked like yours! I’d get so much done in a day.” He longed to be able to look around properly and grab things that were high up. But instead Turtle was “saddled with this little excuse for a neck.” Turtle even demonstrated how far his neck could reach—which was not far at all. Giraffe was nonplussed to find another neck sufferer. But they were happy to have found each other. Turtle introduced himself as Cyrus, and Giraffe said his name was Edward. In this spirit of camaraderie, Cyrus confessed a secret. “There is a hill in the distance, which you can surely see from your great vantage. I’ve stood on that very hill for seven straight days now staring skyward, watching as a single piece of fruit—a lone banana!—slowly changed from green to yellow, ripening.” Cyrus’s frustration poured forth as he explained how he’d spent sleepless nights waiting for the fruit to drop so he could taste just a bit of it. Then came the disappointment and self-recrimination as he revealed how foolish he felt as he stretched his “neck toward those greedy branches, only to be limited by my own physical shortcomings.” He topped off this soliloquy with a small smile. Edward summed it up, just to be sure. “You want a banana from a tree.” That is indeed what Cyrus wanted. Easy as one, two, three, Edward plucked the banana from its branch and dropped it in front of Cyrus. Cyrus gobbled it up and declared it delicious. In thanks, Cyrus complimented Edward on his “impressive” neck that allows him “to do amazing things.” In return, Edward complimented Cyrus’s neck, saying “it’s elegant and dignified, and it works well with your shell. They each appreciated the other’s viewpoint then Edward had a suggestion for his new friend. Soon, each was smiling and complimenting the other on how they looked in their handsome bowties. And for the first time ever, both Edward and Cyrus felt good about their necks. Who knew animals have the same insecurities as people? Jory John, that’s who—much to readers’ benefit! John’s completely original story about a giraffe and a turtle who both despair about the state of their necks will make readers laugh out loud even as they empathize with these two endearing characters. Edward’s flowery reveries comparing his own imperfect neck to those of his fellow animals and Cyrus’s burst of vexation at the limits of his neck are hilarious—and, really, who doesn’t feel this vociferous sometimes? Following this, the friendship forged by Edward’s ease at fulfilling Cyrus’s simple request provides a satisfying ending that’s all the more charming for its modest honesty—and bowties. When Jory John and Lane Smith team up, you always know you’ll be opening the cover to an exceptional experience. Here, sweet Edward juts onto pages with a neck so long that often only his head and neck, or body and neck, or just his neck appear. His attempts at disguising his most noticeable feature under neckties, behind palm trees, and in other natural surroundings will only make readers love him more. Edward is a born storyteller with a beautifully inlaid shell and an expressive face that makes his confession all the more touching. Alert readers will notice that the supposedly gawking animals all have their own unique features and perhaps are as self-conscious as Edward is. The muted and mottled browns, greens, reds, and golds that color the textured images are perfectly suited for the natural environment, and a gatefold page that flips up to let Edward procure the banana will delight kids. Giraffe Problems is a must for fun story times as well as for when a child (or adult) needs a bit of a boost. The book would be an often-asked-for addition to home, classroom, and library bookshelves. And if you’re looking for more adorable animals with problems, check out Jory John and Lane Smith’s Penguin Problems! Discover more about Jory John and his books on his website. To learn more about Lane Smith, his books, and his art, visit his website. National Compliment Day Activity Caring Compliment Cards Sharing a compliment is a great way to brighten someone’s day and make new friends! With these printable cards, you’ll always have a sweet compliment at hand to give to a friend, a teacher, a librarian, or anyone who looks as if they need encouragement. Compliment Cards 1 | Compliment Cards 2 You can find Giraffe Problems at these booksellers Posted in Animals, Anxiety, Book Related Printable Kindness Cards, Empathy, Feelings, Friendship, Humor, Identity, Individuality, Kindness, Self-confidence, Self-Esteen Tagged Book Related Printable Kindness Cards, Humorous Picture Books, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Animals, Picture Books about Empathy, Picture Books about Feelings, Picture Books about Friendship, Picture Books about Identity, Picture Books about Individuality, Picture Books about Kindness, Picture Books about Self-confidence, Picture Books about Self-Esteem January 23 – National Reading Day Celebrated in schools across the country, National Reading Day was established to encourage students in PreK through 3rd grade to develop a love of reading, which is the basis for becoming a lifelong learner. Schools, libraries, organizations, bookstores, and parents provide activities to connect young readers with books they’ll love. Sterling Children’s Books sent me a copy of Mirabel’s Missing Valentines to check out. All opinions are my own. I’m happy to be partnering with Sterling in a giveaway of the book. See details below. Mirabel’s Missing Valentines Written by Janet Lawler | Illustrated by Olivia Chin Mueller Mirabel had always been very shy, and as Valentine’s Day approached she was nervous about giving cards away at school. Still, “despite her nerves, the night before, she crafted works of art.” When she was finished, she signed them and drew a heart. In the morning, though, she was reluctant to go to school. Finally, though she left the house and ran to school. In her hurry, she didn’t notice that her bag was getting lighter and lighter. Image copyright Olivia Chin Mueller, 2018, text copyright Janet Lawler, 2018. Courtesy of Sterling Children’s Books. Mirabel rushed past a lonely lady who was checking her mailbox—and then checking it again just in case. But as Mirabel hurried down the road, the lady turned and saw a valentine lying next to her. “She smiled and thought, How nice!” As she turned a corner, “construction workers sweating / as they dug around a pole / laughed to find a sweet surprise / half-buried in the hole.” A baby found a valentine that had floated into their stroller, and for a jogger who’d just stepped in gun, the sparkly card on the ground made her day better. Others, too, found valentines that made them smile. Suddenly, though, the neighbors all heard a cry: “‘I’ve lost my valentines!’” Mirabel had discovered a hole in her bag and that all of her cards were gone. Everyone realized what had happened. They rushed to find Mirabel and return the valentines. “‘Your cards have made us smile! / Thanks for sharing them with us, / if only for a while,’” they told her. Seeing all of their happy faces cheered Mirabel and made her feel braver. She waved goodbye to her new friends and followed the other students into school. Later, she joined in her class party and was excited to share the valentines she’d made. On the way home from school, Mirabel didn’t notice the jogger, dad, construction workers, and others slip valentines into her bag as she passed by. But when she got home, she discovered that her bag was overflowing with love. Janet Lawler’s endearing story of a little mouse who is nervous about Valentine’s Day will resonate with little ones and adult readers as well. Sharing one’s feelings and talents—as Mirabel does with her homemade cards—can be daunting, but Lawler shows that friendship shared is often returned in kind. Little ones will find much to admire in Mirabel’s bravery to go to school even though she is apprehensive about what the day will bring. The reminder that children occupy a special place in the heart of many people, including family, friends, teachers, librarians, and others that they interact with, will cheer them and inspire them to reach out and accept the love offered on Valentine’s Day and every other day. Olivia Chin Mueller’s Mirabel is an adorable friend for little readers. As she cowers under a blanket, contemplating going to school, kids will send her encouraging thoughts and be happy to see her change her mind and hurry along to join her classmates. As the valentines begin to fly out of Mirabel’s bag, readers will wonder who will find each card and will look forward to each page turn. The smiles on the faces of those treated to the surprise gift are heartening as readers see what a positive impact little Mirabel has on those around her. As Mirabel hands out her valentines to her classmates, hearts abound, demonstrating along with the students’ smiles and surprised expressions the warm feelings of friendship that are contained not only in each unique card but in Mirabel’s kind spirit. The final image of Mirabel clasping her bag full of valentines is endearing. Sterling Children’s Books, 2018 | ISBN 978-1454927396 Discover more about Janet Lawler and her books on her website. To learn more about Olivia Chin Mueller, her books, and her art on her website. Mirabel’s Missing Valentines Giveaway I’m excited to partner with Sterling Children’s Books in this giveaway of: One (1) copy of Mirabel’s Missing Valentines by Janet Lawler | illustrated by Olivia Chin Mueller To be entered to win, just Follow me on Twitter @CelebratePicBks and Retweet a giveaway tweet during this week, January 23 – 29. Already a follower? Thanks! Just Retweet for a chance to win. A winner will be chosen on January 30. Giveaway open to US addresses only. | No Giveaway Accounts Prizing provided by Sterling Children’s Books. National Reading Day Activity Monster Love! Maze Help the love monster gobble up all the Valentine’s Day candy snacks in this printable maze! Monster Love! Maze | Monster Love Maze Solution You can find Mirabele’s Missing Valentines at these booksellers Posted in Anxiety, Book Related Puzzles, Friendship, Kindness, Love, Overcoming Fears, Self-confidence, Social Skills, Valentine's Day Tagged Janet Lawler, Mirable's Missing Valentines, Olivia Chin Mueller, picture book review, Picture Books, Picture Books about Friendship, Picture Books about Kindness, Picture Books about Love, Picture Books about Overcoming Fears, Picture Books about Self-confidence, Picture Books about Social Skills, Picture Books about Valentine's Day, Sterling Children's Books Welcome to Celebrate Picture Books Title Archive H through N O through Z Ged Adamson Astronaut Clayton C. Anderson Marsha Diane Arnold Cale Atkinson Galia Bernstein Cathy Breisacher: Cavekid Birthday Cathy Breisacher: Chip and Curly Michelle Cuevas Sue Lowell Gallion Alison Goldberg Karlin Gray Carole Gerber: If You’re Scary and You Know It! Carole Gerber: The Gifts of the Animals Robie Harris Blake Liliane Hellman and Steven Henry Jannie Ho Jess Keating Ann Ingalls Tara Knudson Jackie Azúa Kramer B.J. Lee Sara Levine Paul Owen Lewis Claire Lordon Kate Louise Margie Markarian Ellen Mayer Deb Pilutti Sydell Rosenberg Erin Danielle Russell Grace Sandford Paul Schmid Jody Jensen Shaffer Deborah Sosin Jane Sutton Vikki VanSickle Jennifer Thermes Wendy Wahman Lindsay Ward Original Book-Related Crafts A Chicken to Crow About Acorn Pumpkins & Jack-O’-Lanterns Appealing Potatoes Board Game Bathtub Clings Bookmobile Craft Briefcase Craft and Dream Job Application Bunny Candy or Organization Jar Campfire Craft Cheery Canary Centerpiece Child’s Sensory Board Come Inside! Cardboard Box Playhouse Decorative Hanger Photograph Hanger Dependable Dragon Pencil Case Doctors & Nurses Clothespin Figures Doughnut or Bagel Craft Douglas Spool Puppy Dress-Up Craft Flip-Flop Plant Holder Foam Bathtub Clings Gingerbread Kids Foam Craft Give Me Your Hand Interchangeable-Piece Puzzle Glass Stone Magnets or Picture Hanger Go Fishing: Magnetic Fish and Fishing Pole Craft & Game Grow Your Own Poem Halloween Mobile Handprint Elephant Craft Jar Full of Love Moo Cow Mug Moose Antlers Headband Nail Polish-Dipped Ornaments Neck Warmer or Pillow Paper Plate Tree Penguins Spice-Bottle Craft Pet Paw Magnet Pocket Poem Carrier Poetry Plant Craft Polar Bear Scarf and Banner Crafts Presidents’ Day Abraham Lincoln Top Hat Chalk Board Radio Desk Organizer Record Chalkboard Bulletin Board Rock Jack-O’-Lantern Roly-Poly Spool Pig and Piglets Rosa’s Very Big Job Paper Dolls School Bus Craft Sensory Muffin Tin Shark Organizer Jar Shaving Cream Wrapping Paper Skating Rink Craft – Magnetic Sleep Buddy Blanket Snow Buddies Snow Man Craft Snowy Day Mind Jar Sparkle Test Tubes Spice Bottle Penguins Spool Elephant Spool Photograph Holder Spoon Flowers Spooky Haunted Graveyard Craft Spoon Lion Storytelling Felt Bear Craft Sweet Syrup Bottle Figure Turkey Craft Vampire Treat Box Windsock Craft Wooden Ball Kitten X-Ray Craft Original Book-Related Games Animal Match-Up Card Game Avast! Pirate Treasure Map Game Beautiful Moths Board Game Create Your Own Pizza Game Egg Carton Chickens and Games Fill the Fishing Tackle Box Game Go Fishing: Magnetic Fish & Fishing Pole Game Grow Your Vegetable Garden Board Game Hot! Hot! Hot! Chili Pepper Game Iditarod Trail Race Board Game In the Soup! Animal Card Game Make a Peanut Butter & Jelly Lunch Game Math Fun Is in the Bag Grocery Game Musical Instruments Card Game Out of this World Tic-Tac-Toe Game Patterned Popsicle Sticks Find-the-Differences Game Sock Tumble Matching Game Wonderful Wildlife Board Game Bookmarks, Bookplate, Books-to-Read List Kindness Cards Matching Puzzles
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Fatehpur district Khaga tehsil Chak Dost Mohammad Chak Dost Mohammad Population, Caste, Working Data Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh - Census 2011 Chak Dost Mohammad is a village situated in Khaga tehsil of Fatehpur district in Uttar Pradesh. As per the Population Census 2011, there are total 86 families residing in the village Chak Dost Mohammad. The total population of Chak Dost Mohammad is 420 out of which 232 are males and 188 are females thus the Average Sex Ratio of Chak Dost Mohammad is 810. The population of Children of age 0-6 years in Chak Dost Mohammad village is 59 which is 14% of the total population. There are 31 male children and 28 female children between the age 0-6 years. Thus as per the Census 2011 the Child Sex Ratio of Chak Dost Mohammad is 903 which is greater than Average Sex Ratio (810) of Chak Dost Mohammad village. As per the Census 2011, the literacy rate of Chak Dost Mohammad is 58.4%. Thus Chak Dost Mohammad village has higher literacy rate compared to 57.4% of Fatehpur district. The male literacy rate is 67.16% and the female literacy rate is 47.5% in Chak Dost Mohammad village. As per constitution of India and Panchyati Raaj Act (Amendment 1998), Chak Dost Mohammad village is administrated by Sarpanch (Head of Village) who is elected representative of the village. Chak Dost Mohammad Data as per Census 2011 As per the Population Census 2011 data, following are some quick facts about Chak Dost Mohammad village. Children 59 31 28 Literacy 58.45% 67.16% 47.5% Scheduled Caste 29 22 7 Illiterate 209 97 112 Schedule Caste (SC) constitutes 6.9% while Schedule Tribe (ST) were 0% of total population in Chak Dost Mohammad village. In Chak Dost Mohammad village out of total population, 326 were engaged in work activities. 34.4% of workers describe their work as Main Work (Employment or Earning more than 6 Months) while 65.6% were involved in Marginal activity providing livelihood for less than 6 months. Of 326 workers engaged in Main Work, 70 were cultivators (owner or co-owner) while 0 were Agricultural labourer. Main Workers 112 94 18 Cultivators 70 68 2 Household Industries 3 1 2 Marginal Workers 214 86 128 Non Working 94 52 42 Map of Chak Dost Mohammad, Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh Nearby Villages to Chak Dost Mohammad, Khaga Below are the list of villages near Chak Dost Mohammad village in Khaga. Paigambarpur Rikouha 1,870 Kura Karnai 493 Chak Din Mohammadpur 1,415 Gaura 2,338 Chak Auhadpur 310 Rasulpur 1,145 Akbarpur Churai 2,752 Madarpur 91 Chak Gazipur 246 Gazipur Kalan 292 Chak Dost Mohammad, Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh - Wikipedia
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Behind Barbed Wire in Century City Saturday May 26, the Los Angeles Temple Visitors’ Center (LATVC) hosted musicians Mary Au and Chika Inoue. The duo’s recital included selected compositions from the last 250 years. The centerpiece of their program was “Behind Barbed Wire,” a piece commissioned to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the signing of Executive Order 9066. Photo: Michael Ray. Mary Au is a chamber musician and a former executive of the Grammy Awards. The performance was the second of the day for the duo. According to Au, they had played earlier at Beyond Baroque as part of an event sponsored by the Venice Japanese American Memorial Monument Committee. Inside the LATVC, Au stated “tonight’s concert was really fantastic, we got to perform ‘Behind Barbed Wire’, composed by Deon Nielsen Price.” Au is a chamber musician and a former executive of the Grammy Awards, she cited that in 2017 she and Chika Inoue played the musical composition with Mary Kageyama Nomura, also known as the “songbird of Manzanar”, at California State University, Dominguez Hills (CSUDH). According to LATVC, “the executive order placed 120,000 American of Japanese ancestry into camps from 1942-1946.” Manzanar in Inyo County, California, was one of the camps. The composition, “Behind Barbed Wire” uses an array of musical styles, including swing, to depict life inside of the camp. “It was a really sad time, and we need to remember so that history does not repeat itself,” said Au. Chika Inoue. Chika Inoue, an on-call saxophonist for the Los Angeles Philharmonic, stated that Mary Au had written a piece about the Watts Riots, and “two years later, Mary commissioned a piece about Japanese internment.” “It is powerful music [with] a powerful message,” she said. The saxophonist is a native of Osaka, Japan, and has played throughout the world in festivals, and concert halls. She started playing the saxophone at 13 when she joined the marching band. “I picked up the saxophone…a really cool looking instrument, and since then I’ve been playing it,” Inoue said. “Classical saxophone is what I do, [however] saxophone is known as more like a jazz instrument.” For young musicians, Inoue advises listening to lots of music, playing different styles and from different cultures. As the performance came to a close, both Mary Au and Chika Inoue greeted the attendees and thanked the LATVC for hosting. The evening’s program of five selected works included George FFrideric Handel’s “Arrival of the Queen of Sheba” (1749), “Franz Schubert’s Arpeggione Sonata in A Minor” (1824), Ryo Noda’s “Improvisation III. for Unaccompanied saxophone (1948), and Darius Milhaud’s “Scaramouche.” For more information: www.aumary.com By Michael Ray June 1, 2018 in Arts and Culture, Century City, Entertainment, News Tadashi Yanai. Photo: Courtesy UCLA. January 17, 2020 Staff Report A rendering of a potential stop in Van Nuys. Photo: Sepulveda Mobility Partners/LA Metro. Featured, News, Traffic + Transportation LA Metro announces five companies competing for project planning and design By Chad Winthrop The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation... The Rancho Park Expo Line station. Photo: Wikimedia Commons. Featured, News, Oped, Politics, Real Estate January 14, 2020 wpengine Every time Scott Wiener amends his SB 50 plan to force much higher housing density on virtually all parts of... The West LA Armory. Photo: Google. January 13, 2020 Sam Catanzaro An aerial rendering of the West Edge. Photos: Hines. Featured, News, Real Estate Construction Begins at Martin Cadillac Redevelopment 8-story, nearly million square foot project underway By Sam Catanzaro Construction has begun on the former Martin Cadillac lot on... Marci Weiner and best friend, Larry Link at a recent charity event. Photos: Courtesy. Arts and Culture, Entertainment, Featured, News January 8, 2020 Marci Weiner This Holiday season has been a difficult one, after losing my beloved husband of 30 years. However, friends have been... An apartment complex on Santa Monica Boulevard a developer wants to demolish and replace with a six-story building. Photo: Google. Featured, News, Real Estate, Uncategorized More Housing Coming Near Century City January 7, 2020 Sam Catanzaro Development continues along Santa Monica Boulevard By Sam Catanzaro A developer wants to replace a largely-vacant housing complex adjacent to... Wexler's Classic Macarthur Park sandwich. Photo: Wexler's Deli (Facebook). Century City, Dining, Featured, News January 6, 2020 Westside Today Staff Popular Jewish deli no longer at Westfield Century City By Kerry Slater Wexler’s Deli, the popular Jewish restaurant known for... Councilmember Paul Koretz who represent Century City and Westwood. Photo: Councilmember Koretz (Facebook). Featured, News, Politics January 3, 2020 wpengine Century City-Westood Councilmember announces bid By Chad Winthrop Los Angeles Councilmember Paul Koretz, who represents Century City and Westwood, has... Photo: Sam Catanzaro. Featured, News, Real Estate, Westwood State Rent Control Law Too Little Too Late for Westwood? California rent control law in effect By Sam Catanzaro With the new year, a sweeping rent control bill has taken...
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Slugging Twins Set Road HR Record In 10-5 Rout Of White Sox Filed Under:Chicago White Sox, Minnesota Twins, MLB CHICAGO (AP) — Jake Cave homered twice, C.J. Cron went deep and the surging Minnesota Twins set a major league record for home runs on the road in a 10-5 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Thursday. Chicago White Sox starting pitcher Dylan Cease (84) throws against the Minnesota Twins during the first inning of a baseball game Thursday, Aug. 29, 2019, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Mark Black) Cave led off the third with drive off Dylan Cease to give Minnesota 139 homers away from home, eclipsing the mark of 138 set by San Francisco in 2001. Cron, the next hitter, followed with a homer to center. Cave added a shot in the seventh for his second career multi-homer game, increasing the Twins’ overall total to 261. The record for homers in a season, 267, was set last year by the New York Yankees. Cron doubled and had three RBIs in a three-hit afternoon, and Nelson Cruz drove in in three runs as the AL Central leaders won their fifth straight. In sweeping a three-game series with sliding Chicago, Minnesota (82-51) moved to 31 games above .500 for the first time since September 2010. Minnesota Twins shortstop Jorge Polanco (11) catches up with Chicago White Sox’s Yolmer Sanchez (5) during a rundown between second and third in the fifth inning of a baseball game Thursday, Aug. 29, 2019, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Mark Black) © 2019 by STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
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M-F 9-5PM, SAT 12-6PM Lauren McKee Nominated by Northern Illinois University Lauren McKee is a visual artists whose work is influenced by themes of nostalgia, necessity and cataloging. Through the use of pattern and imagery as a form of communication, McKee compares the past and the present. By dividing an existing image into two equal parts, she creates a double which displays the positive and negative result. This allows the work to posses a balance and flow that naturally guides the viewer around referential patterns communicating the basic needs - food, clothing, shelter, and self. Through the deconstruction and reassembling of imagery into pattern, the work plays with a combination of abstraction and realism, as vintage periods are juxtaposed with the present day. Lauren is a recent graduate of Northern Illinois University. Image: Town House, Collage, 2013. LAUNCH Invitational ©2019 Chicago Artists Coalition. All rights reserved. 2130 W. Fulton Street, Chicago, IL 60612 Monday - Friday, 9-5PM Saturday, 12-6PM
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← 23 Review Street – a Book Blog: Sophie's "Favourite of the Week" Christy's Cozy Corners: Looking For La La review → Rabid Readers: Chat with “Looking for La La’s” Ellie Campbell. Posted on June 3, 2013 by chicklitsisters | Leave a comment Yes, we’re in the UK Top 100 novels for under 2.99 and with perfect timing we have this fun interview with Rabid Reader’s Tammy Dewhirst. Thank you, Tammy. Looking for La La author Ellie Campbell – also known as sister team Pam Burks and Lorraine Campbell kindly consented to “sit down” for an interview. When coming up with the questions I struggled with what I wanted to know having read the novel with what the reader who hasn’t yet experienced the fun that is Cathy O’Farrell would want to know before diving into the fray. The end result is a little of both. Stay tuned to the end of the interview for information about how you can win your own copy of Looking for La La by Ellie Cambell. To read my review of Looking for La La click here. Question 1: I see that you live halfway across the world from each other. How did you come to the decision to write together? My dad and I live quite a distance from each other and that enables us to get along better on a personal and working level. Do you find this to be the case as well? Pam: In many ways yes. We are less than two years difference in age and we get on extremely well as sisters and friends. However, professionally we’ve found that working apart actually suits us. I have been over to Colorado to visit Lorraine, hoping to work on a few things, and we found we did very little. As soon as I got home we were on email, skype and internet immediately swapping ideas and stories. It seems to work for us better at a distance. Lorraine: Not to mention that if we disagree on anything we put the phone down (I didn’t say slam it, did I?) and cool off. All sisters argue and it’s easier to be touchy and sensitive if you’re face to face. As for writing together, we were both writing short stories and found we enjoyed sending our work to each other for comment, criticism, suggestions for improvement… a writer’s group of two, if you like. It grew out of that. Question 2: Your writing style is very cohesive. Is one of you the idea person and the other the writer? No, we’re both into it all, hashing over the story, sitting down to write a section. Sometimes we can’t wait to tell the other the new idea we had in the night, talking possibilities over and elaborating like a pair of old gossips. As for the ‘writer’s voice’, I think we sound alike even when we talk, it’s quite jarring hearing a story or a joke come out of your sister’s mouth that is exactly what you might have said. There are times when one of us is doing more writing – usually if we’re in a major rewrite – and the other is editing frantically and there are times when one of us feels more creative and carries the load for a day or two. But we both go over each scene, paragraph, line, cutting and reworking if necessary. At the end of the day it’s hard to remember who wrote what and who came up with what plot point. Question 3: I recently heard an interview where a script writer working in a team said that teams enable a writer to keep the best material because the best material is always that of which you’re unsure. Is there a scene in “Looking for La La” you might have cut without having the assurance of the other person? We actually cut some of our favorite scenes… for length, or because one of us thought the book could survive without it, and because our final rule is if one of us seriously questions or hates something, it’s out. But yes, we might get cold feet over the day’s work and need the other one to tell us it’s good. As far as specific scenes in Looking For La La, I remember us debating whether having Cathy steal Alec’s glass (for fingerprints) in the office party scene was too outrageous and deciding that given her character (and inebriation) it wasn’t beyond belief. Question 4: I notice that you’ve quoted Douglas Adams on your Facebook page. I have a number of DNA fans that follow my website. We must know, are you hoopy froods? Lorraine: Sadly, we can’t claim to be that together. I rarely know where anything is, let alone remember to bring a towel on my travels or carry it on Towel Day. But living in England when Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy came out, first as the BBC radio show and then the book, it was a cultural phenomenon as huge as Monty Python, everyone talking about hoopy froods and quoting the funniest bits. So of course we were part of that and I do remember laughing through the book, though it’s been a while. Question 5: The story in “Looking for La La” was based on Pam’s personal experience. Did Pam take the Cathy route to solving the mystery? Is Pam the real Cathy? Pam: Not quite that insane! And I didn’t try to solve the mystery. I decided the postcard was a bad joke or stupid prank but it made a great idea for a novel. However, like Cathy, I had an amazing group of close friends when the children were small and I remember when the children went back to school, us all struggling with decisions of what direction our lives should take – go back to the old job, start a new career, have another child? I was lucky in that I was offered an interesting job which I loved by a very good friend of mine. Question 6: There is a feeling at several points of the story that what Cathy says is written to ring in an ironic sense to the reader, is this the case? In location 328 of the Kindle copy she comments “And this is supposed to be a liberated society” but she is the one who keeps herself as a “prisoner” at home (in her mind). Yes, the irony is intended. And, yes, it is Cathy’s fears that keep her prisoner when she obviously misses her former working life and would be a lot happier with more independence, money, stimulation and everything a job could bring. She’s very much in self-denial, full of self-doubt, sticking her head in the sand when she has to face something she is terrified of – in this case change. But then her self-esteem is at an all-time low, she’s lost confidence in her ability to function outside the world of motherhood and her stubbornness comes into play. Because expectations are being made of her and she feels she’s being pushed to action, she’s digging in her heels. But although Cathy’s extreme, a lot of people are scared by that next big move – be it marriage, kids, a career change… Question 7: Raz and Cathy do the spit shake which could be considered odd for women of their age until you get to know them. Is that something you, as sisters, do in your life? Well, probably, we did as kids. Can’t remember the last time but I’m sure our hands were pretty dirty and knees scabby. But it’s part of the fun of Raz and Cathy’s relationship that they allow each other to be silly and playful, almost like an escape from their stressful adult lives. Question 7: Your story-lines were pretty well resolved even down to ones that may have seemed minor – the hang up caller. Did you plot the course before writing “Looking for La La” or was it a case of keeping track as you went along. It’s very organic. We have certain things plotted and certain things seem to write themselves. Then we might put “clues” in earlier, to tease the reader. Question 7: Cathy is written in the spirit of the great British comedy characters. If “Looking for La La” were to be made into a movie, who do you see playing her? I must admit, I pictured the great Welsh actress, Ruth Jones, in the role. Well, Cathy, of course, would suggest Eva Mendes, and she’d probably hang about the set, making a nuisance of herself. She’d love to be that glamorous and sophisticated. But our choice? Ruth Jones would be great. Are you listening, Ruth?? Question 8: Your cover perfectly conveys the novel. Who created the cover? Andrew Brown from Design for Writers. Recommended to us by Kirsty Greenwood, who is a fabulous chick lit author, who runs the site Novelicious. We felt so lucky to have found someone like him as a designer. He made the process so easy, that we feel indebted to him, and he came up with the idea of Cathy staring over the fence. Question 9: I recently compiled a list of 42 novels for Towel Day. If you could list 2 novels you think everyone should read, what novels (or non-fiction works) would they be? If had to narrow it down to two books, I would perhaps say “Gone With The Wind’ and “Lord Of The Rings”. They’re both such epic masterpieces. Question 10: What is coming next for Ellie Campbell? We just published our two other novels How To Survive Your Sisters and When Good Friends Go bad in the States for the first time. We haven’t really started to promote them yet so they are very much hidden amongst the millions of other great reads. Watch this space though. We also have a fourth novel which is currently with our agent and which hopefully will come out next year. Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions. They were fun. Thank you, Tammy, for asking them. Ellie Campbell is running a fabulous contest on their Facebook Page to win a copy of Looking for La La. Click here for details. Looking for La La has been selected for the top 100 novels under £2.99 and has been listed at amazon.co.uk for £0.99! Perfect time for my UK fans to try this fabulous work. via Chat with “Looking for La La’s” Ellie Campbell.. This entry was posted in Interviews and tagged Amazon, chick lit, chicklit, Design For Writers, Gone With The Wind, Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, hoopy frood, humor, interview, Lord Of The Rings, Rabid Readers, Towel Day. Bookmark the permalink.
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Citation Alert (off) Regional Economic Outlook, April 2018, Asia Pacific : Good Times, Uncertain Times: A Time to Prepare Get Code Buy International Monetary Fund. Asia and Pacific Dept http://dx.doi.org/10.5089/9781484339886.086 Asia is expected to grow by about 51/2 percent this year, accounting for nearly two-thirds of global growth, and the region remains the world's most dynamic by a considerable margin. But despite the strong outlook, policymakers must remain vigilant. While risks around the forecast are broadly balanced for now, they are skewed firmly to the downside over the medium term. Key risks include those of further market corrections-possibly triggered by inflation surprises and/or faster-than-expected monetary tightening in advanced economies-a shift toward protectionist policies, and an increase in geopolitical tensions. Regional Economic Outlook, April 2018, Asia Pacific 1. Good Times, Uncertain Times: A Time to Prepare 2. Low Inflation in Asia: How Long Will It Last? You are not logged in and do not have access to this content. Please login or, to subscribe to IMF eLibrary, please click here Other Resources Citing This Publication look up citations for this publication in google scholar
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Confronting the Long Crisis of Globalization: Risk, Resilience and International Order o The nature of risks to global security has changed dramatically since the fall of the Berlin Wall, but our mechanisms for preventing, responding and adapting to them have lagged far behind. While there have been limited efforts to develop more effective international responses, these have been piecemeal and have produced only modest increases in global resilience. This report serves as a think piece to stimulate discussion about possible solutions. Author(s) / Contributor(s): Alex Evans, Bruce Jones, David Steven Topic(s): Crises, Fragile States, G8 and G20, Resource Scarcity The fourth edition of the Annual Review of Global Peace Operations was published by Lynn Reinner Publishers on 3 March 2009 and can be downloaded here "An essential resource for understanding peacekeeping’s contribution to international security."— Stephen Stedman, Stanford University Concepts and Dilemmas of Statebuilding in Fragile Situations : From Fragility to Resilience This report follows upon earlier work commissioned by the Fragile States Group to further reflections within the international community on Whole of Government Approaches to Fragile States and Service Delivery in Fragile Situations : Key Concepts, Findings and Lessons. This report will help to promote greater consensus and clarity within and outside the DAC on what state building means in a situation of fragility. Such consensus is essential if international actors are to play a constructive role in this critically important but complex, highly political and nationally driven process. Author(s) / Contributor(s): Center on International Cooperation, Bruce Jones Topic(s): Emerging Powers, Fragile States The International Role in Libya's Transition Kofi Annan’s U.N. Mission Is Last-Ditch Push for Diplomacy in Syria Despite Past Differences, U.N.'s Ban Turns to Annan for Syria Annan is security crisis envoy Kofi Annan Appointed as Special Envoy: New Hope for Syria?
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Panther Involvement Network (PIN) Finance & Admin Development and Alumni Affairs Instructional Innovation and Technology PR and Marketing Communications College of Law Library Office of Faculty Affairs Andrew Young School of Policy Studies Byrdine F. Lewis College of Nursing and Health Professions College of Education & Human Development Institute for Biomedical Sciences J. Mack Robinson College of Business Perimeter College Undergraduate Degrees and Majors Graduate Degrees and Majors International Students & Scholar Services Academic Pathways Offered What Will It Cost What Will It Cost You Need Money For School? Bachelor Programs Offered Your Alumni Association Join the Alumni Association Panther News Show Your Spirit Georgia State License Plate Panther Cubs Print/Email Search/Directory Atlanta Review of Journalism History (ARJH) Journal of Middle East Media World Media Forum CIME Partnership with Beijing Foreign Studies University CIME Hosts World Media Forums Arab-U.S. Association for Communication Educators CIME Publishes Two Annual Journals The Center for Media Education (CIME) is dedicated to advancing cooperation, networking, and understanding among media professionals, scholars, educators, and students through research, education, and service. CIME was established at Georgia State University in the Communication Department in 1995 and has continued to create a forum to promote international and intercultural exchanges of information, perspectives, ideas, research, publications and visits. Since its inception, CIME has expanded services and programs through global partnerships with the United Nations, the U.S. State Department, CNN and numerous universities and professional media organizations throughout the world. AUSACE Since 1995, the Arab-U.S. Association for Communication Educators has encouraged the advancement of professional relationships among Arab and U.S. academics. This continuing series was begun in 1993 as part of a Program for International Media Education. CIME hosted its 75th WMF in 2013. CIME initiatives include Journalism Education and Professionalism projects across the Arab World, Africa, South Asia, and China. Atlanta Review of Journalism History ARJH is an annual refereed journal inviting research on U.S. and international journalism history. JMEM is the first peer-reviewed journal dedicated exclusively to research on media in the Middle East. CIME was founded by Dr. Leonard Teel, professor in the Department of Communication. New Publication from AUSACE Board Member New Publication from AUSACE Board Member Sheds Light on Egyptian Revolution Congratulations to AUSACE Board Member Dr. Sahar Khamis on the publication of her co-authored… more » Yarmouk University Faculty of Communication holds its Fourth Conference, entitled “Digital Communication in the Time of Disclosure” in cooperation with the Arab-U.S. Association for Communication… more » Georgia State University33 Gilmer Street SE Atlanta, GA404-413-2000 Contact Georgia StateView legal statementPrivacy NoticesState AuthorizationWebsite Feedback©2020 Georgia State University
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/ GAMING New 'DOOM' Movie First Look, Title And Synopsis Revealed By Tyler Fischer - March 10, 2019 03:11 pm EDT (Photo: Universal Pictures via Dread Central) Our first look at Universal Picture's upcoming direct-to-video DOOM movie is here, courtesy of some new and official images. Further, word of the the movie's title has surfaced alongside a story synopsis. According to Dread Central, Universal Picture's DOOM movie will be titled DOOM: Annihilation, and follow a group of space marines responding to a distress call from a base on a Martian moon. “DOOM: Annihilation follows a group of space marines as they respond to a distress call from a base on a Martian moon, only to discover it’s been overrun by demonic creatures who threaten to create Hell on Earth," reads an official story synopsis. The "space marines" mentioned in the synopsis have been confirmed to be UAC marines, or in other words, the team from the video game franchise. On top of a title and story synopsis, three official images from the movie -- again, courtesy of Dread Central -- have been revealed. You can check them all out, below: At the moment of publishing, there's been no word of when exactly the movie will release, but we do know it will be sometime later this year during the fall season. For those that don't know: DOOM: Annihilation is written and directed by Tony Giglio, executive produced by Lorzeno Di Bonaventura and John Wells, and produced by Jeffery Beach, Phillip Roth, and Ogden Gavanski. Meanwhile, the cast features the likes of Amy Manson, Dominic Mafham, Nina Bergman, and Luke Allen-Gale. Are you interested in seeing DOOM: Annihilation? In this latest episode, we talk Arrow coming to an end, new Avengers: Endgame footage shown, a HUGE Captain Marvel discussion & so much more! Make sure to subscribe now and never miss an episode! Ubisoft Making Big Structural Changes to Create Better and More Unique Games Pokemon: Twilight Wings Teases Gym Leaders Story Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Confirms Highly Requested Feature Is Coming in Next Update The Last of Us Part 2 Director Promises to Make PlayStation Gamers Proud Microsoft Shares Promising News About the Future of Xbox Game Pass Sonic the Hedgehog Movie Reveals New TV Spots Dragon Ball Artist Celebrates Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot Release with Hilarious Broly Art New Disney Show Getting an Official Video Game Adaptation on Consoles and PC
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/ Marvel Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings Falcon & The Winter Soldier Marvel: Future Fight Marvel: Contest Of Champions Chris Pratt Reviews 'Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse' By Adam Barnhardt - December 5, 2018 04:01 pm EST The world premiere for Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse was held over the weekend and now that advanced screenings are being held for press and the like, more and more people are taking to Twitter to share their thoughts on the movie. One of the latest celebrities to share their thoughts on the microblogging platform is none other that Star-Lord himself, Chris Pratt. The Guardians of the Galaxy star shared his thoughts on Into The Spider-Verse and they weren't close to being short of supportive. "YOU HAVE TO SEE #spiderman #intothespiderverse We LOVED it!" Pratt tweeted. "Truly an original. Chris Miller and Phil Lord (LEGO Movie directors) absolutely crushed this emotionally moving, cutting edge, progressive, diverse, funny, meta, action packed, silly, visually stunning masterpiece!" Pratt, of course, has a pretty close working relationship to Lord and Miller, the producers behind Into The Spider-Verse. The two directed The LEGO Movie and serve as producers — and writers — for the follow-up The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part. Pratt voices Emmet Brickowski, the lead character in both films. With Into The Spider-Verse having a very positive reception — it has a 100% Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes as of this writing — it's but a matter of time before Sony begins to expand off the universe set up in the movie. In fact, the studio has already green-lit two additional properties based off of Into The Spider-Verse. That was the plan from the beginning, according to Lord and Miller. Speaking with ComicBook.com, the duo admitted they wanted more properties to branch off of it. Look, we wanted to make a movie that felt like it was the tip of the iceberg," Lord admitted. "You could imagine all of these other things. So it's music to our ears that people could imagine a Spider-Noir film, and the Spider-Ham insane cartoon." "Right. We still have the horse," Miller said. "We've got to put the cart behind it. So we'll let it ride down the road a few blocks before we get too big for our britches." Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse stars Shameik Moore as Miles Morales, Jake Johnson (Peter Parker), Spider-Man Noir (Nic Cage), Hailee Steinfeld (Spider-Gwen), Spider-Ham (John Mulaney), Liev Schreiber (Wilson Fisk), and Kimiko Glenn (Peni Parker). Are you looking forward to the budding animated universe from Sony? What character are you looking forward to seeing most? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below! Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse is set to swing into theaters on December 14th. Chris Hemsworth Teams With NatGeo for Real-Life Superhero Docu-Series Limitless People Are Super Confused Why The Incredible Hulk is Trending Marvel Studios Rumored to Be Actively Casting Hulkling New Black Widow Toys Could Spoil Big Plot Detail Spider-Man Fan Imagines the MCU Debut of the Sinister Six With Epic Logo Sony Sneakily Hinted at Plans to Bridge Its Spider-Man Universe With the MCU Years Ago Is Marvel Setting Up the Future of the MCU With Empyre? ComicBook Nation Episode 98: DC’S Crisis on Infinite Earths Spoilers & Bad Boys 3 Review
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Nat Gas / LNG Petrol versus EV We're freezing! Isn't it great? The carbon tax must be working! Anilkumar Gupta September 12, 2018 in Nat Gas / LNG Anilkumar Gupta + 1 India has seen a huge surge in two wheelers users in last 5 years. The government has begun thinking in terms of rapid electrification of India two-wheeler fleet. A time frame of five to seven years for the full transition is now being talked about. Savings to the tune of Rs 1.20 lakh crore (120 billion rupees) in crude oil imports is being bandied around in government circles. Refineries in India are taking into account while doing strategic planning. Can it happen in that timeframe, realistically? I'm asking because lots of governments have very ambitious electrification targets but they don't really sound realistic for the most part. Jan van Eck + 5,182 14 minutes ago, Marina Schwarz said: Sure it can. Building electric bicycles and electric motorcycles is (relatively) easy to do, especially bicycles. What you are adding is a hub motor and a battery pack, plus a throttle and a charge controller, which can be separate and plug-in. They draw very little power to recharge, so you don't worry about grid issues. As the amount of power for each unit is quite small, they remain simple enough to fabricate. My electric bicycle only has 27 little cells in the pack, yet can run at 45 mph. Building bicycles with lower power than that, meaning less speed, gets even cheaper. For a poor country it is a classic solution. And for a country with a top-down bureaucracy, I anticipate that it would be easy enough to Order - simply outlaw the importation of gasoline scooters. The larger benefit would be in removal of air pollution. Those small scooter motors are notorious polluters. ceo_energemsier + 1,365 8 hours ago, Marina Schwarz said: The only problem with that in India is I think its called rolling blackouts. In most parts of the country they dont have power half the time ..... https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/picturegalleries/worldnews/9442080/Huge-power-cut-in-India-600-million-without-electricity-in-biggest-ever-blackout.html The situation hasnt changed much in India since that event. There are rolling power outages almost on a daily basis across India. 2 hours ago, mthebold said: I would say the answer to this is, "It's technically feasible, but as with everything else, India will fail at it." A bit harsh on our Indian friends. No need to kick a man................ 5 minutes ago, mthebold said: When I fail, I admit it, learn from it, and do better the next time. The first step is admitting you have a problem. Objectively speaking, India has a track record of not lifting itself out of poverty, not developing high technology, and not achieving stated economic goals. Until they, as a culture, do some introspection and make significant changes, my guess is that string of failures will continue. That's not a malicious statement; it's the level of objectivity necessary to find a root cause. Anyone who takes criticism personally is missing the point. Yeah, I get it. I lived there for a year and our son was even born while we were there, I get it. The fact that they get up every morning and keep trying is amazing. And I'm talking about the executives! I agree with all of your points above, too. They can be defensive and even a tad delusional; I think you'd have to develop those defense mechanisms to deal with the reality on the ground every day. One of the toughest questions I used to get was "which one do you think is better: India or China?" Talk about delusional. In all honesty, I think they get it, too. When I say "No need to kick a man....." I mean it as that is how it must feel to them to see it in a casual forum. Not a personal dig at you and I absolutely know you didn't mean it that way, it just seemed a bit harsh to read. Having said all of that, your experiences will have been unique, and they are quite capable of standing up for themselves if they take offense. Sorry if I've made an issue out of nothing. jaycee + 348 All very well the indian govement telling the world they will convert their scooters to electric but none of them own one its the poor people of thier country that do and then comes the simple question who is going to pay for it? In India a scooter is an expensive item for those that buy it converting it is an expense they cannot afford I suggest unless the government has plans to pay for the scooter conversions, street power points and upgrade their very dodgy electricity system there is no hope it will happen. Edited October 19, 2018 by jaycee I'm not seeing this as an "issue"; I just don't understand how the truth is considered kicking a person. It is what it is. Guillaume Albasini + 701 Solar powered charging stations could be a way to overcome the frequent power shortages. On 9/12/2018 at 8:53 PM, Jan van Eck said: You might have to address this situation first: There is also this mighty issue: Power Theft in India Indian middle class is 24 million, not 264 million: Credit Suisse Good luck with charging. DA? + 301 Again it comes down to economics. The neighbours son want a moped, when asked why he doesn't want an electric bike (just as quick) it's not cool he wants something that's loud to impress the girls. Here in France he can afford it, he will pay considerably more to be "cool". For many people in the world a moped is a means of getting from A to B that's it and is a major expense. Being cool isn't going to be a major facture and the lowest cost wins out. Maybe with that money saved they can buy a solar system so not have to worry about black outs and charge their bikes. Also having spent time in India and similar countries (economically) I can see a new industry been created converting those old moped and such over to electric. It's amazing what some people can do with a few tools and will power. Edited October 19, 2018 by DA? more to say ronwagn + 2,199 Here I go again. Natural gas can run the motor scooters with no problem. It has become the fuel of choice for the three wheel conveyances India uses. I would stick with electricity for the bikes. I want one myself but worry about safety for practical use in my area or all but rural areas. http://ngvindiasummit.com/ http://www.ngvglobal.com/blog/indias-natural-gas-fuelled-transport-sector-poised-growth-2018-0217 http://www.ngvglobal.com/blog/all-new-santro-cng-introduced-by-hyundai-india-1023 Edited November 4, 2018 by ronwagn 5 hours ago, ronwagn said: https://cleantechnica.com/2018/10/31/indias-1-5-million-electric-vehicles-why-youve-never-heard-of-them/ Electric seems to be starting to be the choice for three wheelers now. 14 hours ago, DA? said: Do you have a reference for that? Wikipedia mentions it deep in their auto-rickshaw article. They started being popular this year apparently. Will be watching how that works out. Unfortunately, they will probably be burning coal to produce the electricity. On 10/19/2018 at 3:54 AM, DA? said: Is thievery a big problem with bikes and mopeds in Asia? 2 minutes ago, ronwagn said: 12 hours ago, ronwagn said: Think that as far back as I know comes from Yahoo Finance. India seems to be starting to move rapidly to solar and wind, so their grid should become cleaner. Probably as everywhere, but makes no difference. Only problem I saw in India with mopeds were the dangerous roads, was going to buy one out there but glad I didn't especially after dealing with a chap that died after been hit by a truck. Just look the number of cheap electric rickshaws already available on Alibaba : https://www.alibaba.com/showroom/electric-rickshaw.html Yogi + 1 Sure it can. Building electric bicycles and electric motorcycles is (relatively) easy to do, especially bicycles. What you are adding is a hub motor and a battery pack, plus a throttle and a charge controller, which can be separate and plug-in. They draw very little power to recharge, so you don't worry about grid issues. As the amount of power for each unit is quite small, they remain simple enough to fabricate. My electric bicycle only has 27 little cells in the pack, yet can run at 45 mph. Building bicycles with lower power than that, meaning less speed, gets even cheaper. For a poor country it is a classic solution. And for a country with a top-down bureaucracy, I anticipate that it would be easy enough to Order - simply outlaw the importation of gasoline scooters. India hardly imports scooters or any other two wheelers except high HP bikes. It is one of the largest producers of two wheelers and an exporters. So it will require the companies like Hero, Honda, Bajaj, TVS, Suzuki, Yamaha and Mahindra to convert to production of electric 2 wheelers. As of now only Mahundra, TVS & Bajaj have announced definite plans On 9/13/2018 at 3:49 AM, ceo_energemsier said: You need to update your knowledge. In the last few years India has been through one of the most aggressive electrification programmes ever Auson + 118 I thought people just wanted 2 ton virtue signaling Teslas to save the planet. But seriously I think anything lightweight and electric could be the future for green transportation so I'm all for electric bikes of any type.
