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Faith, Spiritual Teachings Faith and Human Freedom December 7, 2017 SiteAdmin By Rev. Peter M. Buss “And many more believed because of His own word; and they said unto the woman, Now we believe, not because of your saying: for we have heard Him ourselves, and know that this is indeed the Christ, the Savior of the world” (John 4:41, 42). “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” John 8:32). Our freedom is limited in all sorts of ways and at different times of our lives. A child grows up under authority and learns to take orders. He also learns his parents’ ideas of morality and his parents’ religion. He has to obey the rules of the school, of the town in which he lives, of his country. He is taught to look up to and obey those in higher positions than he, and he comes to have a feeling for the authority of man and the power of certain persons. He feels the press of social law — doing what society expects of him. All these things limit his freedom to do what he wants. Rational society knows that some freedoms should not be given to us. To break the laws of the country should be forbidden unless they are totally and spiritually unjust. We should be bound by social law as well. Society has a right to punish people who show no care for its members in moral matters (see AC 4167 et al). Some freedoms we should work for and even fight for. We have made a history of doing so, and we have to wish well to all people who are trying to do so throughout the world. The freedom to worship, to speak the truth, to act from conscience, to live where you may make a living — all these things should be guarded by a government which deserves to survive. For these freedoms are part of human longing. They can be smothered for a while, but the human soul yearns for them and will go on looking for them through any oppression. And one freedom is so important that it is in the hands of the Lord Himself. He won’t let anyone take it away for more than a while. It is the liberty to believe what you want to believe and to love what you want to love. That spiritual freedom is deep within the heart of man, and it can hide where no person can ever go, and it can be protected even when terrible pressures are being put on us to give it up. The Lord holds as inviolate the principle that every human being is free to choose his or her belief, and to cherish his or her chosen loves. You can deny someone the free expression of belief or love, but not the secret, private conviction and enjoyment of them (see DP 129, AC 5854, et al). In the long run no one can deny us this freedom, but it can be muted and delayed and interfered with over a period of years. A person who is sick is not in full freedom, because the private enjoyments of life are denied him, and he may be afraid of death. A person acting under strong fear is not free: the fear makes him think differently from the way he might otherwise think. Someone who is mentally ill may find his spiritual freedom impaired for a long time. There are also pressures that can limit it. Some countries, for example, teach their people that disagreeing with the rulers is a crime, and often succeed in limiting free thought (see TCR 814, SD Minor 4772). Society can do that as well: if people are made to feel that merely to express a differing opinion is sinful, they will be pressured into the more acceptable modes of thought. A church can be just as bad if it limits the understanding of truth to what the leaders of the church teach. Anyone in the church can do it too: if you express an idea and someone looks at you with surprise and faint distaste because the idea is “not what the church teaches,” you may feel pressured to relinquish your idea in favor of one that will make you less unpopular. It’s amazing how deeply the people around us can affect our enjoyment of the most precious freedom there is — the one the Lord guards secretly in our minds so that no one can destroy it forever. It can’t die, but it can be held ransom for months or years; and bits of it can be limited so that we have to wait, maybe until the next life, to feel true spiritual freedom. The Lord has given the Writings for the New Church to restore that freedom, to establish it at the highest level possible. In His order there is nothing more important, because unless we can turn to Him in freedom, we can’t turn to Him at all. The freedom to choose our loves and our beliefs is so important that He Himself never forces anyone. In fact, He says that were He to force someone to love what is good, that person “would come into such torment and into such a hell that he could not possibly endure it, for he would be miserably deprived of his life” (AC 5854). The Writings establish and uplift this freedom in several ways. First, they are given to take away the authority of man, to cut through the dogmas or the customs of any organization — even of the church that acknowledges them! They were given to enable people to look not to the learned and the outspoken and the eloquent for guidance, but to the Lord Himself for leadership in all spiritual things. They were given to provide personal, private, and therefore totally free, contact with the Lord and His truth. “If ye abide in My Word, then are ye My disciples indeed, and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” This last revelation by the Lord is quite different from all those which went before, even though it agrees with them in every point. It is different in its appeal. First of all, it is complete. It talks about all matters of human life, in terms that people can understand. The Old and New Testaments touch on all parts of human life, but often so briefly that people have not understood them. The Writings are a comprehensive, consistent and completely presented description of the Lord’s laws. They are not just comprehensive. They also have depth. They talk about things that we could never know without the Lord’s telling us. They tell us about the life after death and the spiritual nature of the life we will live there. They tell us secrets about human life here — how, for example, the bond of marriage spiritually changes a young man and woman and prepares them for total love. They tell of the thousands of secret things the Lord is doing when He rebuilds the human heart that turns to Him. Inside of his new revelation there is a depth that will never be plumbed. We will go on learning its secrets for tens of thousands of years and never grow tired of them. They appeal to that human understanding which longs for truth and goodness. They touch the part of us which wants to see the truth for itself. The Writings aren’t written in the form of commands. They set out our obligations, and they most certainly tell us what is forbidden. But their whole approach is Lo ask us to consider what is said and see if it is true, and only embrace it when we see it. “What the spirit is convinced of,” they say, “is allotted a higher place in the mind than that which enters from authority and the faith of authority without any consultation of the reason” (CL 295). And again they say, “Real faith is nothing else than an acknowledgment that the thing is so because it is true; for one who is in real faith thinks and says, ‘This is true and therefore I believe it.’ … If such a person does not see the truth of a thing, he says, ‘I do not know whether this is true, and therefore as yet I do not believe it. How can I believe what I do not comprehend with the understanding? Perhaps it is false” (Faith 2). It is nonsense to say that we should believe without understanding. The Lord has given us the power to see His truth. “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” The freedom to look at truth for ourselves and see it for ourselves; the freedom to find joy in discovering that what He has said is true: the Lord offers us this by telling us of His truth and doing so quietly, without persuasiveness, without threatening us or appealing to anything but our love of the truth. This can be done only if it is the Lord Himself who reveals these truths. If a brilliant man explains the truth, even if he is enlightened by the Lord Himself, then he can give insights into the truth, but he can’t give freedom! The reason is simple — you are believing the truth on the basis of his understanding and his awareness, and so it is the faith of authority. If the Writings were the work of the most brilliant man who ever lived, they couldn’t make us free. Even if they were the Lord’s revelation to Swedenborg, which he then told us about, our faith in them would be a trust in a man’s understanding of what the Lord showed him. It would be a faith in the authority of some man, and that is limited. Only an explanation of truth which comes directly from the Lord Himself can open the mind. For the Lord reveals the truth in perfect form. It is unsullied by human adjustment and interpretation. It is from His mouth, and there is no fault in the expression, and therefore when we have faith in it we have faith in something pure which our minds can explore in total freedom. This is the quality of the truth in the Word of the Lord — truth opens all the way to the Lord Himself. It is couched in the language of man, coming apparently through the prophets, through the apostles, through Emanuel Swedenborg. But the truth itself is from the Lord Jesus Christ, who is the way, the truth and the life. And because it is His truth, He adds, “No man comes to the Father but by Me.” And therefore the Writings for the New Church also do not allow us to use them — the Writings — to control the minds of others. It is true that while children are growing up, we teach them truths from the Writings without questioning them. But we don’t allow a child to confirm his faith. He or she must be an adult before taking that step. Time and again the Writings preach against historical faith — the notion that what was good enough for your fathers is good enough for you — and they reject all faith on authority — believing because people we admire believe. Time and again they urge the people of the church not to band together and decide what is true. We are not to make councils and decide what is true, nor ask people to believe in something because we, the leaders or older generation in the church, have seen it. “Put no faith in councils,” they say, “but in the holy Word; and go to the Lord and you will be enlightened; for He is the Word, that is, the Divine truth in the Word” (TCR 624e). And again they say, “But, my friend, go to the God of the Word, and thus to the Word itself … and you will be enlightened” (TCR 177e). The authority for the New Church is now and evermore will be the Word itself; it has no formal, written doctrine outside of it. A person who is confirmed in the New Church is stating his or her faith in that Word — the Old and New Testaments and the Writings. He is saying that he believes they are from the Lord and are the only authority, the only ruler over his mind. We must obey civil law, of course; we must observe moral laws; but we reserve the right to decide from the Lord Himself, from His Word, their justice, or the rightness of anything on earth or in heaven. In doing so we give up a certain freedom — the freedom to espouse any idea we want, to decide for ourselves what is true; but we give it up willingly, for now we are saying that we want to be in favor, not of ideas but of what is true, and the Lord has shown us perfect truth. Many people may be tempted to disdain ideal truth. Like Pilate they might ask, “What is truth?” The Lord has answered that: “Everyone that is of the truth hears My voice.” “I am the way, the truth and the life.” But in the last analysis we don’t accept faith in the Lord in order to reject faith in other people and in false ideas. We accept it because we know that we need living faith, faith in living truth, so that we ourselves can be changed. There is only one thing in all this world that is perfect, and that is the Lord’s Word, and when we turn to it, we are asking for that perfect, faultless help that flows through that Word from the Lord — the help we need if we are to forsake evil and love what is good. When a man or a woman stands before the Lord and joins the New Church, he or she is taking just the first step along the path of a happy and blessed life. He or she is saying, “Lord, I believe; help Thou mine unbelief.” “Lord, I know that in Your Word You are present. Guide me in all the steps that are to come. Even when we accept Him He still gives us freedom. He shows us a perfect truth, and we can say, “I want it,” or “I don’t.” But if we choose to, then He gives us the power to find the ultimate freedom. Every angel of heaven is free to do what he or she wants, because what he or she wants is good. This is the freedom which starts when a young man or woman declares a faith in the Word, which is the Son of God. “If the Son therefore shall make you free, you shall be free indeed.” Previous PostEaglesNext PostFaith In the Will
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Jimmy DeYoung's News Update Jimmy DeYoung's daily report on current events as they set the stage for Bible prophecy to be fulfilled. Ultra-orthodox Jews are expanding the population of the West Bank by large numbers Listen to Today's Program The Jewish settler population in Judea and Samaria, the West Bank, is growing twice as fast as the rest of the population in other areas in Israel and the Ultra-Orthodox community is responsible for the major portion of the annual growth in these disputed territories. In the areas where the Ultra-Orthodox move in to establish their young families, the annual growth rate is five to six times more than Jerusalem and Tel-Aviv's growth respectively and twice as much as the growth of many other Jewish settlements. The Ultra-Orthodox rabbis sanctioned living in these settlements assuming that these territories would be annexed to Israel sometime in the near future. Jimmy's Prophetic Prospective on the News The expanding population of Ultra-Orthodox Jews in Judea and Samaria is in essence a page out of Bible prophecy for these religious Jews and the land of their forefathers. Since the end of the Six Day War in June of 1967, Jews both religious and secular have been moving into the area of Judea and Samaria, the West Bank, building their homes and raising their families. These disputed territories have increased in population over the years to nearly 500,000 people in two hundred Jewish settlements. Now, the Israeli government is reporting that the fastest growth of population in any area of Israel is this area referred to as the West Bank, but known Biblically as Judea and Samaria. As I mentioned, this report is a page out of the prophetic passages in God's Word. The Ancient Jewish prophet Ezekiel wrote 2,500 years ago that in the Last Days God would give the land of the forefathers of the Jewish people to the Jews of today, Ezekiel 36. Ezekiel the prophet was actually told to preach to the land that would bring forth man and animal and multiply them on the land, Ezekiel 36:11. Ezekiel 36:6-22 reveals what God would do with the land for the Jews and in verse 22 tells us that would be done for His holy namesake. Posted by Jodi at Monday, April 25, 2016 Top Stories Home Prophecy Boookstore ► Dec 14 ( 1 ) ► Sep 30 ( 1 ) ► Aug 31 ( 1 ) ► Apr 30 ( 1 ) ► Jan 29 ( 1 ) ▼ Apr 25 ( 1 ) Ultra-orthodox Jews are expanding the population o...
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3AP1A Electrostatic CRT Source ........................................ Sylvania - 1959 Bulb .......................................... J24C Base Type ..................................... Medium 7-Pin (A7-13) Maximum Overall Height ........................ 11-1/2 In. Maximum Diameter .............................. 3 In. EIA Base ...................................... 7CE Minimum Useful Screen Diameter ................ 2-3/4 In. Focusing Method ............................... Sylvania - 1959 Deflecting Method ............................. Electrostatic Deflecting Angle (approx) ..................... Electrostatic Deg. Fluorescence ............................... P1 Phosphorescence ............................ Green Faceplate ..................................... Medium Grid to All Other ............................. 9 pf D1 to All Others .............................. 8.5 pf Anode No. 2 Voltage ........................... 1650 V Grid Voltage Negative Bias Value ........................ 125 V Positive Bias Voltage ...................... 0 V Peak Voltage Between Anode No. 2 and Any Deflection Plate ....................... 550 V Grid Circuit Resistance ....................... 1.5M Ω Deflection Circuit Resistance ................. 5.0M Ω Characteristics and Typical Operation Anode No. 1 Voltage ........................... 240 to 560 V Grid No. 1 Voltage Required for Cutoff ........ -25 to -75 V Deflection Factor Deflecting Plates No. 1 & 2 ................... 90 to 137 V/In Anode No. 1 Voltage ........................... 285 V Grid No. 1 Voltage Required for Cutoff ........ -33 V Deflecting Plates No. 1 & 2 ................... 77 V/In Deflecting Plates No. 3 & 4 ................... 72.5 V/In 1. With D2 positive with respect to D1, the spot is deflected toward pin 1. With D4 positive with respect to D3, the spot is deflected toward pin 6. 2. Brillance and definition decrease with decreasing Anode No. 2 Voltage. In general, Anode No. 2 voltage should not be less than 1000 volts. 3. Visual extinction of undeflected spot. 4. The plane through the tube axis and Pin 6 may vary from the trace produced by Deflecting Plates 3-4 by an angular tolerance measured about the tube axis; of 10 degrees. 5. Angle between D1-D2 trace and D3-D4 trace is 90 degrees +/- 3 degrees. 6. Deflecting Plates 1-2 are nearer the screen. 7. Deflecting Plates 3-4 are nearer the base.
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5124
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https://disrupt-africa.com/2023/01/13/...tartup-showcase-in-cape-town/#respondhttps://disrupt-africa.com/2023/01/13/applications-open-for-2nd-stitch-early-stage-startup-showcase-in-cape-town/#respond
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Published on May 28, 2021 May 30, 2021 by Maggie by Nicola Manasseh I spent many lockdown afternoons playing football with my godson Joe in the street outside his home, both of us focused on being accurate in our passes so as to avoid banging parked cars. I loved watching him become animated as we kicked the ball, and especially when I would ask him to show me his ‘epic’ skills. I was really disappointed that, as for all youths, Joe’s after-school football sessions had been suspended. So when the chance came for me to interview Charlie Hyman, CEO of Bloomsbury Football, I readily agreed and took Joe along with me. Charlie is an inspiration for anybody about to finish formal education. Three years ago, he was sitting in Greenberry Café, local to his parents’ home, revising for his final exams at the University of Nottingham. Two fathers whose sons had received football coaching from Charlie whilst he was a student happened to enter the café and asked him what he intended to do when he finished his degree. That chat led Charlie to establish Bloomsbury Football with those two parents as founding trustees. In the beginning Charlie was a full-time coach whilst running the organisation. His main ambition was to bring children of all backgrounds together to create a club that would be inclusive. Today, Bloomsbury Football engages 3,000 young people every week between the ages of two and sixteen, including thirty-five teams competing in local junior football leagues. There is a pool of around thirty coaches who visit primary and secondary schools, community centres and housing estates to provide football training sessions. Bloomsbury also run three football camps in London, available to children on holiday weekdays. At the Academy, keen young footballers can develop their play with training available three or four times a week. Six months ago, Charlie launched a programme for girls-only teams, although there has always been the option for boys and girls to play together. “Usually when children play football,” Charlie explained, “they mostly interact with their school mates and that is not always diverse, especially if they attend a fee-paying or religious school. I hope to encourage a child to grow alongside somebody who may have a completely different background. Once young people understand differences, that’s the first step towards empathy.” Charlie is very much invested in nurturing his football coaches, some of whom are sixth-formers. When I asked him what makes a good coach, he chuckled: “To make the coach’s role not need to exist, although it will always exist.” He told me how kids look up to their coach, sometimes as if they are celebrities, and so these role models have the chance to show children “how to take ownership over themselves”. For instance, through the example of being consistently punctual and always arriving to a session with the correct equipment, the children can learn this behaviour from their coaches. Self-reflection is another requisite in Charlie’s opinion. “I want the coaches to review each and every session and ask themselves what did and didn’t work and where they need to develop.” Needless to say, Charlie has always loved football, and it turned out that he and my godson support the same team. Charlie remembers playing football in Primrose Hill at the end of a school day and feeling blessed that the park was his ‘garden’. One of the main challenges that he has with Bloomsbury Football is finding spaces to hire, because most sports halls, recreation centres and park pitches are fully booked, sometimes years in advance. In order to make sure that children are not priced out from his foundation, Charlie has a sliding scale of prices based on what parents can afford. “No child is turned away because of their financial background,” he explains. Presently he is organising Bloomsbury staff to raise £30,000 so that they can offer bursary places across the programmes. Charlie has set himself the target of running five kilometres every day for fifty days: “That’s about the length of Regent’s Park’s Outer Circle.” Charlie’s parents think that he’s a workaholic, but the truth is that he really loves his job, even the administration aspect of it all. “The real reward is to see the joy the children get from having proper football training and to know that the coaches are also getting a real opportunity.” At some point during the interview, my godson shyly asked Charlie which football players he admires, and they chatted as fans do. Finally, I asked Charlie what was the biggest lesson he’d learned in his twenty-five years, and he replied, “True fulfilment comes from helping others.” For more information visit www.bloomsburyfootball.com Nicola Manasseh is a freelance writer and editor and can be contacted at [email protected] Football, Sport, Uncategorisedbloomsbury football, football, Sport Previous Previous post: Part-time Administrator Next Next post: Plans for an 18m 5G mast on the edge of Primrose Hill Park
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Tag: Italian JOURNAL FROM ROME 1.1 At the beginning of October, Br. Scottston Brentwood was transferred to the Mercedarian student community in Rome for further ecclesiastical studies. Br. Scottston agreed to send us a periodic journal to help keep us in close communion with him. To date, Br. Scottston has sent four installments. We shall post the first four together and then update the installments as they arrive. Please keep Br. Scottston in your prayers and enjoy his journal. INSTALLMENT #1 I thought I would let everyone know all the happenings here in Rome. I’ve only been here for a week, but MUCH has happened! I have to admit, it is truly a wonderful experience, and I have to thank all the brothers/priests here in Italy for all the kindness they have shown toward me. Even with the present language barrier, we are having a great time with many laughs and a truly remarkable, communitarian life. Thus, here is a summary of many of the things I’ve done this last week. By no means is it comprehensive, but it does give you a flavor of the fun I have had. I arrived early Saturday morning at the Da Vinci Airport in Rome. I was overwhelmed not so much with being in the city of Rome itself as much as the shear number of people there! So many people, and the tragedy was that everyone was headed to the same location – baggage claim. As sad as it might sound, I literally watched my bags go by at least twice as I was unable to get close enough to them to pull them off the carousel. I met the other brothers who picked me up, and we went to what would be my home for the next few years. I spent the next couple of days doing various things. I went from unpacking to liturgical functions to processions etc. As I did not speak the native language (and few if anyone here shares my language) I can assure you it was rather interesting trying to figure out what exactly I was suppose to be doing. In the end, it all worked out, that is, until they asked me to lead the rosary in Italian. On Sunday I went with one of the other brothers – Bro. Petrus – to downtown Rome. We visited the Vatican (i.e. St. Peters) and stopped for a gelato at a nearby shop. On our way home we visited the “Holy Stairs” and St. John Lateran. On Tuesday I went with Fr. Stefano to register at one of the Language Institutes. Afterward we walked to the Gregorian University where he teaches via the Trevi Fountain before returning home for ponzo. After the meal we headed out for the sacred and highly coveted Metrobus Card that will allow me to take the Metro without the hassle of purchasing a ticket with every trip. On Thursday I decided to take in some sights while at the same time taking the opportunity to travel to my new school alone to see if I could remember how to get there. I found it with no difficulties. I traveled back toward the Trevi Fountain and continued on to the more ancient parts (i.e. the area around the Monument to Victor Emanuele) I took some photos, relished in the past grandeur of the Roman Empire, and headed back home. Friday came, and I thought it wise to find a location for confession in English. Fr. Ricci suggested I go to St. Mary Major, so I asked Bro. Petrus which stop on the Metro would be the closest. He told me the Termini stop is best, and when I looked at a map, St. Mary Major was between Termini and Victor Emanuele stops. I opted for the Termini stop – major mistake. The shear number of people there is enough to detract my attention, and when I emerged from the station I was completely lost. Note to self – a map alone is useless without a compass. I asked some Sisters for directions and easily found the Basilica. The experience of the Basilica was different – very pleasant. I found the beauty of the Basilica to be a true reflection of the beauty of God’s creation. I think of all the places I have been in Rome, St. Mary Major was my favorite. To return home I opted for the other Metro stop – Victor Emanuele. Note to self – take this stop if you are going to St. Mary Major: its on the same street, and there are no people there. Thus, I finished my first week in Italy. -Fra. Scott Br. Scottston taking in the sites. So I had to spend some time preparing for my exam to move to the next level in my study of Italian, so I was unable to give a written version of week 2 here in Italy. SO, here is weeks 2 and 3 all at once. Most likely you will not find it as interesting as the first week, but it is what it is right? I began my Italian classes on Monday, October 12. I have class five days a week for three hours each day. As of now, the classes are in the afternoon, so I have the mornings to study. The class is small which helps facilitate the “learning process,” and the teacher is a nice guy – Italian, but he knows some English which helps. The other students are American. As I actually have to do homework (it is checked every day and there are MANY exercises to complete), the general rule for me is thus – every morning is occupied with books, paper, pens, and DICTIONARIES. I had my first run-in with a “quasi-gypsy” the following Tuesday. As I was at the Spanish Steps, this guy approaches and (in less than 30 seconds) ties this string bracelet around my wrist. He then asks me for 5 euros! I told him I had nothing, he of course did not believe me as I am an American, and I actually demonstrated that my pockets were empty and the sound he was hearing was my KEYS! Fortunately I do not carry money with me, so if they ask for it, I cannot give that which I do not possess myself. Ultimately he came to the obvious realization that I was not going to give him anything (as I had nothing to give), so he told me to accept it as a gift, “welcome to Italy” he said to me, and walked away. Note to anyone walking in Rome – keep your hands in your pockets so as to prevent the gypsies from putting something in them and wanting money for something you neither wanted nor asked for. On Thursday I headed to the more ancient parts of the city. I saw the Coliseum and the Arch of Constantine, took some photos, and found my way home via another route. The purpose of this exercise is so that I become more familiar with the city, and you never know – I might find some interesting places in my travels. The following day I wanted to see if there were any bookstores close to my school, and as I arrived early (the METRO is sometimes fast, sometimes slow, and sometimes on strike…so you never know what to expect), I went looking. I stopped to ask a man for directions, asked him if he spoke English (I asked in Italian), he told me (in Italian) that he neither spoke nor understood English, so I proceeded to put my Italian courses to work and asked for directions to a bookstore with books in English (in Italian). His response (in ENGLISH) was, “go two blocks down the street, take a left, and it will be right there.” Hmmmmm…. As a side note, books in English are easy to find, but the cost is more than double the price of the same book in Italian. Thus I finished my second week in Italy. I went on Saturday (October 17) downtown to find another bookstore…something larger maybe? I found one online close to St. Mary Major, so I figured I could head out for a weekly confession, visit the bookstore which was three blocks away, and head home by the METRO which is a block away from the bookstore. It was raining, so I bought an umbrella from the perpetual venders walking around outside the tourist places (if you speak in Italian you get things at a cheaper rate), confessed, and as I exited the church was overwhelmed by a Communist Party demonstration which was literally marching around St. Mary Major! Personally, I think I would have chosen a more political venue for a political demonstration, but whatever. I found the bookstore with no difficulty and it was ENORMOUS – 4 floors of books of every kind (some even in English…but at a “normal” price). Saturday night was spent in front of the all-powerful plasma TV…literally transfixed to the glowing edifice as the Genoa / Inter game was screening. I was supporting Inter, and I was in luck as they won. I somehow surprised the Italians with my knowledge of the different teams, their uniform colors, and the cities they are from. Every American knows these things…right? On Sunday I spent some time with the youth of our parish – Bro. Sergio coordinates a soccer game every week, and the youth wanted to demonstrate to me their soccer skills. To my surprise, even the younger ones were really, really good. That evening, Bro. Petrus brought wood into the refectory and started a fire in the fireplace there. I jokingly asked Fr. Stefano if he was going to cook over the fire, and to my surprise, he said yes! I had never seen steak prepared using a fireplace before, but it was tasty so I cannot complain. Somehow thoughts of Fr. Matthew Phelan grilling in the refectory fireplace of the Monastery made me laugh. All I can say is, “do not try this at home, we are professionals.” Monday = back to class and the regular routine. Nothing really new there, but on Thursday I had to take a test to see if I was ready to move onto the next level at the language institute. I was rather worried about it during our review – I did not remember many things, but when I took the exam, I was the first one to finish. Ultimately I did very well, and begin the next level on Monday morning. End of week three. Saturday, October 24 – We had our first formation class in the morning…in Italian of course. I understood what was being said, took some notes, but did not really offer much input; I did afterwards when I was alone with Fr. Ricci. After the sacred pranzo, the students and Fr. Ricci went to Fr.’s hometown to visit his sister. Next we went up the mountains that surround the town – VERY nice, but different than the mountains I am use to in Virginia. Finally, we headed to Nemi to see the house/community there. The city is beautiful, and the house is located next to Lake Nemi. We saw the renovations that are taking place there – MANY – and headed back home. On a side note, I saw my first Roman sunset…over Lake Nemi. On Sunday, Fr. Provincial returned home. We had a very nice conversation (in Italian of course), and he was happy that I was progressing with the language. Though I made some grammatical mistakes, he at least understood what I was trying to say. That night many of the various superiors arrived as a gathering of the Italian superiors was going to begin on Monday and carry on through the week; some of them I had already met as they had been here for the various Secretariat meetings the previous week. Monday proved to be an interesting day. I was under the impression class was to begin at 9:30am with a new instructor, but it was changed to 10:00am…and I thus arrived EARLY. I thought I would walk around the general vicinity to see what was new and exciting. I stumbled into a church that was near by that I had not visited yet – St. Andrea d. Fratte. Very nice. I did notice that even though Mass was going on, a confessional was available. As I did not have time to hit up St. Mary Major for confession during the weekend, I thought I would ask the priest if he spoke English. It turns out that he, in fact, did NOT (big surprise)…but he said that “Jesus understands all languages”…and he wanted to continue the confession with me attempting it in Italian. Ultimately (as I did not know the names of any sins in Italian) I described the sins, and the priest provided me with the Italian name for them. Confession done – my first in Italian – I went to school and followed the normal routine. On Wednesday Bro. Petrus and I went to the Post Office to work on the documentation for the Promesso Soggorno. The office only has one person to handle everyone who is seeking this…and though the office opened at 8:30am, he did not arrive until 9:15am. LONG day, and there is still more that needs to be done to obtain this “important” document. Needless to say, I was late for class, but no worries. Bro. Petrus and I walked from the Vatican (where the Post Office is) to my school – the trip was very short and was equal in time to the public transportation fiasco. I was able to see the Castle Sant Angelo…and a few other things before I had a couple more hours of Italian. Thursday was the final day for the gathering of superiors, and when I was returning home from school, I was greeted by Fr. General who welcomed me home from the balcony over the main entrance. In fact, he said he was “unhappy” with me because I did not write to him as soon as I had arrived in Italy, but I rectified the situation by mentioning that I thought he was OUTSIDE Italy at the time. I had a quick bite to eat – alone as everyone had literally just finished – but while I ate Fr. Nunzio spoke with me about the vocations situation of the Order within Italy. Once I finished, I sat and spoke with Fr. General. At our last meeting in Cleveland we spoke in English as I did not know Italian. This time, however, we used Italian. As we were speaking, Fr. Provincial joined us, and the two of them asked me many things about America and my thoughts on various topics. On Friday my former teacher showed me the location of an international bookstore…not far from the large one I already knew of. EVERY language you could think of was present, but the English section was the largest…and the books were actually priced at a reasonable price. Thus ended my fourth week…and my first month. Editor’s note: In installment #4 we see, as Brother Scottston stated himself in the message that accompanied the journal, the “more spiritual side came out.” It feels as though an eternity has passed since our last conversation… Perhaps it was my fault – I was too preoccupied dwelling on my own thoughts to perceive the fact you were present. I realize that no level of apology would be sufficient to account fully for my unremitting failures…a reality that I have reluctantly come to accept. Why should today be any different? I can see you…standing there…saying to me, “Why such baffled disposition? ‘Did you miss me?’ It is a normal question – I missed you. But what do I get back? Not an ounce of excitement, not a whisper of a thrill.” My only response would invariably be silence. It always is. I see you further saying to me, “Scott at a loss for words? The man from whose lips fall ‘rapture’ and ‘fury’ and ‘enthrallment’ …all those admonitions about being ‘deliberately happy,’ … all the dispiriting advice you dispense in round, pear-shaped tones…?” …again…the customary downcast sigh. And yet the faint, sad uncertain smile, so often there, now seems to glimmer from its obscurity, and linger briefly on my lips. It could be a fool’s hope of that which is to be…or merely the delusion of a simple boy…who finds himself coming to the realization that all truly IS well. My daily transformation takes place…my gradual coming to better understand you as I mature day by day into the person I was always meant to be. But you already knew that. I attempt to surprise you…even though I know that your knowledge of me is so superior to my expectations that there is nothing that would (or could) surprise you. …yet you still pretend to be surprised to placate my child-like desire to please you. What impresses me most is that – though I never surprise you, you always respond in a way that ultimately elevates me. How could you who know me so well…not feel disappointed by the knowledge that I do not recapitulate that same reciprocal knowledge of you? Is this merely further evidence of not only my failure to truly get to know you from the beginning, but also evidence of my focus on myself at the detriment of knowing you? The possibilities are endless. I rest, however, in the knowledge that ultimately it does not matter – all is made perfect in time…or that is the hope at least. Until then, I will rest in my complacency…knowing (and trusting) in that which is…and that which will be. Until then I remain, ~Your Most Devoted Friend Posted on November 10th, 2009 February 5th, 2013 Author adminCategories Mercedarians-U.S.A., Mercedarians-World, Miscellaneous, Vocations & FormationTags Brentwood, friar, Italian, Order of Mercy, Rome1,422 Comments on JOURNAL FROM ROME 1.1
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Posts Tagged ‘nucleus’ Monday, September 8th, 2008 by Terence Witt I had a friend ask me the other day where he could get one of those green ‘glow-in-the-dark’ cats he had read about. He wanted one for his girlfriend’s birthday. “Can I get one that starts blinking when it’s hungry, and what other colors were available?” His sense of humor is almost as dry as mine, so I’m still not sure whether or not he was baiting me. Just in case, I told him that I thought that he should go to his nearest chain pet store to pre-order one, but I didn’t think the blinking version would be out until just before Christmas. Then he wanted to know how soon it would be before the Army created genetically enhanced super-soldiers or chimps could be modified to drive cars. I told him that the Army would probably opt for ‘Killer Robots’ to avoid the ethical hassles associated with playing with the human genome. As to chimps driving cars – they already do (see Jared Diamond’s excellent book, The Third Chimpanzee for why humans are actually one of the three native species of chimps on Earth). The best way to understand the challenges of genetic modification (aka gene therapy) is to embrace the complexity of our genome. The execution of good aroma therapy, for instance, requires the ability to put odd smelling stuff in wax and light a candle. Now I’m sure there’s a lot more to this than meets the eye, but it is simply not very difficult to get some sort of beneficial, soothing effect, with technology that was available thousands of years ago. Compare gene therapy. Imagine that you’ve got this computer program, 3.2 billion code words long, and you really don’t know what most of it does. Now imagine that this program operates by exposing portions of its code to its environment, using what amounts to a protein mask. Some parts are running, others aren’t, based on the parts that are covered up by this mask. Different parts of this mask are permanently configured in different cells, such as the parts that are always exposed in a liver cell but concealed in a bone cell, and other parts of this mask open and close depending on enumerable environmental factors, such as ion concentrations and the presence or absence of thousands of different molecules. So bits and pieces of this mask are winking on and off all the time, in every cell in our body. And that’s just the main code. Beyond this code, there are all sorts of micro-codes scattered through a cell’s cytoplasm that tells the cell how its monstrously complex genetic code is to be interpreted. Also consider that our 3.2 billion code genome, if stretched out as a single molecule of DNA, would be about six feet long. Yet it is so thin and coiled so tightly that it fits inside of a cell’s tiny nucleus. If you don’t think this system is absolutely remarkable, then you just haven’t been paying attention. So now you set up to program this code nightmare. You have some piece of code you want to run, say, to make your hair green or your skin transparent (creepy!). If this were a computer program, you would just find the appropriate place to add the subroutine, QED. But with the genome, you have two problems. First, you don’t really know where to put it because you don’t really know how the program works. The second problem is that you can’t really control exactly where it goes. This second issue is the truly bad news. Regardless of how the code is delivered (sometimes even shot into a nucleus), whether or not it will ‘take’ depends on where it actually combines with the genome, which is to a large extent random. There are, after all, only four letters to our wonderful genetic alphabet, and only short sequences can be used to match some location in the genome. So if your matching code is, say, 6 letters long, then the number of places that it might match in the genome is 3.2 billion divided by 4 to the 6th power, or about 800,000 different locations. Now add the fact that the availability of many of these locations winks on and off depending on the environment. Yikes. Yet even in spite of this staggering complexity, progress is definitely being made, and each new step overcomes monumental odds. But as it stands now, it would be easier to build a shopping mall on the moon than confront some of the technical challenges waiting inside each and every one of our tiny cells. So the next time you get down on yourself for missing a three foot putt or can’t remember where you left your car keys, just keep in mind that you’re running some of the most complex software imaginable. There’s bound to be a few bugs. Tags: cell, DNA, gene, genetic, genome, human, nucleus, therapy Posted in Author's Blog> Paradigms Lost | Comments Off on Gene Therapy
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Posted on February 7, 2015 February 7, 2015 Full size 200 × 150
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Are You Destroying Your Motivation? In traditional economics, motivation is simple: People want stuff. The amount of stuff they want is unlimited, therefore if you want people to do something you give them more stuff, and they will do it for you. Threaten to take away stuff, and they will avoid doing whatever would cause their stuff to be taken away. The emerging field of behavioral economics takes a more holistic (and realistic) understanding of motivation: Sometimes people don’t want stuff. Sometimes people do things that don’t help them get more stuff. And there are some things you can’t convince people to do no matter how much stuff you give them. This is critically important to the sudden popularity of gamification. Gamification is a way of creating incentives. But many people have attempted to create incentives based on the assumption that the only two motivators are pain and gain. This approach seems to assume that human beings operate like machines: give us a directive and reasons to follow the directive, and we will. This thinking is what caused behaviorists to discover the overjustification effect, which is dangerous can be permanently damaging. Dubner and Levitt give a perfect example in Freakonomics of an Israeli day care facility that wanted to discourage parents from arriving late to pick up their children and started charging for late pick-up. The result was that more parents arrived late. The fee for late pick-up had supplanted an intrinsic motivation (guilt over inconveniencing the day-care workers) with an extrinsic motivation (a small fee to compensate for that inconvenience). What’s more, when the fee was subsequently removed, the damage had been done: parents continued to see the late pick-up as a service, but now it was a service they were getting for free. Businesses often take a similar simple-economics approach to dealing with their own people. Incentivize this, disincentivize that, counter-incentivize something that you’re making more difficult. Much of the bulk and complexity of large organizations can be traced back to complicated incentives and metrics. So before you do anything, remove the obstacles. It’s impossible to know whether sufficient intrinsic motivations are there if you’ve piled up a mountain of paperwork in front of them. Sometimes the barriers exist outside your organization, such as the ability to market a new service. If you want a particular activity to occur more often within your organization, start by identifying and removing the obstacles, and then step back. Adding incentives is dangerous and difficult to reverse, and can result in unexpected and undesirable behaviors. If you create a space for something to happen, and your people are aware that space exists, wait and see what comes to fill in that space. Posted on March 2, 2015 March 2, 2015 Author PaulCategories economics, managementTags context, incentives, motivation, obstacles, response, sustainability Previous Previous post: Are Your Taxes Too High? Next Next post: Feedback: The Motivation Superpower
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This Is More Important Than Success We have been told not to let our failures get us down, and many people believe this means we should put our failures behind us as quickly as possible and keep moving. We spend hours, days, months, examining successes and trying to emulate them and turn them into strategies. But failing well is more important than success. Success is just success, and there’s not much more you can do; but failure is opportunity, and it will slip away if you don’t seize it. When an effort has the result I intend, it can be for any combination of reasons, both within and beyond my control. But when I don’t get the result I’m looking for, it’s important for me to find out what I can about why I didn’t succeed, look for the variables I could have influenced, and at the very least try something different next time. If I move too quickly past my failures, I’m likely to repeat them; if I move too quickly past my successes, at worst I may forget to celebrate them. (Celebrating successes is important too–but we’ll get to that later.) As you might have heard, the road to success is paved with failures. If you plan to succeed on a regular basis, you’ll need to learn how to pave. Ignoring the importance of failing well doesn’t just mean repeating your mistakes. It also has an impact on your organization’s culture. Your employees tend to do less work at or above their level of competence for fear of doing it incorrectly, which means that higher-level employees and managers are left doing lower-level work. So much for “high-performance culture.” Glossing over failures at the organization level also leads to poor communication at the individual level. If I’m trying to make the failures of my business disappear, should I really be surprised when an employee makes an enormous miscalculation and doesn’t tell me about it until the last minute? The more failure is accepted and dealt with properly, the less stigma will be attached to it and the easier it will become to handle. It should come as no surprise that this applies to your life as well as your business. Anticipate failure and learn how to fail well, and it will lead you to a richer, wiser life. Posted on February 3, 2015 February 7, 2015 Author PaulCategories management, strategyTags failure, performance, success Previous Previous post: This Is More Important Than Money Next Next post: The Four Ways to Fail
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Plant-based Athletic Inspiration: Josh LaJaunie by Garth Davis, MD on May 19, 2015 Josh LaJaunie is an incredible individual. His story is truly inspiring. Read and enjoy his guest post. I’m Josh LaJaunie. I’m the big guy in the left picture. I am from Thibodaux, Louisiana. I am a former football lineman. And I identified most with the big, whiskey-drinking, animal-eating (didn’t matter, wasn’t very picky), former football player with stories of how athletic I used to be before I got hurt. And being that guy got me 200lbs overweight and miserable. There is no shortage of that person here. I was kind of in that big guy club. The guys who couldn’t fit in booths. The guys who need seatbelt extensions and specially made clothing. That club was my identity. Even as I began to lose weight eventually, my goal was always “playing weight” (290-300lbs). I held onto the “fact” that I was destined to be a big man. I almost felt I’d be betraying something or someone if I left. Eventually, some life circumstances began to change; I found a girlfriend, although it feels kinda silly to call my wife that now. And at the age of 29, in 2007, she encouraged me to go back to school as a freshman at Nicholls State University. By the spring of 2011 I was thinking like an educated pragmatist for the first time in my life, and preparing for my senior year. Not only was my pending degree exciting for me, but in the year previous my beloved New Orleans Saints won SB44. I sort of made a case study out of the that epic win (WHODAT!!). I wanted know how the hell Coach and Mr Loomis were able to have success in a town that has epitomized the opposite over the long term in many ways, especially when considering NFL success. So, I read Coach’s book. Among his beautifully timed “f” bombs were some profound ideas that struck me as relatable to my own world. But one I found particularly useful and paradigm-decaying was when he addressed all the “that’s just the way it is here” talk he encountered. He defied it at every turn. Unwaveringly. He even imported people from outside, like Joe Vitt for example, who bristled at the idea of complacency as bad as Coach did. And ultimately, they changed a culture. A culture who’s results were appalling on many levels. Now we are used to winning. Reading that book planted a seed. But that seed didn’t germinate until my friend Jeff called and invited me to join the gym with him in February of 2011 as I started my final full semester. With that invite, Jeff changed my life. I would wind up never looking back. Durning my presentation-heavy final semester I had gotten compliments on my weight loss as well as my presentations. That felt pretty cool. By graduation in December I had lost 60lbs. and was feeling like a proud graduate. It was around this time that my friend Jeff and I decided to run the Crescent City Classic 10k in New Orleans that following April. Jeff would often be able to walk alongside me as I “ran.” Although I had lost weight, at 340ish lbs, I was still quite heavy for a runner. We got up to 4 miles in training. I figured I would have to walk some on raceday, and I did, a lot. I was happy to have finished, but bummed that it took me 1:43:00. I was hoping for 1:30:00. But that failure sparked me. I knew how I was still eating in my heart of hearts. So, I really had no right to be upset for underachieving; I hadn’t done what it takes. I was still eating like shit, drinking like a fish, and smoking cigarettes when I wanted to because I was losing weight regardless. But as the weight loss slowed, I reevaluated what I was doing. That race eventually lead me to reading “Born to Run,” which introduced me to Scott Jurek, whose story lead me to plants and running. So, I found myself 100lbs lighter (but still 100lbs overweight) reinventing an already somewhat reinvented self. I was morphing into an aspiring runner, rather than being a reluctant runner looking for weight loss. As I began to hone my aspirations, I found that a plant based diet was used by some of the baddest runners out there. Scott Jurek is not alone, which was a surprise to me; Rich Roll, and Brendan Brazier were the next two plant based badasses I learned about. This, coupled with watching Forks Over Knives for the first time, really cemented my new views on food. I became a 100% plant based, not ex fat guy, but athlete. I decided “I’m going be that. An athlete.” Today I identify with being a runner, a plant based runner. Yes, I have lost 200 lbs., but I think about that so much less now that it’s been done. It’s no longer the moment I’m in. I think about PR’s these days a lot, but I also want to be a Pied Piper, if you will, for the plants, mindset, and activity that got me to where I am today, and where I know so many would like to be. In my own family, for example, my wife and I found ourselves always fielding questions that ultimately just ask “how?” So, we invited everyone over and started a “boot camp” at our home. We workout (my wife tries to kill us, I mean) on Tuesday and Thursday every week. We bond, laugh, hurt, piss-moan, and complain, but we get it done. This started as just family but has grown as people have discovered that there’s a workout at Josh’s every Tuesday and Thursday. So now I have running buddies, friends, friends of friends, and family all working out with us. It’s so cool! But if you know me, I’m a “fix the damn food!” guy. I guess it because I’ve come so far that I take it so seriously, but I do. So, beside breaking a sweat with folks, I try to be consistent example of the plant based lifestyle in action. Not unlike a lighthouse on a rocky shore. In the end, I’m just a guy who wanted something bad enough to change, finally. So if you’re reading this, and you identify with the old me more than the new me, I get it. Just know I’ll be here when you’re ready, but you’re giving me a helluva head start. Posted in athleticism, behavior change, guest post, inspiration, movement and exercise, obesity, overall health, weight loss
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RADICAL TEACHER, founded in 1975, is a socialist, feminist, and anti-racist journal dedicated to the theory and practice of teaching. It serves the community of educators who are working for democratic process, peace, and justice. The magazine examines the root causes of inequality and promotes progressive social change. RADICAL TEACHER publishes articles on classroom practices and curriculum, as well as on educational issues related to gender and sexuality, disability, culture, globalization, privatization, race, class, and other similar topics. We welcome inquiries and ideas for articles, issues, or conferences from people actively engaged in progressive education. Radical Teacher is a peer-reviewed journal. Please visit our website for more information at radicalteacher.net All manuscripts undergo editorial screening and full articles are double-blind peer-reviewed. Upon submission, issue editors determine whether the article falls within the scope of the journal, and then assign the article to two reviewers drawn from the editorial board of the journal. These reviewers are responsible for assessing the contribution and quality of the submission. Teaching Notes, Reviews, and News for Educational Workers are not peer reviewed. This journal provides immediate open access to its content. Our publisher, the University Library System at the University of Pittsburgh, abides by the Budapest Open Access Initiative definition of Open Access: “By “open access” to [peer-reviewed research literature], we mean its free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited.” Researchers engage in discovery for the public good, yet because of cost barriers or use restrictions imposed by other publishers, research results are not available to the full community of potential users. It is our mission to support a greater global exchange of knowledge by making the research published in this journal open to the public and reusable under the terms of a Creative Commons CC-BY license. Furthermore, we encourage authors to post their pre-publication manuscript in institutional repositories or on their Web sites prior to and during the submission process, and to post the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version after publication. These practices benefit authors with productive exchanges as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. There are no article processing charges, submissions fees, or any other costs required of authors to submit articles to this journal. Statement on Publishing Ethics Adherence to ethical standards for the dissemination of research results is critical to the research process. Radical Teacher adheres to the Code of conduct and best practice guidelines of the Committee On Publication Ethics (COPE), the Code of Conduct of the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association (OASPA), and the Principles of Transparency and Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing of the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ).
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Resurrection of the Daleks (Paperback) Author: Eric Saward Publisher: BBC Books RRP: UK £7.99, US $10.99, Cdn $16.99 ISBN: 978 1 78594 434 5 The TARDIS is ensnared in a time corridor, catapulting it into derelict docklands on 20th-century Earth. The Doctor and his companions, Tegan and Turlough, stumble on a warehouse harbouring fugitives from the future at the far end of the corridor – and are soon under attack from a Dalek assault force. The Doctor’s oldest enemies have set in motion an intricate and sinister plot to resurrect their race from the ashes of an interstellar war. For the Daleks’ plans to succeed, they must set free their creator, Davros, from a galactic prison – and force the Doctor to help them achieve total control over time and space. But the embittered Davros has ideas of his own… It’s taken a while (37 years, in fact), but at last there’s a Target novelisation of Resurrection of the Daleks! Back in the 1980s, the original Target Books imprint was unable to reach an agreement with writer / script editor Eric Saward and Dalek originator Terry Nation to allow Saward (or any other writer) to adapt his scripts for the 1984 Fifth Doctor serial. Virgin Books, the imprint that succeeded Target, tried again in the early 1990s, Saward started work and the novelisation was actually announced, but again the project stalled. Now the paperback edition of the completed 2019 book is being published in the resurrected Target imprint… but was it worth the wait? This novelisation is not what I had been expecting. It’s not the number of differences between the book and the original serial that causes me to raise my eyebrows. After all, other long-delayed Doctor Who adaptations that have been completed in recent years, based on scripts by Douglas Adams, have contained large amounts of new material, reinstated from earlier versions of scripts and storylines. No, it’s the nature of the changes that surprises me. Whereas the screen version of Resurrection was almost unremittingly grim, the novelisation often adopts a comical tone. Perhaps I should have expected this. Saward’s 1986 novelisations of The Twin Dilemma and Slipback contain several Adams-style digressions into light-hearted background information. So does this book, which holds forth on such subjects as how the prison station got its name (the Vipod Mor, a designation accidentally reused from Slipback) and an unlikely mix-up between a producer of preserves and a manufacturer of missiles. On other occasions, the novelist deliberately undermines the drama of a situation he has created by taking a turn for the bathetic. For instance, after significantly raising the stakes during the initial TARDIS scene, placing the ship and its crew in danger of destruction (rather than being merely off course and out of control, as they were on screen), Saward punctures the tension with the understatement, “The greatest Time Lord of them all was having a really bad day.” Exciting lines that the writer had scripted for Davros are sabotaged by having Commander Gustav Lytton ponder that the villain talks too much and by describing the Dalek creator as squawking “like Florence Foster Jenkins aiming for a high C”. The Daleks themselves come in for similar stick. Lytton finds the species as a whole to be “noisy, aggressive and highly repetitive,” and regards the Supreme Dalek as downright odd. The latter’s dialogue is often “oozed” or “purred”, he makes noises similar to burps and grunts – and he even attempts a joke! Terry Nation would not have approved. (Some readers may also be sceptical about Daleks muttering or contemplating insubordination, but there are precedents for both of these in the television show.) I dare say that much of this satire arises from Saward’s feelings about writing for the Daleks and his dissatisfaction with his own scripts. Both the writer and the critics have pointed out the convoluted nature of the serial’s plot, in which too many ideas jostle for attention and not all of them are developed as fully as they might have been. However, I don’t think taking the mickey out of the source material is the solution. It’s an approach that was successful with The Twin Dilemma and Slipback, because the broadcast versions already contained a lot of humour, but a story like this (in common with the similarly convoluted Evil of the Daleks, to which Resurrection owes much of its inspiration) needs to be told straight. Poke fun at it, and the whole thing could fall apart. Fortunately, Saward takes other aspects more seriously. He explores the inner thoughts of his characters, which is particularly effective in the case of the ruthless Lytton, the conflicted Sergeant Raymond Arthur Stien and the ill-fated homeless smoker at the beginning of the adventure, who is given the name Mr Jones. The writer clearly enjoys describing the rain-soaked streets of Shad Thames, where the warehouse entrance to the Daleks’ time corridor is located. He makes the most of all the grisly deaths that take place in this tale, by not only describing them when they occur but also foretelling many of them beforehand, with phrases like, “Little did they know it would be the last time they would hear him speak those words.” We are made aware of the Daleks’ involvement at an earlier point than in the television serial, via Lytton’s musings and the Doctor’s deductive reasoning. The Time Lord concludes that the time corridor must be the work of the demented pepper pots while the TARDIS is still ensnared in the temporal phenomenon. However, once the time travellers arrive in 1984 London, this realisation is all but forgotten, and the Doctor’s exploration of the warehouse reverts to the less urgent investigation that it was on screen. The novelist resolves some but not all of his original story’s implausibilities, including the inconsistent nature of the Daleks’ human duplicates and Davros’s awareness that the Doctor is a Time Lord. The time corridor is given a computerised intelligence, allowing it to defend itself, and its London entrance is effectively disguised in a manner similar to the TARDIS’s chameleon circuit. However, when it comes to explaining the science behind such marvels, it would have been better if he hadn’t tried. We are informed that the operation of the Doctor’s craft involves “time bubbles” suspended in “stabilising dampers.” When these bubbles burst, the TARDIS risks becoming trapped “in a crack in time, causing the Doctor, and his two friends, to relive the same single moment over and over again.” Being caught in such a temporal loop is, nonsensically, a greater threat to the Time Lord, whose regenerative powers would condemn him to “a permanent state of living hell.” The source of the time corridor, we are told, is a beam of light projected from the Dalek ship. This cuts through space until, at a prearranged point, gravity (somehow) affects it, forcing the light “to spiral and twist its way through the cracks and fissures in the time-space continuum”, until pressure transmogrifies it “into the swirling mass of a time corridor.” Saward himself seems to realise that this kind of description is not where his strengths lie, and so later claims that to comprehend how the time corridor works “would require a double-first in mathematics plus the help of a dozen Albert Einsteins and several Stephen Hawkings on the side just to interpret the first five lines of the principle.” The author also throws in references to other Doctor Who adventures that he wrote or edited. Humans are referred to as Tellurians, as they are in several Robert Holmes scripts. They enjoy drinking Voxnic, a potent alcoholic beverage previously knocked back in Slipback and the novelisation of The Twin Dilemma. Speelsnapes (Revelation of the Daleks, The Trial of a Time Lord) are mentioned and time spillage (The Mark of the Rani, Slipback) occurs. Most frequent, however, are the allusions to the Terileptils, reptilian beings introduced in The Visitation, and tinclavic, a malleable metal that they are said to mine. I know Saward created them, but there are other species and substances in the Whoniverse! Here tinclavic is used in the construction of devices operated by Time Lords, Daleks and Tellurians alike, despite the fact that, according to the Doctor in The Awakening, the Terileptils mine the stuff for the more or less exclusive use of the inhabitants of the planet Hakol. (That’s in the star system Rifter, you know.) As a result of all the additions, we are two-fifths of the way through the book before we reach the end of the material from Part One of the four-part serial. Then, as with his approach to scientific explanations, the novelist seems to change his mind mid-narrative. From this point on, he is more economical with his embellishments to the original plot – apart from a lengthy tour of the TARDIS interior and a bemusing coda. Moreover, several key developments, such as the fate of Colonel Archer, and the arrival and ‘recruitment’ of Davros’s helper Kiston, are conveyed only in summary. Did Saward get bored? Was he struggling to meet the deadline? Given the duration of recent Adams and movie adaptations published by BBC Books, I doubt he was in danger of breaching the upper word limit. The complete text is presented in this 192-page paperback edition, though the type size is very small. For me, the novelisation of Resurrection of the Daleks is far from successful. Sure, it has its good points, but for every instance of admirable prose, there’s a passage that has me wondering, “What was Saward thinking?” The author’s sardonic tone works better in his next book, based on the blackly comical Revelation of the Daleks, whose paperback edition joins the Target library at the same time as this one. Richard McGinlay
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Rome Seventh-day Adventist Church Health Message Online Bible Studies The Seventh-day Adventist Health Message The relationship of one’s religion and healthful living traces back to the Levitical Laws on health and hygiene given to the ancient Israelites while in the wilderness of their Exodus experience. The purpose certainly included the hygiene principles necessary to prevent and combat communicable diseases made possible by such gathering of people who lived and traveled together in the desert environment. Issues of sanitation were addressed. Principles of healthful living were emphasized in order to keep the desert travelers robust in body, mind, and soul. Later, fasting appears as a ready remedy for those who sought special powers or healing, for those seeking discernments, or signs of repentance. Later the New Testament drew attention to matters of temperance or self control, here again emphasizing the importance of making decisions that would give the believer an advantage in the development of his body, mind, and soul. The believer who practiced self control would have more discernment, be able to endure hardships, and be in better position to bring under control totally, the body, mind and soul. Such teachings had been lost over the centuries. By the 19th century mankind came to a new understanding of the relationship of health and hygiene and the overall health of the population. The second half of the 19th century saw dramatic increases in the awareness of sanitation and cleanliness, how foods affected health, the uses of water, air, and exercise, in the prevention and treatment of disease. Various hydrotherapies were introduced. The consumption of health foods e.g. graham crackers, the introduction of dry cereals, and proper uses of fruits and vegetables were highlighted. For mental and emotional health, sanitariums came into being which addressed the aforementioned health principles and added the care of gardens and of working outdoors, in an attempt to combat the increase of stress and nervous disorders found in an ever increasing industrial society. During this time some Adventist church leaders and health professionals assessed the exploding interest in health and hygiene and carefully gleaned principles that were of enduring nature. By combining the Biblical principles found in the Levitical Laws, the emphasis on self-control, with the emerging health and hygiene principles of the 19th century, the Seventh-day Adventist Church developed a unique teaching for the prevention and treatment of disease, that has stood the test of time. Seventh-day Adventists saw the body, mind and soul as organs that responded favorably to fresh air, sanitary and hygienic principles. Further, they saw a balance between work and conditioning exercise. A special emphasis had been placed on self control issues such as abstaining from injurious tobacco practices, alcohol, the avoidance of patent remedies of the day in favor of natural remedies, the increased care for hygiene and sanitation, and a strong emphasis on plain and simply prepared foods, all of which came to fuller appreciation in the later 20th century. The last quarter of the 20th century has witnessed the introduction of health principles for reducing fat and adding high fiber to the diet leading to a light or moderate use of meat and dairy products as preferable. This very teaching is basic to the Adventist teaching of abstaining from flesh food, the greater daily use of fruits and vegetables, and light to moderate use of dairy products, which in the nutrition world would be advocacy for a Lacto – ovo- vegetarian diet. The church’s 150 years of denouncing smoking is now supported in the scientific understanding of health problems associated with tobacco. While alcohol is still widely consumed, its deleterious effects are well known in the scientific community. The identification of natural remediesand reduced patent remedies that did more harm than good, were identified by the Seventh-day Adventist health conscience practitioners many years before science support the theory. The Seventh-day Adventist mission populations in third world countries are known for their sanitation and hygienic practices, earning the name of “the clean people”. Today Americans sit down to breakfast on dry cereals and various meatless frozen or canned entrees developed directly from grain and soy sources, thus bypassing the need for eating flesh foods. These foods were first developed in Adventist healthcare institutions and food factories. Health conscious people of today and those entering the new millennium are demanding a greater understanding of the health and hygienic principles, many of which were either first taught by Seventh-day Adventists or gleaned from the great variety of teachings that have emerged from the past two centuries. Even in the United States Dietary Guidelines 2005, greater use of whole grains, soybeans, and other legumes are recommended for protein, and the greatest emphasis is placed on plant based foods. In addition, exercise is recommended side by side with proper nutrition. The uniqueness of the Seventh-day Adventist health principles is they were far ahead of their times. Welcome! Rome SDA Church is a safe place to grow and learn about God. We want to connect with you on your spiritual journey. Mission and Service
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csgo排行榜app Philosophy is one of the most captivating and intellectually stimulating academic disciplines there is. After graduation, though, there will be bills to be paid. And those bills can’t be paid with knowledge and insight alone. The question becomes, then: what careers in philosophy are available out there in the working world? Of course, the answer to that question comes with a whole host of other concerns, including how much these positions pay and what degree requirements are needed for philosophical roles. In this article, we’ll explore some of the most common jobs in philosophy in order to provide information for those interested in pursuing a degree in philosophy. We’ll also discuss the skills philosophy students gain through their academic study and how these skills transfer to success in the workplace. Does a Degree in Philosophy Make One More Employable? There’s a fair amount of pessimism associated with employment prospects after graduation from a philosophy degree program. Because the field is so broad and doesn’t point toward a specific career path, many students fear they’ll be overlooked by employers or passed up in favor of someone with a more targeted degree. Is it possible, though, that a degree in philosophy could actually make you more employable? Absolutely! Let’s discuss the skills a philosophy degree plan can give students that transfer to a professional environment. While nearly all liberal arts curricula will facilitate solid critical thinking skills, none do it better than plans of study in philosophy. In philosophy courses, students are continually pushed to look at controversial topics from all possible angles. Professors urge students to think deeply about various subjects and viewpoints, questioning their own biases and flaws in logic. This type of extreme critical thinking becomes habitual for philosophy majors and can be quite valuable in workplace situations. The excellent critical thinking skills students gain from philosophical study go hand in hand with the development of good communication skills. That is, clear thinking promotes clear writing and clear speaking. Moreover, the majority of assignments that a philosophy major will be asked to complete will involve scholarly writing. Over the duration of the program, students will become quite skilled in the written word. As far as verbal communication is concerned, students will be asked to participate in class discussions, formal debates, and oral presentations. Ethical Analysis Much of philosophical study consists of grappling with moral dilemmas and discussing ethical behaviors and choices. These experiences teach philosophy students to reason ethically and analyze various scenarios to determine the right course of action. It’s easy to see how these skills could help someone make good decisions in the workplace. Employers often report philosophy majors to be among the most reliable and trustworthy team members they have. Best Minors and Concentrations for Philosophy Majors Philosophy is a very broad major. Adding a minor or concentration to your degree plan can help you specialize in a specific sub-field of the discipline, making you more knowledgeable in this one area. In turn, this can make you more employable in certain fields after graduation. Choosing a minor or concentration for your philosophy degree is an important decision because it can shape your academic life and career path for the foreseeable future. You’ll want to make sure that the minor or concentration you choose is an area you’re genuinely interested in and one that will help further your professional aspirations. A minor or concentration in bioethics is the ideal choice for philosophy majors interested in pursuing a health-related career. The field of bioethics marries the study of health care and ethics, tackling the issues surrounding the morality of medicine. Course titles typical of a minor or concentration in bioethics include the following: The Ethics of Medicine Sociology of Mental Health Bioethics and the Law Students with ambitions for public office or those who wish to work in public affairs or administration may benefit from a degree in philosophy with a concentration or minor in Political Science. Ultimately, students who elect a political science emphasis will study the ethics of politics. Course titles may include: Topics in Political Philosophy Philosophy, Economy, and Society An increasingly popular concentration/minor in the discipline of philosophy, the study of mathematics prepares students for further study or careers in STEM fields. Students who combine the study of mathematics with philosophy gain a broader insight into the intellectual processes that drive mathematical theories. They can expect to encounter courses like the following: Topics in Mathematical Logic Symbolic Logic The degree in philosophy with an economics concentration will facilitate the study of topics like economic theory, social justice, and economic policy. Students who hope to pursue a career in economics will benefit most from this specialty. Classes may include: Probability and Decision Theory Jobs for Professionals with an Undergraduate Degree in Philosophy There aren’t many entry-level positions in philosophy itself, but there are many related jobs in other fields and industries that are well-suited for graduates of an associate’s or bachelor’s degree program in philosophy. Paralegals and Legal Assistants Mean Annual Wage: $50,940 Job Growth Projection: 12% (Much Faster Than Average) Careers as paralegals and legal assistants are popular choices for those with an associate’s degree in philosophy. These two-year degree programs provide students with an introduction to important ethical concepts that will serve them well in the legal environment. Students enrolled in an associate’s in philosophy program will also learn how to think critically, research effectively, and write clearly—important skills for legal assistants. On the job, paralegals will be charged with helping lawyers prepare for cases by gathering facts, conducting research, and writing briefs. Marketing and Advertising Managers Mean Annual Wage: $132,620 Job Growth Projection: 8% (Faster Than Average) The unique skillset one gains from a philosophy degree program lends itself well to a career in marketing and advertising. Marketing and advertising managers, in particular, must have above average verbal and written communication skills in order to lead team initiatives and provide feedback to group members. These professionals must also have excellent critical thinking skills since they are charged with evaluating the success of marketing and advertising campaigns and developing strategies for improvement. Job Projection: 0% (Little or No Change) You may have heard it said that clear writing requires clear thinking. For philosophy majors, thinking clearly and logically is priority number one in order to make the grade. The curriculum for philosophy degrees requires that students take classes in basic logic and reasoning, and students routinely participate in debates that require a deep level of thought and analysis. All of this makes for great preparation for a career as a writer or author. Writers often work from home and make their own hours, so the career is a popular one. This means there is a lot of competition, so jobs may be difficult to find. The field can be lucrative though; the top ten percent of writers and authors in the United States earned over $120,000 per year in 2018. Social and Community Service Managers Job Projection: 13% (Much Faster Than Average) Philosophy majors study social issues in-depth, making them ideal candidates for positions as social and community service managers. In this role, graduates of philosophy degree programs will be charged with creating and overseeing initiatives to improve their local communities and social service programs. They must also rely on their excellent critical thinking skills to evaluate the effectiveness of these initiatives and plan for necessary changes and adjustments. The earning potential for this particular career can vary significantly depending on specific employment details; the lowest 10% of earners in this field earned around $40,000 in 2018 while the top 10% earned well over $100,000. Careers for Those With a Graduate Degree in Philosophy Students who hold graduate degrees in philosophy have even more career opportunities available to them. They may also have a competitive edge over job applicants with bachelor’s credentials in philosophy and have the potential to earn more, too. College/University Philosophy Professor Job Projection: 10% (Faster Than Average) Many individuals who study philosophy feel compelled to teach others about this fascinating academic discipline. Unless they plan to teach at a two-year community college, students with a desire to teach at the postsecondary level must earn their doctorate in philosophy. Clearly, this credential prepares students with the necessary knowledge of the field that they’ll need to pass on to their students in the classroom environment. Philosophy professors also need to keep abreast of any research findings and other developments in the field. Most are members of professional organizations and associations such as the American Association of Philosophy Teachers, for example. Political Scientists Median Annual Wage: $117,570 Job Projection: 5% (As Fast As Average) The field of politics covers many of the same topics that philosophy majors study in school, including morality, ethics, justice, and religion, for example. Thus, careers in political science are suitable for those with a graduate philosophy credential. The job duties of a political scientist include researching social issues, analyzing and evaluating public policy, and making projections regarding the economy and other social issues. Political scientists usually specialize in a specific sub-field of politics such as international relations, political theory, or national politics, for instance. A position as a political scientist is one of the most lucrative roles a philosophy major can pursue. Job Projection: 8% (Faster than Average) Economics might not be the first field that comes to mind when you think of jobs for philosophy majors. Many of the skills taught in philosophy classes do apply to the duties of an economist, though. For example, economists must critically evaluate economic issues and reason logically to develop solutions to problems involving the economy. Advanced research and writing skills are also helpful since economists must routinely collect, analyze, and report on economic data. Lawyer/Attorney Though it’s not the only path to a career as a lawyer or attorney, a degree in philosophy can help prepare students for the challenges they’ll face in this legal profession. A major in philosophy facilitates the development of sharp analytical skills—skills that will help attorneys inside and outside of the courtroom. As an added benefit, the philosophy curriculum acts as excellent preparation for the Law School Admission Test (LSAT). Famous/Successful People Who Majored in Philosophy If you think no one studies philosophy, you’re wrong. In fact, many celebrities and highly successful people have made philosophy their major. In this section, we’ll highlight some of these individuals. Born September 21, 1957, Ethan Coen is an American filmmaker. Alongside his brother Joel Coen, Ethan has produced numerous noteworthy movies, including Fargo (1996), The Big Lebowski (1998), No Country for Old Men (2007), and True Grit (2010). He earned his bachelor’s degree in philosophy in 1979 from Princeton University. His final paper for the program was entitled “Two Views of Wittgenstein’s Later Philosophy.” Christopher Hardwick was born on November 23, 1971, in Louisville, Kentucky. Though he studied philosophy at UCLA, graduating from the university in 1993, he ultimately pursued a career as a media personality. Hardwick has enjoyed success as a stand-up comedian, talk show host, and game show host. Most notably, he has hosted talk shows on the popular AMC television network as well as a game show on Comedy Central. Born in Los Angeles, California on April 9, 1967, Sam Harris holds a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Stanford University and a PhD in Neuroscience from the University of California- Los Angeles. Harris is considered a working philosopher, though he is also a writer and podcast host. His first nonfiction work entitled The End of Faith (2004) stayed on The New York Times Best Seller list for more than eight weeks. Herbert M. Allison The late Herbert M. Allison was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on August 2, 1943. Earning his BA in Philosophy from Yale University in 1965, Allison went on to become a successful businessman, holding many positions at the investment banking company Merrill Lynch over the course of nearly 30 years. He also acted as President and CEO of Fannie Mae. Allison ended his career by serving in public office as the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability. The late Ira Levin enjoyed a successful career as a novelist and playwright. Some of his most well-known books include A Kiss Before Dying (1953), Rosemary’s Baby (1967), and The Stepford Wives (1972). His famous play Deathtrap (1978) remains the longest-running comedy/thriller on Broadway. Born in New York City in 1929, Levin studied both English and philosophy at New York University as an undergraduate. He died in 2007. Often referred to as the “father of modern linguistics,” Noam Chomsky was born in 1928 and received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in 1955. Though he’s most well-known for his work as a linguist, he’s also made significant contributions to the field of analytical philosophy. His work in both fields is a mainstay in university coursework in both English and Philosophy courses. Frequently-Asked Questions About Careers in Philosophy More excited than ever about pursuing a career in the enthralling field of philosophy? That’s great news! Before you dive in head first, though, be sure to arm yourself with the information you need to make the pursuit an enjoyable and rewarding one. To help in this endeavor, we’ve listed some of the most frequently asked questions we receive about philosophy careers. Q: Are careers in philosophy lucrative? A: They can be. Some of the positions we’ve discussed in this very article routinely yield six-figure salaries. Keep in mind, though, that your specific wage will depend on numerous factors, including your level of education, employer, and job title. Q: Are careers in philosophy in demand? A: Many of them are, so your chances of getting a job with a philosophy degree are good. It does depend on the specific role you’re planning to assume, though. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has detailed data involving job projections for certain career paths. Q: What careers are there in philosophy? A: This is the ultimate question! And the answer is promising. There are too many careers for philosophy majors to list because the field is just that versatile. Jobs are available in industries such as business, marketing, education, and even health care. Q: Do I need a degree to work in philosophy? A: Yes. The careers we discuss here are open to applicants with a minimum of an undergraduate degree in philosophy. Q: What kind of philosophy degree do I need? A: This depends on your academic interests and career goals. There are many different types of philosophy degrees available and even more concentrations and specialization options within each type. Once you enroll in a specific philosophy college or university, an advisor can help you determine which track is most suitable for you. Q: Are dual degree options available in philosophy? A: Yes! Many colleges and universities offer dual degrees in philosophy and a related field. Some of the most common of these degree plans include: Philosophy and Law Philosophy and Computer Science Philosophy and Data Science Philosophy and Health Care Philosophy and Theology Related Rankings Top 14 Most Affordable Online Bachelor’s in Philosophy Top 50 Most Affordable Bachelor’s Degrees in Philosophy Top 10 Most Affordable Online Master’s in Philosophy Top 50 Most Affordable Master’s in Philosophy Top 10 Most Affordable Online Doctorate in Philosophy Degree Programs Top 25 Most Affordable Doctoral Degrees in Philosophy 50 csgo赛事结果 for Philosophy
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csgo买外围网站 Supply Chain Management, which is often called SCM in business, is the business practice of managing materials and information as they go from the supplier to the manufacturer. Since the flow of goods is so important in the world of business, being dedicated to effective SCM is crucial. There are several different dimensions of SCM. Some of these dimensions require management by an experienced professional with an operation management degree and others require the use of an integrated software system. Read on and learn more about the flows of SCM and what you need to know about software programs. 15 Most Affordable Online Operations Management Degree Programs (Bachelor’s) What Are the Three Flows of SCM? To really understand what goes into managing a supply chain , you need to first understand the activities that require management. These activities all have their own flows and movements.Currently three different areas of movement or flows exist in SCM: Product Flow, Information Flow, Finance Flow. In the product flow, products or materials will move from the supplier to the customer. This is also the flow where returns are sent from the customer to the supplier. In the information flow, orders are transmitted to the supplier and the supplier will receive special updates on deliveries and delays. In the final flow, the financial flow, payments schedules are updated and credit offers are extended. Since every flow is unique, there are different systems that should be learned. Different Types of SCM Software Systems In today’s world, any business that offers the public or other businesses products and services needs to find a way to streamline the supply-side of their activities. By taking the time to streamline the processes, the company can keep their cost of goods competitive and also maximize customer value to retain their clients. One way to ensure everything is streamlined is to integrate the right types of SCM software systems and applications. The two most common and most popular types of SCM systems that exist today are planning and executing applications. The planning software system will use formulas and industry-standard algorithms to use data from inside and outside of the enterprise to predict or project what the best way to fill an order will be. The purpose is to fill the order quickly from the best location to keep the operation costs down and to stay most profitable. Execution software programs focus on the processes after orders are filled and before they are delivered. Within these programs, the products and packages will be tracked and the physical status will always be stored and easily accessible. The purpose of this system is so that materials and packaging can be shared or managed in the blink of an eye. With all of the companies that are operating online or trying to compete with purely online businesses, supply chain management has never been more important. Companies really need to compare e-commerce or web-based applications that have all of the SCM features that are needed to manage their resources, to reduce costs and to plan for their needs in the near future. When a company is fully stocked but does not have too much inventory, they can keep their product management costs down while keeping their satisfaction ratings up. Be sure that you really get knowledgeable in supply chain management and stay on top of your supply chain flow.
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2 Oct, 2017 100 × 100 B.ed Teaching Staff
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14 14 7 7 42 4:30 PM PT5:30 PM MT6:30 PM CT7:30 PM ET11:30 PM GMT7:30 AM 北京时间4:30 PM MST6:30 PM EST, Oct. 29, 2022 Folsom Field, Boulder, Colorado Attendance: 40,334 Arizona State racks up 557 yards, beats Colorado 42-34 By CRAIG MEYER BOULDER, Colo. (AP) Trenton Bourguet threw for 435 yards and three touchdowns, all of which went to tight end Jalin Conyers, and Xazavian Valladay ran for three touchdowns as Arizona State racked up 557 total yards and held off a late push for a 42-34 victory against Colorado on Saturday night. Utilizing an up-tempo attack, the Sun Devils (3-5, 2-3 Pac-12) scored a touchdown on each of their first two drives, going a combined 139 yards in 15 plays. Making his first career start, Bourguet completed his first nine passes for 161 yards. On its way to a 28-17 halftime lead, an Arizona State offense that entered the night averaging 353.6 yards had put up 327 while averaging 8.4 yards per play. It finished the game with 10 plays of at least 20 yards. "Getting on field and looking how they were playing defense, I kind of had a feeling that me and (tight end) Messiah (Swinson) were going to have a good day," Conyers said. Despite allowing those gaudy offensive numbers, Colorado (1-7, 1-4) remained competitive for much of the first half. On a third-and-12 late in the second quarter, Buffaloes quarterback J.T. Shrout found freshman wide receiver Jordyn Tyson in stride for a 58-yard touchdown to get within 21-17. The Sun Devils, however, responded with a nine-play, 75-yard drive, capped by a 1-yard touchdown plunge from Valladay. Arizona State led by at least 15 points for much of the second half, but an 88-yard punt return for a touchdown from Tyson got Colorado within 42-34 with 3:50 remaining. The Sun Devils were able to mount a seven-play, 36-yard drive that ran out the clock. "The plays haven't changed," Arizona State interim head coach Shaun Aguano said. "The template changed. The play calling changed. It is gratifying. I'm crossing my fingers on the sideline hoping it works, but the kids bought in. They trusted the changes that I made and I'm grateful for that." Valladay, the Football Bowl Subdivision active leader in career yards rushing, ran for 118 yards, giving the Wyoming transfer more than 4,000 for his career. Shrout was 13-of-34 passing for 222 yards with two touchdowns. Tyson had 115 yards receiving along with his two touchdowns, the third-highest total for a true freshman in program history. Deion Smith added 111 yards rushing and a score for the Buffaloes. "You think about the scoreline being 42-20. What's happened throughout the course of the year when the scoreline looks like that? That's why a lot of people left," Colorado interim head coach Mike Sanford said, referring to a thinned-out home crowd in the fourth quarter. "But I'm going to tell those people that left that this team's going to fight to the very end and there will be a breakthrough. I believe that." In a battle of teams with interim head coaches, Arizona State earned its second-consecutive victory against Colorado. It scored a combined 77 points in those contests. With the loss, the Buffaloes secured their 15th sub-.500 record in the past 17 seasons. In the previous 21 seasons, they finished with a losing record just three times. Arizona State linebacker Kyle Soelle, who entered the night third in the FBS in tackles, left the game in the third quarter but later returned. . Colorado freshman tight end Caleb Fauria had to be helped off the field after a 3-yard catch in the first quarter. He did not return. . Arizona State safety Chris Edmonds left the game late in the first half, but he later returned and had an interception. . Colorado linebacker Josh Chandler-Semedo left the game in the fourth quarter, but was able to walk off the field and later returned. Arizona State hosts No. 12 UCLA on Saturday. Colorado hosts No. 8 Oregon on Saturday.
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Websites like these feature a large number of sexy Latin women, and allow one to customize your by choosing the sex you want and other significant characteristics. There are many benefits to choosing a Latin bride as a postal mail order woman. Not only do you get a chance to meet fabulous women from around the world, however you can also be promised that the woman you select will be loyal and trusted. Most Latin mail purchase brides keep in touch with their loved ones. Remember that Latin women often just like a guy who can provide them with attention. Be patient and understand her culture. Don’t be too ruthless or confrontational inside your approach to going out with Latin women. Instead, become balanced and possess her that you’re here worthy of her time and focus. 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Asian females may not be the most https://studymaterialonline.150startups.com/2021/08/14/inquiries-to-ask-upon-online-dating/ opportunistic partners, however they will give you the interest you are worthy of. As such, they may be the best companions meant for the man who have prefers a relaxed lifestyle. Finally, need not afraid to look for a girl with great sight. Many Hard anodized cookware women possess very beautiful eye that European men won’t be able to disregard. Some declare the eyes are the window towards the soul. They also tend to have well-groomed epidermis. http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png 0 0 webadmin http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png webadmin2022-04-18 00:00:002022-04-18 00:00:00Finding an Hard anodized cookware Girlfriend How to Make a Second Marriage Work If you’re thinking about trying an additional marriage, you should consider the initial challenges that this type of romantic relationship presents. To become successful, interaction is crucial, of course, if there are any issues, make sure you address them early on. When you’re remarrying with children, make sure you communicate with the ex whenever possible. Keep in mind that your ex will always be a part of your children’s lives. It isn’t essential to like your ex girlfriend or boyfriend spouse, however, you need to in least bear them in good terms. 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A second marriage requires commitment and effort on both equally sides. It’s important to develop trust simply by learning https://brightbrides.org/mail-order-brides-reviews/asiandate to be weak and open with your partner. Be sure to practice interaction, appreciation, weeknesses, and conflict resolution skills prior to big day. In this way, you can support your partner appreciate your emotional needs. Although a second relationship can be challenging, it is possible to produce it work. You can learn from your initial marriage and use the skills within a new position. You can also refine the relationship skills and become a better partner. http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png 0 0 webadmin http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png webadmin2022-04-17 00:00:002022-04-17 00:00:00How to Make a Second Marriage Work Buying a Wife? Established Ways to Find the Perfect Woman For You If you’re looking for a wife although don’t know how to start, there are several proven ways to fulfill the perfect female for find a foreign wife you. The first thing to finding a wife is usually to broaden your circle of friends and acquaintances. Appear socializing with people, try starting a new relationship with old co-workers and friends. Additionally, you can sign up for a charity or community group and meet like-minded individuals who can become potential girlfriends or wives. If you’re religious, you can find a wife in your community center or other places where you worship. If you’re looking for that wife, make sure that you stay compatible with her values and goals. Guys want their very own wives to share the values, be effective and sociable. They also desire to be with somebody who shares their ambitions and challenges. The main factor in locating a wife will be a good spouse. It’s very essential for both of you to get along and build a strong romance. Listed below are some ways to find the correct woman in your case. Do your research. Before signing program any dating site, do some research over the woman’s nationality and track record. Make sure that you’re getting the right woman — some sites are better than other folks. Be sure to have a look at user feedback, also. If you can’t look for a wife out of your home country, consider marrying an individual from abroad. A foreign woman can provide a much better life partner than a native. Select a godly wife. A godly wife can be a woman who have shares your own personal beliefs. Whether she is a Christian or not really, it doesn’t warranty you’ll be able to be equal in your romance with God. A godly wife is certainly someone who can help you develop spiritually and make your marital life a strong you. You should consider her background, figure, and beliefs before making a decision on a wife. Mail order wives undoubtedly are a viable replacement for traditional online dating sites. These girls are usually satisfied with the looks and can easily make money. However , make sure to check the track record of your potential wife ahead of deciding to sign up with any kind of romance company. It’s also important not to pay for pub in any such agency or discuss the intentions with your prospective other half. Some of these companies have bogus brides who have swindle males into relationship. Some guys are wondering what nationality the actual best girlfriends or wives. Different countries have different objectives, and ladies from one region are often viewed as better spouses than those from one more. For example , Asian European females are good girlfriends or wives for men due to their eye-catching presence, high education level, and centurial figures. And the ideal thing about these women is that they are often times available on Russian dating sites. Should you be looking for a wife from some other country, they have likely that you’re going to find an eye-catching woman with this continent! There are also a better half in Latina America. These women are charming, emotional, and make a marriage memorable. That they no longer rush to obey and live a measured existence, making them your best option for any man looking for a partner. If you’re buying wife from Latin America, you might want to look in Brazil, Republic of colombia, or South america. Interracial marriages have become well-known over the years, and there’s a growing success rate. For anyone who is looking for a partner, you may also want to look into Philippine ladies. They are warm and friendly, and they are looking for somebody who will love all of them and be dedicated. Filipino females are also wonderful wives since that they expect the husbands to provide for them monetarily. This is a great way to find a wife who shares your passions. You’ll be shocked at the multiplicity of women you will discover there. When you’re looking for a wife from foreign, you’ll have to figure out the legalities of getting married in the destination region. The process differs depending on the country of origins, and it can run you money. Additionally , you’ll have to figure out foreign partnerships are legal in your vacation spot country. This can be difficult if your fiancee is not a citizen of the US. Once you’ve sorted out the legalities, you can begin searching for your wife. You’ll likely look for a woman exactly who shares the interests and values. Using this method, you’ll have the very best chance of establishing a lifelong my with a woman you love. Additionally, she’ll be happy to spend quality time with you. Although make sure that you have a woman who’s compatible with your own personality and your standard of living. http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png 0 0 webadmin http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png webadmin2022-04-15 00:00:002022-04-15 00:00:00Buying a Wife? Established Ways to Find the Perfect Woman For You How to Start a Romantic Romance With a Ukrainian Girl If you are looking to begin a romantic relationship with a Ukrainian girl, there are a few things you ought to know. Ukraine is a very mental country, and women through the region tend to be impressionable. They also react in a different way to different conditions, and it is necessary to be aware of your surroundings once approaching a woman from this portion of the world. For instance , you may get a bright and beautiful girl break meals or pack up her bags, but your sweetheart may be actress’ out of resentment. To make a woman more interested in you, be sure you are thoughtful of her needs and wishes. Ukrainian women prefer to be considerate of others, therefore be thoughtful of their period and thoughts. You have to be patient and wait for a few how to date ukrainian women dates to find out how the woman responds https://russiansbrides.com/ukrainian-brides to your innovations. After all, physical affection is among the most reliable indications of feelings. Ukrainian ladies also want to pamper their particular men. They can be superb cooks and definitely will go out of their way to build their guy feel special. They have attractive people and are fun to hold out with. Ukrainian females also have a strong perception of self-esteem. They do not like cheating or going out of their partner. Ukrainian https://www.linandjirsa.com/photography-tips-for-brides/ gals have a very good sense of hospitality. This kind of tradition means they love to give the other person gifts. Usually, they will give you a basket of flowers or a memorabilia from her country. Ukrainian ladies need men who are able to be open-minded, and who all are ready to pursue their own self-development. http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png 0 0 webadmin http://stefanosfoundationng.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Stefanos-logo-1-300x138.png webadmin2022-04-15 00:00:002022-04-15 00:00:00How to Start a Romantic Romance With a Ukrainian Girl
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Jesus Teaches About Prayer Memory Verse: 2 BEFORE READING PLEASE CLICK HERE TO SEE JESUS' LATER MINISTRY TRAVELS. I. The Lord's Prayer (1-4) >1. What does it mean that Jesus prayed? * Luke 11:1a "One day Jesus was praying in a certain place." * "One day" -Luke may not be following chronological order. * Matthew 6:9-13 places the Lord's Prayer in the Sermon on the Mount. It's possible that Jesus taught this more then once, then to many, then later specifically to his disciples when they asked him how to pray. * "Jesus was praying" -Jesus often went to his Father for direction, strength, comfort, and help. * "in a certain place" -By saying Jesus was praying in a certain place Luke indicates that he prayed there often and before. Jesus was often on the move so how might this be possible? If this is in chronological order, then Jesus was on his way to Jerusalem. Jesus had taken many trips to Jerusalem. This was probably a regular stopping place for him. * As God Jesus is prayed to. As man he prayed to God his Father. Though he was a Son he learned and was obedience in prayer. * "praying" -Communication with God. >What request did his disciples make of him? * Luke 11:1b "When he finished, one of his disciples said to him, 'Lord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples.'" * Jesus' disciples were uneducated. They had not learned under a great Jewish spiritual leader before Jesus called them, though some had known of John the Baptist. This is the same as saying they had not gone to seminary school. * "When he finished" -The disciples waited for Jesus to finish out of respect. * "one of his disciples said to him" -Perhaps at the consent of other disciples. * "teach us to pray" -Asking Jesus to teach us things is good even though we know he teaches us things. We can even ask how to pray while we are praying. * The disciple asked Jesus HOW to pray, not WHAT to pray. >Why? (When had they seen Jesus pray before? [9:18, 29, etc.]) * Luke 9:18 "Once when Jesus was praying in private and his disciples were with him, he asked them, 'Who do the crowds say I am?'" * Luke 9:29 "As he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and his clothes became as bright as a flash of lightening." * They had seen John and his disciples pray as well as Jesus praying. They too wanted to learn how to pray. They obviously had not or at least not prayed much outside of a synagogue. * Jesus often prayed. He was an example to them. We can be an example to others. * Psalm 109:4, "I am a man of prayer." >Why did they mention John's disciples? * Some of them had been with John the Baptist. (John 1) * They had seen John preach and raise up disciples. * They had seen John teach his disciples to pray and how to pray. * Perhaps they were envious of John's disciples. * We should teach others to pray. * "When you pray" -Here Jesus is referring to a time and place set aside to commune with God whether corporately and/or privately one-to-one. >2. What are the prayer topics Jesus gave? (2-4) * Luke 11:2-4 "'Father, hallowed by your name, your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread. Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us. And lead us not into temptation.''" * Five prayer topics 1) God's name to be holy 2) God's kingdom to come 3) daily bread to come 4) sins to be forgiven 5) lead not into temptation * All are asking for something to be done in the here and now and in the future. All are active. >Which ones are about God's concerns, and which are about our personal needs and problems? * The model of prayer that Jesus gives is a petition prayer more than anything else. It is asking God for something. * The first two concern God, the last three are about personal needs and problems. * God is first for prayer is communicating with him as he is, not as we believe he is. His identity and interest should be first. * God already knows everything. So why pray asking for things? Prayer is communicating with God, part of a normal healthy relationship. God wants and we need to ask him in our conversations with him. Do we have a loving relationship with someone and then not want to talk with them? * The sinful nature asks for needs first and often without addressing God as he is and deserves. * Without proper perspective our sinful nature controls us and leads us to be stuck in our needs. By first focusing on God we will be more inclined to size up our needs, concerns, and interest properly without getting carried away by them. * The Lord's prayer was written in Greek as is most of the New Testament. However, the thought pattern and expression are Jewish. Yet, Jesus' teaching here went against some long established pre-first century Jewish thoughts and beliefs about prayer. It is true that at this time some Jewish prayers began resembling Jesus' teaching here. Whether or not these Jewish prayers came into existence because the first century Christians were repeating Jesus' teaching here or (as some have claimed) Jesus was borrowing on these prayers is hard to tell. Still, the Jewish religious leaders were so offended by Jesus referring to God as his father that they tried to kill him (John 5:18); thus establishing that they would have never thought of God as their individual own personal father and would not have addressed the Lord God as such in prayer before Jesus taught this to this disciples. They did consider God the father of the nation Israel, but not as their individual personal father. This tends to point to the fact that Jesus' teaching here was mostly unique and shortly after his teaching it was adapted in non-Christian Jewish prayers. * Some assumptions are made in this prayer; God is true, God is good, God is passionate, God is all powerful, God is able to answer, God wants to answer, and God will answer. * This prayer is a corporate prayer. "Our", "us" and "we" are constantly used throughout the prayer. This image to the right is of Jesus teaching his disciples to pray appears in "Brevis institutio" (1549), or "Brief Instruction in Catholic Piety," based on Michael Helding's sermons in the Mainz cathedral from 1542-1544. >3. How does Jesus teach us to address God? * "When you pray, say: 'Father.'" * "say" -The original Greek word is "lego" referring to verbal conversations. We can pray in our head and our spirit, but here Jesus refers to speaking out loud when we pray in private and publicly. * "Father" -The original Greek word is "Pater" referring to one's personal male parent. Calling God Father in this concept was a new teaching, considered heretical to the Jewish teachers of the Law (scribes) and Pharisees. (John 5:18) The Greeks and Romans would have laughed at anyone who stated that God was their father because their belief systems taught that Uranus (the Roman Caelus) the supreme first god had children who were called Titans, lesser gods and then was castrated. So to them if anyone called God father, he either considered himself a Titan (laughable) or was ill-informed about god's castration. * Some early Greek manuscripts have "Hemon Pater" meaning "Our Father". Matthew's version is "Our Father". * When we don't recognize that God is our Father we are lonely and anchor-less. We wonder here, there and everywhere trying to find something or someone to be our daddy. >What does it mean to call God "Father"? * It means that we can have a personal 1-to-1 relationship with God as one would have with a perfect human father. * God is not an abstract force or power or the all of nature. He is not inanimate or unemotional. * God desires a close relationship with us. He is our true Father even though we don't love and respect him as such. He wants us to act like his children. * Through Jesus we are children of God. Through Jesus we have a personal relationship with God. Through Jesus we enter the very throne room of God. Through Jesus we inherit all that is our Heavenly Father's. * The Father is the head of the family. A good father is love, power, protection, authority, and provider. * The parable of the two sons (aka the prodigal son) shows us God as our Father. >What does this teach about our basic relationship with him? * It means that I look to God as my Father. It means he looks at me as his son. * God is loving, patient, kind, good, faithful, gentle, long suffering, and forgiving in his dealing with me. * God disciplines, trains, and raises me up to be like his one and only true Son, Jesus. * It means I can look up to him with respect, pride and awe. * It means I can completely trust him and have absolute faith in him. * Romans 8:15-17 "For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship. And by him we cry, "Abba, Father." The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God's children. Now if we are children, then we are heirs--heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory." * Galatians 4:6-7 "Because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out, "Abba, Father." So you are no longer a slave, but a son; and since you are a son, God has made you also an heir." * Mark 14:36 "Abba, Father," he said, "everything is possible for you. Take this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will." * Ephesians 3:14-15 "For this reason I kneel before the Father, from whom his whole family in heaven and on earth derives its name. * Hebrews 2:11-12 "Both the one who makes men holy and those who are made holy are of the same family. So Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers. He says, "I will declare your name to my brothers; in the presence of the congregation I will sing your praises." >What does it mean that we all call him Father? (Matthew 6:9, "our") * Matthew 6:9 "This, then, is how you should pray: 'Our Father in heaven...''" * It means that physically all people in the world are my brothers and sister. * It means that spiritually all true Christians are my brothers and sister. We are all seen as the same in God's eyes. He treats us in the same way. * It means we should love one another as a brother or sister. * It means we should respect one another as a brother or a sister. * It means we should help one another as a brother or a sister. * 1 Corinthians 1:10-11 "I appeal to you, brothers, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree with one another so that there may be no divisions among you and that you may be perfectly united in mind and thought. My brothers, some from Chloe's household have informed me that there are quarrels among you." * James 2:1 "My brothers, as believers in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ, don't show favoritism." * Galatians 6:10 "Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers." This image to the right is of Jesus teaching his disciples to pray as a woman kneels before him. >4. What does "Hallowed be you name" mean? * "Hallowed be your name" according the the NIV. Other English translations have "Holy be your name". * "Hallowed" -The original Greek "hagiazo" means "to make or regard with awe and fear, to be perfect and purity, to sanctify and consecrate." * Asking for God to be holy is from a personal, congregational, and world point of origin. It looks forward to the day that all will call God holy. * God's holiness is a deep and complicated subject. Often we consider holy as a pure, yet is much more than pure. Holy is perfection in love, power, wisdom, knowledge, presence, thought, action, joy, pleasure, time, faith, hope, and being. * Restore creation's original order, by giving God respect and awe. * God's name would be "hallowed," or "sanctified," "shown holy," in the time of the end, when his kingdom would come. This idea was biblical (Isaiah 5:16; Isaiah 29:23; Ezekiel 36:23; Ezekiel 38:23; Ezekiel 39:7, 27; cf. Zech. 14:9). >What does it mean practically to honor or glorify God's name? (John 17:4; and 1 Peter 4:13) * John 17:4 "'I have brought you glory on earth by completing the work you gave me to do.'" * 1 Peter 4:13 "But rejoice that you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed." * On the personal level to bring honor to God with our life, words, actions, hearts, and all of us. * At many times this means that we not bring honor to ourself. * Jesus glorified God by sacrificing himself in obedience. Jesus' suffering brings God glory. Jesus did not suffer because he sinned. He suffered because we sinned and he wanted that sin to be removed. * John 12:27-28 "Now my heart is troubled, and what shall I say? 'Father, save me from this hour'? No, it was for this very reason I came to this hour. Father, glorify your name!" Then a voice came from heaven, "I have glorified it, and will glorify it again." * John 17:1 "After Jesus said this, he looked toward heaven and prayed: "Father, the time has come. Glorify your Son, that your Son may glorify you." >What does it mean to dishonor his name? (Romans 2:24) * Romans 2:24 "You who brag about the law, do you dishonor God by breaking the law? As it is written: God's name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you.'" * In the present God's people could hallow his name by living rightly; if they lived wrongly, Jewish teachers observed, they would "profane" his name, or bring it into disrepute among the nations. (Bible Background Commentary - The IVP Bible Background Commentary - New Testament.) >5. What does it mean to pray "Your kingdom come"? (Matthew 6:10) * God's kingdom coming is from a personal, congregational, and world (historical) point of origin. * God's kingdom in this age is a spiritual kingdom. It is wherever God rules. God rules with justice, righteousness, gentleness, mercy, holiness, and love. * God's kingdom is not fully established yet. Many have not accepted Jesus as Saviour and Lord, and so are not in God's kingdom. So we should pray for them. * When a person enters the kingdom of God they begin to resist Satan's and the world's influence in their life. They turn away from sin and rebellion enticed by the sinful nature, and turn towards God's will powered by the Holy Spirit. * God's kingdom is wherever God rules absolutely and completely in love, peace and security. * Previous commentaries on Luke concern more about the kingdom of God. See Section III, question 6 in Luke 14 study. and See Section II in Luke 15 study. The kingdom of God is one of the subjects of the manuscript "The Believers Future - Hope that Inspires" also found on this web site. >What does it mean personally? * In the personal life it means that Jesus comes into the heart, that he may rule there. * God's kingdom in our heart is when we accept Jesus as our personal King and Lord of our life. * God's kingdom in this age is not a geological location, its his people. * Jesus frees us from the kingdom and power of sin and Satan. * Evidence is given in Romans 1:5, "peace and apostleship". * Have you turned over absolute control of your life to Jesus? Do you fear his and his control? Have you trust in yourself or someone else to be the king of your life. John 14:1 records Jesus tell us, "Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God; trust also in me." See also Romans 15:13. >For the world and history? * God's kingdom coming in this age is the church. God's kingdom is spreading to all people around the world when they accept and enter a 1-to-1 personal relation with him. God's kingdom is now in a believer's heart. * God's kingdom coming from the world (historical) point of view is when Jesus comes again as he promised to establish his rule over the world. His coming will remove Satan's rule. * Satan is currently the prince of this world. John 12:30-32 records Jesus saying, "This voice was for your benefit, not mine. Now is the time for judgment on this world; now the prince of this world will be driven out. But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself." And in John 16:8-11 he is recorded as saying, "When he (the Holy Spirit) comes, he will convict the world of guilt in regard to sin and righteousness and judgment: in regard to sin, because men do not believe in me; in regard to righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no longer; and in regard to judgment, because the prince of this world now stands condemned." * Jesus is the kingdom of God. Luke 11:20 records him saying, "But if I drive out demons by the finger of God, then the kingdom of God has come to you." * God's will is not followed on earth as it is in heaven in this age. The image to the right is a seventeenth century Dutch scene of a family prayer at mealtime. It illustrates Jesus' instruction on prayer. The monogram of the artist, Christoffel van Sichem (1546-1624), appears at the upper right. >6. What is the first petition about our personal needs? * Luke 11:3 "Give us each day our daily bread." * Daily bread is whatever is needed to maintain our existence; spiritual bread and physical bread. * John 6:35 "Then Jesus declared, "I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty." John 6:49-51 "Your forefathers ate the manna in the desert, yet they died. But here is the bread that comes down from heaven, which a man may eat and not die. I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever. This bread is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world." * On the physical level it may be food, water, ect. * On the spiritual level it is Jesus. Jesus said, "'Now this is eternal life; that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent.'" (John 17:3) And "In him was life, and that life was the light of men." (Jn. 1:4) Jesus is the word of God. (Jn. 1:1,14) So the Bible his words are our spiritual food. "'The words I have spoken to you are spirit and they are life.'" (Jn 6:63b) * When Abraham didn't pray during a famine he went into Egypt and got in trouble. (Genesis 12:10-20) >Why "daily"? (Proverbs 30:8b-9a; Ex 16:14-21) * Proverbs 30:8b-9 "...give me neither poverty nor riches, but give me only my daily bread. Otherwise, I may have too much and disown you and say, 'Who is the LORD?' Or I may becaome poor and steal and so dishonor the name of my God." * Exodus 16:14-21 "'This is what the LORD has commanded: 'Each one is to gather as much as he needs. Take an omer for each person you have in your tent.' The Israelites did as they were told; some gathered much, some little. And when they measured it by the omer, he who gathered much did not have too much, and he who gathered little did not have too little. Each one gathered as much as he needed.''" * Deuteronomy 8:2-3 "Remember how the LORD your God led you all the way in the desert these forty years, to humble you and to test you in order to know what was in your heart, whether or not you would keep his commands. He humbled you, causing you to hunger and then feeding you with manna, which neither you nor your fathers had known, to teach you that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the LORD." * God trains us through "daily" bread in faith to rely on him. * The Israelites manna was also daily; to much and we forget God, to little and we fall into depression and may dishonor and curse God. Deuteronomy 8:3 records Moses tell the Israelites, "He humbled you, causing you to hunger and then feeding you with manna, which neither you nor your fathers had known, to teach you that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the LORD." And in Deuteronomy 8:16, "He gave you manna to eat in the desert, something your fathers had never known, to humble and to test you so that in the end it might go well with you." * Each person's needs may be different. * Each day we need to come to God for life for our entire existence. >What does it mean to pray for "our" daily bread? * "our" -We should recognize and pray for others needs not just our own. * Love is required to pray for other's needs. * God wants us to pray for each other's needs. Often he provides for his people through his people's prayer and action. * This is the same meaning as when above it states "our father". We are to pray for and recognize others in our prayer. An example of praying for and helping others in need was taught by Jesus is Luke 16:19-20 which states,"'There was a rich man who was dress in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every day. At his gate was laid a beggar named Lazarus, covered with sores and longing to eat what fell from the rich man's table. Even the dogs came and liked his sores.'" >7. What is the second petition about our personal need? * Luke 11:4a "Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us." * Matthew records sins here as debts. * Continually we need to ask for forgiveness, for even the best of us sin sometimes after we come into a personal relationship with Jesus. So we need to continually ask for forgiveness. * Jesus is not saying that human forgiveness can merit forgiving of another's sin against God. Nor is Jesus saying we can induce God to forgive another for sins they had committed towards God. Rather, he is saying we should forgive someone who has sinned against us. * Jesus is not saying we forgive in general. Rather, he is saying we should forgive exact and particular to one sin or a series of sins that are connected. >Why is it important to ask for forgiveness? * Without forgiveness of sin we remain in a state of having a broken relationship with God. At the end of this worldly life we will go to hell. * If we sin once a day by twenty-four we will have committed 3,760 sins. * Our sins are taken away, but our sinful nature is still with us until we physically die. * God forgives us whether we ask for it or not. He forgives knowing we still possess the ability to sin in the exact way again. He does not forget our sinful nature. Rather, he is fully aware of it and forgives us anyway. Similar, when we forgive someone we should accept that they have in them the sinful nature which could compel them to commit the exact same sin against us again. * When we ask God to forgive us we must have a desire to not want to sin in that way again. So, if someone asks for our forgiveness they should sincerely want to stop doing what they are doing against us. * We need to be generous towards others as God is generous towards us. >How can we receive the grace of forgiveness? (John 3:16; Matthew 1:21; John 1:29) * John 3:16 "'For God so loved that world that he sent his one and only Son that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.'" * Matthew 1:21 "'She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.'" * John 1:29 "The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, 'Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!'" * Through Jesus' blood our sins are removed once and for all. However, God's work in our concerning sin is a life long process. Jesus told Peter in John 13:7-10 "You do not realize now what I am doing, but later you will understand." "No," said Peter, "you shall never wash my feet." Jesus answered, "Unless I wash you, you have no part with me." "Then, Lord," Simon Peter replied, "not just my feet but my hands and my head as well!" Jesus answered, "A person who has had a bath needs only to wash his feet; his whole body is clean. And you are clean, though not every one of you." * Jesus on the cross prayed, "Father forgive them." (Luke 23:34) * Romans 12:17-21 "Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of everybody. If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God's wrath, for it is written: "It is mine to avenge; I will repay," says the Lord. On the contrary: "If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink. In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head." Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good." >Why must we forgive others? (Matthew 18:21-35) * Matthew 18:21 "Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, "Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother when he sins against me? Up to seven times?"" * Matthew 18:35 "This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother from your heart." * Because God forgave us many sins. * Forgiving others is seldom easy, especially those who are close to us. Since we recognize that we sin every day, we should understand that others do to. Those who are close to us may hurt us when they sin. Since God is willing and does forgive his children we should too. * Forgiving others should be from the heart. * We need to have faith in God's work in ourselves and others. >8. What is the third personal petition? * Luke 11:4b "And lead us not into temptation." * "temptation" -To be incised to go against God and God's desire and will. * We need to acknowledge our need for God to protect and lead us. If he does not we will be tempted and fail. We need to ask for his help. * "lead" -God leads and we must follow his lead. (Mark 1:12) * We need to trust God's lead. >Why should we pray not to be led into temptation? (1 Peter 5:8; and 1 Corinthians 10:12) * 1 Peter 5:8 "Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour." * 1 Corinthians 10:12 "So, if you think you are standing firm, be careful that you don't fall!" * God does not tempt us. (James 1:13-15) * If we fail during tempting, we fall from grace, but not so far that God is unable to forgive us. * Pride can lead us not to pray for God's leading away from temptation. Self righteousness makes us fail to acknowledge we fell to temptation. * Jesus was lead by the Spirit into the desert to be tempted by the devil at the beginning of his ministry. II. The Spirit of Prayer (5-13) >9. What does the parable in verses 5-8 teach about the effectiveness of bold and persistent prayer? * Luke 11:5-8 "Then he said to them, "Suppose one of you has a friend, and he goes to him at midnight and says, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread, because a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have nothing to set before him.' "Then the one inside answers, 'Don't bother me. The door is already locked, and my children are with me in bed. I can't get up and give you anything.' I tell you, though he will not get up and give him the bread because he is his friend, yet because of the man's boldness he will get up and give him as much as he needs. * This parable is unique to Luke's gospel. * "'yet because of the man's boldness he will get up and give him as much as he needs.'" -The key work here is "boldness" meaning boldness got the desired results of the request. * "a friend of mine on a journey has come to me" -Hospitality was very important in Jesus' day." * "The door is already locked, and my children are with me in bed" -An entire family slept in the same room in Jesus' day. The only bed was covers and cushions lying on the floor. If one were to get up all would wake up. Putting children in bed and keeping them in bed is often hard work. * Jesus truly wants us to pray by faith. * "boldness" -persistent is another translation possibility. * Jesus is not saying that God is slow to answer because he is selfish as the man in the parable, but that God who is kind will act much better than the man in the parable. We cannot be troublesome to God who loves us. * "as much as he needs" -Not more, not less. >What are the instructions and promises in verses 9 and 10? * Luke 11:9-10 "'So I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened.'" * Be bold when asking things from God. * Pray until we receive and answer; be bold, confident, and earnest. * Why does God want this? So we remember he did it, not us. The more we come to him and acknowledge our need of him, the more we will remember it was his work as an answer to continual prayer. This also builds a stronger relationship between us and God. Through this kind of prayer we learn faith and grow in faith. * Jacob would not let go of God until he got what he wanted. This is when God changed his name to Israel. (Genesis 32:23-30) >What do verses 11-13 teach about God and prayer? * Luke 11:11-13 "Which of you fathers, if your son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead? Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!" * He gives us what is good for us. He knows what we need. * He loves us. He is affectionate. * Pray for specific things is acceptable. * God gives good things when we ask for them. * He gives as a loving father does in spite of ourselves. * "son" -young lad. >About the best gift God wants to give us if we ask? * "how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!'" * See verses 2-4, the Lord's example of prayer. * The Holy Spirit gives us life and knowledge of Jesus, our Saviour and Lord. The Holy Spirit empowers us to stay in God's will, resist temptation, and live according to God's design. * This is a promise. * If a child asked for a snake or scorpion the father out of love would not give it. III. Jesus and Beelzebub (14-28) The image to the right is by Melanchthon, Philipp, 1497-1560. Jesus casts out a demon, enabling a mute man to speak. >10. Why were some amazed at Jesus' and others condescending? (14-16) Who is Beelzebub? How is asking for a sign like this wrong? * Luke 11:14-16 "Jesus was driving out a demon that was mute. When the demon left, the man who had been mute spoke, and the crowd was amazed. But some of them said, "By Beelzebub, the prince of demons, he is driving out demons." Others tested him by asking for a sign from heaven." * Matthew 12:24-37 record a similar if not the same event. * "driving out a demon that was mute" -When we were in Satan's kingdom we were like this man. We had multiple problems. We were susceptible to demon control, to blind to see God and his work, and dumb to speak of God and worship God. * "When the demon left" -Just as Jesus healed this blind man, so when we became a part of his kingdom, Jesus healed us. Jesus cast out other demons from people and healed others that are not recorded in the Bible. Why then this event? Perhaps because it is the foreground the vary important events that follows. After this Jesus teaches about himself and the way his work is done, through the Holy Spirit. Jesus also teaches about different reactions one can have to the Holy Spirit and result of rejecting the Holy Spirit. * "Beelzebub, the prince of demons" -In Greek "Beelzeboul". It is of Chaldee origin meaning; "dung-god; Beelzebul, a name of Satan." Thus, it means "Lord of the manure pile" or "Lord of the Flies" because flies always buzz around waist piles. * Matthew 12:38 records who was asking for a sign. "Then some of the Pharisees and teachers of the law said to him, 'Teacher, we want to see a miraculous sign from you.'" * Faith is not made by seeing and then believing. Faith is believing what is not seen. God wants us to have faith, trust him and his love. When we have faith we will see God's work in and around us. The image to the right is by Luther, Martin, 1483-1546. Jesus Answers the Pharisees in the Temple. >How did Jesus show that the Pharisees' thinking was nonsense? (17-20) What should have Jesus' work signify to them? (20) * Luke 11:17-20 "Jesus knew their thoughts and said to them: "Any kingdom divided against itself will be ruined, and a house divided against itself will fall. If Satan is divided against himself, how can his kingdom stand? I say this because you claim that I drive out demons by Beelzebub. Now if I drive out demons by Beelzebub, by whom do your followers drive them out? So then, they will be your judges. But if I drive out demons by the finger of God, then the kingdom of God has come to you." * "Jesus knew their thoughts" -When Jesus was on this earth he was man. But he was more than a man. Jesus was and is and always will be God. I do not understand the full meaning of this. I can understand how he could be man and God simultaneous. But I do not understand how he could have all the attributes of God, probably because I don't understand all the attributes of God. I can't even understand all the attributes of this universe. I don't even understand myself that well. Yet, my lack of understanding does not take away from the fact of the truth. Knowing their thoughts Jesus knew what to say to help them accept the truth. Some did, but most stubbornly refused to accept the truth. Whether we accept the truth, or reject it (choosing to ignore it) is what Jesus lets us do. Jesus knows my thoughts today. He knows what will help me and what won't. He leads me into paths to accept the truth. But as in those days, so it is today. Jesus lets me chose and I will pay the consequences of my decisions, or be given a blessing for them. * "Any kingdom" -Jesus referred to Satan and the fallen angles as a kingdom. Just as God his people and his angles is like a kingdom, so Satan and his demons have a kingdom. * "Any kingdom divided against itself" -When a kingdom is divided it is easy prey of another kingdom because it is weakened. * "If Satan is divided against himself" -Jesus is addressing the Pharisees accusations made in their thoughts. They believed that Satan was allowing Jesus to cast out demons so that people would be deceived in believing that he is the Messiah. But Jesus is pointing out that Satan allowing demons to be cast out is counter acting against his wills. It is like an attacking army giving up a concurred state full of riches so that it can gain a village in another state. Such an army would soon fall. Thus, if Satan came under a contract with Jesus it would lead to Satan's ruin. * "by whom do you followers drive them out" -The Pharisees also drove out demons. Jesus did not denied that. This points out that not all the Pharisees were like those before Jesus now. Some of the Pharisees were of God's kingdom. Nicodemus and Joseph mentioned in John's gospel were two such men. (John 3:1-2; John 19:38-39) * "So then, they will be your judges" -Here, "they" refer to the Pharisees who were doing the work of God by driving out demons. * "But if I drive out demons by the finger of God, then the kingdom of God has come to you." -Here Jesus lead them to a conclusion. Jesus finished the logic for them. Sometimes, I suppose when it was more obvious, Jesus did not finish the logic with a conclusion. However, probably because it was obvious, Jesus did not draw his conclusions out even more. He did not say, "And if the kingdom of God has come upon you through me, I am of God. And since I do the miracles that only the Messiah is said to have done, then I must be the Messiah. And since I am the Messiah, it would be a sin to reject me as such." Rather, Jesus gives them another parable and then gives them a conclusion. >Who is the strongman who is stronger than the devil? * Luke 11:21-22 "When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own house, his possessions are safe. But when someone stronger attacks and overpowers him, he takes away the armor in which the man trusted and divides up the spoils." * Rather than leading them through a logical conclusion right away, Jesus used another analogy to explain his point. * "a strong man, fully armed, guards his own house" -Satan's rule is strong. No man from Adam up until Jesus had overcome Satan. * "someone stronger attacks and overpowers him" -Jesus is stronger than Satan. He attacks Satan with truth. Jesus overpowers Satan. * "But when someone stronger attacks and overpowers him, he takes away the armor in which the man trusted" -Before Jesus could carry people out of Satan's rule (house) he first must tie up Satan. In order for Jesus to do this he must be stronger than Satan, which he is. If Jesus could not tie up Satan, than Satan would beat and defeat Jesus. * "he takes away the armor in which the man trusted" -Satan uses lies to deceive. Jesus proclaimed the truth, thus taking away Satan's armor. Ephesians 6:10-18 records Paul's instruction about the spiritual battle. "Finally, be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power. Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil's schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand. Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace. In addition to all this, take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one. Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the saints." * "divides up the spoils" -Demon possessed people are Satan's possessions that he uses. Jesus enters Satan's rule and carries off those who are under his rule away from his rule. Thus Jesus is describing his saving work. The man in this chapter who was demon possessed was rescued by Jesus. Jesus demanded the evil spirit to leave him alone and leave his body. Jesus freed the man from Satan's kingdom and he spoke for the first time in a long time, perhaps his whole life. >11. What does verse 23 mean? * Luke 11:23 "He who is not with me is against me, and he who does not gather with me, scatters." * "He who is not with me is against me" -Now that Jesus made his point he goes on to describe where the Pharisees are at, and where they will be if they do not change. Jesus urged the Pharisees to take a stand to be with him or not. If not they needed to know their outcome. * "he who does not gather with me scatters" -Jesus is gathering people into his kingdom. Those in his kingdom do the same. The Pharisees where scattering people so that they would not be gather in Jesus' kingdom easily. They disrupted his teachings, demanded signs, and called in league with the demonic. * The religious leaders and well educated were the greatest opponents to Jesus. Today similar people are no different, saying and doing as the Pharisees did. >In the parable what does the evil spirit do to a man? (24-26) What is the result of an unrepentant heart? * Luke 11:24-26 "When an evil spirit comes out of a man, it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it. Then it says, 'I will return to the house I left.' When it arrives, it finds the house swept clean and put in order. Then it goes and takes seven other spirits more wicked than itself, and they go in and live there. And the final condition of that man is worse than the first." * Jesus' teaching about an evil spirit that leaves and goes back into a man is also recorded in Matthew 12:43-45. Between Luke 11:23 and 24 Matthew records Jesus' teaching about the sign of Jonah which Luke puts after verse 28. * "When an evil spirit comes out of a man" -The "educated" in my day do not believe in evil spirits and therefore evil spirits dwelling in people. However, most of the "average" people believe in angles. Yet not all of them believe in evil spirits. This does not take away from the truth of them. Evil spirits can come in and out of a man. They come out only when God drives them out by the power of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of Christ. * "it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it" -Evil spirits can roam the earth. * "Then it says...when it arrives" -Evil spirits can go back to those whom the Holy Spirit cleaned out. However, the evil spirits can only go into those who did not grow in Christ. * "it finds the house unoccupied, swept clean and put in order" -This explains how someone who is freed from drug or alcohol abuse often returns to the vice. * "the final condition of that man is worse than the first" -Often true of those who return to vices they were once freed of. Seven demons (evil spirits) and more can dwell in a person. Such a person is clean, but they have not heart change. >How does this parable illustrate the root problem of the self-righteous and legalistic Pharisees? * Matthew ends this teaching with "That is how it will be with this wicked generation" When Jesus came in the flesh to this earth, he did a lot of house cleaning of his people, Judah. Judah was the remnant of Israel that kept God's promises of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Moses. However, the religious leaders and many of the people in Jerusalem did not accept Jesus as the Messiah. Some may have accepted him for a while, superficially. After all it was a crowd of people that shouted "Hosanna" when Jesus entered Jerusalem. Yet, only a few days later they all cried, "Crucify him." So they rejected him. Jesus warned them of the fate of such fickleness. * We should take a spiritual assessment. Do we truly believe in Jesus, or have we just changed outward habits? >12. How did a woman have the wrong concept of being blessed? * Luke 11:27-28 "As Jesus was saying these things, a woman in the crowd called out, "Blessed is the mother who gave you birth and nursed you." He replied, "Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and obey it." * Luke is the only one to record this exchange between Jesus and this woman. * It was customary to praise the child by blessing the mother; this figure of speech occurs in Greco-Roman literature (e.g., the first-century Roman satirist Petronius), rabbinic texts (e.g., sayings attributed to Johanan ben Zakkai) and elsewhere (e.g., 2 Baruch 54:10). (Bible Background Commentary - The IVP Bible Background Commentary - New Testament.) * "Blessed rather are..." -Jesus did not acknowledge that Mary was blessed because she was his mother. There is a difference between outward position and inward faith, hope and love. Hearing the word of God and obeying it is required of God. Mary did do this when the angel was sent to her. Jesus' birth did not make her blessed as her position as Jesus' mother does not make her eligible for honor and praise. Her acceptance of God's word to her and her obedience to allow the pregnancy was required by God.