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About CECD About Chagas What is Chagas Disease? How is Chagas Disease Spread? Where is Chagas Found? Chagas in the US Chagas Disease in California Chagas Disease and Immigration Chagas Links & Information Could I Have Chagas? Chagas Symptoms How to Get Tested Talking to your doctor about chagas CENTER OF EXCELLENCE FOR CHAGAS DISEASE Housed within the Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in Sylmar, California, the Center of Excellence for Chagas Disease (CECD) is the only organization in the United States fully dedicated to providing comprehensive care for people affected by Chagas disease. The Center of Excellence for Chagas Disease (CECD) at the Olive View-UCLA Medical Center will provide care for Chagas disease and supports the principle that healthcare is a human right. The CECD will lead efforts to expand screening and treatment of this neglected disease in the United States. A hidden disease… Chagas disease is a parasitic infection caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi. It is spread mainly by blood-sucking insects known as kissing bugs. Not everyone gets symptoms, but 30-40% of people infected with the parasite eventually develop heart disease or other serious complications. This happens 20-30 years after they were initially infected. Most people are unaware they have Chagas disease; less than 1% have been diagnosed. To learn more about Chagas disease, click the links below. Where is Chagas disease found? How does Chagas disease spread? Could I have Chagas disease? Is there a cure for Chagas disease? Chagas Disease at a Glance People Infected Worldwide People Infected in the US Deaths Per Year Countries Affected If you have been diagnosed with Chagas, their is treatment available. Please contact us as soon as possible so that we may help you find the care you need. Get Involved today We need the help of healthcare professionals to test and treat people with Chagas. If you are interested in Volunteering, contact us today. What is Chagas © 2017 The Chagas Center For Excellence | Privacy Policy | Site Map
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Indiana Topics Indianapolis Public Schools Innovation schools Teacher pay Indiana General Assembly Early Childhood Education Charter schools All Topics Indiana ​ Lawmakers want more research before they spend big on preschool. When it comes to vouchers, there’s no such hesitation. By Shaina Cavazos PHOTO CREDIT: Megan Mangrum/Chalkbeat The The Starting Line Newsletter: A roundup of early childhood stories from across the country. Delivered to your inbox every month. Lawmakers have demanded lots of proof to determine whether preschool helps kids before deciding to significantly boost its funding, despite dozens of studies showing that students who attend high-quality preschool perform much better in school than students who don’t. Yet they’ve requested no long-term study of another similarly designed, tuition support program — vouchers for private schools, a program that launched in 2011 and has seen hundreds of millions of dollars in state support. In research that does exist on the effectiveness of vouchers in other states, results are mixed, at best, and show relatively small effects on kids. “Nobody is talking about whether vouchers as a policy proposal are resulting in students achieving at higher levels,” said Rep. Terri Austin, a Democrat from Anderson and former educator. “We pick and choose. What do we really want? It becomes using data as an excuse instead of a rationale to drive policy.” The disparity in evidence and money spent is concerning for some Indiana lawmakers, educators and researchers, particularly when the state is poised to spend more than $300 million on vouchers over the next couple years. That’s compared to the $40 million for preschool over the same period that barely managed to squeeze through after months of negotiating in the GOP-controlled legislature. “We’re taking public money and putting it to private use without even assessing whether that use has been good or bad,” said Rep. Ed DeLaney, an Indianapolis Democrat. “This is a very dangerous concept.” Both issues were heavily debated in the recent legislative session, resulting in more state dollars to each program. But as part of preschool negotiations, Republican legislators have continued to ask to see more data from a long-term, state-backed local study of the program, which launched in 2014. Republican legislative leaders have not requested — or funded — a study on Indiana’s voucher program. But researchers at Notre Dame University and the University of Kentucky are expected to publish a study in the coming months that shows results from the state program’s first six years. Early results presented at a 2015 conference in Florida showed that in the first three years of the voucher program, students who switched from public to private schools using vouchers experienced “significant losses” in math, with little to no effect in English, compared to how they did at their public school. In fact, legislators had a chance to learn about the outcomes of vouchers before continuing to invest so heavily in them. Ashlyn Nelson, an Indiana University education researcher, was involved in a prior attempt to study the state’s program under state Superintendent Tony Bennett, but that agreement was cancelled at the last minute, she said. “To me that represents the extreme of an ideological devotion to something,” Nelson said. “You are advancing ideological claims about the benefits of a program … and then saying we’re not going to even allow the program to be evaluated to see whether it fulfills the promises.” Perhaps even more perplexing to Democrats and others who support Indiana’s preschool program is that preschool tuition support operates very much as a voucher program for 4-year-olds. Families choose a public or private preschool, and then the school receives money from the state to help pay tuition. Despite the similarities, some Republican lawmakers see preschool vouchers as government supplanting family, but kindergarten vouchers as a parent making a deliberate choice in their child’s best interest. Elena Silva, a researcher at New America, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, said this contradictory ideology isn’t unusual. She’s seen the same rhetoric across the nation that upholds vouchers as freedom of choice and expansive state-funded preschool as government intrusion. But regardless of which side you sit on, she said, the result is the same: The state taking on a greater role in education. “As soon as you enter into that,” Silva said. “You are essentially shaking hands with the government.” Shaina Cavazos @ShainaRC scavazos@chalkbeat.org More stories in Indiana IPS regains control of 3 schools in a dramatic end to state takeover By Dylan Peers McCoy Indiana officials end takeover of Roosevelt, returning it to the troubled Gary district By Emma Kate Fittes Holcomb pledges to spend $250M from surplus in 2021 to increase Indiana school funding More stories in Charters & Choice Struggling charter schools implore Memphis board to ‘look at the entire record’ in the community before voting to close them By Laura Faith Kebede Charter school growth drives enrollment increase in Memphis schools More voucher advocates join Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee’s administration pre-kindergarten Preschool Vouchers Chalkbeat is rooted in local communities. Be the first to know what’s happening in education in Indiana. Follow Indiana:
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Call for papers for themed issues Vol. 2, No. 2 (2018) / Interactivity as a Vector of the Socialization of Art Vladimir Bogomyakov Tyumen State University, Russia Marina Chistyakova Tyumen State University, Russia DOI: https://doi.org/10.15826/csp.2018.2.2.036 The article presents research into the role of interactive practices in the development of contemporary art. By “interactive” is meant a creative work based on a two-way interaction with the viewer. Such a creative work is capable of responding to the recipient’s actions as well as changing under their influence. Interactive work is process-based, variable and open to interpretations. The history of the establishment of interactive contemporary art practices, which may be traced back to the historical avant-garde, punctuated by such important stages for contemporary art as the performative and social turns, is considered alongside ruptured art conventions associated with their advent. It is assumed that the various possibilities for interactivity are correlated with different media types (old/new/post). Interactivity is considered in terms of an important socialization factor in the various modifications of interactive art, including participatory art, as well as collaborative and collective artistic practices. Vladimir Bogomyakov, Tyumen State University, Russia Vladimir Bogomyakov, Doctor of Philosophy, is professor at Tyumen State University, Russia. His main research interests are in the formation of new geo-spatial discourse (geo-poetics, psycho-geography; in addition, he studies new socio-cultural practices (Street-art, public-art, and contemporary social activism). Marina Chistyakova, Tyumen State University, Russia Marina Chistyakova, Doctor of Philosophy, is professor at Tyumen State University, Russia. Her main research interests are in the sphere of aesthetic anthropology revealing transformation of human sensitivity in the context of historical avant-garde and neo-avant-garde; in addition, she studies social potential of contemporary art-practices, and media-art. Adashevskaia, L. (2011). Interaktivnaia zavisimost’ [Interactive addiction]. Dialog iskusstv, 6, 96–101. Bishop, K. (2010). Sotsial’no angazhirovannoe iskusstvo nado otsenivat’ tol’ko esteticheski (interv’iu) [Socially engaged art should be evaluated only aesthetically (interview)]. Retrieved from: http://os.colta.ru/art/events/details/16799/ Bishop, K. (2015). Tsifrovoi raskol [Digital split]. Khudozhestvennyi zhurnal, 96. Retrieved from: http://moscowartmagazine.com/issue/18/article/255 Bourriaud, N. (2016). Reliatsionnaia estetika. Postproduktsiia [Relation aesthetics. Postproduction]. Moscow: Ad Marginem Press. Esche, Ch. (2005). Sovremennye predlozheniia i bezrassudnyi optimism [Contemporary suggestions and thoughtless optimism]. Khudozhestvennyi zhurnal, 58/59, 6–8. Goldberg, R. (2015). Iskusstvo perfomansa. Ot futurisma do nashih dnei [The art of performance. From futurism till nowadays]. Moscow: Ad Marginem Press. Groys, B. (2018). V potoke [In the flow]. Moscow: Ad Marginem Press. Jacob, M. (2013). Iskusstvo – eto sotsialnaia praktika [Art is a social practice]. Retrieved from: https://theoryandpractice.ru/posts/7451-mary-jane-jacob Kester, G. (2013). Kollaboratsiia, iskusstvo I subkultury [Collaboration, art and sub-cultures]. Khudozhestvennyi zhurnal, 89, 38–53. Kravagna, Ch. (2014). Rabota v soobshestve [Work in a community]. Retrieved from: https://art1.ru/2014/09/02/rabota-v-soobshhestve-2-42598 Lindt, M. (2013). Povorot k sotrudnichestvu [Turn to collaboration]. Logos, 25(4), 88–121. Manovich, L. (2017). Torii soft-kultury [Theories of soft-culture]. Nizhnii Novgorod: Krasnaya Lastochka. Paul, K. (2017). Tsifrovoe iskusstvo [Digital art]. Moscow: Ad Marginem Press. Toffler, A. (1999). Tretya volna [The third wave]. Moscow: AST. Virno, P. (2013). Grammatika mnozhestva. K analizu form sovremennoy zhizni [Gramma of variety. Toward the analysis of forms of contemporary life]. Moscow: Ad Marginem Press. Weibel, P. (2011). Perepisyvaia miry. Iskusstvo i deiatel’nost’ [Rewriting worlds. Art and Activity]. In: 10++ programmnyh tekstov dlia vozmozhnyh mirov, 271–301. Moscow: Izdatelstvo Logos. Weibel, P. (2015). Mediaiskusstvo: ot simuliatsii k stimuliatsii [Media art. From simulation to stimulation]. Logos, 25(4), 135–162. Click here to view full text in PDF format Bogomyakov, V., & Chistyakova, M. (2018). Interactivity as a Vector of the Socialization of Art. Changing Societies & Personalities, 2(2), 183-197. doi:10.15826/csp.2018.2.2.036 Call for papers for forthcoming themed issues in 2020 Ural Federal University named after the first President of Russia B.N.Yeltsin
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Thomas Simms Exec Warns $9 Trln Trade Finance Industry Must Go Digital to Combat Fraud, Cites Blockchain A top executive at one of Asia’s largest banks says trade finance needs to go digital because forged paper records have become too sophisticated. A top executive at one of Asia’s biggest banks says the $9 trillion trade finance industry needs to go paperless to tackle fraud, citing blockchain-based examples A senior executive at one of Asia’s biggest banks has said the $9 trillion trade finance industry needs to be digitized in order to tackle fraud, according to a Bloomberg article published on May 5. Ng Chuey Peng, managing director and head of global commodities finance at Singapore’s Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp Ltd. (OCBC), criticized the industry’s reliance on paper receipts, and warned forgeries have become so sophisticated that can be difficult to spot fake documents. Paper records are regularly used for everything from invoices to establishing the ownership of goods, and without them, banks are often unable to lend money to finance trades. According to Ng, the colors and watermarks used to signify that a document is legitimate are now being copied precisely by counterfeiters. There have been several examples where banks lost millions because of forged receipts for metal and nickel, affecting big names such as Standard Chartered, Citigroup and the Australia & New Zealand Banking Group. Although OCBC is working on technology that reduces the need for paper records in commodities trade, Ng did not specify if it was blockchain-based. She separately added: “Blockchain, Komgo, Forcefield, Vakt, one of these will have to work to change how trade is being done. It’s a matter of time. When, I can’t tell, but I think it has to go paperless.” In March, it emerged that several international metals companies were backing a blockchain-based solution called “Forcefield” that would increase transparency, improve responsible sourcing and give traders secure ownership of their inventory. Vakt is backed by major oil firms and aims to eliminate unnecessary paperwork in commodity trading, while Komgo has a similar offering for the energy industry and plans to diversify into agriculture and metals. In April, Volkswagen became the latest major manufacturer to join an IBM-powered blockchain platform designed to ensure the cobalt used in lithium-ion batteries is responsibly sourced. #Fraud #Singapore ‘CoinLab Is a Big Stopping Block’: Mark Karpeles Talks Mt. Gox Creditor Claims and Life After Trial China’s Shenzhen Stock Exchange Launches Index of 50 Blockchain Firms Application for China’s ‘First’ Blockchain ETF Filed With Regulator Hong Kong Institute of Bankers Onboards Six Virtual Banks as Members Thai Stellar-Based Startup Lightnet Raises $31M to Replace SWIFT
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4 Things Companies Need to Boost Agility on the Innovation Speedway |In Blogs |By Tabitha Driving to work this morning, I paused for the school bus, braked for wayward kittens, and sipped coffee while a train rattled through the intersection. My commute follows the same path each day and typically allows time for unforeseen events. In contrast, companies today are driving on an innovation speedway. The Information Age has accelerated the pace of change to a point where agility is required for survival as well as success. Prior to the age of instant access, organizations operated in a linear, cause-and-effect environment, much like my morning commute. Three to five-year destinations were established, and a leader’s key task was to navigate variances back to the plan. Today, we ride on an innovation superhighway, where chaos is the norm and agility is the only hope for competitiveness. Finishing the race successfully requires: agile leadership, to respond quickly and decisively to each variation; a refined process, to accelerate implementation; technology that incorporates current advances; and power from employee potential to innovate. Agile Leadership—Variation is the Norm, Not the Exception Driving is completely different at 100 miles an hour. The finish line is clear, but targets change instantaneously, based on variables like: track conditions, other drivers, and proximity to the curves. Decisions must be swift and decisive, because a simple misstep, or an unforeseen event, may have an unpredictable and amplified impact that leads to loss in position. Organizations are similar, but their “finish line” may be less clear. Prior to the Information Age, leaders were rewarded for identifying a roadmap that defined success, then sticking to it. Today, drivers of business must recognize within mere moments whether the variables around them represent new risks or opportunities. The target is no longer clear, because it is in constant motion. Industry changes, competitors, and cultural context all play key roles in success. Identifying and valuing variation must become a cultural norm, as it increases creativity and mitigates risks. This practice is gaining traction, but does not come intuitively to many Gen Xers and Baby Boomers. With Millennials and Gen Z making up 75% of the workforce by 2025, spontaneity, diversity, and inclusion will be intrinsic qualities. Until then, progressive organizations must prepare by identifying the source of employee energy and igniting an innovation culture. The Process—Accelerate Implementation with Relevance & Actionable Steps As SVP of Innovation for two global companies, I witnessed countless ineffective ideation programs, internal and external to our organizations. The ones that provided the most frustration typically included a general call for employees to “Submit your big ideas!” Companies that encourage random ideas from employees run the risk of discouraging innovation because if the idea is not aligned to strategy, it is rarely implemented. With an already overburdened workload, irrelevant ideas are seen as a distraction. When seemingly good ideas are not put into practice, frustration, demotivation and disengagement predictably result. Sustainable innovation starts with a thoroughly defined problem, this ensures ideas are relevant. Relevance accelerates implementation. Imagine being asked to drop what you have been working on for the last six months to try something innovative that has nothing to do with your division’s business goals, needs, or measures of success. Like Newton’s Third Law of Motion, for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Unless there is strong leadership support for the idea, chances are, it will be met with resistance and its momentum stopped. In contrast, consider Newton’s Second Law of Motion, that when force is applied to an object traveling in the same direction, it creates acceleration. And, the larger the mass of the object, the more its velocity may be increased. The more relevant, prioritized, and critical an idea is to the organization’s success, the more quickly it will be implemented. This simple paradigm shift can turn fluffy, cost center innovation programs into tangible, profit center generators. The other critical factor for executing high speed innovation is providing only one to three actionable steps. Missing either relevance or simple, actionable expectations nearly always means the idea will sit idle. Adding clear direction, and these proven behavior-change techniques keeps creativity flowing, generates engagement and demonstrates empowerment. For example, when leading innovation at Balfour Beatty Investments, we improved idea implementation and won new business by narrowing the process to align with director strategy. We went from “blue sky” ideas of all sorts to a very focused topic of “Identify how smart meters and resident behavior effect energy use in student housing.” With this focus, existing suppliers, subject matter experts, and potential clients were included in the ideation process. An emerging leader team used the company’s “i-Lab” process to power employee potential while generating new ways of incorporating technologies. The initiative ultimately led to new business. Balfour Beatty Investments became more agile because the i-Lab targets changed periodically based on actual needs. On-line, at-a-glance comparisons allow savvy shoppers to identify the slightest improvements. The pace of change and availability of information make technological improvements more critical than ever before in history. While many companies have an eye on product or development, they may be forgetting about the integration of machine systems, cybernetics. NASA employee, George Washington, handles clerical work more quickly and efficiently than ever before. He never complains about working late hours or needs a cup of coffee. George is a bot who takes in information from emails and identifies job candidate suitability—something formerly completed by HR personnel. He represents a new type of diversity within organizations—Cognitive Diversity. Cognitive Diversity, simply put, includes different ways of thinking. It consists of both humans (cognitive thinking) and machines (cognitive technologies). Today, automation is pouring into the workplace at an accelerating rate. Cognitive Technologies involve: robotic process automation, traditional machine learning, natural language processing, and rule-based expert systems. Witness this Artificial Intelligence (AI) in our everyday lives as it handles answering services, account balance inquiries, and payment services. Most companies begin by integrating AI and other machine systems to replace the repetitive, “low hanging fruit” projects. This allows them to achieve quick wins early in the adoption process. The idea of accepting these new “employees” at work as equals, however, can initially cause concerns about long-term job security. According to research from Accenture, 86% of marketers believe AI will make their industry’s work more efficient and effective as practical applications already include processes like: precision targeting, dynamic ad creation, and marketing automation. In these cases, adopting Cognitive Diversity into the workforce improves efficiency, increases accuracy, and frees humans to focus on more complex tasks. Data from Emarsys shows widespread inclusion of AI by retail marketers worldwide: 54% Personalizing customer experience and behavior across channels 52% Managing real-time customer interactions 48% Identifying or reorganizing customers across channels 41% Targeting appropriate audiences for new customer acquisition In NASA’s case, the organization feels that Cognitive Diversity, through the inclusion of bots, is a way to meet shrinking budgets and allow existing humans to focus on higher-level tasks. Thus far, George Washington has been met with open arms, and NASA plans to bring on a Thomas Jefferson bot soon. Their experience shows that integrating machines as cognitive tools has improved the bottom line. While demographic diversity is important for success, including new ways of thinking and automation will expand organizational agility and innovation. As cybernetic models improve, they will become more commonplace when organizations consider the functions of diversity and inclusion executives. Embracing cybernetics, the science of communications, and automatic control systems in both machines and living things, may sound like science fiction. But in reality, it boosts agility, innovation, and profits. Powering Organizational Potential Actualizing employee and organizational potential provides the fuel needed to power execution. This can be done through leveraging variation and managing strengths. Organizations that leverage employee ideas and knowledge meet product revenue targets 46% more often and product launch dates 47% more often than their industry peers. Companies also have opportunities to expand beyond traditional, demographics-based methods. For example, cognitive variation (differences in the way people think) and cybernetic diversity (integrating machine technologies with human systems) both improve performance and increase competitiveness. Most companies already use traditional cognitive tools such as: Myers-Briggs, DISC, Management by Strengths, and the Predictive Index to highlight an employee’s preferences. While these tools increase an employee’s communications ability with peers, without the relevance of strategic alignment, the tools fall short of improving profitability. Newer tools, such as the AEM-cube, which has been adopted in the U.S. by organizations like: IBM, Yahoo, Apple, Stanford and Purdue, maps employee preferences to different phases of the naturally occurring growth curves (Sigmoid “S” curves). This innovative, cybernetic-based, 3-D model can be used to reflect a team of employees simultaneously, matching talent to need, based upon an organization’s current location on a growth curve. Employees can quickly understand where they contribute most powerfully, and employers can identify gaps of risk. In summary, driving fast in today’s economy is the only option. Success under this condition means organizations must be agile, strategically relevant, and actualize organization and employee potential. These factors improve inclusion, innovation and consequently, profits. Please let us know how we may help your company, whether it’s training, consulting, speaking engagements, or something else.
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CEREAL SYSTEMS INITIATIVE FOR SOUTH ASIA About CSISA CSISA locations CSISA Leadership Discussion Papers and Journal Articles Factsheets and Manuals HomeCSISA Success Story Nepal-news CSISA Expands Domain of Registered Maize Hybrids in Nepal CSISA Expands Domain of Registered Maize Hybrids in Nepal CSISA is collaborating with national partners in Nepal to support the domain expansion of registered maize hybrids, helping increase maize productivity in the country. Maize is the second most important food crop in Nepal, after rice. It contributes approximately 25 percent of Nepal’s food basket and occupies around 26 percent of the total cropped area. Maize productivity at 2.3 tons per hectare in Nepal is still quite low compared to the global average of 5.5 tons per hectare. Growing demand from the poultry industry in Nepal cannot be met by the cultivation of open-pollinated seed varieties alone. As a result, higher-yielding hybrids have become increasingly popular among farmers because of their productivity, quality and profitability. However, most maize hybrids are only approved for sale and cultivation in the central and eastern Terai, east of the Narayani River. Farmers in many areas, especially in western Nepal, sometimes purchase non-approved hybrid seeds to meet market demand. These hybrid seeds are not registered at the Seed Quality Control Centre and are traded through informal channels. With a potential risk of penalty from the government for violating the seed policy, traders have not distributed many high-performing hybrids, thereby restricting their local production, fair distribution and widespread availability, which otherwise could benefit many farmers in Nepal. It is estimated that annually about 2,500 tons of hybrid maize is grown in Nepal, of which only 1,000 tons are registered hybrids. Catalyzing Change In 2014 and 2015, CSISA and the National Maize Research Program (NMRP) partnered to evaluate maize hybrids in six additional districts (Banke, Bardiya, Kailali, Kanchanpur, Surkhet and Dadeldhura) in western Nepal. Trials were conducted in the spring in the Terai and in the summer in the mid-hills and were monitored by a team of stakeholders from NMRP. The performance data for variety release and registration was shared with the National Seed Board (NSB). Of the ten hybrids that were evaluated, four (TX 369, Bioseed 9220, Rajkumar and Nutan) were found agronomically superior, producing more than 6 tons per hectare, and having a tight husk cover and providing moderate resistance to northern leaf blight and grey leaf spot. In response to the evaluation results, the NSB has approved and registered four hybrid varieties for sale in the western region. Highlighting the need to increase farmers’ access to registered hybrids, Dilaram Bhandari, member of NSB and Director, Crop Development Directorate, Department of Agriculture said, “We have to adopt this modality for other hybrids as well since new hybrids expand outside the recommendation domains quite frequently.” This article is authored by Narayan Prasad Khanal, Research Associate, CIMMYT. Tags: Dhangadhi, Hybrid, maize, Nepal Posted on Nepal-news, News - Homepage, News & Announcements, April 10, 2016 Copyright © 2017 CIMMYT CSISA Website While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this website and its contents, CIMMYT and its implementing partner organizations for CSISA – IFPRI and IRRI – assume no responsibility for errors or omissions. All information and features described herein are subject to change without notice. This website may contain links to third-party websites. CIMMYT is not responsible for the contents of any linked site or any link contained in a linked site. This website is providing these links only as a convenience, and the inclusion of a link does not imply endorsement by CIMMYT of the linked sites or their content. Copyright © 2017 International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) CIMMYT holds the copyright to all CSISA publications and web pages but encourages use of these materials for non-commercial purposes, unless specifically stated otherwise. Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is hereby granted without fee and without a formal request provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and full citation on the first page. For copyrights not owned by CIMMYT, express permission must be pursued with the owner of the information. To republish or redistribute for commercial purposes, prior permission is required. We use cookies on this site to improve the usability of this website. By clicking 'OK, I agree' you are giving your consent for us to use cookies. | More info
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Diana Preston, photo by Nigel Spalding Diana Preston is the author of the new book Paradise in Chains: The Bounty Mutiny and the Founding of Australia. Her other books include Before the Fallout and A Higher Form of Killing. She lives in London. Q: How did you come up with the idea for Paradise in Chains, and what did you learn in the course of your research that especially surprised you? A: A few years ago I wrote a A Pirate of Exquisite Mind about William Dampier, the 17th century buccaneer turned explorer and naturalist who was the first Briton to land on and write about the Australian continent 70 years before Captain James Cook. Fascinated, I researched other Pacific explorers and expeditions. I discovered that the decisions to send convicts from Britain to Australia to make the first European settlement by founding a penal colony there and to dispatch William Bligh to Tahiti to fetch breadfruit seedlings shared a common sponsor – the famous naturalist Sir Joseph Banks who had visited both Tahiti and Australia with Cook. At one stage, with the British government’s consent, Banks planned the expeditions as a single venture, an idea he only abandoned a week before the convict fleet’s departure. The two stories, both so full of human drama, intersected again when the British naval captain Edward Edwards, sent to round up the Bounty mutineers, encountered and arrested nine convicts - including a highwaywoman, Mary Bryant, and her husband – the first people successfully to flee the rigors, disease and hunger of the new penal colony. Edwards shipped both Bounty mutineers and convicts home together in chains for trial. The two stories became further intertwined when, in 1805, Bligh was appointed governor of the penal colony where in 1808 he suffered another mutiny. What also stood out were three remarkable open boat voyages. After the Bounty mutineers cast Bligh and loyal crewmen adrift, Bligh succeeded in bringing them safely to Kupang in Timor after a 3,600 nautical mile, 47-day odyssey. The Bryants and their fellow escapees completed their own epic open-boat journey of 3,254 nautical miles from Port Jackson, modern day Sydney, also to Kupang, taking 69 days. Finally, after Edwards’ ship HMS Pandora was wrecked on the Great Barrier Reef, he successfully brought the starving, sun-blistered survivors, including several mutineers, in four open boats to Kupang after a 1,200 nautical mile voyage. There he captured the fugitives from Port Jackson. Among other surprises was how sympathetic the British public was both to the Bounty mutineers and the escaped convicts when they heard their stories. But of course this was the time of the Enlightenment, of ideas about people’s natural right to live free, of Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man, of the American War of Independence and of the French Revolution, William Wilberforce’s anti-slavery campaign and Mary Wollstonecraft’s writing about the rights of women. Attitudes towards crime and punishment, personal liberty and sexual freedom (the latter stimulated by stories of free love in Tahiti) affected events in a way I’d not anticipated. Q: What are some of the most common perceptions and misperceptions about the mutiny on the Bounty? A: The most common misperception is that William Bligh was a physically sadistic brute, ready to flog his men for the slightest reason. I was fascinated by the more complex picture revealed in documents of the time. Bligh flogged fewer men less frequently than most captains who ventured into the Pacific. He was a good husband and father and a brilliant navigator. His success in bringing himself and the men cast adrift with him by the Bounty mutineers to safety ranks with Ernest Shackleton’s achievement in reaching South Georgia after his ship Endeavour was crushed by the ice in the Antarctic. Bligh was, however, a mental if not physical bully. His chief weapon was sarcasm and he seemed to enjoy verbally humiliating people in public, something which caused the sensitive Fletcher Christian to snap and infuriated even one of Bligh’s own closest relations who later served with him. Bligh was also status-conscious, sycophantic to his seniors, avaricious, ambitious and jealous of talented rivals. His immense self-belief, self-confidence, and disregard for others served him well in his leadership of the open boat voyage but were serious disadvantages at other times. Other common misconceptions: That Fletcher Christian was an eager mutineer and a particularly strong character. He wasn’t. He was, however, a popular charismatic man – neither mutineers nor, less expectedly, loyalists in their accounts criticized him. Rather than rushing into mutiny, Christian’s initial reaction to Bligh’s final insults was to go overboard alone on a plank raft in a virtually suicidal attempt to reach a distant island. His leadership soon fell apart after the mutiny; That the desire to return to their Tahitian “wives” was the overriding reason many joined the Bounty mutiny. Bligh alone alleged this. Others, mutineers and loyalists alike, blamed Bligh’s behaviour. That the Bounty mutiny was one of the worst in the Royal Navy in this period – it wasn’t. No one died or was even injured. There were more serious mutinies elsewhere. What made the Bounty story stand out to the public of the 18th century, much it does to us today, was the extraordinary circumstances of the exotic location, the reputed lure of the Tahitian women and the clash of personalities on board, so well documented in journals, books and court martial records. Q: What impact did the British have on the Pacific Islands and Australia in this period, and what do you see as the legacy of this interaction? A: A Tahitian account of the islanders’ reaction to the first foreign arrivals aboard the British ship HMS Dolphin suggests the islanders were initially awestruck at what seemed to them “a floating island” but then attacked the Dolphin in war canoes to be driven off by cannon - a weapon unknown to them – only for a friendship to develop, leading to those on both sides weeping at parting. This pattern of friendship interspersed with misunderstanding and violence typified relations between the British and the Pacific islanders, not only on Tahiti but elsewhere such as in Hawaii where islanders clubbed Captain Cook to death in 1779. In Tahiti friendly relations, once established, persisted and the island swiftly acquired a reputation as a lotus-eating, permissive Utopian paradise. However, by the time of Cook’s final visit – Bligh was with him - Cook could already foresee the catastrophic consequences of the Europeans’ arrival, bringing venereal and other diseases and giving the islanders an appetite for firearms and alcohol. When Bligh returned on the Bounty he also decided the Tahitians would have been better off if the foreigners had never come. What happened in Australia was much worse. The Tahitians had rulers and a social structure that the status-aware British could relate to and respect. The Aboriginal people who lived communally with few possessions seemed to the British more primitive. Although Captain Arthur Phillip, commander of the fleet bringing the first convicts to Australia, tried to interact humanely with the indigenous people and learn their customs, the British swiftly appropriated the Aboriginals’ lands, fishing and hunting grounds. Smallpox and other "foreign" illnesses decimated their communities even more than those on Tahiti. Q: How was the book's title chosen, and what does it signify for you? A: The title is my attempt to encapsulate the book in three words. It reflects the irony that from the moment Europeans first encountered the beauty of Tahiti and of its people who appeared to lead an effortless existence plucking fruit from the trees in a sexually permissive Utopia, they without exception described it as a paradise on earth. Yet the arrival of newcomers in the South Pacific – not just of sailors in Tahiti but also of literally enchained convicts in Australia – subjected and subsequently subjugated the indigenous peoples to the new arrivals’ ideas, diseases and greed with disastrous consequences, fettering their cherished freedoms and cultures for generations. And although less significant for the region, after their break for freedom both the Bounty mutineers and the escaped convicts were once more put in chains for shipment back to Britain. A: As well being interested in exploration, I’m drawn to big strategic subjects closer to our own times, hence my books like Before the Fallout: From Marie Curie to Hiroshima about the development of atomic science and A Higher Form of Killing about the first use during World War One of new weapons like submarine-fired torpedoes, aerial bombardment and chlorine gas – the latter sadly familiar today from reports from Syria. My next subject will be the 1945 Yalta Conference, a human drama in which Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin planned the end of the “hot war” and in their decisions about the partitioning of the post-war world inaugurated a “cold war.” A: Recently I was delighted to act as historical consultant and to appear in National Geographic TV’s newly-transmitted Origins series exploring important milestones in our human story. --Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with Diana Preston. Q&A with Sophfronia Scott Q&A with David Stipp Q&A with Laura Kumin Q&A with Franklin Foer Q&A with Liv Constantine Q&A with Deanne Stillman Q&A with L.M. Elliott Q&A with Andrew Larsen Q&A with Barbara DiLorenzo Q&A with Miranda Paul Q&A with Jan English Leary Q&A with Laurence Westreich Q&A with Will Wootton Q&A with Jonathan Eig Q&A with Frederic Block Q&A with Ellen Wittlinger Q&A with Catherine Reef Q&A with Philip O Ceallaigh Q&A with Natalka Burian Q&A with Jonathan Hennessey Q&A with Kathryn Erskine Q&A with Susan Goldman Rubin Q&A with Peter S. Rush Q&A with Beverly Gray Q&A with Robert W. Merry Q&A with Jennifer Robson Q&A with Melissa Schorr Q&A with Eshkol Nevo Q&A with Pamela Ehrenberg Q&A with Hazel Gaynor and Heather Webb Q&A with Henry Allen Q&A with Noah Strycker Q&A with Randall Platt Q&A with Martin Puchner Q&A with Melissa de la Cruz Q&A with John House Q&A with Odd Arne Westad Q&A with Mark Rubinstein Q&A with Shelley Tougas Q&A with Christina Renée Joubert Q&A with Daniel P. Bolger Q&A with David Breskin Q&A with Jonah Winter Q&A with Shelia P. Moses Q&A with Chipp Reid Q&A with Catriona McPherson Q&A with Betsy Aldredge and Carrie DuBois-Shaw Q&A with Abigail Pogrebin Q&A with Joshua Maserow Q&A with Georgia Hunter Q&A with Karen Shepard Q&A with Renu Persaud Q&A with Nigel Cliff Q&A with Dian Curtis Regan
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Tag Archives: Laboratory of Epidemiology Chief Medical Officer’s Second Public Health Surveillance Report (Department of Health / BBC News) Summary The Chief Medical Officer, Professor Dame Sally Davies’s second surveillance report offers a broad review of England’s public health. This second surveillance volume, “Annual Report of the Chief Medical Officer, Surveillance Volume, 2012: On the State of the Public’s … Continue reading → Posted in Acute Hospitals, BBC News, Community Care, Department of Health, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, National, NHS Digital (Previously NHS Choices), Nutrition, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, Systematic Reviews, UK, Universal Interest | Tagged Active Travel, ADA’s Prediabetes Label, Ageing Workforce, Alcohol Concern, Alcohol Consumption, Alcohol Health Alliance, American Diabetes Association (ADA), Annual Report of the Chief Medical Officer: Volume Two - 2014. 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Dawg Post Recruiting Board v3.1 - "Big and Nasty" Recruit Sticks Out ATHENS - Dawg Post give its readers insight and analysis on UGA recruiting each day heading into Signing Day this December, which is about six weeks away on December 19th. ****** TODAY’S QUICK REPORT ****** Do you subscribe to Dawg Post? Give us a shot today - Join the best message board out there... On Sunday, a slew of 2021 recruits gathered to try out for the annual Georgia-Texas event that had its start with the 2019 class a few years ago. Matt DeBary focused on Wayne County OL Weston Franklin, who he described as “big and nasty”. Franklin already has offers from South Carolina and Michigan, but wasn’t in Athens over the last two weekends. Its important to keep an eye on the future. And while Franklin stood out during that event a slew of 2021 players didn’t make it. Still, they are worthy of keeping an eye on for the future. DeBary includes at least these players in that list: Centennial WR Julian Nixon Pace Academy ATH Jayden Thomas Camden County OL Micah Morris Peach County OL Terrence Ferguson Carrollton LB Chaz Chambliss Prince Avenue Christian QB Brock Vandagriff Hapeville Charter ATH Jaquez Smith Georgia offered Pace’s Thomas late last week. Speaking of younger players, Belton-Honea Path (SC) ATH Bralyn Oliver was in Athens over the weekend for Georgia’s destruction of UMass. Two former Georgia commitments committed over the last 48 hours. JD Bertrand picked Notre Dame, and Jalen Perry picked Michigan. What We Are Hearing Dawg Post Recruiting Board v1.1 Dawg Post Recruiting Board v2.1 - Recapping UGA's Big Weekend Dawg Post Recruiting Board v2.2 - UGA Commits to Visit Knoxville Dawg Post Recruiting Board v2.3 - UGA Targets Spread Out ****** CHECK BACK FOR UPDATES DURING THE DAY ****** UGA has 18 prospects committed for the Class of 2019. Dawg Post Recruiting Analyst Matt DeBary thinks the Bulldogs are set to sign around 24-26 players in this cycle. ****** WHAT TO WATCH FOR LATER THIS WEEK ****** This is the final recruiting weekend of the regular season for the Bulldogs. Who will show up in Athens for the Georgia Tech game? ****** WHO IS LEFT? ****** Georgia is sitting at 18 commits right now - after a reconfiguration of the class in October. The Bulldogs are “expected” to sign “about” 24 prospects this cycle. The Dawgs have 84 known players on scholarship - 15 of which are seniors. So that means UGA can sign 16 players with no attrition to injury, the NFL or transfer. ****** STILL OUT THERE AT THIS MOMENT (9 or more) ****** 5-star Cedar Grove WR Jadon Haselwood Dawg Post Jadon Haselwood Matt DeBary on Haselwood: One of the top overall players in the country, the five-star receiver and former Georgia commitment is still a major target for the Bulldogs. The Cedar Grove star has an elite blend of speed and ball skills to go along with his 6-foot-3 190-pound frame. Haselwood is the best receiver prospect to come out of the Peach State in a very long time and will be a game-changing player at the next level. After his de-commitment, sources say that Miami is the team out in front, but this one isn’t over just yet. Miami, Georgia, Oklahoma and Auburn appear to be his top four schools as of November 5. 11/05/2018 Update - Keep an eye out for Haselwood possibly visiting UGA the weekend of the Auburn game. 5-star Horn Lake (MS) LB Nakobe Dean Nakobe Dean Matt DeBary on Dean: One of the top linebackers in the country, the five-star prospect from Horn Lake, Mississippi is a true sideline-to-sideline inside linebacker. He’s a fast linebacker who knows how to tackle as well. He’s not the biggest guy, but the 5-foot-11, 220-pounder has been a top Georgia target for a long time now and sources say the Bulldogs are in the driver’s seat here with a decision coming in December. Georgia is fighting off Alabama, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, LSU and others. He will take his official visit to Georgia this upcoming weekend when the Bulldogs host the Auburn Tigers. 11/05/2018 Update - Matt DeBary reports: Sources say the Bulldogs have the momentum here. 11/10/2018 Update - Dean visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 11/12/2018 Update - Matt DeBary reports that Dean loved the "game day feel in Athens." 4-star The DeMatha (MD) DB Nick Cross Matt DeBary on Cross: With safety Lewis Cine already on board, Georgia could still take another safety in this class and Nick Cross is a guy to keep an eye on. The four-star from DeMatha Catholic in Maryland is currently committed to Florida State, but sources say a de-commitment is possible sooner than later. Notre Dame, Georgia and a few others could get back in this mix if Cross decides to open up his recruitment. 11/12/2018 Update - Nick Cross visited Athens for UGA's win over Auburn. 4-star IMG (FL) RB Noah Cain Matt DeBary on Cain: One of the best running backs in the country, the high four-star out of IMG Academy told Dawg Post that the Bulldogs are back in the race after the de-commitment of John Emery. He has a great relationship with running backs coach Dell McGee and sources believe the Bulldogs could easily get back in this race. There are plenty of other schools also targeting Cain at the moment, but Georgia needs an elite back in this class and Cain would be a great option at the end of the day. 4-star The Benjamin School (FL) DB Kaiir Elam Matt DeBary on Elam: Another four-star cornerback from the sunshine state, Elam is a long, athletic cornerback who is really high on Georgia at the moment. Elam has been a priority target for the Florida Gators for a long time now but sources say the Bulldogs have pulled even with the Gators this fall. At 6-foot-1 190-pounds, Elam is a major Georgia target and one of the top 10 cornerback prospects in the country. 4-star Crystal Lake South (IL) OL Trevor Keegan Matt DeBary on Keegan: Another big tackle prospect, the four-star and top player in Illinois is listed at 6-foot-6 310-pounds and sources say the Bulldogs are in his top group at the moment. The Michigan Wolverines have been the leader here for some time, but Keegan is high on Sam Pittman and the Bulldogs. A decision will be made on December 11th, and while the Wolverines are expected to be the pick, Georgia, Northwestern, Ohio State and Clemson remain in the mix. 4-star Oxford (AL) OL Clay Webb Matt DeBary on Webb: One of the top offensive line prospects in the country, the Oxford, Alabama star is the ideal center prospect due to his size, football IQ, quickness, and overall nasty play. He has been an elite performer in camps for years now and rarely loses a rep while going up against bigger defensive lineman. At 6-foot-3 295-pounds, Webb moves very well for his size, and it as fundamentally sound as it gets. He’s a special lineman and a guy Georgia has a legitimate shot at landing in December. Georgia will have to fight off Alabama and Auburn, but sources say Georgia can get it done. Webb plans to take his official visit this upcoming weekend when Georgia hosts the Auburn Tigers. 11/05/2018 Update - Keep an eye out for Webb possibly visiting UGA the weekend of the Auburn game. 4-star Southridge (FL) DB Tyrique Stevenson Matt DeBary on Smith: You won’t find a more physical cornerback out there than Tyrque Stevenson. The 6-foot-1 202-pounder has outstanding ball skills who isn’t all about physicality. Stevenson is a true cover corner and possibly Georgia’s most important target left of their board on defense. Like current cornerbacks Deandre Baker and Divaad Wilson, Stephenson is a south Florida kid who plays with lots of swagger and passion. Sources continue to say this is a Georgia/Miami battle and the Bulldogs are in a great spot. He currently plans to sign in February. ****** CURRENTLY COMMITTED - (18) ****** 5-star IMG DL Nolan Smith Matt DeBary on Smith: One of the top overall prospects in the country, Smith is an elite pass rusher at outside linebacker who should be able to contribute immediately as a freshman in 2019. At 6-foot-3 235-pounds, Smith is quick off the edge and is strong enough to set the edge the edge in the run game. He has been dominant during the camp circuit and one of the top players on a loaded ING Academy team. Smith committed to Georgia early in the process and will be the leader of Georgia’s defense for years to come. He’s a special talent. 