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The Victorious Life Memory Verse: 38-39 I. If God is For Us... (28-34) >1. Read verse 28. * Romans 8:28 "And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose." >Meditate on the meaning of each phrase "in all things", "God works for the good", "for those who have been called according to his purpose". * "we" -all who accept Jesus as Savior and LORD, who confess his name and live for his glory, all who have repented of a sinful life, not just a person who believed he or she is a Christian, but one who actually is by faith. William Blackstone wrote in his book Jesus is Coming, "The true church is a persecuted, suffering, cross-bearing people. This is its calling, as the Scripture says, 'all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.' (2 Tim. 3:12) And this will continue until Christ comes, which precludes any Millennium until after His coming." * "know" -We know, with teaching we understand the truth that Paul is explaining here. This is definitely a basic truth of believers in Jesus. * "that in all things" -not all things are good, but they become good with God's help. * "God works for the good" -God works in the lives for his children as a good father works for the good of his children. * "for those who have been called according to his purpose" -not for all the people in the world, but definitely for all of this children. His children here is described as those who have been called (called by God for a purpose. See study 1.) * "his purpose" -not our purpose; not the churches' purpose; not the leaders' purpose; not the sheep's purpose; not worldly good works purpose, but for God's purpose. (Jer. 29:11) >2. Think about a few examples of how God displayed his goodness in history (Gen. 45:4-7, 50:19-20, Ruth 1:11-19, 4:16-22, Job 2:7-10, 42:12-17; Jer. 9:10-14; Acts 2:36). * Genesis 45:4-7 and Genesis 50:19-20 talk about how God worked in Joseph's life. * Ruth 1:11-19 and Ruth 4:16-22 talks about how God worked in Ruth and Naomi's life. * Job 2:7-10 and Job 42:12-17 talks about how God worked in Job's life. * Jeremiah 29:10-14 talks how God worked in Israel's history. * Acts 2:36 talks how God worked in Jesus' life. all believed God's goodness all loss something close to them something bad happened in each of their lives they all ended up better than before the bad event happened people suffered without cause, the didn't deserve what happened to them the bad event was beyond their control in the midst of it there didn't look like a way out or any hope they stayed in God's history in human blessing >Why does God display his goodness in such ways? (Ps. 100:5, 119:68; Rom. 11:33-36) * Psalm 100:5 "For the LORD is good and his love endures forever; his faithfulness continues through all generations." * Psalm 119:68 "You are good, and what you do is good; teach me your decrees." * Romans 11:33-36 "Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! "Who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor?" "Who has ever given to God, that God should repay him?" For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be the glory forever! Amen." * They are processes so that we grow spiritually. * It is important to understand what God considers good; that is that we grow in the image of Jesus. We have a lot of sinful habits to take out including pride and stubbornness. Note: before the fall God did not show his goodness in the way for Adam was already in the image of God. * We are unspiritual, but changing. God is spiritual. So for us to understand the soul/spirit (which is unseen) is hard for us. How much harder is it to understand what makes us grow spiritually-that is conform to the image of God, as children of God. >What is the ultimate good God brings for us? (29) * Romans 8:29 "For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers." * "For those God foreknew"-before the creation of the world. See first lesson. * "he also predestined" -God has a plan for us. According to this verse it is to grow in the image of Jesus. See next question and Eph. 1:5. * "to be conformed to the likeness of his Son"-this is the ultimate good God brings for us. Jesus is the mold we are to conform to. >What is the process of God's plan for us? (30) * Romans 8:30 "And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified." * "predestined" -God marked out our life so that at any point a Christian can look back and say, "God had worked in my life and for my favor to bring that about. God's plan is absolute, not abstract or arbitrary. * "called" -according to lesson 1. * "justified" -Just as if I had not sinned. * "glorified" -through Jesus we will be completely in the image of Jess. This is in the past tense because he started the work in our past, when we accepted him as Savior and LORD and he is continuing it to this day. * The point made here is that it is certain that God's plan for those who are in Jesus to grow in the image of Jesus. * We can be sure of the outcome. * God's purpose for me ends in glory (30), in receiving the whole world as a Garden of Eden in bliss and peace n(31). This purpose can only be generated and maintained in love (31, 32). God predestined my glory to come. Being predestined means he planned my glorious future in eternal bliss even before I was conceived, even before the creation of the world. The believers in Jesus whom Paul was writing to in Rome and in many other places had experience or were experiencing trouble, hardship, persecution, famine, nakedness, danger, sword, and even faced death all day long (35-36). During such life-draining events, I wonder if God really loves me. I ask the mostly unanswered question, "Why?" more specifically I am thinking, "Why me? Why this now? What have I done? How is this good for me? Is God against me?" So spins my thoughts in self-pity ruts. Yet are these questions really unanswered? Here's the great news. God does love me. He is not against me. God is for me (31). None of these life-draining events can separate me from God's love (34). God always loves me, always. Then I think, "Ok. God is good. He is love. So then something must be wrong on my end. I did something and now God doesn't love me anymore." No. Not even anything I do can separate me from the love of God. Sin has consequences. Yet these too is God's love. Nothing can separate me from the love of God. Paul wrote those experiencing life-draining events, "I am sure that nothing can separate us from God's love-not life or death, not angels or spirits, not the present or the future, and not powers above or powers below. Nothing in all creation can separate us from God's love for us in Christ Jesus our Lord!" >3. What then would be our response to God? (31) * Romans 8:31 "What, then, shall we say in response to this? If God is for us, who can be against us?" * "to this" -the knowledge of the previous truth. * "if... then" -implied that no one will stop God's plan for us. * "God is for us" -when we see our life without this understanding we could conclude, "God is against us". But when we see our life in totality, we will say, "God is for us". * "who can be against us"-Paul will bring out the extremes of those who, it would appear, to be against us. * "against us"-meaning to destroy us, to make it that we will not be in the image of Christ. >How can Christians absolutely be certain about God's provision in all things? (32) * Romans 8:32 "He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all--how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?" * Jesus was God's most valuable possession. * In saving us, God did not spare his own Son, Jesus. So then we can conclude that God loves us and will do anything to do what is good for us. * "graciously give us all things" -is there anything excluded from this? We are co-heirs of the kingdom of God, the Millennium age, and all eternity. >4. Why can no one bring charge against God's children in regard to God's plan? (33-34) * Romans 8:33-34 "Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who died--more than that, who was raised to life--is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us." * "any charge" -this does not mean that we are free from correction. This is a continuation of the previous sentences. So this is in regard for God working and saving us and growing us in the image of Jesus. "Charge" here refers to a charge against our salvation. * "God...justifies" -God is the judge. God will decide who will be saved and how. He will not be influence by any other. >What is the work of Christ for us? * "Who...condemns? Christ Jesus" -Jesus will condemn. He is the judge. He will say whether a man or woman has faith in him or not. No one else will be able to stand as a prosecutor. * "and is also interceding for us" -Jesus defends us. He loves us and makes atonement for us. * Heb. 4:14-15 * All will be judged, but not at the same time, nor with the same outcome. Jesus' loved ones will meet their Lord face-to-face. We will see him with our own eyes and he will judge our deeds done in this life. As we approach his radiant glory, glory of staggering proportions, his light will burn away all that is not pleasing. As we approach him all that will be left in us is the good deeds we did in this life. The Day of Atonement is described by Paul in his first letter to the Corinthians. “For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ. If any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw, his work will be shown for what it is, because the Day will bring it to light. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each man's work. If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward. If it is burned up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping through the flames.” (1 Cor. 3:11-15) What does gold, silver and costly stones represent? What will survive? Later in his first letter to the Corinthians Paul tells us, “And now these remain faith, hope and love.” (1 Cor. 13:13a) II. Who Shall Separate Us From the Love of Christ? (35-36) >5. In what ways is our conviction in God's goodness tested? (35-36, 2 Cor. 11:23-29; Ps. 44:22) * Romans 8:35-36 "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? As it is written: "For your sake we face death all day long; we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered." * 2 Corinthians 11:23-29 "Are they servants of Christ? (I am out of my mind to talk like this.) I am more. I have worked much harder, been in prison more frequently, been flogged more severely, and been exposed to death again and again. Five times I received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one. Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, I spent a night and a day in the open sea, I have been constantly on the move. I have been in danger from rivers, in danger from bandits, in danger from my own countrymen, in danger from Gentiles; in danger in the city, in danger in the country, in danger at sea; and in danger from false brothers. I have labored and toiled and have often gone without sleep; I have known hunger and thirst and have often gone without food; I have been cold and naked. Besides everything else, I face daily the pressure of my concern for all the churches. Who is weak, and I do not feel weak? Who is led into sin, and I do not inwardly burn?" * Psalm 44:22 "Yet for your sake we face death all day long; we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered." >How does absolute trust in God's love make us victors in life? (35-36) * In the end of the "refining" event we recognize that we grew through them. so in christ we are victors. >6. Read verses 37-39. * Romans 8:37-39 "No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord." >List the obstacles that would hinder people to believe the love of God. * These are absolute extremes which make us conclude that nothing can separate us from the love of God. >7. To what extent do God's people believe the love of God? (37-39) * "we are more than conquerors" -conquerors fight great battles and gain land and goods. For us we fight the spiritual fight, great battles of the soul and gain the image of Jesus. >From this lesson what do you lean about the nature of faith? * Faith transcends the situation that God has put me in, not that I am above it, but that I trust God's love for me. >About the love of God? * It is wise and good.
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5142
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Nincompassion Lockerbie snafu weakens the West Critics of the War on Terror claim that our military is "creating more terrorists" by fighting back against them, but the thing that really sustains our enemies is their belief that Westerners are inherently weak. If our side is to prevail, we've got to stop proving their point for them. In 2001, Abdelbeset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi was convicted of murdering 270 people by blowing up Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. Last August, the British government granted him "compassionate release," based on medical expert Karol Sikora's estimate that he had only three months to live, before succumbing to prostate cancer. Earlier this month, an apologetic Dr. Sikora revised that assessment, saying that al-Megrahi could live for another ten years. If that proves to be true, the duration of his imprisonment will be exceeded by the length of time he'll since have lived a free man. At the time of al-Megrahi's release, FBI director Robert Mueller angrily noted that he'd "served less than 14 days per victim." Dr. Sikora is not the one at fault here. His misdiagnosis was a tragic mistake, but an innocent one. The same cannot be said of the Brits' decision to allow al-Megrahi's return to Libya. This act of "compassion" so defied rational explanation that it led to baseless suspicions of a petroleum-based quid pro quo between the two countries. At least that would suggest an action being taken, however misguidedly, in Britain's own interest. The more plausible explanation is far more demoralizing. Upon releasing al-Megrahi, Scotland's Secretary of Justice, Kenny MacAskill pronounced, "Our beliefs dictate that justice be served but mercy be shown." Both of those things cannot be done, however, if one's definition of "mercy" is a nullification of justice. It is impossible to serve justice to a mass murderer, while at the same time telling him to go home, because his two weeks per murder are up. Craven exercises in appeasement like al-Megrahi's release are not acts of mercy. Rather, they are pleas for mercy from enemies who have no capacity for it. The Islamists in Libya greeted the freed al-Megrahi as a conquering hero, precisely because of his wanton slaughter of innocent Westerners. For the West to appeal to their nonexistent humanity is like trying to shake hands with a cobra. If the Brits' intention had simply been to show mercy to a dying man, it would have been perfectly simple to do that within the confines of the justice system. They could have given him a nice, clean bed in the Edward G. Robinson suite at the cracker factory, where he could listen to Beethoven's Sixth while watching Animal Planet until he expired. Whatever was done to ease his suffering, there's no reason it could not have been done in captivity. Contrary to the terrorists' attempts at reverse psychology, we do not create more of them by sending our military to kill them in Iraq and Afghanistan. The way we create more terrorists is by making cowardly concessions to them in our own countries. We wring our hands over every alleged instance of their mistreatment, no matter how implausible or trivial. We incessantly worry about "profiling," and about violating the terrorists' "civil liberties." We create more terrorists by editing cartoons that would otherwise offend them, removing images of pigs from advertisements, and cleansing movie scripts by replacing Islamic terrorists with neo-Nazis. Only since 9-11 have we become concerned about whether airports have foot-washing stations for Muslim taxi drivers, and whether or not public toilets face Mecca. Can the terrorists have any doubt that accommodations like these are the result of their intimidation? When General Casey shows more concern for "diversity" than for the 13 murdered soldiers at Fort Hood, President Obama sends al-Qaeda-trained Uighur terrorists to live the high life in Bermuda, and the city of New York approves construction of a mosque near Ground Zero, they make us appear as vulnerable as the proverbial wounded animal trailing the pack. We might as well just ring a giant dinner bell. If American and British citizens on the homefront -- including our politicians, judges and diplomats -- displayed even a fraction of the resolve of our soldiers in the field, our terrorist enemies would by now have found their campaign to be futile. Instead, we repeatedly invite them over to have another try at killing us. Meanwhile, all that the Secretary MacAskills of the world want to do about it is see to it that our headstones read, "They were compassionate."
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5143
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Bill & Al's Risky Scheme You're a waste, says the prez When George W. Bush selected Dick Cheney as his running mate, the Gore campaign's response was that Cheney is not a forward thinking politician, that he would lead America into the past, back across The Bridge, to the twentieth century. The companion argument, of course, is that Gore is the visionary of this campaign, that he is the intellectual, the creator of innovative solutions. Who else would have the vision to set a timetable for the elimination of the internal combustion engine? But what sorts of innovations have we seen during the two terms of the Clinton-Gore administration? Its 1993 budget was just a slightly magnified image of the Democrat tax bill which was signed by President Bush in 1990. When it tried to socialize health care, this administration demonstrated its forward thinking by nodding in agreement with the government of Canada, that intellectual trailblazer of the galaxy. The forward thinking, twenty-first century, Clinton-Gore solution to Social Security is ... more money. Their solution to education? More money. To crime? More money. Foreign policy? More money. These are certainly not new ideas, but they are ideas which Democrats believe to be forward thinking or progressive, because they follow what Democrats believe is the natural, forward flow of money, from you to them. That is why they consider it regressive when you are allowed to keep more of your own pay. It is a "risky scheme" whenever a politician conspires to seize less of your money than he otherwise might. President Clinton warns that tax cuts recently passed by Congress would "help only a few while putting our prosperity at risk," but the only people whose prosperity is threatened by tax cuts are the bureaucrats whose job it is to spend "surplus" money. On July 21, the Senate passed a bill which would repeal the "marriage penalty," a quirk in the tax code which results in higher taxes for married couples than they would pay if they had remained single. President Clinton vetoed the bill, "in the interest of fiscal responsibility." What? In this era of allegedly huge tax surpluses, the government can't afford to relieve married couples of an obvious injustice? But wait. President Clinton left open the possibility of signing the bill, on one condition -- that it is packaged with a new federal prescription drug program. So we can only afford tax cuts if they are accompanied by the largest entitlement program created since the Johnson administration. That sure doesn't add up, especially if you're a liberal Democrat like Bill Clinton, who believes that tax cuts invariably produce declining tax revenues. If you are a liberal, however, you have absolutely no concern whether or not the budget is balanced. The Democrats controlled the House of Representatives for forty years, and never once was their willingness to spend money contingent on that money's actual existence. The reason this administration is so adamantly opposed to tax cuts is not that those cuts will dip into its bottomless supply of spending money; it's that they will help people provide for themselves, when they could instead be dependent on liberal politicians. Take, for instance, the proposal to raise the ceilings on investments into IRA and 401(k) plans. The measure passed the House by a whopping count of 401-25. In opposition to a large majority from both parties, President Clinton has suggested that he will veto that bill as well. Why would anybody oppose letting people save more of their own money? Because, according to an official White House statement, "a better approach is to enact pension and retirement savings incentives to reach tens of millions of working Americans who do not participate in employer-provided pension plans and have little or no retirement savings." Does the congressional plan not provide incentives for people to save, you might ask. Well, no ... not if you understand the Clintonian definition of "incentive," which means either the threat of absolute and brutal destruction, or the delivery of a large sack of money. Happily for "working Americans," it is the latter definition which applies here. The approach the Clinton-Gore administration would prefer to take is the president's plan for "Universal Savings Accounts," or "USA's" as Clinton has named them, perhaps as a deliberate tweak at flag-waving conservatives. Vice President Gore is promising to implement a spin-off of the Clinton plan, which he less playfully calls "Retirement Savings Plus." President Clinton's proposal is to create a new savings plan, in which the federal government would use taxpayers' money to subsidize participants' contributions. For lower-income investors, the tax-funded matching contributions would be made on a dollar-for-dollar basis. As income rises, matching funds would shrink to fifty cents on the dollar. The Gore plan raises the offer to three tax dollars for every one contributed by the participant himself, with the ratio being reversed for higher income participants. In both the Clinton and Gore versions of the program, matching funds would be phased out at the point at which the participant is deemed to be rich. Of course, that "sliding scale" deters upward mobility, which is what all liberal programs do by design. So this is what passes for an innovative idea -- another exercise in warmed-over Depression-era chicken-in-every-pot populist claptrap. If Huey Long were alive today, he could sue. It turns out that, when Bill Clinton promised to reform welfare, he only meant that he would mold it into another shape. The same president who famously declared that, "the era of big government is over," is now proposing an enormous, redistributionist giveaway program. In his 1998 State of the Union Address, President Clinton demanded that "any penny of any surplus" be directed toward Social Security. That's far from as bold a challenge as it sounds, because the "surplus," as he defines it, is any money which is left after he is finished spending on his new initiatives. That way, projected revenue losses from tax cuts eat into the surplus, but new federal spending does not. So the amount of money earmarked for "saving Social Security" is not the real issue at all, because Clinton is free to spend as much of it as he wants, before he declares the remainder to be the "surplus". The day after that address, Clinton spoke before an audience in Buffalo, which one would presume was composed predominantly of his supporters. When he told them that he could return the surplus to the taxpayers in the form of tax cuts, they erupted in applause. Panicked, he hushed the crowd, explained that he hadn't finished his sentence yet, and added that he didn't think it would be responsible to let taxpayers keep their money, because they might spend it the wrong way. In that one breath, he crystallized the entire Democratic Party platform: you can't be trusted with your own money. When left-wing control freaks like Clinton and Gore gain political power, they take it upon themselves to manage every aspect of citizens' lives, from the traffic on their way to work, to the number of students in their children's classrooms. When liberals are confident that they are speaking only among like-minded friends, they even propose ideas like controlling people's diets through punitive taxation. Considering this, it goes without saying that the amount of money you possess is their business. If that weren't so, we wouldn't have a progressive income tax in the first place. (There goes that confounded "p" word again.) To Democrats, the money in your paycheck and your portfolio has not been earned, it has been "distributed." If more has been "distributed" to you than some wonk thinks is "fair," then that constitutes a management problem. Enter the managers, Bill and Al, who know better than you how your money should be distributed. Oh, if they decide you have a need for your money, you will have it, once they've taken it from you, and returned it, on the end of a string. When Bill and Al decide what to do with your money, they call it an investment. When you are allowed to make that decision, they consider it a waste. Moreover, they call it "risky" and "reckless." They would just as soon hand a soldering iron to a chimp. Taking home, spending and saving your own pay is not progressive, at least as far as the progress of politicians' legacy-building projects are concerned. When Clinton and Gore talk about looking to the future, they have visions of monuments in honor of themselves. Those monuments, fittingly, are federal entitlement programs, large as their egos, and more permanent than Mount Rushmore. Naturally, you would never spend your money on that. Only they would spend your money on it. That is why they say that letting you keep your own pay is a waste.
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Even though great care was taken in compiling personal data, there may be errors in the spelling of names or in the listed birthplace. Places of birth are given in the local language. Where the geographical location of a place of birth can be established with certainty, the place name is followed by the country of origin; this is based on the pre-war borders (as of 31 December 1937). In many cases, however, knowing the place of birth and nation of origin gives little indication of the individual's ethnicity. This applies particularly to Eastern European regions such as Galicia, whose borders were redrawn repeatedly during the first half of the twentieth century. For example, most of the Hungarian Jews who were deported to the Mittelbau camps were born in areas transferred to Romania or Czechoslovakia after 1920. In these cases the memorial book lists the Hungarian place name, which is also most frequently cited in the available sources. For places of birth which were located in the German Reich, no country name is listed.
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hair-salon Published on November 11, 2013 in BeauticiansFull resolution (800 × 300)
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Amber in Chains So, based on a convergence of guests and available free time, I ran a game last night. I had done very little prep to begin with, but I ended up improvising madly as the number of expected players jumped from 3 to 6. With 3 players I had been considering just trying some 2 Guys with Swords, modified for 3, but for 6 that wasn’t practical, but I also didn’t want to run straight Leverage – I had gotten a request for some supers elements, and what’s more I’m not entirely sure how it shakes out with 6 players. So, looking at the potential spread of players, their overlapping familiarities and my needs, I very hastily threw together a Leverage hack, bolting on many pieces from Smallville, to run an Amber game. Sort of. The premise of this particular Amber filed the serial numbers off, both in and out of game. At a high level, one of the princes had won, and ruled Amber as the Sun King with an army of elementals at his beck and call. More problematically, he had also wiped the names and much knowledge of his siblings from the universe with his destruction of the pattern and assertion of the new order. Players represented the underground, those with enough knowledge to know there’s been a usurpation, looking to find and restore the nameless. One of them was said to be held by one of the lords of Amber, and the players took advantage of the wedding being arranged in the manor to try to find it. I won’t delve too much into what happened, but it went spectacularly, with one player taking advantage of a recent widow to get an invite (all the while being urged by her husband’s ghost to kill her) , and with complications that spiraled out of control, including one dramatic romantic proposal accompanied by peacocks resulting in roast peacock getting added to the menu. Things culminated with the discovery that the whole manor rested on the shoulder of the Titan, his release and the subsequent destruction of, well, the whole building. I got at least one request to return to the setting at some point, and with a bit of polishing to the system, I think I’m inclined to do so. System wise, I stole the four stats from Road to Amber (Force, Wits, Grace and Resolve) and a new set of roles: Soldier, Scholar, Tinker, Priest (which should have been Courtier), Ruffian and Hunter. Straightforward enough, but Priest ended up doing more heavy-lifting for rolls than anything else, perhaps a bit too much. Something I need to keep an eye on. I let the characters take five distinctions. In retrospect it was too many. I think that many distinctions works with no stats, but in conjunction with the stats they just made for a little bit too much, especially for freshly created characters. It wasn’t a huge problem, but it’s something I’m going to note. I also tapped into Smallville, loosely, and had each character pick a bloodline (effectively a heritage) and a gift (effectively a superpower). The two could be related, but did not need to be. These were pretty much entirely created on the spot, and they were structured after powers: three special things you could do with a plot point. As such we had: A scion of the house of the moon, who could turn into a shadow A Scion of the Titan, who was a badly trained mage A Scion of Mandrake with an entourage A Scion of Karm who could read thoughts A Scion of The Hanged Man who had Major Arcana related tricks A Scion of Feldane who mastered ghosts Mechanically (and time-wise) this was the hardest part because I pulled these out of the air. For some of the poweres I just riffed off Smallville, but for the bloodlines, i was totally making things up. Worse, because I was working fast, I forgot to include any abilities based on exploiting opportunities (what you can do when the GM rolls a 1). If I take the time to go back and retune this system, most of the effort is going to go into making the bloodlines and gifts cleaner and easier to use. Lastly, I hybridized Smallville conflict resolution by adding stress pools for Hurt, Tired, Confused and Upset. They worked like Smallville (opponents can roll them against you, the value gets too high, you’re taken out) but I skipped Smallville’s ‘damage’ roll and used this rule: Look at the third highest die you rolled – you inflict stress equal to that die size or increase the stress pool by one step, whichever is higher. With that out of the way, I’ll say this – All the good things about running Leverage very easily transitioned over to this. Chargen was a bit rougher than Leverage, taking most of an hour, but that was a function of the new system and the necessity of me making stuff up. Play was full of subplots and complications, but was still all wrapped up in about 2.5 hours of actual play. With 6 players and the amount that got done, I was pretty darn pleased. What’s more, it was very low stress for me as a GM. I went in with a few ideas, but by and large I just let the complications do the work for me (which they did, with extreme prejudice). I did use the “Complications start at d8” rule, allowing myself a free budget of d6s, and I think that worked out very well for one specific reason: When players wanted to use distinctions that seemed a little dodgy, I asked them to justify it, and often used those justifications to add some assets or descriptors to the table. I also used a slightly different method of creating assets, where I let players create “permanent” assets – ones that last the whole game – for one plot point, but only if they went on the table, rather than remaining under the player’s control. That let the players use these assets, but also let me turn them around to use later to complicate things (which I, of course) did. as a technique, I really liked this as a very organic way to handle players stretching their distinctions. The bottom line of this for me is that I need to work a bit on my Leverage hacks to help make sure I have more of a toolkit on hand to draw from rather than need to totally make stuff up, but with that done, man, Leverage remains a super-potent go-to for a fast, engaging game. The one tip that I’ll add is this: While the system can support open-ended play, you’re only going to get the speed benefits by having a clear goal in play. In leverage, that’s baked in. For this, I needed to make sure it was inserted (recover the nameless). In the absence of that, we could probably have played all night, and that would have been fun, but it wouldn’t have had anything like this kind of finish. The goal drives play, but it also gives you a stopping point – that’s incredibly potent and important. This entry was posted in Amber, Cortex on December 17, 2010 by Rob Donoghue. ← My Father’s Sword Stress Tracks in Leverage → 7 thoughts on “Amber in Chains” Cam_Banks December 17, 2010 at 5:09 pm Your experiences with Complications at d8 and “free” d6es is interesting. Ditto the “on the table” Assets and the “in my hands” ones. I think I like that quite a bit and may need to work it into some future designs. One of the things it dovetailed with is my using complications more indirectly (in some ways, more like the Smallville trouble pool). I would occasionally put a complication to immediate use, but more often I would take a black poker chip and add it to my stack, then spend those as opportunities arose. Shifted the focus a bit, but definitely underscored the “building the adventure as we go” vibe. ZeroGain December 17, 2010 at 7:33 pm Man, but I just wish I had a window into some of these sessions. Ever consider a limited format podcast for some of these games where you hack up new ideas? I’d love to have an inside look at how you manage that much story inside 2.5 hours… in most of my games that’d be a single combat encounter… I hear the iPad has some wonderful voice recordings, maybe your crew would be interested in sharing with the rest of us? Big Rob December 17, 2010 at 8:34 pm I have to agree with ZeroGain. I am mesmerized sometimes with the ease that you pull things out of the hat. If not a podcast, which could put pressure on the gaming table, how about a symposium of some type at a convention? I don’t know how often you travel to them, but the opportunity to witness, interact, query you and your compatriots…well…would be quite enlightening. What I am finding is that the speed and relative efficiency of many Cortex Plus-powered scenes is a sharp contrast to games folks are used to playing, if only because of the shift away from extended combat. It might help to explain why a lot of story can unfold in a shorter time period. That said, I’d love to sit in on a panel of other Cortex GMs and riff on this sometime. When the game hits the play space, it goes from being multiple ideas in theory to actual use, and I find that the best part of any game. Fred Hicks (Evil Hat Productions) December 18, 2010 at 5:18 am It’s also not THAT much story in the grand scheme. I mean, yes, we said and did a number of things, but there were pauses like you have in any game. The difference as Cam points out is that the combats are super brief — I don’t know that we can really be said to have had any, though there was that brief punch in the face I did on one dude in the climax. They take about as long as you’d see them take on a TV show, super fast. Which left the rest of the game to be all about each player coming up with a gambit, pursuing it to the point of a roll being made, and some consequences spilling out onto the table. There was very little filler in between and, I think due to our timeframe, very little side-chatter. In a more relaxed, less “holy crap it’s already late and we want to finish this” mindset we could have had more banter and scenery-chewing (and I’d’ve enjoyed it — if we started at 2pm instead of 9pm). But that wasn’t the kind of game we were pursuing that night. This was more, we have a mission, let’s probe the objective’s defenses, find the soft spots, and push on through to our goal. Good stuff. evilhat December 21, 2010 at 3:56 am I really liked the sharply focused conflicts / gambits. I think they kept playing moving at a sharp clip. Short sessions usually leave me feeling unsatisfied, and this was definitely an exception. The fast clip also meant that waiting for a spotlight turn amidst everything that was going on wasn’t tedious.
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Cañete, Peru San Vicente de Cañete, Peru: population: about 60,000. San Vicente de Cañete is a small town also known as the "Cradle and Capital of National Black Art." The history dates back to pre-Inca times. The leader of the original inhabitants, Chuqui Manco, resisted the Incas for four years before finally succumbing to the conquerors. Then the Spanish explorer Mendoza arrived and founded the town of Villa de Cañete. During the following years, the rich built haciendas and brought slaves from Africa to work in the fields and orchards. Slavery was abolished in 1854 so the slave owners had to find new slaves. They brought in people from China. And that's the end of the history I can find including two Wikipedia pages. I found a trails website that talks about a path/trail that can be hiked, ridden on a mountain bike, or possibly driven (not sure about that) from Cañete to Huancayo in the Andes. Supposedly it's a beautiful ride. I imagine it probably is. Imperial, Peru: population around 30,000. Imperial is a neighboring town to Cañete. I walked from Cañete to Imperial in no more than 20-25 minutes. I don't like Imperial. It's a world different from Cañete - very sandy, dirty streets, awful traffic, ugly old buildings. Granted, there is a lot of road construction, especially in the area of the huge Mercado. The marketplace is huge! Especially compared to the tiny size of the town. And it is just about surrounded by road construction which makes for some absolutely gawd-awful traffic problems. San Vicente de Cañete (and Imperial) has a dry desert climate. The average daytime high of 24° C (76° F), and the night average low of 19° C (66° F). The city's elevation is 40 meters (131 feet). San Vicente de Cañete averages, based on the little info I can find, 0mm or only in the low single-digit mm, of rain per year. Now that I wrote all that about how rare the rain is here, just tonight when I was walking back to the hotel after eating in a downtown restaurant, it started to rain. Very light and not enough to even stream up on the streets or flow off the roofs, but it was actual raindrops that got me a little wet. That lasted no more than 10 minutes. Probably not even enough to be measurable. So, my impressions: Cañete is a decent enough town, Imperial I don't like. As with many small towns along the coast of Peru, the climate is unbeatable, unless you actually like rain and cold. There are a few nice parks and a new 'mall' which is a large shopping center with several large 'big box' stores (Falabella, Sodemac, Tottus, and a movie theater), a food court, and a few small stores. The town is generally clean and has a lower volume of noise compared to many other towns I've visited, including Imperial. My goal is to visit the towns and discover which one calls out to me - "Chip, Chip, make your new home here, this is your new home town". That hasn't happened yet, but the six towns listed below are very close to giving me that feeling. At any rate, I am not visiting tourist attractions or archeological sites, etc, those will have to wait for another trip through South America. At this point in my journey I have four towns on my Top 10 list - Tingo Maria, Moyobamba, La Merced, Cañete, Peru, and Catamayo and Puyo, Ecuador. In my travels in Ecuador, I visited 31 towns/cities. At this point in my journey through Peru, I have visited 16 towns/cities. Next up: Chincha, Peru.
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Back to SMS Images John Cage – How to Improve the World (You Will Only Make Matters Worse) How to Improve the World (You Will Only Make Matters Worse) Early portion of text piece which Cage revised and continuously added to between mid-1960s and early 1980s. 7.5 x 5.5 in., 20 pp. S.M.S Issue No. 4
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Mr. Rostan at the Movies: The Enduring Stillness of “Room” November 6, 2015 by Andrew Rostan Leave a Comment Andrew Rostan was a film student before he realized that making comics was his horrible destiny, and he’s never shaken his love of cinema. Every week, he’ll opine on current pictures or important movies from the past. There are many words to describe Room, adapted by Emma Donoghue from her novel and directed by Lenny Abrahamson, but if I had to sum it up in only one, that word would be “still.” Room is a quiet, lingering, peaceful movie for the most part, and this tone serves to both make the moments of emotional crescendo all the more hard-hitting and allow the audience to enter the characters’ emotional states in the midst of the calm, thus allowing the story’s drama and power to overwhelm. Room is an unforgettable picture, and while credit is due to the entire team, the greatest masterstroke is the performance of Brie Larson. Posted in: Awards Season, Films, Reviews Tagged: Brie Larson, Emma Donoghue, Jacob Tremblay, Joan Allen, Lenny Abrahamson, Room
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Gerald Heard Gerald Heard was a British MI6 agent and propaganda writer. He was a member of the Society for Psychical Research with Cecil puppets Arthur Balfour, Henri Bergson (brother of Moina Mathers of Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn), worked for the BBC and from 1929 published The Realist with writings of Julian and Aldous Huxley, HG Wells (MI6, Fabian Society), Harold Laski (Frankfurt School, Fabian Society), Arnold Bennett (HOGD with Crowley), Rebecca West (The New Republic) and marxist/Darwinist JBS Haldane. The Realist was founded by George Catlin (Cornell, Fabian Society, Pilgrims Society) and AG Church (Nature magazine, the Science Church). He was educated at the University of Cambridge. He was an assistant of Horrace Plunkett of the Irish cooperative movement (related to jesuit Joseph Plunkett who instigated the Easter Rising). He was a member of the Engineers Study Group with Naomi Mitchison (sister of JBS Haldane), wich studied group dynamics and computer science. He set up the HG Wells Society with Sylvia Plankhurst (friend of Austin Osman Spare, daughter of Emmeline Plankhurst who founded the Independant Labour Party) and Eden Paul (communist, advocate of eugenics). He helped founding the Peace Pledge Union with Bertrand Russell, Donald Soper (LSE), George Lansbury (grandfather of Angela Lansbury), Vera Brittain (married to George Catlin of The Realist), CEM Joad (Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists) and Aldous Huxley. In 1937 he worked with Aldous Huxley, who had moved to Hollywood, Christopher Isherwood and Jiddu Krishnamurti of the Theosophical Society of Helena Blavatsky. They developed techniques based on yoga and Vedanta. Isherwood translated the Bhagavad Ghita with Swami Prabhavanda (Vedanta Society of Southern California in Hollywood). In 1942 he founded Trabuco College with Huxley, a retreat center that later became the inspiration for the Esalen Institute and the Lama Foundation of Richard Alpert. Heard was the mentor of Henry Luce (Order of Malta, S&B, Pilgrims Society, promoted magic mushrooms in Time Magazine in the 50's and participated in the JFK ritual with publishing the Zapruder film) and Bill Wilson. Bill Wilson founded Alcoholics Anonymous with Dorothy Brando, mother of Marlon Brando, with a 12 step program based on the Spiritual Exercises of the jesuits (tradition of confession in the Christian doctrine) and the Moral Re-Armament movement. Huxley met with Laurel Canyon resident Moyna Macgill and her daughter Angela Lansbury (The Manchurian Candidate). Heard did LSD experiments with Bill Wilson and Betty Eisner (Stanford) and worked with LSD researcher Humpfrey Osmond and Huston Smith who did LSD research with Timothy Leary. He gave LSD to director John Huston and Steve Allen (NBC show The Tonight Show). In 1950 he wrote a book about UFO's. Paul Krassner founded a magazine in the 60's, also named The Realist. born 10/6/1889, date d Sidney Blackmer, Britt Ekland. died 8/14/1971, date Patrick McGee, Halle Berry, Mila Kunis.
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Monthly Archive:: June 2014 The youth international conference, conference titled “Issues of Preservation and Development Perspectives of the Intellectual Cultural Heritage” Ministry of Urban Development of the Republic of Armenia National Museum-Institute of Architecture In the framework of the young scientists’ support program carried out under the patronage of the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan and financed by the Youth Foundation of Armenia The National Museum-Institute of Architecture of the RA Ministry ...Read More Conference dedicated to the 150th anniversary of Toros Toramanian International conference cultural heritage preservation in occasion of Toros Toramanyan's 150th anniversary June 4-6, 2014. the conference program CHP2014DraftProgramm ...Read More
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Posted on April 11, 2022 by Harry Global learning is a general development or change in a situation that affects many countries around the world. Listed below are some global or domain-based education trends that might have a useful place in your classroom: 1. Personalized Learning When a school curriculum is tailored to a student’s unique needs, it is more likely to foster student progress because each child can progress at their own pace. In addition, adaptive software programs allow teachers to use the same program for all students in their classroom, including students with learning disabilities. 2. Mastery-Based Grading Many teachers are looking for alternatives to letter grades. Some worry that traditional assessment methods do not accurately measure student progress. 3.Genius Hour Genius Hour is a fairly new teaching method that allows students to work on self-chosen and self-directed projects for an hour a day. 4. Soft Skills Learning Soft skill Learning teaches children specific academic skills with short, focused activities. 5. STEM(science, technology, engineering, and math) Curriculum You may be familiar with the STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) curriculum and know-how he prepares students for the world of work with demanding practical skills. But adding arts alongside these subjects (creating STEAM: STEM plus arts) can improve your students’ academic performance. 6.Brain Break Brain Breaks are short five- to 10-minute activities, such as dancing or standing up to stretch, that allow students to stay fresh after spending a long period of time concentrating in class. 7. Experiential Learning Experiential learning is a strategy that, according to Western Governors University, allows students to learn and develop skills in an environment outside of the classroom. Jonathan Ullmer Jonathan Ullmer is an education expert and the founder of Excellence in Schools. He is a veteran of the British education system from a junior high university. Originally from Oxford, England, Jonathan Ullmer is a professional educator with extensive experience working with students in the UK and abroad. He began his career in 1985 as an English and Drama teacher at Swanley School in Kent. He was also directing the school when it obtained its first very successful results in the international baccalaureate. In addition, the Nursultan branch of Haileybury, under his leadership, was shortlisted for a times independent school award and received two awards for its student leadership programs and Kazakh language teaching. We have discussed the latest trends in Global Education.So, keepingan eye on these trends can be helpful in addition to completing your professional development requirements. Business Reputation Defense Posted in Education
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Re-do A Mirror Posted by Mike O'Connor on July 27, 2001 04:54:48 UTC a friend has a 10" mirror that was damaged in a fire..How best to re-do the mirror? Or strip the aluminum coating? Strip it - walter - July 27, 2001 - 11:33 UTC
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Anosmia and COVID-19 in south ... Marco Capelli 1 , Patrizia Gatti 1 Author Affiliation(s) ENT Columbus Clinic Center, Milano, Italy B-ENT 2020; 16: 86-90 DOI: 10.5152/B-ENT.2020.20129 Keywords : Anosmia, coronavirus epidemic, neurotropism, SARS-Cov 2, world pandemic. Read: 5022 Downloads: 792 Published: 12 June 2020 Objective: The Basso Lodigiano is located in southern Lombardy. The capital of this district is the city of Codogno where on February 21, 2020, the first case of COVID-19 (Corona Virus Disease 2019) was diagnosed in Italy. The etiological agent is known to be a new coronavirus called SARS Cov-2 (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome – Coronavirus – 2). Even asymptomatic or paucisymptomatic patients can transmit the virus and contribute to the expansion of the infection. From 21 February 2020, we have noticed a significant increase of anosmia cases in the population of Codogno and we believe there may be a relationship with the SARS-Cov 2 infection. Methods: In the period between 21 February and 15 March 2020, we described 27 patients, living in Codogno, with anosmia. We calculated the incidence of the anosmia symptom in our patients in the period following the first diagnosis of COVID- 19 in Italy (February 21, 2020/March 15, 2020) and then compared it to the incidences relating to the same period of the years 2019 and 2018 and to the incidences in other periods from 1 January 2018. We then analysed the results through test χ2 in order to verify a statistical significance in the results. Results: We observed a statistically significant increase in the incidence of the anosmia symptom in the period between 21 February and 15 March of 2020 compared to the incidence of the same symptom in other periods Conclusion: The interpretation of the results leads us to argue that anosmia may be a symptom related to SARS-Cov2 infection. This symptom could be significant in paucisymptomatic patients who represent a potential viral transmission reservoir. In this regard, in this age of pandemic, when doctors observe patients with anosmia, they should consider SARS-Cov 2 infection in the differential diagnosis. Cite this article as: Capelli M, Gatti P. Anosmia and COVID-19 in south Lombardy: description of the first cases series in Europe. B-ENT 2020; 16(1): 86-90. /Content/files/sayilar/93/86-90.pdf
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Election panel disapproves of Moily's LPG remark New Delhi, Dec 12 (IANS) The Election Commission Wednesday expressed its "strong disapproval" of Petroleum Minister M. Veerappa Moily's remarks on raising the cap on LPG cylinder supply ahead of the Gujarat elections and asked him to be "circumspect in future." Moily, whom the commission Tuesday asked to explain his remark over LPG cap being increased from six to nine, in his reply to the commission Wednesday accepted that he made the announcement. The commission said the remarks amount to violation of Model Code of Conduct as the first phase of the Gujarat elections are slated for Thursday. The second round is on Dec 17. Counting in both Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh, where polls were held Nov 4, will be on Dec 20. "..the commission hereby conveys its strong disapproval of your above action and cautions you to be circumspect in future," the panel said. In its letter to the minister, secretary Harbans Singh said that though he said that the government is yet to take a decision in the matter, it has emerged that the cap on the supply of the subsidized LPG cylinders is being raised from the present six to nine a family a year. "The commission is of the considered view that your above mentioned reply amounts to announcement of promise of financial grant by the government, which the Model Code of Conduct prohibits during its operation when the election process is on," the poll panel said. The poll panel said that when the Model Code of Conduct becomes effective, ministers and other authorities cannot make any announcement of any financial grants. It said the announcement is thus "a clear violation both of the letter and spirit of the Model Code of Conduct." In his reply to the commission that was submitted Wednesday morning, Moily said there has been widespread demand from all sections of society, particularly women, for raising the cap on supply of domestic LPG cylinders. In an event Tuesday, Moily told reporters that the LPG cap is "likely to go up definitely from six cylinders to nine cylinders". The minister said the decision to raise the cap will be taken by the union cabinet "very shortly". The government had, in September, limited the supply of subsidised LPG to six cylinders per household in a year. Subsidised cooking gas costs Rs.410.50 per 14.2 kg cylinder at present. Additional requirements have to be bought at the market price of Rs.931. Moily said as the capping decision was taken by the Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs, it would also decide on raising the cap. Asked about the time-frame for the decision, he had said: "I think as early as possible." The government will have to provide an additional Rs.9,000 crore per annum if the cap is raised. The petroleum minister had said the government was working on a "certain formula" to neutralise the impact of any additional subsidy burden, and he has had two rounds of discussions with Finance Minister P. Chidambaram on the issue.