11/10/2018 Update - Smith visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 11/15/2018 Update - Smith is set to visit Tennessee for the Missouri game. 5-star Upson-Lee DL Travon Walker Travon Walker Matt DeBary on Walker: There isn’t a more athletic defensive lineman in the country than Upson-Lee’s Travon Walker. A long, leaner defensive tackle prospect, Walker stands 6-foot-5 275-pounds with great quickness and playmaking ability. He runs well for a guy his size and has played mostly middle linebacker during his senior season. Walker is an outstanding basketball prospect as well due to his elite size and athleticism. Like Smith, expect Walker to make an early impact in the 2019 season as a freshman. Walker chose Georgia on July 24th over Clemson, Alabama and many others. 11/05/2018 Update - Walker visited Florida over the weekend, but it doesn't sound like the Gators made up much ground on him. 11/05/2018 Update - Walker is "expected" to stay enrolled at Upson-Lee in the spring to play basketball and defend the school's back-to-back state titles. 11/10/2018 Update - Walker visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 11/14/2018 Update - Walker is set to visit Tennessee for the Missouri game. 4-star Walton WR Dominick Blaylock Dominick Blaylock Matt DeBary on Blaylock: The high four-star receiver from Walton might be the best route runner in the country. He’s a natural at the position with reliable hands who can consistently create separation from a defender. He’s got great ball skills and while he’s not a burner, he has plenty of speed and the ability to get yards after the catch. He’s as consistent as it gets. The 6-foot-1 190-pounder chose Georgia on July 16th, 2017 over Auburn, Alabama, Clemson, among others. Blaylock is another 2019 signee who has a chance to see the field early next fall. 11/10/2018 Update - Blaylock visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 4-star Trinity Christan (TX) DB Lewis Cine Matt DeBary on Cine: Kirby Smart wants his defensive backs to have some size to them, and that’s exactly what Lewis Cine will bring at 6-foot-2 180-pounds. Cine is a level-headed kid who knows he can excel in Georgia’s offense with his range and physical play against the run. He’s a smart player and knows how to play multiple positions in the secondary. One of the best defenders in Texas, Cine chose Georgia over Michigan, Penn State, Florida and Texas. 4-star Wekiva (FL) LB Rian Davis Rian Davis Matt DeBary on Davis: Dawg Post saw Davis play earlier this fall and came away extremely impressed. The four-star linebacker has great size at 6-foot-2 240-pounds and can really run. He’s a physical player and very vocal on the field. He plays with a lot of passion and is someone who can call defensive plays for Georgia’s defense down the road. Davis has some swagger about his game and really looks the part physically to go along with his intense style of player. 4-star Clinch County LB Trezmen Marshall Trezmen Marshall Matt DeBary on Marshall: A true “thumper” out of Clinch County, the 6-foot-1 236-pounder is all muscle who is as physical as it gets. He’s a guy who can help clog those lanes in the middle of the field and shoot the gaps. He’s a tackling machine at inside linebacker but could help out at running back down the road if he needs too. One of the top 10 prospects in Georgia, Marshall could help immediately on special teams before seeing time at linebacker early on. 11/10/2018 Update - Marshall visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 11/14/2018 Update - Marshall is set to visit Tennessee for the Missouri game. Jermaine Johnson 4-star Independence JUCO (KS) DL Jermaine Johnson Matt DeBary on Johnson: Another JUCO commitment with a year of experience at the collegiate level, Johnson has great size at 6-foot-6 240-pounds. He will be expected to come in and provide some pass rush next fall. He’s got a great motor to go along with a great pass rush, and is considered one of the top JUCO prospects in the country. His film isn’t on the same level as Nolan Smith’s or others who have recently signed with Georgia, but he has experence in college ball that they don't. 4-star Kennesaw Mountain TE Ryland Goede Ryland Goede Matt DeBary on Goede: One of the top tight end prospects in the south, the Kennesaw Mountain product is another signee who will bring good size to the position at 6-foot-7 240-pounds. He’s a good blocker on the edge and a big target who could really help in the red zone. He still needs to get stronger and he’s coming off knee surgery, but Goede could turn into a solid player down the road. He showed good ball skills as a receiver at the Atlanta Opening Regional, and proved he’s one of the better blocking tight ends around when Dawg Post saw him play against Lassiter back in October. He’s likely headed for a redshirt season in 2019, but he’s a solid four-star tight end who can make an impact down the road. 11/10/2018 Update - Goede visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 4-star University Lab (LA) ATH Makiya Tongue Matt DeBary on Tongue: Maybe the most versatile player in this class. The 6-foot-2 210-pounder can play on both sides of the ball, but will likely player receiver in Athens. He has great ball skills and has no problem going up into traffic to make a great catch. He’s got decent speed for his size and has a knack for making plays. Some schools recruited him to play linebacker due to his size and physical style of play. That means we should expect him to be an excellent blocker on the outside in the run game. Tongue broke his leg earlier this year. He is not expected to enroll early. 4-star Christian Brothers (TN) DL Bill Norton Matt DeBary on Norton: The four-star from Christian Brothers High School in Memphis is a guy Tray Scott will love to coach these next four-years. At 6-foot-5 275-pounds, Norton is a big guy with an outstanding motor. He does a great job of playing through the whistle and making big plays when the game is on the line. He’s still a little raw in a lot of ways but he has a lot of potential to be a good player in Athens. He will add immediate depth at defensive tackle position next year. 11/10/2018 Update - Norton visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 4-star Brunswick OL Warren McClendon Warren McClendon Matt DeBary on McClendon: One of the better offensive lineman in the peach state, The Brunswick lineman is a versatile player who could play either tackle or guard down the road. He’s not nearly the size of Xavier Truss, but still has some size on him at 6-foot-4 318-pounds. He won’t blow you away with his play, but he’s a consistent player with size who goes out and does his job. He won’t be asked to play early, so he’s another guy who will benefit from developing over time and perfecting his craft before he’s asked to go out and play a ton. Overall, he’s a solid four-star prospect and a nice addition to the class. McClendon committed to Georgia on July 16th over Florida, South Carolina, among others. 11/06/2018 Update - McClendon tells Matt DeBary he plans to attend Georgia's game with Auburn. 11/10/2018 Update - McClendon visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 4-star Georgia Military College DB D.J. Daniel Matt DeBary on Daniel: One of Georgia’s most unknown commits in the 2019 class is cornerback D.J Daniel. The Griffin, Georgia native out of Georgia Military College was a major target for the Bulldogs this summer before surprising everyone and committing to South Carolina. After a few months, the four-star cornerback flipped to Georgia. At 6-foot-0, 180 pounds, Daniel is not the biggest cornerback out there, but he’s not undersized either. What stands out the most about Daniel is his speed. He’s sound fundamentally, showed quick feet to go along with his speed and showed on film that he can be physical on the line of scrimmage. He’s a tough guy and a true competitor. Overall, there’s a lot to like, and with so many uncommitted cornerbacks still out there, it says a lot that Kirby Smart wants him in this class. 4-star Oak Grove (MS) QB John Rhys Plumlee Matt DeBary on Plumlee: One of the better dual-threat quarterbacks in the country, Plumlee is dangerous when scrambling and making plays with his feet. At 6-foot-1 185-pounds, Plumlee shows good accuracy, but the arm strength needs to improve. Luckily, Plumlee won’t be asked to play anytime soon so he’ll have plenty of time to develop his arm and become more of a true quarterback. He’s certainly a weapon due to his speed, so there’s a chance he could get some look at receiver down the road. 4-star Bishop Hendricken (RI) OL Xavier Truss Xavier Truss Matt DeBary on Truss: It’s clear Sam Pittman wants some beef along the offensive line, and that’s exactly what he’s getting in four-star Xavier Truss. At a massive 6-foot-7 350-pounds, Truss is a great run blocker who really moves people in the run game. Playing in Rhode Island, it will take him some time to develop against better athletes, bit he can be a very good player down the road if he can be developed properly by Pittman. He will have to drop some weight and work on his pass protection, but the potential is there to make an impact later in his career. 4-star Franklin Road Academy (TN) DL Tymon Mitchell Matt DeBary on Mitchell: The three-star defensive tackle from Franklin Road Academy in Nashville, Tennessee isn’t the most highly regarded prospect out there, but he’s a guy with good size at 6-foot-3 309-pounds who will add depth to the defensive line. He will likely plat defensive tackle in Athens but has a chance to move inside and play some nose guard down the road if needed. He shows good quickness for a guy over 300 pounds but like others in this class, he won't be asked to play early, and needs to develop more overall before he can make much of an impact. 11/10/2018 Update - Mitchell visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 4-star Lebanon (TN) DL Zion Logue Zion Logue Matt DeBary on Logue: Georgia found this under the radar prospect late in the spring and went hard after him until his commitment on July 15th. Another big lineman at 6-foot-6 285-pounds, Logue still has a lean look to him after putting on a ton of weight as a junior. His recruitment took off later than most, but the Georgia staffed loves him and his potential is sky high. His film won’t blow anyone away, but he had a very goos senior season and could be the biggest steal for Georgia in the entire class. 11/06/2018 Update - Logue tells Matt DeBary he plans to attend Georgia's game with Auburn. 11/10/2018 Update - Logue visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 4-star Hutchinson CC (KS) DL Tramel Walthour Tramel Walthour Matt DeBary on Walthour: Perhaps the most forgotten players in this class, the three-star defensive end has a year of college football experience already under his belt but needs to keep adding weight if he wants to see the field anytime soon. He won’t blow you away with his play, but he’s still a consistent player who does his job. He’s got some quickness to him but needs to continue getting off blocks and developing into an SEC caliber defender. Like Mitchell, he won’t be asked to play early and will have some time to develop while he adds emergency depth to the position. 4-star University School (FL) RB Kenny McIntosh Matt DeBary on McIntosh: Another four-star back from the Sunshine State, the University School prospect is one of the best in the country. McIntosh has a relationship with running backs coach Dell McGee. The Bulldogs beat out Auburn and Miami to get his commitment. He’s a bigger back at 6-foot-0 218-pounds with deceptive speed and tackle-breaking ability. He will be a very good addition to Georgia’s 2019 class. 11/07/2018 Update - McIntosh confirms that he will officially visit UGA for the Auburn game. 11/10/2018 Update - McIntosh visits Athens for the Georgia-Auburn game. 11/14/2018 Update - McIntosh commits to Georgia. Tags: Georgia vs. Georgia Tech
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About DDCRW Law Landlord/ Tenant Disputes Do I have the right to ask to see my spouse’s financial records prior to negotiating a divorce settlement? by dcdclaw | Apr 15, 2012 | Domestic, Family Law Questions & Answers Yes, Massachusetts’ Rules of Domestic Procedure, Supplemental Rule 410, requires a disclosure of financial information by both parties to a divorce action. After the service of the complaint for divorce and summons, the court requires each party to a divorce action... Do I have to wait until the restraining order expires to see my children? by dcdclaw | Sep 21, 2011 | Domestic, Family Law Questions & Answers Additional information: My ex obtained a 209A restraining order against me in Worcester district court which grants custody and prevents me from seeing my children. Do I have to wait until the restraining order expires to see my children? While the 209A restraining... Does Massachusetts law allow a parent to withhold child support? by dcdclaw | Aug 31, 2011 | Domestic, Family Law Questions & Answers Additional information:If a parent refuses to allow the other parent visitation with the child, does the law allow a parent to withhold child support? No, if a parent is denied court-ordered visitation, he or she does not have the right to withhold child support based... What is Massachusetts law regarding the payment of child support for a child who is over the age of eighteen? by dcdclaw | Jul 12, 2011 | Domestic, Family Law Questions & Answers Child support may be awarded for a child eighteen years of age until the child’s twenty-first birthday if the child resides with the recipient parent and is principally dependent upon that parent for support. Child support may continue through the age of twenty-three... How Do I Take Control Of My Divorce? For most people going through a divorce, this is the most out-of-control they have ever felt over their lives. Part of that overwhelming sensation of being out-of-control is when the court is deciding their fate – how their children will be raised, how their money or... How can a custody or child support judgment be changed or modified? by dcdclaw | Jul 2, 2011 | Domestic, Family Law Questions & Answers The parent who requests a change to the judgment must file a Complaint for Modification. In order for a parent to successfully alter a judgment, he or she must demonstrate a material and substantial change of circumstances since the entry of the last judgment. These... Does Child Support End in Massachusetts When a Child Turns 18? How Do Children from Another Relationship Affect the Child Support You Pay or Receive? Homestead or not to Homestead? Paid Family and Medical Leave-Notice to Employees State Leaders Delay Start of Payroll Deductions for Paid Family and Medical Leave Whos theme My Theme | Powered by MyPress | Designed by Your Design Agency
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Denison Seminar Explores Our Neighbor to the North Cheyanne Cierpial '16 The new Denison Seminars offer exciting opportunities to explore multiple viewpoints and approaches—some even include study abroad. The Denison Seminar “Neighbor to the North” explores Canadian art, visual culture, history and politics, through classroom academics, video podcasting and study abroad. The class is led by team-teachers Sue Davis, associate professor of political science, and Joanna Grabski, professor of art history and visual culture. During the 2014 fall semester, the seminar students researched and assembled a thorough working knowledge of their topics, then deepened their learning with a 10-day visit to Quebec City and Ottawa over winter break. In the spring semester, they returned to the classroom to create video podcasting projects with materials collected during the study abroad. Topics for the projects run a gamut of interests, including a comparison of how women are portrayed in public art in the two provinces; discerning how Canadian identity provides input into public monuments; and a comparison of architecture and tour guide narratives between Quebec City and Ottawa. “The culture of the course is positive and very engaged; it is a very energizing group of students,” Davis said. “It’s really great to be in a group that coheres around an interest and not simply a requirement.” History major Rachael Barrett agreed. “I found it fascinating to see the art, buildings and museums we had talked about in class in their original contexts. Learning something from a textbook or an article in a classroom lecture is informative and useful, but this trip allowed me to see just how important it is to get a real-life, in-depth look at the topics of study.” “This trip allowed me to see just how important it is to get a real-life, in-depth look at the topics of study.” “My favorite part of the class was being able to interact with my professors and classmates in this unique kind of environment,” said Emma Hatcher, Spanish major. “I made wonderful lasting friendships that I would not have made had it not been for the study abroad aspect of the class.” Canada is the United States’ largest trading partner, and the U.S. and Canada share the longest undefended border in the world. Yet Americans generally know little about Canada — and what we think we know is more complex than it appears at first glance. “As I walked the streets of Quebec City and Ottawa, I began to see how issues of identity, contention between the two founding nations, organization of public space and historical representation came together,” said Abby Zofchak, a political science major and art history and visual culture minor. “These daily interactions provided me with a new perspective, one that is built purely on my own experiences of these two very different cities in Canada.” The study abroad experience included walking tours, art museums, forts, parliament, architecture, and time with Duncan Dee, a Denison parent who hosted the group for dinner and special vault tours of the war museum in Ottawa. “We met in Ottawa to underscore to the students that there are Denison connections everywhere and that these connections matter,” Dee said. “We wanted to introduce them to the home one of their fellow Denisonians and to learn more about our country and what makes us both similar and different from the U.S.” “This class and these interactions emerge out of Denison’s unique infrastructure for student growth,” said Grabski. “It’s the kind of class you can only do here.” The Potential Awesomeness of ADHD Occupational Therapy job shadow gives Rebekah Funk ’20 an edge up Mindfulness: Healthy practices across campus A Look Inside Ourselves The Denison Difference Explore Our Campus Home to the office of the Facilities Services team and hub for planning, operating, maintaining, constructing & renewing campus facilities and grounds.
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Musings on Maps About the Blogger and the Blog Tag Archives: weather maps Saturated Shores in Southeastern Texas There is almost no trace of the human, or of the extreme overurbanization of the Texas coast, in most of the maps that were created of the extreme flooding and intense winter rains that hit Galveston and Houston TX with the windfall of Hurricane Harvey. While maps serve to orient humans to the world–and orient us to human processes and events in a “human world,” as J.B. Harley and David Woodward put it, the confused nature of relations between the human and natural world, is increasingly in danger of being mipmapped. Data visualizations of extreme weather that erase the modification of coastal environments provide a particularly challenging means of orientation, as news maps are suspended between registering the shock of actual events–and trying to contain the natural emergencies that events of extreme weather create–and the demand for graphics that register natural calamities and the ethics of showing such calamities as “natural”–or even what the category of the natural is in coastal regions that so heavily modified to modify actual weather events. The ethics of orienting viewers to the rainfall levels that fell in Houston after the landfall Hurricane Harvey Part of the huge difficulties lies in adequately orienting viewers in ways that register a changing natural world–how we are mapping rainfall, for example, or the approach of hurricanes, or are rather mapping the new relation of rain to built surfaces and landcover change that lack permeability for water, facilitating flooding by storms whose potency is changed by the greater atmospheric content of a warming Gulf of Mexico, which the ground cover of Houston, Galveston, and the Texas shore are less able to absorb and return to the Gulf. The area is, itself, something of an epicenter of the increased number of hemispheric tropical cyclones–which demand warm water temperatures above 80 80°F / 27°C and a cooling atmosphere and low wind shear–often led to the Gulf coast. NASA Earth Observatory/Tropical Cyclones through 2006 –those that come ashore at Galveston hit a seashore that is eminently unprepared to accommodate an influx of water that the paved surface has rendered all but impermeable. If the problem of global cyclones that can become hurricanes is truly global– NASA Earth Observatory/150 years of Tropical Cyclones –the intersection between cyclones and areas of paved ground cover is problematic to the southwestern states, and most of all to Texas, Louisiana, and Florida, where water absorption has been anthropogenically reduced in recent decades. At the same time, few other areas of the inhabited world are so widely “tracked” as the destination of tropical cyclone formation.. NWS JetStream Online School) The problem is partly evident in the choice of new color ramps that transcend the rainbow spectrum of measuring the intensity of rainfall in the recent arrival or ground fall of Hurricane Harvey, which condenses the great difficulty of using old cartographical categories and conventions in order to capture or communicate increasingly extreme weather conditions. in an era of climate change. But the cartographic problem goes farther: for it lies in the difficulty of registering the changes in relations f how rain dropped meets the ground, mapping relations between complex processes of warming and atmospheric warmth that lead to greater humidity across the gulf region to ground cover permeability that leaves regions increasingly exposed to flooding. The relentless logic of data visualizations based on and deriving primarily from remote sensing are striking for rendering less of a human world than the threat of allegedly “natural” processes to that world. Perhaps because of the recent season of extreme weather we have experienced, weather maps may be among the most widely consulted visualizations in our over-mediated world, if they were already widely viewed as the essential forms of orientation. But the pointillist logic of weather maps may fail to orient us well to extreme events as the hurricane that dumped a huge amount of water on overbuilt areas to include the human–or the human world–seem a tacit denial of the role of humans in the complex phenemona of global warming that have, with the warming waters of the Gulf of Mexico and ever-increasing ozone over much of the overbuilt southeastern Texas shore, created a perfect storm for their arrival. This failure to include this role haunts the limited content of the weather map; including the role of humans in maps of extreme weather events indeed remains among the most important challenges of weather maps and data visualization, with the human experience of the disasters we still call natural. And although the subject is daunting, in the spirit of this blog, we will both look at the communicative dilemmas and difficulties of eye-catching color ramps and their deceptiveness, and poetic difficulties of orienting oneself to shores. For as the disaster of Harvey is depressing, it compels raising questions of the orientation to the shifting shore, around the national epicenter of Galveston, where the landfall of Hurricane Harvey focussed our attention on August 27, 2017– –and the meaning of place in an saturated shoreline, where the sea is somehow part of the land, and the land-sea divide blurs with a specificity that seems as if it may well be increasingly true in an approaching era of climate change. And as we depend on the ready generation of maps based on remote sensing whose relentless logic is based on points, we risk looking sight of the role of place in determining the relations of rainfall to shoreline in maps of coastal flooding that remove remote observations from the built environment that flooding so drastically changes, challenges and affects, in ways that may elide specificities of place. At a time when we are having and will be destined to have increased problems in orienting ourselves to our shores through digital maps of rainfall, the unclear shorelines of Galveston sent me to the bearings that a poet of an earlier age took her bearings on the mapped shorelines of the place where she had been born, and how she was struck by a bathymetric map to gauge her personal relation to place, and saw place in how the changing shoreline of the northern Atlantic were mapped in the maritimes, in a retrograde form of print mapping in a time of war. For the way the mapped shore became a means by which Elizabeth Bishop gained bearings on shores through a printed map of coastal bathymetry to access the spatiality of the shore–how “land lies in water” and the blurred relation of land and water that the bathymetric map charts–in an age when the materiality of the map was changing, with the introduction of aerial composite maps from the early 1930s, as the rise of aerial composite maps removed the hand of the mapmaker from the map in an early instance of remote sensing– Cartography Associates/David Ramsey: Historical Map Collection: Composite of 164 Aerial Views of San Francisco by Harrison Ryker/Oakland, 1938, 1:2000 –in a medium of aerial photography that focussed on land to the exclusion of water, and that all but erased the relation between water and shore just a few years after Bishop quickly wrote her poem in Christmas 1935 about coastal “edges” of land and sea. Ryker, who developed techniques of aerial photography used in the mapping of the shores of Puerto Rico for the Fairchild Aerial Camera Company, as well as photographs of the devastating Berkeley Fire of 1923, went into business in 1938–the year of his map–as a map publisher, with a patent for the stereoscope used to interpret aerial imagery, and must have performed the massively detailed mapping of San Francisco in one hundred and sixty for images taken from airplanes from 1937-38 as a sort of calling card, soon after Bishop wrote her poem, before manufacturing a range of stereoscopes of pocket and desktop versions for military ends that were widely used in World War II by the US Army. Before war broke out, but in ways that anticipated the coming war, the printed bathymetric map must have resonated as a new reflection on the impersonality of the aerial view; Bishop was suddenly struck when she encountered the materiality of a print map on Christmas 1938 as the art of cartography was already changing, responding to the drawn map under glass of the Atlantic as a way to recuperate the personal impact of place. Her poem powerfully examined the logic of drawn maps utterly absent from the digitized space of rainfall maps of a flood plain, deriving from data at the cost of human inhabitation of place–and in envisioning data to come to terms with the catastrophic event of flooding distancing or removing the craft of mapmaking from the observer in dangerously deceptive ways. And so after wrestling with the problems of cartographic representation using remote sensing, while recognizing the value of these readily produced maps of rainfall and the disasters they create, 1. For weather maps are also among the most misleading points to orient oneself to global warming and climate change, as they privilege the individual moment, removed from a broader context of long-term change or the human alteration of landscape. They provide endless fascination by synthesizing an encapsulated view of weather conditions, but also suggest a confounding form of media to orient audiences to long-term change or to the cascading relations of the complex phenomenon of climate change and our relation to the environment, as they privilege a moment in isolation from any broader context, and a sense of nature removed from either landscape modification or human intervention in the environment, in an area were atmospheric warming has shifted sea-surface temperatures. The effects on the coast is presented in data visualizations that trace the hurricane’s “impact” as if its arrival were quite isolated from external events, and from the effects of human habitations on the coast. The image of extreme flooding is recorded as a layer atop a map, removing the catastrophic effects of the flooding from the overpaved land of the megacities of southeastern Texas, and the rapid paving over of local landcover of its shores. Such visualizations preserve a clear line between land and sea, but treat the arrival of the rains on land as isolated from the Consuming such events of global warming in color-spectrum maps. The data of rainfall translate data into somewhat goofy designs represents a deep alienation from the environment, distancing viewers in dangerous ways from the very complexity of global warming that Gulf coast states encountered. Such data visualizations seem dangerously removed notion of how we have changed our own environment, by describing a notion of “nature” that is immediately legible, as if it were removed from any human trace or of the impact of modification of the land, and by imaging events in isolation from one another–often showing a background in terrain view as if it has no relation to the events that the map describes. Although weather maps and AccuWeather forecasts are sources of continual fascination, and indeed orientation, they are are also among the most confounding media to orient viewers to the world’s rapidly changing climate–and perhaps among the most compromised. For they imply a remove of the viewer from space-and from the man-made nature of the environment or the effects of human activity form the weather systems whose changes we increasingly register. By reifying weather data as a record of an actuality removed from human presence at one place in time, they present a status quo which it is necessary to try to peel off layers, and excavate a deeper dynamic, and indeed excavate the effects of human presence in the landscape or geography that is shown in the map. We are drawn to tracking and interpret visualizations of data from satellite feeds in such weather maps–or by what is known as “remote sensing,” placed at an increased remove from the human habitation of a region, and indeed in a dangerously disembodied manner. Visualizations resulting from remote observation demand taken as a starting point to be related to from the human remaking of a region’s landscape that has often increasingly left many sites increasingly vulnerable to climate change. But the abstract rendering of their data in isolation from a global picture–or on the ground knowledge of place–may render them quite critically incomplete. The remove of such maps may even suggest a deep sense of alienation form the environment, so removed is the content of the data visualization form human presence, and perhaps from any sense of the ability to change weather-related events, or perceive the devastating nature of their effects on human inhabitants: their stories are about weather, removed form human lives, as they create realities that gain their own identity in images, separate from a man-made world, at a time when weather increasingly intersects with and is changed by human presence. While throwing into relief the areas hit by flooding near to the southeastern Texas shore at multiple scales based on highly accurate geospatial data, much of which is able to be put to useful humanitarian uses– Dartmouth Flood Observatory/University of Colorado at Boulder, August 29. 2017 –the reduction of floods to data points creates a distorted image of space renders their occurrence distant from the perspective of folks on the ground, and places their content at a considerable remove from the complex causality of a warming Gulf of Mexico, or the problems of flood drainage by which Galveston and Houston were beset. Indeed, the multiple images of that report rainfall as an overlay in a rainbow spectrum, at a remove from the reasons for Houston’s vulnerability to flooding and the limits the region faces of flood control, in broadcast Accuweather images of total rainfall in inches advance a metric that conceals the cognitive remove from the dangers of flooding, ora human relation to the landscape that the hurricane so catastrophically affected. Can we peel under the layers of the data visualization, and create better images that appreciate the human level on which the landscape stands to be devastated by hurricane rains, as much as tracking the intensity of the growth of rainfall over time? AccuWeather, Rainfall levels by Thursday AccuWeather, Friday to Monday Such layers of green, meant to suggest the intensity of rainfall that fell over land, reveal the concentration of water in areas closes to the Gulf of Mexico. Even the most precise geographical records of the dangers of flooding in the floodplain of southeastern Texas with little reference to the historical modification of the region by inhabitants– Dartmouth Flood Observatory at University of Colorado, Boulder/August 29, 2017 –and conceal the extent to which the landscape’s limited ground cover permeability has left the region far more susceptible to flooding, and elevated the risks of the emergency. The problem of reading any signs of human presence into these “images” of precipitation provoke problems of disentangling remote sensing data from knowledge of the region’s recent urban growth and the consequent shift in local landcover. The perspective of our relation to these events is often as fleeting and as existential as they flood us with data, which we viewers have little perspective or tools to process fully. The onrush of recent remote sensing maps batter us with an array of data, so much as to lead many to throw up their hands at their coherence. Even as we are still trying to calculate the intensity of damages in Puerto Rico–where electricity is so slowly returning that even even after four months, almost a third of its 1.5 million electricity customers still lack power–and the cost of fires in southern California. We look at maps, hoping to piece together evidence of extensive collateral damage of global warming. Yet we’ve still to come to terms with the intensity of rainstorms that hit southeastern Texas–deluging the coast with rainfall surpassing the standard meteorological chromatic scale that so misleadingly seems to offer a transparent record of the catastrophe, but omits and masks the experiences of people on the ground, digesting swaths of remotely sensed data that take the place of their perception and experience, and offering little critical perspective on the hurricane’s origin. The rapidity with which rain challenged ground cover permeability provides both a challenge for mapping as a symptom of global warming and landscape modification: the mapping of “natural” levels of rainfall blurs the pressing problem of how shifting landcover has created an impermeability to heightened rains, and indeed how the new patterns of habitation challenge the ability of the coast of the Gulf of Mexico to absorb the prospect of increased rain in the face of decreasing groundcover permeability, and the extreme modification of the coastline that increasingly impeded run-off to the Gulf. 2. Across much of southeastern Texas, a region whose growth was fed by the hopes of employment in extractive industries, real estate demand and over-paving have unfortunately intersected with extreme weather in southeastern Texas in ways which dat visualizations have had trouble exposing, but which raise a curtain on the coming crises of a failure of ability to accommodate increased levels of rainfall If the lack of precedent for the intense rainfall in Galveston Bay generated debate about introducing a new color that went beyond the rainbow scale employed in weather charts, what seemed a problem of the cartographic color-spectrum suggested a problem of governability and indeed government response to extreme weather conditions. How to register the dangers of rainfall that goes of the scale or standards of measurement? One must consider how to orient viewers to the intensity of consequent flooding, and to its consequences and better prepare ourselves for the arrival of deluging rains without falling back on the over-freighted metaphor of rains of biblical scope. How many more hurricanes of increasing intensity can continue to pound the shores, by whipping precipitation from increasingly warming waters and humid air? The cumulative pounding of tropical cyclones in the Gulf stands to create a significantly larger proportion of lands lying underwater–temporarily submerged lands–with radically reduced possibilities of drainage, as hurricanes carry increased amounts of evaporated water from the humid air of the warming gulf across its increasingly overbuilt shores. in ways that have changed how the many tropical cyclones that have crossed the land-sea threshold since NOAA began tracking their transit (in 1851) poses a new threat to the southeastern coast of Texas, and will force us to map the shifting relation between land and water not only in terms of the arrival of hurricanes, or cyclonic storms– –but the ability of an increasingly overbuilt landscape to lie underwater as the quantity of the Gulf coast rainfall stands to grow, overwhelming the overbuilt nature of the coast. Most maps that chart the arrival and impact of hurricanes seem a form of climate denial, as much as they account for climate change, locating the hurricanes as aggressive forces outside the climate, against a said backdrop of blue seas, as if they are the disconnect. Months after the hurricane season ended, the damage for hurricanes caused have hardly been assessed in what has been one of the most costly and greatest storm damage since 1980 in the United States,–including the year of Hurricane Katrina–we have only begun to sense the damage of extreme weather stands to bring to the national infrastructure. The comparison to the costs of storm damage in previous years were not even close. But distracted by the immediacy of data visualizations, and impressed by the urgency of the immediate, we risk being increasingly unable to synthesize the broader patterns of increased sea surface temperatures and hurricane generations, or the relations between extremely destructive weather events, overwhelmed by the excessive destruction of each, and distracted from raising questions about the extremely poor preparation of most overbuilt regions for their arrival, and indeed the extent to which regional over-building that did not take the possibility of extreme weather into account–paving large areas without adequate drainage structures or any areas of arable land–left inhabitants more vulnerable to intense rains. For in expanding the image of the city without bounds, elasticity, or margins for sea-level rise, the increasingly brittle cityscapes of Galveston and much of the southeastern Texas shoreline were left incredibly unprepared for the arrival of hurricanes or intense rains. Despite the buzz of an increased density of hurricanes to have hit the region, the questions of how to absorb hurricanes of the future, and to absorb the increased probability of rainfall from hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico and its shores, suggests questions of risk, danger, and preparation that we have no ability to map. What, indeed, occurs, as hurricanes themselves destroy the very means of transmitting on the ground information and sensing weather, and we rely exclusively on remote sensing? Destroyed satellite dishes after Hurricane Maria hit Humacao, Puerto Rico REUTERS/Alvin Baez To characterize or bracket these phenomena as “natural” is, of course, to overlook complex interaction between extreme weather patterns and our increasingly overbuilt environments that have both transformed the nature of the Southeastern Texas coast and have made the region both an area of huge economic growth over time, and have paved over much of the floodplain–as well as elevated the potential risks that are associated with coastal flooding in the Gulf Coast. To be sure, any discussion of the Gulf of Mexico must begin from the increasingly unclear nature of much of our infrastructure across land and sea, evident in the range of pipelines of gas and oil that snake along a once more clearly defined shore charted by ProPublica in 2012, revealed the scope of the manmade environment that has both changed the relation of the coastal communities to the Gulf of Mexico, and has been such a huge spur to ground cover change. The expansive armature of lines that snake from the region across the nation– ProPublica, Pipeline Safety Tracker/Hazardous liquid pipelines are noted in red; gas in blue -and whose tangle of oil pipelines that extend from the very site of Galveston to the Louisiana coast is almost unable to be defined as “offshore” save as a fiction, so highly constructed is much of the national waters in submerged lands in the Gulf of Mexico– ProPublica, Pipeline Safety Tracker/Hazardous liquid pipelines are noted in red They indeed seem something of an extension of the land, and a redefinition of the shore, and reveal a huge investment of the offshore extractive industries that stand to change much of the risk that hurricanes pose to the region, as well as the complex relation of our energy industries to the warming seas. Yet weather maps, ostensibly made for the public good, rarely reveal the overbuilt nature of these submerged lands or of the Gulf’s waters. Despite the dangers that such an extensive network of hazardous liquid lines along the Gulf of Mexico, the confusion between mapping a defined line between land and water, and visualizing relations of extreme weather disturbances as hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico and local infrastructure haunts the extremely thin nature of the sort of data visualizations that are generated about the dangers of hurricanes and their landfall in the region. For all too often, they presume a stable land/sea divide, removed from the experience of inhabitants of the region and how we have remade the shore. 3. How can we better integrate both a human perspective on weather changes, and the role of human-caused conditions in maps of extreme weather? How can we do better by going beneath the data visualizations of record-breaking rainfall, to map the human impact of such storms? How could we do better to chart the infrastructural stresses and the extent to which we are ill-prepared for such extreme weather systems whose impact multiplies because of the increased impermeability of the land, unable to absorb excessive rainfall, and beds of lakes and reservoirs that cannot accommodate increased accumulation of rainfall that stand to become the new normal? The current spate of news maps that provoke panic by visualizing the extremes of individual cases may only inspire a sort of data vis-induced ADD, distracting from infrastructural inadequacies to the effects of global warming–and leaving us at a loss to guarantee the best structures of governability and environmental readiness. Indeed, the absence of accurately mapping the impact and relation between landcover, storm intensity, rainfall, flooding, and drainage abilities increases the dangers of lack of good governance. There need not be any need for a reminder of how quickly inadequate mapping of coastal disasters turns into an emblem of bad governance. There is the danger that, overwhelmed by the existential relation to each storm, we fail to put them together with one another; compelled to follow patterns of extreme weather, we risk being distracted from not only the costs but the human-generated nature of such shifts in seasons between extremes of hot and cold. For as we focus on each event, we fail to integrate a more persuasive image of how rising temperatures stand to create an ever-shifting relation between water and land. Provoked by the rhetoric of emergency, we may need to learn to distance ourselves better from the aerial views that synthesize intense precipitation, tally hurricane impacts, or snowfall levels, and view them less as individual “strikes” or events and better orient ourselves to a broader picture which put us in a less existential relation to extreme weather. We surely need to establish distance to process syntheses of data in staggering aerial views on cloud swirl, intense precipitation, and snowfall, and work to peel back their striking colors and bright shades of rainbow spectra, to force ourselves to focus not only on their human costs, or their costs of human life, but their relation to a warming planet, and the role of extreme of weather in a rapidly changing global climate, as much as track the “direct strikes” of hurricanes of individual names, as if they were marauders of our shores: their creation is as much tied to the changing nature of our shores and warming sea-surface temperatures, and in trying to create a striking visualization, we deprive ourselves from detecting broader patterns offering better purchase on weather changes. If patterns of weather maps epitomized by Accuweather forecast and projections suggest an exhilaratingly Apollonian view on global and regional weather patterns, they also shift attention form a broader human perspective in quite deeply pernicious ways. Such maps provided the only format for grasping the impact of what happened as the hurricane made landfall, but provided little sense of the scale of inundations that shifted, blurred and threatened the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. They provide a format for viewing floods that are disjoined from victims, and seem to naturalize the quite unnatural occurrence of extreme weather systems. Given the huge interest in grasping the transformation of Hurricane Harvey from a tropical storm to a Category Four hurricane, and the huge impact a spate of Category Four hurricanes have created in the Gulf of Mexico, it’s no surprise that the adequacy of the maps of Hurricane Harvey have been interrogated as hieroglyphs or runes of a huge weather change: we sift through them for a human story which often left opaque behind bright neon overlays, whose intensity offer only an inkling of a personal perspective of the space or scale of their destruction on the ground: while data maps provide a snapshot of the intensity of rain-levels or wind strength at specific sites, it is difficult if important to remember that their concentration on sites provide a limited picture of causation or complexity. All too often, such maps fail to offer an adequately coherent image of disasters and their consequences, and indeed to parse the human contributions to their occurrence. This post might be defined into multiple subsections. The first actions suggest the problems of mapping hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico in relation to flooding in data visualizations of the weather and the overbuilt region; the middle of the post turns to an earlier poetic model for considering the relation between land and sea that visualizations all too easily obscure, and the meaning that the poet Elizabeth Bishop found in viewing relations between land and sea in a printed map of the Atlantic; after returning to the question of the overbuilt shore compounds problems of visualizing the Texas coast, the final section, perhaps its most provocative, returns to Bishop’s reading of a map of the Atlantic coast. What such new weather maps would look like is a huge concern. Indeed, as we depend on weather maps to orient us to place ourselves in the inter-relations of climate change, sea-level, surface temperatures, and rain, whether maps cease to orient us to place, but when best constructed help to describe the changing texture of weather patterns in ways that can help familiarize us not only to weather conditions, but needed responses to climate change. For three months after the hurricanes of the Gulf of Mexico caused such destruction and panic on the ground, it is striking not only that few funds have arrived to cover costs of rebuilding or insurance claims, but the judgement or understanding of the chances for future flooding have almost left our radar–perhaps pushed rightly aside by the firestorms of northern and southern California, but in ways that troublingly seem to forget to assess or fail to assess the extent of floods and groundwater impermeability along the Texas and Louisiana coast. The problems that preparation for future coastal hurricanes off the Gulf of Mexico raise problems of hurricane control and disaster response that seem linked to problems of mapping their arrival–amd framing the response to the increasing rains that are dumped along the entire Gulf Coast. Indeed, the chromatic foregrounding of place in such rainbow color ramps based on GPS obscure other maps. Satellite data of rainfall are removed from local conditions, and serve to help erase complex relations between land and water or the experience of flooding on the ground–by suggesting a clear border between land and sea, and indeed mapping the Gulf of Mexico as a surface as if it were unrelated to the increased flooding around Houston, in maps prepared from satellite imagery, despite the uneasy echoes of anthropogenic causes for the arrival of ten hurricanes in ten weeks, in ways that suggest how warming waters contributed to the extreme inundation of the Gulf Coast. Despite NOAA predictions of a 45% likelihood of ‘above-normal’ activity for the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season, with, a 70% likelihood of storms that could transform into hurricanes, the images of inundated lands seem both apocalyptic and carefully removed from the anthropogenic changes either to the ocean or land that intensified their occurrence so dramatically on the ground. Dartmouth Flood Observatory Dartmouth Flood Observatory/August 29, 2017 Is it possible to recuperate the loss of individual experience in such data maps, or at least acknowledge their limitations as records of the complexity of a changing climate and the consequences of more frequent storm surges and such inundations of rainfall? As we seek better to understand the disaster relief efforts through real-time maps of effects of Hurricane Harvey as it moved inland from the Gulf of Mexico, shifting from Category 4 Hurricane from a tropical storm, we tried to grasp levels of rainfall that spun out of 115-mile-an-hour winds across southeastern Texas that damaged crops, flooded fields, ruined houses, and submerged cars, we scan stories in hope of clues to assess our position in relation to increasingly dangerous weather systems whose occurrence they may well forebode. At a time of increased attention to extreme weather has long developed, the gross negligence of climate change denial is increasingly evident: it recalls the earlier denial of any relation between hurricanes and climate change, when increased hurricanes were cast as “the cycle of nature,” rather than as consequences whose effects have in fact been broadly intensified by human activity. Current attempts to map the toll of record-smashing hurricanes focused almost exclusively on point-based data view rainstorms largely as land-based records; even as they intend to monitor the effects of Harvey’s landfall by microwave censors, they risk seeming to isolate real-time rainfall levels from the mechanics warmer air and sea-surface temperatures which result from human-caused global warming, not relating increased storm surges or inundations to achanges in coastal environments or climate change. To render such changes as natural–or only land-based–is irresponsible in an age of reckless levels of climate denial. Indeed, faced by the proliferation of data visualizations, part of the journalistic difficulty or quandary is to integrate humanistic or individual perspectives on the arrival of storms, rendered in stark colors in the increasingly curtailed ecosystems of newsrooms which seek simplified visualizations of satellite data on the disaster, which fail to note the human contributions to the travails that are often reserved for photographs, which increasingly afford opportunities of disaster tourism in the news, emphasizing the spectator’s position before disasters, by images that underscore the difficulties in processing or interpreting the proliferation of data from MODIS satellite feeds: we can show the ability to measure the arrival of torrential rains, but in offering few legends, save the date and scale, but offering few keys o interpret the scale of the disaster. The looming portent of human-made climate change, however, underlies the poor predictions that NOAA offered of perhaps 2-4 major hurricanes this Spring, and the lack of a new director for NOAA–on which local and state agencies depend to monitor the nations shores and fisheries–suggested the, from June to September, which left states on their own to make decisions and plan for disaster mitigation programs and better flood maps. (The danger of appointing a newly nominated director, Barry Myers, who is a strong supporter of the privitization of weather maps and an executive at the private Accuweather mapping service, suggests the difficulty of determining the public-private divide in an era of neoliberalism, and a free market of weather maps that were once seen as central to national security and standards of safety.) There are two hidden scales on which we read these opaque maps of global warming and globalization and local inundation are triply frustrating. For all the precision and data richness of such point-maps of largely land-based rainfall, local temperature, or flooding, the biases of such instantaneous measurements seem to fit our current governing atmosphere of climate change denial, and dangerous in erasing how such storms are informed by long-term consequences of man-made climate change. (As the mapping tools of coastal weather seem destined to change, what sort of change in direction for NOAA coastal maps do we want: the appointment suggests the terrifying possibility of a return to the Bush-era proposal nominee Myers supported that prohibiting the agency from producing any maps already available in the private sector then threatened federal weather lines to go dark–lest they literally compete with ad-supported websites private providers–and shift federal information offline?) For making moves toward the future readability of weather maps may well be at stake in critically important ways. The 2005 proposal that Myers backed would have eliminated the National Weather Service, even while exempting those forecasts needed to preserve “life and property,” would in essence have returned the weather services to a pre-internet era, even as the most active hurricane season including a record breaking fifteen hurricanes and twenty-eight storms began in the gulf coast, including the infamous hurricane Katrina. The proposed bill would have prevented NOAA from posting open data, and not only readily available to researchers and policymakers, in ad-free formats, free of popup screens, but allow them to make their own maps on the fly–ending good practices of posting climate data would work quite dangersously to prevent development of tools of data visualization outside commercial models of rendering storms and hurricanes as if environmentally isolated. A deeper problem of providing such limited weather maps of tropical storms may be the subtexts about the relation of human causes to weather they convey, and the absence of a greater narrative of the transformation of a global ecology or of the ecology of the Gulf Coast. The curtailed images of “nature” they present by symbolizing rains, winds, floods, or submerged regions in appealing hues as natural–raise questions of the odd simplicity of the absent storylines: cheery colors erase or bracket complex questions of climate change, the human contribution to extreme weather events, or the human experience of suffering on the ground: Rita, Cindy, Katrina, Dennis, and Wilma seem not part of the environment, epiphenomenal interlopers moving across a static deep blue sea, in an apparent dumbing down of the mechanics of hurricane or storm formation in a rainbow spectrum removed from a human-made environment. Filed under anthropogenic change, climate change, coastlines, ecological disasters, gulf coast Tagged as aerial photography, bathymetry, coastal flooding, extreme weather, global warming, groundcover change, gulf coast, Gulf of Mexico, Houston TX, hurricane Harvey, hurricanes, landcover, news maps, Remote Sensing, weather maps Mapping a Century of Rising Heat The color-saturated mapping of regional changes in temperature across the contiguous United States provided a commanding visual for the front page of the New York Times of May 6 to capture changes in the US climate: placed on conspicuously above the fold and standing alone, just below the headlines, the graphic served multiple functions in a strikingly effective way. The weather map that was first released by the Obama White House elegantly and effectively served–in ways that words could not–to combine several narratives of climate change that synthesized the findings of a recent committee of scientists on the wide-ranging effects of global warming. This is an unprecedented victory of the map, the most effective single tool to describe the complex process of a veritable cascade of environmental shifts, by selectively focussing on a known variable of local warmth. The orange and bright reds of the map arrest the eye in ways an article or headline could not, and effectively provoke a cascading set of side-effects and reactions to occur in readers’ minds that served to grasp the finality of warming’s consequences. As one mind quickly moves off the map of stark changes of temperature to the effects of future droughts and increased aridity of soil, consequent crop-shortages, and subsiding ground-levels, imagining the marked depletion of cool air, streams and rivers that would dry, and an increasing dependence on energy to create artificially cool environments. Although it is static, the historical map suggests a spectral future forecast for the nation that dramatically moved from back pages to headline news. It mirrored a roll-out of the announcement as part of a dialogue with weathercasters on television news programs in a gambit to engage the public in the question of climate change. Indeed, the graphic mimicked the presentation of weather maps on TV, images of the national forecast that the Weather Channel has made all too familiar. Even if the map documents changes of the previous century, it shares the iconic status of the sort of severe weather forecast that The Weather Channel has accustomed us to interpret and to see. We’re now trained so often to interpret and to read similarly colorized climatological forecasts to trace regional emergencies that the Times‘ map seemed to recuperate these conventions to make a polemic point not so much about the past–“US Climate Has Already Changed”–but about the possible futures that the map forebode. For weather maps offer the most acceptable medium of future predictions, where they have currency as credible tools for short-term forecasting. The range of information in the map that summarized a century of rapidly shifting local climate temperatures How could such a gamut of consequences be convincingly understood or presented other than in a map? The visual immediately triggered multiple questions of effects on species, forests, farmlands, new sorts of vegetation, and shifting insect populations described in the article, which a reader some decades ago would be challenged to link. The effectiveness with which the map implicitly summarized the ramifications of these potential changes, or provoked its readers to react to its orange and read heat-distributions, presented an ominous vision of the future, as well as the historical past of a century of warming weather that the headline announced. As if with the ominous fatality with which science fiction authors like Arthur C. Clarke described the future of a world battered by asteroids, the map opened up a view on the consequences of environmental change in a future world, even if its headline announced an event firmly rooted in the past century, synthesizing as it did the findings of two periods in the past hundred years. The finality with which the map released by John P. Holdren documented a change that had already occurred across the nation’s regions, but made it to every weather bureau and station across the country, as if to maximize the newfound familiarity of audiences to engage meteorological maps as a way of making its own polemic (and of course partly political) point of how drastically rising temperatures stand to redraw the familiarity of the world. Extending far beyond earlier warnings voiced by the UN, or the pronouncements of an Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change whose report documented the melting of the ice-caps and collapse of sea ice in the arctic, the migration of many fish out of their habitats, and impending dangers of rising seas. Perhaps these global images were too remote, or difficult to visualize. The powerful invocation of the weathercaster seemed to give greater reality to the scary prognostic in the contiguous United States, and concretized the multiple threats of climate change in an image that confirms the changing nature of the ground beneath our feet. Some may criticize the focus on the United States alone in an interconnected world, as if the isolation of our country’s climate somehow removed it from a global problem and dilemma, or placed undue emphasis on the effects of emissions on the climate in the US. But the image of actual experiences spurs a call for reaction and response, and, in an echo of the tactics of the Obama administration, reveals the increased “cartographical literacy” in the reading and interpreting forecasts in persuasive national weather maps. The emulation of the televised weather forecast is no doubt what makes the map appear so immediately effective. The map of the entire country was in ways a counterpart to the images of November 2012, around the time of Hurricane Sandy, simply titled “What Could Disappear,” which asked viewers to imaging the shifting coastlines of rising seas, and pictured the coasts that rising ocean waters could redefine, submerging beneath the sea low-lying areas of what we consider habitable land–as well as flooding all of Galveston, TX and some 45% of Long Beach. But rather than engage with complex claims of climatological futurology, the front-page graphic was both at the same time historical in perspective and even more apocalyptic. In announcing or intoning “US Climate Has Already Changed,” it reminded us of the consequences of rising temperatures at a historical remove that was still part of our present and an uneasy glimpse to the future we have mad, using tense whose finality foreclosed debate in quite incontrovertible ways. The map’s comparison of temperatures over a century effectively resolved debates, separating the actual consequences of climate change on a familiar environment from debate about its mechanism and reminding us of its man-made origin, and untangling the dangers of the changes that it wrought from the cascading (if terrifying) mechanism of ocean levels rising, habitats altering, fish migrating, the extinction of species, and deaths of coral reefs. The map was able to link itself to a multiplicity of lived experiences and actual fact, and conjure a scarier–precisely since undefined–picture of what was to come–an era of increasing heat. (Its associations might almost be as apocalyptic as the hallucinatory surreal dream from a 1959 episode from Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone, “The Midnight Sun,” in which the earth exits its elliptical orbit and moves toward the sun, warming the nation so much as to induce crazed radio weathercasters to stray incoherently off script and panicked Americans to flee abandoned cities en masse to Canada in search of cooler climes.) The particularly powerful graphic of the map of regional variations in rising temperatures was quite devastating in its depiction of how–despite some regional differences–none save rare pockets of settled land experienced anything approaching a decline in reported weather temperatures. For those that did, mostly concentrated in the lower Mississippi basin, they experienced quite slight declines: it presented an image of a continent on fire, almost about to be consumed by flames, burning from its edges, if, the accompanying article noted, increasingly soaked by torrential rains. The growth of areas already warmer on an average of some two degrees suggested an encroaching of scarlet red blotches across the land from all sides, particularly in southern California and Arizona, Utah and New Mexico, the northern eastern seaboard, and the Great Lakes, with Bob Dylan’s native Hibbing seeing the greatest temperature change of over a massive three degrees. The map powerfully synthesized the effects of human-induced climate change in ways that are not only impossible to rebut, using findings of a national committee that has been in existence for over a decade–but was by far the most effective among the various interactive graphics it released. The simple synthesis in a four-color map of the contiguous US immediately showed rising temperatures in some of the more inhabited areas of the nation, from New Mexico to Southern California, to the New York-Washington corridor. In selecting a map to represent the consequences of climate change that were detailed in the report, the images suggested less of an infographic than a sort of disease map of a climate that has gone off the tracks. Even if it might be faulted from its insistence on removing the US from the world, and focussing on one place within a complex web, as well as flattening its findings in cartographical form, the image is powerfully links the land to a set of abstract changes we cannot fully comprehend, but whose effects we can perceive. This is the stunning victory of the static map. Filed under "Midnight Sun", Global Warming, Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change, John P. Holdren, Rod Serling, The Weather Channel, weather maps, weathercasting Tagged as climate change, global warming, The Weather Channel, weather maps May 3, 2014 · 12:48 pm Windswept Lands Warm wins that rise in the high plains have increasingly driven the fires that have devastated California, hurricanes battered our costs, and driven unprecedented showers that have flooded southeastern Texas. But winds are rarely mapped, or even perceivable in maps, although winds were once a central part of the maps known as portolan charts designed when the primary means of long-distance voyaging was navigation. But data now stands to integrate the winds–once shown as heads that buffeted human history or at least human travel– 00but are increasingly able to be incorporated into our own maps of disasters, if only to fully understand the fluidity and vulnerability to which we are exposed by high winds. Indeed, it is increasingly clear that we are better able to read the relations of geographic locations and the information of data visualizations only by including the winds in their surfaces, at the same rank, or level, as the sites of human habitation that maps have long prized. But if the winds shown on global maps are confined to its margins as embodied personifications, less quantifiable than the graticule of longitude and latitude but vestiges of an older traditional of nautical charting where the provided directionality as well as the force of gales that would provide a basis to orient one’s sails, the place of the winds are able to be inscribed on the surfaces of many recent data maps. The ready availability of huge datasets about wind-strength indeed offers multiple formats for modeling an increasingly dynamic relation to space, and perhaps to incorporate them within the legibility of the map . Indeed, the processing of remotely sensed data allows for frighteningly rapid condensation and synthesis of what can be called information within a single map. And the recent NOAA based on modeling weather conditions in a real-time wind map is particularly neat in how it invests the currents of air that swirl above land and sea with a hue of their own, as if to invest them with character as a subject of mapping and give them a new level of visibility. Set against a night sky, where details such as topography or ocean currents are conspicuously silenced, the lines of winds appear in neon blue relief off the California coast, showing an elegance of serpentine motions are tracked with far more wonder than the static terrestrial map: The flowing electric blue lines used to render wind move with a sleekness as if to promise immediate access to meteorological actuality that seem to blend the screen with current wind conditions, and provide that most fantastic of illusions of a map of the present-day that almost sends tingles up our neck in providing a map of events that seem actually to be transpiring. The maps have in fact led reporters to gush thanks to the US government for its funding of the project with tax dollars, creating new conditions for the visibility of currents of air to which we are ineluctably drawn in an almost zen manner. The GIF suggests a mapping that is based on looking at the overlooked, or rendering the smoothest of airborne sensations with cartographic legibility. It echoes the recent ability to encode data from sensing stations in a transfixing image of swirling gusts that seems far more animated than the flat topographical base map that lies beneath. The attraction of these maps is more visual, in fact, and somehow more seriously phenomenological, than having to do with geographical information, save as it suggests the increasingly fluid nature of all information flows. The dynamic nature of wind maps renders an idealized perspective whose content asymptotically approaches a view that is almost entirely abstracted or removed from the inhabited world, based on the mathematical models for projecting and tracing the currents and intensity of wind over land: indeed, in the marvelously idealized data-driven maps, wind currents create whirls of whorls over the lower forty-eight. The website hint.fm uses real-time images of the inroads winds make across the territory of the United States, distinguishing gradations of gustiness by wisps of differing intensity to describe a space not only removed from the inhabited world, but whose elegant tracery enacts an aerial drama across in an artificially demarcated mapped space too vast to comprehend, but offers a sort of atmospheric ballet of the wind’s shifting directionality and intensity, as if traced by a multitude of individually situated geographically dispersed weather vanes oriented by the shifting winds across the lower forty eight. If the image recalls something like a smoke-filled room, it is more of a wind-filled continent, where blowing winds cross borders, rivers, and plains in an image of the bounds of the contiguous forty-eight states. The cartographers, or artists of technological visualization, Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg are dedicated to “work [that] explores the joys of revelation” and in converting local data to suggest natural currents that existed before highways carved the continent into itineraries–like the “blue roads” of rivers run across the land–but their constantly shifting trails mark a weirdly curved space in a situated perspective rarely able to have been captured before. Even on a “mild day,” the winds give a sort of dramatic intensity to the organization of space oddly removed from the cartographer’s art, which is quite passive in the sense of offering a surface to be inscribed by the movement of the air, as wind curves around the nation’s great plains in currents of a recognizable patterns or flows that approximate stop-action photography. Sure, there are specific moments of meteorological intensity when winds line up in a recognizable pattern–a tornado or hurricane–in ways that define a geographic focus of interest or attention, as in the vortex of Hurricane Isaac as it approached New Orleans, but all too often the dispersal of attention is the rule, as one watches the patterns that winds themselves generate. This charting of currents is one of the most precious dreams of early map-makers: to chart the very presence of winds across the land and sea, early symbolized by the rhumb lines that were so important for nautical navigation in early modern and medieval charts, where they communicated the basis of projecting travel across oceans otherwise rarely noted or known how to be represented in the surface of the map itself: even the lines surfaces of the waves on which ships gently rock and sea monsters rear their heads is only a suggestion of the winds that run across their surface. The wind-map is abstracted from territoriality in a sense, as were the oceans: its formal focus on the United States, derives from its synthesis of predictions of the National Digital Forecast Database. Laura Kurgan has suggested how much the big data of cartographical operations like Google Maps or Google Earth were not only enabled but indebted–and informed by–the declassification of satellite views during the Clinton administration, which created something of a boondoggle of available data for American mapping firms, if it also informed the very strategies of global surveillance that Google inherited: the delicate wind-maps Viégas and Wattenberg conceived and coded suggest less of a governed land than a territory inhabited by air, in which the unfurling curling currents of wind estheticize the bounded nature of territory: migrations of flows of air that course above the terrain, tracing inroads of whitespace into the blackened map of the lower forty-eight until, over a sufficient amount time, the entire region would be wiped white or erased by air currents, and present only where wind-velocity was nil, in an atmospheric vanishing act of a truly windswept land, where winds course across by crossing out space and inevitably white-washing inhabited lands. In another sense, the wind maps register the messiness of local interaction, so absent from the idealized rendering of the map, even if that interaction and specificity lies above where human interaction occurs, and creates a network of a sort that is constantly reconfigured before our eyes as it is drawn and redrawn in trajectories with comet-like tails. The modeling of wind gusts across the contiguous United States suggests a new sense of the spectatorship of the D3 map, although real-time of the map qualities maintain an illusion of an actual meteorological surveillance of the skies. Just as we cannot watch the unfurling of wind-currents of different velocities over the space that is mapped, they define the dispersal of wind currents across space as if at a remove from actual habitation: the fine lines that recall stop-action tracing of six levels of gustiness across the nation are extraneous to sites of habitation, because habitations are not what is being described, or included in the data that drives the map: the conventions recall streets or waterways or rivers, but follow a set of mathematically modelled swirls and whorls that render air apparent over the land that we more usually map, in a view to currents far above the ground. And yet the mesmerizing drama of modeling data of wind currents is so elegant and engaging that it is hard to stop watching: its ambitious organization charts a record of our world at a remove from the categories of mapping that we are more habituated to scan. In a way, the windmap is the most elegantly estheticized of terrestrial or worldly maps, because it is also the most etherial. What is the subject of the map is the flow of data that is so oddly anthropomorphic, casting the map as a hirsute surface and second skin, even as it describes the velocity of air currents above the land abstracted from any view of place? Do the wind-currents create or seem to sculpt a sense of place in their whirls and eddies, giving a concrete palpability to the map’s surface that somehow runs against the flattened isotropic surface of a map? Is it still a map, now that any sense of spatial indices are erased, and centers of habitation are dramatically reduced? Or is it a screen? One of the beauties of this projection is that as one zooms in to the ground, further cities appear in the map, providing the needed points of reference that would be too busy in the larger scale versions, where they would obscure the beauty and drama of the inroads made by the winds that circulate across the lands. There is specific period eye that is attracted to the data visualization, familiar with reading data distributions rather than describing a topographic space in naturalistic terms of portrayal. If the United States seems a shaggy dog, the most mesmerizing of D3 tricks in the book is to watch the ongoing expansion of wind currents across the Rocky Mountains, Desert, and California, from an imagined t-zero at which the calculations are assumed to begin, as winds begin to be inscribed, as if on an etch-a-sketch in reverse, and give contours and form to the blank black area that the first screen seems to map, suddenly giving it a texture that is specific to a date and time when the download of whether data began, until it gains something of a meteorological image of wind flows. Is this sort of data visualization, as attractive as it is, a map? The processing of the distribution of air currents is difficult to stop watching because of the elegance with which it makes us look at the winds that we notice but have such a hard time collectively grasping, and because of the currents, eddies, whirlpools and lines of different flow that the wind map increasingly reveals, so that it gains a coherence in itself that it initially lacked. The idea of mapping air is intensely appealing, because it acts, as a map, to make visible what is so easily overlooked or otherwise has no concrete identity by which to be grasped. The parallel currents, if approximating a familiar natural appearance of a hirsute coat, are nonetheless quite conceptually difficult to envision in their relations to one another or totality. The best reaction is one of wonder–wonder at being able to find a visual residue tracking the unrelated sensation of wind: this is mapping, in a sense, as an exercise in synesthesia, where sight replaces the sensation of wind on skin. There are elements of translating sense-based observations to a format of visual modelling in all maps, but the oddity of removing the array of wind-velocity from sense-peception of course seems odd because one rarely thinks of spatially locating winds with precision or fixity. With closer examination of the trajectories of gustiness one notices, first, the odd pockets of calm across the land, oddly coincident with some cities, and probably not only because their buildings block the velocity or intensity of air flow, in what can appear like racing currents or overlain strands: And then the country, as it is inevitably drawn by an invisible hand of the forces of the winds, cumulatively gains the contours that it originally lacked: Filed under CityLab, comet-like tails, D3, Fernanda Viégas, Google Maps, hint.fm, Martin Wattenberg, National Digital Forecast Database, NOAA, wind-maps Tagged as D3, data-driven maps, weather maps, wind maps Follow Musings on Maps Enter your email address to follow Musings on Maps by email. Follow More Musings From Russia with Love? Monuments of Global Kitsch The New World in Practice: Placing Columbus in a New World Loopy Maps to Rationalize Random Shut-Offs? 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Get Updates from the Portland Bureau of Transportation News Release: PBOT teams up with Disability Rights Oregon, Rooted in Rights, Lime in new E-Scooter Safety Video Portland Bureau of Transportation sent this bulletin at 12/03/2019 08:15 AM PST Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a webpage News media contact: Dylan Rivera dylan.rivera@portlandoregon.gov @pbotinfo News Release: PBOT teams up with Disability Rights Oregon, Rooted in Rights, Lime in new E-Scooter Safety Video Scoot Smart, Portland! (Dec. 3, 2019) The Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) is teaming up with Disability Rights Oregon, Rooted in Rights, and Lime to release a new e-scooter safety video that raises awareness of the importance of sidewalk access for people with disabilities. The video is believed to be the first time a city has partnered with a shared e-scooter company to create content intended specifically to address the effects of illegal e-scooter riding on people with disabilities. Today’s release is timed to honor the United Nations’ International Day of Persons with Disabilities. PBOT releases the video in Portland today, and scooter company Lime rolls out a shorter version in their markets nationwide. The central message of the new video: Scoot Smart, Portlanders! Ride in the street or bike lane Park correctly, near the curb, out of the path of travel and away from buildings and transit stops, and leaving enough space for people using mobility devices to get by The video focuses on Portlanders with disabilities who share how illegal e-scooter sidewalk riding and improper parking impact their ability to safely get around. The video was created in partnership with Disability Rights Oregon, Rooted in Rights, and Lime, and highlights how illegal e-scooter sidewalk riding and parking negatively impacts Portlanders with disabilities. In 2018, PBOT hosted a focus group with people with disabilities to learn more about the impact of e-scooters. PBOT heard that sidewalk riding was a major concern for seniors and people with disabilities, and that illegal parking was of particular concern for people who are blind or experience low vision. In response, Commissioner Eudaly directed PBOT to invest in user enforcement and education during the 2019-20 pilot. A partnership with Disability Rights Oregon (DRO), Rooted in Rights, and Lime emerged out of several conversations of how to raise awareness amongst riders. “We heard from Portlanders that riding on sidewalks and irresponsible parking were the most prevalent problems with the 2018 e-scooter pilot program,” said Transportation Commissioner Chloe Eudaly. "This video is the beginning of a larger educational campaign we directed PBOT to conduct to help riders better understand the rules of the road. E-scooters have great potential as a low emission transportation option, but it is vital for people to use them safely and respectfully.” "To be a city where everyone is welcome, Oregonians with disabilities, older adults, and others should be able to safely navigate our city’s sidewalks without fear of getting hurt by e-scooters," said Jake Cornett, Executive Director of Disability Rights Oregon. "If you use a wheelchair or you're blind or low vision, an e-scooter strewn across the sidewalk can prevent you from easily getting where you need to go and is a serious safety hazard. The city's second e-scooter pilot is a chance for Portlanders to get e-scooters right. Whether it's curb ramps, safe crossing, or e-scooters, Disability Rights Oregon will continue working to make Portland a welcoming and accessible city for all." "Getting more people out of cars is great, but scooters and other new mobility options shouldn't come at the expense of the mobility access of people with disabilities," said Rooted in Rights Program Director Anna Zivarts. "Many of us rely on sidewalks as a primary part of our transportation network, and we need to make sure access isn't jeopardized." "Lime is committed to working collaboratively in the communities we serve to improve safety for both our riders and non-riders," said Jonathan Hopkins, Lime Director of Strategic Development for the Northwest United States. "That’s why we worked with disability rights leaders like DRO and Rooted in Rights, PBOT and other experts to produce this first-of-it’s-kind educational video. We are excited to highlight Portland and local Portlanders in what we believe will be a model for scooter education locally, but also globally for scooter riders." Since April 26, PBOT has issued more than 700 penalties and 57 warnings to companies for improper user behavior. Companies are required to issue notifications, warnings, fines, and account suspensions to users who are not operating e-scooters legally. PBOT regulatory specialists are monitoring sidewalks, documenting instances of illegal scooter riding and parking and providing those to the companies. After receiving a warning, e-scooter riders may receive a fine of $50 for riding on sidewalks or $15 for illegal parking. The 2019 Shared Electric Scooter Pilot Program started on April 26. It follows a 120-day pilot program in 2018 that showed a shortage of safe places to ride led many to ride e-scooters on sidewalks. To make more safe places to ride e-scooters, e-scooter riders are charged a 25 cent street use fee, and companies are charged a 5 to 20 cent right-of-way fee to generate funding to build safe places for people to use e-scooters, such as protected bike lanes and neighborhood greenways. PBOT learned in the first pilot that where e-scooter users had safe places to ride in the street, sidewalk riding decreased. These investments will also improve safety for people walking, biking or using mobility devices. In PBOT's 2018 e-scooter pilot program, the bureau gathered and shared with the public more data on the use of shared e-scooters than any other city in the nation. The bureau posted regular updates on its Twitter account, @PBOTinfo. It published a comprehensive report on the use of e-scooters, with data about injuries within weeks of the pilot program's completion. Check the PBOT website, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram accounts for updates on e-scooter use throughout the one-year pilot program Questions? Email e-scooter@portlandoregon.gov About Disability Rights Oregon Disability Rights Oregon upholds the civil rights of people with disabilities to live, work, and engage in the community. The nonprofit works to transform systems, policies, and practices to give more people the opportunity to reach their full potential. For 40 years, the organization has served as Oregon’s Protection & Advocacy system. About Rooted in Rights Rooted in Rights tells authentic, accessible stories to challenge stigma and redefine narratives around disability, mental health and chronic illness. As part of Disability Rights Washington, our Seattle-based team of disabled video producers, editors and digital organizers partner with both local coalitions and national advocacy campaigns to fight for concrete changes for our community. About Lime Lime is the global leader in micromobility, serving more than 120 cities in more than 30 countries on five continents. Lime is revolutionizing mobility in cities and campuses by empowering residents with a greener, more efficient, and affordable transportation option that also improves urban sustainability. Lime partners with local key stakeholders to systematically deploy a multi-modal smart mobility fleet enabled with GPS, wireless technology, and self-activating locks. Lime dramatically improves urban mobility by making the first and last mile faster, healthier and more affordable for riders. Funded by Silicon Valley's leading VC firm Andreessen Horowitz, Lime is based in San Francisco, CA. Learn more at li.me. The Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) is the steward of the City’s transportation system, and a community partner in shaping a livable city. We plan, build, manage and maintain an effective and safe transportation system that provides access and mobility. Learn more at www.portlandoregon.gov/transportation The City of Portland complies with all non‐discrimination, Civil Rights laws including Civil Rights Title VI and ADA Title II. To help ensure equal access to City programs, services and activities, the City of Portland will reasonably modify policies/procedures and provide auxiliary aids/services to persons with disabilities. Call 503-823-5185, TTY 503-823-6868 or Oregon Relay Service: 711 with such requests, or visit http://bit.ly/13EWaCg Stay Connected with the Portland Bureau of Transportation: Manage Subscriptions | Unsubscribe All | Help | Contact Us
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Cosmic Reflections Largest Satellites of Our Solar System Here is a table of the 12 largest satellites in our solar system. In addition to the size of each satellite, its home planet, its median distance from that planet, and discovery information, its median distance from its home planet is given in terms of the median lunar distance from the Earth. Remarkably, Pluto’s moon Charon is just 0.05 lunar distances from Pluto, only 19,591 km. Only one other of the largest satellites orbits closer to its home planet than the Moon orbits around the Earth, and that is Neptune’s moon Triton at 92% of the Earth-Moon distance. At the other end of the scale, Saturn’s moon Iapetus orbits Saturn over nine times further away than the Moon orbits the Earth. Now let’s look at the orbital eccentricity of each of the largest moons, and the orbital inclination relative to the equator of its home planet. Our familiar Moon is really an oddball: it has the greatest orbital eccentricity of all the largest satellites, and, with the exception of Triton and Iapetus, by far the greatest orbital inclination relative to the equator of its home planet. Triton is the oddball among oddballs as it is the only large satellite in our solar system that has a retrograde orbit: it orbits Neptune in a direction opposite the planet’s rotation. Iapetus has an orbital inclination relative to Saturn’s equator almost as much as the Moon’s orbital inclination relative to the Earth’s equator, but this anomaly can perhaps be forgiven because Iapetus orbits so very far away from Saturn. Its orbital period is over 79 days. Note that the Moon’s orbital inclination relative to the equator of the Earth varies between 18.33˚ and 28.60˚. This occurs because the intersection between the plane of the Moon’s orbit around the Earth and the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the Sun precesses westward, making an entire circuit every 18.6 years. Author David OesperPosted on July 30, 2018 December 14, 2018 Categories AstronomyTags Callisto, Charon, Europa, Ganymede, Iapetus, Io, Oberon, Rhea, The Moon, Titan, Titania, TritonLeave a comment on Largest Satellites of Our Solar System 88 Constellations, One Musical Instrument Of all the constellations in our sky, only one is a musical instrument: Lyra the Lyre. A lyre is a stringed harplike instrument used to accompany a singer or reader of poetry, especially in ancient Greece. One wonders what strange and lonely enchantments await the contemplative listener as Lyra wheels through our zenith these short summer nights. Lyra crossing the celestial meridian at 12:06 a.m. CDT 15 Jul 2018 at 42°58′ N, 90°09′ W Author David OesperPosted on July 14, 2018 December 14, 2018 Categories AstronomyTags constellations, LyraLeave a comment on 88 Constellations, One Musical Instrument Nova Scuti 2018 Nova Scuti 2018 (or N Sct 2018, for short) was discovered by prolific nova finder Yukio Sakurai of Japan on June 29, 2018. His discovery image at 13:50:36 UT showed the nova shining at magnitude 10.3 (unfiltered CCD magnitude), using only a 180-mm f/2.8 lens plus a Nikon D7100 digital camera. One of his many discoveries is named after him: Sakurai’s Object. What is a nova? A classical nova is a close binary star system that includes a white dwarf and a “normal” star. The white dwarf siphons material off the other star until a critical density and temperature is reached in the atmosphere of the white dwarf, and a thermonuclear detonation occurs. Nova Scuti 2018 will eventually receive a variable star designation (V507 Sct?). Here are some typical nova light curves. Nova Scuti 2018 is located fortuitously close to the 4.7-magnitude star Gamma (γ) Scuti. Scutum Region (Source: Voyager 4.5) Gamma Scuti Region (Source: Guide 9.1) Here is a time sequence of images I’ve acquired of Nova Scuti 2018. Comparing with the star chart above, can you find the nova? Nova Scuti 2018 July 3 6:33:50.632 UT Nova Scuti 2018 July 10 6:24:01.118 UT Nova Scuti 2018 August 3 4:52:03.911 UT Nova Scuti 2018 August 10 4:32:05.961 UT Nova Scuti 2018 September 12 3:06:01.260 UT Author David OesperPosted on July 9, 2018 September 4, 2019 Categories AstronomyTags Nova Scuti 2018, novae, Sakurai's Object, white dwarf, Yukio SakuraiLeave a comment on Nova Scuti 2018 Gorgeous Grieg Edvard Grieg (Photo EGM0270, Edvard Grieg Archives at the Bergen Public Library) Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg (1843-1907) is best known for his iconic Piano Concerto in A minor, op. 16, written in 1868 when the composer was just 24 years old, and his Peer Gynt suites, No. 1, op. 46 (1875, 1888), and No. 2, op. 55 (1875, 1891). Like Tchaikovsky, Grieg had a gift for melody. Grieg once wrote, “Artists like Bach and Beethoven erected churches and temples on the heights. I only wanted to build dwellings for men in which they might feel happy and at home.” With this in mind, you will find no better introduction to some of the other gorgeous music that Grieg wrote than Norwegian conductor Bjarte Engeset conducting Sweden’s Malmö Symphony Orchestra on Naxos 8.572403. Bjarte Engeset Seldom have I found a disc of music so beautifully paced and played. These five pieces for string orchestra (augmented by oboe and horn on “Evening in the Mountains”) followed by one piece for full orchestra provide the listener with over 71 minutes of pure enjoyment that will convince you (if you weren’t already convinced) that Grieg deserves a place alongside the most significant composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. For me, personally, every one of these pieces is a favorite. There is nothing to skip over here! Naxos 8.572403 Two Elegiac Melodies, op. 34 (1880) + The Wounded Heart + The Last Spring Two Melodies for String Orchestra, op. 53 (1890) + Norwegian + The First Meeting From Holberg’s Time: Suite in Olden Style, op. 40 (1884) + Prelude + Sarabande + Gavotte + Air +Rigaudon Two Lyric Pieces, op. 68 (1897-1899) + Evening in the Mountains + At the Cradle Two Nordic Melodies for String Orchestra, op. 63 (1895) + In Folk Style + Cow-Call & Peasant Dance Lyric Suite, op. 54 (1905) + Shepherd Boy + Gangar + Notturno + March of the Dwarves Don’t let words like “gorgeous” and “pure enjoyment” give you the impression that this music is lightweight fare. There is a sadness in this beautiful music that evinces that it is anything but superficial. Grieg and his wife Nina lost their only child, Alexandra, to meningitis when she was little more than a year old, Nina later miscarried a second child, and Grieg himself suffered all his adult life from the effects of pleurisy he had contracted when he was 17 years old. Nina Grieg with her daughter Alexandra (Edvard Grieg Archives at the Bergen Public Library) Author David OesperPosted on July 2, 2018 December 14, 2018 Categories MusicTags Alexandra Grieg, Bjarte Engeset, Edvard Grieg, Malmö Symphony Orchestra, Naxos, Nina Grieg1 Comment on Gorgeous Grieg Satellite and Meteor Crossings 2019 #2 Bastien and Bastienne…and Beethoven? An Astronomy Retirement Community Zodiacal Light 2020 Meteor Shower Calendar 2020 David Oesper on Streetlighting Concerns David Oesper on Symphonies by Women David Oesper on Dodgeville Streetlights Dawn on Dodgeville Streetlights Dark-Sky Communities Cosmic Reflections Proudly powered by WordPress