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Maneka Gandhi to award Araria SP for preventing smuggling of camels Patna,(BiharTimes): The chairperson of People For Animals (PFA), Maneka Gandhi, (MP) will present an award to Araria SP Shivdeep Lande on behalf of her organization for saving the lives of 49 camels, which he intercepted while they were being smuggled into Bangladesh via Araria on Jan 22. She will also recommend Lande’s name to the Union forest and environment ministry for a national award in this regard as he showed extraordinary interest in nabbing the camel smugglers and also for preserving lives of the captured camels all these days at Forbesganj. Maneka Gandhi said the number of camel population in India is estimated to be about four lakh. However, it is declining at the alarming rate of 10 per cent every year. The camels are the economic health of Rajasthan and Gujarat. They need to be saved for the maintaining ecological balance, she said. According to Maneka camels are being smuggled from different parts of the country. Over 200 camels, which were being smuggled to Bangladesh, were recovered and seized from the animal smugglers in Hissar district in Haryana. These camels were kept at Sadri Jain cow shelter of well known animal saver Nitin Jain of Rajasthan. Prior to this, 140 camels were recovered and seized by the Katihar district administration but Maneka said, it is still a mystery as to how all these camels were released. When Araria SP can protect the lives of the seized camels why not the Katihar SP?, she asked. She lauded the efforts of Lande for protecting the lives of camels and sending the smugglers to jail. She quoted Kerala high court ruling which said that the killing of camel is illegal but added that despite this a large number of camels are being killed in India.
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You are here: Home > BW briefs > Building a global business Tuesday 21 March 2023 Building a global business by Tej Kohli, CEO, Grafix Softech on 15-Mar-2013 As the world gets smaller and customers and investors are no longer dictated by geography, the desire, and indeed the need, to build a business with truly global value is becoming increasingly important. Globalisation has changed the way we think about business in many ways. And it has served to iron out some of the differences between national cultures and business practices. In the cities of the Middle East, we may find traces of the great caravanserai and the souks that characterised the great trading past, for example, but modern business is conducted very much according to international standards. And so, in many ways, building a business with global value depends on the same planning and processes as building a local company. Whatever your plans for business, the first step is to work out what you are good at, focus on that and then identify a gap in the market and how you might best fill it. If you take a global view, there will be more gaps available to fill. Mobile phone companies, for example, looked at the fixed line infrastructure in the developing world and jumped in, disintermediating traditional telcos in the process. Take up of mobile phones across Africa and East Asia has been phenomenal as a result. But business success also depends on constant engagement with the latest developments in your industry. Those mobile phone companies are indulging in an arms race to get the latest consumer gadgets out to western customers; but in developing markets, where banks have never managed to develop a viable business case for establishing basic banking and transaction services to the rural poor, they are involved in a very different proposition. As a result, in Kenya, Afghanistan, South Africa, India and countless other countries, mobile phone companies have developed essential mobile payments and transaction services to unbanked customers � and have achieved a degree of penetration that far exceeds that in any Western nation. not every market wants or needs the same thing The story of the mobile phone companies illustrates yet another point about the development of a global business: not every market wants or needs the same thing. Clearly, there is little market for heating systems in Abu Dhabi or air conditioning in Greenland. And if you are selling DIY tools, then you should probably focus on markets with a thriving real estate market, plenty of re-sales and a culture of home improvements. It comes back to making sure there is a real opportunity and whether you can stimulate real demand for your offering. However, it can get more sophisticated than that. My business provides e-commerce and payments solutions and it has shown some very interesting differences in behaviour. For example, if you want to expand your online business to European countries outside the UK, France and Germany, you may need to think of a very different business model. These three countries account for 75% of all online sales in Europe. You need to do very careful market research to decide whether there is a demand for e-commerce in your chosen destination. Is there still a strong expectation that goods will be paid for by cash, or are cards acceptable? Will you have to deliver your goods with the invoice and invest more in debt collection? Do you have facilities to accept debit, credit and prepaid cards? What are the different fees and charges? These types of details are easy to overlook, but make a difference between a successful and unsuccessful business. Then there are the legal and structural differences to manage. For example, Brazil has a complex method for withholding tax that doesn�t fit with the standard purchasing cycle used in the US or the UK. In Europe, Germany�s works councils are much more firmly entrenched at senior level than the UK�s trades unions. Then there are different cultural expectations that need to be managed. Some are obvious: if you are in Delhi and need to communicate with Dubai you, need to allow for time zone differences, even language differences. Some would argue that you need to allow for language differences if you�re in London and trying to talk to New York. But if you focus only on these obvious factors, you may miss more important differences. The reason that Brits and Americans sometimes feel they are �divided by a common language� is because the words represent alternative ways of thinking and a different ways of doing things � from working lunches to organising credit. In fact, for all the similarities in the way we do business around the world, there are important differences that remain. For this reason, choosing the right people to work with becomes even more important in a global business. I have always believed that success is built on choosing the right people and nurturing their talents. That doesn�t change if you have global ambitions. In fact it becomes even more important. The bigger the company, the more you need to delegate and the more you need to trust the people that work with you. When you have a global perspective, you have to make sure you have people in place who understand both the local laws for conducting business and that they understand the local accepted practice. harnessing the power and ideas of young people Finally, I believe that harnessing the power and ideas of young people is the key to business and economic success. Business is driven by technology and younger people, who have never known a world without computers will have completely different expectations than their aging parents. When we consider that when NASA first sent a man to a moon it had less computational power available to it than an average Western student has in their laptop bag, we understand how vast the change has been and how inspiring the possibilities could be. As fresh thinkers with new ideas, courage and confidence, young people play an important role in any business. Shutting out their voices because they lack experience is a big mistake for any company that wants to achieve longevity. Trying to force them to fit your mould damages your prospects and theirs. But we can extend that metaphor to young economies. As we saw with mobile phones, developing countries often leap straight to the latest innovation without developing legacy systems and processes. They too have fresh ways of thinking about business problems, unencumbered by traditional thinking or the need to make the most of existing investments. Building a global business is about personal discipline, hard work, planning, focus, innovation and flexibility. But more than anything else, it is about listening. It�s about taking on board new voices and new ideas from people who are separated from you either by years or by distance and then building a company that can take those voices out to your customers. Tej Kohli is CEO of Grafix Softech
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Hodes wins 2009 CIPD Recruitment Grand Prix Two nights ago, I had the pleasure of attending the 2009 CIPD Recruitment Awards at the HAC Gardens. The setting was idyllic – on arrival, we were greeted with a glass of champagne and quickly ushered onto the veranda to lounge in the evening sunshine against a backdrop of a cricket match. An immaculately manicured cricket pitch in the middle of the city – how quintessentially English. Anyway, a fantastic evening was made much better by Hodes winning the Recruitment Effectiveness award and then topped by our work for Hertfordshire Constabulary winning the Grand Prix award. A great honour and one that does credit to a long-standing relationship between Hodes and Herts, which has allowed us to test some of the more innovative/risky advertising ideas. But there was a sombre note to the evening. The previous day had seen the announcement that one of our competitors, Barkers, had been bought. Unbeknown to many of us, Barkers was already in administration and its acquisition by Penna for the lowly price of £8.6m resulted in a further suite of redundancies (and I’m fairly certain that it heralds the start of more to come). The announcement had been too sudden to allow for Barkers’ advertisement to be removed from the programme. Barkers, which was the only agency to post a three-figure billing in the top ten agencies list, focused on the company’s long term history, with the ad proudly stating its establishment date (1812) and survival through “2 world wars, 6 recessions, 8 monarchs, 36 Prime Ministers, the fall of the British Empire, climate change and the global credit crisis.” It reminded me of a recent book that I have read – Then we came to the end, by Joshua Ferris – which is about the slow and inevitable death of an advertising agency and the desperate struggle of those under its employ to pretend that it wasn’t happening. And it got me thinking as to whether it was really such a big surprise, after all. Plus ca change, n’est ce pas? Tags:And it came to an end, Barkers, CIPD, Grand Prix Award, Joshua Ferris, Recruitment Effectiveness Award
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Home NEWS BUSINESS & JOBS Dubai marks World Humanitarian Day at Burj Khalifa Dubai marks World Humanitarian Day at Burj Khalifa Source: www.ameinfo.com Under the patronage of UN Messenger of Peace and Chairperson of the International Humanitarian City (IHC) HRH Princess Haya Bint Al Hussein, wife of HH Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, the UN’s World Humanitarian Day was marked on Sunday, August 19, 2012. nternational Humanitarian City raised humanitarian awareness at global simulcast event. Dubai joined cities across the globe for a live simulcast celebrating humanitarianism and honouring those who risk their lives to help others in need. Over 10,000 people gathered at the Burj steps in Downtown Dubai for the simulcast of the global World Humanitarian Day video and Beyonce’s new song ‘I Was Here’, a product that has been put together by a remarkable team of creative and production specialists who have donated time, energy and enthusiasm towards establishing World Humanitarian Day as a day of note and recognition. On this day, we joined forces to commemorate those who have lost their lives in the line of humanitarian duty and as well as celebrate the incredible commitment of people across the globe who give so much to humanitarian service. More info Burj steps in Downtown Dubai UN Messenger of Peace and Chairperson of the International Humanitarian City (IHC) World Humanitarian Day Previous articleDubai’s Palm Jumeirah proves to be hot property Next articleBurj Khalifa consultants to build tallest statue in the world in India Police confirm Burj Khalifa death was suicide Mohanlal to get a ‘tall’ address Dubai World to sign final debt deal
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Shloka Shankar (India) Shloka Shankar resides in Bangalore, India. She is notable for her work in anthologies of repute including Traversal of Lines, The Dance of the Peacock, The Unsettled Winter and Family Matters. Shloka has also seen her poems published in numerous other literary journals including Creatrix, Whispers, The Brown Boat, A Handful of Stones, The Bamboo Hut, A Hundred Gourds, Cattails and the Asahi Haikuist Network among others. View all haiga by Shloka Shankar (India)
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Submitted by 180Fusion on Mon, 10/16/2017 - 01:44 While a small cache of microfiche is definitely more portable and a huge space saver compared to a collection of books or magazines, a virtual library of digital documents can fit onto a single thumb drive. That means scanning and converting your microfiche can turn what used to require multiple cases and possibly multiple rooms into something that can literally fit conveniently onto a keychain. There's simply no equal when it comes to portability and saving space. While a thumb drive is portable, remote access takes it a step further. Digital documents can be stored for cloud access, archived and stored on servers, and transmitted across the globe in mere moments. Documents sitting on a server in London could be accessed by a remote team in Melbourne. This means that everyone who needs to have those documents available can manage to access them simply by having Internet service and a laptop or even a phone. Your collection of microfiche can go from requiring hundreds or thousands of miles to travel, to simply requiring a login name and password. Redundancies Of course, backing up microfiche is a time-consuming process. However, backing up digital documents can be done via servers, cloud storage, a portable hard drive, or a flash drive. Backups can be done often, easy to perform, and easy to access. Having ample copies and redundant storage options means that losing your data will be next to impossible. Perhaps microfiche scanning doesn't sound overly exciting, but the advantages to converting your microfiche to digital documents are plentiful and powerful. In an increasingly global world, and with remote workers and remote accessibility being more and more a requirement, it's easy to see how important microfiche scanning could be for you and your business. There's simply no substitute for the potency and performance of a digital archive.
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Summer days & summer nights. Summer starts soon, but to me, it's already started.
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October 27th (1924) was a Monday. It's the 300th day of the year (301st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 65 days left to the end of the year. » The Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic named Uzbek SSR is founded in the Soviet Union. » Ruby Dee, American actress, singer, playwright, and poet » Remembrance days in Slovakia e.g Černová Tragedy Day (Slovakia) » Abbán » Kaleb of Axum named Elesbaan » Frumentius (Roman Catholic Church) » Independence Day, celebrates the independence of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines from United Kingdom in 1979. » Independence Day (Turkmenistan) known as Independence Day, celebrates the independence of Turkmenistan from USSR in 1991. » Navy Day, first organized to be on this day. (United States)
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Julie Walters Julie Walters (born February 22, 1950) is a British actress, mainly associated with comedy and character roles. She came top in a poll to find Britain's most popular actress. Born in Birmingham, England, Walters first became known as the occasional partner of comedienne Victoria Wood. Their series, Wood and Walters, appeared on television in 1982, and they have continued to perform together frequently over the years. One of Julie Walters' best-known roles is as "Mrs Overall" in Wood's spoof soap opera, Acorn Antiques. Her first serious acting role on TV was in the classic Boys from the Blackstuff in 1980, and she broke into films with her sensational performance opposite Michael Caine in Educating Rita (1983), a role she had created on the West End stage. Julie Walters has won numerous acting awards, and was made an OBE in 1999 for her services to the theatre. In 2001, she won a Laurence Olivier award for her performance in Arthur Miller's All My Sons. She often plays older women, and in 2002 she won the BAFTA Best Actress award for her performance as Paul Reiser's mother in My Beautiful Son.
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Mikey Oquendo Producer & Comedian Chicago based producer with a focus on Comedy, Theater and Music for general and corporate audiences. Clients have included ComEd, Tampico, City of Chicago, GOYA, Northwestern University, Coca-Cola and Allstate. Our community partner nights raise around $70,000 annually for local non-profits. We have been featured on THE VIEW, Telemundo, People Magazine, New York Daily News, NY1, FOX TV, American Latino TV, Univision, Urban Lifestyle Media, CNN, Chicago Tribune, New York Times, and Broadway World.
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Home > urban > Akuyaku Reijou no Naka no Hito > CH 12.1 Akuyaku Reijou no Naka no Hito CH 12.1 Author:Makiburo Category:urban Update time:2022-12-29 13:40:52 「Your Majesty, Demon King, uhm, can I call you Angel-sama」 「…This woman’s name is」 「No, I’m just… uhm, I am, my name is Pina Blanche. I am called the Star Maiden by those around me, but by all means, Angel-sama, please call me Pina.」 He just asked the other side for the name of the rude one, and when Pina, who was perverted, replied that way, a blue streak appeared on Angel’s forehead. What she was saying is so far apart that it looks like a comedy, and I almost have a toothy grin on my face. Why would anyone want to put this woman in front of a state guest of honor What was the instructor doing teaching manners when there was so much time, this would still be better for a 5 year old who hasn’t even made her tea party debut. There was a soft and predictable aroma wafting from the space Pina ran through. My mood was further boosted by the fact that the trap had worked as I had hoped. I knew it was through a number of people, but it was this woman who asked for the「nectar of Lilith.」It was tentative because one of the intermediaries was killed to keep its mouth shut, but now we know for sure. Lilith flower nectar was a chargeable item in the story that raised the demon tribe’s favor, and now Angel has designated it as a prohibited item to be handled and strictly forbidden to take out of the country. Of course, what this woman got was not actually the nectar of the Lilith flower, but just a harmless perfume made from a harmless flower native to the magical world with a characteristic smell. Pina herself used it as a trap because she had never held a real one in her hands, so she would not notice it. She is so stupid that she comes out wearing the evidence in this way and feels all the more adorable. 「By the way, King of the Land of Men… Did you know that the woman there gives off a scent known as a drug that is strictly forbidden to be taken out of the country because it affects the mind and can only be used by those with a license」 「Wha…!」 The king of the land, whose eyes widened in astonishment, directed the kingsguard knights behind him with a glance to keep Pina away from Angel. The kinsman who moved was David’s own brother, the eldest son of the Dominici family. He skipped David, the Star Maiden escort for the coming Star Maiden’s, a de facto “incompetent” pronouncement from the king, but he doesn’t seem to have the luxury of realizing that much. The knightly figure is treating the woman he has been pampering like a sinner, but without any reason to raise his voice in rebuttal, he drops his outstretched hand and awkwardly moves closer to her. Now that man, the Star Maiden who chose to be by his side even to the point of breaking off the engagement, is in that state, and I guess it’s awkward because he’s not even training properly because he’s worried about what people around him will think. There’s a limit to how much you can train alone, and it takes a few days on the knighthood’s training schedule to go on a full-scale demon slaying mission, however… David, who cannot be away for long from his escort Pina, the「Star Maiden」to his eyes, has not been able to take that time. He said that many of the knights don’t want to escort Pina, so they have no choice but to increase David’s operation. Pina, who no longer had access to the perfume of attractiveness, was still trying to curry favor with the good-looking Konoe without changing her behavior, and was failing drastically. She was shunned by their professionalism. The exceptions are a few who were boned by a secret love potion that was mentioned in a poisoned taste while escorting the Dauphin during his school years. However, some of them are knights in name only, as they have long since dropped off the career track due to their frequent behavior unbecoming of a member of the Kingsguard, such as sitting down next to the Star Maiden to have tea when requested during work hours. David is doing the same, which is why he avoids his brother, who is called a sword saint but continues to strive to be one. Stefan, the son of the chief royal mage, is also close to Pina in terms of his position, but his father is completely on Angel’s side, glaring at Pina, who is named as the one who drugged Angel, the demon king who brought Lilin, who cured his chronic disease. Stefan, too, was on the verge of becoming both a magician and a musician before he went up to the academy. Many of the wizards in the Sorcerer’s Tower resented Pina because they were grateful that Emi had developed a lot of non-lethal, life-useful magic that she had helped invent with her「modern knowledge cheat,」 which had improved the status of magicians, who were said to be「money-grubbing insects except in time of war.」Furthermore, Pina, who is no longer able to use the perfume of charm, was practically banned after graduation from the school for being rude to the ladies of nobility in social circles. Stefan, who is still under the protection of the Star Maiden, has no proper accomplishments because he does not come to the sorcerer’s tower to guard the Star Maiden due to his awkwardness, and there is no salon that calls him as a musician, so when asked what Stefan’s profession is, he has to tilt his head. Claude is the only one who works every day as a political officer, but when he proposes policies that sound good, such as「pensions,」「child allowance,」「universal health insurance,」 and「welfare,」 which he hears about from the Star Maiden, and then he was asked,「So, where is the money going to come from」He was repeatedly kicked out, and now he is working in a smaller company. I wonder if he was that stupid. The world Emi lived in was too developed to introduce the same thing without much more mature social system and stable tax revenues than this country, which I think is obvious if you think about it for a minute. Not to mention the fall of Williard, the crown prince. Oh, by the way, it seems that Pina had a certain magical tool developed based on an idea that she said would be「useful」if it were available. Maybe it’s because we can now get high-quality magic crystal stones from the demon world. From the materials we were arranging, she found out that we were trying to produce and disseminate, at a low cost, a food heating and cooking device inspired by the「microwave oven」that existed in Emi’s world, and a「refrigerator」that already existed but only a few nobles had a similar device…… I squashed that plan by spreading a similar one that was already in the demon world, where magical tools were more developed, first. That’s about all that’s new, I guess. I made a look of disbelief and turned my attention to Pina, who was said to be「on drugs.」 「That’s! You’re wrong, I’m just…」 「Reports are coming up from the person in charge of conducting the trade. When someone asked for a drug ingredient that was forbidden to export, he refused, but when he was approached with a bribe, he gave them a perfume made from a flower native to another magical world under the false pretense that it was the same. The smell of that illegally distributed perfume is wafting from you to your nose. I ask again, if you were not trying to harm me, what difference does it make」 Attempting to serve a love potion to cage a person without regard to his/her feelings, is sufficient to「do harm.」 Knowing that the demon king Angel’s eyes can see through lies, Pina quickly changed the color of her face and turned her head down. There is no way to tell the truth without lying, and the only way to avoid being exposed for lying is to shut up. 「Hmm, as expected, you know that my eyes can see through lies. You heard me right.」 「Y–You’re wrong… It’s just, I, I just wanted to get to know you demons better…」 「So, you’re doing through use of those drugs Just like Remilia warned me about.」 「Why, why did Angel-sama know that person’s name…!」 「… The knight there, keep her mouth shut. When I am insulted by this woman to whom I owe so much for saving our country, I feel like strangling her to death. And you, woman, I don’t allow yourself to call me names. I don’t care about the position of an ornamental person who is enshrined in a country. Shut your disrespectful mouth unless you want to die.」 I was so irritated that I put my hand on his arm as I approached him soundlessly to restrain Angel’s anger, which had been peeled off by the stranger’s words.「Angel, don’t raise your voice for me.」As I spoke, Angel’s brow furrowed as he felt a familiar body heat touch her, and he looked away from Pina and smiled softly when he saw me. Pina glared at me,「Why are you」hurriedly shutting her mouth, as if she thought it was a bad idea after Angel had threatened her. And now, looking at me from top to bottom with the color of Angel all over my body, her face is stained with rage and her clenched fists are shaking slightly. Oh my, the cat you were wearing has gone for a walk somewhere. 「I can’t believe it’s a banned substance… I didn’t know, a spell to get along with… I can only assume it’s something like… T–That’s right! Erm, My King, you are going to form an alliance for friendship with the demon tribe, aren’t you For the sake of that alliance, I, the Star Maiden representing this country, and… I think it’s a very good idea, like His Majesty the Demon King getting married.」 「…Hey, Remilia, what the hell is this woman talking about」 「Ah… Your Majesty, Demon King, uhm, as the Star Maiden, I have the power to draw out various talents and enhance the talents of others, making me the perfect queen for a demon king who is having trouble developing an inconvenient demon world!」 Angel, who seemed to be beyond comprehension, looked at her blankly. Behind her, bewilderment is tacked on, and you can see that she was in trouble. Probably because deep down Pina thought,「I am a good match for Angel and Angel should be happy to marry me,」and there was no lie there. She doesn’t even realize that she has just made a statement that has undermined the territory of another country. Don’t she know that there is plenty of untouched land because she couldn’t afford to develop it, but there are plenty of resources Angel’s weakness is that he gets confused when the other person assumes it’s true. She almost felt out of place and at ease when she stared at him with those sullen eyes like a puppy begging for rescue in the rain. 「Your Majesty the King, it has been a long time.」 「…Lady Remilia, you are…」 「Today I am not the daughter of the Duke of Graupner, but a guest of the land of the demons, and I am here with Angel-sama.」 「…Let’s see.」 He is the king of this country, not a fool. He looked at me with a very serious face… It seems that he saw the demon king who laid his own hand over mine covering my hand on Angel’s arm and started calculating at high speed that favoritism is with me, including the word that I am greatly indebted to him. 「…The Star Maiden seems to be in poor health, how about she rest for a little while We can talk about the intricacies after the evening meeting.」 「Yes, I agree with Lady Remilia…」 「Remilia-sama, have you come to do terrible things to me『again!』Please stop this!」 Shaking off the eldest Dominici, who had been jittery and hesitant to touch the Star Maiden’s body, Pina rushed forward and looked up at me with her hands held in front of her body and her eyes looking up at me. Angel’s anger swells with a blur. Some who excelled as magicians could be seen shaking under the pressure and involuntarily falling to their knees. Oh my, she was trying to pick a fight here. Emi would not have done anything to expose her to the public, so I tried to quiet Angel’s anger and let him retreat to the back of the house, but Pina seemed to have the intention of making him feel uncomfortable. Well, I knew she would do it. 「D–Demon King…! Please listen to me, I am sure the Demon King is deceived. The lady over there was the Dauphin’s fiancée, erm… She’s the kind of person who abused me, and was finally condemned and banned from social life, along with breaking off an engagement for attempting to kill me!」 The words were very poor, as if she had twisted her brain in a hasty attempt to bend the truth without lying. Hearing this, Angel’s anger intensifies. 「Remilia said,『I was maliciously lied to and falsely accused and driven away,』and there was no lie in her words. If you somehow know that I have a magic eye that can see through lies, then you know what these words mean, don’t you」 「No… uhm, Remilia-sama just doesn’t know she’s guilty… She didn’t want to admit it until the very end…」 「Then you can answer with『yes』or『no.』Did you lie then, fabricate evidence, and use bribed witnesses to falsely punish Remilia」 「…Tch.」 「Choosing silence in my presence is the same as affirming it.」 Hah, Angel snickered and twisted his face in a grimace. Pina’s face turned pale and her lips wagged, and she started mumbling something to me, glaring at me through her bangs, so that only I could see her face. 「No… That’s wrong… Because I am the Star Maiden, and I should be the one who deserves Angel-sama… Even that dress, why is this woman wearing it… The colors of Angel-sama… I’m supposed to get that magic crystal stone too…」 「I don’t know how enshrined you are, but I would never want someone just for their title. Remilia is also a Maiden of Purification who receives blessings from Renge, the youngest daughter of the God of Creation, but I love Remilia, a kind-hearted girl who has devoted herself to the world based on her beliefs without corruption and without breaking, even though she has no allies, regardless of what kind of blessings she has.」 I love you, he said, surprised as if I had never heard it before, and when I showed him the words with a flush on my cheeks, Angel smiled as if I was in trouble. As he hugged me around the waist, he whispered,「I’m sorry, I wanted to tell you properly when we were alone,」and I smiled back with my hazily moist eyes as if embarrassed,「I was surprised, but I’m very happy.」 Yes, I’m glad from the bottom of my heart that I would say something like that at a time when I could do the most damage to Pina. It’s more than I expected. Out of the corner of my eye, I catch Williard gasping behind Pina when he sees my smile, but I pretend not to notice it. Pina, perhaps not so pleased that Angel had whispered his love to me right in front of her, began to wriggle and try to lash out. A female knight was rushing in, holding her from both sides, though she could do nothing but stand her ground. Well, how vulgar. My true feelings came out, and my face was about to distort with amusement, but I kept my rationality and made an expression of joyful acceptance of Angel’s words, even though I was puzzled by them. I remember to look at Pina with pity from time to time. 「Why, why are you there……! Did you trick me! You’ve got to be kidding me, the Maiden of Purification was also a title I was supposed to get!」 「Pina… Is it true, His Majesty, The Demon King said that you falsely accused Remilia……」 「 N–No, Will… I was really bullied… uhm, I was afraid of Remilia-sama, erm…」 Glancing back and forth, Pina pleads her case to Williard, with Angel’s attention on her. I guess for fear of being exposed as a lie. In fact, Pina was probably afraid of Emi. Emi was liked by them without using any items to increase their sensitivity. She was in such a hurry to get there because she was aware that she was playing a cowardly hand in her knowledge of the story. …Emi was, she was willing to accept an end to the engagement if Williard had a change of heart after the Star Maiden appeared. She told Father, but only to the queen, because she was sure Father would not approve, but she said,「When Master Will has someone in mind, if he is a better person for the country than I am, I will accept the dissolution of the engagement.」However, the queen was not entangled in the perfume of Pina’s charms and did not approve of her fiancé’s replacement because she had almost no contact with Pina, even though she was the Star Maiden. After that, she was not caged by Pina because she hated her as the woman who had driven away Remilia, whom she loved like a daughter. I’ve noticed in my monitoring that that item doesn’t seem to work unless the person has a little bit of a good feeling about it. Because those who had only bad impressions of Pina from the beginning never seemed to be dropped.
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5167
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The 30 Greatest Hotels And Properties Close to City Of Arts & Sciences, Valencia, Spain April 18, 2018 November 9, 2017 megan arts & scienceclose, greatest, hotels, properties, sciences, spain, valencia Graduate Students – Please contact your major division for advising. Six educational applications within the School of Arts and Sciences obtained high marks in the U.S. News Greatest Graduate Faculty rankings 2018 version. College students with degrees from different institutions are invited to pursue the other second diploma choices accessible. Students are required to fulfill the residency necessities and to complete program requirements. These may be open to all students, or restricted to particular nationalities, areas or tutorial division. The typical is calculated from the grades obtained on all courses taken, that carry credit score towards the B.A., B.A.&Sc., B.F.A., or diploma. To receive a Four-12 months or Honours B.A. after another undergraduate diploma, college students must full a minimal of 30 extra credit items not utilized in any earlier degree, and fulfill all program necessities. 18 credit items from the Social Sciences, Humanities and High quality Arts; at most 6 credit models in a single topic; at minimum a minimum of 6 credit score models from two of Social Sciences, Humanities and Fantastic Arts; and a minimum of three credit units of Languages. Such a core curriculum may specify that certain courses by their college students have to be taken, or might require elective programs to be taken within certain areas to supply a properly-rounded schooling for each student. Additionally, students might choose from over 60 minors offered throughout the School; they could also select forty cross-faculty minors at other colleges within NYU. A Specialization should be accomplished along with a Main, and should be completed at the time of commencement with a 4-year or Honours degree. College students who wish to pursue a second diploma program in Arts & Science with a degree from another college (listed above) should full the required minimal further 30 credit units. And discovery within the arts helps students open their imaginations to recent perspectives on the world. A Faculty of (Liberal) Arts and Sciences generally has a core curriculum which all college students in the Faculty must take, regardless of their main in the College. Before a B.A. or diploma may be awarded, the College requires the scholar to finish specific courses and meet sure laws. New York Metropolis Culture Museums, Galleries And Theaters School And Graduate College Of Arts And Sciences, University Of Virginia
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Home > Articles by: Louise Savoie Author Archives: Louise Savoie Alzheimer’s Disease in People With Down Syndrome Many but not all people who have Down syndrome develop Alzheimer’s disease when they get older. Down syndrome is a condition wherein a person is born with an extra copy of chromosome 21, which carries a gene that produces a specific protein called ... By Louise Savoie Medical Conditions Associated with Autism Aside from difficulties with communication and forming interpersonal relationships, autistic children and adults also struggle with many health issues. Life on the spectrum is rarely easy for these individuals. If you are caring for someone who is au... Accommodating People with Disabilities in the Workplace Despite having limitations, individuals dealing with disabilities should be treated like everyone else in a working environment. From the office tools to the way you communicate with them, you can transform the workplace conducive for all employees. ... How Do You Cope with a Mesothelioma Diagnosis? Mesothelioma is a type of cancer that affects tissue linings in the lungs and in the abdomen. Asbestos exposure is a direct cause of mesothelioma, cases of which are being discovered by thousands in the United States. In mesothelioma, asbestos fibers... Recuperating from an Injury at Home When a person with an injury is finally discharged from the hospital, they are usually asked by their physician to rest at home for a prescribed period. This means that they must limit their movements as much as possible so that their stitched or pat... Proper Wound Care That Can Avoid Infection Wounds are rarely life-threatening, except when the injury has penetrated the internal organs. When you sustain that kind of injury, you’ll have to enlist the help of specialist services in hospitals so you can get the best care possible until you ...
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Now Get Rid of the $2600 Limit 4/3/2014—News came yesterday of the decision of the Supreme Court to overturn aggregate limits on campaign contributions. The typical responses were that conservatives hailed the change and liberals bemoaned the effect of money on politics. These overall limits on money contributed to federal candidates in a 2-year cycle do not affect the $2600 limit to an individual candidate in one election cycle. So, it would already have been complicated to actually reach the aggregate limit and few people did so. What is missed in the reaction is that we already have unlimited spending on campaigns. That spending comes from independent groups, usually super PAC’s, that are free to raise money and spend it as long as they do not coordinate their spending with any candidate’s campaign. Thus, we now have the worst of all worlds—-unlimited, irresponsible and invisible spending by rich people infecting our politics, creating obligations that candidates understand and that the voters do not understand. The simple answer is counterintuitive—-get rid of the $2600 limit, which now actually only affects regular people. In one act, independent spending would begin to ebb. The voters would see which candidates received money from people whose politics they do not like. If independent spending went on, voters could ask why a candidate could not control his or her own supporters. Politics would become transparent, which is even more important than controlling how much money is spent. Posted by Bruce Ledewitz at 6:19 AM There is a man in America who was taken to church as a child. When he went to a local college Sam spent most of his time with friends, studying, playing games and with nice girls. When holidays came around he went to church with his parents where he liked the preacher's stories but Sam did not believe the parts that insisted that God was the all powerful. When he took his first job as an accountant Sam was able to live in a nice house and enjoy life around town with his friends. He became engaged to a woman he loved and they had plans for a secure life. As time went on Sam made plans for getting a better job and living a better life. He moved with his family to a new city where there was a well paying job. When Sam was alone he occasionally had feelings of depression and loneliness even though he loved his family and they loved him. He tried many things like taking his family on vacations and spending more time entertaining his friends but the uplifting benefits of these things would fade quickly. Sam was very protective of what he had and was very sad when his first child went off to a university. His children visited on occasion, he moved to better jobs and bought nice things to live with. Until the day Sam died he worked to get that better life that America had promised but there was always more that was needed. Now there is another man in America who was also taken to church as a child. When he went to a local college Pat spent most of his time with friends, studying, playing games and with nice girls. When holidays came around he went to church with his parents where he liked the preacher's stories but Pat did not believe the parts that insisted that God was the all powerful. When he took his first job as an accountant Pat was able to live in a nice house and enjoy life around town with his friends. He became engaged to a woman he loved and they had plans for an abundant life. As time went on Pat made plans for ensuring that his family would have what they needed. He moved a few times between jobs looking for one that would pay the bills and was a fulfilling place to work. When Pat was alone he thought about who he was and what the right way was to raise a family. He took his family on vacations, entertained friends and reminded himself constantly that he was lucky to have these things he loved. Pat had high hopes for his children and encouraged them to take risks while being conscious to do the right thing. He and his wife stayed in the same house and his children came back to visit on occasion. Until the day Pat died he pursued a good life, he love America for providing him the opportunities he had and was fulfilled with his life. The difference between Sam and Pat is not some psychological difference; it is that Pat believed that there was a universal good within a world of randomness and Sam believed that relationships and objects could make his life good. Sam was a Secularist, Pat was a Hallowed Secularist. This blog will track the progress of a new way of life in this society, a way of life that may come to be known as Hallowed Secularism. In the short run, I will be writing a book that describes this way of life, at least as I see its future. But in the longer run, others will decide the future of Hallowed Secularism by living it. A group of self-announced atheists, such as Christopher Hitchens, is currently trying to push secularism toward atheism and away from religion. But secularism need not be atheism. The secularist rejects many things the religious person holds dear: a traditional God, life after death, miracles and so forth. But the secularist can still have a conception of God or Godhead. The secularist may see a deep pattern in history and may feel a profound connection to all that is. Secularism can be holy. You and I will live that possibility. Bruce Ledewitz Follow me on twitter @BLedewitz and read my columns for the Pennsylvania Capital-Star newspaper. Author of Church, State, and the Crisis in American Secularism (Indiana University Press 2011), Hallowed Secularism: Theory, Practice, Belief (Palgrave Macmillan 2009) and American Religious Democracy: Coming to Terms with the End of Secular Politics (Praeger 2007). Upcoming Events and Appearances Oxford University Press will publich Bruce's new book, The Universe Is on Our Side: Restoring Faith in American Public Life, in early October. Preorder now from Oxford, Amazon or wherever you buy books. Bruce will participate in a zoom discussion of the Electoral College and The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact with the League of Women Voters of the Hamptons, Sept. 13 at 7 p.m. Bruce will be delivering the Larry Grimes Lecture at Bethany College on October 7. Bruce is interviewed on the podcast Ikthos at https://ikthos.podbean.com/e/episode-4-interview-with-prof-bruce-ledewitz/ Indiana University Press has published Church, State, and the Crisis in American Secularism. A trailer for the book can be viewed on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2n2aEHsYP5Q A podcast about the book can be accessed here. Atheists and Hallowed Secularists (19) Framework of Hallowed Secularism (39) Hallowed Secular Talmud (2) hallowed secularims and God (4) hallowed secularism (2) Hallowed Secularism and Christianity and Judaism (135) Hallowed Secularism and Current Approaches to Gnosticism (2) hallowed secularism and economics (31) hallowed secularism and global warming (2) Hallowed Secularism and God (97) Hallowed Secularism and Harry Potter (2) Hallowed Secularism and Higher Law (9) Hallowed Secularism and Humanism (7) Hallowed Secularism and International Law (5) Hallowed Secularism and Longing (4) Hallowed Secularism and Materialism (14) Hallowed Secularism and Natural Law (12) Hallowed Secularism and Our Religious Traditions (214) Hallowed Secularism and Politic (3) Hallowed Secularism and Politics (232) Hallowed Secularism and Ritual (4) hallowed secularism and science (16) Hallowed Secularism and the 2008 Election (32) hallowed secularism and the Constitution (52) hallowed secularism and the election (2) Hallowed Secularism and the Environment (11) Hallowed Secularism and the Family (7) Hallowed Secularism and the Fight over Evolution (4) hallowed secularism and the future (16) Hallowed Secularism and the Issues (153) Hallowed Secularism and the meaning of Life (49) Hallowed Secularism and the Name of God (7) Hallowed Secularism and the Natural World (9) Hallowed Secularism and the Secret of Life (8) hallowed secularism and the w (3) Hallowed Secularism and the Wall of Separation (147) hallowed secularism and truth (20) hallowed secularism in the age of nihilism (61) Hallowed Secularism is More Than Not Going to Church (1) hallowed secularism Talmud (1) Hallowed Secularism: No Big Deal? (1) Hallowed Secularism's Relationship to American Religious Democracy (9) How Should a Hallowed Secularist Live (6) Public Life and Hallowed Secularism (54) Racism and Hallowed Secularism (1) Secularism's Indifference to Religion as the Task of Hallowed Secularism (11) The Failure of Secularism (8) The Growth of Hallowed Secularism (3) the Israeli/Palestinian conflict (1) The Life of Hallowed Secularism (47) The New Atheism and Hallowed Secularism (16) The Origin of Hallowed Secularism (5) The Sources of Depth in Hallowed Secularism (24) The Sources of Secularism (9) The Theologians of Hallowed Secularism (2) Theists (1) What Makes Hallowed Secularism Hallowed? (10) What Makes Hallowed Secularism Secular? (3) Why Secularism Should Embrace Hallowed Secularism (17)
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The Strategy Behind Snooker Pool Sure, you're not drawing isosceles triangles or measuring the length of its hypotenuse at a pool hall (doing that might bring about a few stares down your way), but billiards is all about angles, positioning the cue ball to ricochet off other balls, ultimately causing them to go into one?or all?of the six pockets that line the table's perimeter.The different kinds of games you can play at a pool table far out number the 15 balls used in your typical game (not counting the 8-ball or cue ball, of course). One of those games is snooker.Snooker is a game that originated in Britain and came to be called "snooker," it's believed, after Neville Chamberlain referred to an army cadet as a snooker when his play wasn't exactly up to snuff. "Snooker" by definition is a first year cadet; Chamberlain then referred to the rest of the men playing with him that they were all snookers. The name stuck to the game since then.The object of the game is similar to your regular game of 8-ball: Put all the balls in the pockets that line the table. But the way in which the balls are set up at the beginning of the game?not to mention the balls' colors, the multiple "fouls" that can be committed, the number of balls used, the referee, and the fact that each game is made up of multiple frames?makes this game truly unique when compared to its counterparts. Snooker has never really caught fire in the United States but that doesn't hold true for the United Kingdom. In fact, it is the most watched sporting event outside soccer, or football, as it's known throughout most of the world. In 1985, one-third (18. 5 million people) of the United Kingdom population plunked themselves in front of their television sets to watch Dennis Taylor win on the final shot?a performance that is remembered as one of the sport's best moments.Since 1927, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association organize the professional tour and championship; the champion ship is held in Sheffield, England. .For more information go to http://www.infostormpublishing. com/ebooks/?bk=34.Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Kent_Sayre. By: Kent Sayre
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5171
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Nadia Krasteva „The rich, smoky colors and earthy sensuality of her voice were matched by the naturalness of her acting and a fiery temperament at one with this touchstone mezzo role “, John Von Rhein writes in the „Chicago Tribune“ about the debut of Nadia Krasteva as Carmen on the stage of the Chicago opera. The audience has also applauded to Carmen, Nadia Krasteva´s bravura role, on leading opera stages all around the world as the Vienna State Opera, the Arena di Verona, the Bolshoi Theatre, the Deutsche Oper in Berlin, the National Opera Amsterdam, the „O2 Arena“in Hamburg, the festivals Sankt Margarethen (Austria) and Savonnlina (Finland), the National Opera Riga, the National Opera Sofia and others. In her repertoire, Nadia Krasteva has more than 30 roles, performed on some of the most prestige opera stages and festivals in the world, like Wiener Staatsoper, the Arena di Verona, the Metropolitan Opera, the La Scala in Milan, the Chicago Lyric Opera, The San Francisco opera, the Bolshoi Theatre, La Opera Bastille in Paris, the Konzerthaus and Musikverein in Vienna, Theater an der Wien, Musikverein in Graz, the Verdi-Festival in Parma, the Nomori Opera and the „Spring Opera Festival“ in Tokyo, Teatro auditorio de San Lorenzo de el Escorial ,the Deutsche Opera and the State Opera of Berlin, the “Teatro Colon” in Buenos Aires, the festivals „Sankt Margarethen“, Savonlinna (Finland), Santander (Spain) and „Faenol“ in Wales, the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, the San Diego Opera, in Amsterdam, Valencia, the opera in Dallas, the National Opera in Sofia, the opera Theaters in Zürich, Geneve, St. Gallen, Torino, Riga, Dresden, Essen, The National Performing Centre(NSPA) in Beijing. After getting a special invitation to join the ensemble of the Wiener Staatsoper in 2002, Nadia Krasteva has immediately become a leading figure and the audience´s favorite in Vienna. She made her debut as Fenena in „Nabucco“ and has performed most major mezzo-soprano roles in the opera literature like Carmen (Carmen), Eboli (in both French and the Italian versions of “Don Carlos”), Leonora (The Favorite), Adalgisa (Norma), Sara (Roberto Devereux), Maria Gesualdo (Gesualdo), Ulrica(Un Ballo in Maschera), Giulietta (The Tales of Hoffmann), Marina (Boris Godunow), Preziosilla (La Forza Del Destino), Maddalena (Rigoletto), Giulietta (The Tales Of Hoffmann), Olga (Eugene Onegin),Pauline/Daphnis(Pique Dame), Meg Page(Falstaff), Emilia(Otello), Suzuki (Madame Butterfly) and other ones with great success. The fastidious Viennese review enthusiastically welcomes every appearance of hers on stage, thrilled by the incredibly strong influence of her beautiful timbre, her ability to recreate every role extraordinarily convincing and musically precise, as well as her enviable play and her strong presence on stage. Nadia Krasteva is a guest of many of the most prestige opera stages and musical festivals in Europe, the United States, Japan and South America – both with the above listed roles and parts like Delilah (Samson and Delilah), Amneris(Aida), The Princess (Rusalka), Venus (Tannhäuser), Princess De Bouillon (Adriana Lecouvreur), the requiems of Verdi and Mozart, the 9th symphony of Beethoven, opera gala concerts and song recitals.Some of her biggest successes are connected with her appearances as Delilah(San Diego opera,Sofia national opera,NCPA in Beijing,Teatro reggio Torino) and as Eboli in both italian and French version(Vienna,Berlin,Munich,New York,San Francisco,Dresden,San Lorenzo de El Escorial,Valencia,Sofia,Bratislava). Recent engagements of the mezzo-soprano have lead her to the Vienna State Opera as the foreign Princess in "Rusalka" and Maddalena in "Rigoletto", Amneris in "Aida" at Theatro Colon in Buenos Aires, as Carmen in Sofia National Opera, on a Japan tour with “Carmen” in Tokio, Nagoya etc. as well as to the Bolshoi Theater as Ulrica in "Un ballo in maschera". Nadia Krasteva was born in Sofia. She was a student at the State Music Academy „Pancho Vladigerov” in Sofia, when she made her debut on a big stage with the role of Sally Bowles in the musical „Cabaret“at the State Music Theatre „Stefan Makedonski“in Sofia. She graduates from the State Music Academy in July 2000 with an award and next year got a scholarship from the Academy for Opera Singing „Boris Christoff“ in Rome, where she specialized under the guidance of the Italian opera prime Anita Cerquetti. Nadia Krasteva singt die Partie der Ulrica in Un Ballo in Maschera am Bolshoi, Moskau. Vorstellungen am 20.. 22. und 25. April. Änderungen vorbehalten
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GEDSC DIGITAL CAMERA Pierre Bienvenu Noailles was an enthusiastic young priest of Bordeaux who, at the age of 27, began to found what he then called the Association of the Holy Family.