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Home > Funeral Directors > Opals Funerals Ltd. Opals Funerals Ltd. Funeral Director/s: Frances Alcock. Frances worked as a nurse in the NHS for over 30 years in various roles; in the community as a District Nursing Sister, as a Nurse Practitioner, a Multiple Sclerosis Specialist Nurse and in Oncology. With a BSC in Health Studies, it is clear she explored all many different aspects of nursing, and the best qualities of a nurse are evident when you meet her. Frances is instantly likeable, unfazed by anything, practical, kind and thoughtful. She really listens too, not just to what is being said but to what isn’t, and her experience and background means she is able to really ‘get’ people quickly, tuning in to feelings and emotions. She’s very much a people person, with great natural skills and an easy, comfortable manner that puts you at ease straight away. The transition from experienced nurse to a funeral director is, when you think about it, a very logical one, but it’s a path that very few have taken. Frances is a pioneer in that she realised that the skills she had were completely transferable, that caring for patients and their families as a nurse was very similar to caring for people when they have died and the families they have left behind. And this realisation began to take shape when she went to the funeral of her beloved uncle in October 2013. It wasn’t a good send off for Don; during the eulogy the officiant referred to him as ‘Bob’. There was reference to a cruise that he had been on during his life (he hadn’t). Leaving the ceremony, rather than feeling that her uncle had been given the best possible service, Frances’s overriding thought was ‘I could do better than that’. But instead of simply letting that thought go and accepting the funeral as ‘just the way it was’, Frances was inspired to find out more about the funeral business. Typically, she did this thoroughly. She read a lot, she spent longs hours doing research, she set about finding people who were working in a way that she liked and meeting them, she visited lots of funeral homes and wrote a business plan. She found a training course and qualified as a funeral celebrant, and embarked on a six month Inspiring Speakers programme operated by Ginger Public Speaking (“The best money I ever spent!”) from which she graduated at an advanced level. A supportive funeral director nearby willingly shared his expertise, and she came across various helpful funeral directors who were happy to let her spend time shadowing them and answering her questions. It all helped build her understanding of how she wanted to become involved in the world of funerals. She never intended just to be a funeral celebrant, as she likes and wanted to be more hands on. She wanted people to realise they have more choice and offers a different approach to the local funeral companies that are very traditional. There is nothing wrong with traditional funerals Frances is keen to emphasise and OPALS have assisted with these and are very happy to support families if that is what is right for them. She however wants to offer a more personal approach as she believes conventional funeral practice does not always provide the scope for families to be as deeply and personally involved as they would like or need. Opals are the birthstone for October, the month in which Don had been born and the one in which he died. October figures a lot in the story of Opals Funerals! The word opal derives from the Greek ‘Opallos’, which means ‘to see a change (of colour)’ – all so fitting for the change that Frances had been inspired to make. And in the same month, (October again) her Aunt Nancy, Don’s wife, died, and Frances was able to carry out the funeral service herself, something she looks back on with great pride. Opals Funerals grew gradually; Frances intuitively knew that she needed to go slowly and not overstretch herself. She visited clients at home, hired mortuary facilities from other funeral directors, and hired people to help her when she needed them. She kept her overheads low, and began to build her business, investing in a great website and looking after each family who engaged her in such a way that the company’s reputation began to spread. As time went by, it was clear that her approach was meeting a need, and she started looking for premises of her own. By October 2016 she had found somewhere that was just right, in Hedgerley, close to her home. A former beauty salon, in a tranquil location on a quiet road overlooking a green, the building didn’t need much to be done to it in order for it to be the way Frances wanted; it had wooden floors and downlights throughout, a light filled reception area and various smaller rooms which provided perfect spaces for the various things she needed – somewhere to sit with clients to discuss arrangements, somewhere where people could have privacy when spending time with the person who has died, room for a mortuary and refrigeration, a kitchen and a bathroom, a door at the back and some parking spaces in the car park at the rear – everything was there ready for her. With the help of friends, Frances made the few adjustments that were needed, and 1 Hedgerley Hill was tastefully decorated and furnished and ready to receive guests in March 2017. When you enter, you step into the reception area with natural light coming in through the large windows. To one side is Frances’s desk and a low unit for storage, while above the desk a shelf holds five candles with the letters OPALS, a clock and an elephant. There’s another elephant on the bookshelf in the opposite corner, with a matching shelf with wooden letters spelling out LOVE and a photo of Uncle Don and Aunt Nancy. A small contemporary table and chairs offers somewhere to sit for anyone dropping in for a chat, while through a doorway to the right is the smaller room where you can sit in more privacy. There’s another table in here, and a sofa. The colour scheme is a pale green, reminiscent of the most beautiful opals, with contrasting cream walls – it’s a really attractive, comfortable welcome. Going through the central doorway opposite the entrance door, there is a room to your left which is where you can come and spend time with the person who has died. Frances calls this the Family Room, it’s called simply what it is, a room where families can be together after one of them has died. The room itself is simple and contemporarily decorated, with a screen in front of a small hand basin. (Another screen is used to hide Frances’s desk if she is with clients making funeral arrangements – she feels that looking out onto a busy desk of papers isn’t what people need when they’re talking about something so important, so she just brings out the screen and places it across.) Opposite the Family Room is the door leading to the well-appointed modern mortuary, with refrigeration spaces for three people. The room itself is cool and well equipped, and people are welcome to see it if they want to know whereabouts their relative will be cared for (just make an appointment with Frances to ensure that the privacy of other people’s relatives in her care is maintained). The premises are perfect, and have helped Opals Funerals have a home. It’s still a one person business though, so when she’s out on funerals or collecting people who have died, the premises will be closed – she advises that you telephone first to make an appointment. Away from her new career, Frances continues to give back to society in other ways. She volunteers regularly at Crisis at Christmas, marshals the London Marathon, is on the committee for the Hedgerley Memorial Hall and helps with the social functions. She enjoys spending time outdoors and is a big fan of Parkrun that takes place every Saturday morning at Black Park, she also enjoys cycling and walking. Her two sons are young adults and she enjoys spending time with them and with her friends, going to the theatre and cinema and generally keeping a good work / life balance. Specific Gravity: For Frances, creating Opals Funerals isn’t just about having a business, it’s about getting people to have the conversation about death and dying. She is passionate about getting it right for clients and starts with a blank piece of paper every time, without any expectations. She sees her role as being supportive and as flexible as each client needs, aiming every time to do ‘what is right for you’. She offers caring, unique, modern or traditional, affordable, family led funerals, and prides herself on being completely transparent and honest. What’s important? Frances’s recognition that by encouraging clients to get involved and create the funeral that works for them, the experience is so much richer and more fulfilling for them than it perhaps would have been in a more passive role. Her determination to be completely open and transparent in every aspect is evident from first contact, whether this is via her website or by speaking with her in person. And her passion for spreading the word that a different approach to funerals is not just possible, but perfectly acceptable, and in most cases, desirable. She’s taken to public speaking like a duck to water after completing her training, and often gives talks to groups locally. What’s different? It is rare to find someone who is capable of carrying out the practical aspects of funeral arranging and directing and also of taking on the role of funeral celebrant. The skills needed are quite different, and most people are stronger in one role or the other, but Frances has garnered all of her experience, innate abilities and training and is able to fulfil both aspects with equal ease. Most clients realise that she is a trained funeral celebrant from reading the information on her website, and many ask her directly to lead the funeral ceremony while making the funeral arrangements. It makes sense from the client’s perspective – the conversations that form part of arranging the funeral flow seamlessly into those that help structure the ceremony. And to be honest, because of Frances’s approach of empowering families to be as involved as they feel they can be in everything, often she finds that she simply is needed to steer the proceedings, maybe introducing the various speakers or music that the family has chosen, but very much helping them to lead the ceremony themselves. She is always supportive though, and will lead the service if required or take over from family if necessary. Your first call will be answered Frances. Occasionally one of her trusted self-employed colleagues might step in, almost always it will be Frances you speak to. Home visits – yes absolutely. Especially for older or frail clients who might find a visit easier than travelling to the premises, but Frances finds many clients prefer to have her come to them. Same sex person to wash and dress? If needed. Embalming? In Frances’s opinion? “Totally unnecessary most of the time. I have only had one person embalmed since opening Opals”. Ethnic specialism? Happy to serve clients from all cultures and ethnicities. She recently helped a Hindu family and is more than happy to work with all cultures and faiths. Home arranged funerals – Yes absolutely, and something Frances has done on a number of occasions. Local celebrants – Happy to recommend local celebrants and equally happy to carry out this role for you, whichever works better for each client. Vehicles– The main Opals Funerals vehicle is a smart Galaxy, but if you want for traditional formal vehicles Frances can hire these for you for an additional fee. Website– Really good, modern and informative website that clearly reflects the values, style and quality of Opals Funerals. All prices online. Client support – Exceptionally good throughout your contact with Opals. (As you might expect from someone with Frances’s background and approach to her work). Money matters – Really clear and straightforward pricing information on the website, showing a basic price including all the necessary components and then outlining optional extras and the costs involved. Full payment is usually required before the funeral. Parking–plenty of space to park outside What Frances has created here is exactly the kind of funeral company that deserves to be recommended by the Good Funeral Guide. When we visited her as part of the GFG accreditation process, we ended up overstaying by two hours as we looked through the many orders of service from funerals she has facilitated over the last four years and talked about each one – a fascinating and often moving reflection on her work, not least because the little booklets were all so different (Frances encourages families to design their own rather than using standard funeral director templates, and the results are immensely personal). The company strapline is ‘Family led funerals’ and this is just what we most like to see. As Frances says, doing this work “is very similar to nursing in many ways, caring for people when they need it most.” And this care is appreciated by everyone who chooses Opals Funerals. Here’s a typical example of one of the testimonials previous clients have left for her; “Frances took time to understand our family and what would work for us and helped us put together a perfect service for my father. We could not have asked for it to be any better, as we concentrated on the content, Frances sorted out all the details behind the scenes in a seamless manner. I would highly recommend her.” 1 Hedgerley Hill Hedgerley Buckinghamshire SL2 3RP
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InComm InComm Healthcare Enhances Independent Retailer Network Capabilities Press Release from InComm ATLANTA, Dec. 3, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- InComm, a leading payments technology company, today announced that it has enhanced InComm Healthcare's independent retailer network point-of-sale terminals to accept and process payments for all healthcare products covered under its Medicare and Medicaid supplemental benefit and incentives cards. This new capability will seamlessly augment thousands of existing independent retailers' point-of-sale terminals, giving them the capability to accept and process payments made using Medicare and Medicaid health and wellness benefits, as well as incentive funds for healthy foods and other targeted incentive catalogs. The terminal enhancement will take place in January 2020; updates will occur on the back end, with no interference to current operations for any existing partner retailers. Providing these capabilities will increase opportunities for foot traffic to these retailers, giving access to a consumer base of health plan members with significant buying potential. InComm Healthcare's product suite, powered by the OTC Network, features OTC supplemental benefits and health and wellness incentive programs that engage health plan members and encourage healthy behaviors while driving in-store purchases to participating local retailers. Members can use their supplemental benefits and incentive dollars to purchase items from specified product categories. With a range of targeted product catalogs to choose from, health plans can customize their programs to their specific customer base and rely on InComm Healthcare's comprehensive compliance reporting. "Consumers in major cities like New York have hundreds of independent retailers, and we're making sure our network serves all of them," said Brian Parlotto, Executive Vice President at InComm. "We're supporting small businesses while empowering health plan members to enjoy their benefits wherever they choose." For more information about InComm Healthcare's independent retailer network, click here. About InComm By building more value into every transaction through innovative payment technologies, InComm creates seamless and valuable commerce experiences. InComm's unique products and services – which range from gift card malls to enhanced payment platforms – connect companies across a wide range of industries including retail, healthcare, tolling & transit, incentives and financial services to an ever-expanding consumer base. With more than 25 years of experience, over 500,000 points of distribution, 386 global patents and a presence in more than 30 countries, InComm leads the payments industry from its headquarters in Atlanta, GA. Learn more at www.InComm.com. Anthony Popiel Dalton Agency apopiel@daltonagency.com Nilce Piccinini Sr. Communications Manager npiccinini@incomm.com View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/incomm-healthcare-enhances-independent-retailer-network-capabilities-300968225.html SOURCE InComm Companies Mentioned in this Press Release: Business Categories Mentioned in this Press Release:
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Who is Sri Sakthi Amma Sri Narayani Hospital and Research Centre How to Make A Donation Emergency and Relief Efforts Public Health Programs Empowerment Programs Sripuram Going to India Heart Surgery Program Saves Children's Lives There are over 180 Indian children, alive and well today, because Sri Sakthi Amma’s devotees all over the world chose to support this program and provide needy children suffering from congenital heart defects with necessary corrective surgeries. This is an ongoing program with a goal of 300 completed surgeries. Over 50,000 children die each year in India because they have no way to receive life-saving surgery. Each surgery costs approximately US $3,000, however donations of any amount can help save a child’s life and are greatly valued. Emergency Relief for Sri Lankan Refugees In response to the crisis in Sri Lanka and under the guidance of Sri Sakthi Amma, Divine Love World Charity donors provided Sri Lankan refugees with life-saving medical supplies, food, clothing and other basic necessities of life. In addition, the Sri Narayani Hospital & Research Center partnered with Direct Relief International (DRI), a U.S. based charitable organization that obtains medical equipment and supplies for use in disadvantaged countries. DRI Deputy Director and Amma devotee, Matt Mac Calla, coordinated two shipments of medicine and medical supplies with a wholesale value of US$240,000. The need for the supplies was so urgent and overwhelming that the second shipment was sent by air, made possible by donors to Divine Love World Charity. Sri Sakthi Amma personally visited the refugees, distributed the goods, and provided solace and divine blessings to the people. Sri Sakthi Amma Now Has A YouTube Channel Click here for Sri Sakthi Amma's YouTube Site About Divine Love Divine Love World Charity, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit charitable corporation, established in 2003, through which donors can support these humanitarian and charitable programs in conjunction with Sri Narayani Peedam and the Sri Narayani Hospital & Research Centre. Sign Up for the Divine Love World Charity Newsletter! Stay updated on Sri Sakthi Amma and all Peedam News We respect your privacy and won't spam All right reserved © Copyright 2020 - divineloveworldcharity.org
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Diy Wireless Music 3.0 Music Industry Blog I think it’s safe to say that we’re at the end of the “album age group,” and although the format will hang on for a while, it’s obviously waning in popularity. I’ve given this a great deal of thought and also have come up with what I believe will be the reasons, but take note, they’re not absolutely all exactly what the favorite wisdom assumes. So let’s start with the 6 explanations why the album format has, for many purposes and intents, died. It had been a visible experience. The recording format in the vinyl fabric record age got the benefit of that wonderful piece of cardboard known as the recording jacket. The album jacket contained the cover art (still found on CDs), and most importantly, the liner notes on the comparative back again, which we’ll reach in another. But one thing that everyone either forgets or has never experienced is the actual fact that millions of albums were purchased completely on impulse because of the recording artwork alone! It may be hard to believe, but it was quite common to come across an album cover that was so cool that you’d buy it without knowing a thing about the musician. It would be a total loser Sometimes, nevertheless, you acquired the liner records to learn still, and occasionally that could still make it a worthwhile purchase. High scope for action in establishing our Big Data platform GRIDS Practice Empathy Salaries, bonuses, other compensation You must recognize that you will be not getting something for nothing Requirement Specification 50 Caliber called my attention to this hub, and I’m glad he did Grand Millennium Business Bay Hotel, Dubai, 251 Rooms & Suites It was an informational experience too. Those of you too young to have experienced this have no idea how much the liner notes meant to nearly everyone who bought an recording (the picture on the left gives you an idea how extensive they could be). To state the least, the visuals and information along with the music made buying an record a total experience that today’s recording doesn’t some near. The demise of the record stores. Again Once, this may seem hard to believe but nearly every community had someplace that sold records, even if it didn’t have an archive store. There was a whole network create to supply information to shops, supermarkets, diners even. You couldn’t help but to perform into someplace selling records during a day. But the record store was the spot to not only buy music, but to spend hours browsing. Because of the cover liner and art records. You’d peel through a bin of records, stopping every so often to look at an intriguing cover, which made you want to learn the liner notes, and even buy the album because of this maybe. But the record store was also the best place for word of mouth. The people that proved helpful the record stores always knew what was hot, that which was underground but to pop about, and what was overhyped. You could get into a store and ask a clerk, “What’s really good?” and he’d give you 10 choices, the majority of that have been high quality fairly. For today online That is something that the music industry continues to be looking. Now we call it “music discovery” and VC’s still throw a lot of money at anyone who claims to have an app. The price. Albums used to be a bargain. 3.98, before prices began to increase gradually. Either way, initially the album was a no brainer for a youngster on a good allowance even. 8.98, before it was reduced, that was a good deal still. 8.98, a gesture that might be most unlikely today by a large music take action). The CD. Came the CD Then, and the business went to hell at hand basket. The packaging was different, therefore the jacket was longer needed no, and as a complete result, the cover art became less important, and you couldn’t really do extensive liner notes because the print would be too small to read. Then your record brands really got greedy, charging outlandish prices (called “technology charges”) on something that eventually cost them less than the vinyl information they previously were making. Posted In Business Tagged In business Traveling Guidelines THAT MAY Significantly ALLOW YOU TO GET! Travel Savvy WITH ONE OF THESE Basic Tricks And Tips Try These Ideas To Succeed With Affiliate Marketing! Improve Your Affiliate Marketing Campaigns With These Great Tips Web Hosting Tips Everyone Should Be Aware Of
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Tag / illinois November 29, 2016 December 29, 2016 by dksheets The greatest man from the Greatest Generation community, family, history, relationships army, construction, du quoin, greatest generation, illinois, merchant marine, navy, sacred hearth catholic church, world war II Eugene Eisenhauer, 1924-2016 On paper, Eugene Walter Eisenhauer was listed among the Greatest Generation. His country spent decades deciding whether he belonged on that list, and when recognition finally came he mostly ignored it. Other things mattered more by then: his six grown children and their offspring, and thoughts of retirement. The southern Illinois economy central to his life was poor and getting poorer, and the lumber yard he owned was whittling down his peace of mind. But in 1988, the federal government agreed that the risks Eugene and thousands of others took during World War II in service with the U.S. Merchant Marine qualified him for wartime veterans benefits. He submitted the qualifying documents behind a wave of nagging from his family. I asked my father-in-law to tell me about his wartime life, about how he crisscrossed two oceans aboard creaking cargo ships to help supply the Allied war effort. Usually, he demurred. The few stories he relinquished oozed forth slowly, like tar dripping from a hot metal bucket. Each drip landed hard. Like the one about a convoy crossing fast and alone across the North Atlantic late in the war. The Navy was too busy fighting elsewhere. So, the convoy’s only protection against enemy submarines was speed. But subs found them – as they often did – and Eugene watched from the center of the convoy as ships on the fringe erupted into brief towers of orange flame, then vanished into the inky black water. Or the one about Eugene crawling hand over hand the length of the ship, a metal cable tied to his waist, so he could reach his watch station at the bow during a ship-tossing storm. Or the one about an argument he overheard between his ship’s captain and a petulant Dutch harbor master who demanded that the vessel, loaded with highly volatile fuel oil, ignore safety protocols and weave through a line of floating mines to reach port. It is difficult for us to understand now, at a time we equate self-promotion with personal and public validation, why anyone would keep stories like these to themselves. That ignorance spans a wide gap in our understanding of the timing and purpose of true patriotism. In the 1940s, the threat of a dark future pushed in on America. In cities, towns, and farms everywhere, young men felt compelled to push back. They considered enlistment a necessity, not an option. But the Army and Navy were reluctant to take a man too scrawny to wear their smallest uniform size. In the Merchant Marine, however, Eugene’s slight build was a bonus inside the cramped cargo ships that raced to avoid the enemy. During his service, Eugene passed through the Panama Canal half a dozen times and sometimes saw the coasts of Europe and Asia on the same trip. He rode in convoys and on ships traveling alone, and he watched the wake of torpedoes pass his ship to hit others. Until then, he never knew the world beyond a few farms surrounding his tiny hometown of Vergennes, Illinois. When he returned, he settled in nearby Du Quoin, shelved his service medals and sharpened the same sense of purpose that had shaped his patriotism. He raised his six children on the hard fruit of driving milk trucks at dawn along winding country roads, and he hammered together homes from scratch as a construction worker. He also patched neighbors’ broken roofs during summer storms, cinched leaky pipes, and restored light to darkened homes – often at a moment’s notice and without pay – out of compassion, not out of obligation. Eventually, Eugene partnered with other builders to open a lumber yard, then took it over as the partners trickled out. Along with more homes, he built friendships, respect, and a community-wide appreciation as solid as his service to the country. All of those enviable qualities were reflected in the long line of mourners who streamed through Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Du Quoin to say farewell at his funeral. He was 92, and though he outlived many friends, and his wife by 18 years, the grieving included the sons and daughters and grandsons and granddaughters of those friends. In small, profound ways stretching across decades, their lives were enriched by this quiet hero of the war who returned to provide a much more heroic and lasting measure of service to his community. To the federal government, Eugene Walter Eisenhauer symbolized the Greatest Generation. But to the people who revered him, that praise was far too small to describe his true influence.
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The 'Badger #2' carried fish from state hatcheries to rivers and streams throughout Wisconsin from 1912 through the mid-1940s. © DNR Photo The Badger Fish Cars & Dr. Fish Commish Fish stocking via rail. Stephen J. Gilbert In 1881, the U.S. Fisheries Commission contracted and built specialized "fish cars" – rail cars that could transport live fish coast to coast for stocking. The Wisconsin Commissioners of Fisheries had been transporting its fish in milk cans that were stacked in standard baggage cars. By 1892 the Wisconsin Commission was shipping almost 45 million eggs, fry, and fingerling fish around the state from its hatcheries. The fish cars seemed a better means of safely shipping more fish, greater distances. In 1883, the State Legislature appropriated $5,000 to purchase a fancy fish car for Wisconsin fish stocking programs. The appropriation for this pricey acquisition was partly justified to carry Wisconsin fish to the World's Fair (the Columbian Exposition of 1893) in Chicago. The fish car, named the Badger #1, went into service in the summer of 1893 and remained in use until 1914. In most years the car logged more than 20,000 rail miles delivering fish and fry where the Wisconsin rail system reached. Badger #1 was sold to the Canadian government and its whereabouts today are unknown. A replacement, Badger #2 was purchased in 1912. Its steel construction and sturdy design could travel on modern rail lines and the train held many more fish than its predecessor. By the early 1930s, Wisconsin's road system was improving and highways reached many areas of the state not served by regular rail service. The Conservation Commission purchased two new fish trucks that could each haul only half the number of fish cans as the Badger #2, but required less handling to stock the fish. As rail transport costs rose, more fish trucks were added to the fisheries fleet, and the end of the fish car era was in sight. In the mid 1940s, the Badger #2 was sold to a private railroad contractor and turned into a rolling office. In 1960, it was sold to the MidContinent Railway Historical Society in North Freedom, Wis., where it rests today. Dr. Fish Commish In 1874 the Legislature created three unpaid positions to serve as Commissioners of Fisheries. The first gubernatorial appointees were William Welsch of Madison, Alfred Palmer of Boscobel, and Dr. Philo R. Hoy of Racine. Dr. Hoy, a physician, was very interested in animal life and started the first fisheries surveys. His influence is reflected in the commissioners' 1875 annual report: "These investigations" [could provide] data by which we can tell what species of fish would be best to introduce in each individual lake...If all lakes could be carefully surveyed, and every species of animal ascertained that inhabit the waters, or burrow in the bottom, it would be of the greatest interest to science, and of permanent value to the cultivation of fish." Dr. Hoy, could be called the first state fisheries biologist. In his five years on the commission, he carried out many lake surveys statewide, none more ingenious than an attempt to inventory southern Wisconsin fisheries in 1876. Dr. Hoy sent questionnaires to postmasters asking them to record lake acreage, maximum depth, bottom type, inlets or outlets, and fish species present in each lake within the postal service area. Thirty-nine questionnaires were completed and returned to the Fisheries Commission. So the postal service not only delivered the mail, it surveyed local lakes! Stephen J. Gilbert writes about fisheries for Wisconsin Natural Resources.
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Keeping nutrients down on Farmers are working to keep manure and soil out of the creek. Carol Holden Reining in polluted runoff Hundreds of hours, thousands of words Wisconsin's runoff rules at a glance About those runoff rules Putting money behind policy Keeping nutrients down on the farm Rural lessons come to town Making a right turn Terms and resources Evolution of controlling polluted runoff – a timeline What will the new regulations mean for Wisconsin farmers? Soil and its nutrients are among the farm's most valuable assets. But sometimes those assets turn to liabilities when rainfall or snowmelt washe them into the nearest creek or lake. Keeping livestock manure and soil out of the water, and keeping clean water clean are basic tenets of the agricultural performance standards and manure management prohibitions – key provisions of the new regulations. By meeting these standards, farmers not only protect water quality but protect their soils and nutrients as well. The new standards and prohibitions apply to farms large and small. Livestock operations with 1,000 or more "animal units" are required to have a state discharge permit that will include standards prohibitions and manage manure (1,000 animal units = 1,000 beef cattle, or 710 dairy cows, or 2,500 hogs (55 pounds or over), or 55,000 turkeys, or 200,000 broiler chickens). To meet the performance standards, some farmers may need to change tillage methods to bring their field's soil erosion down to tolerable rates. Many livestock producers may need to take extra steps to ensure that manure is managed in an environmentally sound way. That means no manure stacks near waterbodies (300 feet from a stream, 1,000 feet from a lake or areas susceptible to groundwater contamination) or making sure that manure from feedlots or barnyards doesn't directly flow into waterways. Cattle access to state waters will be restricted to protect shoreline plants, and starting in 2005, producers will need to follow prescribed plans if they spread manure or other fertilizers on their fields. Although the rules do not require manure storage, it may be necessary to build a holding structure or enlarge an existing one to properly contain the manure from a livestock operation. If a manure storage structure is needed, the operator will need to ensure that any new construction, maintenance or abandonment of a structure meets accepted standards. Structures that are failing or leaking and pose an imminent threat to public health, fish and aquatic life or groundwater must be upgraded, replaced or properly abandoned. Contour plowing is one of the ways farmers can minimize runoff from their fields. © DNR file photo Most agricultural performance standards can only be enforced if the state has offered to share at least 70 percent of the cost with the noncompliant landowner. The cost-sharing amount can go as high as 90 percent if the farmer demonstrates economic hardship. Livestock operations that are required to have a discharge permit are not eligible for cost-sharing to meet the conditions of their permits, but may be able to have other costs partially covered such as conservation tillage practices. Once a cropland or livestock operation meets a performance standard, the standard must be maintained in perpetuity without cost-sharing, even if land ownership changes. The task of moving the performance standards from paper to farm practices will mean that major players such as county land conservation departments, the Department of Natural Resources, Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection, and the Natural Resources Conservation Service must work cooperatively. County staff will play a key role in helping landowners meet these new requirements. Farmers may find themselves dealing with DNR staff in some cases where the county is unwilling or unable to work with a landowner to achieve compliance. The Department of Natural Resources also will continue to work with landowners to meet standards at large livestock facilities and other livestock operations covered by WPDES permits. One standard that would have required buffers along rural waterbodies was put on hold pending research on their effectiveness under Wisconsin conditions. Buffers are, however, voluntary and eligible for cost-sharing and a one-time payment of $500 an acre. After the University of Wisconsin completes its research, the Department of Natural Resources will draft an "agricultural riparian buffer performance standard" by the end of 2007 that will be based on the research results. "The runoff performance standards are really a work in progress," says DNR Runoff Management Section Chief Russ Rasmussen. "As we learn more and gain experience, we will make continual improvements that ensure we get the best water quality return on our investment." Carol Holden is a DNR Water Program education coordinator.
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Line Combos Starting Goalies Latest Prospect Ramblings - Click Here - - -2019 Fantasy Prospects Report BUY NOW - - - **World Juniors - Click Here ** Our Scouting Staff 2019 Prospects Report Newsletter – Sign Up Prospect Forum Full Forum Main Hockey Forum Teams -East Teams – West 2020 World Junior Championship Team Prospect Breakdowns (31 in 31) 2020 NHL Draft Eligible Feature Story – Hockey Prospects Prospects Rambling – Archived Unrestricted Free Agent Prospects Top 250 Prospects Dobber Sports DobberHockey DobberProspects Frozen Tools Fantasy Hockey Geek Goalie Post Dobbernomics Prospect Ramblings: Scouting Notes from Around the CHL by Tony Ferrari on January 13, 2020 Prospects Rambling Philip Tomasino in his new Oshawa Generals sweater Welcome back to my weekly Prospect Ramblings, this week will be a bit less formal as I go through my notebook and talk about some of the notable performances or players that stuck out in some recent games that I’ve watched. I’ll take a look at some of the players that are eligible for this upcoming draft and players already drafted by NHL teams who are still playing in the CHL. Cole Perfetti and Ryan Suzuki vs. Flint Firebirds (January 10, 2020) The 2020 draft-eligible prospect took just one period to gel with new linemate (and teammate) Ryan Suzuki who was recently acquired by the Saginaw Spirit. Despite a first period where both players looked a little bit out of sorts, the duo clicked in the second frame. It seemed as if the new teammates had a discussion in the intermission and figured out how they wanted to play together. Cole Perfetti is given a gift with the addition of the highly skilled Suzuki. Both Suzuki and Perfetti finished the game with two assists and could have had more if a couple of small bounces went their way. The chemistry was impressive as the two players were both able to thread passes through traffic in the offensive zone. Suzuki was able to put his shot on display which looks vastly improved from last season. His shot looks harder and he seems to be more willing to take the shot when it presents itself while still being a creative playmaker who is able to spot his teammates with passes in high-danger areas. https://dobberprospects.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/01/Suzuki-and-Perfetti-assists.mp4 Perfetti continued to play the role of facilitator, even with Suzuki on his line, which made for some fun passing plays between the two high-skilled forwards. The benefactor was Islanders’ prospect Cole Coskey who was the goal scorer on both of Perfetti’s assists, the second of which was the game-winning goal on a solid play by both Suzuki and Perfetti. Perfetti worked the puck down the boards to Suzuki who finds Coskey from behind the goal line, Coskey makes no mistake and the eventual game-winner was in the back of the net. Aside from his diversification in the offensive zone, an area where Perfetti has improved this season is in his skating. He seems to have a bit more power in his stride and his agility is noticeably improved, especially in tight quarters. With the growth of Perfetti and the addition of Suzuki, the Saginaw Spirit have themselves one of the most entertaining lines in the OHL. Philip Tomasino and Ty Tullio vs. Peterborough Petes (January 12, 2020) Speaking of fun lines to watch, the newly formed ‘TNT’ line in Oshawa will give the Saginaw top-line a run for their money. Ty Tullio, Brett Neumann and Philip Tomasino (T-N-T) have been a hit since the arrival of Tomasino last week. With 10 points in his first three games with the Gens, Tomasino has made an immediate impact. Tullio’s five points over the same span have largely come as a result of the duo’s instant chemistry. With Tomasino’s speed, playmaking and high-end puck skills to go along with Tullio’s creativity, shot and high-motor, the Generals have given themselves a line who can play in all situations, at any time during a game. Both players finished with multi-point nights but none were better than this passing play from the ‘TNT’ line! https://dobberprospects.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/01/Ty-Tullio-Spinning-Assist-to-Tomasino-JAN1220.mp4 Tullio has been impressive all year and has been steadily on the rise in most draft rankings. His production has been steady and solid as the primary offensive player on his line and the addition of Tomasino will only bolster that. Tullio blends a never-ending motor and his high IQ to get himself into good scoring spots and he has a very underrated shot that keeps goaltenders honest. His playmaking has been improved over the course of the season making him a more balanced player. His skating is above average but it plays even better than that because he never stops moving his feet and puts pressure on the opposition with his consistent effort. Tomasino, the Nashville Predators first-round pick, has been a monster on the scoresheet this year. He is currently standing at 67 points in just 39 games, good for fourth in the OHL, and has heated up with the Oshawa Generals. Tomasino is a silky smooth skater who can move the puck up the ice with just a few strides. His transitional game is impressive and seems to be a skill that the Oshawa Generals were targeting with the acquisition. His playmaking is among the best in the OHL, creative and efficiently making his teammates better every time he steps on the ice. He may end up being the addition that the Generals needed to get into the upper echelon of the OHL’s Eastern Conference. Lukas Svejkovsky vs. Winnipeg Ice (January 8, 2020) Lukas Svejkovsky has been solid if nothing else this season. Against the Ice, he was noticeable on the ice (no pun intended) on every shift. He had two goals against Winnipeg, showing off his speed and hands as well as his willingness to battle along the boards. Svejkovsky’s second goal of the night came on a beautiful play on a two-on-one. After receiving the pass, he drags the puck to the middle to lose the defender and then snipes the puck across the grain for a beautiful goal as can be seen below. He has the ability to create time and space for himself, using his quick first step and raw speed to open the ice up. His shot is good, not great, but he does a good job of getting into the dangerous areas to make sure that his shot can be more effective. https://dobberprospects.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/01/Lukas-Svejkovsky-Goal-on-2on1-Drag-and-snipe-JAN820.mp4 Svejkovsky has his warts but he’s an intriguing offensive talent. He is a player that fans enjoy watching with the puck on his stick because he is willing to try and create opportunities for both himself and his teammates. The issues with Svejkovsky come when you watch his effort in the defensive end. He is a bit uninterested at times but he has a good stick. He shows the skill that he has with some takeaways but he’s not a defensive stalwart by any means. His creativity can lead to unique paths through the neutral zone but that can be chalked up to the fact that he is a young player trying new things. He is an intriguing prospect for the 2020 NHL Draft, to say the least. Cole Sillinger vs. Moose Jaw Warriors (January 11, 2020) Cole Sillinger is a stud. There is no other way to say it. The 2021 NHL Draft eligible prospect is producing at an impressive rate with 45 points in 37 games (1.21 P/GP) as a 16-year-old. Against the Warriors, Sillinger had two goals to help lead the Tigers to a 7-5 victory. Sillinger is a smart player who has outstanding awareness in the offensive zone. He showed off his big shot with one goal off the rush and a one-timer on the powerplay. Sillinger has the ability to change the angle of his shot while skating at his top speed with subtle stick handling, taking shots from between his skates or with fully extended arms. In the video below, Sillinger scores on a wicked shot that handcuffs the netminder after he changes the angle ever so slightly with a toe drag that leads right into his shot. This skill, similar to the way Auston Matthews changes the shooting angle, allows Sillinger to be a lethal shooter from anywhere on the ice. https://dobberprospects.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/01/Cole-Sillinger-Goal-on-the-rush-toe-drag-to-chnage-angle-JAN1220.mp4 While his top-speed is a concern for some, his instant acceleration makes up for that because he always has a step on opposing players in a race for the puck. His defensive game has been maligned at times but there have been signs of growth this season. He may not be a future Selke winner but the young forward should be able to grow into an average defender at the next level because of his advanced IQ. Sillinger understands where the puck will be around the ice and needs to improve his defensive intensity and consistency. While we are still well over a year away from the 2021 NHL Draft, Sillinger has been impressive and will likely be in the top-15 in most preseason rankings to start next season. Adam Beckman vs. Vancouver Giants (January 11, 2020) The WHL-leading scorer has done everything the Minnesota Wild could have hoped for and more when they drafted him in the third round of the 2019 draft. Adam Beckman had a goal and an assist against the Giants, helping retain a share of the league scoring lead. Beckman was able to score the game-tying goal on a play where his linemates forechecked in behind the net and then Beckman snuck into a soft spot on the inside left circle before firing a one-timer home for the Chiefs, as seen below. https://dobberprospects.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/01/WHL-Network-Google-Chrome-2020-01-13-14-17-36_Trim_Trim.mp4 Beckman is an offensive contributor that relies on his effort and motor to drive play and produce. Beckman uses the forecheck to create havoc and draw defenders towards him low in the zone when battling behind the net or along the boards. This allows his teammates to find open space near the net. Beckman has a good shot and he is a decent playmaker, keeping teams honest. Beckman projects as a middle-six scorer at the NHL level but his energy and tenacity will help make Beckman a useful player in all situations. James Malatesta vs. Val-d’Or Foreurs (January 11, 2020) A possible 30-goal scorer as a 16-year-old rookie in the QMJHL, James Malatesta has been on fire this year with 20 goals and 33 points in 37 games for the Quebec Remparts. Malatesta had a goal (video below) and an assist against Val-d’Or Foreurs, all while showing maturity in his game beyond his years. The young Quebec forward has been a shooting machine, getting 4.3 SOG/GP which is an impressive rate for a player his age. The puck seems to follow Malatesta around the ice. He is a play driver already in the QMJHL and has been one of the best rookies in the CHL period. https://dobberprospects.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2020/01/James-Malatesta-Goal-Sneaks-in-the-backdoor-to-pot-the-rebound-JAN1220.mp4 What makes Malatesta so special is his ability to control the play while he’s on the ice. He is a player who thrives on possession, at times leaving the offensive zone with possession when being pinched out towards the blueline. This allows him to keep the puck on his, or his teammates, stick and re-enter the offensive zone for another crack at attacking the opposition. This is the type of play that is becoming more and more prominent in the modern game as teams learn that possession in a major part of winning the game. Malatesta has an outstanding shot and good vision on the ice as well. His IQ matches his skill set, making him one of the most promising 16-year-old players in the CHL. Thanks for joining me for some scouting notes from around the CHL! There is always a ton of great hockey to be watched so make sure you catch the action at your local CHL rink (or lower-level junior hockey)! I’ll be back next Monday with another Rambling about whatever is going on in the world of prospects. Be sure to watch out for the NHL Draft Report later this month as well as we kick off 2020 with an in-depth report on the upcoming 2020 NHL Draft! As always, you can reach out to me on Twitter at @theTonyFerrari! Which prospects have stood out to you recently? Let me know! Next in Post >> Prospect Rambling: 2019 First Round Mid-Season Expectation vs Reality Grades Prospect Ramblings: Underrated European Prospects on Notable Draft Rankings Prospects Ramblings: Brogan Rafferty, Scouting Notes, Zayde Wisdom and Midseason Guide AHL Report - January 2020 Prospect Ramblings: Top Prospects Game, & Thoughts on Brogan Rafferty (Jan. 17) Prospect Ramblings: Calder Power Rankings 007 DPR Episode 79: Vitali Abramov and Russ Cohen Guest Prospect Ramblings: Calder Power Rankings 007 January 18, 2020 Prospect Ramblings: Top Prospects Game, & Thoughts on Brogan Rafferty (Jan. 17) January 17, 2020 DPR Episode 79: Vitali Abramov and Russ Cohen Guest January 17, 2020 Prospect Ramblings – My January 2020 Draft Rankings January 17, 2020 Prospect Ramblings: Underrated European Prospects on Notable Draft Rankings January 16, 2020 Prospects Ramblings: Brogan Rafferty, Scouting Notes, Zayde Wisdom and Midseason Guide January 14, 2020 Tweets by @DobberProspects © 2015 dobbersports.com
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2-[methyl[(nonafluorobutyl)sulphonyl]amino]ethyl acrylate Short-term ecotoxicity testing was conducted on C4 acrylate. Studies were designed to ensure exposure to the maximum possible dissolved concentration of C4 acrylate in test media. Results based on mean measured concentrations showed EC/LC50 values greater than 0.32 mg/L for Brachydanio rerio (zebra-fish, 96-hr mortality), greater than 0.34 mg/L for Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata (green algae, 72-hr growth inhibition), and 1.2 mg/L for Daphnia magna (water flea, 48-hr immobility). C4 Acrylate is not completely soluble in water and based on laboratory studies, the solubility of C4 acrylate decreases with increased ionic content of the medium. In the fish and daphnia studies, water accommodated fractions (WAFs) were prepared at a loading rate of 5 mg/L. Resulting concentrations were considerably lower (0.40 and 0.42 mg/L at the start of the first and last renewal, respectively) in the fish WAFs despite the fact that the same medium was used as the Daphnia test. It is believed by the testing laboratory that the maximum solubility in this medium was reached in the zebra-fish study and that likely the higher concentrations in the Daphnia study were above the medium solubility although no undissolved test substance was visible. In the algae study, the measured concentrations of the WAFs decreased significantly after 24 hours and all concentrations were below the limit of detection (< 0.04 mg/L) after 72 hours of exposure. The highest test concentration (nominal: 5mg/L) incubated without algae showed a similar decrease. All aquatic toxicity studies were classified as reliable without restriction since all reasonable steps had been taken to keep the test substance in solution within the context of the method as published at the test date.
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Glacier Club man convicted of assault, racially taunting sheriff’s deputy A jury on Thursday convicted a La Plata County man on four criminal charges related to a fight he had with law enforcement last year at the Glacier Club. La Plata County Sheriff’s deputies led... Suspect in DUI, indecency case allegedly left signature in Durango theater A Bayfield man was arrested Friday after allegedly urinating the first initial of his name on a wall in a movie theater at Allen Theatres’ Durango Stadium 9. Around 11 p.m. Friday, the Durango... DATE: Jan. 15, 2020 | UPDATED: 2 days 7 hours ago | CATEGORY: Local News Suspect in Mancos homicide pleads not guilty A two-week trial has been set for Debra Riddle, who faces a second-degree murder charge in the death of her common-law husband just west of Mancos. Riddle, 57, pleaded not guilty at an arraignment... Durango bus driver cited for watching football game on phone while driving A Durango Transit bus driver was cited Saturday with careless driving after supposedly watching a football game on his cellphone while driving his route. Around 5 p.m. Saturday, a passenger on the... Mancos man armed with machete arrested in attempted murder A Mancos man remains in the Montezuma County Detention Center after he was arrested Sunday on suspicion of second-degree attempted murder after he allegedly jumped on a woman’s car on Main Street... Southern Ute Detention Center to remain open The Southern Ute Tribal Council on Monday reversed a decision to close the Southern Ute Detention Center and said it will instead seek new funding to keep the facility open in 2020, according to an... Cortez police seek help identifying graffiti vandals Cortez police request the public’s help to catch graffiti vandals in town. Suspects are being sought for recent graffiti that has caused thousands of dollars in property damage to local businesses,... Ignacio man sentenced for drive-by shooting An Ignacio man has been sentenced to 16 years in prison in connection with a drive-by shooting last summer on the Southern Ute Indian Reservation. Antonio Castro, 24, was driving a gold-colored van... La Plata County man charged with assault in connection with shooting A La Plata County man suspected of shooting someone in a dispute about who owned a chain saw has been charged with felony assault. Sheriff’s deputies said Robert Simons, 45, fired two shots from a... DATE: Dec. 6, 2019 | CATEGORY: Local News Cortez man admits to Ignacio murder Cortez resident Robert Dean Rose admitted Friday to shooting and killing Mark Wayman in May at the victim’s Ignacio home, a crime punishable by decades in prison. The 50-year-old pleaded guilty to... Felony charges for suspects in alleged Animas River Trail attack Three men accused of assaulting a man and a woman on the Animas River Trail under the Ninth Street Bridge will each face felony assault charges, according to court records. Law enforcement said... Durango police officer accused of domestic violence appears in court Issues over money and an alleged extramarital affair led to an altercation that resulted in a Durango Police Department officer’s arrest earlier this week on suspicion of domestic violence,...
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IPFD Harmonization of Genetic Testing for Dogs: Press Release NOTE: Since this press release, as of April 2018, Harmonization of Genetic Testing for Dogs is online. Please check it out! The International Partnership for Dogs (IPFD) announces the “Harmonization of Genetic Testing for Dogs” initiative: to support the appropriate selection and use of DNA testing in dog health and breeding decisions The ever-increasing emergence of new canine DNA tests and testing laboratories has made choosing quality DNA testing providers and the right DNA tests for health and breeding decisions increasingly challenging for many owners, breeders and veterinarians. Working with a wide-spectrum of stakeholders in dog health, the International Partnership for Dogs (IPFD) "Harmonization of Genetic Testing for Dogs" initiative will provide practical support to address these challenges. With no existing national or international standards of accreditation, or standardization oversight group, there is a growing need for a reliable third party neutral organization that can provide guidance surrounding test reliability, laboratory quality assurance processes and procedures, test applicability by breed, and provide counseling regarding interpretation and best use of genetic test results. This is needed to support consumer confidence in DNA testing, educate consumers in the use of these tests, utilize these tests effectively as tools to reduce the incidence of inherited disease, and to reduce redundant international efforts. IPFD will work to coordinate and consolidate expertise, as well as ongoing and new work to increase the availability of resources to consumers. The goal of this new IPFD initiative is to create an open access, searchable and sustainable online resource that will: Catalog information provided voluntarily from commercial test providers for genetic testing in dogs; Describe expertise, quality assurance, activities and resources of the test providers; Host expert panel reviews of genetic tests, their reliability, and applicability; Coordinate a program for standardized proficiency testing and potentially peer review and audit; Collate/assemble existing and new resources for genetic counseling and education; and provide the foundation for future developments. The initial phase of the initiative is to develop a working prototype of the online resource. Both the prototype and the final output will be hosted on the IPFD’s DogWellNet.com platform. The initiative will be guided by IPFD CEO Brenda Bonnett and Project Director Aimee Llewellyn-Zaidi and will be overseen by a multi-stakeholder steering committee set up by the IPFD (see Initiative Description on DogWellNet.com). Initial funding for the prototype is provided through generous contributions from IPFD Founding Partners, the Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA), and the AKC Canine Health Foundation. We invite other collaborators and potential contributors to contact us Brenda.Bonnett@ipfdogs.com or Aimee.Llewellyn-Zaidi@ipfdogs.com The International Partnership for Dogs (IPFD) is a non-profit organization, registered in Sweden, and initiated in 2014 by a diverse group of stakeholders in the international dog world. The IPFD mission is to facilitate collaboration and sharing of resources to enhance the health, well-being and welfare of pedigreed dogs and all dogs worldwide. Visit the IPFD online at www.dogwellnet.com for more information. The Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA) is a 50 year old non-profit foundation with a specific mission to improve the health and welfare of companion animals through a reduction in the incidence of genetic disease. Visit the OFA online at www.ofa.org for more information. The AKC Canine Health Foundation is the largest non-profit organization solely dedicated to funding research to prevent, treat, and cure canine disease since 1995. Visit the AKC CHF online at www.akcchf.org for more information The Agria-SKK Research Fund is a collaboration between Agria Animal Insurance and the Swedish Kennel Club. Edited July 26, 2018 by Brenda Bonnett Go to articles IPFD News C.A. Sharp ASHGI would like to commend IPDF, OFA and CHF for this new initiative. This is a subject that has been concerning me for several years now. I have more than once had to counsel dog owners and breeders regarding cases where a dog tested differently with different labs (and I've experienced this myself, too), where lab results are reported inaccurately (i.e. calling dogs “carriers” when the mutation is dominant as with MDR1 and HSF4), when labs offer tests for our breed that do not apply, when offspring’s test results fail to conform with those of the parents, and more. Thank you for doing this. I look forward to seeing this program develop. Harmonization of Genetic testing for Dogs (HGTD). Search out tests, diseases (phenes), and labs. Find resources for genetic counselling. What our 4th IDHW participants have said... ...Now, the real work begins! View 4th IDHW Theme Resources Post-Meeting Resources Plenary talks, Posters & Theme outcomes Defining Breeders - It is not just about volume By Brenda Bonnett in Brenda's Blog Genetic Diversity: The Big Picture and Challenging Issues IPFD and DogWellNet 2019-2020: Looking Back and Moving Forward Breeding policies and management of pedigree dogs in 15 national kennel clubs By Gleroy in Gregoire Leroy's Blog Behavior inheritance and consequences Ann Milligan IPFD DWN Editor1 Dave St. Louis East Siberian Laika The Petit Basset Griffon Vendéen Schnauzer, Miniature His nature is similar to that of the Schnauzer and is determined by the temperament and the behaviour of a small dog. Intelligence, fearlessness, endurance and alertness make the Miniature Schnauze… Chihuahua, Long Coat Halden Hound Elkhound, Norwegian Grey Norwegian Hound (Dunker) Landseer ECT NOTE: LANDSEER ECT is not the same breed of dog as the black and white 'Landseer' Newfoundland Newfoundland - Landseer History Newfoundland, Landseer or both? Actually, there are 3 v… The Dobermann breed requires a medium sized, powerful, muscular dog. Despite his substance he shall be elegant and noble, which will be evident in his body line. He must be exceptionally suitable a… These Mastiff-type dogs stem from animals taken to Germany by Roman soldiers as they marched across Europe. Used to guard livestock, they were either discarded as the cattle were eaten or were left… Bernese Mountain Dogs were originally found in the valleys of the Bernese Oberland of Switzerland and were used as general multi purpose farm dogs. They were draught dogs pulling cart loaded with pr…
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The Dolan Law Firm, in partnership with the San Francisco Examiner, has created and is distributing in San Francisco and parts of Oakland four sets of custom newspapers boxes. Each set of boxes contains its own legal guide. The topics covered are California injury, employment, elder abuse and bicycle and pedestrian law. The guides can also be found in many of the green newspaper racks (called ped mounts) along Market Street and other busy corridors in The City. We hope the guides assist you in understanding your legal rights. The guides include safety tips and practical advice should you or loved one have been in an accident or were discriminated against or harassed in the workplace. You are welcome to download, print and share the guides: California Injury Law Guide Employment Law Guide Elder Abuse & Neglect Law Guide Bay Area Bike & Pedestrian Law Guide In addition, we are sponsoring 100 newspaper boxes that contain the latest issue of the Examiner in San Francisco. These boxes have a public safety message altering drivers, bicyclists and pedestrians to be alert. In placing the boxes, we relied on data gathered by Vision Zero San Francisco, an initiative by the City and County of San Francisco to eliminate traffic deaths in The City by 2024. Every year in San Francisco, about 30 people lose their lives and 500 more are severely injured while traveling on city streets. Promoting safe streets and roads is a fundamental priority of our firm. We are long-time sponsors of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition, Bike East Bay, and Marin County Bicycle Coalition. We also support the California Bicycle Coalition which advocates in Sacramento for the rights of cyclists and helps shape California bicycle laws. Meet Chris Dolan $61 million Verdict Two Lebanese-American employees subjected to outrageous racial and ethnic discrimination and harassment. $20 million Verdict Former timeshare sales representative was wrongfully terminated for reporting time share fraud on the elderly. $6.5 million Settlement Lawsuit brought by motorcyclist severely injured in accident caused by dangerous roadway condition. $6 million Settlement Wrongful death car accident case filed on behalf of family of woman killed in a head-on collision when defendant's car crossed the center line. $4.2 million Settlement Settlement reached with City of San Francisco for teen walking in crosswalk who suffered permanent brain injury after being struck by vehicle. City officials were informed intersection was dangerous and failed to make it safer.
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EA Play 2019: Everything Announced At The Pre-E3 Event (VIDEO) by Eric Hall E3 2019 is very much upon us and while Electronic Arts has opted to yet again open before the main proceedings, the company has nonetheless kept the spirit alive with their self-branded EA Play showcase. Sure, some years have been better (or worse) received than others, but one can’t argue the anticipation surrounding this year’s pre-E3 event; it teasing several admittedly straightforward reveals such as Respawn’s Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, a bevy of new Battlefield V content from DICE, as well as significant unveilings for two prominent EA Sports titles. Star Wars fans have been itching to get a new single-player Star Wars game, with Titanfall developer Respawn seemingly answering the call with Jedi: Fallen Order. Having been teased for weeks, the new lore-canon experience showed off its first piece of gameplay at EA Play, the extended footage dazzling with emerging protagonist Cal Kestis (Cameron Monaghan) effectively lightsabering several of the Empire’s forces in half. Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order releases for PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on November 15th. Apex Legends – Season 2 Respawn ‘s battle royale shooter Apex Legends is set to get another round of content in the coming months, the studio additionally taking the EA Play occasion to lay out the game’s new season of goodies. Among the lovely array of new game modes and weapons, the atmosphere was effectively electrified with the reveal of Wattson as an all-new playable Legend; the character introduced with a fittingly heartstring-tugging video. Apex Legends is free-to-play for PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One. Season 2 arrives on July 2nd. Battlefield V – Chapter 4 & Chapter 5 World-warring shooter Battlefield V additionally provided a proper showcase, confirming quite a lot of additions fans of the DICE title have been clamoring for. For one, the next entry of Tides of War was properly detailed, with the new Marita map and the rest of Chapter 4: Defying the Odds given proper context ahead of going live later this month. In an especially enticing tease, plans were also revealed regarding the upcoming Chapter 5, which is set to return to the glorious Pacific Theater later on in the fall. Battlefield V is out now for PC, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. Chapter 4 goes live on June 27th, while Chapter 5 is slated for Fall 2019. The likes of football/soccer may be lost on many of us in the US, but the sport continues to enjoy a sustained popularity nearly everywhere else in the world, especially when it comes to EA Sports’ FIFA franchise. As revealed during the EA Play event, Electronic Arts is looking to expand its already phenomenal playerbase with FIFA 20, the upcoming soccer title set to additionally offer a more visceral urban-variety of the sport dubbed VOLTA Football. FIFA 20 releases for PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on September 27th. A special “Legacy Edition” is planned for Nintendo Switch. Of course, there’s more than one type of football game these days, and we Americans use the term to describe a pigskin-covered ball shaped like a lemon. Madden NFL 20 appears to be delivering the goods on that front, the sports title seemingly focused on delivering a much more solid single-player experience this time around. Sporting cover athlete Patrick Mahomes, features such as Career Mode and Ultimate Team Mode were confirmed for a return, as was the availability of NCAA College Football teams. Madden NFL 20 releases for PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on August 2nd. The Sims 4 – ‘Island Living’ Expansion “Chillin’ out, maxin’, and relaxin’ all cool” looks to be the vibes of The Sims 4’s Island Living expansion, the upcoming content pack revealed in the closing showcase of EA Play 2019. Hanging ten in the tropics is only one of the handful of experiences teased to be available in the DLC, with the mythical inclusion of mermaid Sims also being one of the main highlights. Not one to stop there, EA also confirmed another pair of future expansions; one centering around LGBTQ+ pride and the other following the Realm of Magic. The Sims 4 is out now for Mac, PC, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. The Pride content pack is set to launch for Mac and PC on June 18th while the Island Living expansion releases for the same platforms on June 21st. Realm of Magic was given a Fall 2019 release window and teased for a proper reveal at a later date. What do you think? Did you enjoy EA’s more gameplay-centric approach to this year’s EA Play, or do you feel it was it even worse than last year’s event? Let us know in the comments below and be sure to follow Don’t Feed the Gamers on Twitter and Facebook to be informed of the latest gaming and entertainment news 24 hours a day! For other headlines recently featured on DFTG, check out these next few news stories: New Yooka-Laylee Game Announced With Impossibly Adorable Trailer (VIDEO) The Legend Of Zelda: Link’s Awakening, Luigi’s Mansion 3, And More Playable At E3 2019 Cyberpunk 2077 Box Art And Pre-Order Bonuses Possibly Leaked EA Play 2019 The Sims 4 Reveals Tropical 'Island Living' Expansion (VIDEO) Persona 5: The Royal Confirmed As PS4 Exclusive, No Other Platform Releases Planned Eric Hall1796 Posts Phone-browsing Wikipedia in one hand and clutching his trusty controller in the other, the legendary Eric Hall spreads his wealth of knowledge as a writer for Don't Feed the Gamers. Be sure to catch his weekly "Throwback Thursday" segment for a nostalgic look at trivia from the past. The Elder Scrolls Online: Greymoor Announced, Skyrim Returns (VIDEO) Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Dark Samus, Richter Amiibo Available Soon (VIDEO) Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Adds Assassin’s Creed, Cuphead Mii Costumes (VIDEO) Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order Was Almost About Bounty Hunters, Not Jedi Apex Legends Grand Soiree Event Is Bringing Back The Roaring Twenties (VIDEO) The Sims 4 Tiny House DLC Lets Your Sim’s Home Be Compact and Cozy (VIDEO) Sea of Solitude Developer Confirms Next Game Has Been Written Respawn CEO Vince Zampella Taking Over New DICE LA Studio
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« Crusaders | Main | The blog debate » I had heard of Siobhan Dowd but sadly only via the news of her tragically early death from cancer last year. Beyond the usual detached sadness you feel when you hear of the death of a young writer I didn't think too much more until a copy of Bog Child published by David Fickling arrived. I'm keeping children's literature high up my reading agenda again having lapsed in recent months and allowing the grown-up stuff to push it aside but it adds something special to the reading broth and I have quite a few in the queue. Bog Child wasn't going to let me go after the first twenty sample pages and I just carried on, in fact couldn't and didn't want to stop. Whilst out digging for peat eighteen-year old Fergus and his Uncle find a body in the peat bog. This is 1980's Ireland at the height of the troubles, the provos, the bombs and the prison hunger strikes and all this weaves in with the story of Mel, the bog child's life. To reveal any more would be to ruin the little revelations that make this story so good, so that's all you're getting of the this-happened-then-that-happened which I don't do a great deal of at the best of times. So easy to give away something seemingly insignificant which then detracts wholesale from the enjoyment of a book.For goodness' sake tell me if I do. With two narratives running side by side there's a great danger with a book like this that you end up with too much of the story you don't want too much of, and not enough of the one that has really grabbed your attention but I was completely satisfied with the balance that Siobhan Dowd achieved here. Mel's story gradually revealed but it doesn't smother that of Fergus and his family, just complements it perfectly. Themes of struggle and sacrifice, love and conflict connect both and with it that little sense that in many ways plus ca change. Exquisite writing with a very matter of fact Irish lilt to the vernacular which constantly reminded me where I was and a definitive fictional account of recent history that still may not have made much of an appearance in children's literature, I'm not sure. But now for the sadness because here's a writer I would strive to read all there is and ever will be, but we will only have what has already been written by Siobhan Dowd and just one more book after this one. Solace of the Road will be published in 2009 and already available A Swift Pure Cry and The London Eye Mystery. But Bog Child is published today and I hope there's a launch going on somewhere with an accordion playing because for sure, having read about Siobhan's life, she will be dancing and singing to it wherever she is. One of those books you feel very privileged to have read and if it doesn't win prizes then I'm a leprechaun. There is also a newly established Siobhan Dowd Trust which will endeavour to help disadvantaged children improve their skills and experience the joys of reading, offering financial support to a wide range of children including I'm pleased to say those with special needs.I have applied successfully in the past to the excellent Roald Dahl Foundation for grants for children who fit their very strict criteria and it is trust funds like this which can make a huge difference. Sometimes all a family needs is a few hundred pounds for something that will vastly improve their lives and there are fewer and fewer places to find that now without jumping through more hoops than many of them have the energy to do. The Siobhan Dowd Trust a lasting legacy to a very gifted writer and final words to David Fickling, ' Siobhan was a person of immense humanity warmth and ability, just coming into the full measure of her talent. She made words sing for her. She had been waiting all her life to write as she had now been writing. We are lucky to have four brilliant books, and we cannot help thinking that is not enough.' Thursday, February 07, 2008 | Permalink Eric Ravilious Fiction Uncovered Fifty Books First name terms... Gallimaufry GDSB goodbookalert H.E.Bates Hogarth Shakespeare How to Build... James Ravilious Josephine Tey knitsuki L.M.Montgomery Literary Journals Literary visits LitFests Little Nell Little Toller Books Loss & Bereavement Lucy M.Boston Mittel Europa Murdochitis My Aurelian Year My Wild Places Not the TV Book Group Nurse Prudence suggests... Nursing Press on...
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English Language Teacher Education Arabic Language & Islamic Studies Curricula and Methods of Teaching Arabic Language Curricula and Methods of Teaching Islamic Education Professional Diploma Professional Diploma in Teaching Research and Scholarly Activities Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages Type : Graduate Credit Hours : 36hrs Campuses: Al Ain & Abu Dhabi Apply Now Download Brochure The Master of Arts in TESOL is meant to turn English language graduates and teachers into the ESL/EFL professionals of tomorrow. It paves the way for many job opportunities in the ever-growing field of education and other related sectors. The program will further enhance an already acquired professional development among candidates and further their careers in the field of English Language Teaching and educational leadership. The Master of Arts in TESOL is designed to be the leading regional program that prepares students, teachers, teacher trainers, school principals, and researchers to become future experienced TESOL professionals and education leaders. The program equips candidates from diverse nationalities and cultures with state-of-the-art research methods in second language acquisition and second language learning, in teaching and testing and in using instructional technology in the classroom. The mission of the Master of Arts in TESOL program is to provide English language graduates, teachers and education professionals with a distinctive blend of theory and practice in the areas of language learning theory and teaching methodologies. The program further introduces candidates to the learning and teaching practices in the UAE and elsewhere. Candidates will demonstrate understanding and can apply the central concepts and research methodologies relevant to English language studies, TESOL theory, and TESOL practice. Candidates will demonstrate knowledge of how diverse English language learners develop and learn in a TESOL environment, and can plan for learning opportunities that support individual learner’s English language skills, intellectual, social, and personal development. Candidates will use a variety of TESOL classroom instructional strategies to encourage English language learners’ development of their English language proficiency and critical thinking according to mandated curriculum goals. Candidates will use an understanding of various motivational forces and behaviors to create an environment that encourages English language learning, active inquiry, collaboration, positive social interaction, active engagement in learning, and self-motivation for English language learners. Candidates will apply different technologies, including computer-assisted language learning technologies, and effective communication techniques to support instruction, English language learning, and assessment in the TESOL classroom. Candidates will use various assessment strategies to evaluate and ensure the development of the English language learner. Candidates will become reflective practitioners who continually evaluate the effects of their choices and actions on others (students, parents, and other professionals in the learning community), and who actively seek out opportunities to grow professionally within the TESOL community, especially by fostering relationships with school colleagues, parents, and agencies in the larger community to support students' English language learning and well-being. Upon successful completion of the MA in TESOL, students will be able to: Program Learning Outcomes Aligned with L9 QFE Descriptors 1 Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the advanced theories, principles and methods of TESOL drawing on research in the TESOL field and related areas QFE 2,4,6 2 Apply key SLA theories to current teaching methodologies and materials development with a scheme of implementation. QFE 1,3,4 3 Design and implement a range of lesson types that serve learners’ needs and enhance academic achievement. QFE 1,4,5 4 Display competency in problem-solving skills to address complex challenges in highly diverse TESOL contexts. QFE 1,2,4,7 5 Communicate arguments as well as academic and professional information through debate and in various TESOL settings QFE 5,6 6 Use personal experience to critically reflect on theoretical issues in the field of TESOL and their relationship to professional practice QFE 3,6,7 7 Demonstrate advanced skills for undertaking, independently, small-scale research projects including the use of information technology QFE 2,4,8 8 Apply professional and ethical standards in highly complex TESOL learning environments and research situations QFE 3,9 English language teachers English language supervisors Curriculum Developers School headmasters Bachelor degree in English or Linguistics or English Language Teaching or its equivalent approved by the UAE Ministry of Education with a minimum (GPA) of (3 out of 4), or its equivalent on the Bachelor level. A valid English Language Proficiency Certificate in one of the below certificates or its equivalent, at least as the following: EmSAT TOEFL ITP TOEFL CBT 1400 550 79 213 6 B2 Conditional Requirements A student may be granted conditional admission in the Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) in the following cases: - If a student obtains a score of (530 in TOEFL ITP) certificate or its equivalent and has an average of at least (3 out of 4), s/he will be granted a conditional admission, provided that the student: Obtains a score of (550 in TOEFL) or (6 in IELTS) by the end of the first semester of joining the program. Registers for no more than (6) credit hours in the first semester of joining the program. Obtains a GPA of (3 out of 4). - If a student obtains a score of (550 in TOEFL ITP) certificate or its equivalent and has a cumulative average from (2 to 2.99 out of 4) s/he will be granted a conditional admission, provided that the student: Registers (9) credit hours per semester of joining the master’s program and the student may take these 9 hours in one semester, two semesters (3 + 6) or even three semesters (3 + 3 + 3). - If an applicant obtains a score of (530 in TOEFL ITP) certificate or its equivalent and has a cumulative average from (2 to 2.99 out of 4), s/he will be granted a conditional admission, provided that the student: Registers a maximum of (6) credit hours in the first semester of joining the program. Obtains at least a score of (550 in TOEFL )or (6 in IELTS) by the end of the semester of joining the program. To obtain a Master of Arts in (TESOL), the student must successfully complete 36 credit hours, with a minimum (CGPA) of 3 out of 4. CR.H. Compulsory Courses (33) CR.H. 0401601 TESOL Methods 3 0401602 Linguistics and the Structure of English 3 0401603 Theories of Learning and Develpoment 3 0401605 Teaching Language Skills 3 0401606 Second Language Acquisition Theory and Practice 3 0401603 0401608 Classroom Management and Environment 3 0401609 Evaluation in the TESOL Class 3 0401601 & 0401605 0401611 English Language Learning and Technology 3 0401618 TESOL Research: Theory and Methodology 3 0401620 MA in TESOL Project 6 All other TESOL courses, excluding 0401608 Elective Courses (3) CR.H. 0401607 Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis 3 0401612 Language and Social Interaction 3 Guidance Plan Click here to view Financial Informations College of Education, Humanities, and Social Sciences Al Ain University P.O.Box: 64141 Al Ain - UAE Phone No: +971 3 7024888 Fax No: +971 3 7024777 E-mail: education@aau.ac.ae Bachelor of Education - English Language Teacher Education Bahelor of Education in IT Teacher Education Bachelor of Education- Teacher Education (Arabic and Islamic Studies) Bachelor of Education in Special Education Bachelor of Arts in Applied Psychology Bachelor of Arts in Applied Sociology Master of Education in Islamic Education Curricula and Instruction Master of Education in Arabic Language Curricula and Instruction Need Help? 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« The final verdict on homeopathy: it’s a placebo Wonderland (6): attempts to sabotage my scientific, moral and ethical standards » Bach flower remedies: positive effects cannot be doubted Published Friday 13 March 2015 According to Bloomberg Markets, A Nelson & Co Ltd. manufactures and markets natural healthcare products. The company offers arnica creams that provide natural first aid for bruises; plant and flower based remedies that help in managing the emotional demands of everyday life; and over-the-counter homeopathic medicines for everyday ailments, such as relief from travel sickness and relief for the symptoms of hay fever. It also provides hemorrhoid relief creams and soothing hygienic wipes; anti-blemish range products for various skin types and age groups; multi-purpose cream that helps to soothe and restore skin; iron supplements; teething granules that provide relief from the symptoms and discomfort of teething; a range of creams, ointments, and sprays for a range of common skin conditions/complaints; and a range of commonly used herbal remedies. The company offers products for ailments, including aches and pains, mild anxiety, babies and children, colds and minor infections, digestion, emotional health, energy, everyday stresses, first aid, getting older, pets, quit smoking, skin, sleep, travel, and women’s health. It also operates a clinic; and a pharmacy that offers homeopathy and complementary healthcare products. The company offers its products through its pharmacy in the United Kingdom; and distributors in Europe, Latin America, and internationally. It also serves customers online. The company was formerly known as Armbrecht, Nelson & Co. The company was founded in 1860 and is based in London, United Kingdom with subsidiary offices in Boston, Massachusetts; and Hamburg, Germany. A Nelson & Co Ltd. operates as a subsidiary of Nelson and Russell Holdings Ltd. In the journal ‘Chemist and Druggist’ we find an article informing us that, in 1930, Nelsons Homeopathic Pharmacy was approached by Dr Edward Bach who wanted help making and selling his products. He had created 38 flower remedies to rebalance emotions and later created an emergency remedy, a combination of five flower remedies that became Rescue. The relationship between Nelsons and the Dr Edward Bach Centre, based at Dr Bach’s former home at Mount Vernon in Oxfordshire, continues to this day and both the Bach Original Flower Remedies and Rescue are key ranges for Nelsons. Nelson’s homeopathic pharmacy has a proud history: Ernst Louis Armbrecht, a German pharmacist and disciple of Samuel Hahnemann, came to London and founded Nelsonsin 1860. Since then, Nelsons has been supplying homeopathic medicines. “Our wish today” they state “is the same as 152 years ago: to make homeopathy accessible and to provide the highest standards of medicine and advice.” The highest standards of medicine and advice? It seems that the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) disagrees. A recent ASA Adjudication on A Nelson & Co Ltd deals with an advertisement by Nelsons for ‘Bach Rescue Night’ which stated “I CAN’T SWITCH OFF…The RESCUE NIGHT range helps your mind switch off, so you can enjoy a natural night’s sleep” A freelance health writer had challenged whether the claims “I can’t switch off … Rescue Night range helps your mind switch off, so you can enjoy a natural night’s sleep” was an authorised health claim in the EU Register of Nutrition and Health Claims for Foods (the EU Register). The ASA noted that, according to EC Regulation 1924/2006 on Nutrition and Health Claims made on Foods (the Regulation), which was reflected in the CAP Code, only health claims which appeared on the list of authorised health claims (the Register) could be made in ads promoting foods, including food supplements. Health claims were defined as those that stated, suggested or implied that a relationship existed between a food category, a food or one of its constituents and health. The ASA furthermore stated: We acknowledged Rescue Remedy’s assertion that their ad had not made specific claims to aid sleep or that it improved sleep. However, we considered that the use of visuals such as a crescent moon and stars on a dark background, that the letter ‘O’ in the word “OFF” resembled a simple on/ off light switch image, the text “… you can enjoy a natural night’s sleep” and the name of the product “Rescue Night” was likely to give the impression to consumers that it was a product that would aid sleep or that it would help consumers fall asleep easily. We understood that ‘unwanted thoughts’ was one reason why consumers might find it difficult to get to sleep and, again, considered this added to the impression that the product would contribute positively to sleep. We therefore considered that the ad made a health claim related to sleep involving a food item. We understood that some Bach Flower Remedies contained levels of alcohol which would preclude them from bearing health claims altogether, however, we noted that Bach Rescue Night was alcohol free. We acknowledged Rescue Remedy’s points regarding EFSA and ‘on hold’ claims for botanicals. We understood that ‘on hold’ claims for such botanicals could be used in marketing, provided such use had the same meaning as the proposed claim and they were used in compliance with applicable existing national provisions (in this case the CAP Code). However, Rescue Remedy did not provide evidence that relevant proposed claims for white chestnut, or any of the other product ingredients were ‘on hold’. Nevertheless, we understood that there were no ‘on hold’ claims entered onto the Register for white chestnut or the other product ingredients. Furthermore, ‘on hold’ claims should also be supported with adequate substantiation which we did not receive. Because the ad made health claims relating to Bach Rescue Night as a sleep aid and we had not seen evidence that relevant claims for the botanical ingredients contained in the product were ‘on hold’, we concluded that the ad breached the Code. The ad breached CAP Code (Edition 12) rules 15.1, 15.1.1 and 15.7 (Food, food supplements and associated health or nutritional claims). The ASA ruled that the ad must not appear again in its current form. We told A Nelson & Co Ltd t/a rescueremedy.co.uk not to make health claims for botanical ingredients if they did not comply with the requirements of the Regulation. I am afraid that such a ruling will have very little effect on the sale of Bach Flower Remedies. In case you have any doubt, I should mention that these inventions of Dr Bach are not supported by good evidence. Here is the abstract of my systematic review on the subject: Bach flower remedies continue to be popular and its proponents make a range of medicinal claims for them. The aim of this systematic review was to critically evaluate the evidence for these claims. Five electronic databases were searched without restrictions on time or language. All randomised clinical trials of flower remedies were included. Seven such studies were located. All but one were placebo-controlled. All placebo-controlled trials failed to demonstrate efficacy. It is concluded that the most reliable clinical trials do not show any differences between flower remedies and placebos. Bach Flower Remedies have no effect whatsoever! Come to think of it, this is not entirely true: they obviously keep the ASA busy, they exploit the gullible public, and they are clearly good for the cash flow at Nelson’s. Posted in aetiology, bogus claims, commercial interests, gullible consumer, insomnia, quackery, systematic review | Tagged alternative medicine, bogus claims, homeopathy, misleading consumers, unreason 32 Responses to Bach flower remedies: positive effects cannot be doubted Jeff Rubinoff on Friday 13 March 2015 at 14:35 Obviously Bach Flower Remedies have no medical effect. One relative bought some for another, and they do smell nice. I guess however that: * You cannot sell potpourri for as much money as you can “medicine” * Saying that you are “taking aromatherapy” sounds less frivolous that “I buy nice smelling stuff because it makes me happy.” There are thousands of respectable middle-class men who, if you found them unexpectedly in a Turkish bath, would explain in all sincerity that a doctor had ordered them to take Turkish baths; if you told them in return that you went there because you liked it, they would stare in pained wonder at the frivolity of your motive.–Saki, “Filboid Studge” Richard Rawlins on Friday 13 March 2015 at 16:48 Bloomberg’s clearly state “The company (Nelsons) offers arnica creams that provide natural first aid for bruises; plant and flower based remedies that help in managing the emotional demands of everyday life; and over-the-counter homeopathic medicines for everyday ailments, such as relief from travel sickness and relief for the symptoms of hay fever.” They clearly stste these remedies provide relief. They do not say “The company Nelson’s offers remedies which Nelson’s claim…” Are Bloombergs not vicariously liable for misleading the public by making unstantiated claims? Are they quacks? How are we to tell? Or do Bloombergs have evidence the remedies actually do relieve travel sickness, hay fever, bruises? If they do not have the evidence, why is their write up not more honest? darwinslapdog on Friday 13 March 2015 at 23:29 Hah! If only it were only Bloomberg’s! Amazon.com, as well as any number of “respectable” catalogs that get dumped in my mailbox regularly, make endless claims for all sorts of pseudoscientific products. Richard Rawlins on Saturday 14 March 2015 at 11:18 So, although Bloombergs website states it aims to “quickly and accurately deliver business and financial information” – it obviously doesn’t and its anaysis is pseudo-ecomomic. It’s as well we know that. Pingback: Wonderland (6): attempts to sabotage my scientific, moral and ethical standards Cathy Stillman-Lowe on Saturday 14 March 2015 at 13:09 I was the ‘freelance health writer’ who made that complaint and I am truly delighted that the adjudication has been picked up and given more publicity. The ASA did a cracking job. I will be keeping an eye out for any further health claims that I consider cannot be readily substantiated on a scientific basis. Edzard on Saturday 14 March 2015 at 14:14 Alan Henness on Saturday 14 March 2015 at 14:32 Hey Cathy! Well done indeed. You beat me to it – there’s a lot more to be done yet, though! Too right. I have other complaints pending. The ASA performs its role with some zeal I have found, but someone has to start the ball rolling… 🙂 Alan Henness on Sunday 15 March 2015 at 00:47 @Cathy Would you like to contact me here? Bart B. Van Bockstaele on Sunday 15 March 2015 at 12:18 I am also guessing that their workload is enormous and that it is quite remarkable they get anything done. Robert Forte on Tuesday 24 March 2015 at 05:58 I don’t understand the title of your posting “positive effects can’t be doubted.” You the write the exact opposite. Edzard on Tuesday 24 March 2015 at 07:01 it’s called irony! see end of article. Daniël Nelck on Thursday 23 July 2015 at 10:15 Dear emeritus Professor, MD, PhD, FMedSci, FSB, FRCP, FRCP Ernst, Reading your article I wondered: have you ever showed real interest/done research what lies behind the remedies? Did you know that behind the remedies there is a system? A system that, long before the DSM arrived, defines 7 groups of described “main” emotions (which everyone is likely to experience in a lifetime) containing 37 emotions descriptions in total. Could there be a chance, beside the actual remedies, that using the (self help) system of dr Edward Bach gives people more comprehension in their everyday emotions. Could it be that defining their troubling everyday emotions and getting understanding about what is troubling them, bring a first sign of emotional relief or a glimp of what is needed to rebalance those emotions? Especially when this is done together with a spouse, close friend, therapist, doctor. Thus, could there be a working, psychological, beneficent component to the Bach remedy system, aside from the remedies ? Have you ever read the 38 descriptions and recognized a description of an unbalanced emotion referring to yourself ? High regards, Daniël Nelck, Naturopathic therapist, Bach Foundation Registered Practioner, Student Psychology Edzard on Thursday 23 July 2015 at 10:21 possible, even likely; BFRs are placebo and the benefit some people experience is not due to the remedies but due to some amateur psychotherapy. personally, I would still prefer real psychotherapy to the sham, and I would argue that pretending BFRs are more than a placebo is an unethical deception and fraud. FrankO on Thursday 23 July 2015 at 10:23 @Daniel Nelck Please cite the evidence for your 7 groups of emotions, descriptions etc. Concepts pulled out of anal orifices are not the same thing as reality! Dear FrankO, Same question for you: have you ever really investigated the system, read the descriptions thoroughly and wit an open mind? I studied the DSM thoroughly and with an open mind and I am further on my toward a degree in psychology. The groups are about everyday human emotions, thus recognizable. Do I really have to proof I have fear for something, I feel lonely, I am worried about someone I care and I recognize that in the description of dr Bach? Must be joking. “The benefit some people experience” according to prof Ernst actually consists of decades of testimonials from people all around the world describing the help they experienced with using the system. Seems blunt, arrogant an disrespectful to me to put the experiences of all these people aside as bullocks, lost in confusion etc. King regards, Daniël Nelck don’t they teach critical thinking in psychology? “don’t they teach critical thinking in psychology?”. Clearly not. If Mr Nelck is studying for a degree in psychology, he needs to learn to distinguish pseudo-science supported only by words people write from evidence supported by robust experimental data. I can offer descriptions 39 and 40: wide-eyed gullibility and inexperienced naïvety. Flower remedies: the stinging nettle of scholarship and the thistle of reason. But they do, off course you know. That is why I question your article and the responses on the article. Critical thinking should be kept in balance with open mindedness (otherwise it becomes narrow minded thinking) and pragmatical thinking without forgetting about ethics. High regards with a mind too wide open, your brains might fall out Hahaha, glad you have some humor left, totally true! If you squeeze your mind too tight your brains might dye due to hypoxia : – )) But Mea Culpa, everybody is entitled to his or her own world view. For the rest of you: clearly a case of ingroup/outgroup reactions….start thinking for yourself instead of bleating after prof Ernst. With his degrees he can probably take it on his own. “everybody is entitled to his or her own world view” – SOME EVEN SEEM TO BE ENTITLED TO THEIR VERY OWN FACTS! Bart B. Van Bockstaele on Saturday 25 July 2015 at 05:13 Critical thinking should be kept in balance with open mindedness (otherwise it becomes narrow minded thinking) No, it should not. Critical thinking includes open-mindedness. Open-mindedness is the ability to accept new evidence. What you call open-mindedness is properly called gullibility, which is, of course, a quality you want and need your victims to have in abundance. Bart B. Van Bockstaele on Thursday 23 July 2015 at 17:09 Did you know that behind the remedies there is a system? Fantastic. What is the usefulness of a system behind remedies that have the same results as placebos behind which there is no system? Alan Henness on Thursday 23 July 2015 at 11:34 Daniël Nelck, Naturopathic therapist, Bach Foundation Registered Practioner, Student Psychology said: Could there be a chance, beside the actual remedies, that using the (self help) system of dr Edward Bach gives people more comprehension in their everyday emotions. There is a question mark missing from the end of that sentence, but that rhetoric question seems to be a prime example of corollary of Betteridge’s Law of Headlines. Anyway, I’m not sure what training is required to administer products that are neither medicines nor ‘remedies’ but simply food supplements that contain little more than alcohol and are, therefore, not permitted under EFSA rules to have any indications. That’s primarily because there is no good evidence of any effects – other than the effects of the alcohol, of course. Anyway, I’m not sure what training is required to administer products that are neither medicines nor ‘remedies’ but simply food supplements that contain little more than alcohol and are, therefore, not permitted under EFSA rules to have any indications. I would think that some intense training is indeed required. How else can we otherwise explain how FlowerQuacks can look their victims in the eye, and lie about diseases they don’t have to sell them products that don’t work? They remind me of magicians, except that magicians freely admit, and even proudly announce, that they are cheating. Yet, magicians need lots of practice to adequately con their public. FlowerQuacks, I would think, must train even more, since they must feign ignorance and stupidity and conviction without ever giving themselves away, while stretching out their greedy paws to encourage their victims to hand them their money. They are, in essence, professional sociopaths. That, I would think, requires training. Lots of training. Cathy Stillman-Lowe on Thursday 23 July 2015 at 21:50 I must say Prof Ernst has exercised admirable restraint in NOT responding to this rather impertinent question: “Have you ever read the 38 descriptions and recognized a description of an unbalanced emotion referring to yourself ?” But then again I have not noticed the emeritus prof to be in any way emotionally unbalanced of late. I myself, having bipolar spectrum disorder, am exceedingly unbalanced. However Hell will freeze over before I try a Flower Remedy to mend my fevered brain! EJ Bramwell on Thursday 27 August 2015 at 19:42 Weird, I am also bi-polar and have always got so much help from the remedies. No episodes for years. Please stop fighting over this, life is too short really. Just try them if you haven’t – they work without a shadow of a doubt (even if it is a placebo – actually does it matter if they work if they are a placebo, I ask?) Amazing not to be ill quite frankly. I’m sorry for anyone who hasn’t been introduced to them. At so little cost with absolutely no contraindications with medical drugs this one is a no brainer. Get real, just try it possibly (even if you do it secretly to see if it works!) & stop intellectualizing. How boring, we’re all just visiting this planet. Alan Henness on Friday 28 August 2015 at 09:38 @EJ Bramwell Why Bogus Therapies Seem to Work Pingback: Another homeopathy fail Pingback: Bach flower remedies – too good to be true? Edzard on Homeopathy: it’s time to stop the double standards
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Advocating for community rights and partnering with Colombian civil society to investigate illegal land acquisition and forest destruction Land at the heart of rich cultural and natural diversity At the intersection of the Central American Corridor, the Pacific tropics, the Amazon Basin, and the Andes Mountains, Colombia is home to a wide range of ecosystems and striking biodiversity. Approximately 10% of the world’s plant and animal species are in Colombia, and forests cover 54.5% of the country. More than half of Colombia’s forests are located in Indigenous and Afro-Colombian territories, whose rights to land are enshrined in national law. Even with these legal protections, Colombia’s decades-long armed conflict has displaced more than 6 million people from rural lands. Threats to forests and ecosystems Colombia’s forests are under threat from rapidly growing industrial agriculture to produce commodities like palm oil, and from illegal logging and mining. These activities have contributed to massive internal displacement of local communities. The Colombian government estimates that over 300,000 hectares of natural forest are lost each year to deforestation. Agro-industrial takeover of rural landscapes Colombia is the fourth largest producer of palm oil in the world and the biggest palm oil producer in Latin America. Despite serious concerns about deforestation and forced displacement affiliated with the expansion of oil palm, the Colombian government is supporting efforts to increase the country’s palm oil production six-fold by 2020. EIA Partners in Colombia EIA is partnering with Comisión Intereclesial de Justicia y Paz (The Inter-Church Commission for Justice and Peace) to document palm oil expansion in Colombia and associated violations of human rights and environmental damages. Justice and Peace accompanies communities affected by violence, providing on-site accompaniment, legal, and psychosocial support. The Comisión Intereclesial de Justicia y Paz has brought crimes associated with palm oil expansion in Colombia to light. Justice and Peace was instrumental in a case in the Colombian courts against 19 palm oil businessmen, 16 of whom were imprisoned on charges of conspiracy, forced displacement, and invasion of areas of special ecological importance. Prevent the illegal expansion of agro-industrial commodity crops, such as palm oil, and their affiliated production, over forests, community lands, and delicate ecosystems Advocate for protection of environmental leaders defending Colombia’s forests and natural ecosystems Strengthen civil society capacity to investigate illegal logging and other drivers of deforestation Get informed about threats against land activists in Colombia Condenando El Bosque Ilegalidad y falta de gobernanza en la Amazonía colombiana Un nuevo informe de investigación de Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), Condenando el Bosque, revela el modus operandi utilizado por traficantes para comercializar madera con permisos comprados en el mercado negro, incluyendo especies protegidas como el cedro; y detalla cómo intermediarios aprovechan vacíos legales para lavar madera y escapar cualquier responsabilidad legal, dejando que los titulares de los permisos de aprovechamiento paguen las consecuencias.
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Eileen R. Tabios Poet, Writer, Artist, Editor, Critic, Publisher Prose Collections Hay(na)ku With the Community Press and Other Coverage Selected Poems Online Interviews and Essays Selected Reviews, Engagements and Blurbs As Guest Editor Book Cover Artists TO BE AN EMPIRE IS TO BURN! Moria Books’ Locofo Chaps (Chicago, 2017). TO BE AN EMPIRE IS TO BURN inaugurates Moria Book’s “politically oriented” Locofo Chaps series. In 20 pages, the chap addresses the state of the nations U.S.A. and Philippines as of its release date of January 2017, as well as the “poetry world.” For readers who don’t know some of the mentioned people, the names are easy to google. Available as an online read at Locofo Chaps. Available as a printed publication ($5.00) through Moria Books’ Lulu. Cover image from “Colored Fire” Series (2012) by Dan Waber. “Ever the prolific and prudent poet, Ms. Tabios declares in 11 poems over 20 pages what others might attempt to do in 150. In attainable and straightforward language, the poet summons contemporary muses, including activists amplifying the struggle, architects of change. Brevity notwithstanding, her verses deliver a needful jolt to deeper political awakening, resistance and action.” —Maileen Hamto, The Halo-Halo Review (December 2018) “…a razor cut through the contemporary poetry embodying a movement that initiates in the world and flowers into the political subject of the individual.” —Freke Räihä, Galatea Resurrects (April 2017) “this volume is biting, harsh, and stark, blending three elements that always make for good political prose.” —M. Earl Smith, The Halo-Halo Review (December 2017) KQED FEATURE: The Locofo Series is featured on KQED’s feature, “First 100 Days: Art in the Age of Trump.” The following photos were taken for this April 20, 2017 feature article by Jonathan Curiel: Open to All Schools Available for Class Visits and/or Lectures related to Poetry, Creative Writing, Filipino Literature, and Cultural Activism. Previously lectured at New York University, University of California Berkeley, San Francisco State University, Sonoma State University, Mills College, Skyline College, Rutgers University, Manhattan College, City University of New York-LaGuardia Community College, among others. She is also available for free class visits (subject to scheduling constraints) to Bay Area, CA classrooms which utilize her books.
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The Snyder Cut Of The Justice League Movie Won't Be Released By Damian Seeto Ever since Justice League came out last November, fans were disappointed by it because the movie had many reshoots and was edited by Joss Whedon. Fans were hoping an original cut of the movie existed which was done by the original director Zack Snyder. The Wall Street Journal has reported on some bad news as it sounds like the Zack Snyder cut of the Justice League movie does not actually exist. Snyder did have a rough cut of the film back in 2016, but the rest of his scenes were never shot. Furthermore, Snyder oversaw some of the new scenes that were added to the film that were eventually shot by Joss Whedon. A source close to the matter said the following: "Who are these people who won’t stop talking about the magical Snyder cut that doesn’t exist?" The report further went on to say that Warner Bros has no plans to release an alternate version of Justice League at all. The report also says don't expect any news of the Justice League movie from Comic Con happening right now as the original cut of the film is the only version of it that we are ever going to see. This is kind of sad news as it would have been interesting to see a different version of Justice League get released. I was unhappy Danny Elfman did the score and would have liked an alternate cut that made Junkie XL the main composer of the film. Wanna read more on this? Check these out: Robin Hood Is Currently Getting Hammered By The Critics (more); Major Update Revealed For Matt Reeves' 'The Batman' Movie (more); DC's Birds Of Prey Movie Gets An Official Release Date (more); Second Bumblebee Movie Trailer Released (more). And here are some more related articles: First Look At Joaquin Phoenix's Joker With Full Makeup (more); Rumor: Henry Cavill Could Be The Next James Bond Actor (more); James Bond 25 Movie Receives A New Release Date And Director (more). A few more: Ryan Coogler Set To Produce Space Jam 2 With LeBron James (more); Disney Releases Magical 'Mary Poppins Returns' Trailer Online (more).