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A SERLING CHRISTMAS Long-time readers of this blog know that the two Christmas stories I love and cherish above all others are Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol (especially the extraordinary 1951 movie version starring Alastair Sim) and Frank Capra's It's A Wonderful Life (which may be my favorite movie of all time). But I was recently reminded—thanks, Jack!—of another Christmas tale near and dear to my heart: the classic Twilight Zone episode, "Night of the Meek"—which features an honest and magical Rod Serling script, matched by an equally-honest and magical lead performance by the great Art Carney. Since this is the time of giving, I present it here in its entirety. No need to wait until December 25th—you can unwrap it right now. Enjoy! SANTA'S BACK On television they’re trotting out Miracle on 34th Street, A Christmas Story, It's a Wonderful Life and seemingly-infinite variations on A Christmas Carol. Here at Creation Point we have our own Yuletide tradition. A few years ago—born out of my inordinate love for this heart-filling, soul-transforming, sacred and transcendent season—I wrote a short Christmas tale called The Truth About Santa Claus. Since then, I’ve been offering it annually as a kind of cyber Christmas present: my way of wishing all of you who visit this site the happiest of holidays and the most magical of Christmases. I offer it again this year—along with a trio of illustrations whipped up last year by my friend and collaborator Vassilis Gogtzilas. So grab a plate of Christmas cookies, pull a chair up close to the fireplace and enjoy. THE TRUTH ABOUT “THERE IS NO SANTA CLAUS!” He’d been thinking about it for days—ever since he heard Big Mouth Jenny Rizzo announce it on the school bus—and he didn’t believe a word of it, not one word. (Well, maybe ONE.) But Cody had to be sure, absolutely, positively sure— —and that’s why he was hiding behind the couch at midnight on Christmas Eve. His mother was there, asleep in his dad’s old easy chair, the reds and blues of the Christmas tree lights making her look peaceful and happy and impossibly young. The tree, by the way, had not ONE SINGLE PRESENT underneath it. That didn’t make sense. If there WAS no Santa Claus, if his mother was the one who bought the presents, wrapped the presents, stacked them under the tree, then how come she hadn’t done it? How come she wasn’t awake RIGHT NOW arranging them all? He got scared. Maybe there wasn’t going to BE a Christmas this year. Maybe Mom had lost her job and they didn’t have any money and so she COULDN’T buy him any presents and— And then Cody glanced over at the windows and noticed that it was snowing. Or was it? If that was snow, it was the WHITEST snow he’d ever seen. It was snow as bright as moonbeams, as bright as sunlight, as bright as... Stardust. Quickly, but quietly (he didn’t want to wake his mother), he scurried to the window and looked out. It was coming down and coming down and COMING DOWN all across town, whirling and whipping, spinning and gyrating, out of the night sky. Glowing so brightly that it almost hurt his eyes to look at it. And Cody saw that it certainly wasn’t snow, and it absolutely wasn’t rain, it wasn’t ANYTHING he’d ever seen before. But each drop, no...each flake, no... each BALL of glowing WHATEVER IT WAS, seemed to pulse and spin, soar and vibrate, as if it were alive. And the stuff, the magical WHATEVER IT WAS (and he knew now that it was magic. He just KNEW), wasn’t collecting on the streets, wasn’t piling up on the rooftops. It was MELTING INTO (that’s the only way he could put it: MELTING INTO) every house (no matter how small) and apartment building (no matter how big). EVERY house and apartment building. EVERY. He looked up. And there it was: coming RIGHT THROUGH THE CEILING of Apartment 3F, HIS apartment, swirling, like a tornado of light, around the chandelier and then down, down, down— —STRAIGHT FOR HIS MOTHER. At first he almost yelled out a warning, “Mom! Wake up! MOM!” But something made him stop. Instead of yelling he ducked back behind the couch and watched, eyes peering over the top. Watched as the light-tornado wheeled around his mother, so fast, so bright, that he could hardly even SEE her. But he COULD see her. Most of her, anyway. And what he SAW... The light poured in through the top of her head, through her eyes, through her chest, through her toes. It lifted her up—still sleeping!—and carried her out of her chair and across the room. And as she floated— —she started to change: Her hair became white, her nose became red, her belly ballooned like the most pregnant woman in the history of the world. Her feet grew boots, her head grew a hat, her nightgown grew fur. An overstuffed sack sprouted, like a lumpy angel’s wing, from her shoulder. And then— AndthenandthenandTHEN, it wasn’t his mother there at all, it was him, it was SANTA CLAUS! STANDING RIGHT THERE IN CODY’S LIVING ROOM! Santa Claus who, with a laugh (exactly like the laugh Cody always knew he had, only better) and a twinkle in his eyes (exactly like the twinkle he’d always imagined, ONLY BETTER) reached into his sack and pulled out package after package, present after present, and placed them, carefully, like some Great Artist contemplating his masterpiece, under the tree. When he was done, Santa Claus stood there, grinning and shaking his head, as if he couldn’t BELIEVE what a beautiful tree this was, how wonderful the presents looked beneath it. As if this moment was the greatest moment in the history of Christmas, as if this apartment was the only place in all the universes that such a Christmas could ever POSSIBLY happen. And then the MOST amazing thing happened: Santa Claus turned. He turned slowly. So slowly Cody couldn’t even tell at first that he was moving at all. And—slowly, SLOWLY—those twinkling eyes, that Smile of smiles, fixed itself on the two boy-eyes peering, in wonder, over the top of the couch. And what Cody felt then he could never really say: only that it was better than any present anyone could ever get. Only that it made his heart so warm it melted like magical WHATEVER IT WAS, trickling down through his whole body. Only that it made him want to reach out his arms and hug Santa Claus, hug his mother, hug his father (and FORGIVE him too, for running out on them) and his aunts and uncles and cousins (even his Cousin Erskine who was SUCH a pain) and Big Mouth Jenny Rizzo (who really wasn’t so bad most of the time) and all his friends and teachers and the kid in his karate class who always smelled SO BAD and, embarrassing as it sounds, it made him want to hug everyone and everything in the whole world including rabbits and snakes and trees and lizards and grass and lions and mountains and, yes, the EARTH HERSELF. Cody wanted to hold that gaze, to keep his eyes locked on Santa’s, forever. (Or longer, if he could.) Wanted to swim in that incredible feeling, drown in it, till GOD HIMSELF came down to say: “Enough!” Except that he blinked. Just once. But in that wink of an eye, Santa was gone. Cody’s mother was asleep in the chair again and, for one terrible moment, the boy thought that the whole thing must have been a dream. Except, under the tree: THERE WERE THE PRESENTS. Except, out the window: THERE WAS THE SNOW, the rain, the magical WHATEVER IT WAS, shooting up, like a blizzard in reverse, from every house, every apartment building. Shooting up into the heavens, gathering together like a fireball, like a white-hot comet— —and fading away into the night: going, going... Without so much as a tinkling sleigh-bell or a “Ho-ho-ho.” Not that it mattered. Cody looked at his mom. Cody kissed her. “I love you,” he said. And he was crying. Happy tears. Christmas tears. Like moonbeams, like sunlight. Like stardust. Mom stirred in the chair, smiled the softest sweetest smile Cody had ever seen. “I love you, too,” she said. And then she drifted back to sleep. Cody sat at her feet, warming himself, warming his SOUL, by the lights of the tree. And soon, he, too, was drifting off to sleep. And as he drifted, a wonderful thought rose up, like a balloon, inside him. Rose, then POPPED—spreading the thought to every corner of his mind. Giving him great comfort. Great delight: “One day,” the thought whispered, “when you’re all grown-up, when you have children of your own. ONE DAY,” the thought went on... “It will be YOUR TURN.” Story ©copyright 2013 J.M. DeMatteis Art ©copyright 2013 Vassilis Gogtzilas HAPPY BIRTHDAY, FRANCIS ALBERT SINATRA I've written about my love of All Things Sinatra here before, but there's nothing I could say that this wonderful television special, from the mid-1960's, doesn't say far more eloquently. The magic is in the Voice. Enjoy! Posted by J.M. DeMatteis at 5:44 PM 8 comments OF MICE AND HOBBITS I recently had the honor, and pleasure, of writing the introduction to the newest Mice Templar hardcover collection—the Harvey Award winning epic fantasy from the talented team of Bryan J.L. Glass, Michael Avon Oeming and Victor Santos—and I'd like to share it with you. If, after reading my essay, you feel an irresistible urge to order the book, just click here: I don't think you'll regret it. Onward! Worlds Within Worlds I was a teenager when I discovered Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy. I’d been a fan of fantasy and science-fiction, and a comic book obsessive, as far back as I could remember (blame Dr. Seuss, Rod Serling and Superman)—but I’d never encountered anything quite like The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers and Return of the King. Working my way—slowly, deliciously—through those three massive volumes, I encountered a fictional world that was not only utterly different than the world around me, but, in so many ways, more real. More true. All fiction is make-believe, of course—J.D. Salinger is as much a fantasist as Ray Bradbury, they just come at the work from different angles—but Tolkien’s achievement was, to my young eyes, unparalleled: He created an entire world—a rich, fertile universe filled with multiple races and cultures, a detailed history, unforgettable characters—from the ground up. I remember being stretched out on the living room couch, stunned and heartbroken as I turned the final page. The experience was such a unique and memorable one that I haven’t returned to the trilogy since: I don’t think any rereading could possibly match the magic of that first journey. I had a similar experience, years later, reading the Narnia series—written by Tolkien’s friend and fellow Oxford professor, C.S. Lewis—aloud to my son. When we reached the end—after a memorable voyage through seven books—there was absolute silence in the room. After a few moments I asked Cody, “Are you sad that it’s over?” He could hardly answer, just nodded his head. “I am, too,” I replied. And I was. That’s the power of great fantasy (whether it’s Baum’s Oz or Zelazny’s Amber, Bradbury’s Mars or Serling’s Twilight Zone): it transports you, alters your consciousness, peels apart the (so-called) reality we know and—most important—reassembles it in a form that serves not just as an escape, but as a way to see our own world with new, and more wonder-filled, eyes. I’ve long maintained that writing fantasy (and, yes, that’s a broad term, covering a wide range of stories) is, perhaps, the best way to capture the truth about the universe around us. In my experience, once you peel back the Skin of the World and look, really look, you’ll see that we’re all living in a universe as filled with magic and miracles as any found within the pages of a book. Our lives are fantasy—of the highest order. Of course creating the world-building kind of fantasy that Tolkien specialized in isn’t easy. The bookstore shelves are filled with attempts that, however enthusiastic their creators may have been, just don’t convince. We may be initially intrigued, but we’re not transported; the alternate reality just doesn’t stick, doesn’t take root in the heart. I’ve tried my hand at it on several occasions and I’ll leave it up to my readers whether I’ve succeeded or not. What I do know is that there are few pleasures in the writing life more exhilarating, more intoxicating, than unlocking that door in the unconscious that connects to worlds undreamed of, voices unheard, stories untold. When I was writing the children’s fantasy Abadazad, it felt to me (no, it didn’t just feel that way, I absolutely believed it) that ‘Zad was a very real place, located on the far side of Forever, and that its inhabitants had somehow chosen me to tell their tale. I imagined someone hunched over a kind of magical teletype machine, click-clacking away, transmitting the details of the story across time and space into my head. I imagine that Bryan J.L. Glass feels that way when he’s working on Mice Templar, because the tales he’s woven over the past ten years—abetted by fellow dreamers Michael Avon Oeming (who received the first transmissions from Karic’s world and set this spectacular story in motion) and Victor Santos—don’t feel “created.” You don’t get the sense of a writer sitting at his computer trying to fit together pieces of a puzzle, figuring out clever bits for this character or that, wracking his brain for a twist in the plot or a surprise ending. When you read Bryan’s stories it feels as if you’ve had a veil between dimensions pulled back, as if you’ve been yanked, body and soul, into a world that—like Tolkien’s—becomes somehow more real than the one around us. Bryan’s not a writer: he’s a channeler. When I first encountered Mice Templar, several years ago, I had my reservations. Talking mice? Hey, I love Mickey Mouse as much as the next person—maybe more—but a fantasy story about heroic, sword-wielding rodents wasn’t a concept that got my heart beating or excited my imagination. Which just goes to prove the fruitlessness of approaching art, and life, with preconceived notions. To my surprise, Mice Templar wasn’t some fairy tale romp through magical forests—although you will find your share of magical forests in these pages—it’s a complex and fascinating epic about complex and fascinating characters, battling their way through a richly-imagined, and utterly convincing, universe. Strangely, the fact that we’re immersing ourselves in the adventures of talking animals doesn’t pull us out of the story, it somehow pulls us in deeper, makes it all-the-more believable. (I can’t explain that, but it’s true.) Of course, channeling a story is one thing—but taking the raw material teletyped across Creation and crafting it into a coherent and engaging tale is quite another. To successfully mold a fantasy world as powerful and persuasive as the one in Mice Templar, you need to be both a dreamer and a craftsman. Page after page, Bryan proves himself an expert at both. But this is comics, after all, and words can only take us so far. Someone has to sit down and translate visions into images. Someone has to take a world that exists in the ethers and give it life on the printed page. Michael Oeming was the first to do that—and he did it brilliantly. The volume you hold in your hands was brought into being by the astonishingly-gifted Victor Santos (aided and abetted by the vibrant color work of the equally gifted Serena Guerra). Drawing comic books is fun, no doubt, but it’s also a difficult and challenging profession. Just being able to draw isn’t enough. (I’m sure we’ve all read comics that were beautiful to look at but utterly confusing. Worse: they were lifeless. Pretty pictures, I’m sorry to say, just aren’t enough.) An artist needs, first and foremost, to tell a visual story, to move the eye (and heart!) fluidly, effortlessly, from panel to panel, creating the perfect gesture, the ideal expression—eliciting awe and wonder in the big moments and a range of complex emotions in the quieter ones. Victor does all that and so much more. In the end, prose and pictures, Glass and Santos, fuse into one, creating something unique that neither could have achieved alone. And that is the magic of the best comic books. That is the magic of Mice Templar. ©copyright 2013 J.M. DeMatteis AND WHAT HAVE YOU DONE? Last year I wrote about my memories of December 8, 1980, the night John Lennon died—and, as that dark anniversary approaches again, I don’t see any need to repeat myself. Instead, let’s remember Lennon, and welcome the Christmas season, in the best possible way: by listening to, and celebrating, the man's extraordinary music. Back in 1971, John and his wife, Yoko Ono, took the bare bones of a traditional folk song called "Stewball" and transformed it into a Christmas classic. "Happy Christmas (War Is Over)" is a heartfelt mix of clear-eyed Lennon honesty and starry-eyed Lennon idealism. It's also—in my hyperbolic opinion—one of the greatest Christmas songs ever written. WHEN THE WORLD STOPPED I was in the fifth grade when John Kennedy was murdered. It's not history to me, it's memory: as strange, frightening and sad now as it was then. The assassination wasn’t announced in school that day, but I remember someone telling me that they’d seen the Principal crying (which, when you’re nine years old, is a staggering thing to hear); someone else mentioning that the school flag was at half mast (I knew that had some military meaning, but wasn’t sure what). On the way home several people informed me the President had been shot, but no one had any details. Had it really happened or was it just the kind of crazy rumor children routinely passed around? If it was true, was he badly hurt? Was he even alive? When I walked into our apartment and saw my father and sister sitting, stunned, in front of the television set, a photo of JFK, with the words May 29, 1917—November 22, 1963 emblazoned below it, filling the screen, the sickening truth was confirmed. The world stopped then—and we all stayed home, for days, glued to our TVs. (It was the first 24 hour news event and, looking back, we were blessed to have men like Walter Cronkite and Chet Huntley sifting through the details, instead of the bellowing, bloviating talking heads we have today.) I didn’t see Jack Ruby shoot Lee Harvey Oswald on November 24, but my best friend, Bob Izzo, did—and a group of us gathered around as he described television’s first live murder. The universe had clearly tipped into madness—but the truth is, this wasn’t news to me. That madness had been revealed, in all its lunatic horror, the year before when the Cuban Missile Crisis brought us to the edge of nuclear devastation. The world almost ended then—that’s not hyperbole, that’s fact—but somehow we survived, thanks, in no small part, to a President who refused to listen to war-hungry advisors. Now, a little more than a year later, that President was dead and it seemed as if the world really was ending. Kennedy was the first President I was ever aware of—I was six when he was elected—and, as a result, he loomed large, like some handsome American demigod, in my young consciousness. We all know now, of course, that he was was far from Deity Status: his many flaws have been repeatedly, and often luridly, catalogued in the years since his death; but JFK was also man of intelligence and wit, passion and wisdom. It’s the tension between the flaws and ideals, the “what was” and the “might have been,” that makes him such an intriguing figure. I’ve read more-than my share of Kennedy books over the years, digested innumerable documentaries, and the fascination continues. How could it not? The Kennedy assassination remains one of the defining world events of my childhood. It echoes on in my mind and heart to this day. To some, perhaps many, people born after the Kennedy era, all the attention focused on today’s fiftieth anniversary might seem excessive; but those of us who lived through those years will never stop reliving the experience. I'm often asked about script formats for comic books. (I remember it being an unfathomable mystery to me before I entered the business.) The answer is that—although there are general rules to adhere to—there are as many formats as there are writers and the template is evolving all the time. When I started in the business at DC Comics, my first editor—the always wise and insightful Paul Levitz—handed me a sample script, explaining the way the page should be broken down: I've pretty much followed that template ever since. In the end, it's easier to show than tell, so here are the first three story pages of one of my all-time favorite projects, The Life and Times of Savior 28. (I pondered including the entire script, but it runs to nearly seventy pages, which seemed excessive.) Keep in mind that this is how I do it. Other writers approach the script in different ways—but everyone is breaking the story down by page, panel, captions and dialogue. What you see below is called Full Script. There's also the so-called Marvel Method, where the writer presents the artist with a detailed plot outline. The artist then draws from the plot, the art goes back to the writer who then provides the dialogue and captions. I'll post a few pages of plot soon and discuss that method in more detail. The advantage of Full Script is that the writer is in complete control of the materials: the visuals and pacing, the flow and rhythm, of the story are in his hands. But the truth is, however specific your script may be, ten different artists will turn that script into ten different reading experiences. Some will raise your story up to heights you never dreamed of, others will drag it down and kick it in the head for good measure. A few will magically pull the pictures directly out of your head and draw them exactly as you imagined them. There's nothing more exciting for a comic book writer than that moment when the art arrives and you see your story exploding across the page. (Savior 28 was illustrated by Mike Cavallaro, one of my favorite collaborators. If you pick up the series, you'll see how brilliantly he brought this sequence to life.) Give the script a read and, if you have any questions, feel free to ask them in the comments section. The Life and Times of Savior 28 is ©copyright 2013 J.M. DeMatteis & Mike Cavallaro RETURN OF THE TITANS My next Teen Titans Go! episode—"No Power"—airs tonight, at 7:30 pm Eastern, on Cartoon Network. I've embedded a preview below. Enjoy! THE ELUSIVE MR. DITKO Today is the 86th birthday of one of most influential artists in the history of comics, Steve Ditko: the visionary creator who pushed, some might say shattered, the boundaries of 60's mainstream comics with his work on Spider-Man and Doctor Strange. I can't think of another artist of the era—aside from the King of all boundary-shatterers, Jack Kirby—whose work was more revolutionary and influential. Ditko illustrated a couple of my early stories—including a Legion of Super Heroes issue that's considered one of the worst Legion tales of all time (my fault, not Steve's!)—back when I was starting out at DC Comics, and one day, when I wandered into the office of editor Jack C. Harris, there he was, the legend himself: an unassuming middle-aged man, dropping off his latest batch of pages. Ditko is notoriously reclusive, the J.D. Salinger of comic books, so I was delighted—and perhaps a bit awed—to be standing in the same room with him, making (very) small talk. Now imagine my excitement when I discovered that Ditko was leaving the office at the same time I was. We hopped in the elevator, walked out of the building together, and headed off, side-by-side, in the same direction. We talked a little (perhaps about the story we'd just worked on, I can't say for sure) and the twelve year old inside me was doing cartwheels. Me and Steve Ditko, strolling down the avenue and chatting? By the Crimson Bands of Cyttorak, I was in Comic Book Heaven. I didn't stay there long. We'd gone, perhaps, half a block, when I said something to the effect of, "So...ah...do you ever think you'll go back and draw Spider-Man again?" In my defense, I don't think I realized that the subject of Spidey, of Ditko's Marvel work in general, was verboten—but I found out soon enough: Within seconds of opening my ignorant mouth, Ditko wished me a good day, crossed the street and vanished into the crowd. I felt like an idiot, but a lucky one: I'd had my moment, however brief, with the elusive legend. And, all these years later, I still treasure it. Happy Birthday, Mr. Ditko—and thanks for all the brilliant work. Posted by J.M. DeMatteis at 12:26 PM 10 comments HELP STEVE NILES Comic book writer, and all around good guy, Steve Niles (perhaps best known as the creator of 30 Days of Night) and his wife, singer-songwriter Monica Richards, lost just about everything a few days ago when flood waters overran their Texas home. (You can read more about it here.) It’s the kind of nightmare scenario that you don’t even want to contemplate, but Steve and Monica are living it right now. The good news is they’re both fine, but they need help to rebuild their lives. If you can find it in your hearts, and your wallets (I know these are tough times for a lot of people), please send a contribution, via PayPal, to HelpSteveNiles@gmail.com. Steve and Monica will appreciate it...and so will I. UPDATE: Writer Mike Miner has organized an online auction to benefit Steve and Monica. You'll find original art, script reviews by the likes of Ron Marz and Scott Snyder and signed books—including a 1989 hardcover edition of Kraven's Last Hunt, signed by yours truly. Click on over to the auction site and check it out. YADA YADA YADA I've been talking and talking lately—mostly about Justice League Dark and Phantom Stranger—to the fine folks at Comic Vine, Newsarama and Comic Book Resources. Follow those highlighted links and you'll find out everything you need to know, and possibly more, about what's coming up in those two books. And if you still haven't had enough of my blathering, you can read this interview with Comicosity that I did (along with some kid named Giffen, who's desperately trying to break into the business) last month at the Baltimore Comic Con. And yada yada yada. Posted by J.M. DeMatteis at 11:04 AM 19 comments IT'S JOHN LENNON'S BIRTHDAY In honor of what would have been John Lennon's 73rd birthday, here's a 1972 John and Yoko appearance on The Dick Cavett Show. This is the episode in its entirety, which gives a real sense of time and place. It also includes a superb live version of one of Lennon's most controversial songs, "Woman is the Nigger of the World." Enjoy. And Happy Birthday, John...wherever you are. Posted by J.M. DeMatteis at 9:46 AM 0 comments HEY KIDS, COMICS! Back in 2010 I told you about a book of essays I contributed to called Hey Kids, Comics!: True Life Tales from the Spinner Rack. Hey Kids—which finally made its debut last month—is a true labor of love from illustrator and blogger Rob Kelly, who collected stories about growing up comics-obsessed from an interesting collection of folks, including novelist and television writer Alan Brennert, legendary comics creator Steve Englehart and IDW editor-in-chief Chris Ryall. It’s a wonderful book and if, like me, you spent a good part of your childhood sprawled out on the living room floor, immersed in superhero universes that often seemed far more real than this one, I suspect you’ll enjoy it. Click on over to Amazon and read more about it. You can also read an excerpt from my essay right here. THE ESSENTIAL QUALITY—ADDENDUM Just this morning I came across a quote, from a 2002 interview with Kurt Vonnegut, that beautifully illuminates the previous post's discussion of Bleak Chic and the role art plays in our lives: "You know," Vonnegut said, "the arts are supposed to ideally make people like life better than they had before." Vonnegut could hardly be accused of having a rosy worldview, but his best stories and essays were marked by profound compassion and a belief in the power of simple human kindness. My favorite of his books—one of my favorite novels by anyone, actually—God Bless You Mr. Rosewater, bears testament to the great beating heart at the center of Vonnegut's work. "The arts are supposed to ideally make people like life better than they had before." To which I can only say, amen. And thanks, Kurt. THE ESSENTIAL QUALITY There’s a lot of utterly brilliant writing out there that’s just too damn bleak for me. I watch certain television shows, read certain books, and I’m left with both awe-struck admiration for the artists behind the work and a deep desire to run, screaming, for the hills. When I think of the books I’ve cherished most—Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine, Salinger’s Franny and Zooey, to name two—they left my heart full, my soul quickened. They cracked opened my consciousness and connected me to something bigger, and truer, than myself. I read a quote, years ago, from Avatar Meher Baba that said the “truth is that which uplifts.” I feel the same way about art. It should look life’s struggles and sufferings square in the eye without flinching, then look farther, deeper, raise our eyes to the heavens and point the way there (a path that, in my experience, leads us straight back to our own hearts). I don’t mind a crawl through the darkness—I think we’ve all done our share of midnight-wrestling with demons, of sinking, neck-deep, in the quagmire of despair—but, in the end, I need a story to bring me to the light, to remind me that life has meaning, purpose, value; that the universe is, ultimately, a positive, loving place. That there’s hope. I had a conversation with a friend the other night about the 1960’s and what it was like growing up in the Nuclear Shadow. I’m old enough to recall, with traumatic clarity, the Cuban Missile Crisis of October, 1962—most notably President Kennedy’s speech to the nation that, stripped of its Oval Office patina and translated by my eight year old brain, said, “Head for the shelters, kids. The missiles will be flying and our asses are cooked.” The instant that speech was over I flew into my bedroom, dropped to my knees and prayed to God, with every iota of my being, begging Him to spare us from the coming holocaust. (I don’t recall praying much, or ever, before that: Perhaps that moment was the beginning of my own spiritual search.) I also remember walking to school the next day—I was in the fourth grade—and the conversation with my friends as we discussed the imminent end of the world. Understand, this wasn’t a “could be” or “maybe,” we really thought the End Was Nigh. The next year, when JFK was assassinated, it seemed that the very fabric of reality was unravelling, that the center would not, could not possibly, hold. And yet, as the 60’s progressed, as the generation that grew up in the shadow of armageddon grew older, the popular and political culture of the time was defined, above all, by a sense of hope, of limitless possibility, of the belief that this world that tottered on the brink of destruction could be changed for the better. In many ways the Beatles, who appeared on American television just months after the Kennedy assassination, became the embodiment of that optimism. “All You Need is Love,” they sang. “It’s getting better all the time.” “Don’t y’know it’s gonna be all right.” And many of us believed it. I certainly did. And still do. Perhaps the unpredictable nature of a world where terrorist bombs could explode anywhere, any time, where global warming threatens to upend the natural balance and blot out the future, has given rise to the current wave of Bleak Chic. But is the current reality any more harrowing or hopeless than the reality I faced at eight years old, the one where a sudden flash of light, a deafening roar, could have left the human race on its knees in a nuclear ruin? I don’t think so. Which is why I’d love to see more optimism, more awe, more joy and wonder, in the arts—and, yes, in our social and political discourse. I’m not trying to tell anyone else how to approach their art: If you honestly believe that life is a chaos-ride to hell, rot and ruin, then you owe it to yourself to present that in your stories (or songs or paintings)—and do it with honesty and passion. If you do it well enough, there’s a good chance I will watch, or read, or listen—and applaud your effort. But I doubt I will cherish your work or hold it in the deeps of my heart. I often return to a quote from the science-fiction writer David Gerrold (who, among many other achievements, wrote the “Trouble with Tribbles” episode of the original Star Trek—a show rooted optimism and idealism). I tore it out of a science-fiction magazine back in the mid-1970’s, tacked it to a corkboard and it’s travelled with me ever since. I think Gerrold’s words about writing apply not just to all art—but to all of life: "A good story is about pain and hope and the transition from one to the other. Most important, it is about what we learn in the process of that transition. The essential quality is hope." COMIC-CONVERSATION While I was at the Baltimore Comic-Con, I had a lengthy and (I hope!) interesting conversation with Tiffany from Little House Online. I've embedded the interview below for your listening and dancing pleasure. Thanks to Tiffany and Little House head honcho Sal Crivelli for the thoughtful questions. It was a pleasure. THE WRATH OF CON The Baltimore Comic-Con keeps growing every year—and this year’s gathering was huge. When my wife looked out of our hotel window Saturday morning and saw the lines snaking back and forth, back and forth, outside the convention center, I knew that the days when BCC was a small, intimate show were over. The good news is that means the creators get to meet, and talk to, even more fans—which, for me, is the primary reason for attending these events. I spend a lot of time alone in a room, playing with my imaginary friends, and when I have an opportunity to hear from the people who have read, and been touched by, my work, it’s a delightful, and often moving, experience. When someone tells me that one of my stories sailed out across the world, pierced his heart, made a difference in his life...well, to say that I’m incredibly grateful doesn’t come close to covering it. Of course, along with the growing legion of fans at BCC, there’s an ever-growing legion of my fellow professionals—and I was lucky enough to spend time (sometimes just a fleeting hello, sometimes a lengthy conversation) with old friends and new, including Ray Fawkes, Bob Greenberger, Paul Kupperberg, Dean Haspiel, Mark Waid, Paul Kaminski, Ross Richie, Dan Didio, Ron Marz, Jack C. Harris, Jim Starlin, Kevin Maguire and some guy named Giffen, who insisted on sitting at the table next to mine for the entire weekend. The highlight of the convention, though, was a Sunday morning breakfast in honor of the man of the hour, the great Sal Buscema—who received a well-deserved life-achievement award Saturday night at the Harveys. I hadn’t seen Sal since our days working on Spectacular Spider-Man together and it was wonderful to share a meal with Mr. and Mrs. B, along with two other exceptional Spider-artists—Mark Bagley (another collaborator I hadn’t seen for at least fifteen years) and Ron Frenz—and my old buddy, legendary writer/editor Tom DeFalco. The word is that next year the Baltimore Convention is expanding to three days. I think this comic book thing might finally be catching on! THE DREAM OF LIFE Just came across this video—that features the words of the late writer and philosopher, Alan Watts—and had to share it with you. It resonates with beauty, magic and truth. NEXT STOP, BALTIMORE This time next week I’ll be at the Baltimore Comic-Con, one of the most enjoyable conventions I’ve ever attended. There are no movie stars, no wrestlers, no porn stars, no video game companies, just comic book fans and creators gathering to celebrate the medium we all love. The guests this year include Keith Giffen, Ray Fawkes, Sal Buscema, Tom DeFalco, Dan Didio, Mike Carey, Kevin Maguire, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Paul Levitz, Ron Marz, Mark Waid, George Perez and Dean Haspiel. (Click here to see the complete, mind-boggling list of creators.) If you’re within shouting distance of Baltimore next weekend, come by my table, say hello, and, if you’re so inclined, bring a stack of books to be signed. TITANS ALERT The first of my Teen Titans Go! episodes airs this Tuesday night at 7:30 pm on Cartoon Network. I've embedded a preview clip below. Enjoy! As I write this I’m sitting on the porch of a cabin, in the heart of a five hundred acre spiritual retreat, gazing through the trees, out at a magical lake that’s home to fish and alligators and, I suspect, water spirits and angels. I’ve been coming here for most of my adult life—and this place has always nurtured me, renewed my spirit, expanded my consciousness. Filled my heart with a profound and inexplicable love. No internet here, no television. No CNN Reality screaming for my time and attention. This is the deeper, truer reality that lies beneath the skin of the world. The line between conscious and unconscious, God and man, thins and vanishes in these woods. Synchronicities, miracles, abound—and the living presence of my spiritual master, Avatar Meher Baba, is everywhere. I’ve been here for over a week now—which explains the radio silence at Creation Point. When I get home, I’ll go through the comments that have been piling up and, with a little luck, return to regular blogging. (This has been a busy and creative summer—many new projects, many pressing deadlines—and I haven’t posted nearly as much as I’d like to.) Till then, I’ll continue to enjoy the peace and stillness, the magic and the miracles. The trick, of course, is to bring it all home with me. To remember that the face of God isn’t just hidden away on these five hundred acres, it’s everywhere. I’ll post this the next time I have an internet connection. Hope you’re all having a wonderful August. I did an interview with USA Today about the Phantom Stranger and his role in the Trinity War. You can read it here...and enjoy a preview of PS #11 via the link below. Enjoy! Phantom Stranger issue 11 Exclusive Preview I've mentioned Ink—Alter Egos Exposed (a Canadian documentary series I took part in a few years back) before here at Creation Point. Ink was a well-crafted, in-depth show about comic books that, unfortunately, never played on a U.S. television station. I just came across several episodes on YouTube, including this one—"Villains"—which concludes with a lengthy discussion of Kraven's Last Hunt. Enjoy! Update: Here's another full episode I found—"Gender and Relationships." I'm in it briefly, discussing the Peter Parker-Mary Jane Watson marriage. SILENCE DAY "You have had enough of words, I have had enough of words. It is not through words that I give what I have to give. In the silence of your perfect surrender, My love, which is always silent, can flow to you - to be yours always to keep and to share with those who seek Me. When the Word of My Love breaks out of its silence and speaks in your hearts, telling you who I really am, then you will know that that is the Real Word you have been always longing to hear." HAPPY BIRTHDAY RINGO STARR REMEMBER THE ALAMO I want to offer a belated thank you to Nasser Rodriguez, his amazing wife, Alicia, and all the folks at the Texas Comicon for taking such good care of us last weekend: Nasser and Alicia were the perfect hosts—kindly, and generously, seeing to our every need. My wife and I flew in a few days early to celebrate our twentieth wedding anniversary and see the sights in San Antonio (a wonderful city; and, yes, I made it to the Alamo, pleasing the ten year old in my soul beyond words), after which it was three full days of comics, comics and more comics. It was a pleasure spending quality time with my fellow pros: finally encountering Steve Niles face-to-face (after a couple of years as Twitter buddies), hanging out with Hulk legend Herb Trimpe, seeing Bernie Wrightson for the first time in what seems like centuries, getting reacquainted with Sean McKeever and having some wonderful conversations with novelist/comics scripter David Liss (I'm currently devouring his book The Twelfth Enchantment). And the fans! What a warm, heartfelt and deeply appreciative group. Since I spend most of my time alone in a room playing with my imaginary friends, it’s always a profoundly touching experience when I meet the people who have read, and been moved by, my work. Deep thanks to everyone who stopped by the table to talk and have their comics signed. Let’s all do it again some time. REMEMBERING MATHESON This past weekend, at the Texas Comicon, I had a conversation with Steve Niles about the work of the great writer, Richard Matheson. We talked about the man’s incredible range and the Matheson stories that meant the most to us. (Steve, a passionate Matheson fan, adapted his classic novel I Am Legend into comic book form.) On the flight home from San Antonio, I found myself at a window seat, looking out on the wing of the plane and wondering if, perhaps, there was something...strange out there. This was, of course, a reference to one of Matheson’s most memorable stories—and one of the all-time great episodes of The Twilight Zone—”Nightmare at 20,000 Feet.” If you were born on Mars and have never seen it, “Nightmare” features William Shatner, in a career-defining performance, as a passenger fighting for both his life and his sanity on an airplane: an unforgettable tale of personal horror and personal triumph. When I got home, I turned on my computer and saw the news that Richard Matheson passed away. I’d say that reading this after referencing Matheson not once but twice in the preceding days was an eerie coincidence right out of the Zone—but there was nothing eerie about it. Matheson’s work is part of the fabric of not just my consciousness, but the collective consciousness. I’m sure I reference his stories regularly without even thinking about it. There’s a good chance you do, too. Maybe it’s the image of The Incredible Shrinking Man fighting for his life against a towering spider...or the transcendent afterlife adventures of What Dreams May Come? (my favorite Matheson novel). Maybe you’ve been forever touched by the time-travel romance, Bid Time Return (adapted for film as Somewhere In Time) or forever scarred by the naked horror of Karen Black being hunted by a Zuni fetish doll in the TV movie Trilogy of Terror. And who can forget the cynical newspaper reporter, Carl Kolchak, in the TV movie The Night Stalker, face wide with amazement as he says, “This nut thinks he’s a vampire!” (And, of course, he is.) These are just a few of the dreams, both dark and light, that Richard Matheson has shared with us over the decades (when you have a moment, head over to his Wikipedia page and be astonished by the man's incredible body of work). Matheson’s worlds—peopled by recognizable human beings who’ve stepped inadvertently into magic, miracle and nightmare—spread across television, film and the printed page; but I’d argue that no work of his has had a wider impact than his contributions to The Twilight Zone. Just a few weeks ago my daughter and I decided to have a Zone mini-marathon and the first episode I wanted to see was a Matheson gem, “A World of Difference”: one of the very best of the Zones that question both personal identity and the nature of reality. Howard Duff is perfectly cast as a man trying desperately to escape an existence he believes is a lie and return to a life that everyone else claims is a madman’s delusion. The moment when Duff is sitting in his office at work and an offscreen voice yells, "Cut!"—revealing the world we've been watching to be a movie set—is one of the most thrilling and disturbing in the series. In all, Matheson contributed fourteen episodes to the show, including “Little Girl Lost” (when I was a kid, I’d often feel the wall beside my bed to make sure it was solid. I had no intention of ending up like the girl in the story and rolling into another dimension)...the hour-long ”Death Ship”: a science fiction/horror mashup that sends a chill down your spine and pierces your heart at the same time...”The Invaders,” in which Agnes Moorehead gives a brilliant, wordless performance as an old woman battling small-but-deadly aliens...“A World of His Own,” where Keenan Wynn plays a writer whose imagination literally brings his characters to life...and Matheson's first collaboration with William Shatner, “Nick of Time”: a tale that delicately, and brilliantly, walks a fine line between the supernatural and the psychological. (And who could forget that bobbing devil-head?) I bow to no one in my respect for Rod Serling—he’s a god in my writers’ firmament, a force of nature who influenced, astounded and inspired me as a child and continues to do the same today—but it takes nothing away from Serling’s achievement to say that Matheson was an essential part of The Twilight Zone’s success. If Serling was the captain of the ship, Richard Matheson was the first officer. Together they sailed through uncharted waters of the imagination and changed our lives in the process. We've lost a wonderful writer, one of the greats in his field—but that astonishing body of work echoes on and will, I suspect, continue to echo long after we’re gone. My heartfelt sympathies to Richard Matheson’s family and friends. "The Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" - 1963 Version from Dylan JamesT on Vimeo. BWAH-HA-HA IN THE 31st CENTURY Word is out about the new monthly I'm doing with my frequent collaborators Keith Giffen and Kevin Maguire. It's called Justice League 3000 and you can read an interview with Mr. Giffen and myself, where we discuss the book (without actually saying anything specific!), right here. There'll be more details as we get closer to the October release date, but for now all I'll say is that if our excitement levels are any indication, this is going to be a terrific book. But we won't really know till you read it, will we? (Check out a couple of the initial character designs, done by Howard Porter, below.) Speaking of interviews: here's one, focusing on my Phantom Stranger series, that I did with Comicvine. If you haven't been reading the PS series, the current issue—#9 (and wouldn't John Lennon love that?)—is a great jumping on point. And now, time to finish packing: tomorrow we hop on our horses and head for San Antonio. FROM ALBANY TO SAN ANTONE This Sunday, June 16th, I'll be appearing at the Albany Comic Con—a wonderful one-day show that's as far from the crowds and madness of SDCC and other comics mega-shows as you can imagine. (Not knocking those shows at all: there's something to be said for crowds and madness.) It's an intimate day where fans and creators can mingle and talk about...well, just about anything they'd like. I'll be doing a panel in the afternoon—along with Ron Marz and David Rodriguez—called "The Art of Story"; but mostly I'll be hanging out at my table talking to fans. If you're in the area, come join us. Admission is—take a deep breath, please—$5.00. If that's not a bargain, I don't know what is! Next weekend (June 21st—23rd), I'll be in San Antonio for Texas Comicon—along with Steve Niles, Bernie Wrightson, Herb Trimpe, Geoff Darrow and many others—for another three days of signing, chatting and celebrating the medium we all love. The folks at TC have been incredibly warm and welcoming and I'm looking forward to attending a Texas convention for the first time since the 1980's. (Which was only five or ten minutes ago, right?) I'm also looking forward to visiting the Alamo, a place that loomed large in my mind when I was a cowboy-worshippin' young 'un, wandering the plains of Brooklyn. (I must have read this book at least six times when I was a kid.) If you live in or near San Antonio, please come by—and bring lots of books for me to sign. Before I go, a quick reminder that next week also brings the release (in comics shops, Amazon gets it a little later) of the Adventures of Augusta Wind collected edition, a beautiful hardcover from those fine folks at IDW Publishing. I'm very proud of this story and the more people know about it, and buy the collection, the better the chance that we'll be back with another series next year. DR. HACKENBUSH VS. THE ARTIST I was having a discussion recently with a talented young writer about being a "hack": a “hack,” in this case, was defined as anyone who takes a paying assignment, as opposed to working on a passion project; the classic starving artist, slaving away alone in his or her garret. “If writing work that pays makes someone a hack,” I offered, “then most successful writers are hacks—in which case it’s an honorable title.” From my perspective, there’s nothing more honorable than feeding your family and making sure the bills are paid. That said, I understand the eternal battle between so-called art and so-called commerce, writing passion projects versus work-for-hire; in fact, years ago, that creative tug-of-war plunged me into a minor crisis. I’d just written Moonshadow and Blood: two projects that helped me find my voice as a writer, that came from the deeps of my soul and imagination. Those stories had nothing to do with Batman or Spider-Man and the denizens of their over-populated universes; no editor approached me and asked me to create them: they were mine and mine alone. (Even that wasn’t completely true, of course: they belonged as much to the artists—Jon J Muth and Kent Williams—as they did to me. But, between us, we owned those worlds and no one else could lay claim to them.) In my heart of hearts, what I wanted then—and, to be honest, what I still sometimes want—is to just go off and write “my” stories and not have to play in anyone else’s sandbox. I said pretty much that when I was on a panel at a convention in England. “If I could have a career, support my family and never write another superhero story...another story that didn’t originate with me...then I would.” A few minutes later, during the question-and-answer period, a guy in the audience got up and said (essentially): “You know, I don’t really care if it’s a creator-owned title like Moonshadow or if it’s an issue of Spider-Man. All that really matters to me is if it’s a good story.” My jaw dropped a little, and a tiny piece of my skull might have blown off and hit the ceiling, because what he said was incredibly obvious, incredibly true, and I’d been so lost in my “artistic crisis” that I’d missed it. The fundamental law of writing is this: It’s all about the story. Yes, there's a part of me that would always prefer to write originals, but if I'd followed that instinct throughout my career then a) I wouldn't have been able to support my family and b) I would have missed out on wonderful creative projects, some of which turned out to be among my very best, and most gratifying, work. Kraven’s Last Hunt wouldn’t exist, I’d never have collaborated with Keith Giffen or written for film and television. My life—not just creatively, but personally—would have been far less fulfilling than it is today. The key for me—whether I'm writing established characters or doing more personal projects—is the the commitment, the passion, I bring to the table. As long as I'm pouring heart and soul into a piece of work, it really doesn't matter whether it’s commercial or personal—because it all becomes personal in the end. I can show you Spider-Man stories where I revealed as much about myself, the intimate details of my life, my hopes and aspirations, as I did in my autobiographical graphic novel Brooklyn Dreams. Perhaps it wasn’t as obvious to the reader because I was talking through Peter Parker and his cast, but the intimacy, the honesty, the passion was all there on the page. Here’s an uncomfortable truth: Sometimes you labor over a piece, your Precious Personal Project, for weeks, months, years—and it dies in your hands. All the creative CPR in the universe can’t save it. And sometimes you're pressured by a ridiculous deadline, working feverishly, rushing out the next issue of The Cataclysmic Camel-Man...and it's better than anything you've ever done. It’s all about the story—and, as writers, we often know less about what's brilliant, what's hackwork, than the story itself does. (It's as if there are the stories I want to tell and stories that want me to tell them—and they're not always the same thing.) I've come to realize over the years—and I’ve written about it at length here at Creation Point—that stories have lives of their own and, whatever the tale’s origin point, my job is to wholeheartedly surrender to it and let it tell itself as best it can. Then all questions of "good" and "bad," "hackwork" vs. "art," go right out the window. I’m sure there are hacks out there, people who don’t give a damn, who just hurl words at an editor and wait for a check to come flying back at them, but I’m not sure I’ve ever met one. The vast majority of writers I know—whether they’re laboring over their “masterpiece” or getting that script in as fast as they can because the mortgage is due—care passionately. Once you sit down at the computer and engage with your story, surrender to it, it doesn’t matter what your motivation is—so let other people worry about who’s a hack and who’s an artist. It’s all about the story—and the story will take you where it needs to go.