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Indian Ocean Times - only positive news on indian ocean Indian Ocean News breaking news : Seychelles new political party "One Seychelles" 04/29/2019 Iceland's First Lady met Alain St Ange 03/11/2019 Alain St.Ange the former Tourism Minister from Seychelles at ITB Tourism Trade Fair 03/11/2019 Mayotte offers its own Vanilla Islands event with the first Lagoon Festival 07/21/2018 Turkish Airlines starts flights to Moroni 06/19/2018 A visit to the paradise island, ile des deux cocos 03/29/2018 Meeting the South Africans 12/23/2017 “It is time to step forward" 10/21/2017 A new Labor Union is launched for Seychelles 10/09/2017 Seychelles to welcome British Airways 09/19/2017 Home > All islands > Seychelles Seychelles new political party "One Seychelles" One Seychelles led by former Tourism Minister Alain St.Ange The board of One Seychelles The launch of the "One Seychelles" Political Party was held on Friday the 26th April and Alain St.Ange, the island's former Minister for Tourism, Civil Aviation, Ports and Marine was elected to lead the party as they prepare for the coming elections. St.Ange is joined by former Minister Peter Sinon who held the Fisheries portfolio after returning to Seychelles from the African Development Bank. The following were elected to serve on the Executive Committee of the 'One Seychelles' party:- PRESIDENT:- Alain St.Ange SECRETARY GENERAL:- Peter Sinon TREASURER:- Vincent Padayachy DEPUTY SECRETARY GENERAL:- Claude Bonte COMMITTEE MEMBERS:- Bernard Port Louis, Sandra Boniface, Herve Anthony, Edouard Anacoura, Justin Francois, Brian Soumery, Ian Delorie, Allan Ah-Thion, Marinette Tamatave, Brondy Hertel, Dorina Vidot, Jean Barra, Jean-Claude Denis, Michou Delorie-Walsh, Antoine Puren, Emmanuel de Stefani, Dean Padayachi & Benjamin Port Louis. After the election of Office Bearers of the new political party Alain St.Ange and Peter Sinon, the President and Secretary General of the "One Seychelles" political party took to the podium to address the full house of interested Seychellois present with numbers far surpassing all their expectations. Peter Sinon, the Secretary General of "One Seychelles" explained the Party's Manifesto and spoke at length on unity for Seychelles and safeguarding the islands. When Alain St.Ange, the President off the "One Seychelles" political party took to the podium he started by saying that the 26th April 2019 would remain a historical day in Seychelles Politics with the launch of the "One Seychelles" party. Alain St.Ange went on to welcome the leaders of the "Lalyans Seselwa" Party of Patrick Pillay who were present to show solidarity in the opposition. He also thanked everyone present who had come forward from the red or green political camps. "Today everyone present we have visited you at home, or we have interacted with you for the creation of a new Seychelles. This move will not please everyone especially those who believe they have a monopoly on ideas and on what is needed for the people of Seychelles. This cannot be an attitude for anyone who believes in democracy and what a democratic society stands for. They should buy a Monopoly Board Game and play it at home someone on Praslin said. We have named this new political party 'One Seychelles' because it is to push the point that we all have only one Seychelles, and the time has come to do away with the 'with us and not with us' policy that has been destroying our country. This policy is worst today than ever before and resulting with so many capable Seychellois not being able to do their bit to keep Seychelles on the road of success and in so doing earn a decent living for themselves and their family. With One Seychelles we shall have One People, One Nation and a proud Seychellois Culture. As we move forward and prepare for elections we shall dedicate energy, time and resources to our 5 Point Action Plan to revive Seychelles, and these are:- 1. Fight the with us and not with us strategy in the country that has never been as bad as it is today. 2. Narrow the gap in the two groups of The Haves and The Have Not and push for no one to be living below the poverty line. Today anyone earning below R. 7500 per month is deemed, according to official reports, to be living in poverty. This includes our old age pensioners and home carers. Salary Bands of the Government Salary Scale will need to be revised to do away with the two or three lower bands to ensure a more acceptable salary is earned by those in the lower cadres. To achieve this the frills offered to the Executive and his Government and to the Members of the Legislative. Frills such as end of year bonus and end of term gratuity will need to be discontinued as these payments also help increase the gap difference between the haves and the have not. 3. Reduce Cost of Living 4. Kick start business community - reduce bureaucracy, reduce Income Tax & VAT payable 5. Respect Seychellois and its Civil Service and push for a culture where the country Seychelles is respected. This will put an end to separation of our islands for the benefit of foreign military powers. These five point plan will help revive our economy, it will help create jobs for our people and it will enable our people to meet their basic needs. It is jobs that will transform the lives of our people from that of existing difficulties and from that of want for a better life. Jobs will provide for greater comfort and wellbeing. This is the future we see after having discussed it with you all" said Alain St.Ange as he delivered his first address as Leader of the One Seychelles party before ending with saying "A good staff will always have their employment contract renewed. The People of Seychelles are the ones who are the employers of both the Executive and Legislative Branches of Government, and if Members of these two Branches of Government have done a good job and delivered on the aspirations and expectations of the people who elected them to office, they can be assured off the renewal of their contract, but if they were disappointment to their employers they will be swept away and new employees put in their places". More from Indian Ocean Times : Monday, March 11th 2019 - 04:51 Iceland's First Lady met Alain St Ange Monday, March 11th 2019 - 04:46 Alain St.Ange the former Tourism Minister from Seychelles at ITB Tourism Trade Fair Iceland's First Lady met Alain St Ange Alain St.Ange the former Tourism Minister from Seychelles at ITB Tourism Trade Fair “It is time to step forward" A new Labor Union is launched for Seychelles Seychelles to welcome British Airways The Spanish footballer Iker Casillas with his girlfriend Sara Carbonero on holiday in Seychelles make the buzz on social networks 07/11/2013 - Laurent Chinaud Seychelles: Culinary competition for chefs and lovers of the creole cuisine in the first edition of the culinary Festival of Praslin Emotional speech Seychelles: Pure FM, first commercial private radio of the archipelago Dubai Airport To Build New Seychelles International Airport New weight support for Seychelles to obtain a seat in the World Tourism Organization of the United Nations Seychelles: Opening of a new hospital of Anse Royale, Mahe, financed by China Explore the islands of the Indian Ocean with the «Vanilla Islands" pass of Air Austral 04/08/2014 - . Seychelles: The Seychellois Tourist Office present at the international fair of travel and tourism of Moscow Seychelles in honour of one of the largest German magazines Seychelles: The tour operator FRAM spreads its wings in the heart of the archipelago from next November © Indian Ocean Times 2016 | Carrefuly designed by Imaz’in
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Cookbook:Ostrich Cookbook | Recipes | Ingredients | Meat and poultry Adapted from the public domain USDA article FOCUS ON: Ratites (Emu, Ostrich, and Rhea). Red meat is now on the "wing" into innovative restaurants and some meat markets. The latest in meat products is from the "ratite" family of flightless birds. It's lean and tastes like beef, but contains much less fat. In fact, ratite meat is even lower in calories than chicken and turkey. 1 What are Ratites? 2 How are Ratites Raised? 3 Retail Cuts of Fresh Ratites 4 What Cooking Methods Can Be Used? 5 What is the Cost Per Pound? What are Ratites?[edit] Ratites are a family of flightless birds with small wings and flat breastbones. Ostrich, emu and rhea are members of this family. Ostrich is native to Africa; emu, to Australia; and rhea, to South America -- particularly the grasslands of Argentina. When fully grown, ostriches -- the largest birds in the world -- stand about seven to eight-feet tall and can weigh 300 to 400 pounds; emu are about six feet tall and weigh 125 to 140 pounds. Adult rheas are about five feet tall and weigh 60 to 100 pounds. The birds are 95-percent usable as meat, feathers, oil and leather. How are Ratites Raised?[edit] Newly hatched chicks usually weigh about two pounds and are about 10 inches tall. Young ratites must be sheltered in a warm place for their first weeks of life. Adolescent and adult birds are allowed to roam freely in fenced pastures or pens. Ratites need daily exercise to avoid leg and digestive problems. The closely woven wire fences must be 6 to 8-feet high because ratites can leap over a 5-foot fence. Ratites are fed on grain supplemented by pasture. Ostrich was the first ratite to be raised in the U.S. There are now about 1,000 ostrich growers in the U.S. raising about 100,000 birds. Emu are now raised in at least 43 states by about 10,000 families (3,000 are in Texas). The emu population is about a million. Rheas are the newest U.S. farm-raised ratite, but there are currently over 15,000 rheas in the United States. Retail Cuts of Fresh Ratites[edit] Ratite meat is sold as steaks, fillet, medallions (small coin-shaped pieces of meat), roasts and ground meat. The most tender meat comes from the thigh or "fan"; meat also comes from the drum and forequarter. Are Ratites "Red" or "White" Meat? Although ratites are poultry, the pH of their flesh is similar to beef. Therefore, they are classified as "red" meat. The raw meat is a very dark cherry red. After cooking, the meat looks like beef and the flavor is similar but a little sweeter. What Cooking Methods Can Be Used?[edit] The tenderness and texture of farmed ratite meat lends itself to light grilling, pan frying or roasting. However, because ratite meat is so low in fat, care must be taken not to overcook it. Especially when roasting ratite meat, it is important to provide ample stock and moisten it, because due to its leanness, it will otherwise become very dry and tough. As a rule of thumb, anything that works for lean venison should work for ratite meat too. Since ratites are classified as red meats, steaks and roasts can be safely cooked to medium rare (145 °F) up to well done (160 °F); ground meat should be cooked to 160 °F. What is the Cost Per Pound?[edit] At this time, emu, ostrich and rhea meat are specialty items available in restaurants and some stores. The meat is more expensive than beef, pork, chicken and turkey. However, the price will become more reasonable as the quantity of this meat becomes more widely available. Retrieved from "https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Cookbook:Ostrich&oldid=3198681" Esoteric meat and poultry
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Wikibooks:Original research This page contains a draft proposal for a Wikibooks policy or guideline. Discuss changes to this draft at the discussion page. Through consensus, this draft could become an official Wikibooks policy or guideline. Original research refers to any facts, theories, ideas, data, opinions, or claims that have not yet been subject to peer review by experts and/or have not yet been included elsewhere by a reliable publication. In principle, Wikibooks discourages original research. In practice, however, Wikibooks allows material based on repeatable information from personal experiences or from common knowledge when published literature might reasonably support it, or consensus might reasonably agree with its inclusion. If questions do arise, questionable material must cite a reliable publication to be kept. Textbooks are typically, but not always, tertiary sources that draw on previously published reviews and syntheses for their content. On the other hand, referring to external sources may sometimes be unnecessary or impractical, such as for recipes in a cookbook. Wikibooks should draw on other sources in situations where published textbooks would reasonably do so. Note that material deemed inappropriate by consensus may be excluded, even if material might otherwise satisfy what is stated below. 1 Verifiable 3 Vocabulary 4 Common knowledge 5 Citations and bibliography The existence of information on the Internet or in publications alone does not make information "verifiable". Information is verifiable when subject to peer review by experts and reliable publications include it. A publication is reliable when the publication and information published by them has itself been subject to peer view by experts. Information that is reasonably safe and easy to demonstrate, apply, and repeat may also be verifiable when results or conclusions are reasonably consistent with the information. A recipe in a cookbook is verifiable when reasonably safe and easy for anyone to demonstrate, apply, and repeat a recipe's directions, and the results are reasonably consistent with the recipe's directions for example. Wikibooks includes information which is or may reasonably be verifiable, and what reliable publications would reasonably include. This may include new uses for a particular product, new methods for performing a common task, or exposition of hidden (undocumented) features in existing products when safe and easy to do. Contributors may decide to include or exclude a recipe from a cookbook when a reliable and published cookbook would reasonably do so for example. If reasonable questions do arise, questionable information must cite a reliable publication to be kept. The Wikibooks project does not include the traditional definition of "textbooks". Wikibooks may and should present or explain information in original ways, including original content arrangements, chapter organization, and titles for books, chapters, and pages. The exact presentation and style should be defined in a book's manual of style, and is defined at the discretion of book contributors. Original vocabulary and original definitions for words are allowed when it conveys better understanding of material. The specific vocabulary and definitions to use is up to the discretion of book contributors. Wikibooks may contain information that is considered "common knowledge", either to a general audience, or to the specific target audience of the particular book. University students are likely to have more common knowledge then elementary school students, etc. Citations and bibliography Textbooks, especially those containing information beyond what is considered "common knowledge" should contain proper citations and bibliographies. Unlike Wikipedia articles, individual Wikibooks may (at the discretion of the participating authors) forgo footnotes and instead create a separate chapter for citations and bibliographies. Retrieved from "https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Wikibooks:Original_research&oldid=2508815" Wikibooks draft policies and guidelines Semi-protected project pages
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LC & CSO × HomePoliticsIN-DEPTHopinionSocietyLC & CSOEventsMultimediaEconomyInvestigations New project to provide IDPs with a chance for new housing in Idlib The Technical Services Directorate of the Salvation Government conducts a topographic survey in the area for carrying out a housing project for the displaced in the northern countryside of Idlib, September 22, 2019( Agency of Sham) Enab Baladi مشروع يتيح للنازحين الاكتتاب على شقق سكنية في إدلب The so-called Salvation Government (SG) active in the province of Idlib, launched a project that allows displaced Syrians in the region to subscribe for apartments in housing units to be built near the border areas with Turkey. The project allows internally-displaced people (IDPs) to leave the camps into proper housing units. The project, announced by the SG on September 21, aims to build these housing units in the areas of Kalbait, al-Bardakli, Mashhad Ruhin in the northern Idlib countryside. The director of technical services at the Ministry of Local Administration and Services in the SG, Qutaiba al-Khalaf, said that the project will allow for the construction of housing units within state-owned lands in the border areas. “In order to accommodate the displaced in proper housing units instead of living in tents that do not protect them from the extreme heat of summer or the harsh cold of winter,” he added. Al-Khalaf told Enab Baladi that the project has several other goals including, “providing work opportunities, reducing unemployment, and ensuring decent life for all. Moreover, another goal of the project is to demonstrate the skills of the technical and administrative cadres in the liberated areas and their ability to manage the regions using their capabilities and expertise”. During the initial phase of the project, 104 residential blocks will be constructed. These will include 1248 apartments, shops, vital and administrative centers and parks, according to al-Khalaf. The project will start with site selection and delimiting the property, as well as conducting topographic surveys. Then comes the architectural design phase and determining the size and number of apartments in each block. Finally, the project will produce the necessary structural and water-related designs before beginning the implementation stage. Subscribers will get a deed, affirming that the housing unit is allocated to them. Once the preparation is finished the the apartments will be divided amongs the subscribers. The final stage will be when the subscribers pay the full construction cost and receive the ownership deed from the real-estate directorate. The prices for the apartments have not yet been set, according to al-Khalaf. The beneficiaries of the first phase of the projected will be 1248 families. “Because of the high demand, work is currently underway on a nearby site of approximately 250 dunams to launch the second phase of the project,” al-Khalaf said. Construction and specifications The housing project, according to the its technical description, is open to IDPs in all areas in Idlib area, and will be located in the regions of Kalbait, al-Bardakli, Mashhad Ruhinin in the northern Idlib countryside, near the Turkish border. The proposed model is a level building in the form of housing units. Each floor will have has four apartments of three rooms and utilities. The area of each apartment in the Model 1 is up to 82 square meters (sq m) , while the area in Model 2 reaches 77.5 sq m. The executing entity will be contracted to build the foundations, pillars, and columns. The entity will also pour the ceilings of the building, stairs with concrete and maintain the roof at a height of about 90cm. The exterior walls will be built and reinforced with a 15 cm thick band of concrete. The interior walls are constructed with thickness of 10 cm. Moreover, the entity ensures that all apartments will have access to electricity, water, and sanitation. The SG, in its announcement, called on all IDPs wishing to subscribe to go to the local councils operating in their places of residency. There they have to fill the free application form of the government’s subscription. if you think the article contain wrong information or you have additional details Send Correction النسخة العربية من المقال Mohieddine al-Manfoush: From godfather of Ghouta siege of to “honest investor” in Europe Protests against harsh living conditions in Suwaida US Dollar exchange rate exceeds one thousand Syrian pounds Gradual return of internet in Syria’s Daraa: Electricity hampers continuation of internet coverage What is behind “fighting corruption” in Syria? More Economy Support independent media.. Support Enab Baladi Results of counter-attack against sites of Russian and Syrian regime forces ISIS carried out ten attacks in Syria since start of 2020 “Faltering initiative” for Kurdish-Kurdish reunification in Syria UN aid to Syria, new victim of international bargains Three lines depict “slow” US policy in Syria Weekly Newspaper Enab Video (EB) is an independent Syrian media organization that was founded in 2011. EB offers 24-hour news coverage through its multilingual interactive websites, and it publishes a weekly newspaper that covers Syrian political, social. Propaganda distorts the truth and prolongs the war.. Syria needs free media.. We need your support to stay independent.. Support Enab Baladi.. $1 a month makes a difference.. Click here to support
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« Here’s What Chrissy Teigen Looked Like on Her Wedding Day (And Night) Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux’s Toronto Love Fest Leads Today’s Star Sightings » 5 Stories You May Have Missed This Weekend From weddings to yet another song leak, Celebuzz is rounding up the weekend’s hottest headlines. #UnfollowSaturdays OK that hashtag probably isn’t real, something like that happened on Saturday. Smilers and some members of the general population discovered that Miley Cyrus is no longer following her fiance Liam Hemsworth on Twitter. Bieber The Boy Wonder? While some people are still dealing with the fact that Ben Affleck will play Batman in the upcoming Batman Vs. Superman movie, Justin Bieber made things even more confusing with an Instagram snap of the film’s “script,” suggesting that he’s been hired for the role of Robin. The only thing that’s certain from this weekend, as far as Beliebers are concerned, is that the singer is BFFs with boxing champ Floyd Mayweather. I Do x 2 Two famous couples tied the knot this weekend: Chrissy Teigen and John Legend in Italy; LeBron James and high school sweetheart Savannah Brinson in San Diego. Ah, love is so not dead, contrary to what Hollywood’s most recent breakups have indicated. She’s Back… Britney Spears woke up to some unsettling news on Sunday: her song “Work Bitch” leaked one day ahead of its official release date. The incident caused Team Britney to release the song to radio and iTunes 24 hours earlier than scheduled. She’s Back Too! The one and only Paula Deen returned to the public eye on Saturday, taking part in a cooking demo in Houston. The appearance marked the former Food Network star’s first public gig since a federal judge dismissed the civil lawsuit filed by a former employee. [Lead image courtesy of RCA Records] Tags Britney Spears, chrissy teigen, Gossip, Justin Bieber, Miley Cyrus, News, paula deen Categories Justin Bieber
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Chapter 21 – Gorbas Fortress in danger That day, as Sati and I were doing our drills at the training field, a quiet sound of a bell could be heard one time. The adventurers and the instructors who heard it stopped what they were doing and looked at each other. We have heard the sound of this bell before. It’s the sound we’ve heard many times during the harpy battle. However, that time it was three times in a row. This time it was just once. It’s sounding out intermittently with some time in between. The instructors tell everyone to gather at the Guild Hall. I have a bad feeling about this. Will it be a battle like with the harpies before? I was only informed of this later, but apparently the number of times the bell is rang shows the degree of danger. With just one, you only need to be on low alert. With three chimes it a fairly high state of emergency. That time with the harpies, even if monsters came attacking it was outside of the town, so three chimes. That means if that came for the town, then it would’ve turned into continuous ringing. Also, adventurers are apparently required to gather at the Guild first when they hear the ringing. Angela explained this to me in detail even while say that this is something that even a three year old child would know. Many adventurers had gathered at the Guild Hall, so it’s noisy in here. I went to the receptionist old guy’s place with Sati. “I think there will be an announcement soon, but an emergency request will be declared.” “Emergency request?” “Right. It will be compulsory for those of at least D Rank, unless they have a very good reason to be exempt, so Masaru-kun will have to take part in it too. There, it’s starting soon.” Our current Ranks are D for me and E for Sati. But compulsory, huh. I got even more of a bad feeling about this now…. The vice Guild Chief came out together with Tilika-chan. The Guild Hall quiets down at once. “Listen! Adventurer ladies and gentlemen! Just now, an emergency report has came in via a Transfer Mage. At this moment, Gorbas Fortress is besieged by a large group of monsters, so we will head to reinforce them. This is an emergency request!” Gorbas Fortress!? That’s where Elizabeth……I feel the blood suddenly leaving my face. “As you know, it takes two days to reach the fortress in a hurry from here. If the fortress falls, then this town will face danger next. A message was delivered to the Capital too, so by now they are probably preparing the army. Our role is to protect the fortress no matter what until the army can get to it. The first group will set out in three hours. As for the details, you should ask the Guild personnel. That is all!” “The fortress is…..” “How many years was it since….?” “But that fortress won’t simply….” “I have to let my family escape…..” Our surroundings started moving with a commotion. What should I do? That time, the old guy from the reception called out to me. “Masaru-kun, Masaru-kun.” “The vice Guild Chief is calling for you, so can you go there now?” When I went to where the Vice Guild Chief and Tilika-chan was, Sergeant-dono was there too. He said I’m the only one he has business with, so Sati went to Tilika-chan and we started talking. “Ooh, Masaru. Thanks for coming.” “I will ask just to be sure, you are participating in the emergency request, right?” “I can reject it?” “You can. However, the penalties are high, since you will be heavily fined for a contract breach or in the worst case you might even get expelled from the Guild.” “I will participate of course.” I have to go help Elizabeth. “Good. Then I would like to ask you to transport the goods this time too.” Sergeant-dono said. “Goods, is it. But if there is a Transfer Mage then he can use Space Magic too, right? Isn’t it best to put them in the Item Box and transport them?” “It’s not that easy. In case of Transfer the mana consumption is increased based on the weight. That also includes the contents of the Item Box. When they are using Transfer they empty their Item Box and also wear light clothes. A Transfer Mage that can transport something else beside himself is very rare.” I thought of taking Space Magic, but if I can’t carry luggage or take Sati with me, then I really have to think it over. Or maybe with my magic power and Skill level it would work out somehow? Elizabeth is probably knowledgeable about the topic, but the Space Magic was a topic to avoid, so I couldn’t ask her. I was led to the warehouse where weapons and armors were piled up in a heap. Also, a lot of arrows. “That and this. This one too. Is there room for more? Then this and….” I stored everything as instructed. “I was thinking this for a long time, but your Item Box is amazing…..I’ve never seen one that could hold this much.” “Aah, as expected it’s almost full now.” My Item Box is still about half-way filled. But Tilika-chan is with Sati, so she is not around. Even though I said it’s almost full, I was only released after cramming in some more things. “Well, it’s fine. If you can transport this much then space will be freed up on the carriages and we can take more adventurers. It’s a big help.” I need to hurry up with our preparations next. There is not much time. I call Sati who was talking with Tilika-chan. “Sati!” “Yes, Masaru-sama.” “Sati should….” “I don’t want to. I will go too.” I got an immediate reply before I even finished saying she should remain here. “Sati is Rank E. You have no obligation to participate in an emergency request.” “I will accompany Masaru-sama anywhere. Also, if the fortress falls, this place will also be in danger, right? It’s dangerous all the same.” The current Sati is stronger than me if we don’t count the magic, so she would indeed be an asset, but I don’t want to expose her to danger. I thought of letting her stay at the orphanage or with Tilika-chan, but… “It’s dangerous, you know.” “I know. Besides, I’m also an adventurer. I’m prepared for it.” She says this even after experiencing the harpy battle. She is serious. “Got it. Let’s go together.” “Yes! Masaru-sama!” After leaving the Guild we went to the shopping district where more than double the usual amount of people were crowding around, they already started buying up goods. However, the familiar places sold their remaining stock to me when I said I’m going to the fortress. I also have a lot of emergency food stored, so if it’s just the two of us, we will probably be fine for quite a while. “Do your best. And make sure not to get injured.” “Yes. I will come shopping when we’re back.” With that I bid farewell to the grocery store auntie. The orphanage was also somewhat busy. Maybe they are evacuating. Sister Matilda was in the dining hall. “Aah, Masaru-chan! Masaru-chan is also going to the fortress, right?” “Yes, so I wanted to ask if you could watch the house for me while we are away.” “I understand. Leave it to us. Ah, wait just a bit. An-chaaan. Angela-chaaan.” After waiting Angela came out. “Masaru! You are going too, right?” “Yeah, so I was thinking of saying goodbye.” “I’m also going along with Priest-sama.” “Eeeh!? Will you be alright?” “It’s the job of a Priestess. It doesn’t matter if I will be alright or not. Besides, I will be treating people behind the lines, so as long as the fortress doesn’t fall there won’t be any danger.” “I see. I guess that’s true.” I’ll just have to do my best. “I’m more worried about Masaru. Sati, properly protect this one, okay?” “Yes, Angela-sama.” Muh. Why do the people around me always ask Sati to protect me. Usually it should be the other way around…. “Then bye for now. I also need to prepare some things. Let’s meet once again over there.” Angela will set out with the second group. We promised to meet up with her over there, then left. We returned home, then first of all stored the contents of the refrigerator. I think I will bring some cookware too. What is it that we need besides those, hm. If we have tents the two of us can sleep there. Right, it’s cold lately, so I will take a futon set too. I also lock up the house. “Masaru-sama. I will speak with the neighbors too.” It seems that before I noticed Sati became acquainted with the neighbors. Did we forget anything? I got the tent, food, and Sati. Our equipment is also ready. Hm, do we have enough arrows? I thought that we have more than enough, but if it comes to a long term defensive battle, then we may run out. We should have more for Sati’s use too. The arms shop next to the Guild was packed. Well that’s to be expected. I guess we were late in coming. As I was thinking what to do, the usual sales clerk found us and approached us. “Please wait a moment.” Saying that he went to the back and brought out a mountain of arrows on a pushcart. “I thought that guest-sama would come, so I set it aside.” What a good guy. “Not at all. Those of us who remain behind can only do this much. You too”, he starts speaking to Sati. “Make sure to protect you Master well.” This is that, right. It’s not like the problem is that I’m not dependable or something, but that it’s obvious for a slave to protect their master, right? If not, then every single person we come across wouldn’t say this, right? Nn. It’s not at all because I look unreliable. It’s not, right? There was a great number of carriages prepared in front of the Guild. As we were aimlessly wandering around not knowing what to do, Sergeant-dono was there so I called out to him. “Masaru. You are with me.” So we were made to sit in the second carriage from the front. Soon we departed. The town people came out to the streets and shouted, Do your best!, Take care!, and such towards the line of carriages. As we went through the gate the guard duty soldier found me and waved his hand toward me. We move forward on the highway while shaking on the carriages. As I was sitting still, somehow my uneasiness started growing. “Um, Sergeant-dono…..Do you think the fortress is alright?” “It’s fine. Is what I want to say, but I don’t know.” Elizabeth…. “Have you been to the fortress before? ….hm, so no. Besides the fortress walls there are additional two layers of outer walls there. It won’t fall from just any simple attacks, but…” But? But, what? “Keep this between us. You guy too.” He warned the surrounding adventurers who were listening. “Apparently there was at least two large species earth dragons amongst the enemy.” “Earth dragons?” “It’s the wingless version of the dragon you fought in the forest. It can’t fly, but it’s unmistakably of the large species. If it’s not stopped properly then it can bite a hole in the fortress walls. I don’t want stir up panic, but it’s possible that by the time we arrive there, the fortress has already fallen.” The adventurers keep their silence. “But, well. There are remarkable people gathered there. It won’t fall easily. It’s no use being worried now. Just rest properly while you can.” “Um, Sergeant-dono.” “Do you think the pioneer village is alright?” Sergeant-dono shakes his head. “Don’t know. I hope they could escape properly.” “Masaru-sama….” Sati, who was sitting beside me, looked up at me with a worried expression. “It’s alright. We are talking about that Elizabeth. She must be eating the fried meat we gave her right about now.” Saying that I pat Sati’s head. Please be safe, Elizebeth. I promised to feed you pudding when you got back, right? Has a feeling this was coming… 😟 Thanks for the chapter! 😃 SilverFeather on 2017-02-11 at 00:02 said: She raised too many flags… It’s getting serious. KneelToMeHuman on 2016-08-11 at 13:31 said: This is why he should have maxed out wind magic… He could fly there and then use lvl 5 lighting to kill those dragons P.S. I’m not a fun of fire magic because even though it has the most power out of all 4 main attributes, it goes beyond beating enemies and destroys everything in its path… Wind magic has less power but is more precise so it’s better for shooting a lightning in a dragon’s forehead 🙂 He should max out cooking and hope that God Satou will bless him in his battle.. … Jokes aside, yay for new arc~ yay for action~ ( ・ω・)=つ≡つ🍃 (っ ≡つ=つ🍃 And the situation just jump up few beat from the last chapter… It seems a siege battle coming, huh… Please make a better system for us readers to make it easier to comment. Thanks for doing this chapter! 😇 ohmariowv on 2017-02-01 at 18:41 said: Hurry up MC, you got a tsundere to save!!! If he can even save her with his “skills”, he should’ve practiced harder instead of going for the “once every few days I’ll go and spar”, I can’t feel his motivation at all… He also isn’t raising his levels, Sati is actually 2 levels above him when she started out way later. Holow on 2018-06-02 at 09:14 said: He really doesn’t need to be strong dude …. He doesn’t even have a half year in that world…relax Albiruni Nurzaman on 2017-03-17 at 18:49 said: thanks for the chapter, i just want to say this somehow the mc is not smart enough for me, first, he got nicely cheat (LV) but not grinding a lot, second, in case of slavery he can make his personal army, using stat/skill as loophole and create magnificent army, for this cause he needs lot money that can be get from selling food/recipe or grinding a lot, and as person that know a future danger lurking ahead he is so passive. but disregard of what i say this is still good novel. nermie01 on 2017-05-11 at 06:15 said: After reading the recent comments, I just have to make a point. For the guys complaining that Masaru is passive and weak, unmotivated and not power-leveling to save the world or building an army with his menu cheats.. Have you not been paying attention to the story or his personality? He fully admits to all of these things, as well as being timid and cowardly. He represents the fairly stereotypical picture of a Japanese NEET, bland, focused on his hobbies, with little in the way of skills or knowledge. He is essentially a blank slate for the author to paint a picture on in this new world. And the author has chosen to do so in a very interesting way, depicting how a normal person without an excess of physical ability, combat prowess, knowledge or skills (aka, a normal person) would react and survive in a harsh new world. And he has done this very well, in a fairly realistic fashion. Most people put into a dramatically different situation to what they’re accustomed to are not jist going to flip a switch and suddenly have the mindset of a badass veteran warrior. Most people will find what comfort they can in setting a routine and a safe environment. Masaru is no different. But, he has had to force himself to grow as a character and as a person through the various things outside of his comfort zone that he has experienced in this world. Has he made mistakes and stupid decisions? Sure. So would anyone. Has he been hesitant, cowardly, and weak? Of course. He only has one life, and the god told him that he did NOT expect him to save the world. Basically, by complaining about the personality of Masaru as compared to how you want him to act, you are complaining about the very premise of the story. You need to either re-evaluate your stance on the story, or move on and find one more to your taste. Thank you very much. Leave a Reply to Dark Jackel Cancel reply
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firefighter with a pen David Jester The Last Romanov December 11, 2014 February 3, 2015 / David Jester Trash blew down the street, rustling against the empty pavement, as he stood there enveloped by the darkness. Streetlights overhead stood like frozen sentinels, their light having died long ago. Glass broken on some, others just no longer functioning, they stood there as monuments to a different era. People once felt safe to walk the streets at night, a time when they felt that artificial light illuminated the darkness, protecting them from what lurked in the shadows. Light can only do so much now. The orange glow of these large lamps would expose and highlight one’s vulnerability in the night, working contradictory to their true purpose, exposing rather than protecting. Their absence was welcomed, their state of disrepair, the veil of which masked his movement. He wandered down the street, hugging the brick walls of decrepit vacant buildings, keeping close to the alleyways to duck within. The buildings offered cover, they offered a safety from the open street, from the revealing sidewalk. Stepping over bags of trash, which cascaded out vacant doorways onto the street, he navigated the refuse of the masses, stumbling over heaping piles of bloated black sacks. His steps were deliberate, as he positioned his body, his balance, with each movement. His calculated actions maintained a stealth on the dead street, where only the loose trash showed life. Shadows cast by the moon overhead, beaming down brilliant rays of the lightest blue, coating the world in an ethereal light, became his refuge, and allowed him a greater comfort on his journey. Resting against the husk of a deceased maple tree, in one of these black voids, he found himself staring out across the landscape, and thinking how beautiful all this entropy was, blanketed in the soft moonlight. The dead hay, where once was green grass, was blue in the lunar rays, and the buildings scars were rendered moot in the contrast between light and dark. Realizing he lingered too long, he darted his eyes to and fro, and then moved on, advancing shadow to shadow. In the distance he could see the monolith of a building rising into the night sky. Its oxidized copper domes were still intact, and sat upon the granite structure, which rose from the street. He could not help himself, and stepping out into the open street, he took in the grand view of this building, allowing imagination to take him to another time. In the few seconds standing there, he envisioned the construction of this building, and could see the grand architect, with blueprints in hand and pencil tucked behind his ear, standing where he stood, overseeing the creation of this marvel. He envisaged, this view was chosen so the street ended at this structure, that this building was so important to the community, a road led to it. And then he heard it, off in the distance, a noise like a screech owl, sounding prey in the dark lit woods, on a snowy night. Frozen in place, he stood there, a sudden rush of fear taken hold of him. Hearing the screech again, he bolted off the road, and found a small hole in the side of a building. Moving debris from the opening, brick and mortar scratched against each other, as he frantically moved the materials away till he could fit in this small space. Fearing what could be inside, living in this recess, he dove in, knowing what was out on the street, producing that sound, was far worse than any animal that could fit in that hole. Cramming himself into that small space, he pulled back some of the brick, and forced his body as far back into the void as he could. As he pulled back the last brick, a screech, louder and far more ominous than the first, rang through the air, and seemed to amplify in his small hovel, ringing loudly through his ears. Watching out through the small opening, he waited for the parade he suspected would come. Slowly a body walked down the street, with deliberate strides, each one so long, it seemed inhuman. In the moonlight his face was bright white, like a sun bleached skull, and very much like this image, the hair was vacant from his head, not even eyebrows to show. Stopping in the middle of the street, the man craned his neck like a bird, his body still, his legs in a lunge position, only his head and neck moving. He opened his mouth and screeched again. And with focused movements he made his way down the street, till he was out of view. The screeches continued as he walked down the street, and they eerily mixed in with the sound of boot heels which followed close behind. First one, then two, then uncountable numbers arrived in the street. Their bodies forming one dark mass in the dull light. From that horde, individuals broke off, scouring the alleyways, poking the garbage heaps, swinging spiked sticks at any object that resembled a human figure. He lay there, his breathing even too loud for his liking, and watched as a silhouette sifted through the heaps of garbage directly in front of his hiding place. As the black figure came closer to his refuge, he could see this creature’s club poke the loose brick, which covered the makeshift entrance. He began sweating in nervous anticipation of the horrors that would descend upon him, and his imagination raced with all the torture that flashed like a slide show through his mind . Like a rabbit wanting to run, waiting till the last second, muscles tensed, and ready for flight, knowing full well it wouldn’t matter, he held his breath, even the beating of his heart thumped so loudly, it rang through the air. A screech cut through the night, and the black figure turned, and pulled his club out of the rubble, knocking the unsecured bricks away, exposing him to the world. The figure ran through the pale light toward the group, while the screech came again, and again, until it was a succession of shrill sounds. And then he heard it, heard the man screaming as he ran away from this armed swarm, pleading for help. Some unsuspecting person, hidden in the shadows like himself, was rooted out, and now being chased like quarry, as if it were all part of some dystopian fox-hunt. The pack followed this poor soul down the street, and the screeches faded off into the distance, as this already dead stranger ran for his life. This fortunate, yet tragic, event was a boon, and crawling out of his hole, entered the street, knowing his path was clear up to his destination. After a short while he reached the tall marble steps of the building looming in front of him, and began to ascend them, one at a time. With each step he could feel the concave marble worn by weather, use, and time. The black, which swirled through the white stone, seemed alive in the pale light, dancing as he alighted each step. Reaching the top platform, he turned around and looked out upon the dismal world, and saw nothing but buildings jutting up into the dark sky, a jagged world of stalagmites, wasting away in the chaos. A wind pulsed by, whispering across his face, and he felt his cheeks flush against the cool air. Turning, he stared at the prodigious bronze doors. Reliefs cast in the metal contained clusters of grapes and vines, Roman and Greek gods, ancient philosophers and Caesars. He ran his hand across this door, and he felt insignificant, dwarfed by the enormity of this treasure. Tracing his fingers across a relief of Pan playing his flute, he could not help wonder, how many hands had touched this door before his? How many people had entered these doors with a deep yearning for something so far from their own lives? He could not imagine it in better times, because he had not been alive to witness it, instead he could only recollect on what his parents had passed on to him in stories. Leaning his shoulder against the massive doors, he pressed into them, exerting his body, flexing his muscles, tensing his back, pushing with all his might against years of neglect. Straining against the stubbornness of the hinges, the door began to open, inch by inch, until it crept ajar enough for him to slide though sideways. Entering the building, it was like a massive crypt, a mausoleum built for kings. High vaulted ceilings could be seen as the moonlight streamed through tall stained glass windows, and small eyes, inserted just below the roof lines along the walls. Standing there, slow and deliberate, he panned his vision, and was awestruck by the enormity and beauty of the architecture. Moving one small step at a time, allowing his vision to acclimate to the darker conditions within this building, his feet moved amongst the dust and dirt collected through time. Large cobwebs filled whole spaces, masking corners and whole walls with their white filament. These massive webs hung like large white, wool blankets strung from looms against the wall. Standing before a wooden railing set atop iron, he found himself on a grand staircase, overlooking the main room. On each side of the landing, upon which he stood, a large set of stairs, formed of black marble, descended into this great room. In the gloom of the night, only rays of blue eked through the windows, illuminating very few details. Carefully he descended each step, making his way to the floor. In that cavernous room, he came to find himself staring across long wooden tables, with oak chairs strewn everywhere in a discordant mess. Some of these chairs were smashed along the floor, pieces missing, laying there like marionettes flopped on the ground, lifeless reminders of what once was. Others were pulled up to tables, left in a row, as if someone had neatly come along, spacing each chair equally one from the other. Making his way past a shattered chair in the middle of the floor, he walked to the end of a shelf, and ran his hand along the tall piece of wood. He closed his eyes and felt the grain of the quarter-sawn oak under his fingertips, and rubbed his thumb over an imperfection, a small divot, and felt an electric sensation run through his body. His excitement was palpable, and turning down an aisle between two oak monoliths, he found himself staring at nothing, empty space. Even in the dim light he knew he stared at nothing. Frantically he ran his hands along wooden shelves filled with nothing but years of dust. The soft pillowy grime, collected under his fingers like skin schluffing off bones. He ran from stack to stack, and found nothing but the same. In his panic, his disappointment, he ran from aisle to aisle, shelf to shelf, and searched in the emptiness, looking for his reward. “No,” he yelled. A single word he uttered, he yelled, echoing off the vaulted ceiling of the empty reading room. Slumping down in a chair, he fixed his eyes to the ceiling, examining the cobweb filled chandeliers, and trying in vain to identify the images painted on the ceiling. He did this for quite a while, and with his eyes transfixed on the ceiling, he did not notice the old man enter the room. His long, thick, grey beard hung low, and ran down his chest, like foamy water churned over rapids as it cascades down a waterfall. His clothes were tattered, and ripped, their life lasting well beyond the intended use. Suddenly a noise alerted him, as the old man shuffled across the room, and spinning in his chair, he fell over the table backwards, landing on the ground like a turtle on its back. As he lay on his back, a face wrinkled with time, and hidden by thick hair hovered over his, and spoke. “What is it you want?” He felt a sharp object stick into his side, and saw the metal poker gripped by the old man’s right hand, sharpened to lethal point, jutting into his ribcage. Speechless he just lay there, the force of the object getting stronger and more painful. “Come. Out with it. There is not much meat left on the bones of this old man, but I will not be eaten. Speak your words, or death will find you quickly.” Wetting his mouth with what little saliva he had, he finally spoke. “I’ve come for…books. Books. I’ve come for books.” “To burn I suspect. Like those heathens that burned so many before, disagreeing with the topic, you will seek to destroy the written language, so none other may share in it. Well as you can see we have none, so off with you, before your heart is pierced.” “No, not to burn. To read. I’ve come to read.” “No one can read. Don’t lie to me.” “My parents. They taught me, long ago. They were Livrelutionists. They read in public, created poetry circles, their intellectualism was subversion, their literature traitorous. They fought against the demise of literature. The state. The state executed them, along with all the others. The public saw fit to accommodate, and so they cowered in their homes, while my parents hung in the street. The state saw fit to let me live. They sent me to reconditioning school, taught me about the image. The digital word. The image and the oral, but the word, literature, they tried to erase that from my mind, but they could not.” “And you have come here to read?” The old man took the poker from his chest, and stood back, giving him his hand. Helping him up, he held his hand firmly, and shook it up and down. “A handshake. It is what civilized people do when they meet. It was a greeting long ago. And now, in keeping with old customs, we introduce ourselves. My name is Anton Romanov.” “I am Orwell Bradbury.” Anton just stood there gripping the man’s hand with his aged and gnarled fingers. And then with a squeeze released it. “That is a strange name.” “My parents named me after two revolutionaries in literature. They told me that surnames did not matter anymore, so they gave me one which they felt reflected the times in which I was born.” “They could not have picked one more appropriate.” They both sat in wooden chairs facing each other. As Anton sat down, it was as if the creaking of the chair mimicked the sound of his bones, and Orwell wondered if it was really the wood or the ossein that shuddered so. “What happened to all the books?” Orwell said. “What happened to the books? That’s a questions that I have asked myself many times. What happened to all the books?” Anton shifted in his chair after saying that and sat in silence staring at a stained-glass window directly behind Orwell. books, Dystopian, future, kafkaesque, literature, sci-fi, writing ← Stone and Mortar Cultural Insanity →
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By Peter Adrastos Athas Adrastos, Bigotry, British Politics, Fog Of History, Race Quote Of The Day: Farage Barrage Edition I couldn’t resist reviving my post-Brexit vote meme before moving on to slap Nigel Farage about. On with the show, this is it. Farage paid a visit to Sydney, Australia and trashed the royals to a group of Ozzie wingnuts The Brexit party leader was laudatory about the Queen – “an amazing, awe-inspiring woman, we’re bloody lucky to have her” – but abused her son, grandson and mother. “When it comes to her son, when it comes to Charlie Boy and climate change, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear. Her mother, Her Royal Highness the Queen’s mother was a slightly overweight, chain-smoking gin drinker who lived to 101 years old. All I can say is Charlie Boy is now in his 70s … may the Queen live a very, very long time.” I remember when British right-wingers were royalists. Additionally, the Queen Mum has been dead for seventeen years so one would think the Insult Comedian UK would let her rest in peace. Shorter Adrastos: Stay mum about the dead Queen Mum. Farage also indulged in a bit of sexism and racism by going after Meghan Markle and her prince: “Terrifying! Here was Harry, here he was this young, brave, boisterous, all male, getting into trouble, turning up at stag parties inappropriately dressed, drinking too much and causing all sorts of mayhem. And then, a brave British officer who did his bit in Afghanistan. He was the most popular royal of a younger generation that we’ve seen for 100 years. “And then he met Meghan Markle, and it’s fallen off a cliff. We’ve been told in the last week that Meghan and Harry will only have two children … and we’re all completely ignoring, the real problem the Earth faces, and that is the fact the population of the globe is exploding but no one dares talk about it, no one dares deal with it, and whether Prince Harry has two kids is irrelevant given there are now 2.6 billion Chinese and Indians on this Earth.” Remember the good old days when Harry did shit like this? According to the Farage barrage, Harry’s soul has been hijacked by his harridan wife who has succeeded in “pussy whipping” him. And making matters worse to the bigoted Farage, she’s a woman of color and an actress to boot. Scary, scary, scary. The only trick he missed was using the Empire era slur, WOG. I guess that proves that Nigel doesn’t have a racist bone in his body. Now where have I heard that before? I posted this Farage barrage as a reminder that other country’s politics have also gone to hell in an increasingly overcrowded handbag. And Nigel is only UK clown number two: Boris Johnson is prime minister. Bigotry is as big in Blighty as at the White House. Oy just oy. As an antidote to Nigel’s awfulness, the last word goes to the Kinks: 4 thoughts on “Quote Of The Day: Farage Barrage Edition” Queen Mary was the grandmother of Elizabeth II and wife of George V. The Queen Mother was Elizabeth, wife of George VI. Peter Adrastos Athas says: Oops. You are correct. Never claimed to be a royalist. Time to change it. mellowjohn says: My wife is convinced that the Queen is determined to outlive Charles or die in the attempt. H-Bob says: Why don’t you use the “Boris the Spider” meme ?