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Bellanca 17-30A Viking, N4204B, registered to and operated by Bel Vik LLC: Accident occurred December 18, 2016 in Blaine, Anoka County, Minnesota Federal Aviation Administration / Flight Standards District Office; Minneapolis, Minnesota Continental Motors; Mobile, Alabama Bel Vik LLC: http://registry.faa.gov/N4204B Location: Blaine, MN Accident Number: CEN17LA058 Date & Time: 12/18/2016, 1500 CST Registration: N4204B Aircraft: BELLANCA 17 30A Defining Event: Loss of engine power (total) On December 18, 2016, about 1500 central standard time, a Bellanca 17-30A airplane, N4204B, was substantially damaged during a forced landing near Blaine, Minnesota. The pilot was not injured. The airplane was registered to and operated by Bel Vik LLC under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 as a personal flight. Day visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the flight, which departed about 1420 from Range Regional Airport (HIB), Hibbing, Minnesota, and was destined for Flying Cloud Airport (FCM), Minneapolis, Minnesota. The pilot stated the airplane was launched from a heated hangar at FCM. After landing at HIB, two passengers were deplaned. The airplane remained on the ground at HIB about 15 minutes, with no fuel added. During departure from HIB, the temperature was minus 6 degrees F. While in cruise flight at 2,500 ft msl, at an estimated temperature of minus 10 degrees F, the engine lost power. After the pilot switched fuel tanks and turned on the fuel boost pump, engine power was restored. Due to uncertainty with fuel status, the pilot diverted towards Anoka County–Blaine Airport (ANE), Blaine, Minnesota. Approaching ANE, the engine began to knock and subsequently seized. The pilot executed a forced landing onto a road, during which the airplane's left wing impacted a sign. Examination of the engine at the accident site revealed the top portion of the right and left crankcases were broken, with crankcase material missing and damaged internal engine components visible, including a fractured connecting rod cap. The engine breather tube was frozen over, with no alternate breather hole present. The propeller shaft seal was partially protruded. The engine, which has a normal oil capacity of 12 quarts, contained about 5 quarts of oil. Most of the oil loss occurred through the holes in the crankcase, with some oil loss through propeller shaft seal. The engine was shipped to the Continental Motors facility at Mobile, Alabama. Examination revealed all rocker arms and shafts were undamaged and all valves were intact, with normal combustion signatures. The induction components, ignition components, and fuel pump were not damaged. The fuel pump was bench tested and performed within specifications. Internal engine damage did not allow for rotation of the crankshaft. Following split of the crankcase, the Nos. 3 and 4 cylinder skirts were found to be mechanically damaged by internal components, with the Nos. 3 and 4 pistons wedged in their respective cylinders. Both crankcase halves were internally damaged by rotating components. The Nos. 3 and 4 connecting rods were damaged, with their respective rod caps separated. The remaining four connecting rods were not damaged. The Nos. 1, 2, 5, and 6 connecting rod bearings exhibited overlay fatigue, dirt embedment and corrosion. The No. 3 and 4 connecting rod bearings displayed significant heat distress and severe damage. The crankshaft's No. 4 connecting-rod journal was severely damaged due to heat distress. The oil galleys and transfer tubes were examined with additional lighting, which revealed that no blockages were present. Each of the five main bearings were intact, with an insignificant amount of contamination. The transfer collar exhibited normal operation patterns. The oil cooler was not damaged and the oil system vernitherm (thermostat) was removed and tested, with normal results. The oil pressure relief valve had evidence of an unapproved sealant on the oil pressure relief valve body. The engine was equipped with a reusable oil screen, versus a spin-on full flow oil filter. The reusable oil screen contained ferrous and non-ferrous metal contaminants. The recommended oil change interval for an engine with a reusable oil screen was every 25 hours or 4 months, according to Continental Motors Standard Practices Publications. A review of logbooks prior to 2011 revealed a history of erratic oil changes, including intervals of 45, 48, 66, 80, and 84 hours. The airplane was involved in a hard landing in 2011 and was not flown for about 5 years. After purchase by the current owner, an annual was performed on February 1, 2016, and an oil change occurred on August 8, 2016. Phillips 20-50WC oil, which has a pour point of minus 27 F, was utilized for both the annual and subsequent oil change. Certificate: Flight Instructor; Commercial Airplane Rating(s): Multi-engine Land; Multi-engine Sea; Single-engine Land; Single-engine Sea Instructor Rating(s): Airplane Single-engine Flight Time: 3742 hours (Total, all aircraft), 60 hours (Total, this make and model), 3547 hours (Pilot In Command, all aircraft), 3 hours (Last 90 days, all aircraft), 2 hours (Last 30 days, all aircraft), 0 hours (Last 24 hours, all aircraft) Aircraft Manufacturer: BELLANCA Model/Series: 17 30A Serial Number: 75-30753 Time Since Last Inspection: 51 Hours ELT: C91 installed, not activated Engine Model/Series: IO 520 SERIES Observation Facility, Elevation: KANE, 912 ft msl Observation Time: 1445 CST Temperature/Dew Point: -19°C / -27°C Wind Speed/Gusts, Direction: 7 knots, 190° Departure Point: HIBBING, MN (HIB) Destination: MINNEAPOLIS, MN (FCM) Type of Clearance: VFR Flight Following Departure Time: 1420 CST Type of Airspace: Accident occurred Sunday, December 18, 2016 in Blaine, MN Aircraft: BELLANCA 17 30A, registration: N4204B On December 18, 2016, about 1500 central standard time, a Bellanca 17-30A airplane, N4204B, was substantially damaged during a forced landing near Blaine, Minnesota. The pilot was not injured. The airplane was registered to and operated by Bel Vik LLC under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 as a personal flight. Day visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the flight, which departed about 1420 from Range Regional Airport (HIB), Hibbing, Minnesota and was destined for Flying Cloud Airport (FCM), Minneapolis, Minnesota. The pilot stated he was returning to FCM after dropping off two passengers at HIB. While in cruise flight, the engine lost power. After the pilot switched fuel tanks and turned on the fuel boost pump, engine power was restored. Due to uncertainty with fuel status, the pilot diverted towards Anoka County–Blaine Airport (ANE), Blaine, Minnesota. Approaching ANE, the engine began to knock and subsequently seized. The pilot executed a forced landing onto a road, during which the airplane's left wing impacted a sign. Examination of the airplane by Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) inspectors revealed significant damage to the engine, including a fractured piston rod cap and counterweights. The engine was retained for further examination and teardown. MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – Authorities say a plane had to make an unexpected landing on a Blaine roadway Sunday afternoon, but no injuries were reported. The Blaine Police Department says a small aircraft force landed on Main St. near Harper at about 3:30 p.m. Sunday. The pilot reported having an issue with the plane and was forced to land it on the roadway. Authorities say the plane didn’t come into contact with any vehicles, and no injuries were reported at the scene. The plane sustained minor damage from hitting street signs with at least one wing prior to landing. What led up to the landing and what the issue was with the plane is under investigation by the Federal Aviation Administration. Source: http://minnesota.cbslocal.com BLAINE, Minn. (KMSP) - A small, single-engine airplane made an forced landing on a street in Blaine, Minnesota Sunday afternoon after it unexpectedly lost power. The plane was flying east around 3:20 p.m. when it lost power and had to land in the eastbound lane of traffic on 125th Avenue near Harpers Street, Sgt. Jeff Warner with the Blaine Police Department said. No one was injured in the forced landing. The pilot clipped a street sign on the way down, causing some minor damage to the plane. The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the incident. Source: http://www.fox9.com Flight and fight: Attendants learn self-defense in the air Gina Hernlem, a flight attendant with United Airlines, takes part in the Crew Member Self-Defense Training Program on Friday, December 2, 2016 near Dulles Airport. The self-defense classes for flight attendants are offered by the U.S. Air Marshals. As a flight attendant, Gina Hernlem has mastered many skills: maneuvering a beverage cart down a narrow aisle without dismembering a passenger, finding just enough space in an overhead bin to squeeze in that last carry-on and easing the nerves of harried mothers flying with newborns. Just this month, the diminutive 55-year-old added a new one: disarming a knife-wielding attacker with her bare hands. Hernlem was one of more than a dozen veteran flight attendants who recently took part in a self-defense course designed exclusively for crew members at a federal facility near Dulles International Airport. “I hope you never have to use it,” instructor Scott Armstrong told his class of mostly female flight attendants with decades of experience. “But there’s always that time.” Armstrong retired as a master sergeant from Army Special Forces, then worked at the Secret Service’s training academy before joining the Federal Air Marshal Service in 2002. With his beefy build and close-cropped hair, Armstrong looks the part of someone who could do serious harm with just his bare hands. But his students on this day, not so much. “I’ve never been a fighter,” confessed Mark Gangler, a United Airlines flight attendant dressed casually in a T-shirt and workout pants. “But I think it’s important to know the principles of how to protect yourself.” The four-hour class is offered without charge by the Transportation Security Administration at 20 sites around the United States. It’s voluntary, so participants must take it on their own time and pay their own travel expenses. Since its inception in 2004, more than 11,000 crew members have taken part. Inside the training room, more than a dozen pairs of protective goggles were arranged carefully on a table. Next to them were several rubber daggers. A half-dozen large rubber dummies mounted on stands were positioned around the room, ready to be used for practice. There was a bit of nervous laughter among the group as Armstrong began the lesson on close encounters. He emphasized three points: Move, block, strike. Using “Bob” the dummy, he pointed to vulnerable spots above the shoulders: the ears, the throat, the nose, the eyes. “You can rupture someone’s eardrums this way,” Armstrong said as he delivered a hard smack to Bob’s ear. “You don’t have to do both [ears]. Just one good slap on the side of the ear is going to cause some really good pain in that ear.” The group watched, eyes wide. And on it went: wind chokes — moves that compress the trachea; blood chokes — moves that restrict blood flow, causing an opponent to pass out; how to deliver a blow to an attacker’s head. The best way to avoid breaking a knuckle? Hit with the bottom of the palm instead of a fist. More than a dozen flight attendants participated in a self-defense training course in Chantilly, Va., offered by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and specifically designed for crew members. Move, block, strike. For flight attendants more accustomed to caring for passengers rather than cold-cocking them, the lessons required a shift in thinking. “Don’t be nice with that arm,” Armstrong shouted as the group broke into pairs to practice dodging hits. “You want to put this person on the defensive, not the opposite.” Like others in the class, Gangler, never thought he’d need to know self-defense to do his job. But these days, he and others said, flights are more crowded, space on planes more confined and passengers sometimes more short-tempered and less patient. And even though more than a decade has passed since Sept. 11, terrorist attacks are always on their minds, they added. Even so, Gangler said it took a push from Hernlem to persuade him and the others to set aside time to take the course. Hernlem, who flies for United, recalled a recent flight on which a male passenger became belligerent, moving farther and farther into her space. The man eventually backed down, but the incident stuck in her mind. Federal statistics show that the number of passengers cited for “unruly” behavior has declined from a peak of 310 in 2004. In the first seven months of 2016, 31 such incidents were recorded. But internationally, reports of unruly airline passengers are on the rise. The International Air Transport Association said airlines reported a 14 percent increase in 2015, compared with 2014 figures. About 11 percent of the 10,854 incidents reported worldwide involved physical aggression. Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants, who also took part in the recent training near Dulles, said the U.S. numbers may not reflect all the incidents that take place, since many are not reported. “We know that even if we aren’t going to have a life-threatening situation, in many cases our de-escalation skills are going to keep it from rising to that,” she said. “The danger has increased for many reasons. [Sept. 11] changed everything.” While much of the day’s instruction focused on the physical, Armstrong emphasized that most situations don’t have to reach that point. Often, crew members can defuse tension by appearing confident and in control. “These are last resorts when you have no other options,” he said. Finally it was time for the section dubbed “Unarmed Defense of Handheld Weapons.” The group watched as Armstrong demonstrated how to dodge a knife aimed at his chest. As another instructor moved toward him, Armstrong hollowed out his midsection and angled his body backward as he swung his arms forward, grabbed his attacker’s arm and wrested the knife out of his hand. The entire encounter took only a few seconds. “You will get cut,” Armstrong cautioned the group. “But you want to minimize the damage.” And then it was their turn. Gina Wong grabbed a knife and faced Hernlem. The two eyed each other carefully. Wong thrust the knife forward and Hernlem dodged, hollowing out her stomach and using her arms to block the knife and grab Wong’s arm. “Just throw those hands out,” Armstrong shouted as he watched. “Don’t try to grab anything. Just initiate that block.” Hernlem’s reactions grew quicker with each of Wong’s thrusts, her arm blocks steadier and stronger. When they finished, the two colleagues wiped their foreheads and broke into wide grins. Even with her newfound skills, Hernlem isn’t exactly eager to put them to use. But now, she said, she knows she’s prepared. If a situation arises, “I feel like I’ll have more confidence,” she said. Story and video: https://www.washingtonpost.com Cold weather prompts flight delays at Colorado Springs Airport COLORADO SPRINGS - The cold weather brought more than just icy roads on Sunday; it left many people stranded at the Colorado Springs Airport. Crowds of people filled the United Airlines check-in stands. Some say it was because of delays and others blame the staff. A number of people experienced delays due to the weather, but the warning didn't come early enough for some travelers. We also received reports of flights being delayed out of Dallas-Fort Worth on American Airlines. A reminder for those traveling next weekend, you can check your flight status on their flight tracker app. Story and video: http://www.krdo.com Air travel, can it get any more unfriendly? No carry-ons or advance seat assignments. That's progress? USA TODAY, Editorial Board Can air travel get any more miserable than it already is? The answer is yes. And major airlines are happy to bring you this new experience. United will introduce its “Basic Economy” fare early next year, selling a ticket on certain routes that offers, well, nothing except getting you to wherever you’re going. Passengers choosing the fare are restricted to a purse and a single personal item — as long as both fit under the seat in front of them. Forget wheeled carry-ons. Fliers on these tickets may use the overhead bin for coats and personal items, but only if space is available when they board. Good luck with that. They’re in the last boarding group. The seat is assigned after check-in or at the gate, meaning that family or friends aren’t likely to sit together. Ticket changes are not permitted. Delta was the first to offer basic economy on a handful of flights in 2012, with some slight differences. Carry-ons are not prohibited, but Delta warns that “customers will board last (and) access to overhead bins may be limited.” There are no refunds, so tickets are use it or lose it. The fare is now available in thousands of markets. American plans to enter this race to the bottom sometime next year, too. The airlines' spin on this is they're offering price-sensitive customers what they want. Frankly, we haven’t heard many customers clamoring for less or complaining that regular economy is just too luxurious. Basic Economy is a way for legacy carriers to compete with discount airlines such as Spirit, Frontier and Allegiant, which offer bare-bones fares that undercut the larger airlines but come with an array of add-on fees. Basic Economy is also the next progression in the nickel-and-dime model or, as the airlines prefer to call it, a la carte pricing. The big difference, though, between an a la carte airline fee and a dinner menu is that at dinner, you're charged separately for an entrée, appetizer and dessert, but you still get your silverware, napkin, tap water and usually bread without paying extra. Such things as a checked bag were once considered so integral to flying, they were part of the fare. But starting in 2008, airlines began adding charges for just about everything. These fees have become enormous profit centers. Last year, the industry raked in $3.8 billion in baggage fees alone. Airlines, of course, are in business to make money and can charge what the market will bear. The real problem is the lack of transparency on prices. The array of fees and the gaggle of restrictions are not part of the main fares initially posted on travel websites such as Travelocity and Expedia, turning price comparisons into an arduous exercise requiring an advanced degree in math. For major carriers, at least one extra click will reveal that a first checked bag generally costs $25, a second, $35. But on low-cost Spirit, for example, you're presented with a range, such as "$45 to $100" for a carry-on, turning trip planning into a high-stakes guessing game. The Transportation Department has been trying for years to come up with a rule that would force airlines to include at least bag fees and seat assignments in the posted fare on travel websites, so comparisons would be easier. The agency began again in October, but don’t hold your breath. The industry has battled every effort in this direction. After Basic Economy, what’s next? An even cheaper fare where you get strapped to the wing? They could call it “Open-Air Economy,” with extra legroom. Source: http://www.naplesnews.com/opinion/editorials Police ask for help identifying body found near Salt Lake City International Airport SALT LAKE CITY — Police are asking for help to identify the remains of a person found dead on private property near the Salt Lake City International Airport on Saturday. The decomposed body was found by a man who was riding his horse accompanied by his dogs near the Rudy Duck Club, north of the airport at about 3200 West, according to Salt Lake Police Lt. Justin Hudson. Police do not know if the body is that of a man or a woman, but it appeared to be an adult and had been in the field for some time. Police don't suspect any foul play and were waiting for autopsy results from a medical examiner to determine a cause of death, Hudson said. Anyone with information is asked to call Salt Lake police at 801-799-3000. Story, video and comments: http://www.ksl.com Robinson R22 Alpha, N121MR, Castor Aviation Ltd: Accident occurred December 18, 2016 in Palmer, Alaska The flight instructor stated that he was providing flight instruction to the private pilot, practicing pinnacle landings to an area of remote, snow-covered mountainous terrain. The flight instructor said that just before the accident, the private pilot accomplished two successful pinnacle landings. After a third pinnacle landing site was selected, a gravel-covered site on a mountain ridgeline, the private pilot circled the site several times for reconnaissance. He reported that as the helicopter neared the site, about 10 to 20 feet above the surface, he realized that it had a steep uphill grade making the site unsuitable for landing. He explained that, as he was getting ready to tell the private pilot to initiate a go-around, the low rotor revolutions per minute (RPM) warning light and horn activated. The private pilot reported that when the low rotor RPM warning light and horn activated, he observed the gauge indicated about 90 percent RPM. The flight instructor then took control of the helicopter, attempting to maneuver it to the right and towards the predetermined escape route, but it descended and the skids subsequently struck the uneven terrain. He said that after the initial collision, he increased collective pitch and applied right cyclic, but it began to spin to the right, while descending. The helicopter continued to spin, while descending, and it subsequently struck an area of steep, snow-covered terrain. The helicopter then rolled downhill multiple times before coming to rest in an area of steep, snow-covered terrain. The pilot's failure to maintain main rotor revolutions per minute (RPM) during a pinnacle landing, which resulted in a main rotor stall condition, a loss of control, and a subsequent impact with terrain. A contributing factor was the flight instructor's failure to monitor the main rotor RPM during the pinnacle landing. Prop/rotor parameters - Not attained/maintained (Cause) Delayed action - Instructor/check pilot (Cause) Incorrect action performance - Student pilot (Cause) Task monitoring/vigilance - Instructor/check pilot (Cause) Registered Owner: Castor Aviation Ltd Operator: Castor Aviation Ltd http://registry.faa.gov/N121MR Accident occurred Sunday, December 18, 2016 in Palmer, AK Aircraft: ROBINSON HELICOPTER R22, registration: N121MR Injuries: 2 Minor. On December 18, 2016, about 1100 Alaska standard time, a Robinson R-22 Alpha helicopter, N121MR, sustained substantial damage during a collision with mountainous, snow-covered terrain about 12 miles north of Palmer, Alaska. The two occupants aboard, the certificated flight instructor seated in the left seat, and the private helicopter pilot seated in the right seat, sustained minor injuries. The helicopter was registered to, and operated by, Castor Aviation Ltd. of Wasilla, Alaska, as a visual flight rules (VFR) instructional flight under the provision of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time of the accident, and no flight plan was filed. The flight originated from the Wolf Lake Airport, Palmer, at 1002. During a telephone conversation with the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigator-in-charge (IIC) on December 18, the flight instructor stated that he was providing flight instruction to the private pilot who was working towards a commercial helicopter pilot certificate. He added that at the time of the accident, they were practicing pinnacle landings to an area of remote, snow-covered mountainous terrain in the Hatcher Pass Management Area. The flight instructor said that just before the accident, the private pilot accomplished two successful pinnacle landings to sites situated about 4,200 and 4,600 feet mean sea level (msl). After a third pinnacle landing site was selected, a gravel-covered site on a mountain ridgeline situated about 4,300 feet msl, the private pilot circled the site several times for reconnaissance. He said that while circling, the pair discussed the maneuver, which included a preplanned escape route that was just to the right of the landing site. The flight instructor said that during the accident approach, while the private pilot was manipulating the flight controls, he confirmed that all cockpit indications were "in the green," no warning lights were illuminated, the manifold pressure was between 20 to 21 inches, and the descent rate was at 150 feet per minute. He reported that as the helicopter neared the site, about 10 to 20 feet above the surface, he realized that it had a steep uphill grade making the site unsuitable for landing. He explained that, as he was getting ready to tell the private pilot to initiate a go-around, the low rotor revolutions per minute (RPM) warning light and horn activated. The private pilot reported that when the low rotor RPM warning light and horn activated, he observed the gauge indicated about 90 percent RPM. The flight instructor then took control of the helicopter, attempting to maneuver it to the right and towards the predetermined escape route, but it descended and the skids subsequently struck the uneven terrain. He said that after the initial collision, he increased collective pitch and applied right cyclic, but it began to spin to the right, while descending. The helicopter continued to spin, while descending, and it subsequently struck an area of steep, snow-covered terrain. The helicopter then rolled downhill multiple times before coming to rest in an area of steep, snow-covered terrain. Both occupants egressed from the wreckage, a cellular phone was utilized to request rescue assets, and the occupants were extracted from the accident site via a helicopter from a separate operating company. The helicopter sustained substantial damage to the main rotor system, fuselage, tail boom, and tail rotor system. The flight instructor reported that there were no preimpact mechanical failures or malfunctions with the airframe or engine that would have precluded normal operation. In the recommendation section of the NTSB Accident/Incident Reporting Form 6120.1, the flight instructor reported that to never execute a practice approach to an area you are not 100 percent sure you could land the helicopter to in the event of something happening in the last 25 to 50 feet. He further reported that if the landing surface would have been a bit more suitable, the helicopter might have been able to touch down and then come back up to take the planned escape route. METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION The closest official weather observation station is located at the Palmer Airport, Palmer about 12 miles south of the accident site. At 1053, an Aviation Routine Weather Report (METAR) was reporting, and stated in part: Wind, 20 degrees (true) at 18 knots, gusting 24 knots; visibility, 10 statute miles; clouds and sky condition, scattered clouds at 8000 feet, broken clouds at 14,000 feet; temperature, 34 degrees F; dew point, 14 degrees F; altimeter, 28.86 inHg. SURVIVAL ASPECTS The accident helicopter was not equipped, nor was it required to be equipped with an emergency locator transmitter. The pilot and passenger were not wearing flight helmets for the flight. The helicopter was equipped with 3-point restraint systems for the two seats. Robinson Helicopter Company has published the R-22 Pilot's Operating Handbook (2016). This document discusses the low RPM light and horn system and states in part: The low RPM light and horn indicate rotor RPM at 97 percent or below. Robinson Helicopter Company has published Safety Notice SN-24 Low RPM Rotor Stall Can Be Fatal (1994). This document discusses main rotor stall and states in part: Rotor stall due to low RPM causes a very high percentage of helicopter accidents, both fatal and non-fatal. Frequently misunderstood, rotor stall is not to be confused with retreating tip stall which occurs only at high forward speeds when stall occurs over a small portion of the retreating blade tip. Rotor stall, on the other hand, can occur at any airspeed and when it does, the rotor stops producing the lift required to support the helicopter and the aircraft literally falls out of the sky. Fortunately, rotor stall accidents most often occur close to the ground during takeoff or landing and the helicopter falls only four or five feet. The helicopter is wrecked but the occupants survive. However, rotor stall also occurs at higher altitudes and when it happens at heights above 40 or 50 feet above ground level it is most likely to be fatal. On December 18, 2016, about 1100 Alaska standard time, a Robinson R-22 helicopter, N121MR, sustained substantial damage during a collision with mountainous, snow-covered terrain about 12 miles north of Palmer, Alaska. The two occupants aboard, the certificated flight instructor seated in the left seat, and the private helicopter pilot seated in the right seat, sustained minor injuries. The helicopter was registered to, and operated by, Castor Aviation Ltd. of Wasilla, Alaska, as a visual flight rules (VFR) instructional flight under the provision of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time of the accident, and no flight plan was filed. The flight originated from the Wolf Lake Airport, Palmer, at 1002. The flight instructor said that just before the accident the private pilot accomplished two successful pinnacle landings to sites situated about 4,200 and 4,600 feet mean sea level (msl). After a third pinnacle landing site was selected, a gravel-covered site on a mountain ridgeline situated about 4,300 feet msl, the private pilot circled the site several times. He said that while circling, the pair discussed the maneuver, which included a preplanned escape route that was just to the right of the landing site. The flight instructor said that during the accident approach, while the private pilot was manipulating the flight controls, he confirmed that all cockpit indications were "in the green" and noted that the manifold pressure was between 20 to 21 inches. He reported that as the helicopter neared the site, about 10 to 20 feet above the surface, he realized that it had a steep uphill grade making the site unsuitable for landing. He explained that, as he was getting ready to tell the private pilot to initiate a go-around, the low rotor warning horn and light activated, and the main rotor RPM decayed to 90 percent. The flight instructor then took control of the helicopter, attempting to maneuver it to the right and towards the predetermined escape route, but it descended and the skids subsequently struck the uneven terrain. He said that after the initial collision, he increased collective pitch and applied right cyclic, but it began to spin to the right, while descending. The helicopter continued to spin, while descending, and it subsequently struck an area of steep, snow-covered terrain. The helicopter then rolled downhill multiple times before coming to rest in area of steep, snow-covered terrain. The closest official weather observation station is located at the Palmer Airport, Palmer about 12 miles south of the accident site. At 1053, an Aviation Routine Weather Report (METAR) was reporting, in part: Wind, 20 degrees (true) at 18 knots, gusting 24 knots; visibility, 10 statute miles; clouds and sky condition, scattered clouds at 8,000 feet, broken clouds at 14,000 feet; temperature, 34 degrees F; dew point, 14 degrees F; altimeter, 28.86 inHg. Two men escaped life-threatening injuries after their helicopter crashed during an attempted landing Sunday morning near Arkose Ridge in Hatcher Pass. According to Alaska State Trooper (AST) dispatch, the chopper’s pilot, 27-year old John Wiese of Palmer and a passenger were the only two occupants in the Robinson R22 helicopter. AST stated the helicopter belonged to a local business that was conducting a training flight at the time. AST, Alaska Wildlife Troopers and state park rangers from the Palmer area responded to the incident. The Robinson R22 is a lightweight, single engine, two-seater machine weighing in at just under 900 pounds. Weather conditions were heavy overcast with a low ceiling at the time of the crash. AST reported it was ready for a full response when it received word that a second chopper, owned by the same business, responded to the scene and transported the occupants. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) was notified. HATCHER PASS, Alaska (KTUU) Emergency crews responded to Hatcher Pass Sunday morning after reports of a helicopter crash believed to be in the area of the Arkose Ridge Formation. Alaska State Troopers report, two people on board the helicopter have been transported with non-life threatening injuries. Trooper spokesperson Megan Peters wrote the helicopter “apparently rolled.” At 11:30 a.m, the National Transportation Safety Board was notified about the crash by AST. NTSB Alaska regional chief Clint Johnson said the helicopter involved was a Robinson R22 Alpha. Castor Aviation, a Part 91 operator, is the owner of the Robinson R22 Alpha involved, according to sister company Pollux Aviation. Johnson said, a helicopter operator out of Wasilla made initial contact with the injured passenger and pilot, despite poor weather conditions. Source: http://www.ktuu.com Multiple agencies were responding Sunday to a report of a helicopter that went down in the Hatcher Pass area, according to the National Transportation Safety Board. At 11:30 a.m. investigators with the National Transportation Safety Board were notified that a Robinson R22 Alpha helicopter had gone down in the area of Hatcher Pass, said NTSB Alaska chief Clint Johnson. It was reported that two people were aboard the helicopter, and the extent of their injuries was "unknown at this point," Johnson said around shortly before 2 p.m. Sunday. "It doesn't sound life-threatening." Alaska State Troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters said around noon that troopers, state park authorities and the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center were involved in an initial response. As of 2 p.m. it wasn't yet clear where exactly the helicopter had gone down or what kind of damage it may have sustained. Source: https://www.adn.com Controlled Flight into Terrain/Object: Eagle Balloons Corp C-7, N3016Z, fatal accident occurred May 09, 2014 in Ruther Glen, Virginia Natalie Mattimore Lewis Ginny Doyle Federal Aviation Administration / Flight Standards District Office; Oakland, California https://app.ntsb.gov/pdf NTSB Identification: ERA14FA231 Accident occurred Friday, May 09, 2014 in Ruther Glen, VA Aircraft: EAGLE C-7, registration: N3016Z Witnesses to the accident reported observing the balloon approaching the landing zone from the south where another balloon had just landed. A video obtained from one of the witnesses showed that, as the balloon descended and approached the landing site, the pilot engaged the burner; however, shortly after, the balloon struck power lines, which resulted in a spark. Subsequently, the basket and a section of the balloon’s envelope caught fire. The balloon then began an accelerated climb and drifted out of the camera’s view. The wreckage was found about 6 miles north of the power lines. Examination of the wreckage revealed no preexisting mechanical anomalies with the balloon. Federal Aviation Administration guidance on balloon flying states that, if there is an obstacle between the balloon and the landing site, the pilot should either give the obstacle appropriate clearance and drop in from altitude; reject the landing and look for another landing site; or fly a low approach to the obstacle, fly over the obstacle allowing plenty of room, and then land. It is likely that the pilot identified the power lines late in the approach and ignited the burner to climb but that insufficient time remained to clear the power lines. The pilot’s inadequate approach and his failure to maintain clearance from power lines, which resulted in a subsequent fire. On May 9, 2014, about 1940 eastern daylight time, an Eagle C-7 Balloon, N3016Z, was destroyed by fire after a landing attempt to a field and subsequent impact with powerlines near Ruther Glen, Virginia. The commercial pilot and two passengers were fatally injured. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan was filed for the local sightseeing flight that departed from Meadow Event Park, Doswell, Virginia, approximately 4 miles to the south of the accident location. The local sightseeing flight was conducted under the provisions of Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Multiple eyewitnesses reported that the accident balloon approached the intended landing area from the south where another balloon had just landed. As the accident balloon approached the landing site, the pilot engaged the burner; however, the balloon struck powerlines, which resulted in a spark. A video obtained from a witness indicated that as the pilot approached the intended landing area, he engaged the burner for about 15 seconds prior to impacting the powerlines. Subsequently, the balloon basket and a section of the envelope caught fire. The balloon then began an accelerated climb and drifted out of the top view of the video recording. The pilot, age 65, held a commercial pilot certificate, with a rating for lighter-than-air free balloon, which included a limitation for hot air balloon with airborne heater. He did not hold, nor was he required to maintain, a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) medical certificate. According to a souvenir card, being handed out at the balloon festival, the pilot had 31 years of experience and over 660 hours of flight time. BALLOON INFORMATION According to FAA and balloon maintenance records, it was equipped with two aluminum propane tanks, a wicker basket, and a 78,133 cubic foot envelope. In addition, it contained a small pod of instruments that consisted of a vertical speed indicator, altimeter, and envelope temperature gauge. The most recent annual inspection, on the balloon, was performed on August 5, 2013, and at that time it had accumulated 270.4 hours of total time in service. The balloon was comprised of a basket, which was composed of wood, padding, woven wicker, rope handles for passengers to hold onto, and a fuel cylinder compartment which contained the two fuel cylinders. Attached to the top center of the basket were the single burner valve/can, coils, pilot light regulator, and pilot light valve. Fuel lines ran from each of the two fuel cylinder tanks, up opposite sides of the basket, and attached to the burner can assembly. The balloon envelope was comprised of nomex and nylon panels. The envelope throat was to be attached to the top of the basket with cables. The 1854 recorded weather observations from Hanover County Municipal Airport (OFP), Ashland, Virginia, located approximately 12 miles to the south of the wire strike site, included wind from 180 degrees at 10 knots, visibility 10 miles, few clouds at 12,000 feet above ground level (agl), temperature 28 degrees C, dew point 14 degrees C, and an altimeter setting of 29.99 inches of mercury. An FAA inspector that was at the launch site prior to the flight departing stated that a mandatory safety briefing by the event organizer reviewed the weather conditions with the pilot participants of the balloon festival including the accident pilot. In addition, he stated that "wind conditions were measured on site several times prior to launch to establish a trend. I recall winds were slowly decreasing, from initially about 12 knots to some as low as 6 knots at the surface. The winds aloft indicated that winds by 1000 feet were increasing in velocity and shifting the course to the right." The debris path was approximately 6 miles in length and was oriented on a northeast heading from the attempted landing field. The balloon impacted electrical powerlines that were about 30 feet agl near the attempted landing field. Several pieces of charred material were present in the vicinity of the powerline. Two aluminum propane fuel tanks, a hand-held fire extinguisher, the instrument pod, and various pieces of the charred envelope fabric, that were associated with the lower portion of the balloon envelope, were recovered along the debris path. Both propane fuel tanks were intact but exhibited thermal and impact damage and were devoid of fuel. The balloon crown, crown ring, deflation port, and the burner were recovered on May 27, 2014, approximately 9 miles northeast of the takeoff location and about 5.9 miles north of the powerline strike location. An examination of the recovered components was performed on August 25, 2014, at a salvage facility located in Clayton, Delaware. The balloon crown, crown ring, deflation port, basket bottom, and burner remained attached through several cables. The balloon envelope was torn in several sections. Several vertical and horizontal load tapes were torn. The skirt and throat of the balloon were torn and exhibited thermal damage. The crown line remained attached to the top of the envelope and the crown ring was found with all retained cords attached. Cord continuity of the crown, vent, and deflation line was established from the top of the envelope to the balloon basket. The bottom section of the deflation line exhibited thermal damage. The wood section of the basket was burned away, but the bottom section of the basket remained attached to the heating system of the balloon through stainless steel wires. The single burner remained attached to the basket frame. The valve block assembly, burner can, coil assembly, liquid fire jet assembly, and igniter assembly all exhibited thermal discoloration. The fuel lines remained attached to the burner assembly but exhibited thermal damage. When the burner assembly handle was operated, it did not exhibit any anomalies. In addition, the burner assembly was able to move freely among the assembly frame as designed. Further examination of the two recovered propane cylinder tanks revealed that the main valve on the center aluminum cylinder was damaged by fire and its position was not able to be determined. In addition, the fuel quantity gauge on each tank exhibited thermal damage and could not be read. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Richmond, Virginia, conducted an autopsy on the pilot on May 12, 2014. The autopsy listed "blunt force trauma" as the cause of death. Forensic toxicology was performed on specimens from the pilot by the FAA Bioaeronautical Sciences Research Laboratory, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The toxicology report stated no ethanol was detected. However, both Fexofenidine and Valsartan were detected in the blood and liver. According to the FAA Aerospace Medical Research, Forensic Toxicology Drug website, Fexofenadine, marketed under the trade name Allegra, was known as a nonsedating antihistamine used in the treatment of hay fever symptoms and the common cold. According to the FAA Aerospace Medical Research, Forensic Toxicology Drug website, Valsartan, marketed under the trade name Diovan, was an angiotensin II receptor antagonist, commonly referred to as an Angiotensin Receptor Blocker or "ARB." It was typically used for the treatment of high blood pressure, congestive heart failure, and post-myocardial infarction. TESTS AND RESEARCH Handheld Global Positioning System A Garmin 12 handheld global positioning system (GPS) was sent to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) recorders laboratory for download in Washington, DC. The Garmin 12 handheld GPS system did not contain any pertinent information to the accident investigation. A Garmin Rhino 530HCX handheld GPS was recovered and sent to the NTSB recorders laboratory for download in Washington, DC. The Garmin 530HCS GPS did not contain any pertinent information to the accident investigation. Three cellular phones were sent to the NTSB recorders laboratory for download. The cellular phones held photographs prior to the accident, but did not contain any photographic documentation of the accident itself. Witness Photographs Several photos were submitted by witnesses. In particular, a witness located in another balloon that landed at the intended landing zone of the accident balloon, photographed another balloon landing at the intended landing zone site. In the photograph, the other balloon is shown on the ground in the field and unmarked powerlines are noted above a road just prior to the intended landing field. In addition, the photograph showed that the field that was the intended landing zone site had several trees just prior to it and located in front of the powerlines. Powerline Information According to the power company, after the accident, they dispatched a team of employees to examine the powerlines. Upon examination, they noted that there was no structural damage to the lines. One phase line had a burn mark on the side that was closest to the intended landing zone. According to the power company, the powerlines were three-phase lines that were 7,200 volts phase to ground. Balloon Flight Manual In the "Normal Flight Operations" section of the balloon flight manual, there was a note that stated, "Extreme care and judgment should be used in selection of landing sites in avoiding downwind powerlines." In the "Performance" section of the balloon flight manual, it stated "during certification, the maximum demonstrated surface winds for landing were 7 knots." In addition, it stated that the "maximum demonstrated surface wind for take-off [was] 5 knots." FAA-H-8083-11A Balloon Flying Handbook In Chapter 3, "Preflight Planning," it stated "Almost all balloon flying is done in relatively benign weather conditions and mild winds. Most pilots prefer to launch and fly in winds less than 7 knots. While balloon flying is performed in higher winds, pilots accept that the faster the winds, the more they are exposed to risk and injury." In Chapter 7, "Inflight Maneuvers," stated in part "One technique to determine if the balloon is ascending, flying level, or descending is to sight potential obstacles in the flight path of the balloon as the balloon approaches the wires, the pilot should determine how the wires (or other obstacles) are moving in his or her field of vision relative to the background. If they are moving up in the pilot's field of vision, or staying in stationary, then the balloon is on a descent that may place the pilot and passengers at risk. Conversely, if the wires are moving down in the pilot's field of vision, then the balloon is either in level flight or ascending, and able to clear the obstacle. Vigilance is required for constant scanning of the terrain along the flight path, and the pilot must be alert to avoid becoming fixated on sighting objects." In addition, it stated that "the balloon actually responds to a burn 6 to 15 seconds after the burner is used." In Chapter 8, "Landing and Recovery," it stated, "Having the skill to predict the balloon's track during the landing approach, touching down on the intended landing target, and stopping the balloon basket in the preferred place can be very satisfying. It requires a sharp eye trained to spot the indicators of wind direction on the ground. Dropping bits of tissue, observing other balloons, smoke, steam, dust, and tree movement are all ways to predict the balloon track on its way to the landing site. During the approach, one of the pilot's most important observations is watching for power lines." In addition, Chapter 8 reviews, "To summarize, if there is an obstacle between the balloon and the landing site, the following are the three safe choices. 1. Give the obstacle appropriate clearance and drop in from altitude. 2. Reject the landing and look for another landing site. 3. Fly a low approach to the obstacle, fly over the obstacle allowing plenty of room, and then make the landing." Lastly, Chapter 8 addressed a "high-wind landing," which stated "When faced with a high wind landing, the balloon pilot must remember that the distance covered during the balloon's reaction time is markedly increased. This situation is somewhat analogous to the driver's training maxim of "do not overdrive your headlights." For example, a balloon traveling at 5 mph covers a distance of approximately 73 feet in the 10 seconds it takes for the balloon to respond to a burner input—a distance equal to a semi-truck and trailer on the road. However, at a speed of 15 mph, the balloon covers a distance of 220 feet, or a little more than two-thirds of a football field. A pilot who is not situationally aware and fails to recognize hazards and obstacles at an increased distance may be placed in a dangerous situation with rapidly dwindling options." The most somber chapter in University of Richmond athletics history soon will acquire a sweet, poignant postscript. UR officials confirmed Sunday that former Spiders women’s basketball player and assistant coach Ginny Doyle and former Richmond swimmer and women’s basketball operations director Natalie Lewis will be inducted in February into the school’s athletics hall of fame. The names likely are familiar even to those with little interest in UR sports. Doyle, 44, and Lewis, 24, perished 2½ years ago in the crash near Doswell of a hot air balloon. The grief that enveloped the Robins Center in the aftermath of the accident has not entirely disappeared. "So many of us who knew and worked with Ginny and Natalie still think of them every day,” said Spiders athletics director Keith Gill. “This just feels like such an appropriate thing to do. It feels like such an appropriate way to honor them.” Given the pair's extraordinary popularity, and given their deep devotion to the school and its athletics department, Gill said, “I think (this formal, permanent tribute) is going to bring a lot of joy to a lot of people.” Doyle, a record-setting offensive player who coached at UR for 15 seasons, will be inducted as an individual. Lewis will enter as a member of the 2010-11 UR swimming team – a group that was superior to an elegant extent while winning the Atlantic 10 championship meet in Buffalo. Spiders coach Michael Shafer said Doyle was in many respects the face – and perhaps the heart – of UR women’s basketball. “Really, (she and the UR program) were synonymous,” Shafer said. Doyle played at Richmond for two prolific seasons after transferring from George Washington. As a junior she helped the Spiders win the 1991 Colonial Athletic Association tournament and an accompanying automatic invitation to the NCAA playoffs. She served as an assistant under three head coaches: Bob Foley, Joanne Boyle and Shafer. She spent three seasons (2012-14) as Shafer’s associate head coach. UR’s record book is dotted with Doyle’s fingerprints. Her 1992 points-per-game average (17.1) still ranks among the top 10 in program history. She owns Richmond records for free-throw percentage in a season (95.0 in 1992) and a career (85.3). She established an NCAA record for all divisions and both sexes by sinking 66 consecutive foul shots over portions of her two seasons at UR. That record has since been eclipsed. Doyle’s free-throw streak made her a reluctant celebrity. She was thrust as a senior into a battle-of-the-sexes competition with Billy Packer, a colorful and opinionated national TV analyst. Packer questioned the legitimacy of Doyle’s streak because women play with a slightly smaller – and hence, he suggested, an easier to shoot – ball. A showdown was arranged. Seldom, if ever, has a UR women’s player confronted greater pressure or responded with greater aplomb. A Robins Center crowd of about 1,200 watched Doyle and Packer attempt 20 free throws apiece. Doyle made all 20. Only two of her shots touched the rim. Packer, who played as a collegian at Wake Forest, missed eight. Oh – and Doyle used a men’s ball. “It’s difficult to put into words how important (the school) was to Ginny and how very important she was to us,” Shafer said. “Whatever she did, she did with a tremendous sense of love and loyalty – not just to (the UR women’s team), but to the university as a whole.” The 2010-11 swim team made the A-10 championship meet its personal plaything. The Spiders piled up 755 points – 177 more than runner-up Fordham. They swept the meet’s individual awards: most outstanding performer (Lauren Hines), most outstanding rookie (Mali Kobelja) and coach of the year (Matt Barany). Richmond’s 2011 victory began a streak of A-10 championships that last winter reached six. Barany said he seldom thinks of the 2010-2011 championship team without also thinking of the previous year’s second-place finish. The 2009-10 team, he said, “was such a tough team…a small roster but a large dose of courage. We learned more lessons from that loss than from any championship we won.” The 2010-2011 championship, he said, “was simply fun. We felt like we had a loaded roster. Our freshmen gave us a strong backbone. Lauren” – Hines, a future All-American – “gave us national-caliber power. It was the best way to send our seniors out.” Lewis, a four-year letterwinner and middle-distance freestyle specialist, served as a Spiders captain in both 2009-10 and 2010-11. Among her contributions: leadership by example in the practice pool and an uncommon knack for doing the little things – a smile, a handwritten note of encouragement, a gift of homemade cookies – that enable the concept of ‘team’ to reach full bloom. Might she have been, in some respects, the glue that held the pieces together? “That’s a terrible understatement,” Barany said. Also selected for induction: men’s basketball player Mike Winiecki and tennis player Tom Clarke. Winiecki, a former Monacan standout, was a 1,000-point, 500-rebound performer while playing at UR from 1986-89. He was a member of UR’s 1986 and 1988 NCAA tournament teams. The 1988 team reached the Sweet 16 by upsetting reigning national champion Indiana and Georgia Tech. Winiecki averaged 17.6 points and 8.3 rebounds as a senior. He was rewarded with a berth on the all-CAA first team. Clarke (1992-95) won 62 singles matches and helped the Spiders capture three CAA championships. He was chosen as the CAA player of the year in 1992 and as the league’s tournament MVP in 1993 and 1995. The inductees will be formally introduced at halftime of UR’s Feb. 4 men’s basketball game against George Washington. Original article can be found here: http://www.richmond.com On May 9, 2014, about 1940 eastern daylight time, an Eagle C-7 Balloon, N3016Z, was destroyed by fire after a landing attempt to a field and subsequent impact with powerlines near Ruther Glen, Virginia. The commercial pilot and two passengers were fatally injured. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan was filed for the local personal flight that departed from Meadow Event Park, Doswell, Virginia, approximately 3.75 miles to the south of the accident location. The flight was conducted under the provisions of Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Multiple eyewitnesses reported that the accident balloon approached a field from the south where another balloon had just landed. As the accident balloon approached the landing site, the pilot engaged the burner; however, the balloon struck powerlines, which resulted in a spark. Subsequently, the balloon basket and a section of the envelope caught fire. The balloon began an accelerated climb and drifted out of sight. The debris path was approximately 1.75 miles in length and was oriented on a 025 degree heading from the attempted landing field. Two stainless steel propane fuel tanks, a hand-held fire extinguisher, the instrument panel, and various pieces of the charred envelope fabric, associated with the lower portion of the balloon envelope, were recovered along the debris path. Both propane fuel tanks were intact but exhibited thermal and impact damage. The balloon crown, crown ring, deflation port, the burner, and two other propane fuel tanks were not recovered. The balloon was equipped with four propane tanks, a wicker basket, and a 78,133 cubic foot envelope. The most recent annual inspection on the balloon was performed on August 5, 2013, and at that time it had accumulated 270.4 hours of total time. A Garmin 12 handheld global positioning system and three cellular phones were located, removed, and sent to the NTSB Recorder Laboratory for download. ▼ Dec 18 (23) Bellanca 17-30A Viking, N4204B, registered to... Flight and fight: Attendants learn self-defense in... Cold weather prompts flight delays at Colorado Spr... Air travel, can it get any more unfriendly? No ca... Police ask for help identifying body found near Sa... Robinson R22 Alpha, N121MR, Castor Aviation Lt... Controlled Flight into Terrain/Object: Eagle Bal... Marana Aerospace Solutions, Ascent Aviation Servic... Lexington County Airport at Pelion slowly taking off Executive Flight Institute makes dreams of flight ... Despite problems, F-35’s first test pilot still be... Remembering the Christmas Eve plane crash of 1987:... JetSuiteX to Offer Passenger Flights from Santa Mo... 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The automobile industry, which has been around for more than a hundred years celebrated it's 125 years of history last May 7-8, 2011 here in Stuttgart. A special exhibition took place at Schlossplatz in Stuttgart, Germany and many companies related to the automobile industry showed many upcoming and promising technology. There was a festive air at the Schlossplatz as there was also another festival going on: The International Animated Film Festival. It was also Mother's Day so that the mood became more festive as people went from one booth to another to get information and collect free items like shopping bags, promotional pens, advertising flags, even buckets. There were also cars of every age, shape and purpose on exhibit at the palace grounds. There's also different surprises for the kids, balloons and small stuffed toys being the most popular. To get to know more about the history of cars, one can always visit the many car museums here in Germany. There's the Porsche Museum and the Mercedes Benz Museum in Stuttgart and the BMW Museum in Munich. Labels: cars, celebration, expat life, Stuttgart
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Roth IRAs are tax-favored financial vehicles that enable investors to save money for retirement. They differ from traditional IRAs in that taxpayers cannot deduct contributions made to a Roth. However, qualified Roth IRA distributions in retirement are free of federal income tax and aren’t included in a taxpayer’s gross income. That can be advantageous, especially if the account owner is in a higher tax bracket in retirement or taxes are higher in the future. A Roth IRA is subject to the same contribution limits as a traditional IRA, the maximum combined annual contribution an individual can make to traditional and Roth IRAs is $6,500 in 2023 (an increase of $500 from 2022). Special “catch-up” contributions enable those nearing retirement (age 50 and older) to save at an accelerated rate by contributing $1,000 more than the regular annual limits. There is no maximum age at which Roth IRA owners can contribute to a Roth as long as they have earned income, and they don’t have to begin taking mandatory distributions due to age, as they do with traditional IRAs; however, beneficiaries of Roth IRAs must take mandatory distributions. Roth IRA withdrawals of contributions can be made at any time and for any reason. Withdrawals of contributions are tax-free and not subject to the 10% federal tax penalty for early withdrawals. In order to make a qualified tax-free and penalty-free distribution of earnings, the account must meet the five-year holding requirement and the account holder must be age 59½ or older. Otherwise, these withdrawals of earnings are subject to ordinary income tax and the 10% federal tax penalty (unless an exception applies). Keep in mind that even though qualified Roth IRA distributions are free of federal income tax, they may be subject to state and/or local income taxes. Eligibility to make annual contributions to a Roth IRA phases out for taxpayers with higher incomes. If you’re looking for a retirement savings vehicle with some distinct tax advantages, the Roth IRA could be appropriate for you.
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Bye Bye Banks I got out of some of my banks and a telecom today, Citigroup (C), Bank of America (BAC) and Research In Motion (RIMM). They were killing my returns. I think the banks will rise at some point, but I think they will continue to fall until at least 1Q11 (first quarter 2011). As for RIMM, unless they got an answer to the iPhone, they're toast in the long term. And it's getting warm... And looking at my holdings, I'll be pulling out of more stuff tomorrow. The "market" is hovering around 10,000. It dropped 140 points today, the big loser was Frontier Financial (FTBK.PK), losing 25% today on absolutely no good or bad news. I think the Dow will hit 9,000 before 11,000. Why? Because it is having a heck of a time holding itself above 10,000 and the economy is still stalled. Businesses aren't hiring (trust me, I know). The market has tried to lift itself for the past 6 months, but it can't sustain it. Therefore, I think 10,000 is an artificial level and it will slowly drift down over the next 4-6 months. Given that, I think some of my good holdings might have to be cut. Ironically, I'm only down 8% in AIG (AIG), the one who started this mess. Posted by Tyrone Griffin at 8:03 PM No comments: Run For the Hills! Another bad day in StockMarketVille. The Dow lost 133 points, due to a huge drop in home sales, ie, "..nobody bought houses last month, I better sell all my stocks!". My big loser was Web Media Brands (WEBM), who lost 10% yesterday, they announced financials a week ago - apparently it took everyone a week to read them. They did announce a smartphone games summit yesterday. I guess nobody wants to go. No, I don't see a correlation between smartphones and home sales either. As we get toward the end of the year, I think mutual fund managers will start trying to clean up their holdings so when they report out in December they don't have all that crap they been losing money on all year on their books. That and the housing news will make for an ugly time ahead, at least until the mid term elections in November. In my logic, that will put downward pressure across the board. I see the downside a higher likelihood than the upside, at least for a few months. I'm not going to sell everything, but I'm going to take a good hard look at RIM, Yahoo and a few of the bank stocks I'm holding and been getting my butt kicked on. I'm not making any predictions on what I think these companies will do, but I don't see their stocks going anywhere positive for a while. I think/hope today will make a bit of a recovery since the market has been dropping for a few days. But I don't think it will last, so I'm going to actually try to time the market this time. OK, let's be honest, we all do that but don't call it that. Posted by Tyrone Griffin at 2:23 AM 1 comment: He Giveth and He Taketh As good as the last few days were, today is worse. "The Market" is currently down about 156 points, but so are about 90% of the stocks I follow. It ended losing 144 points for the day. The "experts" are saying it's because jobless claims were announced to day and are higher than expected. Apparently, most of the people who are trading stocks (Ma and Pa Public) are sitting around waiting for bad or good news and making their immediate trading decisions based on what they hear. Here's a new one: The Hindenberg Omen! I guess if you frequently cry doom and gloom, eventually you will be right. The big loser on my watch list is Frontier Financial (FTBK.PK) who lost 20% today. No headlines so I can't tell you what was behind it. They were followed by Motors Liquidators (MTLQQ.PK), that quasi company that sorta kinda owns GM (article), down 14.8% for the day. Bummer news since yesterday they announced they were going to push for an initial public stock offering. I haven't decided if I would buy GM in their IPO. Chances are, if you can get in good the first few days you'll make out like a bandit on speculation, just not sure if I believe they've turned themselves around sufficiently to warrant any long term consideration. Posted by Tyrone Griffin at 8:18 AM No comments: Fannie & Freddie and GM wants us to buy it, again Wow. A uthentidate Holdings (ADAT), yesterday's big winner, is down 11.6% today. And still no headlines. This is a perfect example of the illogic of the stock market. Freddie Mac & Fannie Mae both got waxed. Probably had to do with "NEW YORK (Reuters) - The four largest U.S. banks could face as much as $42 billion in losses as they repurchase faulty mortgages from housing finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday." At least this time there was really something for the market to react to. GM filed paperwork for an initial public offering today, meaning we'll be able to buy ownership shares in the company we bought last year. I have mixed feelings about GM. I think if they go back public, in the short run at least the stock will jump. But I haven't yet seen that they are doing anything different than what they've done the last 30 years which got them into this mess in the first place. Read an interesting article about Google. They are up almost 389% since they went public 6 years ago, but they are down 20% YTD. That means if you bought Google on January 1, 2010, you have lost 20% - on the Google! The same company that is selling Andriod cell phones all over the place. I guess the point is you can't invest in the popular companies at the wrong time. Posted by Tyrone Griffin at 11:37 AM No comments: My apologies to the few of you reading this. Job search has been taking all my time the last few weeks. No excuse, I need to keep writing and I will definitely try harder. Now, let's look at today's market. It's 3:05 and "the market" is up 154 points. Big whoop, what's really important to me is that my holdings are up 1.4% for the day. USAToday says that the markets are up due to rising home sales. Soooooo, because your neighbors are buying houses, you buy stocks. Sorry, that doesn't make sense to me. As time goes on, I'm thinking more and more stock transactions are computer initiated, if stock X goes up, then buy stock Y. The article also said people are encouraged by higher earnings are The Home Depot (HD) and Walmart (WMT). Here's my unbelief, for this all to be true, 100 million investors would have to be glued to their TVs looking at housing starts and big name company earnings and immediately making the decision either buy or sell a bunch of stocks all over the place. Earlier today Authentidate Holding Corp (ADAT) was up 12% for the day. It's now up just over 2%. What was the big news that caused this spike in this company with a market capitalization of $30 million? Beats me. According to Yahoo they haven't had a headline in 12 days. They have an earnings announcement in September. But they did get a new PR firm a few weeks back. I guess it's working. As I'm writing this, it's back up 11%. My guess is that when some other stock moved some computer algorithm said buy a poopload of ADAT, now sell it, now buy it again. Seriously, imagine the people who work there and maybe have their 401ks wrapped up in this company's stock. They must be going batpoop today. Netflix (NFLX) is down 2% today, the only news I see is that HBO is going to the iPad and not to Netflix. Theroretically, 2% of the value of Netfilx was due to an impending HBO distribution deal. Um, yeah, right. Frontier Financial got a 13% haircut today. Why? Beats me. The last headline was June 9 about a shareholder lawsuit. My point is, if it was news driving this stock down 13%, we'd know. It's not people, it's Skynet.... Oh yeah, still following Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. They're still in the $.40 range. Haven't repulled the buy trigger yet. I think they may shrink a little more. Posted by Tyrone Griffin at 12:04 PM No comments: The Return of Moe Hey, I didn't post in July, the job search has been taking all my time. I'm still out of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, waiting for them to finally bottom out. I still think they are great long term plays as the government still backs them. Haven't bought or sold anything over the past 4 weeks, my returns are finally starting to look decent again. I think in general "the market" has probably bottomed out and now is a good time to snag bargains, then again, it's always a good time to snag bargains. It was a gamble, but as of today I'm still up 2% in BP (BP). I am going to keep my eye on RIM, they got smacked down today. Maybe someone besides Priceline (up 22%) had a good day, but in general the market seems to be blah today. For all the hoopla about Android phones, the Google's stock isn't moving. Posted by Tyrone Griffin at 12:34 PM 1 comment:
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Mimi Ndiweni Full Trailer for Netflix’s THE WITCHER Series Released You can’t outrun destiny just because you’re terrified of it. Based directly the fantasy novels by Andrzej Sapkowski rather than...
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Website: http://indonesianormal10.weebly.com
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Museum24>At work>Forest industry Chapters in the story of forest industry in Jämsänjoki river valley Timber from the forests has been processed in the Jämsänjoki valley for more than 200 years. First came the water-powered sawmill in the Jämsänkoski rapids in the 1790s. The sawmill was followed by a chemical pulp mill and paper mills, groundwood plants and the new paper mill in Kaipola, Jämsä, in the 1950s. The chapters in the story of the river valley forest industry serve in many ways as a general example of the history of forest industry in the whole of Finland. Exceptionally, the pulp mill became operational first in Jämsänkoski, and not the groundwood plant, as was the case in most other early paper towns. This website examines the river valley paper industry from various perspectives. These include different aspects of production, the diverse roles of man in a factory community, environmental changes, and the stories of different manufacturing companies. The focus is the years 1920 - 1980, time of Yhtyneet Paperitehtaat Osakeyhtiö (United Paper Mills Ltd). In terms of time, the website travels from the end of the 1700s to the turn of the 1980s. Emphases vary in different subject areas. Some important sections will be added to the website later, e.g. personal histories and descriptions of the repair workshop, laboratory or the company's construction department by past employees. We hope that the site will also bring back readers' memories, which they can send to the Museum24 Memory Box. Text: Tarja Antikainen Photos: from the UPM-Kymmene Oyj collection, unless specified otherwise People at work Histories of Manufacturing Companies Environmental changes The Finnish Paper Workers’ Union Paperman's glossary
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Dear Evan Hansen at Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Dear Evan Hansen Tickets It's set and tickets are on sale! It's getting exciting in Edmonton as we approach February and fans get in line for their tickets to see them at Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium! Of course, we're talking about Dear Evan Hansen! Billed as one of the biggest events this year, Dear Evan Hansen have gone from strength to strength enchanting more and more fans with their incredible talent as they go! It's getting closer – Saturday 16th February 2019 – hold on to your tickets and get ready! Dear Evan Hansen will be bringing their biggest and best skill and showmanship- This is your chance to see the one and only Dear Evan Hansen LIVE in Edmonton! Their recent circuit around the U.S.A and Canada brings Dear Evan Hansen to Edmonton for a limited time. Unmatched charisma, off-the-chart talent and nifty music to get your body dancing – this event is sure to be out of this world! What else do you expect from Dear Evan Hansen. This is set to be another wild event at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium which is exactly what this music venue is known for. All previous Dear Evan Hansen events have been full house performances given their catapult into stardom in recent times. This is one of Februarys best most exciting live music acts, perhaps even 2019. Avoid disappointment and make sure you reserve your tickets today. We recommend aiming to arrive 30 minutes before the event starts to allow plenty of time to find your seats and purchase beverages.
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Home / Unlabelled / I aborted 320 pregnancies – Abigail, self-confessed human trafficking victim I aborted 320 pregnancies – Abigail, self-confessed human trafficking victim When 26-year-old Abigail Olori met Alhaja Latifat and her husband three years ago, she felt she had met an angel in human form who would turn the odds of her life for good. Considering the fact that she had lost her parents and was saddled with the responsibility of catering for her siblings, she jumped at the offer to travel to Italy to work as an auxiliary nurse for the couple. Unknown to her, however, she was making the biggest mistake of her life. Read her confession below: “I met Alhaja Latifat and her husband in 2013 when they came to Nigeria; then I was 23-years-old. I knew them via a relative of mine, Rofel, when I was residing in Bayelsa with my siblings. Rofel invited me to Lagos; it was during the visit to Lagos that I was introduced to Alhaja Latifat who promised to take me to Italy”, she stated. Before the journey, they said they wanted me to become an auxiliary nurse for them in Italy but unfortunately I found myself in Libya. They took me via the desert. We were about 30 that were taken to Libya from Nigeria. Since I didn’t have parents, I was only able to raise N10, 000 which the alhaja claimed was for the passport she procured for me. The agreement was that I will work and pay her N2.4 million once I get to Italy which included the amount she spent to take me abroad and the return on her investment. “Before we left Nigeria, they took us to a native doctor called Ewe in Abeokuta, Ogun State where we were made to swear an oath. It was after the oath that we were taken to Libya instead of Italy. “Initially when I got to Libya and found out that my responsibility was to abort pregnancies for young girls, I refused but Alhaja Latifat and her husband locked me up in a room and beat me severely with a mop stick I had no option but to bulge. Each time I refused to perform abortion for any of the girls, they will lock me up and beat me. That was how I started assisting them to terminate unwanted pregnancies for the young girls who were working as call girls for Alhaja Latifat. “We had girls within the ages of 10-15 working as call girls, sleeping with all sorts of men unprotected. Most of the girls were forced to sleep with elderly men as old as 60 years-old. Some of these girls confessed to me that they were hairdressing apprentices and fashion designers before they were deceived to come to Libya to work as prostitutes. “Any of the girls who refused to work, they will beat her up. Some of the girls who attempted to escape got into more trouble as they were resold to other traffickers in Libya. “My main responsibility was to carry out abortion for the girls forced into prostitution. By my calculation, I would have aborted 320 pregnancies in the process. They built instrument which I used to perform the abortion on the girls. If a pregnancy was about a month, and the girl in question notified Alhaja Latifat about the development, the Alhaja Alhaja will not allow me to abort the baby till the pregnancy was about four or five months old. “Apart from carrying out abortions, I also performed the job of a physician to the girls. “They had about three houses which were used as brothels to house the girls who worked as call girls. I resided in one of the brothels called New York. The second was called White House. I can’t remember the name of the third one. “I worked for the alhaja for about three years and I was able to raise the amount from the abortion I was performing on the girls and the money I got from my male friends who were into armed robbery in Libya. Like the call girls, I was not allowed to operate a bank account. Since I didn’t operate any bank account, the money I earned was kept with Alhaja Latifat. Within two years I was able to pay the N2.4m agreed amount on the contract and also give her N1.5M which I kept with her as my personal savings. “Meanwhile, trouble started after I demanded that she gives me back my N1.5m which was with her as I wanted to return to Nigeria. Immediately after I demanded for my money, this strange sickness started. I began to grow thin and lose weight. And then skin rashes began to appear all over my body. Look at me I am now a shadow of myself. I don’t know what is wrong with me. I feel very weak too. “I was rescued alongside two other girls weeks after Basirat and Omobolanle were rescued through an NGO, Alliance for Rights Defender, owned by human activists and lawyer, Mr. Ojay Akinwale. Mr Akinwale has been the one working with operatives of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP). Since I was rescued and brought back to Nigeria, Alliance for Rights Defender has been instrumental to providing medical care for me. I want to get well first and I also want the Federal Government to investigate Alhaja Latifat, her husband and others running this human trafficking as a family business by taking advantage of young girls from indigent families Vanguard. I aborted 320 pregnancies – Abigail, self-confessed human trafficking victim Reviewed by Blog It With Olivia on April 03, 2016 Rating: 5 Philippa April 3, 2016 at 8:04 AM People are wicked finally. May God forgive you too
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Addiction Deliverance Outreach...how it started Nearly twelve years ago, I was burdened to do something for the drug problem in my community. Within a few months, I wrote a four step program called Addiction Deliverance Outreach, or better known as ADO. A lot of people ask me, “Why only four steps?” Well, I had never been to an AA meeting, so I had no idea there were supposed to be twelve steps. In a very short time, ADO became an icon of hope in our community. We seen hundreds of people go through it and recover. Other pastors began to send us people from their church who were struggling with addiction and soon, we had more than we could handle. So I began to write down what I was doing and handing it out to pastors, so they could help their own people. At the end of the day, and over about four years, I accidentally wrote a book and a workbook. Today our church has three recovery homes; we serve men and women off the streets and straight out of prison. Other churches have jumped on board as well. The ADO is now used in chur Get the SUCK out of your Membership Model! There are far too many churches who have hundreds of "members" but less than one hundred attending the weekend gathering. I believe the church has sent the wrong message when it comes to membership; and perhaps the wrong message is a symptom of a wrong motive, which is numbers. Membership should be about gospel impact, not an attendance report. Traditional Membership : In most churches becoming a member means going through some sort of class that shares the vision, doctrine, and mission of the church. Church membership is often presented the same way you join the country club or some other social gathering. The protocol isn't that different. When you join a secular club, you are given the beliefs, expectations, and benefits. When people join most churches, they share the church's beliefs about Jesus; detail what good church members should do (give their time, talent, and treasure) and talk about the benefits of being a church member. Unfortunately, most people Four things that can help your preaching NOT SUCK There are many things that can make sermon delivery effective (and yes, prayer is a given). I want to talk about four that I believe are vital in becoming a strong communicator: passion, context, relevancy, and authenticity. Passion is the driving force of the sermon; passion is contagious and causes both response and participation from the people. A passion-less preacher means he isn't passionate about the gospel, which means...he probably shouldn't be preaching. On a side note, passion is not defined by how loud or how exuberant a person speaks; more so, passion is the expression of the heart and what we really believe. Contextualizing is huge in sermon delivery. If you want to kill a sermon, take it out of context. I have always told the guys I coach, "Every scripture has one literal meaning and one million applications." If you want to make good applications, then make sure you understand what context the scripture was written in. With today's
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"Aha" says the Moral Philosopher triumphantly, polishing his monocle ferociously with a large handkerchief. "You have contradicted yourself! If you say yes to the first case you should say yes to the second, for you have already revealed your acceptance of the principle that one person should be sacrificed for the many." ‘I bring good news about our bourgeois lives’: Why business is good for your soul Deirdre McCloskey's Bourgeois Virtues: Ethics for an Age of Commerce is a bold attempt to rehabilitate the much maligned bourgeoisie as the focus of a positive inter-twining of capitalism and ethics. Who are the bourgeoisie? People with middle-class values, temperament, and position. People like us. McCloskey argues, building on her extensive reading in economics, history, philosophy, religion and ethics, that we should recognise and embrace our bourgeois identity. For it is an ethical way of life that is not only instrumentally successful (showing up in our ever increasing wealth and freedom), but intrinsically valuable (showing up in the meaningfulness and richness of our middle-class lives). A Critique of the Modern University part II: Research I previously argued that universities fail at education, partly because academics are so committed to the life of a scholar: they want to learn, not teach (see part I). So perhaps the real contribution universities make to society comes from their research? On the one hand universities do produce a lot of it; on the other hand it is rarely useful to the rest of us. The struggle for real and important knowledge requires - surprise surprise - more than just setting up an academic bureaucracy and giving it money. A Critique of the Modern University part I: Education Universities have become an increasingly significant part of the economy and modern life, affecting the lives of millions of people. But what do they really do for us? The most important arguments for the social value of the contemporary university system are its contributions to education and research (see part II). Unfortunately universities currently fail at both. Why is Heterodox Economics a Joke? Heterodox economics isn't taken seriously by anyone else, is unlikely to be taken seriously at any point in the future, and hardly seems to take itself seriously. Why would you? Heterodox economics has a massive inferiority complex and no self-discipline. What has the EU done for You, lately? As everyone knows, the EU has been tremendously successful in achieving its geopolitical goals 1) peacefully contain the dominant continental power, Germany, and 2) save Eastern Europe from the collapse of the USSR (just look at the former Soviet republics to see what would have happened otherwise). But these achievements have the drawback of being deeply dull, and even worse, about things that didn't even happen. What has the EU done for You, lately? Diagnosing and Refuting Conspiracy Thinking The difficulty of conspiracy thinking is its pathological character; the problem of conspiracy thinking is the enormous danger of false positives. One way to identify and challenge conspiracy thinking is to evaluate its internal coherence: 'Do these claims even make sense in their own terms?' The philosopher Vs. management theory Matthew Stewart has a PhD in philosophy but despite this managed to get, and keep, a job in management consultancy. His book The Management Myth provides an entertaining and insightful analysis of the theory, history, and practise of that mysterious but ubiquitous cult of the modern world: "management". Who really owns cultural treasures? Artistic and archaeological treasures are scattered throughout the world, often quite far from their places of origin. Is there something wrong with that? Who really owns such cultural treasures as the Elgin Marbles (sculptures from the Athens Parthenon) or Vermeer's paintings (17th century Dutch master, whose paintings are scattered through W. Europe and the USA)? Post-colonial nations in particular are quick to argue that such works were stolen from them (as indeed so much else certainly was), that their continued place in museums in New York, Paris or London is a continuation of colonial attitudes, and that they must be returned to their country of origin. But how are such claims justified? There seem to be 3 main ways of staking a claim on such works: national identity, law, and the "cultural heritage of all mankind" Four Ideas of Sustainability Sustainability concerns the relationship between humans and their natural environment over time. But there are various ethical understandings of that relationship with quite different implications. Two popular accounts actually repudiate human interdependence with nature by either making human interests completely subservient to a sacred nature, or by making nature completely subservient to human interests. Gro Brundtland's famous definition points in the right direction by focussing on the goal of meeting humanitarian needs in the present and the future, but her picture of human interests is too narrow and technocratic. What we need is a definition that is humanistic without necessarily being human-centred. Martha Nussbaum lectures Europe on religious accommodation: The 2010 Unseld Lecture Martha Nussbaum is an extremely American-liberal philosopher with a strong interest in US constitutional law and freedom of religion [previously]. She has recently been promoting the tradition of religious accommodation she finds in American legal and political history to Europe, including at the 2010 Unseld Lecture at the University of Tübingen that I attended and which this essay is a response to. Unfortunately Nussbaum's lecture was more an assertion of the universality of a particular American model of relations between state and religion than an argument for its relevance to a European audience, with our quite different legal traditions, politics, social make-up and history. Wisdom is about How to work out Where to look to find out Who to ask about What you need to know Our modern society has achieved an amazing degree of division of labour in knowledge and hence specialisation, particularly in science, but co-ordinating that expert knowledge to make it available to society in general is surprisingly difficult. Consider the problems faced by the non-expert in accessing and employing expert knowledge to address particular problems. The politician who wants to know if GM crops are safe; the fisherfolk trying to work out what's happening to all the fish; the parents trying to assess risks of particular vaccinations for their child; and so on. Bullshit News: An anatomy Mainstream news media are supposed to provide a vital public service for democracy. Particularly newspapers since they have all those words. They are supposed to provide we the people with the accurate and relevant facts and analysis about the world that we can use to come to informed decisions about climate change, health-care, foreign military adventures, etc. They also play a directly political role in successful democracy by making the operation of political power transparent and accountable. So, we are told, it's terribly important that states find some way to protect our newspapers from the current cruel winds of technology driven changes in their business environments. But when you take a look at most news media, including national and local newspapers, one frankly is not overwhelmed by the evidence of either a commitment to public service or the reporting breadth, depth, judgement and integrity that this role would seem to require. The news is just a business, not a sacred mission, and an enormous proportion of what gets published is best described as bullshit news. This can take various forms, but what it has in common is the short-termist private interests of journalists and media companies over and against the public interest. Politics: Can't Someone Else Do It? Politics is concerned with the legitimate exercise of power. Both the competition for power ('who governs?') and the exercise of power (governance) depend on the key concept of legitimacy, since in politics power is acquired by authority not force, by persuading people that you have the right to be in charge, not hitting each of them over the head until they give in. Big Bad Sport A formal definition of sport would be the voluntary pursuit of meaningless objectives by inefficient means involving some level of physical exertion. What's the point of it? Nothing, and that's why, in the normal sense, participating can be fun. It's vaguely healthy; sociable; the exercise produces some physiological pleasure; and one can derive some mental satisfaction from minor achievements within its self-imposed discipline. Plus everyone gets to enjoy those benefits since it doesn't matter much who wins or loses (the goals are deliberately silly). What is Philosophy? Philosophy is concerned with the pursuit of wisdom: not only with what we think we know, but how? why? and what is it really worth? In line with this spirit of questioning philosophy can be defined as the discipline of critical scrutiny, though its specific methods are informed by a variety of philosophical styles, claims, histories, and concerns from Plato to Kant to Foucault, which constitute often quite divergent schools. Philosophers from different traditions see philosophy differently (check out the anthology of answers by contemporary philosophers to the what is philosophy question over at the excellent Philosophy Bites). But here's my take on it. The Decline of Common Sense and the Rise of Conspiracy and Foolishness As Frank Furedi's excellent analysis argues, conspiracy thinking - "attributing the problems and misfortunes faced by individuals to some intentional malevolent behaviour" is on the rise. As many have noted (e.g. Jacob Weisberg) electorates are becoming ever more delusional ("give me public services, but not government or taxes"). Both kinds of foolishness are connected to a decline in an authoritative and widely shared 'common sense' about the-Way the World Works: history, science, politics, ethics. etc. ‘I bring good news about our bourgeois lives’: Why... Martha Nussbaum lectures Europe on religious accom... Wisdom is about How to work out Where to look to f... The Decline of Common Sense and the Rise of Conspi...
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Tag: local attorneys for defamation of character Online Search For The Best Criminal Defense Attorneys A person you love, or you, is being charged with a crime. It can be difficult choosing the right lawyer. There are many things to take into consideration when choosing a lawyer. You need to be aware of many factors, including the reputation and price of an attorney. The relationship with the lawyer, their attitude, personality, and the way they treat clients are also important. If you select a lawyer that isn’t right for you, it will be harder to prove your innocence-recommended site! While it might seem difficult to find criminal l awyers who can help you, it is possible. You can use the World Wide Web to search for a top attorney. The World Wide Web can be a great place to find top-quality lawyers from all corners of the globe. Many law firms can be found online. But, you can also access highly qualified lawyers online. These online lawyers can review your case, provide guidance, and help you through the entire legal process. Let’s look at how you can find trustworthy and highly qualified lawyers. Law Firm Directory: Avoid the stress and hassle associated with finding a legal professional. Visit an online directory to find local attorneys in your state or region. Many law firms directories offer free consultations as well as case evaluations. Do not leave it up to chance to find a trusted lawyer. You can search online for the best attorneys and take action. Law Firm websites – You can also go to law firm websites to search for criminal lawyers. Start your search by visiting the website of a trusted online legal company. Although it is great to get recommendations from colleagues, you should still do your research before making any final decisions. Visit many law firm websites to find the best lawyer for your case. After you find the right one, you can make the final decision. Search Engines. You shouldn’t settle for lower-quality lawyers who don’t know your case. Brochures or flyers can be used to help you find a criminal defense lawyer. Posted in General Tagged local attorneys for child custody, local attorneys for defamation of character, local housing attorneys Leave a Comment on Online Search For The Best Criminal Defense Attorneys
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Director: Noah Baumbach Screenplay: Noah Baumbach (based on the novel by Don DeLillo) Stars: Adam Driver (Prof. Jack Gladney), Greta Gerwig (Babette Gladney), Don Cheadle (Prof. Murray Siskind), Raffey Cassidy (Denise Gladney), Sam Nivola (Heinrich Gladney), May Nivola (Steffie Gladney), Jodie Turner-Smith (Winnie Richards), André Benjamin (Elliot Lasher), Sam Gold (Alfonse) I have not read the 1985 Don DeLillo novel on which Noah Baumbach’s White Noise is based, but it is widely understood that the landmark postmodern work has long been considered “unfilmable.” Of course, that has been said about many difficult novels that have subsequently been turned into films, some of which have been quite good: Mary Harron’s 2000 adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’s American Psycho, David Cronenberg’s 1991 adaptation of William Burroughs’s Naked Lunch, Danny Boyle’s 1996 adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting, and Mike Nichols’s 1971 adaptation of Joseph Heller’s Catch-22, to name a few. This is not the first time a filmmaker has tried to take on DeLillo: David Cronenberg adapted his 2003 novel Cosmopolis in 2012 and Benoît Jacquot adapted his 2001 novel The Body Artist as Never Ever in 2016, both with mixed results. The response to White Noise has been similar, with some viewers and critics immediately settling into its absurdist, ping-ponging narrative groove about the crushing weight of modern anxiety, while others decry it as a mess. And, speaking as someone who has no skin in the game as far as fidelity to the novels goes, Baumbach’s film is something of a mess, but in a great, enthralling, engaging kind of way. So many films telegraph their every move, letting us know from the outset exactly where they are going and how they are going to get there. One of the chief pleasures of White Noise is that it could go anywhere at any point (and it goes many, many unexpected places), but always in a way that feels connected to the other parts. There is a wide range of aesthetic approaches, tones, and dramatic versus comedic approaches throughout the film, but when the final credits roll over a massive musical number set inside an A&P grocery store, it all feels like it somehow makes sense, that Baumbach has found a through-line—however crooked it might be—and followed it. In the simplest (and therefore, least interesting) terms, White Noise is about a family. Set in the mid-1980s, we are introduced to Professor Jack Gladney (Adam Driver), the paterfamilias of a mixed brood cobbled together from his own children from several previous wives and children from his current wife, Babette (Greta Gerwig), who works as an exercise instructor. Jack is a pioneering scholar in the emerging field of Hitler Studies (even though he doesn’t know any German), which he teaches at the fictional College-on-the-Hill in a picturesque college town. He is the envy of his friend and colleague, Professor Murray Siskind (Don Cheadle), who wants to do for Elvis Presley what Jack has done for Hitler in the academy. The film is divided into three parts, each of which is introduced with a title card. The first part plays mainly as a satire of the absurdities of both competitive academia and harried nuclear family life. The humor is both subtle and broad, especially through the dialogue, which is highly stylized in its humorous rhetoric and incongruous asides and digressions (one of the best moments finds Murray pontificating about how great Babette’s curly mass of hair is). Baumbach writes and his cast delivers the dialogue with a perfectly straight face, which makes it all the more pleasurable and engaging, especially in the barely controlled chaos of the Gladney house, where half a dozen Altmanesque conversations are running simultaneously, each so interesting and funny that you want to go back and listen to each one individually. Driver is especially good at playing the self-serious, yet deeply insecure Jack, who we learn shares with Babette a deep and abiding fear of death, which Baumbach dramatizes in one deliriously effective sequence that is as scary and unnerving as anything in any recent horror film. That fear of death is put to the test in the film’s second part, where a massive train derailment leads to a chemical spill that produces a noxious black cloud (labeled “The Airborne Toxic Event”) that slowly moves over the town and forces a mass evacuation. Jack his family wind up in a refugee camp set up outside of town and run by the military, although prior to arrival there Jack is exposed to the cloud, which could prove to be lethal. The final third of the film centers on a mystery involving Babette and her use of Dylar, a fictional experimental drug. In direct counterpoint to the brightly lit, almost sitcom-like nature of the humor in the first past, this last third is defined by both visual darkness and intensifying interpersonal drama that involves lies, secrets, betrayal, and eventually attempted murder. However, the absurdist through-line remains just beneath the surface, poking out through the melodrama and intrigue from time to time before eventually rushing out and taking over in the film’s final sequences. It is a delicate, weird balancing act, and Baumbach, who has worked primarily in restricted dramatic space up until now, pulls it off with real aplomb. White Noise represents a major leap for Baumbach in terms of scope and scale, which is always at risk of swallowing him whole, but never does. And, while the films is very much reflective of its setting in the mid-1980s, it is hard not to feel the constant stab of contemporary anxieties in all its situations, whether those be environmental catastrophe, overreliance on prescription medication, familial breakdown, or culture wars over language and education. If the wardrobe, interior design, and hairstyles weren’t so prominently ’80s, you might think you were watching a film set in aftermath of the Trump years, distended as it is with cultural, political, and interpersonal fears that seem primed to explode at any minute. The fact that Baumbach has managed to make it all so ludicrously humorous and visually striking without losing the sting of its satirical bite is a miracle all its own. All images copyright © Netflix
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Studies show good health is all important There are many variations of passages of Lorem Ipsum available, but the majority have suffered alteration in some form, by injected humour, or randomised words which don't look even slightly believable. If you are going to use a passage of Lorem Ipsum, you need to be sure [...] Amazing health care coming to your area soonadmin2015-12-16T08:31:30+00:00 Best practices in finding the right insurance for your needs Best practices in finding the right insurance for your needsadmin2015-11-27T08:58:12+00:00 Beautiful life with Avada Health Care gives security Beautiful life with Avada Health Care gives securityadmin2015-11-26T14:39:38+00:00
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Do I Need The iPhone 6? There's a very easy answer to this question and it's... No I don't! I have been using an iPhone 4 that I got from my son when my iPhone 3 stopped working six months ago, and though I really like iPhones generally, and find them easy to use, I wouldn't say I needed a new one until it breaks... But there is a difference between "needing" something and "wanting" it! The new iPhones look really good, so I'm going to look at whether it's worth thinking about actually going out and buying one. I'm actually not that great at technology and computers and stuff like that. What I like about the Apple system is that it's easy to use and quite intuitive, as well as the fact that it looks nice! Really I just need a phone to call people, use as an alarm clock and play a few games on, and the big-screen iPhone 6 Plus would be great for gaming. I like to play bingo sometimes, which works well on my smaller iPhone 4. But the site I usually play at is good for more than just bingo games, with slots and roulette as well, so the big screen would make everything much clearer. This is the most important difference with the new iPhone - the screen sizes. The old phones have started to look a bit small now that so many Android phones from Samsung and other companies come with bigger screens. The smallest iPhone 6 screens have gone from 4" to 4.7", which might not sound like much but makes quite a big difference to the screen area. The iPhone 6 Plus is 5.5" diagonally which is pretty big. You could easily watch movies on it! Another thing I use the iPhone for is taking photos, and the new phones have a good camera in the usual place and an improved front-facing one for taking selfies and doing video calls, if that's the kind of thing you like! I think the existing camera on my phone is fine, so if the new one is better, that's great, but it wouldn't be enough to make me rush out and buy one. I think that right now, the iPhone 6 will be too expensive to convince me that I "need" it. When it's released in Malaysia the price will be something around RM2,500-3,500 without a contract. If I was going to upgrade my iPhone 4 I'd probably think about getting an iPhone 5S, as the prices of these will probably now start to come down. The only problem is that big screen - if I get to try out someone's new iPhone 6 my old phone is going to feel very small...! general guest post Labels: general guest post Small Kucing September 29, 2014 at 12:41 PM yesssss lina September 29, 2014 at 1:25 PM wahhhh but if get IP6, sure syiok lah! :) Ez Vina September 29, 2014 at 2:07 PM Yes, I need one ;) Ken Wooi September 29, 2014 at 11:04 PM I've aleady wanted an iPhone.. but till today I still havent gotten one.. Using a Galaxy S4 instead. ;) Twilight Man October 3, 2014 at 4:04 PM If someone ever gives you iPhone 6 and you can send to me right away!! i can even drive to Ipoh to collect from you and have a food fest dinner before coming back!!!!!
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RESEARCH A USED FULL-SIZE SEDAN The Buick Lucerne wraps a spacious cabin with seating for up to six in a handsome body. With its focus set on comfort, the... Sedan | Full-Size Sedan Available years: 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010 The Chevrolet Impala is a handsome and spacious full-size sedan with an emphasis on comfort. Powered by a choice of frugal... The Ford Taurus is a uniquely styled full-size sedan with a large trunk and seating for five in a spacious and quiet cabin.... Available years: 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010 The Hyundai Azera is the bargain among full-size sedans, featuring modern styling and seating for five in a spacious and... The Kia Cadenza is an elegant full-size sedan seating five in a roomy and well-equipped upscale interior. Thanks to a... Kia K900 Kia's uniquely styled flagship, the K900, is a well-equipped full-size sedan with seating for five in a spacious and... The Toyota Avalon features a spacious and well-appointed cabin for five, as well as a well-controlled and comfortable ride.... Sedan, Hybrid | Full-Size Sedan, Hybrid Sedan Home » Used Cars » Full-Size Sedan Bookmark
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HomeAkumaizer 3 - Gariba B by Grip Akumaizer 3 - Gariba B by Grip Gariba B is Garuba's motorcycle from the japanese tokusatsu TV series Akumaizer 3 (アクマイザー3) from 1975-76. This TV series was created by Shotaro Ishinomori and produced by Toei Company. Shotaro Ishinomori also created the Kamen Rider Series,Cyborg 009 and many more.
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In order to be a great team player, it’s crucial to have an unbiased awareness of what you’re good at and what you suck at. As a legendary entrepreneur and YouTube star, Gary Vaynerchuk, says: “Self-awareness is being able to accept your weaknesses while focusing all of your attention on your strengths.” In the modern era, we’re conditioned into improving our weaknesses rather than doubling down on our strengths. When you follow this path, it’s hard to rise above mediocrity. However, when you’re brutally honest about your weaknesses, you can finally accept them and hone other skills that will make you extremely valuable to your employer. Teams benefit when individual members are fully aware of their strengths and weaknesses, but it’s especially important that leaders understand the key attributes of their subordinates. Good leaders know how to delegate effectively, while bad leaders give the inappropriate work to the wrong workers. If you’re a good copywriter, you might excel at crafting thoughtful words in solitude, but perform badly when forced to interact with clients face-to-face. Likewise, a good salesman can easily build rapport with prospective clients, but they might not be good at producing well-researched blog posts for the company’s website. With this in mind, if you read most job descriptions, you could come to the conclusion that companies are only looking for outrageously extroverted salesmen – for every single role!
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Social responsibility as marketing muscle Brands that promote the spirit of giving or “share the harvest” of their success with their clients or the general public may be able to maintain more of a following than their tighter-fisted competitors who merely leverage sponsorships to build their brand awareness. Your brand’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) helps build brand awareness by associating the brand with philanthropic ideals while increasing product exposure at the same time. Two-thirds of consumers say they are more likely to buy products and services from a company if they know it supports good causes. CSR programs can increase productivity up to 13% and may reduce employee turnover rate by up to 50%. CSR efforts range from making charitable donations to causes that match your brand to changing your business structure in an environmentally friendly way. So how do you decide how to engage in a relevant socially responsible activity? Choosing one close to home is a good strategy, both literally and figuratively. A commitment that is imbedded in your area provides your brand with publicity, and a social cause that is closely related to your brand entices similar-minded customers. Avoid supporting a trendy or newsworthy cause to try and gain immediate attention (i.e. “cause washing”). Instead, focus your CSR on efforts that truly connect to your brand and your stakeholders. Alternatively, simply asking employees one-on-one or holding company-wide surveys to discover what charities and causes they believe are important is an effortless way to match your CSR with your brand and the employees it represents. IBM took this approach with its Corporate Service Corps program, which enabled its employees to use their professional skills in developing countries. This program not only attracted more talented employees and increased retention but, since it began in 2008, returned $600 million on a $200 million investment. Building brand awareness is no longer just about paying enormous fees for prime-time airing of your latest commercial detailing how socially responsible you are. It is about a subtle yet authentic charitable contribution to a cause or agency that melds completely with your brand. We must love research. We've been at it for more than 36 years. Tomorrow's insights a day early. Read more. QRCA VIEWS Stay on top of the latest techniques and cutting-edge ideas in Qualitative Research by subscribing to QRCA VIEWS magazine.
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Short Story Collection Vol. 045 Literature (X) Short Story Collection Vol. 045 (X) LibriVox Audio Books (X) * Short Story Collection Vol. 045 By: Various ’s Short Story Collection 045: a collection of 20 short works of fiction in the public domain read by a group of members.
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Yeah, That Makes Sense About a month ago I posted about the White House site where citizens can petition their government and the top petition at the time was Legalize and Regulate Marijauana in a Manner Similar to Alcohol. Well the White House has responded via Gil Kerlikowske, Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. According to scientists at the National Institutes of Health- the world's largest source of drug abuse research - marijuana use is associated with addiction, respiratory disease, and cognitive impairment. Let's see, alcohol consumption is associated with addiction, cardiovascular disease, malabsorption, chronic pancreatitis, alcoholic liver disease, and cancer. We know from an array of treatment admission information and Federal data that marijuana use is a significant source for voluntary drug treatment admissions and visits to emergency rooms. Both links they point to list alcohol use as a much greater reason for voluntary treatment and emergency room visits. Studies also reveal that marijuana potency has almost tripled over the past 20 years, raising serious concerns about what this means for public health – especially among young people who use the drug because research shows their brains continue to develop well into their 20's. Everclear, Ouzo, and Spirytus Vodka. Enough said. Like many, we are interested in the potential marijuana may have in providing relief to individuals diagnosed with certain serious illnesses. That is why we ardently support ongoing research into determining what components of the marijuana plant can be used as medicine. To date, however, neither the FDA nor the Institute of Medicine have found smoked marijuana to meet the modern standard for safe or effective medicine for any condition. Where are the studies, completed or in progress, to back up those statements? Congress won't let that happen. In the meantime, alcohol is not a safe or effective medicine but it is a legal substance that causes greater harm than marijuana and is available to adults who are encouraged to drink responsibly. As a former police chief, I recognize we are not going to arrest our way out of the problem. But we're not going to let that stop us. We also recognize that legalizing marijuana would not provide the answer to any of the health, social, youth education, criminal justice, and community quality of life challenges associated with drug use. Like legalized alcohol does? Labels: bureaucracy, drugs, hypocrisy, legal, society Increased Militarization Of The Police According to KRPC in Houston, The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office in Conroe, Texas used $300,000 in federal homeland security grant money to become the first law enforcement agency to purchase a ShadowHawk unmanned helicopter made by Vanguard Defense Industries. (Note to other news agencies: See how KRPC included links to references so people can read these things for themselves? Hint, hint.) Montgomery County did not get the weaponized version of the remote controlled helicopter. Michael Buscher, chief executive officer of manufacturer Vanguard Defense Industries, said this is the first local law enforcement agency to buy one of his units. He said they are designed to carry weapons for local law enforcement. "The aircraft has the capability to have a number of different systems on board. Mostly, for law enforcement, we focus on what we call less lethal systems," he said, including Tazers that can send a jolt to a criminal on the ground or a gun that fires bean bags known as a "stun baton." "You have a stun baton where you can actually engage somebody at altitude with the aircraft. A stun baton would essentially disable a suspect," he said. According to the Vanguard site: U.S. Military and Law Enforcement consumers have less-lethal/lethal options including single or mulitple (sic) shot 37 mm/40mm grenade launcher, 12g shotgun. I imagine a "less lethal system" consisting of a 37mm or 40mm grenade launcher engaging somebody "at altitude" probably would disable a suspect. Somewhat akin to the Scooter Chair commercial, Vanguard Defense Industries lets law enforcement agencies know that they may qualify for a free Shadowhawk. By nature of the Shadowhawk’s unique capabilities, federal, state and local law enforcement agencies can obtain 100% funding to purchase and maintain a UAS of their own. For further information on applicable grant funding please click the link below or contact us directly for further information. The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office may want to rethink getting the weaponized version of the Shadowhawk. It's the closest thing to a combination AK 57 oozie radar laser triple-barrel double-scoped heat-seekin shotgun needed to bring down Da Turdy Point Buck. Labels: government, legal, safety, society Flying Irish Northside Run This morning the Flying Irish held a one-time-only run at the northside O'Doherty's. (If you're interested in heading up a northside branch of FI runs, Brendan will do what he can to help you with that.) Brendan (green shirt just right of center) gives everyone the "what we're doin' today" briefing. As to having a beer after the run, he wisely notes, "You can't drink all day if you don't start in the morning." Hmmm, he's got a point. Stephanie, Kathy and my sister Barb participated in the extra credit run. The high school sophomore is way too cool to wave at the camera. Posted by Hank Greer at 11:38 AM No comments: Labels: family time, fun stuff, running My Brain Hurts Well, if I choose any answer at random and there are only four to choose from, then I must have a 25% chance of being correct. Yet two of the four answers are 25% so I must have a 50% chance of selecting the correct answer. But wait. The 60% answer can never be correct because that would mean I had to choose more than one answer. So that's at least 25% that I would be incorrect. And since I have a 25% chance of selecting a single correct answer and a 50% chance of selecting two of four correct answers, I really have a 75% chance of being correct. But 75% is not one of the answers so that is incorrect. But wait. If I pick 50%, I'm incorrect because there's only a 25% chance of choosing 50%. And I'm incorrect if I pick 25% because there is a 50% chance I could choose 25%. And 60% is incorrect because I'd have to pick more than one answer which is not allowed. So the real answer is 0%, which is wrong because it's not one of the answers. But wait. Since there's one answer with 50%, I have a 25% chance of randomly selecting the correct answer of 50% which would be incorrect because I have a 25% chance of picking 50% which, in turn, is incorrect because I have a 50% chance of picking 25%. And that would be incorrect because there's only a 25% chance of picking 50% which would again be incorrect.... Thank goodness no Sicilians or iocane powder are involved. Labels: fun stuff Oh, Look At The Bubbles Congresswoman McMorris Rodgers and several other women Republican House members joined together in a GOP Women's Special Order promoting policies to protect seniors. I can't find anything in the House Rules (PDF) that defines what a GOP Women's Special Order is, but it looks like they all take turns recording themselves speaking to a mostly empty chamber about how they are working towards a goal that their actions show they have no intention of accomplishing, posting it on YouTube--OMG, heaven forbid the congresswoman's dad would have to come live with her--and encouraging their constituents to listen to their disingenuous claims. Touting The Path To Prosperity as the plan to improve and reform Medicare, our fair congresswoman claims that Republicans are trying to save Medicare notwithstanding the fact that The Path to Prosperity changes Medicare to a voucher system that doesn't keep up with rising medical costs and forces cash-strapped seniors on a fixed income to pay more because that's the only way we can afford it since Republicans are adamant about not raising taxes. (Sorry for the two-breath sentence.) McMorris Rodgers is a signatory (PDF) to Grover Norquist's Taxpayer Protection Pledge. Republicans have been steadfast in their opposition to increasing taxes. Norquist famously said, "I don't want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub." If there's an image that could define the Republican Party today, it would be a group of Republican House members holding a struggling old man under water all the while congratulating each other on the great job they are doing saving the poor guy. Labels: morality, politics Free Bieber I'm note sure the all hype is justified here. Last May, Sen Klobuchar (MN) introduced S. 978 in the Senate. There's been some complaining that this bill could send you to federal prison for singing a copyrighted song and putting it on the web. Following that tact, detractors of the bill say that Justin Bieber, who started out covering other songs and posting them on YouTube, would have gone to prison instead had this law been in place back then. They created a Free Beiber site to garner support for fighting this bill. Of course that can't pass without a touch of irony. They, in turn, have received a cease and desist letter from Bieber's lawyers who claim the site violates Bieber's intellectual property rights. For the record, Beiber doesn't agree with his lawyers. Setting that aside for a moment, let's have a look at the text of the proposed bill. It amends the paragraphs following subsection (b) in Section 2319 of Title 18. That's all well and good but here's what it does not amend--subsection (b) which states: (b) Any person who commits an offense under section 506 (a)(1)(A) of title 17— Regardless of the offenses and penalties added to Section 2319, there's another section that controls. That is Section 506, paragraph (a)(1)(A) which states: (a) Criminal Infringement.— (1) In general.— Any person who willfully infringes a copyright shall be punished as provided under section 2319 of title 18, if the infringement was committed— (A) for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain; (bolding mine) It would appear that singing or using a copyrighted work and posting it on the web would not be a criminal offense as long as it doesn't create a commercial advantage or financial gain for you just like the other copyright violations. Labels: legal Still Paralyzed And Dysfunctional From CNN we learn that the Joint Deficit Reduction Committee is deadlocked. Why? Because one side wants to raise taxes and the other doesn't. Now who could possibly have seen that coming? Forewarned Is Forearmed The FCC is doing the first nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System on November 9th. That is the same day Stephanie turns sixteen years old. Coincidence or fate? The answer in two weeks. Posted by Hank Greer at 10:09 PM 1 comment: Labels: economy, legal, morality, politics, society Establishing Operational Control It finally made the papers that two and one-half weeks ago the Republicans on the House Natural Resources Committee approved the National Security and Federal Lands Protection Act which does nothing to look out for natural resources or protect federal lands. The Secretary of Homeland Security shall have immediate access to any public land managed by the Federal Government (including land managed by the Secretary of the Interior or the Secretary of Agriculture) for purposes of conducting activities that assist in securing the border (including access to maintain and construct roads, construct a fence, use vehicles to patrol, and set up monitoring equipment). As you can see from the text, it gives Homeland Security carte blanche to do whatever they want on public lands in order to achieve operational control. So what is "operational control"? You have to look at the Secure Fence Act of 2006. Operational Control Defined - In this section, the term `operational control' means the prevention of all unlawful entries into the United States, including entries by terrorists, other unlawful aliens, instruments of terrorism, narcotics, and other contraband. The news about this bill says that it applies to a 100-mile zone along the borders with Canada and Mexico. I don't think that's the case. Carefully read Section 2(c)(1) of the proposed bill. It's convoluted as all get out but it looks to me like the law would apply to within 100 miles of all international land and maritime borders of the United States. Wouldn't that be nice? The really curious part about this is the support for this legislation from the Motorcycle Industry Council. Who knew so many motorcycle riders have been endangered by terrorists infiltrating our borders? Labels: environment, legal Cyclocross Racing - Liberty Lake What a fun day! I raced in the Men's Cat 4 again. After getting by as many as I could on the straightaways after the start, I ended up with two guys ahead of me. I put targets on their backs. I actually caught them the second time we did the run up, otherwise known as the trudge up for many of us. I passed them both at the bottom and one of them hurried up at the last moment and tried to get by me at the top. I frantically jumped on my bike off balance and at the same time my front wheel dropped in a hole. I went down and ended up in this awkward position where one leg was trapped between the front wheel and frame while my body helped pin it down by being on top of the frame. Both guys got past and managed to put some distance between us before I was moving again. I was reeling one of them in on the last lap and then the race was over. I managed the battery time on the cameras better and got video of four of the races this time. Crank up the sound. *** Update After going over this post again it appears the reader may be misled into thinking there were *only* two guys ahead of me in the race. That is most certainly not the case. There were many ahead of me, but I could see only two. Labels: cyclocross, fun stuff JV Cross Country Championship The Greater Spokane League schools met at Mead High School this rainy morning. Steph was buried somewhere in this mass of girls taking off when the cannon fired the start. Despite the soaking wet conditions, she did awesome today and set a new PR - 25:10 for the 5k. Labels: family, running Posted by Hank Greer at 8:30 AM 5 comments: It's Funny How Time Sneaks Up On You Last night I watched American Masters on public television. It was an excellent film about Pearl Jam made after they were together for twenty years. "Twenty years," I thought. "When did that happen?" I remember hearing Pearl Jam when they first came out but it seems so disturbing to realize it was twenty years ago. On the bright side, I'm still here. You Can Fool Some Of The People... This email claims to be from Facebook but take a closer look. The From address is "notification" followed by a bizarre string of characters that could pass as a Microsoft validation code. The domain is facebookspot.com, not facebook.com. You can't tell from the screen capture but each link in the email: the facebook.com/profile.php, the inbox is full, the Frequently Asked Questions, and the unsubscribe all point to a web page nefariously placed on a legitimate web site. I downloaded that web page without executing it and found it contains code that redirects you to another site that is registered in St Petersburg, Russia. And that site claims to be selling drugs at cut rate prices. Click to make the image large enough to see. So...yeah...I got this really good deal on vicodin. Labels: scam Today's Double Entendre We don't allow TVs in the can at our house. Posted by Hank Greer at 10:34 PM No comments: On The Road Towards Irrelevance? It's a puzzle. You'd think that a church so intent on protecting us from same-sex marriage would be just as energetic and forceful about protecting children from predators. Granted, other churches besides the Catholic Church are involved in fighting same-sex marriage and other churches have had pastors and religious leaders prey upon children so this isn't something unique to one church. But what's going on with the Catholic Church? At Mass last weekend, the priest giving the homily complained about the IRS investigating churches and threatening their tax-free status when religious leaders told people how they should vote. Never mind that it's the law and the IRS is charged with enforcing it, he expressed it in a manner that made it seem like the IRS was taking unilateral action in an arbitrary and capricious manner. I have to wonder what they're thinking, especially when they're on the wane. Labels: legal, morality, politics If Hands Could Speak What? What are you--? Don't make me do that again. Hold my breath--hold my breath--hold my breath--hold my breath. Pshhhhhhhhhhhh, I hate that. Hey. Hey! Don't you walk past--HEYYYYYY! You're supposed to wash me. No, go back! Wash me! You're supposed to wash me! The Rhetoric Doesn't Match Congresswoman McMorris Rodgers announced that she and several other Republican congressmen have introduced the Keeping America Competitive through Harmonization Act. “While America has led the medical device industry for decades, our leadership is being threatened by the FDA’s unpredictable, inconsistent and inefficient regulation of medical devices,” said Rep. McMorris Rodgers. “According to job creators I’ve met, harmonizing FDA requirements with those of foreign regulators would help improve FDA regulation, expedite approval of life-saving and life-improving treatments, and improve the environment for job creation. Our bill will charge the FDA with undertaking the common-sense reforms that are needed to keep America the world capital of medical innovation.” I thought I'd check out this landmark proposed legislation. It amends Section 803(c) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 383(c)). The entire bill is almost as long as the title so I'm including the full text. (a) In General- Paragraph (4) of section 803(c) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 383(c)) is amended to read as follows: (4) With respect to devices, the Secretary shall, to the maximum extent practicable, enter into agreements with those countries identified in clauses (i) and (ii) of section 802(b)(1)(A) regarding methods and approaches to harmonizing regulatory requirements for premarket review, inspections, and common international labeling symbols.'. (b) Report - Not later than 3 years after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall submit to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House of Representatives, a report listing the agreements entered into under section 803(c)(4) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (as amended by subsection (a)) and itemizing the methods and approaches that have been harmonized pursuant to such section. If you're into that kind of stuff you can read Section 802 and Section 803. They're pretty short so go ahead and take a look. Note that "harmonizing regulatory requirements" doesn't necessarily mean shorten or lengthen the time it takes to approve a medical device. And "the maximum extent practicable" is hardly a mandate. Here's what I'm not clear on and I'll explain it with a hypothetical situation. Let's say the FDA is evaluating Device A and it will take five years to complete the evaluation. The EU is evaluating a similar device and it will take eight years to complete. South Africa has evaluated Device A for the past year and expects to complete it in one year. We conclude an agreement with South Africa that harmonizes the regulatory requirements for medical devices. (I'm not sure if that's possible because there are medical devices and then there are medical devices.) Let's say the agreement includes Device A and now the evaluation period is two years. Does the FDA start afresh with the newly agreed upon regulation or wait for South Africa to complete the process and use that as the basis for approval? Now let's say the agreement was made with the EU instead and the new requirement is a eight year process. Will the medical manufacturers scream WTF? Soccermom Susie Strikes Again The End Is Near--Again Only three more days until the end of the world. There was a last minute scheduling problem back in May so the date was pushed back six months. Still, it's guaranteed. I consulted a different reference and found the domain names judgementday2012.com, judgmentday2012.com, judgmentday2013.com, and judgmentday2013.com are taken. But judgementday2014.com and judgmentday2014.com are still available. So I'd say we have at least a couple more years, but I can't guarantee it. Labels: thinking Cyclocross Racing At Riverside State Park It was a gorgeous day for racing. A shining sun barely made headway against the cool weather that frosted us up overnight. And although it was such a pleasant day I have to say I really miss the slop. Without any rain the courses have been dry and dusty. What's the use of acting younger than your age if you don't have mud and water to play in, right? I only did one race today, the men's category 4. Instead of back-to-back races where I'm dying and out of gas in the second race, I decided to go all out for just one. It was fun and I thought I did well. I started in the back of the pack but managed to get by a couple guys before we headed into the trees. I passed a couple more during the race and a couple passed me as well. I didn't crash nor did I knock the chain off the chain ring. I took it easy on the dismounts but I could still feel a twinge in the ACL in my right knee. Even so, I had no knee pain after the race or for the rest of the day so I'm both relieved and pleased. The course was very different than two weeks ago. With all the twisty turns in the trees marked with red tape it was worth your while to go through it a couple of times to get the layout down. Even so, if you allowed your mind to wander for even a moment (guilty) you'd find yourself putting the binders on and frantically looking for the direction you're supposed to go. I think it's a given that you are supposed to focus, right? Even with my moment of day dreaming the course was just as fun as it was challenging. I shot video of the first three races and here's the compilation of that. The picture quality is disappointing. If I ever win the lottery I'll get a camera that shoots HD. I took stills of the last race, men category 1-3 and men collegiate. Labels: bicycling, cyclocross, fun stuff Occupy Spokane March Knowing Spokane, I figured there wouldn't be that many people showing up for the march today. I was surprised. My guess is that at least a thousand showed up. The group was a mix of all ages and all walks of life. Click the photos to embiggen them. A sense of humor is always appreciated. And the march would not be complete without the obligatory DFH to satisfy some people's stereotypes. Labels: community, economy, politics Now That's Customer Service I was looking for businesses who convert VHS and film to digital format and found a site I could not navigate. Down at the bottom of the page I found this notice. Created with Microsoft Publisher 2007 and Vista and optimized for the IE9 browser, with which it works perfectly. If some pages look strange with other browsers we are sorry but we have no clue how to fix it. We have been told that none of our links work when you are using some versions of Firefox, and we have no clue how to fix that either. For Firefox users: Phone (number removed by me) or email (email address removed by me) and we will try to answer your questions until you can download an improved browser that is compatible with the new industry standard IE9. I'm using Firefox on a Mac. No specific browser is considered the industry standard. Whether the arrogance is intentional or not, right back atcha Mr More Clueless Than You Know. Labels: technology, thinking No Phone Left Behind I got on the elevator at work with two other gentlemen. As the doors closed we heard a phone ringing and it sounded like it was coming from the top of the elevator. We looked around in puzzlement. The car made its first stop and one guy got off. The phone stopped ringing and now we could hear a muffled voice speaking in the ceiling. More puzzlement. The second guy got off on his floor and the car went to mine. I could still hear the muffled voice. Even though it sounded like it was coming from the top of the elevator, I thought I'd open the small door labeled "Phone". I did so just in time to hear, "...for more information go to www dot...". What the heck? The elevator phone got robo-called by a telemarketer. Giant 1, GM 0 Labels: bicycling, consumerism Betty White... ...is still smokin' hot. She Makes It Look So Easy This afternoon Steph finished 5k in 26:41. Labels: running Occupy Spokane - Getting It Together Standing on the triangle-shaped island at Monroe and Riverside, Dennis Smith waves at traffic and greets everyone who walks by. "Good day, ladies," he says to a pair of women wearing sweats passing by on a power walk. Dennis started participating in Occupy Spokane eight days ago. He is there because he's tired of Wall Street's influence on the government. He's tired of the Koch brothers buying political influence. And he says Cathy McMorris Rodgers only does what John Boehner tells her to and follows the party line and does not represent the people in her district. Dennis Smith holds a "People Before Profits" sign as he waves to passing traffic. There has been a change of personnel at Occupy Spokane. The people who started it two weeks ago have moved on. Today I spoke with three of those who have joined after seeing it on the news. They all articulated a common complaint of monied interests swaying legislators and the disproportional benefit they reap from that influence and at the expense of the vast majority of people. A march is planned for this Saturday. Tim Walsh, holding the Financial Fraud sign, joined the protest last Thursday. He says the repeal of the protections offer by the Glass-Steagall Act helped set up the financial crash in 2007. At the corner of Spokane Falls Blvd and Monroe, there's a poem by Sherman Alexie engraved in a spiral laid in granite. "The Places Where Ghosts of Salmon Jump" now serves as the volunteer center for Occupy Spokane. A young woman named Pippie--she asked to leave her last name out--joined Occupy Spokane twelve days ago and helped arranged this with the Spokane Library under the condition that it not be used as a shelter. Pippy says she's been homeless most of her life and thought she'd bring her cooking talents to the group. She works with the Hippy Family Ministries doing a free food kitchen. She said both the city health and fire departments had stopped by to inspect them and they're complying with the city requirements. As of today they are not allowed to heat water for tea or coffee since they don't have insurance should there be an accident with a propane tank. Pippie says a couple of volunteers who live nearby have agreed to provide hot water. She also said that when the group is unable to use donated food, they in turn pass those on to other charitable organizations so it won't go to waste. So what do people think about the Occupy movement? While I was talking to Dennis an unmarked police car with two uniformed officers drove by. The officer in the passenger seat gave a discreet wave. Passing traffic sounds a horn now and then. Since nothing "newsworthy" has happened, notwithstanding the protester who got hit by a car last night, there's been very little about the protest in the local news. I'm aware of two Facebook groups. There's Occupy Spokane Uncensored, a group of 700+ that you have to ask to join, and there's Occupy Spokane with 3600+ likes. So there appears to be what could be considered sizable support in Spokane. Surprisingly, even though the Fox News coverage of Occupy Wall Street has been derogatory, a Fox News poll shows that most people have a favorable view of it. Dennis Smith also had this to say. "We need more 'mom and pop' people down here." I think he hits the nail square on the head. Everybody has been affected by the recession in some form or fashion. You don't have to be unemployed to be angry and you don't have to default on your mortgage to see the unfairness. City Councilman Jon Snyder stopped by last week and chatted with one of the protesters. In his post he said he told her he would love to see the list of concerns once they have it together. I've known Jon for a while and he is a good person. But what he--and you and I for that matter--need to realize is that "they" includes him...and me...and you. What Dennis calls "mom and pop" people are the good-hearted, hard working folks who know that life is unfair, but also chafe at an unlevel playing field forced upon them. Feeling alienated and powerless, they have withdrawn. A few in Spokane have found their voice. They stand on the side of the road holding a sign for two hours. Or twelve. They donate food. They help clean up. They pay for printing notices. They do what they can. This leaderless movement in Spokane already has it together. It's just patiently waiting for everyone else to join them. So what are you doing on Saturday at noon? Labels: community Home, Home On The Range Fortunately, I haven't seen this kind of wildlife issue at the cyclocross races. Paralyzed And Dysfunctional In today's Spokesman Review we learn that the Joint Deficit Reduction Committee is paralyzed. After weeks of secret meetings, the 12-member deficit-cutting panel established under last summer’s budget and debt deal appears no closer to a breakthrough than when talks began last month. The reason? A familiar deadlock over taxes and cuts to major programs like Medicare and the Medicaid health care program for the poor and disabled. This should not come as a surprise to anyone. As I pointed out before, every Republican party member of the committee has signed Grover Norquist's anti-tax pledge stating they would not raise taxes. Plus, Speaker Boehner made it plainly clear when he said, "Tax increases, however, are not a viable option for the joint committee." Is it reasonable to expect anything other than a paralyzed committee? I direct your attention to the acceptance speech Robert Gates delivered when he was awarded the Liberty Medal from the National Constitution Center a couple weeks ago. In it he expressed his concerns and makes some excellent observations about the political environment and how it has changed over his 45 years of government service. I do believe that we are now in uncharted waters when it comes to the dysfunction in our political system—and it is no longer a joking matter. It appears that as a result of several long-building, polarizing trends in American politics and culture, we have lost the ability to execute even the basic functions of government, much less solve the most difficult and divisive problems facing the country. Thus, I am more concerned than I have ever been about the state of American governance. He continues with his reasons and examples. It's not a lengthy speech, but there's too much to copy here so go check it out for yourself. There is one point pertinent to this post about the paralyzed Joint Deficit Reduction Committee. As a result of these and other polarizing factors, the moderate center—the foundation of our political system and our stability—is not holding. Just at a time when this country needs more continuity, more bipartisanship, and more compromise to deal with our most serious problems, all the trends are pointing in the opposite direction. Indeed, “compromise” has become a dirty word—too often synonymous with a lack of principles or “selling out.” Yet, our entire system of government has depended upon compromise. Going back to the Review article and the consequences if the committee is unable to agree on a budget plan. ...failure to produce a measure would trigger painful across-the-board cuts to the Pentagon budget and a big slice of domestic programs, including Medicare, food stamps and Medicaid. The idea behind this so-called sequester was to force the two sides to come together because the alternative is too painful. “I made it clear to the Republican members of the supercommittee that I expect there will be an outcome, that there has to be an outcome,” House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Thursday. Note that "an outcome" is pretty ambiguous and there's going to be one regardless. But if tax increases are off the table, it's going to be the ugliest one. A more optimistic scenario is that in coming days and weeks, members of the panel will become more flexible as the deadline nears. Since we had a committee that was deadlocked before it was even created, anything is considered a more optimistic scenario. Don't hold your breath. Labels: government, politics Yesterday's Cyclocross Racing Whoever told me the course in Moscow is fun was right. Twisty turns combined with short climbs and descents, short rolling bumps, and even stairs to run up. During a practice run I endoed on the short climb with the sharp left turn and somehow hooked the small strap on the back of my shoes onto a brake lever. It's difficult to stand up and move out of the way with a bike attached to your foot. I did back-to-back races again and I think that's enough of that. Tweaking my knee in the second race didn't help any. There's one issue I really need to work on and it contributed to my knee tweak. When it's time to get off the bike for a run through or run up, I'm coming in too hot. I don't feel like I am, but I am. If I slow down some I'm smoother and more comfortable. And there's the rub--I'm having a tough time figuring out I need to slow down because I don't think I'm going that fast. Hopefully, my knee is okay for next weekend. Here's a video I made of yesterday's racing. I should also mention the other lesson I learned yesterday. When the route begins with a wide path for about 100 yards and then becomes a 100-yard single track followed by a very short and sharp S-turn with short and steep inclines, you want to get out in front of as many people as you can during those first 100 yards. Otherwise, the bunching up that happens when everyone slows for the S-turn--we were literally running into each other--sets you even further back from the front runners if you're in the back of that mess. We Mock What We Do Not Understand Charles Krauthammer never fails to disappoint me when it comes to spouting nonsense. But today's column in the Review is especially puzzling. Writing about the news that neutrinos may travel faster than light, he notes: The implications of such a discovery are so mind-boggling, however, that these same scientists immediately requested that other labs around the world try to replicate the experiment. Something must have been wrong to account for a result that, if we know anything about the universe, is impossible. Actually, scientists making new discoveries always have their work double checked. Being able to find any errors and/or reproduce the results is a hugely important part of science. He blathers on as to the implications of this discovery. It means that the “standard model” of subatomic particles that stands at the center of all modern physics is wrong. Nor does it stop there. This will not just overthrow physics. Astronomy and cosmology measure time and distance in the universe on the assumption of light speed as the cosmic limit. Their foundations will shake as well. It cannot be. Yet, this is not a couple of guys in a garage peddling cold fusion. This is no crank wheeling a perpetual motion machine into the patent office. These are the best researchers in the world using the finest measuring instruments, having subjected their data to the highest levels of scrutiny, including six months of cross-checking by 160 scientists from 11 countries. But there must be some error. Because otherwise everything changes. We shall need a new physics. A new cosmology. New understandings of past and future, of cause and effect. Then shortly and surely, new theologies. I'm not getting this. Does he have a point? Now You Know How The System Works A hat tip to my Aunt Judith for sending me this. Posted by Hank Greer at 10:09 PM 2 comments: Little Miss OCD You can always tell when Steph puts the dishes and silverware away. Of course, looking at her room (no embarrassing photo provided) you'd think it was a totally different person living there. What We've Become Prospective Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry says he is open to sending the U.S. military to Mexico to help fight the drug cartels. “It may require our military in Mexico working in concert with them to kill these drug cartels and to keep them off of our border and to destroy their network,” Mr. Perry said during a campaign appearance here. “I don’t know all the different scenarios that would be out there,” he said. “But I think it is very important for us to work with them to keep that country from failing.” This is the same type of thinking that pushed us over the moral edge when we decided to declare a Global War on Terrorism and use the military to fight it. The war was not against a state, but against a small organization whose members were out in the global hinterlands. The enemy in this war became so conflated and the definition of a terrorist so expansive that Congress has to pass a bill that declared Nelson Mandela wasn't a terrorist so he could travel to the United States. Our military has been involved in Afghanistan for ten years. We helped overthrow the Taliban and installed a government that cannot exist without our continued presence. We used to drop bombs and shoot cruise missiles. Technological advances have given us the ability to use remote controlled aircraft to stay over a target for a long time and then hit it with a missile. That target, as we witnessed recently, can even be an American citizen, a decision cleared by U.S. government lawyers. And how hard can that be these days? During the Bush Administration John Yoo said the President's constitutional authority was broad enough to order the massacre of a village. He also helped provide legal justification for "enhanced interrogation techniques", better known in other circles as torture. So clearing the extrajudicial killing of Anwar Awlaki via a remote controlled aircraft launching a missile shouldn't be hard to do. And as you can see from many of the comments on any articles about this, most people don't consider the violation of his constitutional rights to be an issue. And many that do think that killing a terrorist is worth trumping the law. Instead, celebrate that we killed another terrorist. Labels: human rights, morality, war Photos From Yesterday's Races Cyclocross Racing - Riverside State Park John was kind enough to take photos with my camera while I was racing and I snapped a few before and after. It's great to see all ages and skill levels out there giving it all. Labels: bicycling, cyclocross Race Season Has Begun I woke up this morning, looked outside and saw that it had rained. Whoo-hoo! The first cyclocross race of the season was today and I was looking forward to splashing through puddles and getting muddy. I got to Riverside State Park and it was bone dry. The rain missed it. Bummer, but not the end of the world. Scouting out the course I found it was not completely without hazards. I signed up for two races, the Men's Masters 50+ and the Men's Cat 4. They were scheduled back to back so I figured (quite correctly) I'd be very tired at the end of the day. The Master's race did not go well for me. I was obviously rusty. I felt like I couldn't do anything right. My turns were too wide. I wasn't raising off the saddle on the dips and bumps. I could dismount just fine on the approach to the barrier and run-up, but I couldn't get the bike off the ground in time. One time I slammed it into the board hard enough to knock the chain off. That cost me some time putting it back on once I got to the top. With the track being so dry, the sandy turns could be tricky as this young lady learned. I did the same thing on another turn. The race leaders caught me about halfway through my fifth lap. So I got to complete five and I was beginning to regret signing up for a second race. I drank some sport drink and chilled for a few minutes. At least I was warmed up for the race. Since my front tire was slipping in the sandy turns I thought I'd bleed some air to see if that improved the traction. Besides, everybody knows you look more like a pro at the start line if you lean down, spritz a little air from your tire and then give it a squeeze, right? The second race went much better. I focused on technique during the turns, over the bumpy terrain, and picking up the bike for the run-up. Doing much better this time around. (All photos of me by John Speare.) On the fifth lap I assumed that, like the first race, the race leaders would catch me and I'd be done. But the cyclocross gods had other plans. My race goal is to complete as much of the course I can before I get caught by the leaders. As luck would have it, the leaders caught everyone behind me--was anyone behind me? But I arrived at the finish line where the race official informed me I had one more lap to go. Yeah--one of those "be careful what you wish for" scenarios. Really wishing this was over. (No, I am not track standing.) I continued on the course feeling all alone. Anyone ahead of me was well ahead. Any riders behind me were now finished. My eleventh run-up went without a hitch, but took a little longer. The spring in my step was now a trudge. Kudos to Emde Sports for putting on a first rate race. It was a lot of fun.