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David W. Messenger Rich Dobyns Al Marcum John Bolotin Guitar/Vocals David was born in Baltimore and raised in Pasadena, MD. His mother started grooming him early on with different styles of music. The Platters, Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, The Drifters just to name a few. David quickly moved on to The Beatles, Peter Frampton, Pink Floyd, Cheap Trick, Queen and Kiss In 7th grade David's parents bought him a guitar and amp. David's first performance was at the 8th grade talent show. The band included Jeremy Windrider on Drums, Mike Boyle on Guitar, John Schmidt on Bass. When David entered Chesapeake High School he quickly joined the Stage Band. His experience expanded outside of school, he played many back yard parties and middle school dances. His first bands were Medusa, Strange News and 2 Much which included Dean Watkins, Rob Rood, Rob Bertholdt, Chad Boston and Jim Talley. After graduating high school at the age of 17, David, Rob Rood, Jim Tally, Ross Hancock and Neil Rentuma formed HYJYNX. HYJYNX played many clubs in the tristate area such as Jaxx, Hammerjacks, The Bayou, The Power Plant, The Network. HYJYNX shared the stage with The Ravyns, KIX, Pat Travers, and Child's Play. HYJYNX came to an end in 1988. David joined local band Imposter in 1990. David would then join Skyline in 1992 and play until summer of 1999. David's new band Messenger would debut in 2000. His new band mates were Sharon Sharp, Paul George, and Scott Tydings. Messenger band folded in 2003. In August of 2010 David, Ron Ferrer, Lenny Walls, Mykel Jewel, Russ Amy, and Lynette Messenger formed the group that would be called Radio Graffiti. Pat Mcguire, DVJ, Rick Fleischmann, Eric Forste, Tambo, Rich Dobyns, Al Marcum and John Bolotin would all spend time in the group over a 10 year period. Radio Graffiti ended December 31, 2019. FAST TIMES 2020
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Paul J Kellogg Professor, Physics and Astronomy (Twin Cities) solar wind Physics & Astronomy electron Earth & Environmental Sciences plasma Earth & Environmental Sciences STEREO (observatory) Physics & Astronomy plasma waves Physics & Astronomy electric field Earth & Environmental Sciences spacecraft Physics & Astronomy electrons Physics & Astronomy Support of the Extended MO/DA Phase of the WAVES mission Goetz, K., Cattell, C. A. & Kellogg, P. J. NASA GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CTR Analysis of Some Observations with Antennas in the Solar Kellogg, P. J. Role of Mode Conversion on Solar and Heliospheric Radio Waves and Their Interactions in the Solar Wind Nat'l Aeronautics & Space Admin. (NASA) Juno Waves Instrument Critical Design Review 3D Electric Waveforms of Solar Wind Turbulence Kellogg, P. J., Goetz, K. & Monson, S. J., Jan 20 2018, In : Astrophysical Journal. 853, 1, 14. electric field Are STEREO Single Hits Dust Impacts? Kellogg, P. J., Goetz, K. & Monson, S. J., Sep 1 2018, In : Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 123, 9, p. 7211-7219 9 p. STEREO (observatory) Sign of the Dust Impact-Antenna Coupling Cloud Kellogg, P. J., Goetz, K. & Monson, S. J., May 1 2018, In : Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 123, 5, p. 3273-3276 4 p. Note on the Pantellini et al. process for dust impact signals on spacecraft Kellogg, P. J., Jan 1 2017, In : Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 122, 1, p. 63-70 8 p. Dust impact signals on the wind spacecraft Kellogg, P. J., Goetz, K. & Monson, S. J., Feb 1 2016, In : Journal of Geophysical Research A: Space Physics. 121, 2, p. 966-991 26 p. Contact Paul J Kellogg
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Explore Art: Phoenix Art Spaces: The List Phoenix Finds: Local Businesses Art All Around Us First Friday recommendation: “Vanitas” at PAM Lately, the Phoenix Art Museum has been bursting with good shows — so much so that, on recent visits, I find myself having to zero in on just a few galleries in order not to get overwhelmed. One area that I do find myself gravitating to often is the adjacent Marshall and Hendler Galleries in a somewhat hidden sub-ground level area of the museum. I’ve seen great Kehinde Wiley, Angela Ellsworth and Matthew Moore shows there in the past, and now the galleries are featuring “Vanitas: Contemporary Reflections on Love & Death from the Collection of Stéphane Janssen,” which is so worthwhile that I’ve seen it twice. Tonight, First Friday, might be the perfect time to check it out, as admission to the museum is free after 6 p.m. Plus, PAM is a hub for the Artlink trolley, and there are a number of family-friendly activities planned for this evening. (I wouldn’t suggest taking young children to “Vanitas,” though, as there is some nudity.) “Vanitas” stems from Flemish still lifes of the 16th and 17th century that incorporate symbols of death and change. In more recent times, artists have expanded the concept to converge death images with the macabre, the spectral, the tragic, and often, the humorous — exploring how we resign ourselves to the inevitability of death. “Vanitas refers to the futility of achievement, love, knowledge, and riches,” writes former ASU Art Museum director Marilyn Zeitlin in an excellent essay in the exhibit’s brochure. And so the exhibit offers an international range of artists, working in many mediums and depicting many subjects — all sensitively collected over the years by Janssen, who spends part of the year in the Valley. It is a highly personal collection, with a story behind each of the more than 70 pieces, as I learned during the media preview for the show. Janssen, who is approaching 80 and who has been active in the art world for decades, told us that he has two positions about vanitas: the works can be aesthetically beautiful if you can transcend the subject matter, as in “Children’s Skulls” (2004) by Jean-Baptiste Huynh, a black-and-white photo that manages to portray a delicate tenderness between two children, even in their skeletal form. Or the works can tend toward the creepy side and be initially repugnant, as in “Teatro di Morte (Theatre of Death)” (1989) by Joel-Peter Witkin, in which tiny limbs and the decomposing face of a beheaded man spill from a skull. In any case, Janssen said, he has learned to embrace death and dying. In fact, he added, he has had to embrace it, given the times he has lost friends and loved ones to AIDS. One of Janssen’s especially resonant comments — for me, anyway — was his explanation of how he addresses people who question his taste in art, when it comes to death images. He said a psychologist once told him that particularly violent or aggressive people are attracted to depictions of flowers and landscapes, while calmer, less aggressive people choose difficult, complex and “ugly” works. They go outside the norm, as an expression of who they can’t be in ordinary life. (Maybe that explains why I liked this show so much.) Here are a few highlights: — “D.E.A.T.H.” (2012) by Lucien Murat, a five-foot high tapestry, of all things, that blends a French country scene with figures that have deformed faces and with various worm-like creatures. — “Anatomy, after Francesco Bertinatti (Pictures of Junk)” (2009) by Vik Muniz, a large digital C-print that is an overhead view of nuts, bolts and other junk arranged in the shape of a seated skeleton. The assemblage of junk had to fill a basketball court in order for the photo to be taken, Janssen said. — “Selfportrait” (1988) by Robert Mapplethorpe, showing the famous photographer in his second-to-last self-portrait, a year before his death from AIDS. His head floats on a black background and he clutches a skull cane. A few feet away is a ’60s-era black-and-white photo of Mapplethorpe (by Judy Linn), reclining in the nude, young and vital. The contrast is jarring. — “Running Through” (1983) by Karel Appel, a long canvas that depicts a white-clothed figure approaching a pit of skulls. Janssen said the artist’s intention was to critique the pope regarding his obligatory visit to Auschwitz. — Three works by Fritz Scholder, including “Dead Indian With Snowy Owl” (1972) and an intriguing Polaroid collage by Stefan De Jaeger showing Scholder at home. It mixes fragments of the artist’s face with skeleton imagery and dates from 1996. Janssen recalled his long friendship with Scholder, who died in 2005. In addition, find works by Luis Jiménez, Spencer Tunick, Andres Serrano, Cindy Sherman, Nan Goldin, Robert Arneson, Brassai, and Einar & Jamex de la Torre. As I said, it’s quite a show. Closing date is February 8, 2015. Spencer Tunick, “Skulls, Brussels” (2013), C-print mounted between plexi, aluminum brace, from the collection of Stéphane Janssen. Image courtesy Phoenix Art Museum. deborahross36 "Almost a native" goes the saying if you have lived in Phoenix for a good chunk of your life. That's me -- a desert rat -- and my experiences as a writer and editor have led me to believe that our local art scene is highly underrated. This website might not remedy that, but it will introduce readers to museums and galleries and art in public spaces -- all around our beautiful desert Valley. View all posts by deborahross36 Categories ReviewsTags Arizona art, arizona artists, First Friday, Phoenix art, phoenix art museum, Phoenix art walk, Stephane Janssen, Vanitas1 Comment One thought on “First Friday recommendation: “Vanitas” at PAM” Stephane Janssen says: Hi Deborah, reading your article on Lisa Sette gallery I just discovered your very kind article on VANITAS. Thank you very much Previous Previous post: First Friday, Dec. 5: It was a little tense out there Next Next post: Eye Lounge has helped define the Phoenix art scene "Almost a native" goes the saying if you have lived in Phoenix for a good chunk of your life. That's me -- a desert rat -- and my experiences as a writer and editor have led me to believe that our local art scene is highly underrated. This website might not remedy that, but it will introduce readers to museums and galleries and art in public spaces -- all around our beautiful desert Valley. Follow Explore Art: Phoenix on WordPress.com View Explore Art: Phoenix’s profile on Facebook View exploreartphx’s profile on Instagram deborahross36@gmail.com Ann Morton Arizona art arizona artists Arizona Centennial Arizona State University Art Detour art in Mesa art reviews art shows in Scottsdale art walk ASU Art Museum bentley gallery black-and-white photography downtown art walk downtown Phoenix art downtown Phoenix galleries emerging artists Eye Lounge First Friday galleries gebert contemporary Grand Avenue Heard Museum installation art lisa sette gallery marshall-lekae gallery mayme kratz Mesa Contemporary Arts Modified Arts MonOrchid Native American painting old town scottsdale phoenix Phoenix art Phoenix artists phoenix art museum Phoenix art walk photography roosevelt row scottsdale art scottsdale art galleries scottsdale artwalk Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art Shemer Art Center Southwestern art southwestern landscapes Third Friday thursday evening artwalk Tilt Gallery vision gallery
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Category: Mythology Religion and mythology differ in but have overlapping aspect. Both terms refer to systems of concepts that are of high importance to a certain community, making statements concerning the supernatural or sacred. Generally, mythology is considered one component or aspect of religion. Religion is the broader term: besides mythological aspects, it includes aspects of ritual, morality, theology, and mystical experience. A given mythology is almost always associated with a certain religion such as Greek mythology with Ancient Greek religion. Disconnected from its religious system, a myth may lose its immediate relevance to the community and evolve—away from sacred importance—into a legend or folktale. Ancient Priests: Practical Impacts of Early Experts Mythology / Philosophy / Worldbuilding Saturday February 9th Recently, I’ve been thinking about the role of ancient priests and how temples helped early civilizations thrive. As a culture, we do a pretty poor job of looking beyond the... Interview with Katharine Wibell History / Interviews / Mythology / Politics / Worldbuilding Monday May 29th Katharine Wibell, author of the Incarn Saga, has graciously agreed to be interviewed this month! Even more graciously, she agreed to give us some spoilers for her novel, Issaura’s Claws. This interview represents a... Modern Folklore: Gremlins & Road Gators History / Mythology Humanity has created a huge volume of stories over the last few millennia… some truer than others. We pass down these tales through the generations, for a variety of reasons:... Heroes and Parenting: Achilles vs. Hawkeye Mythology / Politics Monday July 18th I recently read a Washington Post article claiming that President Obama’s most unusual legacy will be that he was a good father. It rang true for me. We rarely get... Giants in War: Frost Giants & Firbolgs Monday June 6th When I attended Balticon 50 over Memorial Day Weekend, I had the pleasure of seeing an amazing panel that looked at created religions in science fiction and fantasy. I arrived... It’s hardly a secret that folk tales exist to deliver a message. Most people can name a piece of folklore that warns about the dangers of talking to strangers, or... History’s Leaders: Great Men or Sons of Society? History / Mythology / Worldbuilding I’ve mentioned before that my novel features a religious element. It’s a central part of the conflict that a small, anti-mage religious sect became very powerful after a cataclysmic series... Fermi’s Paradox and Mythology as Science I know a few people who get a real kick out of those History channel shows where they talk about how all of humanity’s greatest achievements are all due to aliens, and... Exaggeration: History Becomes Myth History / Mythology / Politics / Worldbuilding It was the Black Company series by Glen Cook that made me realize how often history becomes myth, exaggerated beyond meaningful belief. The Books of Glittering Stone detail a religion... Religion & War in Myth Cycles Monday March 7th As I research background for my novel, I’ve noticed that many of the stories from which we’ve gained our understanding of ancient cultures have fundamental similarities. There is, for example, often war...
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Stronger Elena Delle Donne wants more success Sky’s second-year star has built up in the offseason to build on her WNBA rookie of year season. Elena Delle Donne had a remarkable first year while leading the Sky to a first-ever WNBA playoff appearance. But the rookie of the year says she wants to become better and stronger. The 6-foot-5 forward, who averaged 18.1 points and 5.6 rebounds, passed up playing overseas during the WNBA offseason to build up her stamina and muscle mass while training four days a week in Chicago. “Strength … that was an adjustment I wasn’t able to make until the offseason,” Delle Donne said Tuesday in Chicago. “I knew I was going to just have to get through and get by with the versatility of my game. Once we were eliminated (by Indiana), I asked our strength coach (Ann Crosby): ‘When can I start lifting?’ She just said: ‘Calm down. We need to relax first. Relax your body, but we’ll get to it.'” Continue Reading…(Chicago Tribune) Elena Delle Donne to be Honored at Lyme Research Alliance Gala on April 5 Elena Delle Donne Talks About Special Olympics on “Inside Stuff”
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Indigestion And Neutralisation Maalox was a brand of antacid owned by Sanofi. Their main product was a flavored liquid containing aluminium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide, which acts to neutralize or reduce stomach acid, for the purpose of relieving the symptoms of indigestion, heartburn, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and also stomach or duodenal ulcers. More about Carl. Carl qualified as a teacher in Chemistry in 2013, and now works as a tutor with Owl Tutors. Carl is a highly-qualified tutor, teacher and examiner of chemistry with an outstanding track record of helping students to achieve top grades in science. UKPAR Sodium Bicarbonate 500 mg Capsules, Hard PL 30464/0063 6 Comparative dissolution profile has been presented for test and reference product. This edition of A Healer’s Guide has the Tutorial built into it. It is a complete Guide for gaining an in depth understanding of the Sanathana Sai Sanjeevini healing system, and for acquiring the proficiency to work with it with clarity, confidence and compassion. Upset stomach, indigestion, and the much publicized "acid reflux" all occur when the body produces an excess of this acid which travels to more delicate tissues, Best Acid Reflux Tablets Feb 21, 2018. Although occasional acid reflux won't kill you, it should still be taken seriously. are a bunch of things you can do for acid reflux treatment and prevention. What Kind Of Doctor Treats Acid Reflux I saw a post about atrial fibrillation and stomach gas possible association. I too have the same thing so it may not be all in your head if your suspect They protect the gastric mucosa against acid (by neutralisation) and pepsin ( which is. and systemic alkalosis limits its use to short-term relief of indigestion. Acid reflux and indigestion are terms often used to mean the same thing – but. medication such as antacids like Rennie Spearmint, which can neutralise the. The second checkpoint task (Neutralisation) checks that learners can use the pH. hydrogencarbonate solutions are convenient to use as different indigestion. Administration of sodium bicarbonate by mouth causes neutralisation of gastric acid with the production of carbon dioxide. Bicarbonate not involved in that. Sep 28, 2016. Perhaps you count yourself among the 60 million people who endure the burning pain of acid indigestion at least once a month. Although more. Neutralisation Reactions Hazard Symbols Explained The pH Scale & Indicators Neutralisation Reactions (Acid + Base) Investigating Indigestion Remedies. A reaction is an action taken in response to something. If you’re telling your parents that you want to move out, you’ll see by their reaction that they’re sad about it. Indigestion is caused by too much acid in the stomach. Indigestion tablets contain bases, which neutralise the excessive hydrochloric acid. The three indigestion. Three common indicators for titrations and their colours: litmus: red in acid, blue in alkali, doesn’t give that sharp a colour change except with moderately concentrated solutions, the neutralisation end-point is a fairly sharp change red<=>blue Magnesium Trisilicate Mixture BP – Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) by Thornton & Ross Ltd Jan 7, 2019. Heartburn is also a common symptom of GERD, or gastroesophageal reflux disease. GERD is a long-term condition. In GERD, heartburn or. Containing antacid to neutralise excess stomach acid, Rennie Spearmint tablets work fast to relieve the symptoms of heartburn and indigestion. Rennie. Learning Outcome. Understanding? 9. Three examples of everyday neutralisation reactions are: treating acid indigestion with indigestion tablets, treating acidic. The graph shows the results of an experiment to monitor the pH of mouth fluids when various foods are eaten. In this case, Jim and Jane were enjoying sweet cakes and eating one every five minutes from 10 minutes to 30 minutes of the experiment. When an acid reacts with a base, a neutralisation reaction occurs and produces a chemical. Indigestion occurs when the stomach produces too much acid. Acids, Bases and Salts, CBSE Science Class 7 Chapter Wise Solved Q&A With indigestion, the liquid in the stomach will become more acidic. Antacids will neutralise the acids. The reaction that is happening is called neutralisation. drink too much, you may develop heartburn or indigestion. Antacids, such as Tums are used to neutralize this excess acid. The active ingredient in Tums is. Investigate applications of neutralisation reactions in everyday life and. of aspirin tablets using a back titration; or investigating some cures for indigestion. Rennie is a fast-acting, effective remedy for heartburn and indigestion. When symptoms hit, Rennie quickly gets to work to relieve painful symptoms. Rennie. Jun 4, 2018. put a neutralization reaction into action if you've ever taken an antacid to relieve the symptoms from issues like heartburn and indigestion. Jul 28, 2011. one of the simplest ways to relieve the discomfort is to neutralise the acid. Indigestion (dyspepsia) in adults Understanding NICE guidance. Acids, bases and alkalis are found in the laboratory and at home. Acids and bases can neutralise each other. A base that can dissolve in water is also called an alkali. Stomach Acid Effect On Bacterial Cell Labeled Difference Stomach Acid Burning Through Stomach
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Stories | 02.12.2019 Following the very first drop, the Morelia Neo II β is now available in a new, ultra-aggressive and strictly limited colorway. Which means that you have to move fast again to get a pair of these Japanese beauties. The Morelia Neo II βis at the pinnacle of Japanese Mizuno innovation. The most relevant aspect of these eye-catching boots is undoubtedly the incredible low weight which has been further reduced to 170g. Following the Japanese approach of ‘Kaizen’, every single part of the boots has been developed and optimized to reduce weight whilst maintaining the essential feature of Mizuno’s Football philosophy: premium K-leather. Moreover, both the tongue and sockliner have been engineered to reduce the extra grams of weight and achieve the lightest Mizuno Football boot ever. The Morelia Neo II β is Made in Japan and is engineered with performance in mind and as a result is double-bonded to ensure a long-lasting, durable product made not just for your best days. An elegant blackout boot with silver accents for the most stylish players that are looking for the perfect mix of performance and design. These boots will be available worldwide at Mizuno selected key partners.
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ERROR: type should be string, got "https://profreg.medscape.com/px/getpracticeprofile.do?method=getProfessionalProfile&urlCache=aHR0cHM6Ly9lbWVkaWNpbmUubWVkc2NhcGUuY29tL2FydGljbGUvMTA3MjAzMS1vdmVydmlldw==\nDrugs & Diseases > Dermatology\nDermatologic Manifestations of Hirsutism\nAuthor: Basil M Hantash, MD, PhD, MBA; Chief Editor: William D James, MD more...\nSections Dermatologic Manifestations of Hirsutism\nMedication Summary\nAntihypertensives\nAntiandrogens\nDermatologic agents\nGlucocorticoids\nHirsutism is defined as the excessive growth of thick dark hair in locations where hair growth in women usually is minimal or absent (see the image below). Such male-pattern growth of terminal body hair usually occurs in androgen-stimulated locations, such as the face, chest, and areolae.\nIdiopathic hirsutism in an elderly woman.\nAlthough the terms hirsutism and hypertrichosis often are used interchangeably, hypertrichosis actually refers to excess hair (terminal or vellus) in areas that are not predominantly androgen dependent. Whether a patient is hirsute often is difficult to judge because hair growth varies among individual women and across ethnic groups. What is considered hirsutism in one culture may be considered typical in another. For example, women from the Mediterranean and the Indian subcontinent have more facial and body hair than do women from East Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and northern Europe. Dark-haired, darkly pigmented individuals of either sex tend to be more hirsute than blond or fair-skinned persons.\nIn most cases, hirsutism is a benign condition and is primarily of cosmetic concern. However, when hirsutism is accompanied by masculinizing signs or symptoms, particularly when these arise well after puberty, hirsutism may be a manifestation of a more serious underlying disorder such as an ovarian or adrenal neoplasm. Fortunately, these disorders are rare.\nHirsutism can be caused by abnormally high androgen levels or by hair follicles that are more sensitive to normal androgen levels. Therefore, increased hair growth often is observed in patients with endocrine disorders characterized by hyperandrogenism, which may be caused by abnormalities of the ovaries or the adrenal glands.\nThe physiologic mechanism proposed for androgenic activity consists of the following three stages:\nProduction of androgens by the adrenals and ovaries [1]\nAndrogen transport in the blood on carrier proteins (principally sex-hormone–binding globulin [SHBG])\nIntracellular modification and binding to the androgen receptor\nIn short, central overproduction of androgen, increased peripheral conversion of androgen, decreased metabolism, and enhanced receptor binding are each potential causes of hirsutism. For circulating testosterone to exert its stimulatory effects on the hair follicle, it first must be converted into its more potent follicle-active metabolite, dihydrotestosterone. The enzyme, 5-alpha-reductase, which is found in the hair follicle, performs this conversion.\nOverproduction of androgens results in an increased hair follicle size, hair fiber diameter, and duration of time hair follicles spend in the anagen (growth) phase. In addition to a change in hair quality and volume, oilier skin and hair may result from excess androgen secretion. The distribution of hair in women with high androgen levels is also altered. Excessive hair growth occurs in androgen-sensitive regions, but hair loss occurs on the scalp. [2]\nThe severity of hirsutism does not correlate directly with the level of increased circulating androgens because of individual differences in conversion to 5-alpha-reductase and androgen sensitivity of hair follicles.\nTestosterone stimulates hair growth, increasing the size and intensifying the pigmentation of hair. Estrogens act in opposition, slowing growth and producing finer, lighter hairs. Progesterone has minimal effect on hair growth.\nThe amount of free testosterone—the biologically active androgen that, after conversion to dihydrotestosterone, causes hair growth—is regulated by SHBG. Lower levels of SHBG increase the availability of free testosterone. SHBG levels decrease in response to the following:\nExogenous androgens\nCertain disorders that affect androgen levels, such as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) (see the image below)\nThe photograph depicts hirsutism in a young woman with polycystic ovarian syndrome. Note the acne lesions and excessive hair on her face and neck.\nCongenital or delayed-onset adrenal hyperplasia (see the image below)\nThe patient has late-onset congenital adrenal hyperplasia. She has clinical features similar to those found in polycystic ovarian syndrome, including hirsutism, acne, obesity, diabetes, and menstrual irregularities.\nHyperinsulinemia\nHyperprolactinemia\nExcess growth hormone\nConversely, SHBG levels increase with higher estrogen levels, such as the levels that occur during oral contraceptive therapy. The resultant increased SHBG levels lower the activity of circulating testosterone.\nOvarian causes of hirsutism\nPCOS is a disorder that affects androgen levels. The most common cause of androgen excess and hirsutism is PCOS. [3] Virilization is minimal, and hirsutism is often prominent. Characteristic features include menstrual irregularities, dysmenorrhea, occasional glucose intolerance and hyperinsulinemia, and, often, obesity. The hyperinsulinemia is believed to hyperstimulate the ovaries into producing excess androgens. Women with PCOS may show other cutaneous manifestations of androgen excess in addition to hirsutism, such as recalcitrant acne, acanthosis nigricans, and alopecia on the crown area of the scalp (a pattern that contrasts with the bitemporal and vertex androgenic alopecia seen in men). See Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome for more information.\nHirsutism may also be seen in women with the following ovarian conditions, most of which are associated with virilization:\nLuteoma of pregnancy\nArrhenoblastomas\nLeydig cell tumors\nHilar cell tumors\nThecal cell tumors\nFamilial hirsutism\nFamilial hirsutism is not associated with androgen excess. Familial hirsutism is both typical and natural in certain populations, such as in some women of Mediterranean or Middle Eastern ancestry. See the image below.\nThe photograph depicts familial hirsutism in a Pakistani woman.\nDrug-induced hirsutism\nDrugs that can induce hirsutism by their inherent androgenic effects include dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S), testosterone, danazol, and anabolic steroids. Currently used low-dose oral contraceptives are less likely to cause hirsutism than were previous formulations.\nDrugs such as phenytoin, minoxidil, diazoxide, cyclosporine, streptomycin, psoralen, penicillamine, high-dose corticosteroids, metyrapone, phenothiazines, acetazolamide, and hexachlorobenzene presumably exert their effects independently of androgens. The exact mode of action of these drugs on hair follicles is not known, but the same mechanisms do not appear to be involved in all patients.\nDrug-induced hirsutism can be distinguished from drug-induced hypertrichosis, in which a uniform growth of fine hair appears over extensive areas of the trunk, hands, and face and is unrelated to androgen-dependent hair growth.\nAdrenal causes of hirsutism\nCAH in children (ie, the classic form of adrenal hyperplasia) may cause hirsutism. These children may be born with ambiguous genitalia, symptoms of salt wasting, and failure to thrive. Additionally, they may develop masculine features. See Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia for more information.\nLate-onset CAH usually occurs as an incomplete version of CAH and affects approximately 1-5% of women who are hyperandrogenic. In patients with late-onset CAH, hirsutism (without salt-wasting symptoms) may not develop until adulthood.\nSigns of virilization and menstrual irregularities may not be observed until puberty or adulthood. Patients have clinical features that resemble PCOS.\nHirsutism and oligomenorrhea suggest 21-hydroxylase deficiency (elevated 17-alpha-hydroxyprogesterone). Another uncommon disorder is 3-beta-, 11-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency (elevated 3-beta-, 11-hydroxysteroid levels), which may result in early- or late-onset CAH. See 3-Beta-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Deficiency for more information.\nCushing syndrome is a noncongenital form of adrenal hyperplasia characterized by an excess of adrenal cortisol production. The excessive growth is predominantly vellus (non–androgen dependent) hair.\nLess common but potentially serious disorders that may be associated with hirsutism include anorexia nervosa, acromegaly, hypothyroidism, hyperprolactinemia, and porphyria.\nIdiopathic hirsutism or end-organ hirsutism occurs in a small proportion of women with hirsutism. Neither a familial form nor any detectable hormonal abnormality usually is diagnosed. Such patients have normal menses, normal-sized ovaries, no evidence of adrenal or ovarian tumors or dysfunction, and no significant elevations of plasma testosterone or androstenedione. Antiandrogen therapy may improve hirsutism in some idiopathic cases, which suggests that this form may be androgen induced. One theory is that many of these women may have mild or early PCOS and androgen levels in the upper-normal ranges. Eventually, idiopathic hirsutism probably may be recognized as a more subtle form of hypersecretion of hormones from the ovary or, possibly, the adrenal gland. A 2009 study found significant insulin resistance in nonobese patients with idiopathic hirsutism. [4]\nHirsutism is common and is estimated to occur in 1 in 20 women of reproductive age.\nFamilial hirsutism is found most commonly in southern European and South Asian countries, in which it is considered to be a normal trait. Hirsutism indicative of underlying endocrinopathy varies from culture to culture, depending on the incidence of the various endocrinopathies in a particular society.\nFamilial hirsutism is noted most frequently in dark-skinned white persons. It is uncommon in sub-Saharan and African American blacks and is observed least commonly in East Asians and Native Americans.\nThe onset of hirsutism depends on its cause. Familial or ethnic hirsutism typically begins during puberty. Hirsutism resulting from congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) begins early in childhood, while late-onset CAH and PCOS often have onset after puberty. The growth of facial hair commonly observed in postmenopausal women may be caused by unopposed androgen.\nHirsutism is a symptom, rather than a disease. Primarily, hirsutism is of cosmetic and psychological concern; however, it may indicate the presence of more serious associations, such as adrenal hyperplasia and ovarian tumors, particularly if it develops well after puberty. Prognosis of hirsutism depends on the underlying cause and the type of therapeutic intervention, if any.\nIf determined, explain to the patient the specific reason why she has hirsutism. In addition, explain the various therapeutic options available to her.\nMihailidis J, Dermesropian R, Taxel P, Luthra P, Grant-Kels JM. Endocrine evaluation of hirsutism. Int J Womens Dermatol. 2017 Mar. 3 (1 Suppl):S6-S10. [Medline].\nMofid A, Seyyed Alinaghi SA, Zandieh S, Yazdani T. Hirsutism. Int J Clin Pract. 2008 Mar. 62(3):433-43. [Medline].\nFanta M. [Hirsutism]. Ceska Gynekol. 2017 Summer. 82 (3):237-242. [Medline].\nAbdel Fattah NS, Darwish YW. Is there a role for insulin resistance in nonobese patients with idiopathic hirsutism?. Br J Dermatol. 2009 May. 160(5):1011-5. [Medline].\nMorgan J, Scholtz S, Lacey H, Conway G. The prevalence of eating disorders in women with facial hirsutism: an epidemiological cohort study. Int J Eat Disord. 2008 Jul. 41(5):427-31. [Medline].\nEscobar-Morreale HF. Diagnosis and management of hirsutism. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2010 Sep. 1205:166-74. [Medline].\nMoghetti P, Toscano V. Treatment of hirsutism and acne in hyperandrogenism. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2006 Jun. 20(2):221-34. [Medline].\nHeidelbaugh JJ. Endocrinology Update: Hirsutism. FP Essent. 2016 Dec. 451:17-24. [Medline].\nFalsetti L, Gambera A, Legrenzi L, Iacobello C, Bugari G. Comparison of finasteride versus flutamide in the treatment of hirsutism. Eur J Endocrinol. 1999 Oct. 141(4):361-7. [Medline].\nMoghetti P, Tosi F, Tosti A, et al. Comparison of spironolactone, flutamide, and finasteride efficacy in the treatment of hirsutism: a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trial. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2000 Jan. 85(1):89-94. [Medline].\nBergfeld WF. Hirsutism in women. Effective therapy that is safe for long-term use. Postgrad Med. 2000 Jun. 107(7):93-4, 99-104. [Medline].\nHamzavi I, Tan E, Shapiro J, Lui H. A randomized bilateral vehicle-controlled study of eflornithine cream combined with laser treatment versus laser treatment alone for facial hirsutism in women. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2007 Jul. 57(1):54-9. [Medline].\nUnfer V, Zacche M, Serafini A, Redaelli A, Papaleo E. [Treatment of hyperandrogenism and hyperinsulinemia in PCOS patients with essential amino acids. A pilot clinical study]. Minerva Ginecol. 2008 Oct. 60(5):363-8. [Medline].\nBrown T. Updated Guidelines on Hirsutism in Premenopausal Women. Medscape News & Perspective. Available at https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/893904. March 14, 2018; Accessed: April 13, 2018.\n[Guideline] Martin KA, Anderson RR, Chang RJ, Ehrmann DA, Lobo RA, Murad MH, et al. Evaluation and Treatment of Hirsutism in Premenopausal Women: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2018 Mar 7. [Medline].\nBerek JS, Hillard PA, Adashi EY. Novak's Gynecology. 12th ed. Baltimore, Md: Williams & Wilkins; 1996. 799-801; 833-52.\nAndrogen excess. Scott JR, Disaia PJ, et al, eds. Danforth's Obstetrics and Gynecology. 7th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Lippincott-Raven; 1994. 681-93.\nFauci AS, Braunwald E, Hauser SL, et al, eds. Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine. 14th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 1998. 292-4.\nFriedberg IM, Eisen AZ, Wolff K, eds. Fitzpatrick's Dermatology in General Medicine. 5th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 1999. Vol 1: 746-9.\nBasil M Hantash, MD, PhD, MBA Medical Director, Advanced Skin Institute\nBasil M Hantash, MD, PhD, MBA is a member of the following medical societies: Alpha Omega Alpha, American Academy of Dermatology, American Society for Dermatologic Surgery, Sigma Xi, Society for Investigative Dermatology\nRichard P Vinson, MD Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Dermatology, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Paul L Foster School of Medicine; Consulting Staff, Mountain View Dermatology, PA\nRichard P Vinson, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Dermatology, Texas Medical Association, Association of Military Dermatologists, Texas Dermatological Society\nLester F Libow, MD Dermatopathologist, South Texas Dermatopathology Laboratory\nLester F Libow, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Dermatology, American Society of Dermatopathology, Texas Medical Association\nWilliam D James, MD Paul R Gross Professor of Dermatology, Vice-Chairman, Residency Program Director, Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine\nWilliam D James, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Dermatology, Society for Investigative Dermatology\nDisclosure: Received income in an amount equal to or greater than $250 from: Elsevier; WebMD.\nLeonard Sperling, MD Chair, Professor, Department of Dermatology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences\nLeonard Sperling, MD is a member of the following medical societies: American Academy of Dermatology\nHerbert P Goodheart, MD Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Dermatology, Mount Sinai Hospital\nBobby Y Reddy, MS University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Jersey Medical School\nHendrik I Uyttendaele, MD, PhD Instructor, Department of Dermatology, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center\nencoded search term (Dermatologic Manifestations of Hirsutism) and Dermatologic Manifestations of Hirsutism\nCongenital Hypertrichosis Lanuginosa\nDermatologic Manifestations of Generalized Lipodystrophy\nLocalized Lipodystrophy\nde Lange Syndrome\nEpidermal Growth Factor Receptor Inhibitors: Cutaneous Side Effects and Their Management\nPolycystic Ovarian Syndrome: Long-Term Health Consequences\nSkin Often a 'Window' Into Underlying Endocrine Disorders\nCutaneous Signs of 10 Unusual Systemic Diseases\nAccording to Endocrinologists\nIntermittent Fasting Promotes Weight Loss, Improves Lipids\nFDA Investigating Metformin for Possible Carcinogen\nMelatonin: Magic Potion or Unregulated Danger?\nHigh-Protein Diet Could Be Harmful, Even for Healthy Kidneys\nMediterranean Diet Repeats as Best Overall of 2020\n2002 1072031-overview Diseases & Conditions\nDiseases & Conditions Dermatologic Manifestations of Hirsutism\nDiseases & Conditions Congenital Hypertrichosis Lanuginosa\nDiseases & Conditions POEMS Syndrome\nDiseases & Conditions de Lange Syndrome"
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Men’s Soccer Beats Saint Louis in Regular Season Finale Fordham Men’s Soccer heads into the A-10 playoffs on a high note. (Courtesy of Fordham Athletics) Andrew Posadas, Assistant Sports Editor Going into its matchup over the weekend against Saint Louis University, Fordham Men’s Soccer knew it had already clinched a berth in the Atlantic 10 Championship. What remained uncertain for Head Coach Carlo Acquista and his team was where they would end up seeded going into the tournament. In order to earn a top-four seed and the right to host a quarterfinal match, the Rams needed a win Saturday along with some help from other A-10 results. At best, Fordham could still finish as high as the third seed. However, the Billikens had just as much to play for, considering the team was in position to earn the top seed in the Championship with a win against the Rams. Saturday marked the 11th meeting all time between Fordham and Saint Louis, with the Billikens holding a 7-3 edge in the series. Despite being on the road in a hostile environment, Fordham rose to the challenge by controlling possession in the first 25 minutes of regulation. The Rams were able to get off five shots in that span, including two great chances by senior forward Johannes Pieles. Fortunately for Saint Louis, goalkeeper Patrick Schulte looked up for the task as he came up with crucial saves early on. The Rams aggression on offense would finally pay off in the 34th minute. Saint Louis tried clearing the ball near the top of its own 18-yard box, but freshman midfielder Adrian Valentine had other ideas. Valentine was able to deflect the clearance, and the ball ended up on the foot of graduate student forward Tomer Zloczower. Zloczower wasted little time, ripping a shot inside the right post and past Schulte, for his first goal of the season to give Fordham a 1–0 lead. Coming out of halftime, Saint Louis looked poised to turn the tables on Fordham and show some offensive aggression of its own. The Billikens outshot the Rams 12-2 in the second period, giving captain senior defender Joergen Oland and his defensive back line all they could handle for 45 minutes. The Rams needed a stellar performance in goal, and graduate student Konstantin Weis delivered by having arguably his best match of the season. Weis came up with four critical saves in the second half, not to mention perhaps the biggest save of the entire match. In the 88th minute, Saint Louis midfielder Matteo Kidd looked to have the equalizer when his shot seemed destined to sneak inside the right post. However, Weis made an incredible diving save to deny Kidd and preserve Fordham’s lead. Nearly 45 seconds later, Zloczower used great individual effort to add an insurance goal for the Rams, ensuring its biggest road victory of the season. The win improved Fordham to 5-2-1 in the A-10, earning them the fifth seed in the championship. The bad news is that Fordham now has to play its upcoming quarterfinal match this weekend on the road. The good news is the Rams opponent is the same team they just defeated in Saint Louis. Beating a team twice on their home field is no easy task, but the Rams will have incredible motivation to do so, knowing that this year’s A-10 Championship is being held at Jack Coffey Field. Fordham Men’s Soccer is back in action on Saturday afternoon, going on the road again to face Saint Louis, this time in an A-10 quarterfinal matchup. Kickoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. and can be seen exclusively on ESPN+. Andrew Posadas Fordham Men's Soccer Andrew Posadas, Penalty Kicks Decide A-10 Semifinal Between Fordham and URI Ricupati Lifts Rams Over Saint Louis in A-10 Quarterfinal Women’s Soccer Eliminated from A-10 Tournament by UMass Stanco’s First-Career Goal Sends Women’s Soccer to A-10s Men’s Soccer falls to Columbia in Non-Conference Play Women’s Soccer Draws With URI on Senior Day Men’s Soccer Back on Track With Win Over UMass Women’s Soccer Finds Overtime Magic Against George Mason and VCU Men’s Soccer Beat Themselves in Loss to Stony Brook
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