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IEEE SLT 2018 Call for Demos Call for Special Sessions SPS Student Grant Application Author Kit IEEE SLT 2018 Paper Submission Kit About Athens Venue & Transportation Gala Banquet IEEE SLT 2018 | Workshop on Spoken Language Technology 18-21 December 2018 | Athens | Greece Najim Dehak Assistant Professor at the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore USA ndehak3@jhu.edu Najim Dehak received his PhD from School of Advanced Technology, Montreal in 2009. During his PhD studies he worked with the Computer Research Institute of Montreal, Canada. He is well known as a leading developer of the I-vector representation for speaker recognition. He first introduced this method, which has become the state-of-the-art in this field, during the 2008 summer Center for Language and Speech Processing workshop at Johns Hopkins University. This approach has become one of most known speech representations in the entire speech community. Dr. Dehak is currently a faculty member of the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering at Johns Hopkins University. Prior to joining Johns Hopkins, he was a research scientist in the Spoken Language Systems Group at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. His research interests are in machine learning approaches applied to speech processing, audio classification, and health applications. He is a senior member of IEEE and member of the IEEE Speech and Language Technical Committee. © 2017 SLT. All rights reserved.
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5196
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Lock’s Quest DS / Reviews / by Michael Walbridge / Lock’s Quest is one of those games that crosses the boundaries of genre; in the strictest sense it is only strategy, but it also has elements of action, resulting in it being a “strategy-action” or “action-strategy” game. Whatever you call it, Lock’s Quest manages to amazingly blend turret-building, wall-repairing, character-positioning and special move attacks into a you-versus-the-world frenzy. Lock is a young, blond, plain, Japanese-RPG kind of fellow who is branching out: he bears no sword, amnesia, magic, or great regrets, but he does have his village come under attack. Somewhere in the madness he loses track of his sister, but no other tragic events occur except the needed evacuation of the village. Combat is patterned after tower defense games: hordes of robotic clockworks attack Lock’s position, making the selection and placement of towers and walls an important strategical element. Lock has 2 or 3 minutes to place these in the building stage. After this, the fight commences, which also lasts 2 or 3 minutes. Unlike in typical tower defense games, however, Lock himself remains on the battlefield to repair or to clash with the clockworks in person. This is all done using the stylus. Lock’s Quest is commendable for managing to feel like a computer strategy game when everything about it takes advantage of the platform. Sometimes placement is a little uncomfortable, but the building stage gives enough time to make up for it. Pathing, the system through which game units know the shortest route from point A to point B (and how to get around walls) is a bit flawed, at least where Lock is concerned; look away, and you may find he’s still in the same spot, running in place. Combat is also stylus-driven and requires a lot of coordination to really excel at it. Lock has four different kinds of attacks, all of which require unique stlyus manipulation. One of his later moves is a life-stealing attack: to perform it, a bar will appear with a tab on it. The direction the tab needs to be pulled will be random, so reflexes are key. After the first attack, two bars will appear, then three, and then it resets to one. All the moves are, in the strictest sense, easy to perform–but it is much harder to do them quickly when there are 4 towers that need to be repaired and 3 other sets of clockworks that are unattended. The level of challenge here is one of the best features of Lock’s Quest. For a DS strategy game that is going for broad appeal, Lock’s Quest manages to nail it. Success is not out of the reach of children, at least intelligent or older ones, and adults can still find it challenging. I managed to find strategies that worked consistently, but learning those strategies took time, and it was time well-enjoyed. I’m 27 years old, I’ve played over a thousand matches of Starcraft online and won over half of them, and yet a few of these levels beat me more than once. The icing on the cake for Lock’s Quest is the story—Lock and his sister Emi lack depth in personality, but the rest of the characters are surrounded in mystery. There are 100 “days” to get through to get to the end of Lock’s Quest, and at day 96, I thought I knew the rest of the story, but the plot twists and surprises continue through to the very end. There’s nothing deep here, but it was engaging enough to keep me curious as to what would happen, and there were some armchair philosophy and juvenile-lit lectures to boot. This is likely the only other game this year besides The World Ends With You that tells a tale you hope teenagers see; if Final Fantasy feels like a soap opera, Lock’s Quest feels like a darker Disney Movie. Lock’s Quest manages to cross strategy and deliberation at the speed of pencil and paper with live combat, then add an involving story where every single character has a secret or surprise. To do all this and make it appealing and fun for a broad audience across genre-preferences and age is no small feat. Lock’s Quest is one of the best reasons to buy a DS. Plays like: Zelda, PC real-time strategy, and tower defense all at the same time. ESRB: E for everyone. Some serious themes here, including death and life, but nothing offensive. Pros: Good for both extended and quick play, story is unique and well-told, lots of opportunity for creativity, very well-balanced challenge that engages both young and old, newbie and expert Cons: Lock’s pathing is sometimes off, placement is awkward, seems like there are only six music tracks, and they get old quickly; sprites hardly have faces Score: 5/5 Questions? Check out our review guide.
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Liverpool Vs Norwich Contrary to popular belief, Lorem Ipsum is not simply random text. It has roots in a piece of classical Latin literature from 45 BC, making it over 2000 years old. Richard McClintock, a Latin professor at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, looked up one of the more obscure Latin words, consectetur, from a Lorem Ipsum passage, and going through the cites of the word in classical literature, discovered the undoubtable source. Lorem Ipsum comes from sections 1.10.32 and 1.10.33 of “de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum” (The Extremes of Good and Evil) by Cicero, written in 45 BC. This book is a treatise on the theory of ethics, very popular during the Renaissance. The first line of Lorem Ipsum, “Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet..”, comes from a line in section 1.10.32.
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Supported by state-of-the-art technology, advanced manufacturing equipment and highly skilled staff, SUGA has in place a manufacturing process that serves the production of a vast portfolio of electronic products. To constantly improve the manufacturing process, SUGA performs rigorous in-process quality control checks and establishes control points. Each stage of the production process meets strict quality specifications and requirements, and all necessary corrective and preventative actions are taken.
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Real Estate Investing By the Numbers Posted on March 27, 2013 by tsiadmin http://www.youtube.com/v/X4O8yvvV4A4?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Join Bill St. John, Business Development Manager of The Entrust Group, for this educational hour focused on real estate. He will discuss: – The “quick thumbn… This entry was posted in Education, Gaming, Investment, investments, Music, News, Property, Real Estate, Shows, Sports, Uk and tagged auto, billionaire, education, faith, investment, music, news, real estate, sports, web, windows. Bookmark the permalink.
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The Centre Cannot Hold September 15, 1962 — “Green Onions” by Booker T and the MGs reaches #1 on the charts By Loki 222 Content, Culture, Rock n Roll History of the World, The Rock'n'Roll History of the World “Green Onions” is probably the single best known instrumental of the rock era, and routinely appears on lists of the “the greatest songs of all time”. It was originally released as the B-side of “Behave Yourself” in May of 1962, but when its popularity became apparent, the single was re-released with its A and B sides flipped. It peaked at #3 on the Billboard Hot 100, but its influence goes way beyond that. “Green Onions” was composed by the members of Booker T. and MGs (Booker T. Jones, Steve “The Colonel” Cropper, Lewie Steinberg and Al Jackson, jnr. Originally a group of session musicians at Stax Records, they metamorphosed into a successful recording act in their own right, but never had another single as successful as “Green Onions”. By Source, Fair use, Link As mentioned in: Green Onions — The Blues Brothers Tagged 1962, Booker T and the MGs, Green Onions, Sep 15, Stax Records, The Blues Brothers. « August 5, 1962 — Marilyn Monroe dies in suspicious circumstances September 25, 1962 — Sonny Liston defeats Floyd Patterson » The Rock ‘n’ Roll History of the World The Rock'n'Roll History Calendar Pick a random event! The Annotated Ten Commandments Daft Lyrics Database "Keating! The Musical" Annotations Pharmacopoeia Fantastica The Rock’n’Roll History of the World Role Playing Rules Conversions Many links leading to external sites on this site are for affiliate program links, which allow us to help cover the costs of the site. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This is The Centre Cannot Hold, my assortment of various strange ideas that I've put on the internet to share with you all. I hope you enjoy them. The Complete History Every entry in chronological order Crime, law and criminals All arts and popular entertainment. Dateless Events which have no recorded date. Depressions, booms, legislation and important firsts. Historical canards and misconceptions. Events that occurred only in works of fiction. Events projected to occur at some point in the future. Events of either dubious historicity or outright myth. Politics and wars. Events in religious history and religious dogma. Discoveries, new technologies and events discovered only through the application of science. Sporting events, or events related to athletes. The Annotated Ten Commandments | Daft Lyrics Database | "Keating! The Musical" Annotations | Pharmacopoeia Fantastica | The Rock’n’Roll History of the World | Role Playing Rules Conversions | Where Are They Now? Log in here! //z-na.amazon-adsystem.com/widgets/onejs?MarketPlace=US&adInstanceId=dc895610-d442-44f5-a78d-3fbebee0e0f4
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» carlotta.capurro carlotta.capurro Capurro 3D acquisition, modeling and virtual reconstruction Italian, @ Visual Dimension, Ename (Belgium) Period: november, 19 2012 - march, 1 2013 Profile: Degree in Art history and valorization of the cultural heritage (University of Genova). Skilled in 3D modelling and interested in Art History and Conservation of the Heritage, Virtual Museums and Serious Games, Didactic aim of new media, Impact on the society. Full bio: Carlotta Capurro is an art historian and digital restorer. She had her bachelor's degree in Conservation of Cultural Heritage at the University of Genoa. In 2009/2010 she gained a scholarship from the Erasmus European Program and spent an year at the Universiteit Gent (Gent, Belgium, EU), where she studied and worked on Infra Red Reflectography techniques applied on Flemish panel paintings. She had her master's degree in Art History at the University of Genoa. The work included a virtual museum which has been presented at the 18th International Conference on Virtual Systems and Multimedia (VSMM2012) in September 2012. After her internship in the same company, she is currently employee at Visual Dimension (Oudenaarde, Belgium, EU), where she works on 3D reconstruction and virtual restoration of archaeological objects.
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UNDEAD AND UNPOPULAR Wednesday, August 01, 2007 Yolanda Sfetsos 1 comment With her birthday coming up, Betsy isn't in the best frame of mind to face the powerful European vampires who have finally come to pay their respects. Playing politics is not her strong suit, especially when she finds out her best friend Jessica may have a life-threatening illness. Sure Betsy can save her life by taking it-isn't that what friends are for?-but the choice isn't in her hands. Well, I'm now up-to-date with the Undead series. I read the 5th book on Monday night, in one sitting. I think this was the shortest one, wasn't it? Still, it was a lot of fun! Now I need to wait until the next one is released on paperback... which may be a while yet. :/ I love the way the series is going. The way the powerful European vampires visit went, was totally unpredictable. I didn't expect it to go the way it did, which is a great thing! I love Betsy's antics. And the zombie scene was classic. I hope we get to find out even more about that situation. Lol. It was too funny. I also keep waiting for something weird to happen with her baby brother. With a family like Betsy's, you just never know. Anyway, this was another great MJD book. I'm now looking forward to checking out her other series... the one with the mermaid. ;) Posted in: excellent book , reading I have to say that I love this series. I own them all. I have also found that there are a few other novels that I think you would appreciate if you like the undread and unwed series. The anita blake vampire hunter series, actually all the books written by Laurell K. Hamilton.
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It’s not what happens to you, it’s what you do with what happens to you… We hear this over and over, and it is the basis of the Law of Relativity. If your thoughts have power, then the power of your perception is huge. For truly, if we ask for a miracle, we are given a change in perspective, but that shift in how we view things is what orders our steps and enables us with the Law of Action to create the miracle that we seek. Don’t you see?? It’s all on you! God and the Universe can only do for you what It does through you. As the Buddhists teach us, in each moment there are 3000 worlds. We create these worlds through the power of our thoughts and our perspective. When to use this Law When you need to shift perspective When you are feeling sorry for yourself When you need inspiration Remember…there are always multiple ways to view a situation, our job is to find the one that feels right…and the one that is higher vibration. & Workbook Download the Law of Relativity Workbook Blogs & Journal Questions 5 Universal Laws for Stress Relief Managing stress on any given day can be a pain, but these days, emotions seem to be running higher than usual. As a society, we are in the middle of a great Spiritual Awakening. People are discovering that there is more to life than working at a job that brings no... Is it Self-Sabotage or Mis-Alignment? It’s been a week since I’ve written anything… From my journal this morning: “After declaring last week that my desire is to be a writer; to use the power of prose to do what I have always WANTED to do, the next logical step would be to stop writing all together. Of... Pray when you feel like worrying Life is weird sometimes. Our brains can trick us into thinking things are hopeless, or we can’t keep going. But humans…ya just can’t count them out. We have this law of nature working for us, well we have several, but one of my favorites is the Law of Polarity. The... How to make the most of The Law of Compensation Put simply, the Law of Compensation is this: “The energy with which you give to others comes back to you in kind” You get back what you give to others.Be generous with your time, love... give of yourself. This doesn't mean that if you want more money you should give...
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*Best New Books* Annual Best Lists One Star Review Toon Reviews Link Du Jour Covering the Newbery Cover Curiosity Unfortunate Covers Books on Film Morning Notes February 28, 2008 by Travis Jonker Book Review: Swindle February 28, 2008 by Travis Jonker 27 comments Swindle By Gordon Korman In Stores March 2008 *Recommended* Can we get a few more copies please? I work as library media specialist in a school district with four elementary buildings. Right now two of the schools are holding their annual book fair and “Swindle” is the most sought after item … other than the pencils with fuzzy dog toppers (cringe). It helps that “Swindle” was featured prominently in a video we show students hyping up some of the books that will be on sale. I have to say that the hype was warranted. This heist story is sure to catch on with a wide range of readers, including that hardest to reach segment of the reading population: boys. Griffin is a guy to likes to think things through. He has a plan for everything and can always count on his best friend Ben to help him execute his grand ideas. One such idea leads to the discovery of an old Babe Ruth baseball card. When the boys take the card to their local memorabilia fanatic (S. Wendell Palomino, henceforth known as “Swindle”), the collector dupes Griffin and buys the card for cheap. When it comes to light that the card could be worth millions, Griffin assembles a team to get the card back. There’s Pitch, the climber; Logan, thespian; Melissa, computer pro; and Savannah, animal control. Everyone needs to play their role to perfection – Swindle is obsessed with keeping his prized possession secure. Do they pull the job without a hitch? Not even close. But what fun is it if things go as planned? I was wondering how this one was going to end, in fact I was racing to find out. Griffin and his crew commit a crime – you can’t really just say “and then they got away. The End”. So how does the author wrap up the story and leave the reader satisfied while dealing with the serious nature of the offense? Mr. Korman does an admirable job. Our heroes don’t get off the hook, but they aren’t really left on the hook either. It didn’t disappoint. So let’s see: kids being sneaky + the chance to be rich + sticking it to a greedy adult. Yep, by my calculations we have genuine reluctant reader gold on our hands. Now if I could just scare up a few more copies for kids on the book fair waiting list… Filed under: *Best New Books*, Reviews About Travis Jonker Travis Jonker is an elementary school librarian in Michigan. He writes reviews (and the occasional article or two) for School Library Journal and is a member of the 2014 Caldecott committee. You can email Travis at scopenotes@gmail.com, or follow him on Twitter: @100scopenotes. Review: The Genius Under the Table by Eugene Yelchin Review: Allergic by Megan Wagner Lloyd Review: Beetle & the Hollowbones by Aliza Layne Review: Twins by Varian Johnson and Shannon Wright Review: The Sewer Rat Stink (Geronimo Stilton Graphic Novel #1) by Tom Angleberger Stories That Soar: Interview with 2022 Best Books Cover Illustrator Guojing First Books about a Loose Tooth | Milestones SLJ’s 2022 Best Books Are Live. Download a PDF of the Complete List. Best Books 2022 | The Year in SLJ Covers SLJ Book Reviews Editors’ Favorite Books Read in 2022 amazzzzzzing hooorrrriiibbblllee ! let mah say tht easyier fopr yuh 2 read cus yuh must not know bad from good o_o tht first word is HORRIBLE Jared says Iffy… Although the plot is amazing, It was a bit fast pace. There was not much explaining on the settings and character. Because of this it was hard to have a visual idea of the settings and characters. Main plot- After spending a night a house about to be demolished Griffin Bing finds a babe ruth baseball card. So the next day he goes to a antique dealer. There the seller swindles him, buying it for 120$ when, he later realizes, it was worth 1million dollors. So after the dealer refuses to give it back, Griffin organizes a team to steal the card back. I think the book is also pricey. last is if i had to rate it 1-5 (5 being the best) I would give it 2 1/2. i think this book was alright it infact it was really good i really liked the beginning when griffin first finds the card and all the things that happened why they were sleeping in that old house and overall it waas a great srory i really liked it…. Evan says because he was seeing who would come out of all of the grade 6ers it was a really awesome book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Swindle suxd barry says i really really liked it Brandon says uhm ye… this book was good well right now i have a book report to do and right now im doing the character traits. so i think theres to many characters because i have to right like a paragraph each char and i need to do it on page!!! theres like 9 peepz i goota do it on!!! (0_o) it taking me forevever I really liked this book! Plot was amzing. But, was ther a dynamic chaacter in this book? Conner says That book sucked i will never read it again!!!! nd every1 saying tht ihts so great Joel says The book was very exiting and fun i had fun reading the book and i hope u will like it too sry about about the book suck now i read it i realized that it isnt that bad. i hope i can really intro other ppl to this book BK says It was a good book but not a great one! S.M says The book was not half bad if you ask me. There was definately alot of details & supporting ideas. I didn’t really like how they repeated some of the dialogue sometimes, but I’m sure it was just to make it clear. Some parts of Swindle wasn’t all that intresting, I would probably say somewhat it was boring. It’s not a hard book to read at all! No difficult words or anything. Overall, Swindle was a good book to read, even though I didn’t like the whole idea of the book. Rating Out Of 5: 3.5 🙂 i liked the idea of the book but i have a book report on it and i have to describe all of the characters and i have no idea what any of them look like… there needs to be a better description Meg says I’m gonna read this book for summer reading and it seems like a book fulled with suspense and action thats what I like in a book and look for in a book and my freind that read it said that it’s hard to find a book as good as it is! uhm .. for all you ppl who think its good . . . . IHTS NOT !i! iht suxd so bad OMG ill neva tell another pereson to read iht I liek chez burgerz says okay Tori…… stop saying to other people “don’t read it” or “you’re wrong! it sucks!”. People have there own decisions and FYI I have to do a book report on this although IDK why I’m saying that. sssssss says this book is cool!!!!!!!! Varunan says This book was great.it was so good i am going to do all my book reports on this one. also i am going to do some on zoobreak and framed yea, it’s alright i guess ur mom says it a great book i wish u guys like it it has lots action and it makes u curious lucy says i love it!!!!!! Jasmine says it seems like a good book although i never read it lol but i want 2 🙂 Paola says Hey I love it just that I never. 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ONE Musicfest_1242_Week of 8.12.19 Sweepstakes Name: ONE Musicfest (w/o 8/12/19) (the “Sweepstakes”) List of Winner(s): For the name(s) of the winner(s) send a stamped, self-addressed envelope, to: iHeartMedia + Entertainment, Inc., ONE Musicfest Sweepstakes at 55 Music Square West, Nashville, TN 37203. 2.TIMING.Sweepstakes begins on Monday, August 12, 2019 at 12:40:00 p.m. CT and ends at 12:45:00 p.m. CT on Friday, August 16, 2019 (“Sweepstakes Period").The Sweepstakes Period includes five (5) entry period (each an “Entry Period”) comprised of one (1) playtime as set forth below: 2)Tuesday, August 13, 2019: listen between 12:40 pm CT and 12:45 pm CT/ 1 playtime 3)Wednesday, August 14, 2019: listen between 12:40 pm CT and 12:45 pm CT/ 1 playtime 4)Thursday, August 15, 2019: listen between 12:40 pm CT and 12:45 pm CT/ 1 playtime 5)Friday, August 16, 2019: listen between 12:40 pm CT and 12:45 pm CT/ 1 playtime Beginning Monday, August 12, 2019, listen to the participating Station weekdays between 12:40:00 pm CT and 12:45:00 pm CT throughout the Sweepstakes Period for the cue to call in and be the selected caller to the designated Sweepstakes announced.Throughout the Sweepstakes Period, each Entry Period (as listed above) a “sounder” or cue to call will be aired at various times along with a message instructing listeners to call for a chance to become a Potential grand prize winner. The participating Stations may or may not choose to announce exact times the cues will be played. ·The participant must be the designated caller, from all callers calling-in from participating Stations, to the phone number announced; the designated caller, if eligible, will be declared a potential grand prize winner. If the Sponsor determines the designated caller is not eligible, the Sponsor may select the next consecutive eligible caller as the potential grand prize winner for that playtime. Listen to the Station for details on specific times to play. The dates and times of station participation may vary and shall be determined solely by the individual participating Station and announced on air and the local participating stations, at their sole discretion may or may not choose to air all playtimes due to programming obligations and other factors. Prize Description: Two (2) tickets to ONE Musicfest in Atlanta on September 7-8, 2019 Prize provided by: ONE Musicfest
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Rob Carroll, Townsquare Media Hanson is playing a limited amount of U.S. dates this year, but they made sure Brews and BBQ at Rockford Speedway was on their schedule. Fans from as far away as Utah and Texas started lining up during the early morning hours of Sept. 2 for a spot near the front of the stage. Around 8:30 p.m., the band took the stage in a fenced off area just outside of the Rockford Speedway. Categories: Local News, Rockford Events
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WE GROW PEOPLE We’re a tight knit pack who makes big things happen everyday. We work hard and we expect a lot out of each other. We also know that a healthy dose of laughter, good food, and some fresh air is good for the soul (and for business!). Ask us about team outings, picnics, trips to the farmers market, and Summer Fridays. SEE CURRENT OPENINGS 26FIVE is a consulting firm powered by creative and tech labs in India, Europe, and Asia. For over 25 years, our team achieves extraordinary outcomes in Branding, Growth Management and Innovation for clients in technology, lifestyle and Finance/M&As. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer. 26FIVE is committed to creating a diverse environment and is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to age, color, religion, gender, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, national origin, genetics, disability, age, or veteran status. SWISS ARMY KNIVES WELCOME Don’t see your title? All good. We’re not big on labels either. Hit us up, we find ways to work with extraordinary talent. We’re a small tight knit pack. Great work is a big deal.
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Lyfe Jennings – “Gold” (Video) blame it on Shake April 7, 2015 After returning with his new single, “Pretty Is,” Lyfe Jennings is back with another new track called “Gold.” Actually, “new” wouldn’t be correct, since – as longtime fans of Ohio singer might recall – Lyfe would perform it during the early days of his career. At the time, “Gold” was never actually finished and remained incomplete through the years – until now. With his Tree Of Lyfe LP dropping June 23rd, Lyfe decided to finish the song and release an accompanying video for his Day One fans. Much wiser in age, a guitar-strumming Lyfe takes it back to 1994 and shares his new-found knowledge with his younger, unruly self. “The concept of the video is me talking to my younger self. There are consequences in everything you do. The gold, or the beauty in that is the lesson you get from it. The things you say, the things you do, you can’t take it back. All you can do is be better.” Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve gotta find Lyfe 268-192 on TIDAL Spotify. Lyfe Jennings – “Gold” (Video) was last modified: March 31st, 2018 by Shake Tags:lyfe jennings Jay Bel – “TransEuro” f. Jimi Tents Tunde Adebimpe – “Speedline Miracle Masterpiece” f. Sal P & Sinkane
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20th Squadron 429th Squadron James Bruce James J Bruce served his country in World War II with the 2nd Bombardment Group . Information on James Bruce is gathered and extracted from military records. We have many documents and copies of documents, including military award documents. It is from these documents that we have found this information on MAJ Bruce. These serviceman's records are not complete and should not be construed as a complete record. We are always looking for more documented material on this and other servicemen. If you can help add to James Bruce's military record please contact us. Bellvue WA GO: 52 The information on this page about James Bruce has been obtained through a possible variety of sources incluging the serviceman themselves, family, copies of military records that are in possession of the Army Air Corps Library and Museum along with data obtained from other researchers and sources including AF Archives at Air Force Historical Research Agency and the U.S. National Archives. If you have more information concerning the service of James Bruce, including pictures, documents and other artifacts that we can add to this record, please Contact Us. 2ndbg.org, Copyright 2023, Army Air Corps Library and Museum, Inc., All Rights Reserved
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Old Settler Wind Project Floyd County, Texas Related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): SDG 7 - Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all. The renewable energy generated from the project is added to the local power grid. SDG 8 - Promote inclusive and sustainable economic growth, employment and decent work for all. SDG 9 - Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation. SDG 13 - Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts. Wind energy production reduces the reliance on fossil fuels, which are a known emitter of GHG emissions. The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are an urgent call for action by countries in global partnership to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure that by 2030 all people enjoy peace and prosperity. Facebook Icon Twitter Icon LinkedIn Icon RSS Icon Year after year, Texas ranks as one of the nation’s leading generators of wind capacity, and this trend is expected to continue as power producers take advantage of the state’s abundant wind resources. Owned by NorthLeaf Capital and operated by Apex Clean Energy, Old Settler is a 151.2 MW wind farm located in Northern Texas. The wind energy harvested by the 63 General Electric turbines is enough to power about 51,000 homes. The Old Settler Wind project has received acclaim for its inventive financing arrangement, a model for future deals in the wind industry. The clean energy portfolio between NorthLeaf Capital and Apex Clean Energy uses a proxy revenue swap that enables third-party financing and tax equity commitments for the project. This structure allows companies to hedge against risks associated with changing prices in the energy market and fluctuations in power generation. All Photos courtesy of Apex Clean Energy Co-benefits + Where oil wells once stood, wind turbines now dominate the landscape. This region of the United States is expanding offshore wind installations, drastically reducing carbon emissions. + The expansion of renewable energy in Texas has enhanced rural economies by offering green job opportunities in the construction and maintenance of wind farms. + Investments in renewable energy promote resilient infrastructure, inclusive and sustainable industrialization, and foster innovation. View other project profiles or contact us. Tags EAC project portfolio
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X-Bow exits stealth mode with its 3D printed rocket engines Kubi Sertoglu March 23rd 2022 - 12:58pm 0 0 X-Bow Launch Systems, a space technology 3D printing company, has exited stealth mode this week. Originally founded in 2016, the New Mexico-headquartered startup specializes in the development of 3D printed solid fuels and rocket motors and has already created a lineup of small launch vehicles suitable for both orbital and suborbital launches. Having already secured several contracts with U.S. government organizations, X-Bow’s existing customers include the Air Force Research Lab, AFWERX, Los Alamos National Lab, Sandia National Lab, and the Defense Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Jason Hundley, CEO of X-Bow, said, “X-Bow is leveraging a unique combination of technologies with an improved manufacturing model to serve existing aerospace markets and enable new ones. Our breakthrough 3D printing technology is positioned to rapidly innovate the solid propulsion and energetics markets just as SpaceX revolutionized the launch market. Our mission is to modernize solid motor production through additive manufacturing while dramatically improving unit economics.” X-Bow testing one of its solid fuel rocket engines. Photo via X-Bow. Solid fuel rocket engines A solid-fuel rocket, as the name might suggest, is a rocket engine that relies on propellants (fuel and oxidizer) that come in solid form. Since the turn of the 20th century, liquid-propelled rockets have proven to be more efficient and controllable, but solid rockets are often still used for military applications due to their simplicity and robustness. Unlike their liquid or hybrid counterparts, solid-fuel rockets can be kept in storage for long periods of time without the propellant degrading. As such, they almost always launch reliably but suffer when it comes to fuel efficiency and performance, meaning they’re not the optimal choice for modern medium-to-large launch vehicles. Instead, solid rockets are frequently used as strap-on boosters to increase payload capacity or as light launch vehicles for low Earth orbit (LEO) payloads. The Space Shuttle was launched with the help of two solid-fuel boosters. Photo via NASA. X-Bow’s 3D printed solid rocket motors Since its inception, X-Bow has focused on designing and 3D printing its own solid rocket motors. The firm claims that its launch vehicles are both more efficient and more cost-effective than traditional rocket engines, reportedly bridging flexibility, reliability, and responsiveness. Over the past six years, X-Bow has crafted itself an ever-growing product line comprising 3D printed rocket engines, additively manufactured propellants, and end-to-end launch services for a range of government and commercial clients. The company boasts a workforce of over 60, including veteran professionals from the aerospace sector. “For too long, aerospace markets have lacked a 21st century solution that utilizes cutting edge technological advances such as 3D printing, digital engineering techniques, and automation. X-Bow is well-positioned to fill the gap with disruptive technology that can shake up the emerging space economy,” said Matt Bigge, Partner at Crosslink Capital, a key investor in X-Bow. “We are confident in the experienced team at X-Bow and thrilled to be supporting its mission. This company is poised to revolutionize the future of solid rocket motors.” X-Bow’s suite of small launch vehicles. Photo via X-Bow. The 3D printing of rocket engine components is a venture we’ve seen before, with X-Bow being the latest challenger on the scene. Earlier this year, Chinese start-up SpaceTai announced that its 3D printing technology was capable of slashing rocket production costs by as much as 80%. Although a relatively new arrival in the aerospace sphere, SpaceTai says it can manufacture almost all of its rocket parts using its self-developed 3D printers in order to cut costs. Elsewhere, private US aerospace firm Launcher recently hit another milestone in the testing of its 3D printed E-2 rocket engine at NASA’s Stennis Space Center. The company successfully completed a thrust chamber assembly hot fire test, following a string of testing achievements for its E-2 rocket engine at Stennis throughout 2021. The E-2 engine is designed to produce 22,000 pounds of thrust at sea level using RP-1, a highly refined form of kerosene, and liquid oxygen as its propellants. Subscribe to the 3D Printing Industry newsletter for the latest news in additive manufacturing. You can also stay connected by following us on Twitter, liking us on Facebook, and tuning into the 3D Printing Industry YouTube Channel. Looking for a career in additive manufacturing? Visit 3D Printing Jobs for a selection of roles in the industry. Featured image shows X-Bow testing one of its solid fuel rocket engines. Photo via X-Bow. Tags AFWERX Air Force Research Lab DARPA Jason Hundley Los Alamos National Lab Matt Bigge Sandia National Lab X-Bow Launch Systems Kubi Sertoglu Kubi Sertoglu holds a degree in Mechanical Engineering, combining an affinity for writing with a technical background to deliver the latest news and reviews in additive manufacturing. More on this topicSWISSto12 and CAES selected to 3D print antennas for Lockheed Martin satellites More on this topicAddUp-built metal 3D printer to undergo microgravity testing on the ISS Unique 3D printed Zeus-1 satellite container launched into orbit by SpaceX L3Harris to ‘accelerate innovation’ in aerospace and defense with $4.7BN Aerojet Rocketdyne acquisition GKN Aerospace to supply main and upper-stage turbines and Vulcain nozzles for the next 14 launchers Ada Shaikhnag December 19th 2022 - 3:54pm Boom Supersonic to work with GE Additive on new Symphony engine for 1,300 MPH jet AEROPRINT: a project by Dassault Aviation and AddUp Hermeus passes new hypersonic testing milestone with 3D printed Mach-5 Chimera engine New MIT heat treatment could advance the 3D printing of energy-efficient turbine blades
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Marc Blazel Marc Blazel (°1994, London, United Kingdom) makes installations, drawings, media art and films. With a conceptual approach, Blazel creates with daily, recognizable elements, an unprecedented situation in which the viewer is confronted with the conditioning of his own perception and has to reconsider his biased position. His installations bear strong political references. The possibility or the dream of the annulment of a (historically or socially) fixed identity is a constant focal point. By rejecting an objective truth and global cultural narratives, his works references post-colonial theory as well as the avant-garde or the post-modern and the left-wing democratic movement as a form of resistance against the logic of the capitalist market system. His work urge us to renegotiate installation art as being part of a reactive or – at times – autistic medium, commenting on oppressing themes in our contemporary society. By merging several seemingly incompatible worlds into a new universe, he touches various overlapping themes and strategies. Several reoccurring subject matter can be recognised, such as the relation with popular culture and media, working with repetition, provocation and the investigation of the process of expectations. His works often refers to pop and mass culture. Using written and drawn symbols, a world where light-heartedness rules and where rules are undermined is created. By demonstrating the omnipresent lingering of a ‘corporate world’, he tries to approach a wide scale of subjects in a multi-layered way, likes to involve the viewer in a way that is sometimes physical and believes in the idea of function following form in a work. His works directly respond to the surrounding environment and uses everyday experiences from the artist as a starting point. Often these are framed instances that would go unnoticed in their original context. By using popular themes such as sexuality, family structure and violence, he uses a visual vocabulary that addresses many different social and political issues. The work incorporates time as well as space – a fictional and experiential universe that only emerges bit by bit. His works demonstrate how life extends beyond its own subjective limits and often tells a story about the effects of global cultural interaction over the latter half of the twentieth century. It challenges the binaries we continually reconstruct between Self and Other, between our own ‘cannibal’ and ‘civilized’ selves. Marc Blazel currently lives and works in The Internet.
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Eastern Iowa Christmas holiday light displays LIST By Wendy Wilde CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - Many Christmas holiday light displays continue through New Year's Day across Eastern Iowa. Cedar Rapids: Gordon Avenue Lights 5401 Gordon Avenue NW-This light show has 9 songs programmed to music that you can hear on 88.1 FM in your car. This year the display is taking donations for a 29-year-old with a life-threatening infection. 5-10 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and between 5-11 p.m. Friday and Saturday. 9908, 10000, 10009 Hall Road These three houses on Hall Road with their addresses listed above team up for the holidays to spread Christmas cheer. The display has more than 50,000 lights and dozens of figures. 6416 Hoover Trail Road SW Lights set to music with at least 3,000 lights. Peanuts characters, Penguin cutouts. If you remember the light display in Fairfax that had Peanuts characters, they are now at this location! Every day 5-10 p.m. until January 1. 7015 Parkdale Lane NE his display is on a corner lot and has many tiny scenes and lights. The lights are on from 5-11 p.m. Visitors can see Santa, who hands out candy canes, around 6 p.m. every day starting Thursday. 1251 Staub Court NE-This display has many different kinds of lights and can be seen from dusk to around 9:30 p.m. until January 1. 4229 Topaz Avenue NW -This display has a variety of lights for people to enjoy. Zika Avenue NW-This display has a double lot with tons of displays for the holiday lover. 1606 20th Street NW-This display has a variety of lights and more than 60 displays. There is also a spinning Christmas tree in the window. Lights are on at this address from 5-10 p.m. nightly until New Year's Day. Decorah: Holiday Lights, Magical Nights is located in the Pulpit Rock Campground and will be going until December 25. Proceeds from the display benefit Helping Services for Youth and Families. Dubuque: Reflections in the Park' Louis Murphy Park; 1700 S Grandview Ave-Cars are $10 at the gate and money raised goes to Hillcrest Family Services. The event runs daily until New Years Day from 5-10 p.m. and people who visit the light display on Monday's can even see Santa. 1800 block of Bennett Street This home on the 1800 block of Bennett Street is just off of Grandview Avenue near Finley Hospital. Their display is lit from dusk until 10 p.m. most nights. On Sunday nights, lights are usually turned off by 9 or 9:30 p.m. East Dubuque: 191 W Kroll RoadThis display has enough soldiers to protect the holiday house! It also has a full choir of angels too. Lights at this display come on at 5:30 p.m. Fairfax: 175 Driftwood Lane This display has 18 minutes of synchronized lights. Iowa City: Spruce Ridge Christmas Lights 4477 Napolean Street SE This light show is programmed to 90.7 FM. You can see all of their lights between 5-8:30 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and between 5-10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays. Marion: 6th Avenue Lights 485 6th Avenue This light display runs from 6-9 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and 6-10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Mount Pleasant: Mount Pleasant Festival of Lights-This display is open from 5:30- 9 p.m. until December 31. The lights are a mile long. The cost is $10 for a family vehicle, $15 for a mini van, $25 for a limo, $30 for a mini coach and $60 for a motor coach. New Hampton: Little Light of Mine In Mikelson Park runs from 5:30-10 p.m. North English: Forbes Family Christmas Light Show; 225 Campbell Street-Tune in to 96.9 FM until December 31 to watch this 30-minute show. The show runs Sunday-Thursday 5-10 p.m. and 5-11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. Palo: 7 Thompson Drive Handmade light sculptures, inflatables, and other displays, you don't want to miss this one! Lights are on from 5 to 10 p.m. nightly until New Year's Day. Solon: 1697 Newberry Ave This the display is filled with animated faces that sing along with classic and contemporary Christmas songs on 88.1 FM. Animated scenes include penguins, soldiers the Polar Express, Santa and reindeer, snowflakes and a few more surprises. Sumner: Lights in the Park-Located in Sumner City Park, this display runs until January 2 from 5-9 p.m. daily. Santa visits every Sunday in December. Walker: Blue Creek Christmas 4942 Blue Creek Court More than 100,000 lights. 5:30-10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 5:30-11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. If you want to see it on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, stop by between 5:30 p.m.-Midnight. All free will donations at the display will benefit the University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital. Waverly: Waverly Lights 103 Eliasen AveLocated just past the Waverly Soccer Complex. 5-10 p.m. Proceeds raised benefit the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. West Union: Festival of Lights North Pine Street Williamsburg: Christmas on Court 30 song light show. 108 individual light features and a 400 pixel LED tree all sequenced to the music on 97.1FM 5-10 p.m. every night through New Years Eve. List compiled by KCRG-TV 9
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Football Is Still in Trouble Trevann Hamilton The footballing world erupted when news broke out on Sunday that a new league would be formed called “The Super League” which was slated to start “as soon as possible”. The Super League started with 12 teams: Real Madrid, Barcelona, Atletico Madrid, AC Milan, Juventus, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, and Tottenham. Currently, only four teams remain; Barcelona, Real Madrid, AC Milan and Juventus. The concept of the European Super League isn’t new but it was looking more like a reality when football clubs were issuing statements about their decision to become involved in the competition. A post shared by Bleacher Report Football (@brfootball) The formation of a European Super League was always discouraged and so the same threats were coming back around from the football governing bodeis. The teams in the competition and their individual players were told that they couldn’t play in FIFA or UEFA competitions anymore if they didn’t leave. Football fans took to the stadiums and football players took to Twitter to share their disapproval, which prompted the clubs to start pulling out one by one. While many members of the footballing community rejoiced in what seems to be the end of The Super League, it’s important to note that the sport we love isn’t out of the woods yet. Football is still in trouble. The Problem With the Super League Many football fans referred to The Super League as the ‘death of football’ or the ‘rich stealing from the poor.’ Let’s address the first statement. The Super League would have 15 founding members while 5 more teams will join in some way that hasn’t been made clear, potential through some sort of promotion and relegation process.. The problem that fans had is that the 15 founding teams would never lose their place in the competition. One of the best parts of football is that teams have to qualify for competitions. Finishing in a certain position in the domestic league tells you whether the club has qualified for European competition or not. Clubs have had to earn their place. On the other hand, some would argue that the founding members (or at least most of them) usually qualified for European football anyway and at least with the Super League these clubs would earn more money. With that said, the clubs are still not on equal footing, even though football is supposed to be meritocratic, the clubs with the money definitely have the advantage most of the time. Speaking of money, The Super League spelled trouble for smaller teams. According to the New York Times, “The clubs believe that selling the broadcast rights for The Super League, as well as the commercial income, would be worth billions. And it will all go to them, rather than being redistributed to smaller clubs and lesser leagues through European soccer’s governing body, UEFA”. That’s why people say it was the rich stealing from the poor. The founding members of The Super League are wealthy clubs with massive appeal. Without them in the competition, the broadcasting rights for the Champions League wouldn’t be worth quite as much. It Was All About Money Let’s be honest, the fight between The Super League and the football governing bodies is about money, not football tradition, morality, or anything else. FIFA and UEFA are mad because The Super League threatens to take money out of their pockets and the clubs that were in Super League are upset that UEFA isn’t giving them more money, add to that the context of the COVID- pandemic. The “super clubs” have cited that the pandemic has hit them especially hard and has left them cash strapped. Problems Still Exist UEFA and FIFA are not off the hook, fans are only choosing the lesser of the two evils. The conditions that bred the Super League remain and the problems that showed up as a result won’t go away so easily. According to a Washington Post article, “from wealth inequality to fan powerlessness to the desire of a cabal of elite clubs to be free of oversight and run their organizations for the sole purpose of turning a quick buck — will not go away either with the Super League’s demise or the pandemic’s approaching end.” If UEFA and FIFA want to keep the clubs happy, they’re going to have to dish out more money. They probably thought they won this battle comfortably but if the issue keeps getting pressed and clubs sink deeper in debt, the footballing giants may not have leverage. It is no secret that the big clubs are not getting enough funds from UEFA despite these clubs attracting most of, if not all, the attention to their club competitions. In addition to that, FIFA and UEFA have not won over the fans with their lack of meaningful action on racism, as well as ‘the reformed’ Champions League competition that will start in a couple of seasons from now, which will only make the football calendar more congested. The football governing bodies’ strong reaction to The Super League showed fans that both FIFA and UEFA could definitely bring more heat if they wanted. Fans are still side-eyeing FIFA for making them watch a World Cup when they should be drinking sorrel and buying gifts. The point is FIFA and UEFA are not off the hook and they need to do better. It is clear they have the capacity to give back a fairer share to the larger clubs while taking action on more serious issues in football like racism. In addition to that, capitalism still runs football.
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2020 Sample Ballot for November 3rd General Election Secretary of State Michael Watson has released a preview of what you can expect to see on the 2020 General Election ballot. It is important to note there are three measures that appear on the ballot.� The first deals with medical marijuana.� The second measure deals with House Concurrent Resolution 47 which determines how statewide elected officials are selected.� The third gives you an opportunity to vote on whether or not you support the new state flag approved by the Mississippi Flag Commission last week. The post 2020 Sample Ballot for November 3rd General Election appeared first on News Mississippi.
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What Would YOU Do To Get A Better Nights Sleep? By Jack Kulp Would you and your partner be willing to sleep in separate beds in order to get a better nights’ sleep? Well, of the 2,000 people who were asked that question, 49% said “yes”. 42% prefer going to sleep at the same time. We’re also creatures of habit, because 40% of us insist on sleeping on the same side of the bed every night…even when we travel. Click here for more sleep stats.
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Data Shows Concerning Gun Trend In Minnesota November 21, 2022 by Avery Appelman New data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF) suggests that legally purchased firearms are showing up at crime scenes, both on a national scale and in Minnesota, much faster than in years past. The data suggests a growing problem when it comes to firearms across the country, according to the feds. […] Filed Under: Criminal Conduct, Criminal Defense, Felony, Violent Crime Tagged With: firearm, firearm purchase, gun, minnesota, weapon, weapons charge
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Porsches From the Past – Made By Hand Posted on February 4, 2014 by Daniel Enjoy a 5 part tour of the Porsche factory back in the 1960s. This entry was posted in Porsches From The Past by Daniel. Bookmark the permalink.
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Tag Archives: heart disease Entries tagged with "heart disease" Women’s Health: Beating the Odds Over Age 65 Assisted living, Memory Care, Rehabilitation, Senior Care, Skilled nursingBy Marketing Assistant March 27, 2019 It’s a fact. Almost everywhere in the world, women live longer than men. It’s also a fact that older women are more likely than men to be coping with ongoing health challenges. Statistics tell the story: 49% of women have three or more chronic health conditions compared with 38% of men
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5220
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High Potential, Scale UP and General Mobility Visas Home / High Potential, Scale UP and General Mobility Visas UK Innovation Strategy – New Visas announced In the Government’s Innovation Strategy (Published July 2021) the government announced the introduction of three new visas. You can read about these here. The Visas are likely to become valid in Spring 2022. The precise rules for the visas have not yet been defined. However, the Government has given some guidance, which we have paraphrased below. High Potential Visa The High Potential Visa will be aimed at encouraging highly skilled migrants to move to the UK. It’s not yet clear who will be eligible, but it seems that the visa will be aimed at highly qualified people. In the Government’s words “Graduated from a top global university”. It seems to us that the main difference from the Skilled Worker Visa is that migrants wont need a job offer from a company and the migrant will be free to change employer. Scale-Up Visa This visa will be aimed at making Skilled Worker Visa applications simpler for high growth companies. In this context a high growth company is one with average revenue or employment growth over a 3-year period of more than 20%. Also, the visas will be eligible to be fast tracked. To be eligible, businesses will need at least 10 employees. Global Business Mobility Visa The idea behind this new visa seems to be to improve the Intra-Company Transfer Visa and provide overseas businesses with greater flexibility in establishing a UK presence. If you need visa advice we can introduce you to one of our legal partners that can help you. UK Innovation Strategy – New Visas announced In the Government’s Innovation Strategy (Published July 2021) the government announced the introduction of three new visas. You can read about these here. The Visas are likely to become valid in Spring 2022. The precise rules for the visas have not yet been defined. However, the Government has […]
2023-14/0410/en_head.json.gz/5221
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